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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;
VOL. Ill PINCKNEY, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JUNE 18,1885. NO. 23&#13;
PlNCKNEY DlSPATTtJS.&#13;
%-&#13;
i. I . NEWKIRK, PUBLISHER.&#13;
tf&#13;
I S S U E D TUUBMDAT8.&#13;
Snbwriptlon Price, $1.00 per Year.&#13;
ADVERTISING RATES .&#13;
f ranslent advertisements, 25 cants per inch for&#13;
Aratlnsertion and ten centB per inch fur each subseqaent&#13;
insertion. Local notices, 5 cents per line for&#13;
each insertion. Special ratea for regular advertisements&#13;
by the year or quarter.&#13;
ALL ADVERTISING BILLS DUE QUARTERLY.&#13;
RAILROAD CARDS.&#13;
Detroit, Lansing &amp; Northern Railroad&#13;
Time Table.&#13;
GOING WEST. STATIONS. GOING-KAST.&#13;
2&gt;. M.|A. X . A. M.&#13;
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9.56( 3:1710:45&#13;
ln.801 8:50,11:18&#13;
I 4:8V 1*2:00&#13;
Brighton&#13;
Howell&#13;
Fowlerville&#13;
Webbervllle&#13;
WllliainBton&#13;
Trowbridge&#13;
J J-Lansing.; J&#13;
Grand Ledge&#13;
Portland&#13;
l\ *&gt;1» ]a&#13;
110.26 1.59 7.81&#13;
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9.57 1.:-11 i 7.00&#13;
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8.12-11.2^ 4.59&#13;
rf ..145* 1101..08451 4.85&#13;
.... 10.20&#13;
St*nton Jun.&#13;
Greenville&#13;
Howard City&#13;
7.0010.10&#13;
6.30 9.39&#13;
! 8.56&#13;
4.05&#13;
4.00&#13;
8.48&#13;
8.1«&#13;
2.35&#13;
J. B. MULL1KEN, W. A. CARPENTER&#13;
Gen1l Manager. Gen'l Pass. Agent.&#13;
JOHN P. WOOD, Traveling Pass. Agent.&#13;
BUSINESS CARQS.&#13;
INTERESTING TOPICS.&#13;
An Ordinance prohibiting- the use of&#13;
Fire Crackers.&#13;
SB*. 1st:—The Village of Pinckney&#13;
ordains that it shall not be lawtul for&#13;
any person to fire or explode any fire&#13;
crackers on the streets or public&#13;
grounds withm the corporate limits of&#13;
the Village of Pinckney.&#13;
SEC. 2d:—That any person offending&#13;
against the provisions of this act shall&#13;
be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor&#13;
and on conviction thereof before any&#13;
Justice of the Peace shall be punished&#13;
by a fine not exceeding one dollar and&#13;
cost of prosecution tor by imprisonment&#13;
in the village lock-up not exceeding&#13;
two days, in the discretion of&#13;
thecourt.&#13;
Dated, June 6th, A. D., 1885.&#13;
ABERDEEN ANGUS GRADES.;—The Polled&#13;
Aberdeen bulU "The Pon" at the&#13;
Scotch Stuck Farm, will serve a limited&#13;
number of cows at not less than&#13;
$5 per cow, cash. Apply early to&#13;
—23t£ WM. COLLIE, Herdsman.&#13;
T H HO AG, M. D,,&#13;
(HOMOEOPATHIC.)&#13;
PHYSICIAN AND SUR1&#13;
Office at residence on Kast-tfain street.&#13;
T V M.-UREtfSE, M. D.,&#13;
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,&#13;
PLAINFIELD, MICHIGAN.&#13;
Office at residence, Special attention given to&#13;
eurgery and diseases of the throat and lungs.&#13;
r AMES MAUKEY,&#13;
* NOTARY PUBLIC&#13;
And Insurance Agent, Legal papers made on&#13;
short-notice anil, reasonable terms. Office on&#13;
Main St., near Postofnco Pinckneyr~Mich. —&#13;
RIMES £ JOHNSON,&#13;
G Proprietors of&#13;
PINCKNEY FLOtTRlNG AND^CtrS^&#13;
TOM MILLS,&#13;
Dealers 3« Flour and Feed. Cash paid for all&#13;
kinds of grain. Pinckney, Michigan,&#13;
t l f r. VAN WINKLE,&#13;
ATTORNEY &amp; COUNSELOR at LAW&#13;
and SOLICITOR in CHANCERYOfftceover&#13;
Sigler'sDrug Store. PINCKNEY&#13;
-r\ D. BENNETT,&#13;
PAINTER AND PAPER HANGER.&#13;
All work in this line executed with neatness&#13;
And dispatch.&#13;
T»ANG8 &amp; K1RKLAND,&#13;
ATTORNEYS,&#13;
8 3 0 O P E R A H O U S E BLOCK, CHICAGO, attend&#13;
carefully to business sent them from other places.&#13;
PINCKNEY EXCHANGE BANK&#13;
G, W, TEEPLE,&#13;
«*§BANKER,lr&#13;
James Markey, of this place, has secured&#13;
the agency of the Allan Lire of&#13;
Steamers He is also agent for the&#13;
celebrated Jones Scales.&#13;
Pinckney, May 28,1885.&#13;
NOTICE.—All persons owing Birkett,&#13;
Cowin &amp; Co. for lumber, please call&#13;
and fettle at once. We have accommodated&#13;
you now accommodate us by&#13;
settling up- A. L. HOYT, Agent.&#13;
To SUNDAY SCHOOLS, ETC.—I wish to&#13;
dispose of my Palestine paintings—31&#13;
views, 125 feet long—painted J&gt;yCatenazzi,&#13;
Florence, Italy-^ViTT be sold&#13;
for what the duty _at---New York coi»t&#13;
me. Just the^hing to illustrate Bibilicajjiktory.&#13;
D. F. EWEN.&#13;
To. 1 new milch cow for sale by&#13;
JOHN LAKIN.&#13;
FOR SALE CHEAP—a good carpet, loom&#13;
with steel reeds, etc. Inquire at DISPATCH&#13;
office.&#13;
Farmers, call at Markey's and see&#13;
h e new Climax light MOWER, for which&#13;
he is agent. It is a model of beauty&#13;
and perfection.&#13;
Any one in want of harvester or&#13;
stack covers or anything m the shape&#13;
of canvas tents or oil clothing tor men&#13;
or water-proof hoi'se covers. The above&#13;
will i&gt;e constantly kept on hand or&#13;
furnished on short notice. Apply to&#13;
— — -F^Ax BAjrrj)Nj_Unadilla.&#13;
WANTED.&#13;
Wheat, Beans and&#13;
highest prices paid&#13;
PUBLISHER'S NOTICE.&#13;
p y T h o s e 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;
HOME NEWS.&#13;
Dexter will celebrate.&#13;
This is fluctuating weather.&#13;
The M. E. parsonage is enclosed.&#13;
Read the wool advertisement this&#13;
week.&#13;
J. H. Barton raised his barn frame&#13;
yesterday.&#13;
Saturday night brought a large&#13;
crowd into town.&#13;
The Ann A? bor Register has 31 parsons&#13;
on its pay roll.&#13;
- Dr. Hoag and J. McGuiness made a&#13;
ti ip to Chelsea yesterday.&#13;
The store occupied by Lakin &amp;&#13;
Clover Seed,&#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;
COLLECTIONS A SPECIALTY.&#13;
0URPR0DUCE MARKET.,&#13;
*&#13;
CORRECTED WEEKLY B&#13;
Jane 18,1885. T O M P K I N S * ISMON&#13;
Wheat, No. 1 white,&#13;
•« No. 2 white,&#13;
No. 2 red,&#13;
No. 8 red,.&#13;
Oats&#13;
Corn&#13;
Barley,&#13;
Beans,.&#13;
Dried Apples..&#13;
Tompkins &amp; Ismon.&#13;
I wish to dispose of'my residence&#13;
and four lots on Unadilla St., well&#13;
planted to small fruit. Soft and hard&#13;
water. Will exchange for Howell&#13;
property. MRS. D. F. EWEX.&#13;
The HERO*to the front again for&#13;
1885. Farmers, look to your interest&#13;
and get the Hero Reaper and save&#13;
your prain and clover seed, a reaper&#13;
that you can depend upon in all kinds&#13;
and conditions of grain. Don't be&#13;
deceived by buying a poor, cheap machine&#13;
because you can get it at a low&#13;
price. The Hero is sold on its merits,&#13;
any good farmer can have one on trial.&#13;
I keep a few here in stock, also a full&#13;
line of repairs always on hand. I also&#13;
sell the Hoosier Grain Drills which are&#13;
acknowledged to be the best drill made.&#13;
I have corn and field Cultivators for&#13;
one or two horses, shovel plows and&#13;
horse hoes and plow repairs lov v&#13;
ious plows. Tarn also agent, for/the&#13;
J. I. Case celebrated threshing? ma&#13;
chines and steam engines.&#13;
J AS. MARKEY, GeneraL^gent.&#13;
22tf \ Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
\&#13;
Sykes is being resfilngled&#13;
Mrs. Geo. Whitney, near Fowlerville,&#13;
died Tuesday morning-.&#13;
The 4th of July posters will be out&#13;
the last of the week probably.&#13;
Mr. B. Markey returned to his nome&#13;
at Kokomo, Ind., SaturdayJast.""&#13;
Mr. Stickle, of JJrockport, N. Y.Tis&#13;
visiting his^sen^near this place.&#13;
Detroit morning papers now&#13;
reach us by the 8:40 A. M. train.&#13;
Richards has a change of advertisement&#13;
this week. Glance it over.&#13;
Four trains per day keeps us from&#13;
forgetting that we have a railroad.&#13;
Considerable road work is being&#13;
done on thoroughfares hereabouts.&#13;
Alvin Mann and wife returned from&#13;
a visit to East Saginaw Monday night.&#13;
The front ot the store occupied by&#13;
Eugene Campbell has received a coat&#13;
of paint.&#13;
Mr. Henry Thompson, ot Ann Arbcr,&#13;
visited in Pinckney and vicinity&#13;
last week.&#13;
Farmers, bring your wool to Pinckney,&#13;
for here you will get the highest&#13;
market jprjee.&#13;
Wm. Chambers has1 a large new&#13;
barn up and enclosed on his farm two&#13;
miles north-eait of the village, and tomorrow&#13;
night the merry dancers will&#13;
initiate it.&#13;
It is rumored that Will Darrow and&#13;
Flora Bullis, of this place, were married&#13;
last week at Ann Arbor, but as the&#13;
parties themselves deny the charge&#13;
there is a diversity of opinion.&#13;
We hope to see Howell, Fowlerville,&#13;
Plainfield, Gregory, Unadilla, Stockbridge,&#13;
Chelsea, Dexter, and all other&#13;
neighboring towns well represented at&#13;
our celebration.&#13;
Rev. Fred M. Coddington gave universal&#13;
satisfaction his trial sermon at&#13;
be Congregational church Sunday, and&#13;
it is expected that a call will be extended&#13;
to_Jiim to fill thejiastoiate atjhis&#13;
place.&#13;
Mr. T. J. Eaman, who has been&#13;
sending several weeks wittrhis brother&#13;
in West Putnam, departed for his&#13;
home lf.st evening. TheJDiflpATCH will&#13;
follow him. . . ^ " ^ •»&#13;
Mr. JV-W. Munson, Secretary of the&#13;
liar will get his deserts."&#13;
Mr. Thomas Gawley died at the&#13;
Pontiac insane asylum, on Saturday•&#13;
Jane 13th, and Monday the remains&#13;
were brought to this plaee for burial.&#13;
Deceased was born in Drinberk county,&#13;
Ireland, in 1801—making him 84 at&#13;
his death—and came to Michigan in&#13;
1844. He became insane nine yeara&#13;
after coming here and has now been&#13;
relieved dy beath. He lived a christian&#13;
lite for some time before overtaken&#13;
by this malady and was much beloved&#13;
and respected. He leaves a&#13;
wife, three daughters and two sons.&#13;
"We" editorially and, otherwise,&#13;
know how it feels to be in a cedar&#13;
swamp after cub bears and expect the&#13;
old one to show up every minute.&#13;
Last Wednesday, the writer, his father&#13;
and brother, were fishing at George"&lt;&#13;
Lake, when an old bear and two cubs&#13;
jEfira seen on the bank. The boat was&#13;
Mr, and Mrs. J. Patten were called&#13;
to Pontiac last week to attend the&#13;
"funeral of a relative-;&#13;
John W. Decker, who is attending&#13;
the Ann Arbor Medical College, is&#13;
home for a vacation.&#13;
1 50&#13;
_ i oo&#13;
.03® .00&#13;
_ms&gt; m&#13;
Dressed Chickens..&#13;
Clover Seed...&#13;
Drssssed Pork&#13;
THAT HACKINfTCOUGH can be so&#13;
quickly cured ^y Shiloh's Cure. We&#13;
guarantee it&#13;
WILL YOU SUFFER with Dyspepsia&#13;
and Liver Complaint? Shiloh's&#13;
Vitalizer is guaranteed to cure you.&#13;
^SLEEPLESS NIGHTS, made miser-&#13;
/aole by that terrible cough. Shiloh's&#13;
Cure is the remedy for you.&#13;
CATARRH CURED, health and&#13;
sweet breath secured, by Shiloh's Catarrh&#13;
Remedy. Price 50 cents. Nasal&#13;
Injector free.&#13;
For lame back, side or chest, use&#13;
Shiloh's Porous Plaster. Price 25 cts.&#13;
SHILOH'S COUGH and Consumpttiioon&#13;
Cure is sold by us on a guarantee.&#13;
It cures consumption.&#13;
SHILOH'S VITALIZER is what&#13;
£««£2**» • "/' S you-needfor constipation, lossofappe-&#13;
ItUilSr, i , . . . . / . i o &gt; , , S ,1 . ~y* i»&#13;
JM»&gt;"."'-'."."."-"- •—*/- jf? "te&gt; dizziness, and all symptoms of&#13;
••••&amp;&#13;
Dennis Mehan, of Fowlerville, man&#13;
ufacturer of Mehan's medicines, was i&#13;
the village Tuesday,&#13;
Thos. Read bought his firsUbad of&#13;
wheat in this market Mondaymorning&#13;
ot John Van Fleet, Jr.&#13;
The band boys are^practicing up in&#13;
earnest, and some^good music may be&#13;
looked for from/tnem the 4th.&#13;
The Dibble murder case was called&#13;
on yestepday in the circuit court. 55&#13;
extract*rymen had to be subpeened.&#13;
JSvery Thursday and Saturday after-&#13;
'noon and evening delicious ice cream&#13;
is served at the Monitor House. Try&#13;
it.&#13;
Circuit court opened Tuesday, and&#13;
consequently our county seat is&#13;
alive with lawyers, litigators, jurors&#13;
Eating stands, ice cream saloons,&#13;
lemonade and peanut venders will be&#13;
numerous the Fourth. Come and&#13;
heve a good time.&#13;
J. Hodgeman, the photographer,&#13;
did not make a very long stay here.&#13;
Saturday night he folded his tent and&#13;
quetly stole away.&#13;
The wool market opened at this&#13;
plaee Tuesday, Wm. Doyle bringing&#13;
in the first load, which was bought by&#13;
Thos. Read aH£2 cants per pound.&#13;
Mr. R . € . Auld returned last week&#13;
from Scotland, where he has been&#13;
several months. He brought home&#13;
with him several head of fine blooded&#13;
cattle.&#13;
1 S T&#13;
4.50&#13;
5.00&#13;
A bunch of high grade yearling&#13;
tor sale cheap. , _&#13;
—P. A. BARTON, UnadilU.&#13;
symptomi&#13;
dyspepsia. Price 10 and 75 cents per&#13;
bottle. X&#13;
CROUP,-WHOOPING COUGH and&#13;
hroncnitis immediately relieved by&#13;
Shiloh's Cure. • '&#13;
Henry Crawford, formerly a Pinck.&#13;
ney, now clerking for?xljtellogg, Gar&#13;
lond &amp;Co.» Howell, sbook^tands with&#13;
his many friends ifl, tpvMfc Saturday&#13;
and Sunday lait&#13;
N&#13;
ingston Agricultural and Horticultural&#13;
Society, was in town Tuesday.&#13;
The society is making great endeavors&#13;
to have the fall fair, which is to be&#13;
he'd Sept. 22 to 25 inclusive, a very attractive&#13;
and interesting on«.&#13;
Mr. Terrence McDonnell, of Toledo,&#13;
has been secured as orator for July 4.&#13;
Mr. McDonnell, is said to be a very&#13;
fine speaker and is known to many in&#13;
this vicinity, as his former home was&#13;
in Green Oak. Therefore we shall expect&#13;
a good audience to hear him.&#13;
A Petersburg paper contains the following:&#13;
A Petersburg frog is said to&#13;
have fallen into a pail of milk on a recent&#13;
night, and next morning was&#13;
found complacently seated on a roll of&#13;
butter which he had churned in his&#13;
fruitless efforts to get out.&#13;
By reference to advertisement in any&#13;
other column it will be found that&#13;
Geo. W. Reason will have a grand delivery&#13;
day of machinery on Thursday&#13;
next. A traction engine/will draw a&#13;
large load and a fine display is promised.&#13;
The Cornet Band will also be&#13;
tnnsttendance,&#13;
We are in/receipt of the catalogue&#13;
of the Michigan Military Academy of&#13;
1885ywnich very neatly sets forth the&#13;
advantages of that institution as a&#13;
ilitary school. It has able and efficent&#13;
officers and instructors, and&#13;
Michigan citizens are proud of the success&#13;
it is achieving.&#13;
Jerome Winchell has purchased the&#13;
"Beebe store," occupied by lum the&#13;
past two years and a half as a drug&#13;
store, and will continue the business&#13;
therein with unabated zeal. Mr.&#13;
Winchell now carries a large and well&#13;
assorted stock of drugs, medicines, etc.,&#13;
and is meeting with very liberal patronage.&#13;
The Children's Day exercises at the&#13;
M. E. church on Sunday last drew out&#13;
a large attendance both in the morning&#13;
evening. The jntenor of the&#13;
church was finely dtecorated, while' the&#13;
perfume of flowers and songs of merry&#13;
birds made the air redolent with good&#13;
cheer and happiness. The exeroises&#13;
were all pronounced good.&#13;
Members of the ' Congregational&#13;
church and society (both at Pinckney&#13;
and Hamburg) are invited to meet at&#13;
the church in Pinckney Sunday next,&#13;
June 21st, at the usual Sunday school&#13;
hour (balf past eleven) for the purpose&#13;
of making arrangements to secure a&#13;
pastor for saia churches, 'the attendance&#13;
of all interested is requested.&#13;
An exchange says it has been truly&#13;
said that when an editor makes a mistake&#13;
in his paper, all the world sees&#13;
and calls him a fool. When a private&#13;
citizen makes a mistake, nobody knows&#13;
it except a few friends, and they come&#13;
around and ask the editor to keep it&#13;
nut of the paper. When a private citizen&#13;
dies the editor is asked to write&#13;
of his good qualities and leave the bad&#13;
out When the editor dies the pri-&#13;
*Afe oitistn iftgftC u3fe* &amp;*t darn&#13;
pushed toward shore, the old bear ran&#13;
away and the cubs treed. After cutting&#13;
five or six trees the little varmints&#13;
were captured and tied, and although,&#13;
they made a great noise, old mother&#13;
bruin did not put in an appearance*&#13;
Under the tutorship of his majesty,&#13;
our devil, the young bears will be&#13;
taught how to deal with the man who&#13;
calls in to know, ''who wrote that article?"—&#13;
Ogemaw Co. Herald.&#13;
For the benefit of M. B. Darrow we&#13;
will say that we did not expect he&#13;
would feel very elated over the x&#13;
appearing in our paper concerning his&#13;
theft, but did not suppose her would&#13;
have the cheek and gall to appear before&#13;
us and denounce and heap upon&#13;
our head all sorts of enconiums and&#13;
abuses for the publication of the simple&#13;
tacts which rightfully belonged to&#13;
the public. Whatever truth there is&#13;
m the quibbling stories he tells about&#13;
intending to replace it, etc., it is clear"&#13;
to all minds that the taking ot the&#13;
money was a theft, as he acknowledged&#13;
the same when he pleaded guilty&#13;
to the charge. It has never been and!&#13;
is not now our object to defame or&#13;
ruin any one's character, but when it&#13;
comes to being insulted and our items&#13;
dictated to by a thief and a gambler it&#13;
is crowding ov&gt;i good nature too far.&#13;
It is not to please this kind ot people&#13;
that we are laboring—nor will we aid&#13;
in shielding their crimes—but we will&#13;
endeavor to furnish the news in a*K&#13;
explicit a manner as possible, with&#13;
equality and iustice to all.&#13;
PIKCraEY&gt;S EXCHANGE BANK.&#13;
To the above named institutiojnth^&#13;
people of this village hajee^ begun to&#13;
turn their thoughts with pride. Over&#13;
a year and a half ago Mr. G. W.&#13;
Teeple conceived the idea of establishing&#13;
a bank here; and, although the&#13;
town was pretty small and many&#13;
thought the enterprise would prove a&#13;
failure, he finally concluded that by&#13;
energy, determination and grit he&#13;
could build up a business in this&#13;
branch. April 29, 1884, Mr. Teeple&#13;
opened a general banking be sine&#13;
one of the rear rooms of MaaiflJros/&#13;
brick store and in&gt;^snort time by&#13;
strict attentioj^-toDusiness, by being&#13;
mani ght and liberal|in his deal?&#13;
he had a good and steadily increasing&#13;
patronage. One year 90S?~&#13;
ficedtoshow that his judgement had&#13;
not been amiss; that the Pinckney Exchange&#13;
Bank had gained a solid footing&#13;
and that its permanency would insure&#13;
both a financial success and 8&gt;&#13;
benefit to the business interests of the&#13;
village and community. He accord"&#13;
mgly purchased a site just east of H -&#13;
Clark's harness shop and has erected&#13;
thereon a fine little boildlng, which*&#13;
he has fitted u p in the moet approved&#13;
style, the furniture and fixtures being*&#13;
ot superior workmanship, and an elegant&#13;
three-ton time-lock: safe seenrea.&#13;
bis valuables. While Mr,&#13;
tsgrity and good business qualitiea&#13;
so well known here a recommendtBott&#13;
at our hands is needless, we can b u t&#13;
wish him the abundant suocess in the*&#13;
future which we predict barely awaits&#13;
» • ' -»N. ^ . ^&#13;
m&#13;
•»&#13;
r&#13;
-rW'-&#13;
•»M'»BJ. „.«a&#13;
\&#13;
^ N&#13;
X ^&#13;
,-~-w? ;i**itf*\?&gt;: ^.1^4^,..&amp;•. *f- i. -Ac: \ r&#13;
".&lt;*"&#13;
T0C0ESE5P0HDElfT&amp;&#13;
An communication* for thli paperahoald be accon*&#13;
i u l ( 4 by Die name of the author, not neceaaarrfot&#13;
»aillcatfoa, but as an evidence of food faith on ths&#13;
tart of the writer. Write only on one tide of&#13;
taper. Be particularly ccaarreeffuuli about fir I BE names&#13;
*nd ditea, tohitve the leitera and figures plain nail&#13;
ilatlncU Proper namei are often dtSJcult to decipher&#13;
'-4&#13;
•eraoM of the&#13;
Written.&#13;
care lew manner In which they art&#13;
MICHIGAN NEWS,&#13;
Alger't Appointment!.&#13;
Gov. Alger eeut the following appointment!&#13;
to the Senate a few days ago, which were&#13;
promptly confirmed:&#13;
Trustees of the Soldiers' Home: Aaron T. Rliss, Saginaw; Samuel Wells, Buchanan;&#13;
oyal A. Remick, Detroit; Byron R. Pierce,&#13;
Grand Ravids; Michael Brown, Big Rapids;&#13;
Charles Y. Osborne, Marquette.&#13;
School for the blind. Michigan school for&#13;
the blind: Townsend, North Vassar; Tohmas&#13;
S. Applegate, Adrian; James M. Turner, Lan-&#13;
»ing.&#13;
Pharmacist*. Board of Pharmacy: George&#13;
McDonald, Kalamazoo; F. H. Van Emster,&#13;
Bay City; Jacob Jesson, Muskegon; James&#13;
Vernor Detroit; Christian Eberbach, Ann&#13;
Arbor. ^&#13;
Live stock men. Live stock sanitary commission:&#13;
Chas. F. Moore, St. Clair; Henry H.&#13;
Hinds, Greenville; Thomas Foster, Flint.&#13;
Veterinarian. State veterinarian: E. A. A.&#13;
Grange, agricultural college, Lansing.&#13;
Miscellaneous. The following appointments&#13;
Were also made: Cornelius Van Loo,&#13;
n&#13;
Zelland,&#13;
ite board corrections and charities, vice E.&#13;
H. Van Deusen, resigned.&#13;
Geonge Spalding, Monroe, industrial home&#13;
for girls, vice T. H. Hinchman, resigned.&#13;
i m&#13;
A Woman Who Will F i g h t&#13;
Suit has been entered in the Kent county circuit&#13;
court against the Detroit, Grand Haven &amp;&#13;
Milwaukee railroad company by Mrs. Sarah&#13;
McMahone, claiming damages in the sum of&#13;
$15,000. In her declaration Mrs. McMahone&#13;
charges that on September 27, 18S4, she and a&#13;
6-years-old child boarded the train at Cooperaville,&#13;
where she had procured a ticket to Spring&#13;
lake, which was taken up by the conductor.&#13;
The train did not stop at Spring lake but at the&#13;
swing bridge_a half a mile west of .there. She&#13;
was informed that they had reached the station,&#13;
and stepping on the platform of the car&#13;
was pushed on by the brakeman. It was midnight,&#13;
and she struck her knee on a railroad&#13;
tie, causing her great pain. She was then in&#13;
delicate health and the injuries received caused&#13;
her to be sick for three months. *&#13;
OZNEBAL STATE ITEMS.&#13;
Tramps found in St. Louis are arrested and&#13;
put to work. /&#13;
Two hundred citizens of Monroe peuti&lt;&#13;
years/ a resident of&#13;
Countv has been in-&#13;
/&#13;
/&#13;
ltion for&#13;
* city library.&#13;
Levi P. Gretrg, for 50&#13;
Jackson, is dead.&#13;
Wheat In Kalamazoo/&#13;
jured by the Hessian ft/.&#13;
The advent college at Battle Creek has over&#13;
200 students in attendance.&#13;
A summer normal school will be established&#13;
:&amp;t Alma, to-rummence July C. /&#13;
President Cleveland has appointed^cias. H.&#13;
""-"'postmaster at Allegan.&#13;
Minerva Tryon, a resident of Grand&#13;
since 1S40, died recently^'&#13;
Between 40 aud 50 new dwellings have been&#13;
erected at Manistique this-ipring.&#13;
Thirty immigrant families from Holland hnv*&#13;
recently settleu in Ottawa county.&#13;
teold^UbVlgi^-lnf. will hold Its 13fh »n&#13;
.nual reunion u^Joncsvllle 19th inst.&#13;
Geo. N. Davis hai been appointed collector&#13;
of internal/revenue for the 4th Michigan district.&#13;
7 •&#13;
Dr./*!. H. Van Dusen has resigned as membei-&#13;
of the state board of charities and cor&#13;
ructions.&#13;
•;/ The next meeting of the Wayne county&#13;
Horticultural soelctv will be held in Plymouth,&#13;
J u n e 20.&#13;
Thos. G. Gilbert, for over 30 years president&#13;
of the City national bank of GrandRapids, has&#13;
resigned.&#13;
Michigan is the only state in the winter&#13;
wheat belt to-day which gives promise/of an&#13;
average yield.&#13;
Western Michigan editors will enjojr a picnic&#13;
•on Baldhcad at Saugatuck, June 24. A great&#13;
time is expected.&#13;
Female suffragists of Grand Rapids are arranging&#13;
for a convention to be held in that&#13;
-city early in October, /.&#13;
;&#13;
i&#13;
!•&#13;
/&#13;
$ • ' : •&#13;
a**-:&#13;
"Mrs, John Holton of Blackman, Jackson&#13;
county, is dead^ She had been a resident of&#13;
that county..4.8 years...../&#13;
Arrangements are nearly completed for a&#13;
stock sale to be held at the close of Branch&#13;
•county fair this fall.&#13;
Upper Peninswla lawyers refused to defend&#13;
Pat Beenan, who killed an officer while in the&#13;
•discharge of his duty. ^..,-,&#13;
Hiram Way, a farmer aged S3 years, was&#13;
killed at Wbigville, near Grand Blanc, by a&#13;
team of runaway horses.&#13;
George Burnham, son of the managerof the&#13;
Battle Breek machinery company, was drowned&#13;
in Mullet lake recently.&#13;
One of the five buildings belonging to Hope&#13;
college in Holland, burned the other morning.&#13;
Loss, $1,500; incendiarism.&#13;
Geo. W. Dongan, a prominent merchant of&#13;
Niles, has secured an appointment as Indian&#13;
trader in the Blackfoot country.&#13;
All reports to the contrary notwithstanding,&#13;
tbe_Lewis art gallery will remain at Coldwater&#13;
during the lifetime of Mrs, Lewis.&#13;
The Toledo, Ann Arbor &amp; Northern Michi&#13;
gan railroad company has abandoned the plan&#13;
of building the Alma connection.&#13;
The authorities of Deerfield, Lenawee county,&#13;
recently sent to Adrian, at an expense of&#13;
f 1 50, for an 8-cent lamp chimney.&#13;
The degree of L. L. D. was conferred upon&#13;
Gov. Alger by Hillsdale college at the annual&#13;
commencement af that institution.&#13;
Frank M. Stewart, president of the First national&#13;
bank of Hillsdale, succeeds the late John&#13;
P. Cook as a trustee of Hillsdale college.&#13;
Patrick Leslie and Frank Me Adams, the*&#13;
postoffice burglars of Scott's Station, havebsen&#13;
sentenced to five years each in state prison'&#13;
4Citsiagcv's fhinglo mill in--Mfttti*tee~trtirned&#13;
at a late hour the other night, together with it*-&#13;
contents. Loss, §20.000/insured for $11,000.&#13;
Frank W. Morris of Grand Rapids, has been&#13;
Adjudged insane and will be taken to Brlgham&#13;
Hall, a private asylum at Canandaigua, N. Y.&#13;
G. Detviler of Chicago, has purchased Battle&#13;
Creek's street railway system (five miles),&#13;
Including the road to 'Goguc lake, for&#13;
$43,000.&#13;
The supreme court has reversed the decision&#13;
of $20,000 obtained gome, mouths ago bv the&#13;
city of*Lansiug against ex-city treasurer Wood&#13;
of that city.&#13;
A two-years-old child of a German named&#13;
BftUacker of Ionia, while playing on the. track,&#13;
was run over by the morning" train on the D. &amp;&#13;
M. railroad.&#13;
Mr?. Gov. Blair still pos«esscs the beautiful ?lack team presented to her during the war.&#13;
'hey are now about 24 yi urs old, well preserved&#13;
undliv J...&#13;
Ed. Clark, who *h&lt;«t, his step-mother In Port&#13;
Sanilnc a short tim • «gn. bun been held for&#13;
trio] at the Sept m'.^i- tern of the Huron&#13;
.county court.&#13;
Henry Frnl * k of ftntad Rapids, has been&#13;
Michigan semi-centennial commission, Tic*&#13;
Thomas D. Gilbert, resigned. &lt;•&#13;
Mrs. Mary Ollnger and her daughter left&#13;
Burr Oak the oiher day for Kingman county,&#13;
Kansas, taking with them a team of horses, 10&#13;
head of cattle and some household furniture.&#13;
Win. R. Balnbridge, an old resident of&#13;
Gaines township, Kent counvy, was killed by&#13;
being struck with u timber which he was assisting&#13;
to raise into position on a new barn.&#13;
July 13, the Calumet &amp; Hecla mfnlng , company&#13;
will divide among the stockholders the&#13;
sum of $700,0&amp;). This, with the $500,000 paid&#13;
in February last, will make $1,210,000 so far&#13;
this year.&#13;
There was much complaint about the deep&#13;
snow and extreme cold weather of last winter,&#13;
but now comes the report that Michigan is the&#13;
only state in the winter whe*t belt which gives&#13;
promise of an average yield.&#13;
Frank, the six-year-old son of Samuel Hunter,&#13;
ticket agent o'f the Flint &lt;fc Pere Marquette&#13;
railroad, at East Saginaw, was sliding down a&#13;
sand heap, when he slid into the river aud was&#13;
drowned. The body was" recovered.&#13;
Capt Murphy, au old mining exoert, has&#13;
leased the old Cliff mine in Keweenaw county,&#13;
ard will begin work on it at once. Miners say&#13;
that Capt Murphy has found a new vein.&#13;
At a meeting of the Arbeiter Bund held in&#13;
Grand Rapids, a resolution was adopted that&#13;
no physician should be employed by any of the&#13;
societies of the bund unless be has a diploma&#13;
from 6ome reputable university or college.&#13;
The polytecfinie system of school teaching&#13;
has been adopted by the Ionia school board,&#13;
and will go into effect next term. By this plan&#13;
one teacher devotes her whole time to a.single&#13;
study, Instead of teaching all the branches.&#13;
The Michigan Central bridge at Bay City&#13;
was run into by a tow and damaged so seriously&#13;
that all Chicago and northern traius were&#13;
compelled to go around by Vassar aud Saginaw&#13;
for several days until the "bridge was repaired.&#13;
William Maynard, a young man sent from&#13;
Edmore to the" Ionia ho"u&lt;e of correction for&#13;
90 days for the larceny of some chickens, escaped&#13;
the other evening while doing some outside&#13;
work. He was recaptured the next day.&#13;
A business men's association has been formed&#13;
In Negaunee for the purpose of taking advantage&#13;
of any opportunity offering wherebythe&#13;
eity may be benefited. The association^*&#13;
well officered and starts out with a determined&#13;
air. _ r -;&#13;
The contract for the heating apparatus In&#13;
the northern insane asvluru at Traverse City&#13;
has been let to Samuel * J. Pope;^CorrorCht~&#13;
cago/for $19,379; and Bundle, Spencer &amp; Co.,&#13;
ofrMilwaukee, get the plujnhlnff jnh at ¢17,.&#13;
William Mavnard, sept from Edmore to the&#13;
Ionia house of correction, escaped a few days&#13;
ago while doing some outside work. He was&#13;
captured the next day near Stanton, but not&#13;
until he had been wounded by a sbot fired by&#13;
an officer. /&#13;
The new'state prison for the upper peninsula&#13;
will be/located by Peter Van Bergen of MenomineerEli&#13;
P. Rovs of Delta; John M. Wilkinson&#13;
of Marquette; Eli B. Chamberlain of Maekinac:&#13;
Charles Hebard of Baraga; and John Duncan&#13;
Houghton. /&#13;
At a special session of the board of supervisors&#13;
of Jackon county, in pursuance of a mandamus&#13;
from the supreme court, tor the purpose of&#13;
auditing the board bill for the jurors In the&#13;
Holcomb murder trial, the bills were allowed&#13;
for the full amou nt. /&#13;
There will be held a tent meetings In the&#13;
Vlllaseof Plymouth, commencing June 19,&#13;
continuing for ten days', under the direction&#13;
of the Michigan State Holiness Association.&#13;
few GeorgeE. Shorter. Rev. S. B* Shaw and&#13;
others willbe in attendance.&#13;
The jury In the case of Mrs. Sessions, charged&#13;
with producing an abortion upon Mrsi Peck&#13;
of Wayland,/'from the effect of which the&#13;
woman died, after being out an hour and a&#13;
half, returjoed a verdict of manslaughter, the&#13;
murder count having been quashed.&#13;
Frank T. Voting of Hickory Corners, Barry&#13;
county, white out fishing with three companions&#13;
or^Cron "&#13;
a/eak »&#13;
.toward&#13;
Penm&#13;
drow:'&#13;
Wh'i-&#13;
Grauu i&#13;
et of h&#13;
building*&#13;
are experimenting this year. As there is not&#13;
a mill in the district the crop raised will have&#13;
to be taken outside to be ground or fed to&#13;
stock.&#13;
Bee-keepers in Galeaburg and vicinity have&#13;
suffered greatly the past winter. David L.&#13;
Hamilton, who lives a few miles south,&#13;
out of a 150 swarms last fall has but seventeen&#13;
left; J, R. Cumlngs, out of fifty&#13;
swarms has but eight left; Dr. J. S. Martin&#13;
and Henry Sutterton, both of Galesburg, have&#13;
lost all they had. Various causes are assigned.&#13;
Bee-keepers are greatly discouraged, and&#13;
they have great dinculty in disposing of&#13;
swarms, as those who would buy fear a similar&#13;
experience next winter,&#13;
A plowing match, under the direction of&#13;
Capital grange, will be held at the farm of&#13;
John Holhrook, three miles south of Lansing,&#13;
on June 19, commencing at 9 o'clock a. in.&#13;
Three premiums will be given of $5, $3 and $3,&#13;
respectively, for the best work done, as determined&#13;
by a committee. Au entrance fee of 50&#13;
cents will be charged for those wishing to compete.&#13;
The match is open to all, and will be a&#13;
"good opportunity for implement dealers to&#13;
show their wares. A basket dinner will be&#13;
served by the ladies.—Laming HtpuMican.&#13;
MICHIGAN LEOMLATUiE.&#13;
^e^'TsTfiviwncd; TherboaTsprung&#13;
'i ins frenzy he jump"d overboard&#13;
•itore thirty rods (..istaut. Ellen&#13;
attempting his rescue came near&#13;
Vwen Doorcnboss and H. Dykema of&#13;
pids laborers, were carrying a buckot&#13;
tar across the staging between two&#13;
the staging1 broke, precipitating the&#13;
men tothe ground, aid both were horribly&#13;
burned about the heud, face aud arms by the&#13;
tar. possibly fatally.&#13;
Mrs. Elizabeth Staal, of Grand Rapids, lost&#13;
htr husband about IS months ago, he having&#13;
been killed by a Grand Rapids A India train.&#13;
Misc 3tuul Sfi'meil a .fad^nifut for *£,0W&#13;
against the company, but tue case was appealed,&#13;
and the suoreme court affirmed the liuding&#13;
of the lower courts.&#13;
Wm. K. Joslyn of Grand Iiaplds, aged 70,&#13;
who has made several unsuccessful attempts&#13;
to commit suicide lately, accomplished his&#13;
purpose thr&gt; other night by plunging head&#13;
joremofit :n*.o cistern. He became Insane over&#13;
the loss of a horse and the fear of not being&#13;
able to support his family..&#13;
Sylvester Waldby, a young man who resided&#13;
at Deep Rriver, Arenac county, was drowned&#13;
in a mill pond at that place the other morning&#13;
while washing sheep. He fell off a log ana&#13;
could not get out before he was drowned. He&#13;
was unmarried, and a bright and enterprising&#13;
young man and well known.&#13;
Father Von der Heyden, of St. Andrew's&#13;
Roman Catholic church, Saginaw City, has arranged&#13;
to visit his old home in Holland this&#13;
se:iiw». He expects to s*il on the 20th. It is&#13;
17 years sine?. ht&gt; has visited Holland or had&#13;
any vacation. He has had charge of St. Andrew's&#13;
parish for about 25 years.&#13;
The Houghton copper smelting works, which&#13;
have been iyinar idle for the winter owing to&#13;
the lack of copper, will' start up in a few days..&#13;
The principal supply of minerals coming fromi&#13;
Ontonactin county and one or two small mines&#13;
in Houghton countv, and the closing of navigation&#13;
coinpelhd these works to shut down in&#13;
the winter.&#13;
John Berube and Fred Fortier were working1&#13;
on top of a two-story building at Oscoda&#13;
when the scafiolciing beneath them gave&#13;
wav. Fortier, a man we&gt;ghin&lt;? 300 pounds,&#13;
fell 3) feet, striking on his back across some&#13;
timbers He is probably fatally hurt. Berube&#13;
clun-r to some scantling in mid air and was-released&#13;
unhurt. ^ '&#13;
^he_rcjaaiu5J^JohnJ,riendvinr-many.^seaT«-&#13;
a. pjornTnent citizen of Sebewa. Ionia county,&#13;
•were interred in Portland a few days ag«x He&#13;
was buried under the auspices of the 1. O. O.&#13;
F. of Ionia county. Mr. Friend was ^'"prominent&#13;
recruiting officer during the war, and has&#13;
ever since been identified with the progressive&#13;
interests of the county. ,^.&#13;
The Japanese govrfhtanWb wants, to secure&#13;
the Grand Kapids eduo|J1onal exhibit at the&#13;
New Orleans oxpojmon, to take home. It&#13;
consists of various colored shoe pegs laid vertically,&#13;
horizontally and in almost ejery direction&#13;
possible to describe, by pupils under six&#13;
years of age. This Is to teach, the little ones&#13;
the different colors and lines.&#13;
The body of an unknown man, well dressed,&#13;
of large build, aged about 50 years, was found&#13;
on the farm of Wm. Colby, one and a half&#13;
tniles north of Middleville, hanging from a tree&#13;
with a revolver tied In his band, one bullet&#13;
hole in his head and one in the region of tha&#13;
heart. Coroner Evans held an Inquest and the&#13;
jury rendered a verdict of death by suicide. /&#13;
ITbe weather is unusally cold in the vicinity&#13;
of Houghton, frosts prevailing almost nightly.&#13;
Fanners are still at work planting. Until last&#13;
year no regular attempt was made/to raise&#13;
wheat In the upper peninsula, and the success&#13;
JUNE S.&#13;
SENATE.—The Scbste met this afternoon and&#13;
considered a large number of bills in committee&#13;
of the whole. Of the two principal ones agreed&#13;
upon one defines the punishment for libel and&#13;
limits the penalty to a win not exceeding ¢5,-&#13;
000; the other provides for lighting the capital&#13;
with the incandescent electric light.&#13;
JUNE 9. /&#13;
SENATE—The following bills passed unless&#13;
otherwise noted: For the organization and&#13;
equipment of military companies at Menominee,&#13;
Muskegon, De'troit,/ Jackson, Grand&#13;
Rapids and Houghton ^amending act 23, of&#13;
1873, relative to the adulteration of milk—lost,&#13;
yeas 13, nays 13; amending section 9W9, Howell,&#13;
relative to codnty jails; t.&gt; provide for the&#13;
placing of a statue of Gen. Lewis Cass in the&#13;
Representative gallery of illustrious&#13;
Americans at the National Capitol; to&#13;
regulate the holding of caucusses, passed;&#13;
to regulate the counting of votes at erections&#13;
—lost, yeas 13, nays 14. Reconsidered and laid&#13;
on table; to provide for the sale of certain state&#13;
tax lands, passed; to dispose of all state swamp&#13;
lands remaining unsold January 1, 1886. lost;&#13;
for the compensation of county" clerks in cer»&#13;
tain cases; to compel foreign corporations organized&#13;
to mine or smelt ores ana minerals to&#13;
report to the Auditor-General; for the appointment&#13;
of a fish warden, laid on the table; making&#13;
an appropriation for the Fish Commisioner,&#13;
passed; to revise laws for the incorporation of&#13;
manufacturing companies; for electric incandescent&#13;
lights for the Capitol. The Governor&#13;
noted his approval of the act tojestablish a&#13;
house of correction in the Upper Peninsula&#13;
The Senate in executive session confirmed the&#13;
following nominations of the Governor: Members&#13;
of the Board of Contest of the Mining&#13;
School; James N. Wright, Calumet, and&#13;
Thomas L. Chadbourne, Houghton, tor six&#13;
years; Charles H. Cady, Iron'Mountain, and&#13;
Alfred Kidder, Marquette, for four years; John&#13;
Senter, Eagle River, and John H. Forster of&#13;
Ingham County, for two years. For Commissk&gt;&#13;
ners to secure a site and erect the buildings&#13;
for a State House of Correction and branch of&#13;
the State Prison in the Upper Peninsula; Pettr&#13;
A. Van Burger, Menominee; Eli P. Roys, Delta;&#13;
James M. Wilkinson, Marquette; Eli'B. Chamberlain,&#13;
Mackinac; Charles Hebard, Baraga,&#13;
and John Duncan, Houghton.&#13;
HOUSE—The governor communicated his-ap*-&#13;
proval of the following acts: amending section&#13;
2058, Howell, relative to the protection of logs&#13;
and timbers; to validate contracts made by&#13;
mutual fire insurance companies; making an appropriation&#13;
, for frescoing aud decorating the&#13;
walls of the state capitol: adding one new section&#13;
to chapter 311, Howell, allowing St. Mary's&#13;
Falls ship canal board to administer oaths to&#13;
witnesses; issuing patent to Wm. S.&#13;
Charles; amending section 58#3, Howell,&#13;
relative to appointment of administration of&#13;
wills; incorporating labor and trade societies;&#13;
amending section 5%S, Howell,&#13;
relative to the competency of witnesses;&#13;
denning school districts 1 and 4 in Rlch,Lapeer&#13;
Co,; making ten hours a le&amp;ral day's work;&#13;
authorising the |use of condemned arms the&#13;
Sons- of Veterans; legalizing a mortgage issued&#13;
by the Midland county Agricultural Society;&#13;
prevent the printing, manufacture and sale or&#13;
Immoral articles. The following were passed;&#13;
Amending sections 874, 81*3 and 901, Howell,&#13;
relative to the reorganization of state troops;&#13;
authorizing the state prison inspectors to&#13;
purchase land adjoining the nrison;&#13;
amending the Detroit city charter; proViding&#13;
for sui4a against foreign co-operation&#13;
insurance companies doing business in&#13;
this state; tii prevent officers—f-roni eon*-&#13;
relative to Roger*&#13;
to reapportion the&#13;
Adjourned,&#13;
governor communj-&#13;
How. relative to exclusion of witnesses &gt;&#13;
prohibiting use of word "warranty deed" on&#13;
any deed except warranty deeds; amending&#13;
sec. 80S5 How. relative to garnishee; amending&#13;
act 187 of 1849 relative to garnishees. The&#13;
following bills passed unless otherwise noted:&#13;
authorizing Bancroft to levy taxes for public&#13;
improvements; defining liability of fire and&#13;
marine insurance lost; amending general railway&#13;
laws—paased; amending of charter of&#13;
Port Huron^—amending military laws. The&#13;
Senate in committee of the whole agreed to the&#13;
drainage bill. The Senate passed the Honae bill&#13;
to amend the general highway law; to refund&#13;
money paid the state trespass agent by John&#13;
MacFieof Muskegon county; to facilitate the&#13;
^&#13;
vlng of bonds required by law; to proridi&#13;
r flfilng or fencing pit-holes or shafts on un&#13;
occupied: lands; amendment in statutes rela&#13;
tive to plank roads; amendment to genera!&#13;
highway laws. The bill for a board of medical&#13;
examiners was lost, yeas 7, nays 13, Ad&#13;
journed.&#13;
HOUSB — The select committee on&#13;
apportionment reported favorably the&#13;
Senate and House apportionment bills. Bills&#13;
paased: Authorizing Bancroft, Shiawassee&#13;
county, to borrow money; establishing a lien&#13;
for labor upon logs, timber, etc.; relative te&#13;
jurors in courts of record in Wayne county;&#13;
amending act 408 of 1871,&#13;
township school district;&#13;
state senatorial districts.&#13;
Jij&gt;'E 13—SENATE—The&#13;
cated his approval of the Senate apportionment&#13;
bill. Bills passed: Apportioning anew th«&#13;
representative districts; " making a slngU&#13;
school district of the city of Marquette.&#13;
Adjourned.&#13;
HOV.;K — A concurrent resolution for&#13;
the assembling of the two h.pnsea&#13;
In joint ' convention to receive&#13;
the Hon. Thomas W. Palmer, United State*&#13;
senator, was adopted. The governor noted his&#13;
approval of the act to authorize Bancroft to&#13;
raise money for pubjic improvements. The&#13;
following "bills passed unless otherwise&#13;
noted: reducing the: test on oil to 111&#13;
degrees; lost, reconsidered and laid on the&#13;
table; to reappoint the representative districts&#13;
of the state, passed; to regulate the manner in&#13;
which insurance companies not organized in&#13;
this state, shall do business, otherwise known&#13;
as the "Fletcher bill" to prevent combinations&#13;
among local boards of underwriters, lost, reconsiderd&#13;
and laid on the&#13;
table. After meeting In joint&#13;
convention and listening to an address by Senator&#13;
Palmer, a recess was taken until 7:30 p.&#13;
m. when the following passed: Providing for&#13;
the purchase of additional land for the Kalamazoo&#13;
insane asylum; amending the act organ&#13;
izing a union school in the district of Bay City,&#13;
adjourned. ^ = = = ^&#13;
JUNE 18—SENATE—The governor noted hi?&#13;
approval of the net* placing $b*91 88 to the&#13;
credit of Mauitou county to settle a claim ol&#13;
Muskegon county under act 197 of 1883; tc&#13;
prohibit the manufacture, importation and sale&#13;
of butterlne and oleomargarine; for the punishment&#13;
of public officers who appropriate public&#13;
funds to their own use. The iol owing bills&#13;
passed: to Incorporate thi* Bay City schools;&#13;
lor the purchase of grass 'lands for th&lt;&#13;
Michigan Alysuin for the Insane;&#13;
establishing a board of building inspectors in&#13;
Detroit. The bill amending section 49^9,&#13;
Howell., relative to the compensation of members&#13;
of the state board of agriculture was laid&#13;
orf the table. The following were also passed:&#13;
to regnlate the counting of votes at elections;&#13;
amending section 5'J39, How., relative&#13;
to1 primary school interest fund.&#13;
to be paid semi-annually; legalizing a&#13;
ditch' tax in Windsor, Eaton county;&#13;
amending act for inspection of illumlnatinii&#13;
oils, lost; reconsidered and laid on the table.&#13;
The House concurrent resolution for the immediate&#13;
preparation aud publication ip&#13;
-phamphlet form of the general laws passed at&#13;
this session; also for payment of the secretary&#13;
and clerk, for indexing journals were both&#13;
adopted. Adjourned until Monday, 10 a. m.&#13;
HOUSE—The corresponding clerk was instructed&#13;
to draw pay certificates for member*&#13;
up to and including the i-Ot'h instant,&#13;
The corresponding and journal clerks wen&#13;
granted extra compensation at the rate of $J&#13;
per day for the session. Resolutions of thanks&#13;
to James B. Wilson and Gil R. Osmun private&#13;
counselor andl secretary respecively to- the&#13;
governor, were1 adopted" The governor communicated&#13;
his approval of the following' acts:&#13;
Amending section 874, Howell, relative to the&#13;
reorganization «rf the state troops; providina&#13;
for fencing or filling in holes and shafts;&#13;
amending the lubor bureau act Adjourned&#13;
until 3 p. m. Mbnday.&#13;
Toraktr for OovaraVr-&#13;
The Ohio Republican convention held tn&#13;
Springfield on the 11th inst. for the nt»:mina«o»&#13;
of a elate ticket was most enthusiast^ * « J&#13;
party strength was well represented, ana » u i j&#13;
6.000 people were packed in the wigwam Wh.««&#13;
the convention was held. k After the usual routine of convention worts,&#13;
and the adoption o f r .platform of principles*&#13;
the couveution proceeded at once to the nomination&#13;
of candidates for governor.&#13;
Judge Joseph B. Foraker of Cincinnati, ws*&#13;
nominated ou the first ballot after the adoptioo&#13;
of the platform by a vote of 469¼ and thm&#13;
nomination was made unanimous.&#13;
The nominations of Gen. Robt. P Kennedy,&#13;
for lieutenant-governor, Judge Geo. W. Mo-&#13;
Ilvaino for supreme judge, and John (* Brown&#13;
of Jefferson, for treasurer, were i:y acclamation.&#13;
J. A. Kohler of Summit, was nominated&#13;
for attorney-general, Wells ft. Jones of Pike&gt;&#13;
for board of public works.&#13;
The nominations are well received by Republicans&#13;
throughout the etate with every indication&#13;
of satisfaction, and a feeling that the influence&#13;
of this state election uj&gt;on the general&#13;
election of 1688 wili be most salutary.&#13;
She Aocepts.&#13;
I n the h &gt;u*e of lord* the otber af tcruooli&#13;
Lord Granville announced that Mr. Gladstone&#13;
had tendered to the queen the resignation of&#13;
himself and his entire cabinet. Lord Granville&#13;
also stated that the queen had accepted the&#13;
resignations and had summoned to her presence&#13;
the marquis of Salisbury, who is now at&#13;
Balmoral in conference with her maiesty.&#13;
Therefore, Lord Granville said he hoped the&#13;
House would abandon all ordinary business.&#13;
Mow that it has become apparent that tho&#13;
Tories will assume the reius of government,&#13;
the Parnellite members of parliament have begun&#13;
conferring with leading Conservatives with&#13;
regard t» the government of Ireland. Purnell&#13;
and his followers strongly urge the Tories to&#13;
adopt the home rule measure lor Ireland, stating&#13;
that the advocacy of such a st«p by the&#13;
Conservatives would" completely dish the Liberals.&#13;
CONDENSED NEWS.&#13;
New Orleans had nn $100,000 blaze tho other&#13;
day.&#13;
A tunnel on the Cincinnati Southern road&#13;
caved in the other day, instantly killing six&#13;
persons.&#13;
The entire family of Win. King of Clifton,&#13;
Staten Island were* poisoned by eating canned&#13;
corn beef.&#13;
The Canadian Pacific railway has inaugurated&#13;
war on •Wiunipog through freights against the&#13;
-i&#13;
»om.njtcd uud confirmed a» a moinber ef the was so encouraging that&#13;
£' &lt; &gt;" •&#13;
X&#13;
• : * * ' . '&#13;
•.S&#13;
cealing goods taken on executions:&#13;
amending sec. 3374, Howell, relative to partnership,&#13;
associations; amending sec. 80S5,Howell,&#13;
relative to garnishees: amending sfrt.tons&#13;
53S3 and 53S3, Howell, relative to judgments&#13;
in justices courts; amending section 9468,&#13;
Howell relative to the exclusion of spectators&#13;
at trials; prohibiting the its*' of the words&#13;
"warranty deeds" in any other than warranty&#13;
deeds-; amending section 1)817, Howell, relative&#13;
to the reform school; amending act 137, of&#13;
1819; relative to proceedings against garnishees;&#13;
amending act 141, of 1883, relative to&#13;
compulsory education.&#13;
JUNE 10.&#13;
SENATE—The governor communicated his&#13;
approval of the following acts: Organizing&#13;
Ironwood township, Ontonagon; providing for&#13;
heating the asylum for insane criminals;&#13;
amending section 5774, Howell, relative to&#13;
determination of ' estates by will&#13;
or sufferance; amending section 8020;&#13;
Howell, relative to at'achment; authorizing&#13;
.guardians of insane or incompetent persons to&#13;
carry out- the contracts of th.'ir wards; amending&#13;
sec. 6109, Howell, relative to adjournments&#13;
of real1 estate sales on execution; providing for&#13;
the assessment of prop rtv and the levy and&#13;
eollecti&amp;n of taxes. Tnc f enatorlal apportionment&#13;
Bill was pa ssed. Adjourned.&#13;
HOUSE—The governor noted his approval of&#13;
the acts for the relief of Francis Marsac; for&#13;
the incorporation of associations to raise&#13;
blooded stock; authorizing Kent countv&#13;
agricultural society to sell property; to prevent&#13;
accidents by "shafting and machinery at&#13;
fairgrounds; amending See. 5v!2; How., rela*&#13;
tive tofustices; authorizing Bay county Xo&#13;
buill a bridge; establishing a p &gt;Hce&#13;
court in Detroit; amending section 1S50 How,.,&#13;
relative to roads; amending section 771tJ,How.,&#13;
relative to judgments and executions;/amending.&#13;
Grand Rapids- schovi atft; amending section&#13;
6C43, How., relative to admi-nlstratoss;&#13;
defining methods of securing do/rs and fire&#13;
escapes at girl's industrial home&lt; for payment&#13;
of state bounties, supposed to/have been paid&#13;
upon forged or fraudulentvr^ichers; amending&#13;
section 4358, How., relative to insurance;&#13;
amending section 6391, How., relative to maintenance&#13;
of wives; /• authorizing establishment&#13;
of a / soldiers' " home&#13;
Tlie following bills/passed unless otherwise&#13;
noted: To correcV'ei'rors in statements of inspectors&#13;
of election; Incorporating schools of&#13;
Marquette; amending action 746, Howell,&#13;
relative \xy township officers, lost;&#13;
amending Sees. 1S13-18 How., relative to treatment&#13;
at universltiy hospital; amending Sec.&#13;
5006, How. relative to holding school on Saturday&#13;
in communities where Seventh Day Adventlsts&#13;
live lost, reconsidered and tabled; to&#13;
manufacture, sale or importation of&#13;
oleomargarine, passed.&#13;
JUNE 11.&#13;
SENATE—The governor noted his approval of&#13;
the acts to provide for bringing suits against&#13;
co-operative associations, amending Sec. 6947&#13;
How. relative to assignments of judgments}&#13;
amending reform school law; amending See. %&#13;
iha&amp;v4aei-88*-0f-18S8 charter of Detroit;&#13;
making an appropriation for the Girls Indus*&#13;
DETROIT MARKETS.&#13;
The grain market is irregular but generally&#13;
higher, showing considerable strength after an&#13;
e a r l y d e c l i n e , mhd"h &lt;rHnrhiin.il t.y Mm i t u l l d i r&#13;
statement showiajg an increase. Provisions&#13;
arc firmer but notquotably higher. The general&#13;
produce jriarket is ruifet. The receipts of&#13;
strawberries is large anu the market somewhat&#13;
demoralized. Eggs are a little stronger.—and&#13;
generally }^e higher. Butter is unchanged&#13;
and as dull as ewer. Salt lish show a decline&#13;
of about lc per lb., caused chiefly by the&#13;
liberal receipts of fresh Hsh. The "hardware&#13;
market shows some changes, nails having advanced&#13;
5c per k«g, while tin plates havfr declined.&#13;
white.&#13;
red...&#13;
Wheatr—No. ,..$&#13;
Wheat—No.&#13;
Four 5&#13;
Corn&#13;
Oats&#13;
Barlev. 1&#13;
Rye per 1 0 0 . . . . 4&#13;
Corn meal per 100 18&#13;
Clover Seed $ bu 5&#13;
§0 % 1&#13;
00 («0 5&#13;
48 (aj&#13;
:13 (g)&#13;
35 M 1&#13;
00 (d 4&#13;
00 W19&gt;&#13;
00 (¾ a&#13;
75 ' S 1&#13;
00 (ft 3&#13;
75 (ft 1&#13;
16&#13;
00&#13;
00&#13;
35&#13;
49&#13;
88&#13;
50&#13;
50&#13;
00&#13;
35&#13;
80&#13;
50&#13;
00&#13;
17&#13;
13&#13;
13&#13;
15&#13;
Grand Trunk.&#13;
The internal revenue commissioner says&#13;
collecters must slgu their names instead of&#13;
rising band stamps hereafter.&#13;
Trouble la. threatened by the employes of&#13;
the Canadian Pacific railway .because they do&#13;
not receive their ]xiy promptly.&#13;
It is estimated that between 30,030 and 40,000&#13;
appointments and removals have bceu made&#13;
since Cleveland took the chair.&#13;
News from Tucson, Arizona, is to the effect&#13;
that a supply camp had bec n surprised by the&#13;
Apaebes and five uleu murdered.&#13;
A thorough examination of the pension lists&#13;
of the country is lobe made, for the purpose&#13;
of weeding out those illegally dvawiug |&gt;cnsions.&#13;
The reinterment of the remains of the later&#13;
Alex. H. Stephens took place at Crawforrtvltte.&#13;
Ga., on the lOtli. Robert P: Toombs delivered&#13;
an address-&#13;
An order has been issued hy the Secretary of&#13;
the treasury whereby the coinage of standard&#13;
silver dollars'at Sai/Frun Cisco and Carson City&#13;
are to be discontinued.&#13;
A Rhode Island man who wants an office as&#13;
a medical examiner for the pension bureau has&#13;
sent to the authorities at Washington diagrams&#13;
of various surgical operations performed 'by&#13;
him as evidence of his fitness.&#13;
Joseph Retison a saloon-keeper of Newport,&#13;
R, I., suffering from the delirium tremens sat&#13;
on a 35^pound keg of powder and exploded&#13;
it with suicidal intent. Some half doaeu people&#13;
were injured by the explosion.&#13;
Gen. Sparks, the land commissioner has issued&#13;
an order forfeiting the bulk of the fraudulent&#13;
Maxwell laud grant, covering :i tract on&#13;
the southern part of Colorado and New Mexico.&#13;
This will throw open to the public entry over&#13;
1,500,000 acres.&#13;
Gen. Middletom who has l&gt;cen pursuinc Big&#13;
Bear, has found the country impassable for&#13;
horses and is now on the return to Fori, Pitt.&#13;
Supplies for the north have been countermanded.&#13;
The prohM^1'^0" "'•"•u"'1 """1V"",'&gt;|1 ^-111&#13;
leave for home at once.&#13;
of farmers trial Home of Adrian; amending Sec M6S,&#13;
Timothy Seed 1&#13;
Apples perbbl. 3&#13;
Apples per bu:.&#13;
Butter^ l b . . . . :&#13;
Eggs&#13;
| Potatoes..'&#13;
I Turnips.....&#13;
Onions ^ b u 1&#13;
Honey.&#13;
Beans,! picked...&#13;
Beans,, unpicked&#13;
Hay .'....&#13;
Straw.... 6&#13;
Pork,dr«8sed # 100 5&#13;
Pork, mess new 11&#13;
Pork, family 13&#13;
Hams&#13;
Shoulders&#13;
Lard....&#13;
Dried Beef .', ..&#13;
Tallow&#13;
J W i r a X x T T r r r - . T - r r r f r n - . - . - . - . - M - r "&#13;
Beef extra mess 10&#13;
Wood, Beech and Maple 5&#13;
Wood Maple 6&#13;
Wood Hickort 6&#13;
LIVE STOCK.&#13;
CATTI-E—Shipping steers, $4 90@5 60;&#13;
stockers and feeders, $3 60 w)5 00; cows, bulls&#13;
and mixed, $2 35(a4 50; through Texas cattle,&#13;
3D carloads, makot 10(u)15c liighT, at *3 00&#13;
@4 75; western ranges, corn fed, $5$5 75.&#13;
HOGS—Rough and mixed, $3 95(^4 13; packing&#13;
and shipping, $4 15(u)4 30; light weights,&#13;
$3 90@4 40; skips, l$dS 75.&#13;
SHEEP—Slow but steady; natives, $2 75(¾&#13;
4 50; western, $2 75@4 00; Texans, $3 50(3&#13;
5 50; lambs per head, $2 25@3 25.&#13;
The Princess of Wales is endeavoring to&#13;
bring about a meeting of tha Prince of Wales&#13;
and the Czar of Russia at Copenhagen. It is&#13;
the hope of the Princess that a permanent&#13;
peace may be secured through the meeting.&#13;
Qen. Shoridan is in Washington with one of&#13;
his legs in a plaster cast, having fractured the&#13;
small bone of the limb in his runaway accident&#13;
at Los Angeles, Cal. It appears that the real&#13;
condition of the limb was not ascertained until&#13;
his arrival In Washington where an examination&#13;
showed the bone fractured&#13;
Telepuwu.c iJi'oftt8.&#13;
One of t h e r e a s o n s a d v a n c e d ' for t h e&#13;
f a i l u r e t o r Q d u c e - t e l e p h o u e toils is t h e&#13;
i m p o s i b i l i t v of m a k i n g a b a r e living,&#13;
i n c o n n e c t i o n with this t h e f o l l o w i n g&#13;
.from t h e U t i c a Herald is full of int&#13;
e r e s t : " T h e A m e r i c a n B.ell telep&#13;
h o n e c o m p a n y r e p o r t s t h a t for t e n&#13;
m o n t h s to J a n u a r y l a s t i t s e a r n i n g s&#13;
w e r e $3,067,554 a g a i n s t $ 2 , 1 ^ , 5 4 9 for&#13;
t h e p r e c e d i n g y e a r . F o r t h e s a m e&#13;
p e r i o d its e x p e n s e s w e r e $687,378&#13;
a g a i n s t ,$820,168. T h e c o m p a n y d e -&#13;
clared d i v i d e n d s for t e n months, in&#13;
1884 of $1,440,815 a g a i n s t $1,051,479&#13;
for t h e p r e c e d i n g y e a r . I n tlie f o r m e r&#13;
y e a r t h e d i v i d e n d s c a m e very n e a r to&#13;
50 p e r c e n t of t h e total e a r i i i n i r s j i n U i e&#13;
l a s t t e n m o n t h s of 1884 the- d i v i d e n d s&#13;
w e r e n e a r l y t h r e e - f o u r t h s of the e a r n -&#13;
ings. F o r t h e c a p i t a l a c t u a l l y p a i d in&#13;
t h e d i v i d e n d s a r e m o n s t r o u s . T h e&#13;
u s e r s of t h e t e l e p h o n e s c a n r e c k o n&#13;
t h a t 70 p e r c e n t of a l l t h e m p n e y s&#13;
which t h e y p a y to t h e p a r e n t c o m p a n y&#13;
a r e for d i v i d e n d s on inflated Jitock,&#13;
' w i t h o u t a n y j u s t c o n s i d e r a t i o n . "&#13;
i ^ i ^ -&#13;
The Iiuby and the Diamond.&#13;
It is perhaps not generally known&#13;
that a large ruby is of more value than&#13;
a large diamond. Mr. Streetor. who&#13;
wrote a book about jewels, states that .&#13;
"the ruby ranks for price and beautyr&#13;
aBbve aTI otlier stones. When a per-,&#13;
feet ruby of live carats is brought into1&#13;
the market a sum will bu ottered for i t :&#13;
ten times the price giveu for a di*a-&#13;
- mond of the same weight; but should&#13;
it reach the weight ot' ten carats it is&#13;
almost invaluable."' With' respect to&#13;
the romance of precious stoues the&#13;
. author just quoted tolls acurious story .&#13;
about sapphires. A native of India&#13;
loaded lOOgoats with these gems, and&#13;
reachod Simla after a ton days' jour- s&#13;
ney. Arriving at Simla he tried to&#13;
dispose of them, but the value not being&#13;
recognized he could not even obtain&#13;
a rupee a tolla for them, which&#13;
be would gladly have taken, being in&#13;
a state of jeemi-starvation. Ho then&#13;
proceeded to Delhi, where the jewelers,&#13;
knowing them to be sapphires*&#13;
g a t e him their full value.—New York&#13;
livening Pott.&#13;
8'ng ng contests between birds are&#13;
often field in Normandy, and the dealers&#13;
not op money on their faToritee.&#13;
i&#13;
i&#13;
* • ^ • • • • • • ^ . • ; - . - ^ - &gt;.s-.&#13;
• &gt; ~ , «•»••• n ^ . j * * : ^ ' " • * ! ••• "•j4**^i &lt;**$$**)•«*&#13;
« •&#13;
*&#13;
BACK AGAIN!&#13;
late ehn. Slows lingered, the eptttfe was late,&#13;
It teemed a weariful while to wait&#13;
For warmth, ami fragrance, and nong, and&#13;
flowera,&#13;
And balmy «JT» and dellcloCs showers.&#13;
Bat we bided our time, a«d with patient eyos&#13;
We watched the alow relenting aides,&#13;
Till at la*t one April morning we woke&#13;
To find we were free of the winter's yoke,&#13;
And a rash of wings through the roahing twin&#13;
Told UB the birds were back again.&#13;
A Joyous tumult we heard aloft-&#13;
Clear, rippling moaic and flutterings soft.&#13;
Se-sfcbt of heart and so light of wing,&#13;
K Ajlbope of atuHner, delight of spring,&#13;
.tWy ieemed to utter with voice* twt**,&#13;
.Upborne on ttoeir airy pinions fleet&#13;
'Baluty, delicate, lovely tblnga!&#13;
Would that ay thoughts, like you, had itoffs&#13;
To match yeur erace, your charm, your *ckeer,&#13;
Your fine, nelodloue atmosphere 1&#13;
Trectoua and beautiful gifts of GoA,&#13;
Scattered through heaven and earth al)i«ai|&#13;
Who. ungrateful, would do you wrong,&#13;
Check your flight and your golden aongl&#13;
O friendPy spirit* I O sweet, sweet 'birds t&#13;
Would t could put my welcome in woMs&#13;
fcltfor*uch dingers us you to hear,&#13;
trky-bcpn minstrels and poets dear'!&#13;
—47&amp;ia Thazter, in St. ITtchoUuf* AprtL&#13;
&lt;M"^H^MMki^»i«iHaMaaBiBa«Bk&#13;
AH OLD MAIM.&#13;
A lowering morning wlrteh made&#13;
one wish for the sunny Soath or for&#13;
Italy, for any place which would make&#13;
oac feel happier than could this dismal&#13;
morning in Wisconsin. -And then'to&#13;
thank that this tram could not make&#13;
connection with the eastward bound&#13;
tvain! It Is hard enough to stcap at&#13;
anch a miserable little junction at«any&#13;
time, but to spend three hours %ere&#13;
&lt;his dark moraiagnwtat prove the&#13;
•very refinement o€ torture. There are&#13;
3« dozen passengers who must wait&#13;
-and who prepare to make the best of&#13;
'their stay here, One • couple, evi- 1 deutly just u m t H fiaJl tho clouds of&#13;
•I&#13;
a rosy color, asnithey*walk out of the&#13;
smoky old depot $o make a fcoar of the&#13;
little town, talking-eagerly the while.&#13;
Two-young feltaW8 wander "uneasily&#13;
about, reading, »11 the old tattered posters,&#13;
glowiag inducements to go West,&#13;
and ancient tine tables, which invariably&#13;
decorate the etained walls of a&#13;
^country depot. These young fellows&#13;
'fii)ally utter -exclamations *of impavttenoe&#13;
at tho dreary anonotory, and go&#13;
across the street to she hotel, hoping&#13;
to find something there move congenial&#13;
to them. Two ladies at once take&#13;
their departure for the hotel, and&#13;
other people stroll er.t abort the depot,&#13;
and there are left-two persons, a man&#13;
and woman, who, after a:little time,&#13;
settle themselves teireadiug to pass&#13;
"away the weary moments. He reads&#13;
his paper, she her book, and occasionally,&#13;
woman like, she-casts a look&#13;
at her silent companion, wondering&#13;
what loved ones are awaiting his arrival&#13;
and whether he is impatient to&#13;
greet tlyeoa, or if he-feel a man's&#13;
stoicism ia regard to lit; wondering,&#13;
too, how it is that eaoh woman thinks&#13;
the masculine lives connected with hers&#13;
so full of manhy graces and beauty,&#13;
and who could tind manly beauty&#13;
in those rugged (features? Then she&#13;
turned her gentle eyes toward the&#13;
window and looked out'St the dreary&#13;
landscape, looked with eyes which&#13;
saw not outward'objects, but were introspective&#13;
solely. Ar. old rnairiT&#13;
com mop ly .•anfywrtnt'to be the type of&#13;
I&#13;
/&#13;
t \ i&#13;
-&#13;
discontent and «nre«t}&lt;but here, evl&#13;
"Ttently, the type failed,, for this face&#13;
expressed the utwoostof content. Life&#13;
had been tilled, with much of sorrow&#13;
for her, all hex bright plans had failed&#13;
of fruition; one aiHer another she had&#13;
bidden good-by to bbem and had&#13;
turned bravely again ito t face the coming&#13;
of a new future, a future to be&#13;
peopled again tey k&amp;c bright fancies —&#13;
the old fancies all dead and gone from&#13;
her except us they lingered in memory.&#13;
An old maid she i?, so far as&#13;
years go, but no home i« happier than&#13;
her little ideal home. .She has filled'&#13;
its rooms with bright little faces eagerly&#13;
calling to mother and the'dreamfather&#13;
is strong, earnest, helpful and&#13;
loving. Her dream-home is happier&#13;
far than many a fine iady^s real home,&#13;
although "she has not pictured any&#13;
grandeur about i t 49b, no, she&#13;
dreams that the carpets are faded&#13;
from mu2h sunlight and worn from&#13;
.the—tread of- many little ifeet, that&#13;
quickly: "Ah, but Jt)u have all those&#13;
vanished days and months and years&#13;
to remember, all the loveliness of her&#13;
life to think of now."&#13;
"How did you know her life was&#13;
lovely," he queried, a little sharply.&#13;
She hesitated a moment and then said,&#13;
simply: * "It must have been, or you&#13;
would not miss her from your living&#13;
so much," a tribute to the manly&#13;
worth in the face she saw before her&#13;
which was keenly relished by the&#13;
owner of the face. He sighed and then&#13;
looked for a time out of the smoky&#13;
window, then said: "After all, life is&#13;
a strange muddle," and, receiviag a&#13;
look of 'nnriersrnnding-lii..response to&#13;
this sentiment, he went on:&#13;
"We don't know what is right to do,&#13;
and yet we're punished by fixed laws&#13;
if we don't do the light. That doesn't&#13;
seem just to me."&#13;
•"Oh, but it will come out straight in&#13;
aoxt life," she cried eagerly. .&#13;
"I don't know wbethei it will or&#13;
not," he responded. "I haven't seen&#13;
the next life yet, and I don't know&#13;
what_lt is like—dou't even know if&#13;
there will be a next life. 1 oruy know&#13;
that we are hedged in -aad around in&#13;
this life."&#13;
"But surely th* next life will take&#13;
away all the rough places of this," she&#13;
said"; "it will make us understand -all&#13;
that seems so strange about this and&#13;
—there must be a future life; God&#13;
surely would not pot us into this life&#13;
and let so much go out of it incomplete.&#13;
That seems to me the strongest&#13;
reason for a future, that so many&#13;
die with their life -work only just begun."&#13;
"Is that a T e a s e n o r a hope with&#13;
you?" he astaed. She hesitate* and&#13;
did not answer, mid just then one of&#13;
the restless young men who had been&#13;
a fellow-passenger of theirs came in&#13;
and glanced casually at the twu.&#13;
long time after&#13;
dared to do the&#13;
was lonely, set&#13;
where that life&#13;
lost and lonely&#13;
decided wav the l without her. 5 want that which has&#13;
r - &amp; ~ „. _ . „. a* it she ^^^-gonfumtot rnf :\ie, and I believe^oa&#13;
termined notKo let this straager get f c a n fupP^ ft** want&#13;
T- Y o u « » * l o n e&#13;
n&lt;MM&gt;.uiM *rf**r wftnrWmo- rt5m»ht.« m the world, and I can make&#13;
That efcuftce&gt;n»de her self-conscious,&#13;
and a blush dyed the delicate face and ,&#13;
she turned, in a&#13;
pagesrot~beV%Gok.&#13;
possession -either wandering thoughts&#13;
again. The .young man passed out of&#13;
the station, and the elderly «ene rose&#13;
and walkednrestlessly about the room,&#13;
knitting the Shaggy brows occasionally&#13;
at some tronbled thought. Tho&#13;
three hours&lt;passed, and I o'clock&#13;
came, and a*rrain came. '•Oan't I assist&#13;
youF" he asked gently, reach lag&#13;
out a hard, ;fcrown hand for-soine -of&#13;
the numerens bundles she was carrying.&#13;
She ha-nded some to • him and&#13;
followed his-sturdy footsteps to'the&#13;
train. They wondered a 'little1 why&#13;
their fellowfpasscngers of the morning&#13;
were not in greater baste, but&#13;
forgot themipresenily in the bustle of&#13;
departnre. 'Ho secured a pleasant&#13;
sea^ for hor-^uul then one fen* himself&#13;
at «oaie distance from her. A few&#13;
minutes &lt;&gt;of waiting, of idle watehiiig&#13;
of (toe'dark landscape, so soon'-to bo&#13;
among remembered things, and the&#13;
traas moved slowly out of (town, and&#13;
as it nmvfld away another train&#13;
sbeaaned in. She looked curioHsly at"&#13;
the-second train, but remembered that&#13;
this was a junction and did not obey&#13;
her first nervous impulse, which was&#13;
to go to her whilom protector and ask&#13;
him if he -were_sure they wore on the&#13;
TiyhttTa"th"sShe forgot the train soon,&#13;
and watched his uteru. set fuee, And&#13;
felt sorry for him, and wished he&#13;
might feel as-sure of the future AS did&#13;
she. Soon the conductor came, and&#13;
she watched Jiim as he made Hs way&#13;
there is much planning to *imake both&#13;
«ends meet," but she has imagined unrsellishness&#13;
living in this ideal home,&#13;
jand loving unseltishness can make all&#13;
trials in regard to ways a&lt;nd means&#13;
••e^m very slight* indeed. Her com-&#13;
^ianion in this depot is an elderly person,&#13;
a stout, largo man, with" keen&#13;
eyesatrd a mouth at complete odds&#13;
with tho eye*, not belonging totthem&#13;
apparently. Often eyes' do aot harmo^&#13;
ize4n-c^lor4ngrw4t4^4he-reet&gt;of a&#13;
face, but generally expressions are&#13;
strangly akin. This man had a sensitive&#13;
' mouth, one with a mournful&#13;
droof&gt; to it. Those who looked at him&#13;
caught themselves wondering which&#13;
would conquer—keen, hard eyes, or&#13;
sensitive mouth. He read for some&#13;
time, t»hcn gave a quick look at the ; thoughtful faco near him, and said,:&#13;
abruptly: "Not a tf«ry pleasant ar-1&#13;
rangement, this." .&#13;
A quieik flush passed over the gentle&#13;
face before him—a flush which his&#13;
keen eyes noted instantlv and understood—&#13;
a flush which told of the girlishness&#13;
yet left to this lonely, woman.&#13;
'•Kot'that it matters much to me&#13;
where I am,"'he continued. "Life&#13;
can't give nio anything harder than&#13;
I've had."&#13;
"That is a bad thing to fay," she&#13;
said, in her timid way.&#13;
^ ^ J ^ . ^ ^ ' . ^ o u g h , ! ' he responded,&#13;
jiiyl.tbe corDors of his seasitivo&#13;
month drooped a little more. I&#13;
'ft&#13;
feel afl If I had nothing left to live tor.&#13;
My wife died a year.ago and—" hero&#13;
the voice broke".' Distress ever calls&#13;
some souls oat from their reserve, and&#13;
here was sirca a one, and she said&#13;
in ner imnor conseiousness,jthatTindi&#13;
vidual gocee ,ia quick start at some&#13;
words urterofti by the^ebiiducter, after&#13;
examination »efjHs"ticket. A troubled&#13;
look settled &gt;«pon the resolnte face,&#13;
and he-coa\versed earnestly with the&#13;
coeductor a ;few momenta, then&#13;
glanced at her-aud rose and came to&#13;
her. "I lold you," said he, "that we&#13;
don't kaow wihat is right and then we&#13;
fet punished by. unalterable lawe, and&#13;
ere is a speed^iiiiustration of the fact,&#13;
only that I feel mow that I might:have&#13;
known the right, if I had taken,pains&#13;
to inquire. Wc are on the wrong&#13;
train."&#13;
She looked deeply troubled, boa*aid&#13;
after a moment: «.,_"&#13;
"How can we get back?"&#13;
"It is of no userto go back to tihat&#13;
junction. We might as well go oa to&#13;
Chicago now and go from there.; it&#13;
will really take aot much longer, smd&#13;
as you trusted to imv leading in ithe&#13;
first place, I will, af you will let nae,&#13;
see you safe out of this trouble'."&#13;
"I am used to talking care of myself,"&#13;
she said, but her lips trembled&#13;
a little.&#13;
-iiWnejaa _aro you going?" he aake&lt;L_&#13;
and upon receiving his reply, added:&#13;
"1 am going beyond there, so it will&#13;
be nrv trouble to mu to«eo you safe. I&#13;
will telegraph your dilemma to your&#13;
friends at the next station: we shall&#13;
rearsh Chicago in two hours, and the&#13;
conductor tells me we can immediately&#13;
take another train back, so that&#13;
really tho worst of it will be the extra&#13;
four or live hours in the train."&#13;
Ho remained sitting with her, and&#13;
chatted lightly for a time, till her&#13;
•mind was diverted from the unpleasantness&#13;
of her situation. Gradually&#13;
they wandered to deeper waters, and.&#13;
talked again, - as they had earlier in&#13;
the (day, of the problems of life, and&#13;
into those queries and answers of&#13;
theirs crept, ever and anon, a bit of the&#13;
personal history of each. He learned&#13;
what a desolato life hers had seemed&#13;
to be; he learned, too, what a sweet.&#13;
cheery eourage must underlie her&#13;
whole being, that the desolatoness&#13;
should have boon so ignored, and he&#13;
aahauuKl of h Is own repining&#13;
learned to know a pure soul, and she&#13;
felt a deep pity for the lonely life that&#13;
opened to her viefcr. And as they took&#13;
the other train, which was to take&#13;
them rapidly to their destination, each&#13;
felt a regret that a few hours more&#13;
would part them.&#13;
He sat silent for a&#13;
this, wondering if he&#13;
thing he wished. He&#13;
adrift in the great world by the'death&#13;
of his wife, and he wanted a true,&#13;
womanly heart to sympathize with&#13;
his. Could he do better than to ask&#13;
this lonely woman, who had no kith&#13;
or kin in the world, to share his lot&#13;
with him? Could she do better than&#13;
take him, she who evidently had&#13;
summer-land in her. heart and could&#13;
make a bit of brightness wherever&#13;
she was? Each surely needed the&#13;
other. He asked her if she knew anyone&#13;
in his town, and finding she did&#13;
•know a person residing a few miles&#13;
from him, he took his resolution&#13;
quickly.&#13;
"I have u good farm out there," ho&#13;
said; "one hundred and sixty acre3&#13;
under hoe improvement, house and&#13;
outbuilding all in fine shape. You&#13;
can find out all about me from Mr.&#13;
" A moment he hesitated as he&#13;
saw that she did not realize what&#13;
he meant; then he continued earnestly,&#13;
looking down into the clear eyes&#13;
lifted so fearlessly to his: "I feel as if&#13;
I was looking into the eyes of my wife.&#13;
Am I mistaken?" The last words&#13;
weno breathed rather than uttered,&#13;
and then she understood, aud the&#13;
flame color mounted over the delicate&#13;
features once more, and she said quiet-&#13;
Ir: "Do I look *o much like vour&#13;
wifeP"&#13;
He was baffled, and for a moment&#13;
bnew not what 'to say, then rallied&#13;
and said:&#13;
"Sha riwa ynow into thtt future. I&#13;
•don't know wfcat or&#13;
may be, and II am&#13;
THE DIAMOND'S VALUE.&#13;
It Depend!&#13;
"The&#13;
Than&#13;
your&#13;
life pleasantecvl am sure.&#13;
It was a temptation, such as only&#13;
horaeless ooos can understand; but,&#13;
after a moment, she shook her head,&#13;
and then, reatiing the questioning look&#13;
in those keener ay eyes, she said, while&#13;
the color deepened in her face.&#13;
"I loved «ance, and have loved ever&#13;
since, and k would not be right for&#13;
me to marrjpany one, feeling as I do."&#13;
The door-opened, and the brake man&#13;
-called out the name of the place Where&#13;
she- was te t stop, and the next moments&#13;
wore spent; in gathering together&#13;
her belongings. He helped her&#13;
olf the trait, and grasped her hand&#13;
heartily as &gt;he stood one instant there:&#13;
"I shall *lways remember you and&#13;
your happy way of looking at life, and&#13;
your faith will help me;" and then&#13;
he swung *cn to the slowly mwing&#13;
train, and she walked away in the&#13;
gloaming, a tear or two falling :as she&#13;
thought of the lonely days to «©me.—&#13;
Alura Collins, in I'he CurrtJtL&#13;
Hon Upon the Cuttinr&#13;
Upon the Size,&#13;
first point to be considered&#13;
about a diamond is its lire," said Mr.&#13;
Charles K. Giles^ "by which I mean&#13;
its reflected light, its brilliancy. The&#13;
white and bluish-white diamonds aro&#13;
the mdst expensive,and the steel-white&#13;
are the sharpest. The latter has a&#13;
kind of hard, light-brownish look, just&#13;
like newly broken steel. They are all&#13;
kinds of shades. In fact, they are innumerable,&#13;
since no two stones are&#13;
exactly alike in color. The bluishwhite&#13;
* is the costliest, because the&#13;
rarest, outside of the decidedly brown&#13;
diamonds, which are very rare, very&#13;
hard and very brilliant, and which a«&#13;
good fancier will prefer to any other&#13;
except the bluish-white. Then there&#13;
are the slightly brownish, the slightly&#13;
yellow, the straw color, the greenishyellow,&#13;
the rose color, and the canary&#13;
yellow. Tho greenish-yellow are the&#13;
least desirable, but even a little tinge&#13;
of yellow, not noticeable to the purchaser&#13;
except by comparison with&#13;
others, will bring down the price of a&#13;
stone one-half to one-quarter. You&#13;
see those two sparklers, for instance,"&#13;
and Mr. Giles, exhibited two&#13;
beautifully brilliant stones intended&#13;
for car-drops. "Well, they are only&#13;
worth $500,4&gt;ecause they are a little&#13;
•off,' what we call *by-water* If of a&#13;
tine bluish-white they would be worth&#13;
$2,000. The so-called rose-colored&#13;
stones, which some ignorant people&#13;
suppose to be very valuable, are only&#13;
the result of their being cut flat, such&#13;
stones being generally—the clearings&#13;
from larger atones, the refuse, so to&#13;
speak. Now, as to shape, there are&#13;
different opinions. Some prefer the&#13;
cushion shape and others the round&#13;
shape. The latter is an American inventioav&#13;
and is at present the moat&#13;
&amp;&#13;
The Joys of Camel Hiding.&#13;
A few days ago I had my first ri?&#13;
on a camel,"tiud-I thought it would be&#13;
my last, it was to go tojwnr camp&#13;
that I got crossed-Tggged np«ni an&#13;
Arab saadile, insjiorffely fastened by&#13;
popeiar shape. The cushion shape is&#13;
of English taste. The old Dutch&#13;
stones, cut in Amsterdam, are getting&#13;
out of dale, in this country at lea st.&#13;
Yoa see, 'there in Amsterdam the&#13;
dealers bay the rough diamonds by the&#13;
bagfnll, just as they come from the&#13;
mines, and they have a system of exchanging&#13;
cut stones for "rough stones,&#13;
600 carets of rough for 300 carats of&#13;
•cut ones, for instance, so that it is to&#13;
their interest to lose as little of the&#13;
«tone'« weight as nossible in the/ cutting"&#13;
process. Here things are/quite&#13;
different. We are just now recutting&#13;
a good many of these old Dutch stones.&#13;
Here is one,"you see," and the expert&#13;
unwrapped, a very fine stone, "which&#13;
weighed 9 1-64 carats when it went&#13;
up*stairs'to our cutters, and which now&#13;
weighs but 7^ carats. /Yet its value&#13;
has been increased by/this procedure,&#13;
although its* size diminished, so that it&#13;
is .now worth $2,50(), while before that&#13;
it was -worth ..bul/$2,000. There is a&#13;
great deal in the cutting of a stone^&#13;
l'he old .English single-cut, where,orfly&#13;
one side had facets, while thfTlower&#13;
one was left in straightlines^ is out of&#13;
demandnow. A stone is cut in proportion&#13;
to/its shape and size, there be-&#13;
;iog valu;*l&gt;krstones of all numbers of&#13;
.faeets&lt;/.You see,.there is a grain to a&#13;
mohd, just as much as there is to a&#13;
-slab of wood. An expert diamondcuttcr&#13;
will seo that grain and cut tho&#13;
strings upontire' back of a great, anmbering^&#13;
ktinip-backed brute. 1 «e&#13;
sooner attempted to take my place on&#13;
toward her. \When he reached herLthe saddle itan the camel, which was&#13;
protoetor, :fts&gt;ehe already called ^Jwnl" lying prone, into which position he&#13;
own&#13;
over a lot which had so much of&#13;
brightness in it,&#13;
When tho train drew into tho great&#13;
depot at Chicago he felt'that he had&#13;
had Deen farced, began grunting like&#13;
an old village pump violently worked.&#13;
At the suae time he turned his prehensile&#13;
lips aside, grinning like a &lt;WU&#13;
dog, and showed a grinning row of&#13;
teeth, whteh»he sought to close upon&#13;
me. I got aboard without accident,&#13;
and had »&lt;at long to wait for a rise.&#13;
, The first movement, as he lifted his&#13;
forelegs, nearly sent me over backward;&#13;
the aeoct, as he straightened&#13;
his hind legs, -»tiU more nearly tipped&#13;
me over his head- 1 had been warned&#13;
to hold tight, but it was only the clutch&#13;
of desperation.that savea me. After&#13;
several iun^ee and plunges, the brute&#13;
got fairly on his legs. The reins consisted&#13;
of a rope round his neck for&#13;
steering, and a string fastened to a&#13;
ring thrust in his nostrils, to pull up&#13;
his head, and stop him when going too&#13;
fast. My camel began to move forward,&#13;
and thereupon I oscillated and&#13;
see-sawed as if seized with sea-sickness&#13;
or cramp ic the stomach. Involuntary&#13;
as the .moment was, an hour of&#13;
it would, I am sure, have made as abject&#13;
a victim of me as the worst sufferer&#13;
on the channel passage.&#13;
A heartless friend was in front-of&#13;
me on another camel, which he set&#13;
itrotting. Instantly I became as helploss&#13;
as a child, for the camel disregarded&#13;
.the strain on his nostrils, and my&#13;
feiwent ejaculation*. My profane,&#13;
Arabic vocabulary was too limited to&#13;
hiuve the slightest effect I swayed to&#13;
and (fro, was bumped up .and down,&#13;
until £ was almost shaken to pieces.&#13;
It would have been a positive relief&#13;
could C have found myself at rest on&#13;
the ground, but the motion was so incessant&#13;
I had not time to make up my&#13;
mind what course to adopt. It ended&#13;
as even the experience of the worst&#13;
kind must do, and 1 found myself still&#13;
on the camel's back. Not so my humorous&#13;
frie*d, who, to my great comfort&#13;
performed a double somersault&#13;
and did not succeed in landing quite&#13;
on his feet, I was told that I wouUl&#13;
become accustomed to camel-riding,&#13;
and might even get to like it^ But&#13;
my faith is not great enough/for that.&#13;
—Dongola Letter in the J^hdcn Telegraph.&#13;
: '&#13;
diamond accordingly. The shape of&#13;
the stone must be made so that the&#13;
•angles throw the greatest amount of&#13;
'lignt toward the gazer. Some stonesmarket&#13;
price is governed more by its&#13;
relative icarity than by anything else.&#13;
If, for instance, some prolific mines&#13;
Were discovered now yielding lots of&#13;
bluish-white diamonds they wouid decline&#13;
in price, and those off cjalor, the&#13;
yellowish and brownish ones, would&#13;
rise. Only 10 per cent of the diamonds&#13;
found are worthy to be set in&#13;
jewelry, you know. The rest are refuse&#13;
stones, which are bought up b]&#13;
sharp dealers, who palm them off&#13;
terward on an unsuspecting public as&#13;
great bargains. Lots of men are taken&#13;
in in that way. People think that&#13;
they have struck" a good thing and&#13;
will keep quiet about where they&#13;
bought it and how much they paid for&#13;
it. If they went to an honest expert&#13;
he would point out to them the flaws&#13;
in the stones they purchased so cheap,&#13;
and show them* that they had been&#13;
swindled. Diamonds have always a&#13;
market price, and if they are good,&#13;
marketable stones no dealer will sell&#13;
them below the market figure."—Chicago&#13;
News.&#13;
A Nation of Egg Eaters.&#13;
••There are at least fifty million eggs&#13;
consumed daily in the United States,"&#13;
said a wholesale dealer near Washington&#13;
Market to a reporter. "That is&#13;
over four million dozen, and at an&#13;
average price will amount to at least&#13;
¢80,000. Think of the outlav and&#13;
business activity required to handle&#13;
this enormous quantity. The American&#13;
people are egg eaters. As a, general&#13;
thing the supply is equal to the&#13;
demand, but about three years ago,&#13;
late after January, we ran ashore on&#13;
domestic eggs. "What was the result?&#13;
Europe began to ship us pickled eggs&#13;
bv the millions. Shiploads came over.&#13;
Prices went down, and the European*&#13;
pickled eggs at fourteen cents per&#13;
dozen became immensely popular.&#13;
Thiff nlm^-^r"*"'"* nn* home e g g&#13;
market. During the months of April&#13;
and May the eggs are pickled by&#13;
means of a solution of lime water.&#13;
They are kept until November andt&#13;
December, and then come in to lower&#13;
the market. Fresh eggs, though, are&#13;
worth thirty cents a dozen."&#13;
"Where do the eggs in the United&#13;
States principally come from?"&#13;
"From Jersey^ Delaware, Virginia,&#13;
North and South Carolina and Maryland.&#13;
The Western States of course&#13;
furnish large quantities, but not so&#13;
much as the States mentioned. Niueteen&#13;
million two hundred thousand&#13;
eggs were sbipped from Europe to thi&amp;&#13;
country since the 1st of April to September.&#13;
They come from Belgi&#13;
Copenhagen, Hamburg and tbje-great&#13;
est egg market in the worldTAntwerp.&#13;
But all these EuropeAn eggs are pickled,&#13;
and althougii not half so good&#13;
as the fresh^yet they have tho effect&#13;
of loyjWfrmg prices. _ All of tho peasy&#13;
in Germany, Belgium and Holland&#13;
raise large quantities of fowl.&#13;
But in the United States a few farmers&#13;
only pay attention to the indusr&#13;
try."&#13;
"What is the reason that the farmers&#13;
in the United States do not raisemore&#13;
fowl?"&#13;
"Simple enough. They have been&lt;&#13;
in the habit of making largo profits&#13;
from stock and grain and other prod&#13;
have their angles cut so that the rays&#13;
of light* con verge before they reach the&#13;
eye. That is a point which even a&#13;
great many experts overlook in purchasing.&#13;
They will hold the stone' six&#13;
inches from their eyes, instead of looking&#13;
at it from a distance. And yet the&#13;
latter is the proper way, for diamonds&#13;
arc intended tc show "brilliancy from&#13;
some distance."&#13;
"Where are the largest diamonds&#13;
iound just now?"&#13;
"&lt;in Southern Africa. The mines&#13;
there are, however, pretty old, too.&#13;
and are getting fairly exhausted. I&#13;
think that among our undeveloped resources&#13;
in the United States diamonds&#13;
will loom up largely before long. The&#13;
other day I bought "a 17-karat atone of&#13;
a man who had bought it for $1, taking&#13;
it te be a topaz. It was found near&#13;
Waukesha, Wis. It had much the appearanoe&#13;
of the South African stones.&#13;
Two or three months ago a party&#13;
brought me one from Central Iowa. It&#13;
was a very good stone and I should&#13;
say that there must be more where&#13;
that one came from. I believe there&#13;
are many spots in this Country where&#13;
diamonds are to be found. Only when&#13;
found the general public wouldn't&#13;
know them from rough diamonds."&#13;
"How does a roiigh diamond look?"&#13;
_ 'JiGeaerally, i t i a i i little six-pointed&#13;
crystal, or it may look like a roundish,&#13;
semi-transpareat pebble. In its rough&#13;
state it generally doesn't look as pretty&#13;
as a piece of quartz. The opinion&#13;
of experts ought to be had whenever&#13;
stones arc found suspected to bo dia*&#13;
monds. Search, besides, ought to be&#13;
made not by individuals but by communities,&#13;
for diamonds^ are scarce&#13;
wherever they are lodgedv and many&#13;
eyes looking for them ar&lt;J more likely&#13;
to find them than one pair, however&#13;
keen."&#13;
"What qualifications must a good&#13;
expert in dianibnds possess?"&#13;
"Experience. A judge of these&#13;
stones juust have a constant experience&#13;
in order to enable him to adjust&#13;
properly and recognize the various&#13;
points that give a diamond its value,&#13;
shape, cut and color. Not one in a&#13;
thousand knows enough about diamonds&#13;
to tell if a diamond is worth&#13;
81,000 or $1:00. There are very few&#13;
experts. 7."here are, of course, quite&#13;
ucts, and thought ess raising too&#13;
aft&#13;
Senor Zamacona* Jor soou years Mexican&#13;
minTfttcr at Waiuington, lie* at tbe*point of |&#13;
'death at Pueblo. -.&#13;
"\&#13;
/&#13;
ff&#13;
ii number of thorn smrong tho deaf erg,&#13;
but very few outside ot them. The&#13;
value of a stone, depends of course,&#13;
after all, a good deal on individual&#13;
tastes^ and prejudices, and reallv its&#13;
•^r&#13;
slow, fhey see their mistake now.&#13;
and in less than tea years eggs will be&#13;
exported instead of imported."&#13;
"How will the increase comeabout?"&#13;
"If this new experiment of hatching&#13;
eggs by^means of heaters proves&#13;
successful, then bacon and beef as life&#13;
sustaining foods will oerhaps^be, supplanted.&#13;
Thus far the results on a&#13;
limited scale have proved successful,&#13;
and the old hen, instead of wasting&#13;
days over a dozen or so eggs, can be&#13;
putting in her time laying fresh eggs,&#13;
Thu!» a double saving will be made.&#13;
Every farmer with enterprise will&#13;
have an egg farm or hatchery, just a*&#13;
the rich have hot houses now, and&#13;
send millions of eggs to market. New&#13;
York, perhaps, will be the greatest&#13;
egg center in the world, and ship*&#13;
will be chartered by the wholesale to&#13;
do the export business.—New York-&#13;
Mail.&#13;
Reduced Newspaper Postage.&#13;
Orders have been issued by the&#13;
postoflice department for the preparation&#13;
of a new one-cent newspaper postage&#13;
stamp, which will be needed after&#13;
July 1st because of the law passed at&#13;
the recent session of congress reducing&#13;
the rate on newspapers. The stamp is&#13;
to bo similar in design to the present&#13;
series of newspaper stamps ranging&#13;
from 2 to 10 cents. During the last&#13;
fiscal year 47,240 tons of matter subject&#13;
to ' newspaper rates was sent&#13;
through the mails from 5,785 postoffices.&#13;
The postage amounted to&#13;
$1,899,592.14. This was an increaao&#13;
of nearly 11 per cent, over the preceding&#13;
year. Allowing for the same increase&#13;
in matter sent for the next fiscal&#13;
year, it is estimated that tho reduction&#13;
to 1 cent per pound will result&#13;
in a loss of oyer $1,000,000 to the&#13;
revenues of the postoffice department.&#13;
Dust and Dast.&#13;
The minister, last Sunday morning,&#13;
had preached a very long, parched&#13;
sermon on the creation of man, and&#13;
one little girl in the congregation was&#13;
utterly worn out. After the services,&#13;
she said to her mother:&#13;
"Mamma, were we all made of&#13;
dust?"&#13;
"Certainly, my ohild."&#13;
"The preacher, too ?" /&#13;
"Of course. Why did you think&#13;
he was not made * like the rest of&#13;
- * 4 : :&#13;
"Oh, because he is so awful dry,&#13;
mamma, I don't see how the Creator&#13;
could make him stick together."—&#13;
Merchant Traveler,&#13;
i&#13;
- *&#13;
"N&#13;
•s • _ \ .&#13;
V&#13;
*&#13;
r&#13;
. -HV&#13;
PlNCKNBY DISPATCH.&#13;
J. L. NBWKIRK, KDITOB AKD PUBLISHES.&#13;
Ptackney, Michigan, Tho-aday, Jane- 18, 18»&#13;
That cnolera will spread through&#13;
the whole of southern Europe seems&#13;
to bo inevitable.&#13;
In the mind of the average place*&#13;
.hunter, the civil service reform idea&#13;
belongs to that class of professed&#13;
principles which should be preached&#13;
zealously for effect, but never practiced.&#13;
Mr. Jas. D. Fish's testimony in&#13;
New York, concerning Grant *&#13;
Ward, and the swindling operations&#13;
of Ward in particular, ought to be&#13;
pretty strong ovidence. for the tele*&#13;
graphic report says that Fish swore&#13;
several times, and very emphatically,&#13;
whereas witnesses generally swear on*&#13;
ly once; and that in a perfunctory&#13;
sort of way.—Post.&#13;
Locust will hardly become a pop*&#13;
nlar article of food, notwithstanding&#13;
a Pennsylvania doctor confirms the&#13;
assertion of Professor Riley that the&#13;
insects properly cooked have a delicious&#13;
flavor. The doctor's test ha*&#13;
not been thorough and comprehensive,&#13;
for he only claims to have eaten the&#13;
logi, whereas the Profeasor devoured&#13;
the entire animal. We note that&#13;
Professor Riley wentto^the sea shore&#13;
the other day for his health, which&#13;
seems to have suffered from too free&#13;
indulgence in cicada stew.&#13;
i Ruined Reputations.&#13;
Mary £. Foster is 50 years old, a&#13;
member of the Washtefcaw bar, temperance&#13;
lecturer and a member of the&#13;
Methodist ohurch. Mrs. Foster&#13;
claims that in December last she left&#13;
Ann Arbor for a short time and soon&#13;
thereafter the Detroit Post published&#13;
ed an item alleging that she '.ad dis*&#13;
appeared in order to avoid the payment&#13;
of heriebts. A list of articles&#13;
was given as having been in her&#13;
house, which materially damaged her&#13;
character. She sues the Post in the&#13;
superior court to recover II0.0(H)&#13;
damages.&#13;
On June 3 a Methodist Episcopal&#13;
ecclesiastical court found Rev. D.&#13;
Dawe, of Deerfield, l^euawee county,&#13;
guilty »f lying as to the number of&#13;
years he had been in the ministry.&#13;
The Detroit Evening News got the&#13;
impression that Dawe's "lie" occurred&#13;
when he testified at the trial for&#13;
arson, seven years ag\ of his brother&#13;
Edwin, who was afterwards acquitted.&#13;
The News according / stated that a&#13;
jury of his ministerial peers had convictedDawe&#13;
of perjury. Mr. Dawe&#13;
thought the wor.is "convicted" and&#13;
"perjury" rather strong. Yesterday&#13;
he filed a libel suit for $20,000 damages&#13;
in the United 'States court&#13;
against James E. Scripps.—Journal.&#13;
TAD LINfiftLK.&#13;
The Tories were at last successful&#13;
in their warfare of revenge upon Mr.&#13;
Gladstone. Aided by a group of the&#13;
Parnellites, they pulled the Premier&#13;
down and are now exaultingly trampling&#13;
on him. The proposed increase&#13;
of the duties on beer and spirits was&#13;
the apparent issue. But back of this&#13;
was the fierce, rankling hatred of Mr.&#13;
Gladstone which has for months been&#13;
the chief inspiration of the Tories.&#13;
As for the followers of Mr. Parnell,&#13;
they seem to have aimed to intimididate&#13;
the_Liberals and win favor with&#13;
the Tories, hoping that by an effective&#13;
show of strength at a critic 1&#13;
moment they would impress upon&#13;
both parties the importance of cultivating&#13;
the Irish constituencies by&#13;
pledging themselves to the broadest&#13;
reforms for Ireland. From the point&#13;
of view of expediency it was perhaps&#13;
wise for the Home 'Rulers to throw&#13;
their votes against the Government.&#13;
But what will the Tories reap, after&#13;
all, from the great victory of Monday&#13;
night? They are apparently stunned&#13;
by their own success, The leaders&#13;
hesitate to accept power. Their&#13;
newspaper organs have appealed&#13;
(but in vain) to Mr. Gladstone to&#13;
stay at the helm. Confusion almost&#13;
unprecedented prevails in British politics.-—&#13;
Times Star.&#13;
There is some talk in the Eastern&#13;
States of doing away with the morning&#13;
and afternoon recess, and closiug&#13;
the day sessions of city public schools&#13;
as much earlier than at present as&#13;
the length of recess. The reasons assigned&#13;
for the talked of change are&#13;
that the recess affords bad children&#13;
an opportunity to corrupt the morals&#13;
of their schoolmates, which they are&#13;
very ready to take advantage of;&#13;
that the school bullies can then worry&#13;
if not beat the smaller boys who&#13;
are unwilling and afraid to fight;&#13;
that 12 o'clock being the universal&#13;
dinner hour many mothers, especially&#13;
among the poorer classes, need&#13;
their children a few, minutes before&#13;
noon to assist them in various ways&#13;
and often to carry dinner to fathers&#13;
and brothers at their work. In some&#13;
cities hundreds of scholars are daily&#13;
excused before twelve o'clock for&#13;
purpose- The recess haS/Sb long&#13;
bees a feature of t^e School system&#13;
that it is veryj^wbable it will not be&#13;
abandone^fbr years to come, if ever.&#13;
The^objections offered against it do not&#13;
fpply in the country as they do in the&#13;
cities, and in both they could in a great&#13;
digrae be overcome if the teachers&#13;
would oocasiosaU mingle with the pa&#13;
pits daring resets, as is doue in some"&#13;
private schools.&#13;
[By June* Bently.]&#13;
I wat^ratasmalH&gt;oy when the war&#13;
closed, residing with relatives in Chicago&#13;
not far distant from that fashionable&#13;
thorougiare, Washington street&#13;
in the vicinity of Ann^ m a marble&#13;
front building that fronted on the former&#13;
and ran parallel with the latter&#13;
lived the Lincoln family whom I subsequently&#13;
saw almost daily with the&#13;
exception of Mrs. L., who rarely appeared&#13;
in public and when she did so&#13;
her features were scarcely discernible&#13;
beneath the teary yail she wore for&#13;
RobertT., ex-Sectary of War; I conceived&#13;
a strong liking, but to Tad, his&#13;
younger and onl/ brother my whole&#13;
heart went out toward him, he became&#13;
my daily companion and his merry&#13;
laugh rings in my memory yet, we&#13;
pursued the same studies at school and&#13;
joined actively in the sports of the&#13;
school grounds, while not particularly&#13;
brilliant in his studies he was smart,&#13;
certainly not dull. His perceptive&#13;
faculties were unusually well developed&#13;
and he also had as well a teen&#13;
sense of the ridiculous that made the&#13;
humor of his character stand out in&#13;
bold relief. I do not think any one&#13;
could have beenxhis enemy for his life&#13;
was gentle, with malice toward none,&#13;
charity for all, his friends were legion,&#13;
his generosity knew no linrtt^-to better&#13;
illustrate the latter I will mention in&#13;
this connection—a boy, Marahali .by&#13;
name, the son of an auctioneer, toward&#13;
this youth Tad had shown a decided&#13;
partiality although he well knew the&#13;
comparative poverty of the family and&#13;
that Charley contributed toward their&#13;
support by mental service. One morning&#13;
he (Marshall) was on his way to&#13;
work as was his custom, at Kinzie&#13;
street railway crossing he stopped&#13;
while a freight train went by, it had&#13;
consumed several minutes in passing,&#13;
but it is the same old story, two trains&#13;
moving in opposite direction, danger&#13;
apprehended only from one—a terribly&#13;
mutilated form is taken from under&#13;
the cruel wheeles, a weekly, almost&#13;
daily occurrence in this famed western&#13;
city. Marshall lingered several days,&#13;
during this time Tad scarcely even left&#13;
his bedside except topersonally attend&#13;
to supplying the table with an abundance&#13;
of fruits and flowers, and when&#13;
the last sad rites were over no more&#13;
sincere motrner returned from th&#13;
cemetery than the worthy son ofAfiierica's&#13;
martyred President^^osocial&#13;
prominence or considerations of wealth&#13;
ever laised a barj^er where integrity&#13;
and honesty characterized the conduct&#13;
of those wnom he was thrown in con*&#13;
h. By the side of his illustrious&#13;
he slumbers to-day, but his&#13;
memory is cherished by thousands who&#13;
learned: to love him for his manly deportment&#13;
daring the short time vouchsafed&#13;
to him in this earthly sphere.&#13;
pURNITUREl pURNTTUREl'p^TENTS&#13;
KUinr k CO., of the tciw^tnoAimKAitfjnam&#13;
When iu want of anything in the line of Furniture, suoh as&#13;
BEDROOM SUITS, PARLOR SUITS&#13;
LOUNGES, BUREAUS, BOOKCASES, TABLES&#13;
§TAM)S, CHAIRS, ETC. ETC. COME&#13;
AND SEE ME.&#13;
•*-**ss^fiBSBts&#13;
-atiSgi ps&#13;
COFFINS, CASKETS. ROBES and FUNERAL SUPPLIES of all kinds&#13;
constantly on hand. Respecfflluy,&#13;
L. H. BEEBE.&#13;
bOMnM,&#13;
U B DW _ . _ [paafbolniMuttiiooaa. K*5w2lZu__ it* alaai epm..&#13;
Claba. Soldtar&#13;
lishara. No. SO&#13;
Ih&#13;
. _ eonntriM. Cavaata, Trt4**lU*«. OgJ»&#13;
_TFJafiotord MBatrartianag, toC iaanvatadtaa, ea *&amp;»falt*rJ i GGaanmnuata y and* o--t•h- e—r forties aaaajiriai a* Ianb! oorxt- naaottiioona aaan dto Tonp Vimtalonptaaf bvlaat alaatma . fBtfaaaaa awaittfhnoao.t chPaartta*n.U lofbi£U4l&gt;aboado tkharoa JtCaao.t aarcao aafortaieeahda iont itohaaJ BiwotaaUn tl«aef AaM&#13;
UBroadwar. Now York.&#13;
D O O R S A N 0 B L I N D S ,&#13;
GLASS, NAILS, PAINT,&#13;
BUILDING PAPER&#13;
AND ALL&#13;
IMPORTANT.&#13;
Whan you viait or laave New York City, aava&#13;
bajrgaga axpraaaaga and carriage hire ana atop at&#13;
toe Grand union Tiotal, oppoafo Grand Central&#13;
Depot. • /&#13;
Blngant ronma fit tad np at a .coat of one talllion&#13;
dollar*, reduced to $1.00 and npwarda per&#13;
daar. Soropfna Plan, Ela-ato-. BeaUarant .upplied&#13;
witli tot Mat Bona care, and Hevated&#13;
railroad to all depot*. PaaUlee can live totter&#13;
(or laaa monar at th* Orand Unlou Hotel than&#13;
ear other firef cleea hotel in tha otty&#13;
KINDS OF BUIL0ING MATERIAL \&#13;
AT F. L. BROWN'S. ^&#13;
STILL ON |&gt;EdK! With a larger stock than ever before^-Jtoatfo a complete assortment of&#13;
D R U G S i f t t r l l E DICIN | 5&#13;
^ &gt; — W e have the finest stock of TONER Y &amp; FANCY GOODS&#13;
-sever shown in sduthern Livingston county. .7-&#13;
Diamond Dyes, Dye Stuffs generaly, Lamps&#13;
and Lamp Trimmings, Soaps, Kerosene Oil,&#13;
Tobaccos, Cigars,7 Spices, Etc., Etc,&#13;
PICTURES &amp; PICTURE FRAMES&#13;
in great variety. Framing to order a specialty.&#13;
Briggs* Transfer Patterns, Filoselles and&#13;
Embroidery Silks, very complete line.&#13;
Publaist h«e2d p ©erv eyreya rT; keri,n 4i j&#13;
Those wishing Flower Seeds for indoor planting will find a good assortment&#13;
at our Store, we shall also keep a full stock of Garden Seed* this&#13;
season, • J.&#13;
Winchell's Central Drug Store,&#13;
WEST MAIN ST., FINC£NEY&#13;
Sunday-School Departadtkilv&#13;
bTM~.J.M3TTl trr?&#13;
fr" l . „&#13;
~1 ~&#13;
\&#13;
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FOWURV1LLE PARAGRAPHSFro*&#13;
tta Bavtew.&#13;
Mr. Will Ka#ley lett yesterday for&#13;
Detroit to join toe U. 8. ttoops.&#13;
Mr. ft. N. Dawiey opened his den*&#13;
tal office at Wiiliamston Monday.&#13;
The dates for "The Drummer Boy&#13;
of the BappahAnnock" »*?# been fixed&#13;
on June 23,24,25 and 37.&#13;
Fred Jones has ofspsd a barber shop&#13;
in the building fora*erry occupied by&#13;
B. P. Kent^pa^ market1&#13;
ft. Fqsr&gt;jr;Jhm putchaaed D. 1).&#13;
Shane's veg*t*blo fardea on Garden&#13;
£ t * a o v * ft* pUato to Grand Ledge&#13;
Mrs. Laura. Kenyan died at the residence&#13;
of her son, A.&gt; G. Kenyon, oi&#13;
Thursday. Jane 4th. aged 81 Tears.&#13;
She was taken to her^joioVhome at&#13;
Daviiburg, Oakland county, for burjajoa&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
DEXTER CUPPING*&#13;
•SSteW&#13;
ft as E, Dancer, ot Lima, was buried&#13;
on 8unday last&#13;
James 8mith, one of the old pioneers&#13;
of Dcrter township, was buried hut&#13;
Monday. —&#13;
Wm. Scadin. of Webster, lately 1OFt&#13;
a cow by lightning. Insured in the&#13;
Washtenaw Mutual.&#13;
We publish this week, according to&#13;
the old-time custom, the bans of marriage&#13;
between two of our best-known&#13;
MICHIGAN PATEHTS.&#13;
The following patents were granted&#13;
to citizens of Michigan bearing date&#13;
June 13,1885. Reported expressly for&#13;
this paper by Louia Bagger «Y Co.,&#13;
Mechanical Experts and Solicitors of&#13;
Patents.&#13;
Bradbeer, T. J., Detroit, chimney&#13;
cowl.&#13;
Clark, M. Wn Parma, conveyor for&#13;
flour bolts.&#13;
Dysinsrer, J. H.. Flushing, combined&#13;
feed rack and stall.&#13;
Fisher, F. E., Detroit, drawing and&#13;
galvauiiing wire.—&#13;
Rodebaugb, 6. W., Jackson, saw&#13;
guide.&#13;
Smith. 0. ft., and J. B. Adams, Cheboygan,&#13;
clamp.&#13;
Whipple, E, E., Eaton Rapids, cultivator.&#13;
Woodbury, L. 8M Calumet, piston*&#13;
head packing tor rock drills.&#13;
NEW ~ 4... L , . . , 1 A.&#13;
.4» - - •&#13;
GOODS,&#13;
ca-o o&#13;
NEW GOODS,&#13;
- Backtabs Armlet Salve*&#13;
Tux BSST HiLVt iir-the world for&#13;
Cut" Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt&#13;
Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped&#13;
Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all skin&#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 WISCHKLL'S DRUG STOBX.&#13;
WM! MB BSX fWBS S3!#»3g&#13;
f \&#13;
NEW LAWNS, CHAMBRAYS, GINGHAMS, PRINTS,&#13;
WORSTEAD fDinRe EliSnSe oGf OPAORDAS,S OLALCS EinSc, luGdLinOgV ES, ETC.&#13;
of. • &amp;&#13;
known that the kidnieeyyjs&#13;
the&#13;
and most highly esteemed young p*o&#13;
pie, Mr. Hunyadi Simotuke and Mis*&#13;
M i a Hslima. The ceremony will be&#13;
/fttrrormed in Sill's Hall on Tuesday&#13;
evening, June 23d. In our next&#13;
Leader we will give in full the names&#13;
of the bridesmaids and invitations to&#13;
theguests.&#13;
Mrs. Nancy Lee, of Webster, died&#13;
June 3,1885, aged 81 years and six&#13;
mooths. She was born in Sempbroms,&#13;
Cayuga county, N. Y., and cauie&#13;
to Michigan in 1830. She was married&#13;
to Frederick Lee, of Freedom, in&#13;
1851. They fettled in Webster in&#13;
1868. Sbe was a member of the Pioneer&#13;
Society of Washtenaw county,&#13;
and was very much respected. She&#13;
was kind and gentle to all, and de-&#13;
""parted this life in hope of a glorious&#13;
resurrection. After the funeral services&#13;
by Rev. Mr. Lock wood, her remains&#13;
were deposited in the cemetery,&#13;
at Hudson.&#13;
It is well&#13;
are the sewers, which wash away tue&#13;
debris. When thev&#13;
inactive, Kellogg s&#13;
remove the cause&#13;
SOUTH LVON DOTSFrom&#13;
tlM Picket.&#13;
Tbe new bank is to be a brown&#13;
t&#13;
stone front.&#13;
Two drunks, from near Nortbfield,&#13;
made quite a disgraceful sh^wof therajtelves&#13;
to a large audience on our&#13;
streets Saturday night.&#13;
Looks like business to see the masons,&#13;
teamsters, stone cutters, carpenters,&#13;
and others all at work on the various&#13;
building* that are in process of&#13;
erection in this village.&#13;
IjJeo. Mapes, a carpenter, employed&#13;
&gt;*n Geo. Hughes' new barn, tell from&#13;
the roof, a distance of 33 feet, last&#13;
Saturday and sustained quite serious&#13;
injuries. Dr. Brown dressed his&#13;
wounds and he is now doing as well&#13;
as could be expected.&#13;
,. . Ar/uU house greeted Miss Watts and&#13;
^gHa Noble at the M E. church last&#13;
Friday and $18.00 net receipts of the&#13;
evening were turned over to the Y. L.&#13;
M. treasury.&#13;
Prom tfca Excelsior,&#13;
Will Hodgeman, having a grudge&#13;
against large feet, took the adzs Tuesday&#13;
andtrimmed one of his down a&#13;
little.&#13;
Reports came from some of our No.&#13;
1 tanners that their heaviest pieces of&#13;
,*-*atneat have already lodged with&#13;
• nlfeepect of gaining its perpendicular&#13;
again. x&#13;
It's rumored on 'pretty strong&#13;
thoritythat Wm. Greig/is about to&#13;
associate an oW .lumber firm with&#13;
him in his mill an^ lumber enterprise.&#13;
If present arrangements are consu*&#13;
mated a large assortment of lumber&#13;
will soon belaid off at South Lyon, f«r&#13;
which there has been and still is a&#13;
lively demand.&#13;
Tbe remains ot Mrs. Helen Pinckiwid-&#13;
ef&#13;
impurities and&#13;
become clogged or&#13;
Columbian Oil will&#13;
and create a healthy action, and effect&#13;
a permanent cure.&#13;
Age brings with it the infirmities o&#13;
the body. Our bodies need repairing&#13;
ind strengthening. Old persons are&#13;
more or less subject to diseases of the&#13;
kidneys and urinary organs, and in&#13;
thexe cases the strengthening and curative&#13;
properties of Kellogg's. Columbian&#13;
Oil are sure. Its use stimulates&#13;
the kidneys and bladder, and creates&#13;
natural action, as in youth. Every&#13;
dose will give strength and vigor to&#13;
these debilitated organs.&#13;
The Greatest Medicine of the Age.&#13;
Kellogg'* Columbian Oil is a powerful&#13;
remedy, which can be taken internally&#13;
as well as externallv by tbe tenderest&#13;
infant. It cures almost, instantly,&#13;
is pleasant, acting directly upon the&#13;
nervous system, causing a suddeu&#13;
buoyaney ot the mind. In short, the&#13;
wonderful effects ot* this wonderful&#13;
remedy cannot be explained in 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. Flesh Wounds, Bunion*,&#13;
Burns, Corns, Spinal Affections,&#13;
Colic, Cramping Pains, Cholera Morbus,&#13;
Flux, Diarrhoea, Coughs, Colds,&#13;
Bronchial Affection, Catarrh^auli all&#13;
axjhejtatu^painS) e»ternai-or internal.&#13;
TuTT directions with each bottle.&#13;
For Saleat^WiNCHKLi/s DRUG STORK.&#13;
— _ a flreat Placovery.&#13;
-^Ir. Wm. Thomas, of Newton, la.,&#13;
says. "My wife has been seriously&#13;
affected with a cough for twenty-five&#13;
years, and this spring more severely&#13;
than ever before. She had used many&#13;
remedies without relief, and being&#13;
urged to try Dr. King's New Discovery,&#13;
did so. with most gratifying results.&#13;
The first bottle relieved her&#13;
very much, and the second bottle has&#13;
absolutely cured her. She has not had&#13;
so good health tor thirty years.1''&#13;
Trial bottle fiee at Winehell Drug&#13;
Store. Large size $1.00.&#13;
Never Give Up.&#13;
If you are suffering with low and&#13;
depressed spirits, loss of appetite, gen&#13;
«ral debility, disordered blood, weak&#13;
constitution* headache, or any di*&#13;
of a biiiou* nature, by all means pro&#13;
cure a bottle of Electric Bitters; You&#13;
will be surprised to see the/rapid improvement&#13;
that will fbllowf you will&#13;
be inspired with new Jlfe; strength&#13;
and activity will rerorn; pain and&#13;
misery will cease, and henceforth you&#13;
will rejoice in the^praise of Electric&#13;
Bitters. Sold at 50 cents a bottle at&#13;
Wiochell's Dr*g Store.&#13;
- 3 ^ THE POPULAR COOCHING PARASOLS.&#13;
We are constantly in receipt of* New Goods in every Department.&#13;
Everything marked in plain figures. The lowest possible&#13;
price guaranteed on every article.&#13;
.- \ • V&#13;
S&amp;-BUTTER and EGGS wanted at the highest Market Price in exchange&#13;
for GOODS. No trouble to show goods whether you want&#13;
to buy or not. Come and see us.&#13;
LAKIN &amp; SYKES.&#13;
JFARMERS, READ THIS;&#13;
The undersigned having a large stock of Ml kinds of Lumber, Lath and&#13;
Shingles at their lumber vard in Pinckney, have decided to reduce their&#13;
stock and for the I T E S f c T S i a t T ^ T D A T S wUl sell&#13;
'-IS '-""&#13;
ROGK BOTTOM BRICKS.&#13;
Parties about to build will find it to theirjnterest to get our prices. Wt manufacture&#13;
our own lumber and1 shinirles and will aelL-aiyorfling to the times.&#13;
We keep nn hand a full ^t^kof^Ffooring, Siding and Barn Boards, also all&#13;
lengths of Bill ^tuff ancj- Timbers, and on all bills will give special prices.&#13;
You will find ourJUrtftft, A. L. HOYT, always on hand. Come *nU see us,&#13;
we will satisfy you that we mean business.&#13;
BtftK BTT, COWWI A CO,&gt; PlfltCKSST.&#13;
7&#13;
ney, of WhtiniOTB Lake. *eie&#13;
rest in the Hamburg cemetery&#13;
Fridav. The deceased vao 68 years of&#13;
age,'aeld W d f ' the early pioneers of&#13;
• v&#13;
' - . * « * ' ; * » *&#13;
that Beigbborheod, and was well&#13;
teeeMdby her'large number of ac*&#13;
(j quaintanoes. She leaves two sons to&#13;
Tothe AAicted.&#13;
Sineevthc iutroduction of Kellogg'a&#13;
Columbian Oil it has made more permanent&#13;
cure9 and given better satinction&#13;
on Kidney Complaints and&#13;
Rheumatism than any known remedy,&#13;
fts continued series ot wonderful cures&#13;
in all climatesJitJS made it. known as&#13;
a safe and reliable agent to employ&#13;
against all aches and t*ins, which are&#13;
*tt*lthe forerunners of more serious dis*&#13;
orders. It acts speedily and surely,&#13;
alwavs relieving suffering and often&#13;
**?ing life. The protection it affords&#13;
by its timely use on rheumatism, kidney&#13;
affection, and all auhes and pains,&#13;
wounds cramping pains, rholera morbus,&#13;
diarrhoea, uoughs, colds, catarrh,&#13;
and disorder* 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;
wiose who-have once used.it never will&#13;
It is absolutely certain in its&#13;
effects, and will always uure&lt;when&#13;
cures are possible.&#13;
Calif at Wi»cHicLi&gt;i1«no STORK and&#13;
/&#13;
OU8AND8-CIVEN&#13;
wnmnmmwzmMi^/r^&#13;
AWAY.&#13;
^ C V t R Y NEW SUBSCRIBER&#13;
V 4 X 1 * eW * PMsent valued from 3o«.&#13;
to §500« and no favoritism&#13;
shown*&#13;
'MiMff&#13;
N&#13;
*yrind your name goes ^ ^ o J / J ^ S T * •&#13;
^he'boqk*, and your presenTS^fip^U&#13;
fwlll be forwarded. Write for SampteN^f^&#13;
^n^WfylUx,LjstofPresents. E v e r y t h i n g I 0 * * ^ ^ ^ ^&#13;
mYHOUT R E S E R Y A T T O N S ^&#13;
TO t M i PUBLIC.&#13;
Rocbcater, N.Y., M«r, tt,&#13;
I MM MQTMistad «Uh the pvbUtbcn^&#13;
of tb* Ammnrkn RURAL Horn, and 1 V « ^&#13;
i^ti ». &gt;u &lt;-tei . „ {itmytr«/Rickuttr fmt&#13;
P. -K ^&#13;
bctttf* tbvjr will fulfil every guarantee&#13;
UMVOMIM to tba public&#13;
RURAL H O W CO., Llmltxl, WOCHMT1W, W.Y.&#13;
FOURTH OF JUL^T"&#13;
GOdDS! • • ^ »&#13;
All kinds of repairing promptly attended&#13;
to.&#13;
WATCH AND CLOCK&#13;
—repairing a specialty.—&#13;
EUGENE CAMPBEIIX.&#13;
JtalMFiM&amp;at&#13;
IfayDqyifgs&#13;
MtfSeWfll&#13;
r i • i&#13;
IWO O L W A * 4&#13;
•EH-H-F O-H_-.i-0-.fr L-1-&#13;
The undersigned respectfully annoance to their friends and patrons that&#13;
--—they hHve completed arrangements for all the&#13;
Oorrcadwa.&#13;
M»y for akklUBi&#13;
wok "&#13;
¥^§1&#13;
last&#13;
IXCHKL]&#13;
g^t, s momonmtjrrtm l^ml. ifivng more&#13;
.full details of tbe curative properties&#13;
I of this wonderful medioin*.&#13;
Each and every one can Bpare^^Tlease remember for&#13;
THE NEjpHfHfRTY DAYS I&#13;
shall need all the money we can get&#13;
Ev^pylhing in our store will be sold wifcy&#13;
Jt^down to the lowest notch.&#13;
ResfieOfuily Yo*rs,&#13;
TEE?LE &amp; CADWELL,&#13;
16,1885.&#13;
Having seated D. Biehards*&#13;
BLACKSMITH SHOP I&#13;
we are now prepared to do si!&#13;
kinds of •&#13;
B E P A I P t I I S T Gr .&#13;
Iacladtag Horse*^hoeimf.&#13;
Machine and Steel Work done to'&#13;
order.&#13;
PARKEfi A SPEABS.&#13;
/ILL&#13;
&gt;ia potsage ataapatof&#13;
aavmureoaiTO FREE » Srt»i FNMNJfw&#13;
Aooncas ELPCR PUB. CO., CHICAGO, t\x&#13;
' A T —&#13;
MDEKSON STATION^&#13;
Is nhw1 fiOed1 to overflowing-with a&#13;
fresh, new and complete- stock of Dry&#13;
Goods, Groceries, Boota A Shoes and&#13;
Hardware tp which We invite public&#13;
ies espemaHy- will fithHt to&#13;
tMhr iftttwat to see ^ur noveitiea im*&#13;
Dresa Goods before baying elsewhera.&#13;
J^very variety of oouhtty pwdnce&#13;
taken in eichange for goods or mduey.'&#13;
* JAMBftlVtifcAir&#13;
y&#13;
~\&#13;
J:N&#13;
/ V&#13;
JN&#13;
\\\&#13;
H&#13;
. f,&#13;
1*Vi&#13;
^ - M&#13;
/ %&#13;
* i&#13;
/&#13;
/&#13;
— - &lt;&#13;
mm*m&#13;
- i -&#13;
••li&#13;
V&#13;
\P' v&#13;
gbtfhney Wmv*t{%&#13;
J. L. NKWKIRK, Publisher.&#13;
Bnterea at the Po»to«e* as 40 cuu»&#13;
TXXSLY TOPICS.&#13;
DEFEATED.&#13;
BBRTIHULEllEK AKP HIB CABUTXT&#13;
RE8ION.&#13;
&amp;fter«*tiag ?or«igft Hews.&#13;
^5¾¾&#13;
C**r ol all the Russtas. He succeeded to the&#13;
throne through the murder of his father. He&#13;
ft 45 years old and lives a retired sort of life&#13;
at Oatchlna. He Is chiefly celebrated for hit&#13;
hatred to foreigners.&#13;
THK amount of love Teonesseeana&#13;
have for the Mormons is shown by the&#13;
following: Three Mormon Elders have&#13;
been placed in jail in Tennessee under&#13;
the new law making it a misdemeanor&#13;
to preach Mormoni&amp;flfr—They will teat&#13;
the constitutionality of the law.&#13;
IK one of the papers read at the national&#13;
conference of charities and correction,&#13;
in Washington, recently,, the&#13;
failure to provide lire-proof protection&#13;
for the insane in asylums was denounced&#13;
as "crime in brick and stone."&#13;
As if to emphasize this point comes&#13;
news of the burning of the eastern lunatie&#13;
asylum, at Williamsburg, Va. Although&#13;
only one life was lost, the blackened&#13;
ruins of the buildings remain as&#13;
hideous proof of tfce crime denounced&#13;
at the capital. Unfortunately, the perpetration&#13;
of crimes liJre-this, in Virginia&#13;
or elsewhere, seems to carry in its&#13;
train no punishment but the comparatively&#13;
mild censure ot a coroner*s jury.&#13;
AFTER the death of the gallant C u t e r&#13;
In his desperate encounter with the Indians&#13;
under Sitting Bull on the Little&#13;
Big Horn river, a number of fnenaTasd&#13;
admirers of the fallen hero started a&#13;
subscription for the purpose of erecting&#13;
a statue to his memory to be set up at&#13;
West Point. Several thousand dollars&#13;
were readily subscribed and a committee&#13;
chosen, empowered to select an artist&#13;
and procure the statue. Mrs. Cus"&#13;
ter entered zealously into the scheme,&#13;
and that the statue might be the more&#13;
perfect, forwarded to the committee&#13;
photographs of the general, together&#13;
with the uniform and arms used by him&#13;
in the west, and such informajio:&#13;
would enable the artist to J*rt5auce a&#13;
creditable likeness. Ip^tKeT meantime,&#13;
however, an arti&amp;t^Kad been selected,&#13;
and had madea statue without having&#13;
studieti any of the photographs, uniforms,&#13;
arms or information so kindly&#13;
furnished. Mrs. Custer had not seen&#13;
the model or statue until it was ready&#13;
to be unveiled, and was ignorant of i s&#13;
character. When it was unveiled'her&#13;
pleasure and gratificatioi was changed&#13;
to disgust ana indignation. The artis&#13;
had evolved a statue from his own idea,&#13;
and had gotten up something representing&#13;
the general in a long-tailed coat,&#13;
holding a pistol in one hand and a saber&#13;
in the other, and with air of a dime&#13;
novel hero expecting to wipe out the&#13;
whole Indian race. Mrs. Custer&#13;
endeavored to prevent the erection&#13;
of the statue, but was not successful.&#13;
London advises of the 9th inst, say:&#13;
While one crisis was imminent, another far&#13;
more serious has burst upon us, and the government,&#13;
which has weathered triumphantly&#13;
many votes o' censure on matters where there&#13;
was ground for reasonable differences of opinion&#13;
has now been wrecked with the right all on&#13;
its side, by a union of class interests, party&#13;
hatred. The occasion was the debate&#13;
on the amendment to the budget to tax wines.&#13;
The debate lasted fully eight hours, and was&#13;
the most exciting of any which baa occurred&#13;
since the famous Bradlaugh debates. As the&#13;
hour for the division • approached the excitement&#13;
increased till, when Mr. Gladstone rose&#13;
to close the debate at 1 o'clock In the morning,&#13;
the house was so crowded that many members&#13;
were unable to find seats. Not for a long time&#13;
has Gladstone spoken with such vigor and so&#13;
much-^f the old rire. He received not the&#13;
slightest interruption, in spite of his bitter&#13;
thrutl8»a#t^eyopp^4t!on. The latter seemed&#13;
completely cowed. No doubt Gladstone knewperfectly&#13;
what the vote was going to be. This&#13;
added sharpness to bis attack. His defense&#13;
of the budget was masterly of&#13;
course, but when it came the attack on the&#13;
conservatives for their tactics the house was&#13;
roused into the greatest enthusiasm.&#13;
The climax came when, after dwelling la almost&#13;
a solemn manner ou the greatness of the&#13;
national need for $11,000,000 for the defense of&#13;
the empire, of which the chancellor purposed&#13;
to raise only half by taxation, he paused, waved&#13;
his hand sJmostJn the faces of the leaders&#13;
on the opposite bench and added with crescendo&#13;
scorn: "And the regular opposition is so&#13;
loyal; ditto, national; ditto, patriotic; ditto,&#13;
constitutional, as to refuse us the money."&#13;
The pr&lt;»np whi&gt;h ffiUrm-^ thlf fMiJ^wrr&#13;
gars description. Cheers and ?ell» resounded*&#13;
and for 10 minutes pandemoniun reigned.&#13;
The dispatch says: The ministry will resign,&#13;
but the conservative* «111 find their victory&#13;
worse than a defeat. They must find money&#13;
arrange the crimes act and settle with Russia,&#13;
all in the face of a lanje liberal majority. The&#13;
tax on tea which they propose would be far&#13;
more unpopular than the tax on beer and spirits.&#13;
Therefore they probably will refuse to&#13;
take office. If they accept, the liberals will not&#13;
be sorry to transfer all these troubles to their&#13;
shoulders.&#13;
Mr. Gladstone and his colleagues&#13;
"met- at noon . aad.-,,, cemjdnid ... in session&#13;
fully one hour and a quarter.&#13;
The session is said to have been a stormy one.&#13;
During the .sitting it is said that numerous&#13;
accusations anu recriminations were indulged&#13;
in, but it was unanimously agreed that,thcre&#13;
was no alternative bat to resign. At 5 p. m.,&#13;
Mr. Gladstone announced- the adjournment&#13;
of the House tojjo"fb Balmoral, to place&#13;
his resignation in-th'e queen's hands. It is the&#13;
general belief that the conservatives will take&#13;
office r^^raTrfenT^'feeaoers are urging the&#13;
-leaders to do SOY ' '&#13;
The •oiitieal situation is viewed as very'&#13;
grave at? thfeiim*, and the news that the,cab&#13;
inet has decided fco resign caused mucb/gloom&#13;
In commercial and financial circles.&#13;
Victor Hugo's funeral cost Prance 30,0000&#13;
francs.&#13;
Princess Beatrice's marriage will take place&#13;
July 23. '&#13;
An explosion in an old silver mine in Mexico&#13;
instantly killed* iu miners. ~&#13;
CRUSHED AND XAVOLID.&#13;
Frightful Calamity iu a Town in France&#13;
A t T h i e r s , a town in the Department&#13;
of Puy de Dome, France, a murder trial had&#13;
been in progress for some days. The last day&#13;
of the trial the court house, was crowded with&#13;
men and womcu anxious to witness the closing&#13;
scenes. When the people worn leaving, im&#13;
mediately after the adjournment of the court,&#13;
and were jammed upon the stone sUirwaj&#13;
leading to the street, the lofty staircase felt.&#13;
The scene that followed was appalliug. Immense&#13;
masses of masonry from above crashed&#13;
down upon the struggling people below,&#13;
grinding through their flesh and bones and&#13;
maining and mutilating them in a horrible&#13;
manner. The fall of the staircase and the&#13;
shrieks of the people lying helpless In the ruins&#13;
caused a panic in the court-room, and there&#13;
was a rush for the now wrecked exit Those&#13;
who were in front were unable to withstand&#13;
the pressure from behind, and were hurled&#13;
down upon the meu and women crushed in the&#13;
fall of the staircase, and whom the people in&#13;
the street woru already striving to rescue.&#13;
When at length the panic had exhausted itself,&#13;
and the immense, stone steps of the fallen&#13;
Staircase had been removed, twenty-four persons&#13;
weri* taken from the ruins dead. The&#13;
injured numbered not less than oue hundrod&#13;
aud sixty, and many of these will die of their&#13;
injuries. _&#13;
OEKZ&amp;AL NEWS.&#13;
EMBEZZLED CASH REt'OYERfeD.&#13;
The Sunday Capitol of Washington sayi&#13;
that the losses by the government from tne&#13;
dishonest operations of the postmaster al&#13;
Lewis ton, Idaho, will not ba very large; that&#13;
the postoffiee department bus get track of and&#13;
Intercepted fourteen of the thirty letters each&#13;
of which contained $600 worth of money orders,&#13;
which were seat by Hibbs. the defaulting postmaster,&#13;
to banks in the West for collection,&#13;
and the Canadian postoflice department bat&#13;
shipped the mail intended for Hibbs at Victoria,&#13;
B. 0.&#13;
TO AWAIT ACTIO!* OP THE GRAND JfKT.&#13;
The I'l.TvHleT h&amp;s Concluded his luqulry&#13;
the cause of death of Officer Barrett, shot&#13;
Chicago depot while endeavoring to&#13;
TnTo&#13;
in&#13;
effect the&#13;
The Mahdi's Military Retovrces.&#13;
The Mahdi's military resources include&#13;
16,500 Egyptian regulars, who&#13;
were originally taken prisoners or dose&#13;
r ted to the Mahdi's camp. It is not&#13;
known, even at English headquarters&#13;
in the Soudan, how many native warriors&#13;
have joined Mohammed Achmed,&#13;
but he possesses armaments for an almost&#13;
unlimited number.&#13;
Besides the arms and equipments of&#13;
Hicks and Baiter Pasha's forces, which&#13;
fell into the hands of the enemy, the&#13;
latter has an enormous quantity of&#13;
provisions and ammunition, which the&#13;
Egyptian Government had stored in&#13;
Sennaar, Kordofan and Fachoda.&#13;
As , far back as two years ago the&#13;
Egyptian authorities at Cairo admitted&#13;
that the Mahdi had captured 90&#13;
field guns, 15,000 Remington rifles,&#13;
'and^S,000.000 cartridges. Since then&#13;
the garrisons of Berber, Shendy and&#13;
Khartoum have capitulated.&#13;
At Khartoum also the Mahdi found&#13;
a vast quantity of ammunition and&#13;
5,000 to 6,000 negro troops well armed.&#13;
The rebel army is also copiously supplied&#13;
with siego artillery. Both Sir&#13;
Charles Wilson's and Lord Charles&#13;
Beresford's steamers were tired upon&#13;
by heavy riverain batteries. There&#13;
are a large number of Turkish and&#13;
Arab officers with the Mahdi. The&#13;
black recruits arc drilled by fugitives&#13;
from Arabi's army, and the Mahdi's&#13;
artillery is worked by Turkish Topskis,&#13;
who are held to be the best marksmen&#13;
in the world.—London Standard.&#13;
- * * — i - — • * s » i. - • •&#13;
The Duration of Wars.&#13;
The PallMall Gazette, m attacking&#13;
Gladstone's government for dilatonness,&#13;
gives this as the admiralty's programme&#13;
of ship-building. "Fortyeight&#13;
new ships ordered, December 2,&#13;
1884; tenders accepted for six new&#13;
ships, March 5—ninety-three days.&#13;
Not one of these forty-eight new ships&#13;
gg YEARS IH USE.&#13;
t^araalast Medical Trioaph Of t h j A f #&#13;
SYMPTOMS O f A ^&#13;
TORPID LIVER-:&#13;
StMk » • « , Fain •*«•«• » • »*••»*»*•&#13;
tBellaatloa ts&gt; t u r t t o i s f *&gt;•*.'?* •"ffiff&#13;
m.t~llns*iktrlat s e l e c t e d • • « • MmtWp&#13;
WtwrUasv, MirtsMs*, n « U * r i » » su tks&gt;&#13;
H M K . » • » *•*•*• shw •*•*. **•»&lt;*«*•&gt;&#13;
flrfal elreasas, Hlfkly colere* thrift* u A&#13;
• CONSTIPATION. *&#13;
TUTT'S P I U 4 I are •specially a' yted&#13;
to such eases, one dose effect* such a&#13;
than** i " - — -&#13;
ftoej&#13;
body S&#13;
has as y e t even been begun, for it&#13;
takes l o n g e r to draw up a specificaarresf&#13;
of Louis Resume, the Tnad man whoi tron*and accept a tender than it does&#13;
created such terror on the Wabash train from . - - -&#13;
Kansas City. The jurv recommend that Reaume&#13;
be held to await the action of the grand&#13;
Jurj. The physicians at the County Hospital&#13;
pronounce Reaume out of danger. When he&#13;
was taken to the hospital Sunday, with three.&#13;
bullets in his body, it was thought he bad but&#13;
a few "hours to live.&#13;
PE.U'11 DT&#13;
A watcr-spQUt bu;-&gt;t in&#13;
Joking&#13;
Then she enlisted the sympathy of&#13;
friends of the General, who agreed with&#13;
her that the statue was an outrage upon&#13;
her husband's memory. Mrs. Cuser&#13;
appealed t &gt; Secretary Lincoln to have&#13;
the statue removed, and confident in&#13;
the belief that v, would be done, went&#13;
abroad. When she returned the status&#13;
was still standing. She renewed her&#13;
appeals 1o the present secretary of&#13;
war, and succeeded ia getting an order&#13;
for the removal of the sta'ue. The&#13;
order was promptly executed, and the&#13;
statue has 1 cen stored among a lot of&#13;
rubbish at West Point. This is the fir*t&#13;
instance in th s country where a statue&#13;
lias been t'ken down and rejected became&#13;
of i s demerits, afcer befng deiica'ed.&#13;
It is not known whether anbtby&#13;
er will ever be tree ed to his" memory&#13;
but it is hoped tha*. snmi orm will&#13;
Over 70 persons were killed by the&#13;
of a train on a Russian railroad".&#13;
The F^ench-wtr ship Renanfwent down a&#13;
few days, ago with 150n*efron board,&#13;
Jiieven thousattdrefuges from Khartoum&#13;
and Berbt^-Are now seeeklng shelter in l&gt;ongola.&#13;
e queen has created Lord Wolseley a&#13;
knight o | the order of 8 t Tatrick in succession&#13;
to Lord O'Hag an.&#13;
The Portuguese "governmerithas ordered&#13;
quarantine to be enforced against all arrivals&#13;
by way of Gibfalter.&#13;
Late aflviees from the scene of the earthquake&#13;
in the vallevof Cashmere place the number&#13;
of killed at 200.&#13;
A terrible gale raged on the coast of Newfoundland&#13;
for several days. Manv lives are&#13;
reported lost, and the lost"to shipping is very&#13;
•u avy.&#13;
The greater portion of the building in which&#13;
the inventor's exhibition is being held In London&#13;
was destroyed by fire recently. The valuable&#13;
coilcotinn from India was burned, •&#13;
Three hundred.bouses, fifty .shopsand throemosques&#13;
in the Staml&gt;oul quarter of Constantinople&#13;
were destroyed by tire recently. One&#13;
person was killed and many were injured.&#13;
The British residents of Cashmere report&#13;
that shocks of 'earthquake continue. The&#13;
earth has opusd In several places, swallowing&#13;
e number of Mbu9«s. Hbt water and clouds'of&#13;
of Bulphuroits dust bavc been ejected from the&#13;
chasms. These phenomena are accompanied&#13;
by loud rumblings, • '&#13;
A resolution is before the Canadian House&#13;
of Commons declaring It expedient to impose&#13;
a tax ot $50 on every person of Chinese origin&#13;
entering He Dominion, and providing that no&#13;
vessel carrying Qhinafe immigrants shall carry/&#13;
tin matter in hand and that sooa&#13;
c h e r statue of-the brave and&#13;
hero will be d-.disatid to hi*&#13;
. t&#13;
more than one emigrant for every fifty tons&#13;
vessel's tonnage.&#13;
A strong syndicate. eomposing^««arorte8s&#13;
Burdett-Curtts and other bencj^rFnt parsons,&#13;
is forming in London to,,*e!rrry out yardinal&#13;
Manning's scheme tp^-found a Gordon free&#13;
state and preservo^He Nile from the/commerce.&#13;
of the world—a prefect to whicbytbe cardinal&#13;
urged that the Gordon memoria/fund be de&gt;&#13;
voted. -•* J-* ••&#13;
The Novosti (flfewspeper of/fit, Petersburg)&#13;
reaflirms its statement that/the ameer of Afghanistan&#13;
is dead: It says7 rumors arc being&#13;
received continually, both from the Caucasus&#13;
and the Afghan fronHe/; of the assassination&#13;
of the ameer. The Norosti adds that the people&#13;
of Afghanistan are in a state of great excitement,&#13;
the rumors of the death of the ameer&#13;
having reachofl tbemrfollowed bjr the othef) ruv&#13;
mor that Avonl/KhatL s former ameer, ngnrifn&#13;
Persia, will /take the place of the^ murdered&#13;
ameer/through the machinations of Russia.&#13;
A sonsaflon has teen- caused bv the publication&#13;
q#/powi»WoJteeley*fl dispatcho"* denouncing&#13;
the cwnation-'oT'ttJc Soudan. His warns the&#13;
government that-&lt;Jn the withdrawal from Donroji-&#13;
tfie wboW:i|jrpvlnce will be^iven up to&#13;
tijlarchy and Will n. vert •' from civilization to&#13;
arbiinsm. Withdrawal, he sjys, will revert&#13;
the struggle. The mahdi in a H-w years will&#13;
'm»ck Kgyul.—YiiilTi oOff illuitvM r-nnaull--'' ttrroouubbllee ia&#13;
;;yi&gt;t have Leen a btlrlen ani r.train on IUT&#13;
military resources. The- hc-r pr&gt;iIcy, In both n&#13;
military and tinuiKia' "point o ' view Would bo&#13;
to attack tlu' ra-thdi at Khartoum.&#13;
fanci&#13;
irlin into&#13;
lose an empire." As to the chances&#13;
of augmenting the fleet in war time,&#13;
there is caution to be loarned^for Powers&#13;
neither isolated nor stronger on&#13;
land than the expected invader. To&#13;
show that modern European wars are&#13;
short and sharp, glance at the following&#13;
dates: France and Austria war&#13;
declared May 3, 1859; decisive battle,&#13;
Solferino, June 24—fifty-two days.&#13;
Dano-German war declared January&#13;
16, 1864, decisive battle, fall t&gt;f Duppel,&#13;
April 18—ntnety-three days. Austro-&#13;
Prussian war declared dune 16,&#13;
1869; decisive battle, Sadowa, July 8—&#13;
seventeen days. Austro-Italian war&#13;
declared June 20, 1860; decisive battle,&#13;
Lissa, July 20—thirty days. Franco-&#13;
German war declared July 15/18J&#13;
decisive battle, Sedan, Septejufecr 2—&#13;
forty-nine days.&#13;
Decline o£-^flakerisni.&#13;
There is u^ttuu little resd church in&#13;
Albany^-^t which the Quakers have&#13;
wpjtffiiped for more than half a cenury.&#13;
Formerly the ediiice was filled&#13;
every Sabbath by a prim, quiet congregation,&#13;
who gathered from the surrounding&#13;
country. Of late years the&#13;
membership ha^ gradually decayed,&#13;
until now there^is.no pastor, but at 11&#13;
o'clock on Sundays the door is un-&#13;
, , - . , , . „ . locked and /even or eight persons en-&#13;
X FRIGIITKCL DEATII.&#13;
About 11 o'clock a few nights ago the wife&#13;
and four children of J. Wonch of Barrie. Ont.,&#13;
were burned to death in bed in their house&#13;
here. Mr. Wonch escaped bv jumping'out of&#13;
the wlnjow after » vain • effort-lb rescue his&#13;
wife and children, his shirt .being burned-off in&#13;
the attempt! Mr. \Voneh" is crazy with grief.&#13;
He says that wheu-"ue awoke the whole room&#13;
seemed to be»n"tire. He tried to pull his wift&#13;
out of bed. but could not do so as the tire wai&#13;
leaping out of the mattras* all around her. He&#13;
thinks the rire originated in aiiack shed, and&#13;
savs there were no signs of tire when he retired&#13;
at'll:30.&#13;
FLOOD.&#13;
the mountains about&#13;
eight leagues' east of Lagos, Mexico, near the&#13;
dividing^l-ine between the states of Guanajuato&#13;
and Jajtfeeo. The eiFccts were mo&lt;t deplorable.&#13;
Immense quatitios of water swept down the&#13;
roduutains with invsistihle. force towards the&#13;
ivell poDulated plains and valleys below and&#13;
wrought desolation and ruin. There are a&#13;
ready 100 lives .reported lost, nnd it is&#13;
that the list may bcswelledstill larger-wflen all&#13;
details are known. A great nianVfiouses were&#13;
swept away. Steps have UertTtaken in Lagos&#13;
among inanufacturin£&gt;»&amp;fsses to alleviate the&#13;
pressing want ofm«fiy who escaped from the&#13;
valleys, but lpsfeverything.&#13;
A PATHETIC STORY&#13;
is Kcmeau,&#13;
recently&#13;
ana "told how h"ts owu and three other familiei&#13;
had been foully murdered by Indians. The&#13;
massacre occurred just after "the Duck Lake&#13;
fight while Kemeau and the families were&#13;
camped near Carlcton, having halted their&#13;
freight caravan on hearing of the tight The&#13;
Indians pounced on the camp and killed Remeau's&#13;
wife, three boys and two girls, within nil&#13;
sight as he was returning from hunting game. I/&#13;
He had only a shot g\in and was too far off to use7&#13;
It even if "it would have been effectual.' The&#13;
Indians then killed the other families, wbc&#13;
were in adjacent campa. Reineuu turned&#13;
about and struck south and has beenrieaTjlj&#13;
9lx weeks reaching a place of safety, "/fie ha*&#13;
lived on skunks, mnskrat*and roots for''several&#13;
weeks, going davs at a time without/anj iood&#13;
at all. The Indians were of Big JJcars'band,&#13;
and Remeau thinks they killed /tnore people,&#13;
than is generally known. /&#13;
Government Crop Report&#13;
The June report of the department of agriculture&#13;
will make an increase in the cotton&#13;
area of 5 to 0 per cent, Virginia 107 per cent.,&#13;
North Carolina 10SS, So/th Carolina, 1.03, Georgia&#13;
1(M, Florida 109, Alabama 109. Mississippi&#13;
IQo, Louisiana 107. Texas 110. Arkansas ltffl,&#13;
Tennessee 101. The total area exceeds 18,000-&#13;
000 acres. The r^taut is healthy, growth nearly&#13;
average, the/ stand good. " Where recent&#13;
rains have bei&gt;n excessive the crop is in the&#13;
grass. The general average is 92. which is&#13;
higher tharyin the three proceeding, years&#13;
June. There is an unusual uniforudtyjjKOndition,&#13;
only Tennessee showing lt^&gt;&gt;&lt;**ffian 90.&#13;
The state averages are: YIrjruOHtri'S, North&#13;
CaroUna i)3, South Carolm*-^?)^ Georgia 95,&#13;
Flo win 93, A'abauuJJ^fllisslsaippi DJ, Louisiana&#13;
95, Tcxa,"^O^rfkansai ill, Tennessee S5.&#13;
TfttTT*)'uibJJSfTof winter wheat is reported&#13;
ower thjMfever'before in June. The. general&#13;
icrm^lfegc has declined from 70 in May to tW.&#13;
le averages of the principal states arc: New&#13;
York 91, Pennsylvania 07, Ohio .¾. Michigan&#13;
94, Indiana tM. 'Illinois 40. Missouri 54, Kansas&#13;
.1¾ California (¾. In some states there has&#13;
been a greater loss of area than was anticipated&#13;
in previous reports. The average yield will&#13;
evidently be less than 10 bushels per acre The&#13;
probable product of winter wheat states, according&#13;
to those returns, is reduced to about&#13;
207,000.000 bushels. But none of the territories&#13;
are liul.ided in the winter wheat area.,--&#13;
The report of spring wheat Is move favorable.&#13;
The disposition to reduce its, -breadth ou account&#13;
of the low price wns-checked bv the loss&#13;
of winter wheat ar^-and later by the British-&#13;
Russian war rumors. Substantially the same&#13;
area has been seeded " as last S&gt;ar, about 11,0.'X)KXX&gt; acres, in northern&#13;
ew England, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa,&#13;
Jfcbrnska and all the territories. The• percent-•&#13;
sfee of last year's area is 95 in Wisconsin, 99 ia&#13;
Minnesota, 102 in Iowa, 9i In Nebraska and&#13;
10J in Dakota, The 'condition,ef"spring wheat&#13;
is 97, and indicates a-crojt ^of about 153,000.000&#13;
bushels. Tin- average' for Wisconsin isSSusually.&#13;
/ and after an "RouFs quiet&#13;
meditation the oldest one present will&#13;
arise and stretch out his hand to the&#13;
one/sitting near him. Hands are&#13;
shaken all around and the&#13;
tion departs to repeat the same thing&#13;
fhe next Sunday. If the spirit moves&#13;
any one to pray or speak ho does so.&#13;
Four times a year a general meeting&#13;
is hold, and then twenty or twenty-five&#13;
persons gather, and once or twice a&#13;
year a preacher attends. And this is&#13;
the life of the church. Quakerism does&#13;
not appeal to the sympathies of the&#13;
people of the present day.—Boston&#13;
Journal,&#13;
Telephonic Profits.&#13;
One of the reasons advanced for the&#13;
failure to reduce telephone toils is t]&#13;
imposibility of making a barejivfng.&#13;
In connection with this the^-following&#13;
from the Utica Herujjtfif full of interest&#13;
: "The ^^Ajafferican^ Belt telephono&#13;
com p a a y r e ports that for ten&#13;
m o n t h s ^ r j a n u a r y last its earnings&#13;
werj^$o\06t,554 against $2,295,549 for&#13;
e preceding year. For the same&#13;
period its expenses were $687,378&#13;
against $820,163. The company declared&#13;
dividends for ten months in&#13;
1884 of $1,440,315 against $1,051,479&#13;
HAIR DYL «Gftur H A I * or W H I S M M changed to »&#13;
GLOSST BLACK by a single application or&#13;
ttxls Drx. It imparts a natural color, acts&#13;
InstanUneoDSlr- Sold by DrugjrUU, or&#13;
sent by express on receipt of i l . • • . Office, 4 4 Murray St.. New York* j&#13;
Improved Western Wasner P f t l C B . Ho-1 for family of C . . . §8&#13;
Hs-2 for Urge f*m!lf. - - ••• •&#13;
Ho. 8 for Hotel &amp;»4 iaudrjr, . . , . 10&#13;
Over 20,000 in us*&#13;
Thousand! of ladies are u*ing It, and tbey *r«ak&#13;
of it in the hljjheat terms, saying thit they we&#13;
rather disponse with any other household i&#13;
than this excellent Washer. Ho weU^efuUted&#13;
family will be without it, as It sajee^tho clothes,&#13;
eares labor, naves time, saveslueiT saves soap, and&#13;
makes washday no longer^sraread, but rather s&gt;&#13;
plcsaaotrecreaUon^as-tSiuch as such is possible.&#13;
itt*er&#13;
near to&#13;
Minnesota, IS'j^iowa, 10J; Nubraslca, 102;&#13;
Dakota, 101.^-&#13;
Thcprt^tMit re!x&gt;rt, thereforr;, inxllcatoa n&#13;
wheat crop of 3tK),OOi),000 bUftbels, . £0,000,000&#13;
bushels mimllcr than th^-t of l&amp;Sl.'&#13;
Th»{ tftMiuftl c-ojulftion of rye is 8J. The urea&#13;
of barl'-y f; imarlv'thi1 nami; :va fn 1HS41 ami th*&#13;
lor the preceding year,-&#13;
ye:vr the dividends came&#13;
50 per cent of the total earnings; in the&#13;
last ten months ot! 1884 the dividends&#13;
were nearly three-fourths of the earnings.&#13;
For the capital actually paid in&#13;
the dividends are monstrous. The&#13;
users of the telephones cau reckon&#13;
that 70 per cent of all tho moneys&#13;
which they pay to tho parent company&#13;
are for dividends on inilated stock,&#13;
without any, just consideration."•&#13;
Tho Petrified Forest.&#13;
Visitors to tho petrified forest hear&#13;
»V iniiU' of i-oiulitiiiu 1M 8fl. Tim nc.:-eiuf&lt;« ol&#13;
oats 1 usincrcris' il 4 per c^nt., anrl the average&#13;
•of coiKlfMon is 94. Corn will be reporUvl in&#13;
July, but voluntary' vuturas Indicate &gt;iu Increase&#13;
i»f «n;u&#13;
Corizo, on the Little Colorado, begin&#13;
to see the signs of petrefaction hours&#13;
beforo reaching the wonder. The road&#13;
at a distance of tea miles from Corizo&#13;
enters an immense b.asin, the slope Doing&#13;
nearly a semicircle, and tms inclosed&#13;
by high banks of shale and&#13;
white clay. Tho petrified stumps,&#13;
limbs and in fact whole trees, lie about&#13;
on all sides; the action of the waters&#13;
for hundreas of years has gradually&#13;
washed away the high hills roundabout,&#13;
and tho trees that once covered&#13;
the high tablo-lands now lie&#13;
valley&#13;
VCiG'iT S [ND1AK VEGETABLE PlLIA&#13;
^•'••" ron run&#13;
beneath.&#13;
JnihjL&#13;
Immense trunt's.&#13;
«omo of which will measure^vlBr five&#13;
feet in-diameter, arebroJcenand scattered&#13;
over a surjace'of 300 acres.—&#13;
Boston Journal&#13;
hw ASicfaii B/JtOLja Com plaint©&#13;
^UototjLiTe. b?nw |inptfy vegetable; iiognp»»&#13;
ifij.. liU- 'IJ JU&gt;. Ai:i)ra&gt;wUUk ... -&#13;
tk'^L- r-"?fc.itv^... ,~J»&#13;
' * *&#13;
:w&lt;&#13;
mm i.v. ^s *|- , yi-,.&#13;
mjm« ."• ••&gt;• M 1 $m&amp;&amp;&#13;
w*^i.&#13;
« • * • « •&#13;
/&#13;
WILL PAY YOU&#13;
TO GO TO&#13;
AND HAVE YOUR&#13;
^XAMIKBD AND PITTED WITH&#13;
SPECTACLES OR EYE GLASSES&#13;
R O E H M &amp; A W R I O H T » S ,&#13;
IMPORTERS, JEWELERS AND OPTICIAN8.&#13;
140 WOODWARD AVE.&#13;
THEY MAKE NO CHARGE FOR&#13;
TESTING EYES. AND SELDOM&#13;
1FAIL TO GIVE RELIEF.&#13;
- T H E 0 BESTTQNIC. *&#13;
This medicine, combintns; Irbn with par©&#13;
Vegetable tonics, quickly and completely&#13;
Cures Dyapepslsn Indisjestlon, Weakness*&#13;
Imnare Blood, Alalariu, Chills and Ferers,&#13;
and NeuraJaia.&#13;
It U an unfailing remedy for Diseases of the&#13;
Kidney* and lArer.&#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 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 of&#13;
Energy, Ac, it has no equal.&#13;
*#&gt;• The genuine has aliove trade mark and&#13;
•crossed red lines on wrapper. Take no other.&#13;
ealyky BHOW1 IIIINMMI, CO_ BU-TIHOKX, ]&#13;
K&#13;
BITTERS,&#13;
. i&#13;
i&#13;
If you wish to be relieved of those terrible SlelC&#13;
Headacbe»"and that miserable Sour S t o m -&#13;
a c h . It will, when taken according to directions,&#13;
e u r o a n y c a s e o f Sick H e a d a c h e&#13;
or S o a r S t o m a c h . It cleans the lining of&#13;
a t o m a c h and b o w e l s , promotes healthy&#13;
action and s w e e t secretions. It makes p u r e&#13;
b l o o d and gives it five.flow, thus sending&#13;
n u t r i m e n t to every part; It is the safest,&#13;
speediest and s u r e s t Vegetable Remedy&#13;
ever invented for all diseases of the s t o m a c h&#13;
and l i v e r .&#13;
J. M. Moore, of Farmington. Mich., says: My&#13;
suffering from Sick H e a d a c h e and S o u r&#13;
S t o m a c h was terrible. One bottle of Hops&#13;
and Mart Bitters cured me.&#13;
Do not ret H o p s and IVIa.lt Bitters confounded&#13;
with inferior preparations of similar&#13;
name. For sale by all druggists.&#13;
HOPS &amp; MALT BITTERS CO,JfeflnTli&#13;
ter's Btom-&#13;
. .rters conquers&#13;
prevents malarial&#13;
fevers, dy a p e p s (a,&#13;
chronic constipation,&#13;
a tendency to kidney&#13;
and Madder ailments&#13;
uml rheumatism, And&#13;
Is &lt;*t the greatest&#13;
vtUue In cases of&#13;
bodily trouble arising&#13;
from weakness. Old&#13;
people arc Renerslly&#13;
aided by It, and it Is&#13;
hfjrhly serviceable to&#13;
convalescents a n d&#13;
ladles In delicate&#13;
health. It la. moreever,&#13;
a useful medicine&#13;
to take with one&#13;
on long Journeys, and&#13;
counteracts the effects&#13;
of mental exhaustion.&#13;
For sale&#13;
by all Druggist!&#13;
a n d Dealers g e nerally.&#13;
BITTERS&#13;
ROCKFORDWATCHES&#13;
Are&lt;tnequ«ltod in EXACTING SERVICE.&#13;
Used by t h e Chief&#13;
" J„ oh&#13;
Luis*,"&#13;
UM. e8c.h Canoaicsita Snu orvf ethy* J. by t h e A d m i r a l&#13;
commNaanvdailn Og bInse trhv e&#13;
ry, f o r Astroa&#13;
leal work ; and&#13;
h&#13;
V. s&#13;
kator nomiu»i ,TuiK.,suu&#13;
•by L o e o r o t l v e&#13;
E n g i n e e r s , Coniduetora&#13;
and Rail-&#13;
'waymen. They are&#13;
r e c o g n i s e d a s&#13;
tor all uses in which close&#13;
Ttime and durability are ro;&#13;
luisites. Sold in principal&#13;
T i e s and towns by Che COM -&#13;
.-. PANY'S exclusive Agents&#13;
'•VnlliCJtirltT-,' TT1 *••- n Full Warranty*&#13;
$50 REWARD wTO be paid tar aay Grata F a a&#13;
ef u a i ill* Uut eaa eleaa I M&#13;
bag M aiueh Grain er Seed la ess&#13;
day aeear Patcst MONAKCjeV&#13;
Orala aad a * * * - '^&#13;
and B u n r er ear&#13;
WsreaTsae MM- ^&#13;
tar which we eSefaheaA. Cltet&gt;&#13;
Sir aad PrierlTllt Ballad ft**.&#13;
(•vnAJtvav-^&#13;
• • a a&gt;sjs&gt;ss^s^BjSjs»aF&#13;
"»ffi52IS.%k,&#13;
All Sorts of&#13;
hurts and u&amp;uy sorts of ails of&#13;
man and beast need a cooling&#13;
lotion. .Mustang Liniment.&#13;
Boils and Carbuncle*.&#13;
These are the volcttnoes of the bmmn&#13;
•ysteni. They proceed from impure&#13;
blood and from a riotus dt'inorali/.utiorj&#13;
of the digestive orpins. I hey are un&#13;
uoyiug, painful, and sometimes dangerous.&#13;
I hey can &gt;&gt;e driven out by toning&#13;
the system, and this can bust be done bv&#13;
the use of Brown's Iron Hitte s.&#13;
Messrs. Handy •&amp; Uullmau, druggists,&#13;
Annapolis, Mil., PHY. "We sell Tots of&#13;
Brown's I on Bitters. All who use it&#13;
seem pleased. We hear not one complaint1&#13;
'.&#13;
Not one Prussian j-oldier has died of&#13;
small-pox in the past ten years. *-Vaccination"&#13;
is a standing order in that&#13;
army.&#13;
Savings banks in Berlin do a remarkably&#13;
bris* businc-is. There are about&#13;
114,000 depositors, large and small, in&#13;
the city.&#13;
Chocolate is gaining rapidly in popular&#13;
esteem in the United States, which&#13;
will soon rival France in point of consumption.&#13;
On the average 62,000 messages, press&#13;
dispatches" not included, are sent&#13;
throngh the general telegraph office in&#13;
London daily.&#13;
"There is not a christian in Nashville&#13;
" You may not believe this but a&#13;
southern revivalist named Samuel Jones&#13;
3ays he does.&#13;
Twenty-nine New York Sundayschools&#13;
report a total attendance of 700&#13;
Chinese scholars. The idols of the joss&#13;
house must go.&#13;
"Mothers Should Note This."&#13;
Under this caption an old physician&#13;
writes to a Cincinnati Medical Journal,&#13;
that in view of the fact that people living&#13;
at a distance from cities are frequently&#13;
obliged to resort to cough mixtures already&#13;
put up for use, they should^prtiH&#13;
vide themselves with only such-remedies&#13;
as are known to be frejv-ffom opiates,&#13;
poisons and narcotics; thus A avoiding&#13;
not only dangerTbut even fatal results.&#13;
tar&#13;
aends the recently discovered&#13;
Cough (Jure which analyses&#13;
and tests by various Boards of Health&#13;
proved to be purely vegetable as well&#13;
as prompt, effective and entirely harmless.&#13;
Women who teach music in England&#13;
are nearly 12,000 in number.&#13;
FOUR ACTS PLAYED!&#13;
SAD BE PORT ABOUT EX-PRESIDEHT&#13;
ARTHUR.&#13;
Will the Fifth aad Final Act ee a Tragedy-.&#13;
Rochester Democrat and (Jkronicle.&#13;
" D r . Lincoln, who was at the fu-"&#13;
" neral of ex-Secretary Frelinghuysen, "&#13;
" says ex-Pres dent Arthur looked "&#13;
"very unwell. He is suffering from"&#13;
'• Bright's disease. During the past1 '&#13;
" yearit has assumed a very aggra-&#13;
" r a t e d form.''&#13;
That telegram is act IV. of a drama&#13;
written by ex-President Arthur's physicians.&#13;
In act I. he was made to appear&#13;
in "Malaria," of which all the&#13;
country was told when he went to Florida.&#13;
in act II. he represented a tired man,&#13;
worn down, walking the sands at Old&#13;
Point Comfort and looking eastward&#13;
over the Atlantic toward Europe for a&#13;
longer rest.&#13;
The curtain rolls up for act III. upon&#13;
the distinguished actor affected with&#13;
melancholy from Bright's disease, while&#13;
act IV. discovers him with the disease&#13;
"in an aggravated form, suffering intensely,&#13;
(which is unusual) «nd about&#13;
to take a sea Voyage."&#13;
Just such as this is the plot of many&#13;
dramas by play-wrights of the medical&#13;
profession. 'J hey write the first two or&#13;
three acts with no conception of what&#13;
their character will develop in the final&#13;
one.&#13;
They have not the discernment for&#13;
tracing in the early, what the latterimpersonations&#13;
will be. Notonephysician&#13;
in a hundred ha§ the'adequate miscroscopic&#13;
andjjhemlcal appliances- for disco&#13;
veriagoright's disease in its early&#13;
es,. and when many do finally comprenend&#13;
that their patients are dying&#13;
with it, when death occurs, they will to&#13;
cover up their ignorance of it, pronounre&#13;
the fatality to have been caused&#13;
by ordinary ailments, whereas these&#13;
ailments are really results of bright's_&#13;
disease of which&#13;
Have used Dr. Thomas' Electric Oil&#13;
for croup and colds, ' and declare it a&#13;
positive cure. Contributed by Wm.&#13;
Kay, 570 Plymouth avc.^Buffalo, N. Y.&#13;
President Cleveland keeps a btatuette&#13;
of Andrew Jackson on his dejk.&#13;
THE BURDOCK PLANT is one of the&#13;
best diuretics or Kidney regulators in&#13;
the vegetable world, and the compound&#13;
known as Burdock Blood Bitters is unsurpassed&#13;
in all diseases of the kidneys,&#13;
liver and bloqd.&#13;
Young- ladies .abroad ara "going&#13;
wild" over strings of military buttons.&#13;
.SOME REMARKABLE CURES of deafness&#13;
are recorded of Dr. Thomas' Electric&#13;
Oil. Never fails to cure earache.&#13;
Senator Bec'i on Senator Eirstis: "He.&#13;
is a strong man, lazy, ugly and s u 1 1 " ^&#13;
Stated by H. B. Cochraj^r'aruggist,&#13;
Lancaster, Pa.: Haye^gtiaranteed over&#13;
300 bottles of Buptkrck Blood Bitters for&#13;
dyspepsia; sour stomach, bilious attacks,&#13;
jiver and kindey trouble.&#13;
ian coral lishers secure nearly&#13;
$900,000 worth of coral in the course of&#13;
a year;&#13;
The aching back, the sallow skin, the hollow&#13;
eye, give way speedily before Hunt's Reraedj.&#13;
Fifty-one suiciues of broken gamblers&#13;
at Monte Carlo so far th s season.&#13;
"Any physician who haa used it will certify&#13;
to the excellence of Hunt's Remedv. Hunt's&#13;
Rernedv Is a standard remedy for dropsv and&#13;
kidney "diseases." GILBERT CLARK, M. D.&#13;
Fence wire barbs produce $120,000&#13;
annually in royalty for their inventor.'&#13;
MB S I T . M e C A K T A Y Richland Center, Wii„&#13;
after suffering six years with un aggravated&#13;
case of salt rhtTum, was cured by the use of Cole's&#13;
Carbollsalte. •&amp; and 50 cents. Sold bv Druggists.&#13;
The manufacture of oil from the castor&#13;
bean is a budding industry in Arizona,&#13;
especially at Tucson.&#13;
KIDNEY-VVCRT&#13;
DOES&#13;
WONDERFUL&#13;
CURES OP&#13;
KIDNEY DISEASES&#13;
AND&#13;
LIVER COMPLAINTS, o&#13;
B o c s n s s j t acts o a t h e LITER, BOWELS a a d&#13;
KIDKXTS a t the same tjart.&#13;
Bsoaass It elsanse* t h s system of the poison*&#13;
ous humors that davaiopS ia Xldnsy s a d Urinary&#13;
Plaasaea, DUioHSiieaa, Jaundice, Constrpstion\&#13;
PUas, or la-ga«Tnn*tlam. Kanrslaia, 2far*&#13;
• o u s JWsordefs and all Female Complaints.&#13;
^UT&amp;QUD PROOF OF TEI3.&#13;
^^ I T WILL&#13;
OONlTIPATIONi&#13;
SUSJEL7 CXTEX&#13;
PILI8,&#13;
and RHKU|RATISMt By osartng TCLSX ACTION of aU tha organs&#13;
and functions, thereto?&#13;
CLEANSING the BLOOD&#13;
restoring the normal power to throw off disease.&#13;
THOUSANDS OF OASIS&#13;
of the w o n t forms of these terrible diseases&#13;
hare besn qulokly reliered, and In a short time raica, 91. •uIqRcFroIOoaTLY CUWD. DRT, SOLD BY DHJWHTS.&#13;
Dry eaa be sent b y mall,&#13;
WXLLB, aiOHAXDSON At Oo., Barllnctoa, T t&#13;
3 S4Dd iump for Diary Almaaan for 18M.&#13;
K I D N E Y - W C R T&#13;
Re U. AWARE&#13;
THAT&#13;
tatfiefa*f*J&#13;
LortllArd'g Otoix Plug&#13;
t a rei tea sas; that T&#13;
Uaaf tas sat i taaej&#13;
they are unconscious&#13;
victims, "'&#13;
JJeyond any doubt, 80 per cent, of all&#13;
deaths except from epidemics and accidents,&#13;
result from diseased kidneys or&#13;
livers. If the dying be distinguished&#13;
and his friends too intelligent to be&#13;
easily deceived, his phyiscians perhaps&#13;
pronounce the complaint to be pericarditis,&#13;
pyaemia, septicaemia, bronchitis,&#13;
pleuritis, valvular leisons of the heart,&#13;
pneumonia, etc. If the diseased be less&#13;
noted, "malaria'1 is now the fashionable&#13;
assignment of the cause of death. "&#13;
But all the sime, named right 01&#13;
named wrong, this fearful scourge gathers&#13;
them in ! While it prevails among&#13;
persons of sedentary habits,—lawyers,&#13;
clergymen, congressmen,—it also plays&#13;
great havoc among farmers, day laborers&#13;
and mechan:cs. though they d&lt;&#13;
suspect it, because their physician's keep&#13;
it fr m them, if indeed ^heyare able to&#13;
detect it.&#13;
It sweepsth&lt;Jusands of women and&#13;
childreniifo untimely graves every&#13;
yeafc*-^The health gives way gradually,&#13;
e strength is variable, the appetite&#13;
tickle, the vigor gets less and less.&#13;
This isn't malaria—it is the beginning&#13;
of kidney disease and will end—who&#13;
does not know how?&#13;
No, nature has not been remiss. Independent&#13;
research has given an infallible&#13;
remedy for this common disorder;&#13;
1autrof~«o«rsg_the bigoted physicians&#13;
will not use WlirSeTTt oafo oure,—because&#13;
it is a private affair and cuts up&#13;
their practice by restoring the health of&#13;
those who have been invalids for&#13;
years.&#13;
The new saying of "how common&#13;
bright's disease is becoming, among&#13;
prominent men!11 is getting old, and&#13;
as the Englishman would say, sounds&#13;
"stupid11 -especially "stupid1' since&#13;
this disease is readily deteoted by the&#13;
more learned men and specialists of&#13;
this disease. But the "common run1'&#13;
of physicians, not detecting it, give the&#13;
patient Epsom salts or other drugs prescribed&#13;
by the old code of treatment&#13;
under which their grandfathers and&#13;
great-grandfathers practiced!&#13;
Anon, we hear that the patient is&#13;
"comfortable.11 IV.?t ere long, maybe,&#13;
they " t a p " him and take some water&#13;
from him and the "comfortable"1 story&#13;
is told. Torture him rather than allow&#13;
him to use Warner's safe c u r e ! W i t h ^&#13;
such variations the doctors play^upon i&#13;
the unfortunate until his shroud-is mad ,&#13;
when we learn that he died from heart&#13;
disease, pyemia, sefrffcaemia or some&#13;
THAT TIRED FEELING&#13;
Everybody Itnowo wlrnt "tliixt tiro J frying" \*. It&#13;
affllcta nearly every one at tht* time of year, being&#13;
caueed by tlit^ ilcprexitlu^ effecta oi the changing&#13;
•eaaon and the debilitated condition of the body.&#13;
The refreshing, toning and invlgoiu:lng Influences&#13;
for which the ayatcm appeula will bo found 1« Hood's&#13;
Saraaparllla, the reliable tonic an 1 Hood jjarifler.&#13;
tilve It a trial.&#13;
"I look Ilrxtd'* Saraaparllla for loss of appetite,&#13;
oyapepola, and "generafTaaguorT It did nae s Tast&#13;
amount of good, and I have no hesitancy In recommending&#13;
it to my friends and all needing medicine,"&#13;
i . W. WII.LKXOBD, Qiilncy. Ill&#13;
"I began taking Hood'a hamapartlla when I was so&#13;
weak I eould not do my work. It has made a new&#13;
person-of me. All I ailc of any one la to try HoQd's&#13;
SarsapertUa and ace iu quick effect. It takes less&#13;
time and quantity to show it* effect than any other&#13;
preparation I ever heard of." Mas, C. A. M. HuSSAaD.&#13;
North Chill. N. y.&#13;
Hood's Sarsaparllla&#13;
Sold by all druggiats. ai;aUfors3. Made only by&#13;
C, I. HOOD &amp; CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass.&#13;
IOO Doses One Dollar.&#13;
Spurgeon has quit eating meat.&#13;
The Poor Little Ones.&#13;
We often see children with red eruptions&#13;
on face and hands, rough, scaly&#13;
skin, and often sores on the head.&#13;
These things indicate a depraved condition&#13;
of the blood. In the growing&#13;
period, children have, need of pure&#13;
blood by which to build up strong and&#13;
healthy bodies. If Dr. Pierce's ."Golden&#13;
Medical Discovery" is given, the&#13;
blood is purged of its bad elements, and&#13;
the child's development will be healthy,&#13;
and as it should be Scrofulous affections,&#13;
rickets, fever-sores, hip-joint&#13;
disease or other grave maladies and&#13;
suffering are sure to result from&#13;
neglect and lack of proper attention to&#13;
such cases.&#13;
Anti-treating&#13;
be n. g.,,&#13;
law in Nevada said to&#13;
A Lovely Complexion.&#13;
"What a lovely complexion," we often&#13;
hear persons fay " I wonder what&#13;
she does for it?" In every case th« purity&#13;
and real loveliness of the;?complexion&#13;
depends upon the blood. Those&#13;
who have sallow, blotchy faces may&#13;
make their skin smooth and healthy by&#13;
taking enough of'TJr. Pierce's "Golden&#13;
Medical Discovery" to drive out the&#13;
htfmors lurklngin the svstem.&#13;
Bartholrii's "Liberty"&#13;
imJJdO different cases."&#13;
is coming over&#13;
as s t u n h o a d . P r e m a t u r a 1 W C A &gt; , H c a t •»««•,&#13;
•Isaaiid ail forma of IMtllUy In Men from early&#13;
evror. Ignorance, * io« or etci'Min Qultsklr and Taalir&#13;
Cfcn-ii withont&lt;-onriiiem&lt;-nt l»r t h e&#13;
rCIVIALE TREATMENT?&#13;
nowenwlyawa^bdxdr'i Amnio* Mir •, »n luiacril*&#13;
F R E » , t « «atrw«at lmn«\rrr+, (nut in lx&gt;r&lt;, or curio.&#13;
S»y-tt«kera),Jarir* Ulu-irated *uik on m«*aac« «4&#13;
i££.£F'.H°:Vrim*r* ••«•*••* Brain « • « Nerves,&#13;
(Bested. f«r&lt; eenu lustainpa.) Glvra teattmonlals. btssv'&#13;
MMarMlmadic&amp;l raroit-nt-ea, Ac. &lt;'&gt;n«iiltotl»« Frea.&#13;
CI V J ALJCAOK \ r \ . l t i l ' „lt n n s t , S e ^ w r s w&#13;
Ki Ki Hi&#13;
RAOWAY'S&#13;
READY&#13;
REUEF.&#13;
• CITKE FOR ALL&#13;
8UMMER C0MPLAIST8&#13;
A teaspoonfsl In half s tambler of water wilt la s&#13;
few moments cure CRAMPS. SPASMS, SOUR STOSt&#13;
ACH. NAUSEA, VOMITING. HEARTBURN, NERVOUSNE88,&#13;
8LEEPLESSNTES8, SICK HEADACHE,&#13;
DfARRHckA, DY8ENTEBT, CHOLERA MORBUS.&#13;
COLIC. - - - - -&#13;
PAINS. FLATULENCY,&#13;
For CHOLERA sod seTere cases of the foregoing&#13;
Complaints, see our printed direction*.&#13;
MALAMIA IN IT* VARIOUS WORM3&#13;
v *.. FBTER AND AGUE.&#13;
cure Fever and Agne and all other Malarious, Hllloua,&#13;
and other fevera (aided by RADWAVS PILLSj so&#13;
quickly as RADWATS READY RELIEF.&#13;
RADWAY'S READY RELIEF IS A CURE FOB&#13;
EVERY PAIN. TOOTHACHE, HEADACHE, SCIATICA,&#13;
LUMBAGO. NEURALGIA, RHEUMATISM;&#13;
SWELLING OF THE JOINTS. SPRAINS, BRUISE*.&#13;
PAINS IN THE BACK, CHEST OR LIMBS.&#13;
The application of the READY RELIEF to t h e n a *&#13;
or part* where the pain or difficulty exiats will aRont&#13;
Instant eaie and comfort.&#13;
It waa the tlrat and ia THE ONLY PAIN REMEDY&#13;
that Instantly atops the moat excruciating pa^pi, allay*&#13;
fnflassnifetlon, and Curea Congestion*, whether of the&#13;
Lungs; Stomach, Bowela, or other glands of organs bf&#13;
one application.&#13;
riUCE,50 CENTS per pottle, sold by druggist*&#13;
.Mild, soothing, and healing is Dr.&#13;
Sage's Catarrh Kemedy.&#13;
Half ord Sauce M [ r £ r e S uge Only sold&#13;
cheapest.&#13;
DR. RAOWAY's&#13;
SARSAPARILLIAH RESOLVENT,&#13;
The Great Blood Purifier-&#13;
FOR THE CURE _DF CHRONIC DISEASES.&#13;
Chronic Rheumatism, Scrofula, Glandular Swelllaa&#13;
Hacking, Dry Cough. Cancerous Affections, SyphlUUi&#13;
Complaints, Bleeding of the LungCJ&amp;Tspepaia. Watex&#13;
Braah. White Swellings. Tumors. Timplea, matches,&#13;
Eruptions of the Face. Ulcera, Skin and UlrfUlseaaaa&#13;
Mercurial Diseases, Female Complaints, Gout, Dropsy.&#13;
Rickets, SaR Rheum. Bronchitis, Consumption, K l 4&#13;
ney. Bladder, Liver Complaints, etc.&#13;
Dr Jladway's Sarsaparillan Ecsolvent.&#13;
A remedy composed of Ingredients of .extraordinary&#13;
medical properties, essential to purify, heal, repair&#13;
and invigorate the broken-down and wasted body—&#13;
QLICK, PLXASAKT, SA&gt; K and PKBMAXKST In its treaV&#13;
ment and cure.&#13;
SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. One Dollar a bottle.&#13;
JJJfcnRAD WAY'S&#13;
REGULATING PILLS,&#13;
27½ Great Liver and Stomach Remedy.&#13;
•*"* U&lt; R E 8&#13;
Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sciatica,&#13;
Lumbago, Backache. Headache, Toothache.&#13;
• o r e T h r o a t . S w e l l l n v a . f t p r n i n a . B r n L s e * ,&#13;
B a r n i , S c a l d s . F r o a t B i t e s .&#13;
A5D 4 L t OTHER BODILY PAIXS ASD AtJIES.&#13;
80ldl)jDruxsi«Ji«ni1 D*«ler»evfrywU«r«. FL/t/Coula » LKJUJ*.&#13;
Dir*TtiojiHa H L*uiu»?r».&#13;
T n E CBABXES A. V 0 6 E L E K CO.&#13;
&lt;*a*rm«n t* A, VV.KLF.fl * CO&gt; B»ltlw«rT.. Tfrt., t . f. A.&#13;
THE GREAT&#13;
OHIO&#13;
WEU DRILL&#13;
other deceptij&#13;
cause&#13;
E^Presidcnt&#13;
^shlgular—jt is&#13;
case. "He is&#13;
though "dignified&#13;
Drills the well and purapsonttbe&#13;
cuttings of the Dill I at each&#13;
stroke. Drives the cuing or drills&#13;
a hole under it to let it follow.&#13;
Tc-ti tho well without removing&#13;
tool*! buna easier than any other&#13;
and drops the tools&#13;
faster.' Vv# also make&#13;
m a c h i n o s&#13;
a n d tools&#13;
^tor boring&#13;
LARGE&#13;
, WILLS!&#13;
LOOMIS&amp;NYMAJ.,&#13;
TIFFIN, OHIO.&#13;
e»&#13;
Perfectly tasteless, elegantly coated, purge, regulate.&#13;
- •-• purlfj', cleanse and Htrengthcn.&#13;
Dr. Radwav's Pills, for the cure of all disorders of&#13;
the Stomach, Liver, Bowels, Kidneys, Bladder,&#13;
Nervous Diseases. Loss of Appetite. Headache, Constipation.&#13;
Costiveness. Indigestion, Dvspepsia. Billou*&#13;
ness. Fever. Inflammation of the Bowela, Plies, and an&#13;
denrangementa of the lnternnl Viscera. Purely&#13;
vegetable, coutain|ns no mercury, minerals, or deteterous&#13;
drugs.&#13;
Price 25 cents per box. Sold by all druggists.&#13;
READ "FALSE AND TRUE."&#13;
Send a letter stamp to DR. R AD WAT * CO., No.**&#13;
Warren Street, New York, t y i n f o r m a t i o n worth&#13;
thousands will be sent to you.&#13;
LIQUID GLUE&#13;
Bs^!m»HfWk£.%WZMa Awarded GOLD MEDAL, LONDON, 1S83. Cat*&#13;
by Muoo a Hamlin Orcan and Piano Co.. Puilmaa&#13;
Palace Car Co.. t c Mfd only by the R U S S I A&#13;
C^MJENT CO.OLOUCE8TeR.MA88.SOLD&#13;
eVERYWHERE. avSanpU Tin Can by Mail, So.&#13;
« ,&#13;
P O R T K R S&#13;
I I A. 1* L O A D E R ,&#13;
Attached to waffon.delivers&#13;
the hay out of wtnrow&#13;
or swath on to the hay racfc.&#13;
witliuut any extra help,&#13;
and in combination with&#13;
Porter's Hav Carrier reduces&#13;
the expense of harfnjf&#13;
more than half. Send&#13;
for circulars.&#13;
OTTAWA. n.L&#13;
TJ 1» TL' XJ H . E t&#13;
EGAN'S IMPERIAL TRUSS&#13;
This new truss has a spiral spring aad&#13;
GRADUATED PKKasi'MBi yielda to every motion,&#13;
retaining the hernia always. It cures.&#13;
Worn DAY and XI&amp;HT with comfort. Enclose)&#13;
stamp for Circular. Used In both Hospitals.&#13;
Ask your druggist. EGAN'S IMPERIAL TRUSS CO,&#13;
Box 22» Ann Arbur.Mlch.&#13;
"•' nn «ta3T IS OMIAPBST.** n u m TUREQUPRQ sit But&#13;
llrsMrsssSlfafestal nl I I H t O l l 1 . 1 1 0 fflawrlsHas.&#13;
rtalSaSSaall&#13;
ClimliUfA&#13;
FUN Bro. Jopathaa's Jokes&#13;
80 pages, TItastrsted. flsnt,&#13;
Postpaid, for Tweirs Csata,&#13;
t&gt;aiLaia&gt;iaaasi..ltswtess.&#13;
Arthur's case is not&#13;
typical cf every such&#13;
suffering intensely."&#13;
Th i is not usual. Generally there is&#13;
almost no suffering. He may recover^&#13;
if he will act independently of ris&#13;
physicians. The agency named has&#13;
cured thousands of persons even in the&#13;
extreme stages- is to-day the main-stay&#13;
of the health of hundreds of thousands&#13;
It is an unfortunate fact that physicians&#13;
will not admit there is any virtue outside&#13;
their own sphere, but as each&#13;
sihool denies virture to all others, the&#13;
peop'e act on their own judgment and&#13;
accept things by the record of merit&#13;
they make. " '&#13;
TJ'he facts nre cause for alarm, but&#13;
there is abundant hope in prompt and&#13;
independent action.&#13;
A SOAR TnuoAT on COCQH, if suffered to&#13;
propreaa, often results in an incurable throat&#13;
or lunjr troublt*. "brown « Bro-chiai Troche*"&#13;
give instant relief.&#13;
The slmplwt an&lt;l best regulator of the W*-&#13;
ordeietl Liver hi the world, are Carter's Little&#13;
Liver Pills. They give prompt relief inShk&#13;
Headache, Ditiiiirfs, Naunt'a, Ac.: prevent&#13;
and cure (oastipatlon and Piles; remove Sdlownees&#13;
and Pimplea from the Complexion,&#13;
and are jiiUdard prntle la their operation t&gt;D&#13;
the bowers. O r Vers Little Liver Pllla arc&#13;
email and as eaajr to take as sugar. One pill&#13;
88 eaata. • =&#13;
CONSUMPTION. I have a positiver»medy for tba sbore dlaaasa; by Its&#13;
nta thonsanilsof eases ol the worst kind and of long&#13;
staadlntt hav* been cured. Iiidee&lt;l, 'ostrnntj^smirfalta&#13;
Jo Its efficacy, tlmt 1 wit aendTWO BOTTLES FRBK,&#13;
together with aVAI.CABT.BTRKATlSK on this disease&#13;
to any sufferer. Glveoxpressand P O. nddr »a.&#13;
p a . T. A. SLOUUM, 111 Pearl St., Xew York.&#13;
sfliSBre relist lOsnTatl KIDDER'S PflCTLlJS.^^il^S'i:&#13;
*" |CaarIestowa»l"&#13;
TELEGRAPHY&#13;
• V A X J £ N T I N S&#13;
TATJOHT AHi&gt; SITTJATIOJli&#13;
FUltNISHKD. Circulars " V A X J C N T I N S B R O S . , J M B S S T U I S ,&#13;
OPIUM&#13;
[are trea&#13;
*• 5Ms¾tsv¾ys. Xo s s a yUUf t s i r s s l j&#13;
D k J. S T K P S W N * , T"»K»afm, " " ' -&#13;
CURES Rheumatism. Lum- r i l l . r U l n l l j U I L&#13;
bago. Lame Back, Spraina sa* ^ T ss* aaa. ^ T • i m i W W* U aaal&#13;
and Bruises, Asthma, Catarrh, Coughs,Colds, Sore TbroatyDiphtheria, Burns&#13;
Frost Bites. Tooth, Ear, and Headache, and all pains and Aches. /&#13;
FOSTEIt, 2rrL7iTITX&lt;£ COMPANY, PropriHttrn, Bnffnlo, JTeig Tork, U.S.A.&#13;
/ ^ r . w . u . P - a - 2¾&#13;
/&#13;
Mirror&#13;
Alliak et hoen li ttth4lee cvoetrtaanade au opfo n the talu/srUt the refresh*&#13;
of RMt^s KBO3 BteapVsaga ha anai*&#13;
aoartshlaa.satlsfylna; jad is preparedlaa&#13;
few amtaotes. Felli dtrectloBi "aecompany each —&#13;
staagl hiltiate aee i&#13;
§^g^S?ft!R %fP*it£ as In fear slses,—&#13;
s&#13;
N&#13;
/&#13;
is no flatterer. Would yoo&#13;
makeit tell a sweeter tale?&#13;
Magnolia Balm is the charm*&#13;
er that almost cheats tht&#13;
&gt;kiog«gli&#13;
MJ!&#13;
« •&#13;
- - V - - 1&#13;
X .&#13;
^ A&#13;
"N ,.N N . - . . ' • - ^ N ^ i .&#13;
/ . . N ' s* •V v&#13;
• JKt.:..im23L~&#13;
m***mmm&gt;**mm*1*u "V*1f ''T'f *'*~&lt;:~~r&#13;
r:^*.-&#13;
V &gt;&#13;
3&#13;
il&#13;
PLAIN FIELD SPLASHES1&#13;
^ F r o m o u r CorreBi)ondL&gt;ut.&#13;
Mrs. W. M. Smith 'is improving&#13;
from.her severe illness very slowly.&#13;
The warm rains the past week have&#13;
caused corn and oats to grow rapid-&#13;
The dance at the cheese factory&#13;
was well attended, about 40 numbers&#13;
being sold.&#13;
Mrs. Avery and daughter, from&#13;
near Howell, are visiting at Elder&#13;
Dailey's this week.&#13;
Sheep shearing is in full blast and&#13;
will soon be done, and we hope a&#13;
share will be marketed here.&#13;
The hair lip operated on in the&#13;
case of George Taylor as short time&#13;
since, has healed and is in good&#13;
terrupt the proceedings of its master.&#13;
The damage was slight, aside from&#13;
necessitating the cutting of the barness&#13;
in Qrder to get the horse out oi&#13;
his dhlemrt.&#13;
A seven-year-old son of Mrsv Hirst,&#13;
housekeeper lor Ja=on McFail, died c f&#13;
dropsy last Saturday and was buried&#13;
Sunday afternoon. - --&#13;
i ,&#13;
«&#13;
i &lt;&#13;
Geo. Fitch and wife and J . Richmond&#13;
aud wife, of west Howell, were&#13;
the guests of Rev. and Mrs Daily&#13;
over Sundav.&#13;
G, L. Smith is moving his goods&#13;
For the next.&#13;
T E N D A Y S&#13;
we will give&#13;
to Gregory where he has built a new&#13;
store, and will carry the~sarne line of&#13;
goods as he did here.&#13;
Children's Day at M. P. church&#13;
last Sunday was a success. The exercises&#13;
Arcrc nice in every respect and&#13;
the choir rendered some fine mnsic.&#13;
The M. P . society will have an&#13;
ice cream social at Plainfield Tuesday,&#13;
June 23. It will,be held in the&#13;
, store building vacated by 0 . L.&#13;
Smith, All are invited.&#13;
Rev. Mr. Dailey, will attend&#13;
quarterly meeting at Dansville next&#13;
Sunday, and Rev. E. G.Brumbaugh,&#13;
former pastor of M. P. church in this&#13;
place, will occupy the pulpit here.&#13;
J. C. Dickerson and family have&#13;
moved to Gregory where J. C. will&#13;
wield the hammer. He is a good&#13;
mechanic and we are sorry to loose&#13;
him. A good blacksmith could do&#13;
well to rent the shop formerly occupied&#13;
by Mr. Dickerson, as a-good&#13;
blacksmith is very much needed here&#13;
especially a good horse shoer.&#13;
UtiADILLA REMARKS.&#13;
Prom our Correspondent.&#13;
Died, Wednesday morning, June&#13;
10th, 1885, Earnest, youngest son of&#13;
G. S. and Myra May. He was nearly&#13;
aagan yflarf. old, tip had ^nflfcrpd terribly'for&#13;
nearly five -weeks, and was&#13;
very patient through it all.&#13;
Dear little Earnest has left ue.&#13;
He's gone to that beautiful land&#13;
Where Angles, bright Angles, ire waiting&#13;
To receive him as one of thir band.&#13;
He taae crossed oe'r the dark rolling river.&#13;
He is walking the bright golden shore,&#13;
Where he'll never know sorrow or sadness;&#13;
Where he'll never feel pain any more. "*&#13;
He Is beckoning to papa and mama,&#13;
To sisters and brothers and friends,&#13;
To join him in that blessed city&#13;
Where his song of sweet praise never ends.&#13;
Let ua strive to live true, faithful cftnstiann,&#13;
Let ua walk in the straight and narrow way&#13;
Which leads to that beautiful city&#13;
Where we shall meet Earnest some dav.&#13;
W . C . M.&#13;
A HANDSOME&#13;
J A P A N E S S E I ! , i i&#13;
HAND BASKET&#13;
with every&#13;
TWO POUNDS&#13;
of&#13;
&lt;s 1¾ &lt;L.&#13;
ROASTED COFFEE!&#13;
GENUINE MASON&#13;
FRUIT JARS!&#13;
kept constantly on hand.&#13;
At Pinckney, THURSDAY, JUNE 25, 1885.&#13;
A large amount of Reapers, Mowers, Engines, Threshers, Etc.,&#13;
sold by Geo. W. Reason will be delivered on that day.&#13;
A Birdsall Traction Engine will show its wonderful powers by drawing a nnunmoth load of machinery. Anyone&#13;
ToHTc mTrtat i ti ^ huviiv anything in this hnn should nor tail to see \\\\&lt; exhibition. He also has on'liana" "a "few Roy CO&#13;
and Hern Keepers' formate cheap. THE VIXCK&gt;'EY CORNET BAND IX ATTENDANCE. J 3 T A FREE DINNER&#13;
TO ALTi P f KCHASERS. No one should fail to see this display, as it will be the grandest delivery day ever held in&#13;
this isection . ' . »&#13;
" W A I S T T E J O&#13;
—at the-&#13;
H I G K H E S T&#13;
MARKET PRICE&#13;
PINCKNEY ELEVATOR&#13;
WHEAT,&#13;
BEANS, ETC.&#13;
For ^ i c h the highest market&#13;
price&#13;
THOS. READ,&#13;
—for—&#13;
ik'h #£rw;li he pauT.'-^ft-&#13;
- Pinckney,&#13;
i . *&#13;
1 Hamburg's boom is on, it has ;&#13;
| new hall and one limine has been em:t&#13;
ed already this year, to say nothing o&#13;
1 the tact that its depot has been -retir&#13;
I ed" from business. — Republican.&#13;
It takes but a short time for. a person to see that the stock carried lfrjr&#13;
MANN BROTHERS*&#13;
Is by far the most complete in town. A beautiful line of&#13;
M W TINSEL WINDOW SHADES&#13;
.A. LI3ST3-:. OFm&#13;
BUTTER &amp; EGGS&#13;
-the-&#13;
OLD EAST END&#13;
G R O C E R Y .&#13;
WANTED! AGENTS&#13;
TO 8EI.I,&#13;
TXJNISOIT'&#13;
MACKINAC.&#13;
S&#13;
BRIGHTON SAYINGS.&#13;
From the Citizen.&#13;
A burglar entered the sleeping room&#13;
of George Lawson, through the window,&#13;
by the use of a ladder, Saturday&#13;
night, took his pants and made his exit&#13;
unnoticed. In the morning George&#13;
found his pants down in the yard,&#13;
minus his pocket-book^suspenders and&#13;
handkerchief.&#13;
iFrom the Argus.&#13;
Frank Abrams, of Green Oak, will&#13;
be tried at Howell next week for the&#13;
larceny of a fine nickel plated harness,&#13;
worth about §50, from Sairr Starks, of&#13;
Genoa, about three years ago. Young&#13;
Crippen, who was concerned itf the&#13;
matter turned State's evidenco and&#13;
laid the .crime alt at Abram's door,'&#13;
but the harness could never Jae-found.&#13;
Yesterday while Messrsr"C. E. Cushing&#13;
and Peter Cocb., were down to Woodruffs&#13;
lake fishing, they found a harness&#13;
buried near the shore, within&#13;
about 80 rods ot Crippen's house.&#13;
Word was sent to Mr. Starks .and he&#13;
came down and identified it this morning.&#13;
HOWELL COMMENTS,&#13;
from tbe Republican.&#13;
Last Sunday night while the village&#13;
lamp lighter, Ed. Carpenter, was&#13;
engaged in his duty his horse stepped&#13;
into the ditch while turning the corner&#13;
at the junction of Grand River and&#13;
Lake streets, causing "sad equine-tQ&#13;
turn a head spring and otherwise in-&#13;
New and superior subscription Atlases, Maps and |&#13;
Chart*. AB paying as any a^i'iH'y in the world.&#13;
For catalogue." free, address II. V . TUNISON.&#13;
('taiaa&lt;*o,-HI.; New York City, X. Y.; Oim innati,&#13;
0 , : Atlanta, Ga.; London, Canada; St. Paul,&#13;
Minn., or Kansas City, Mo.&#13;
DANIEL F. EWEN,&#13;
GENERAL AGENT, PINCKNEY, MICH.&#13;
The Most Delightful&#13;
SUMMER TOUR&#13;
Palaoe etaamen. Low B»tM.&#13;
Pour Trips per Week Between&#13;
DETROIT AND MACKINAO&#13;
And Xvery Week Day Between&#13;
DETROIT AND CLEVELAND&#13;
Write for our&#13;
" Picturesque Mackinac," Illustrated.&#13;
Contain* Pull Particul*r«. Mailed Pre*.&#13;
That beats anything in town. L A D I E S , examine the new&#13;
EMBOSSED AND TINSEL BELTS.&#13;
We must cull your .attention to our elegant line of&#13;
Detroit &amp; Cleveland Steam Nav. Co.&#13;
C . O. W H I T C O M B , Q E N PAM. A Q T . ,&#13;
DETROIT, M I C H .&#13;
Hr*J!«fr&gt;fSliBfii«&#13;
LADIES • HANDKER&#13;
Our store is full, and the goods are going to t&#13;
go. Prices are what knock, and we&#13;
are always ready to meet any&#13;
—competition.—&#13;
We have a full line of T i n ^ I Trimming Braid. _ G E N T L E M E N , w t&#13;
call vour attention'to our lineoff*-&#13;
l&#13;
SOFT AND STIFF&#13;
v GROCERIES v&#13;
BOOTS &amp; SHOES&#13;
•CHEAP* • ^&#13;
V—&#13;
/&#13;
F A MANH, PHONEY&#13;
the-¥ery4atest shapes.&#13;
MANN BROS; -&#13;
/ We sha.ll commence doing a strictly-&#13;
CASH BUSINESS.&#13;
We shall keep in *toek a full line of&#13;
BOOTS AND SHOES, '&#13;
Our prices at all times will be found&#13;
low as first class goods can be sold for.&#13;
as.&#13;
With thanks tor past favors and soliciting a continuance of&#13;
main'Yours Respectfully,- -— the same, we re*&#13;
JTBTHUFF&#13;
All persons owing us on account are reouested ta call and&#13;
•«WP»-</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>June 18, 1885 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>VOL III PINCKNEY, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JUNE 25,1885. NO. 24&#13;
PmoKNBY DISPATCH.&#13;
&gt; J.LNEWK1RK, PUBLISHER.&#13;
;-*&#13;
XltUSD TBCBIDATI.&#13;
MMeriptloft Priwf, $1.00 per Tear.&#13;
ADVERTISING RATES .&#13;
rmnaleat advertisement*, 8b cants per Inch for&#13;
t n t lnawtion and ten cents per Inch for each sabeeq&#13;
m t Insertion. Local notice*, 5 cent* per line for&#13;
wch InaarHon Special ratea for regular advertise-&#13;
MMtrijr the year or quarter.&#13;
A l t (OVERUSING BILLS DUE QUARTERLY.&#13;
INTERESTING TOPICS.&#13;
Thla pftpar may be found on file at Geo. P.&#13;
Bowell k Vo'a. Newspaper Advertising Bnreaa&#13;
(10 Sprao* ft.,) where advertising contracts may&#13;
be made for It In New York.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
T H HOAG, M. D.,&#13;
(HGMCEOPATHIC.)&#13;
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.&#13;
Qfflf* »t r*»Manr» nn TCM$ Mitn street.&#13;
TV M. GREENE, M. D.,&#13;
flftYSICIAN AND SURGEON,&#13;
PLAINFIELD, "WICHRSKNT&#13;
JMtcs atrasidence. Special attention given&#13;
•trcerv and diseases of the throat and lungsn. to&#13;
-f AM18 MARKEY,&#13;
NOTARY PUBLIC&#13;
And Insurance Agent. Legal papers made on&#13;
•nort notice and reasonable term*. Office on&#13;
Main St., near Poetofflce Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
6RIMKH * JOHNSON,&#13;
Proprietors of&#13;
PINCKNEY FLOURING AND CUSTOM&#13;
MILLS,&#13;
Dealer* In Flour and Feed. Cash paid for all&#13;
kinds of grain. Pinckney, Michigan.&#13;
i i&#13;
I T P. VAN WINKLE,&#13;
ATTORNEY &amp; COUNSELOR at LAW&#13;
and SOLICITOR In CHANCERYO&#13;
«oeoverSigler'sDrug Store. PINCKNEY&#13;
T \ D. BENNETT,&#13;
PAINTER AND PAPER HANGER.&#13;
All work In this line executed with neatness&#13;
and dispatch.&#13;
WAIT FOR CATHCART—The photographer.&#13;
He will be in Pinckney&#13;
soon with his car, and make you pictures&#13;
satisfactory and reasonable.&#13;
Flags and Fourth oi July goods at&#13;
Winchell's Drug Store.&#13;
BOWKRY DANCB AT THE RINK—day&#13;
and evening of the 4th.&#13;
C. F . LARTJE.&#13;
.CATHCART, THE PHOTOGRAHHER—intends&#13;
coming here soqn. If you want&#13;
some good pictures taken wait lor&#13;
him and he will give you satisfaction.&#13;
ABERDEEN ANGUS GRADES.—The Polled&#13;
Aberdeen bull, "The Don" at the&#13;
Scotch Stock Farm, will serve a limited&#13;
number of cows at not less than&#13;
$5 per cow, cash. Apply early to&#13;
23tf. WM. COLLIE, Herdsman.&#13;
Japanese Lanterns and Fireworks at&#13;
Winehefl's Drug Store.&#13;
I have on hand some first class cider&#13;
vinegar which I will sell cheap. Inquire&#13;
atPettvsville cider mill.&#13;
2 4 w 8 . - ^ - S. M. COOKE.&#13;
PETTYSVILLE MILLS.—Having repaired&#13;
my mills I am now ready to do first&#13;
class work. Flour, as good as any&#13;
Brand onrhahd, we also keep* feed for&#13;
sale. 24w5 S. A. PETTYS.&#13;
PUBLISHERS NOTjC^y&#13;
EVThose 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;
Bignines'that the time has expired, and that, in ao&#13;
cordance with our rules, the paper will be discontinued&#13;
until subscription is renewed.&#13;
JULY&#13;
FOURTH&#13;
ONE WEEK&#13;
FROM SATURDAY,&#13;
A GRAND DAY AT PLNCKNEY.&#13;
COME AND ENJOY ITS FUN WITH US.&#13;
Don't fail to *ee the street parade the&#13;
4th.&#13;
Considerable wool is being marketed&#13;
here.&#13;
J. Winchell has painted his store&#13;
front. '—r~&#13;
Gregory falls in line. She will celebrate.&#13;
Some farme^i have commenced their&#13;
haying. €&#13;
&gt;ANGB &amp; KIRKLA.ND,&#13;
ATTORNEYS,&#13;
—HIC oAtGheOr, paltatcenesd.&#13;
fc&#13;
PINCKNEY EXCHANGE BANK&#13;
G. wfTEEPLE,&#13;
-IB ANKERS&#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;
COLLECTIONS A SPECIALTY.&#13;
—at the—&#13;
PINCKNEY ELEVATOR&#13;
WHEAT,&#13;
BEANS, WOOL, ETC.&#13;
For which the highest market price&#13;
TH08. RE"wAiDll .b e paid:P inckney,&#13;
&gt; l&#13;
WANT EDI AQENT8&#13;
' TO BKIA&#13;
T XT 1ST f. S O 3ST ' S&#13;
^JTeir and superior subscription Atlases, Maps'and&#13;
Chart*. As paring as any agency in the world.&#13;
For catalogue, free, addresa H. C. TUN I HON.&#13;
Chiaago. III.; New York City, N. Y.; Cincinnati,&#13;
O"; Atlanta, Ga,: London, Canada; St. Paul,&#13;
Mlnftn or Kansas City, Mo.&#13;
DANIEL F. EWEN,&#13;
QKNERAL AGENT, PINCKNEY, MICH.&#13;
OUR PRODUCE MARKET:&#13;
CORRECTED WEEKLY BY&#13;
Jane « , 1 8 » . TOMPKINS dt ISMON&#13;
Wfc«a,No.lwhiU,&#13;
"•Ho.lwbtto,&#13;
No. I red,.&#13;
&gt;. S red,&#13;
Oats&#13;
n i l t H I I I W W t M l U ' M M I M I H l l i* j j s s * * *&#13;
** 00&#13;
«&#13;
IS&#13;
10&#13;
Bllmfrf**-- IT ^*«*»&lt;••«••*&lt;•••••» • • • I S&#13;
••ft 4.B0&#13;
James Markey, of this place, has secured&#13;
the agenov of the Allan Line of&#13;
Steamers He is also agent for the&#13;
celebrated Jones Scales.&#13;
No. 1 new milch cow for sale by&#13;
JOHN LAI&#13;
A bunch of high grade ^yfcarling&#13;
ewes tor sale cheap.&#13;
F. A. BARTONj/Dnadilla.&#13;
Farmer?, call at Ma/fcey's and see&#13;
the new Climax light &gt;1OWER, for which&#13;
he is agent. It is a/model of beauty&#13;
and perfection&#13;
WANTED.&#13;
Wheat," Beans and Clover Seed,&#13;
highest prices paid.&#13;
Tompkins &amp; Ismon.&#13;
HERO to the front again for&#13;
18$£ Farmers, look to your interest&#13;
get the Hero Reaper and save&#13;
your grain and clover seed, a reaper&#13;
that you can depend upon in all kinds&#13;
and conditions of grtin. Don't be&#13;
deceived by buying a poor, cheap ma&#13;
chine because-yeuean-get-rtrat a4&#13;
"price.-" The Hero is sold on its' merits,&#13;
any good farmer can have one on trial.&#13;
I keep a few here in stock, also- a full&#13;
line of repairs always on hand. I also&#13;
sell the Hoosier Grain Drills which are&#13;
acknowledged to be the best drill made.&#13;
I have corn and field Cultivators for&#13;
one or two horses, shovel plows and&#13;
horse hoes and plow repairs lor var-'&#13;
ious plows. I am also agent for che&#13;
J. I. Case celebrated threshing machines&#13;
and steam engines.&#13;
.IAS. MARKEY, General Agent.'&#13;
22tf Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
, Bncklen's Arnica Salve.&#13;
THE BEST SALVE in the world for&#13;
Cut" Ttrnisp^ Snrps, Ulcers, Salt&#13;
Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped&#13;
Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all SKin&#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 DRUG STORE.&#13;
THE REV. GEO. H. THAYER, of&#13;
Bourbon, Ind., says: "Both myselt&#13;
and wife owe our lives to SHILOH'S&#13;
CONSUMPTION CURE."&#13;
ARE YOU MADE miserable by indigestion,&#13;
constipation, dizziness, loss of&#13;
appetite, yetlow skm? Shiloh's Vitalizer&#13;
is a positive cure.&#13;
WHY WILL YOU cough when&#13;
Shiloh's Cure will give you immediate&#13;
relief. Price 10c, 50c.&#13;
SHILOH'S CATARRH REMEDY—&#13;
a positive cure lor catarrh, diptheria&#13;
cankered mouth.&#13;
"HACHMETACK" a lasting and&#13;
iragrant perfume. Price 55 and 50c.&#13;
SHILOH'S CURE will immediately&#13;
relieve croup, whooping cough and&#13;
bronchitis.&#13;
FOR DYSPEPSIA and liver complaint,&#13;
you have a printed guarantee&#13;
on every bottle of Shiloh's Vitalixer.&#13;
It never fails to cure.&#13;
A NASAI/ INJECTORJjpM^with&#13;
each bottle of Shiloh&gt;3&gt;a&amp;rrh Rem'&#13;
edy. Price 50 cj&#13;
For sal L F. Sigler &amp; Bro.&#13;
IMPORTANT.&#13;
When yon visit or leave New York City, save&#13;
asjgafte expressage and carriage hire ana stop at&#13;
tnw Hranri ffrftun Tifttol, oppftaito G r i n d Central Depot&#13;
filegant rooms fitted tip at a cost of one million&#13;
dollars, reduced to $1.00 and upwards per&#13;
day. European plan, Elevator. Restaurant supplied&#13;
with the neat. Horse care, and elevatsd&#13;
railroad to all depots, families can live better&#13;
tor less money at the Grand Uniou Hotel than&#13;
any(K»s*im&lt;l*S4hi&gt;Ultn the city&#13;
HOME NEWS.&#13;
Sigler Bros, started their soda fountain&#13;
yesterday/ *&#13;
Regular meeting of the K. O. T. M.&#13;
to-morrow night." :"'". """'""" "'""&#13;
The/Dibble murder trial en last&#13;
pag^of this issue.&#13;
/ A flag-staff was hoisted on the&#13;
skating rink yesterday.&#13;
Norman Mann ate green peas from&#13;
his own garden yesterday.&#13;
H. G. Sellman, state agent, for the&#13;
Buckeye machines, is here.&#13;
Miss Sarah Mastic, of Howell, is a&#13;
guest at C. F. LaRue's thi3 week.&#13;
Read the price list ot goods at the&#13;
"East End" grocery in another column.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. 0. T. Reed, of Detroit,&#13;
are visiting friends in this vicinity.&#13;
J. Winchell advertises his 4th of&#13;
July goods thi^Mveek on last page-&#13;
JrA-rCadwerhand familyreturned&#13;
trom a visit to friends in' Waterloo,&#13;
Monday.&#13;
Sanford Jenkins and family, of Mason,&#13;
vistfed triftnH^jripiftrPj^^^y^^ grgj.&#13;
of the week.&#13;
C. F. LaRue will have a bowery&#13;
dance at the rink the Fourth, day&#13;
and evening.&#13;
A horse belonging to Mrs. N. F.&#13;
Beebe dropped dead in the street Mondav&#13;
of heart disease.&#13;
E. A. Mann was slightly under the&#13;
weather the first of the week, but is&#13;
now able to attend to business.&#13;
Chris. Brown presents us with a&#13;
strawberry of his own raising which&#13;
measures five inches in circumference.&#13;
Bxnsville will celebrate in a style&#13;
equal to her old-time vigor. We find&#13;
many attractions on the programme.&#13;
Kelley's photograph car came in&#13;
town Monday and occupies a position&#13;
on the square, just north of the town&#13;
house.&#13;
Robt. Hawley, of Fowlerville, was&#13;
here Monday to see about getting a&#13;
stand for his warm candy wagon the&#13;
the 4th. •'•&#13;
W. B. Jenkins, of Horton's Bay,&#13;
Charlevoix county, is visiting among&#13;
his old friends in Pinckney and vicinity&#13;
this week.&#13;
A match game of base ball will be&#13;
played at Pinckney on Saturday next,&#13;
June 27, between the Pleasant Lake&#13;
team and the Pinckey club.&#13;
Reub. Finch, fresco and ornamental&#13;
painter, ot Pinckney, has been doin&#13;
some fine work in M. Ryan's re&gt;i^nce&#13;
the past week.—BrightpjKjCrgus.&#13;
From the W ^ ^ ^ r a n c h Herald we&#13;
learn thai-Mrs. Geo. Stock en has been&#13;
seriously ill with pluerisy, but&#13;
at the time the paper was issued she&#13;
was better.&#13;
We are in receipt of invitation and&#13;
program for a sanitary convention to&#13;
be held under the auspices of the state&#13;
board of health at Ypsilanti June 90&#13;
and July 1.&#13;
—A. R. Griffith, while dressing ttnne&#13;
in the grist mill Monday got a piece&#13;
of steel in his eye irom the pick. Dr.&#13;
Sigler extracted the steel, but his eye&#13;
U y«t pretty sore—.&#13;
Thos. Read is buying wool at the&#13;
elevator, and all who deal with him&#13;
can be sure of getting the highest market&#13;
price and good weights. Come to&#13;
Pinckney with'your wool.&#13;
D. F. Ewen is this week delivering&#13;
his maps in this vicinity. He has made&#13;
a great success in selling Tunison's&#13;
maps a M charts this season and they&#13;
HOW WE WILL CELEBRATE.!&#13;
are giving the best of satisfaction. , lE™*™?' ^ ° t h , t h ' p ] n c J n e y and&#13;
_,. . , _ , . , Stockbridge.Cornet Bands have been&#13;
Miss Maggie Robertson, who has&#13;
been working at the Monitor House for&#13;
the past year, departed Monday with&#13;
her uncle, Thos. Simes, for Kansas&#13;
City, where they— will make their&#13;
home.&#13;
Rev. Fred M. Coddington will preach&#13;
at the Congregational church in Pinckney&#13;
Sunday next, June 28th, morning&#13;
and evening; also at the Hamburg&#13;
Union church in the afternoon, at the&#13;
usual hour.&#13;
Dr. J. H. Hoag kindly drove us to&#13;
Anderson Station yesterday, where we&#13;
called at the store of J. T. Earn an &amp;&#13;
Co. Everything in neatly arranged&#13;
therein, and Mr. Eaman informed us&#13;
that he was having a good trade.&#13;
Some elegant specimens of hand&#13;
painting executed by Miss Frankie&#13;
Russey, of Toledo, Ohio, are on exhibition&#13;
at E. A. Mann's store. Mrs&#13;
Hussey will take a class m painting&#13;
here if enough pupils can be secured.&#13;
Mat. Wixom's great show will exhibit&#13;
at this place under a waterproof&#13;
pavilion on Wednesday evening, July&#13;
1. The exhibition is to consist of&#13;
music, dan?ing, tumbling, acrobatic&#13;
feats, etc., etc. Admission 25 cents,&#13;
children 15 cents.&#13;
Sigler Bros., the pioneer drug firm&#13;
Uf Pinckney, have an advertisement in&#13;
this ifsue. They carry a fine line of&#13;
drugs and medicines, toilet and fancy&#13;
articles, stationery, wall paper, tobaccos,&#13;
cigars, candies, nuts, etc., and invite&#13;
your patronage.&#13;
As we go to press this morning&#13;
great preparations • are in progress&#13;
"forth«-deliv£i^i_dayshow of machinery&#13;
sold by G. W. ReasonHvirieh-is-toL&#13;
come oft this afternoon. The street in&#13;
the vicinity of his warerooin and the&#13;
freight house and grounds-*re pretty&#13;
well occupied by harvesters, reapers,&#13;
tedders, mowers, wagons, etc. Every^&#13;
one should come out and see the procession&#13;
which wLl form about 1 o'clock.&#13;
N. H. Cathcart, the Fowlerville&#13;
photographer, has recently built a neat&#13;
and commodious car, with which he intends&#13;
to traverse the country hereabouts,&#13;
making regular trips. The car&#13;
is the lightest" thing of the kind we&#13;
ever saw, being made of light wood&#13;
and well stayed with iron rods, and one&#13;
team can handle it easily. Mr. Cathcart&#13;
has had many years experience in&#13;
the photograph business and his work&#13;
is always pronounced first class. He&#13;
savs he will &amp;e here soon.&#13;
The Livingston county teachers' institute&#13;
will be held at Pinckney the&#13;
week beginning Aug. 3, 1885, and&#13;
Professor Sprout has been appointed&#13;
by Theodore Nelson, Superintendent&#13;
of Public Instutions, to act as a committee&#13;
in making local arrangements.&#13;
It is also hoped that all our citizens&#13;
jadlLendeavor to make it pleas&gt;ntrtor&#13;
all who visit us on thatroccasionT&#13;
Prof. I. N. DemtpjMrTof Ann Arbor,&#13;
will condtyj^tfie institute, turther particuiafsof&#13;
which will be given later.&#13;
The Michigan Press Association&#13;
and the Western Michigan Press Association&#13;
will hold a ioint meeting at&#13;
Traverse City July 6th and 7th, and&#13;
every railroad in the state extends free&#13;
transportation to members of their associations&#13;
and their wives. July 8th&#13;
an excursion is also tendered them on&#13;
Harrnah, Lay &amp; Go's, elegant steamers&#13;
from Traverse City to Petoskey, with&#13;
a banquet and a two-hours' stay at&#13;
Charlevoix«_aiL&lt;L&amp; banquet and ball at&#13;
the Arlington hotel at Petoskey in the&#13;
evening. Numerous other side excursions&#13;
to Harbor Springs and the other&#13;
charming summer resorts of that section&#13;
are also at the command of the&#13;
voider* of the pen.&#13;
Much labor and expense is being'&#13;
laid out to make our celebration a success&#13;
and the day one of rejoicing iii&#13;
engaged to furnish music, and the orator/&#13;
Mr. Terrence McDonnell, is said'&#13;
to be a very talented speaker. The&#13;
street parade promises to be one of&#13;
magnificence, while a nice list of sports&#13;
and games have been arranged.&#13;
PROGRAMME:&#13;
Salute at sunrise.—18 guns.&#13;
Street Parade at 9:30 A. X.&#13;
Exercises at Speaker's stand 11 A. X.&#13;
Music by Cornet Band.&#13;
Pr&amp;yoS'by the Chaplain.&#13;
^fKial Mnslc.&#13;
Reading of the Declaration, •&#13;
Music bv Cornet Band.&#13;
Oration,&#13;
Vocal Music.&#13;
Adionrnment Jot Dinner.&#13;
Base Ball Game at 2 p.&#13;
March and Drill of the Ku-KIux-Klan, 8:00,&#13;
Sports and Athletic Games. 3:510.&#13;
Prizes will be offered for the following:&#13;
Handsomest Baby (in carriages) under one year&#13;
Of ag«- Babv show to_be held on the Square at&#13;
3:30 p. si.&#13;
Fat Man'a Race, for men weighing over XS5 lbs,&#13;
distance (SO yards.&#13;
Climbing Greased Pole.&#13;
Sack Race.&#13;
Bova Race (aged between 10 and 14.&#13;
Girls Race " •' " "&#13;
Running Race (20 rods) open to all.&#13;
Wheelbarrow Race.&#13;
Running race between man and hone, 10 rda,&#13;
and return.&#13;
A prize will also be awarded to moat comical&#13;
character (horse and rider) for Ku-Klnz-Klan.&#13;
Real Estate Transfers.&#13;
Wm. McPherson et al. to George&#13;
Grice, lots in Howell lor $200.&#13;
Wm. Pulford to B. F. Button, lote;&#13;
in Fowlerville.&#13;
Enoch Smith to Martha Cardot, lots&#13;
in Fo wle r vi 1 le for f 125.&#13;
Chas. H. Rounsville to Martha Oafdot,&#13;
lots in Fowlerville for $600.&#13;
Ann Chirk to Wm. S. Holmes, 56.&#13;
acres in Unadilla for $3,640.&#13;
John N. Bergin to AlbertO. Pettys,.&#13;
land in Hamburg.&#13;
Daniel H. Denton et al. to LauraA&#13;
Denton, 157 acres in Unadilla:&#13;
John Anable to A. W. Davis, 711&#13;
acres in Hartland for $3,500.&#13;
John W. Soules to Henry Wade,&#13;
lots in Howell.&#13;
James Edmunds to Alex. Ismay, lota&#13;
in Howell for $600.&#13;
James Deatty ot al. to Lyman Jud-&#13;
V_&#13;
-*s-'&#13;
3ft*n. lot in Brighton for $225.&#13;
Elizabeth Cmnstdn to—frank Cran*-&#13;
ston, 40 acres in Tyrone.&#13;
Wm. Ball to Emin N. ?all, 40 acres&#13;
in Harabursr $2,000.&#13;
Phebe P. Neeley to Denslow DJ&#13;
Neeley, 62 acres in Cohoctah.&#13;
Among the leading members of the •&#13;
house, Daniel P. Markey, the Republican&#13;
representative from Ogemaw-Co.,..&#13;
stands prominent. He is a native of "&#13;
the county in which the capitol is situated,&#13;
and a successful lawyer a t .&#13;
home. As chairman of the judiciarycommittee&#13;
he has had more committee *.&#13;
work to perform than any other mem^&#13;
ber and it hal'been done promptly and •&#13;
well. Mr. Markey is a duiet, indttt-.&#13;
trious worker. He speaks only when&gt;&#13;
the sirbjeet is wo^th discussion, andi]&#13;
then is listened'to with close attention.&#13;
His speeches are crisp, clear and logic-,&#13;
al. It was his addiess that defea+&#13;
th% Marquett, Houghton &amp; Ontonagonv&#13;
extension resolution wlren it was &amp;flt^&#13;
considered .•—DeirotTPost.&#13;
W e ^ a t f e a call at' R.- C. AaldV&#13;
otch Stock Farm" on Monday last.&#13;
and were courteously shown over the-,&#13;
grounds by that gentleman. While,&#13;
he has had the land but a short time,&#13;
he has made some decided improvements&#13;
and has farther plans i» contemplation.&#13;
He has a herd of nearly.&#13;
40 Aberdeen catile imported from,&#13;
Scotland, and this stock is considered;&#13;
the best tor both milking and fatten*'&#13;
ing purposes. The chief character-,&#13;
istics of these cattle are, they have no&#13;
horns and are nearly always black in&#13;
color. It will pay any one who take*&#13;
any interest at ail in fine cattle to go&#13;
and look these Aberdeens over. Mr.&#13;
Auld had also jnst.purchased a^Climax&#13;
mower of Mr. James Markey, ofthis&#13;
place, and set it u p that day, the*&#13;
working of which we saw in a piece,&#13;
of light rye, on sandy and&#13;
ground, and it did its Work to&#13;
tion, Mr. Auld pronouncing h&#13;
well pleased with, the machine^&#13;
N&#13;
: :,t- *',. •&lt;;rf*"-.*&#13;
1¾&#13;
N^&#13;
•M&amp;tW-.nW&#13;
• - — : ' ' ' ^ ^^.••'•Vf.M.-'-'^S ~y-1.:^.: &gt;• -&#13;
A&#13;
• " - * -M&#13;
&lt;f ' • ? * •&#13;
t '-•&#13;
• o .&#13;
• &lt; . . : .&#13;
-J,r ' \ &gt; , I I — - --1&#13;
4fcu*-&amp;^.jaK«*^ V ' ' .Ir-VSL ...--4&#13;
. * H ,.-y&#13;
r ',&#13;
TO CORRESPONDENT*&#13;
ATI communications for thli p»per»hould t&gt;e aocqm-&#13;
Muted by the name of the author, uot njceaaary fu«&#13;
hubllcatfon, hut. aa an evidence of good faith on tha&#13;
part of the writer. Write &lt;&gt;m» on one aide of the&#13;
H&gt;p«r. ne particularly careful about glvlugnamey&#13;
•nd date*, fohave the letters and nfcurei plain and&#13;
dtatlnct. Proper name* are often difficult to decipher&#13;
•erauae of the careleti manner In which they are&#13;
written.&#13;
MICHIGAN NEWS.&#13;
Alger Disapproves.&#13;
Gov. Alger gives the following reasons for&#13;
bis dlsapproAul of, the Eugan prison bill for the&#13;
abolition of the contract labor system.&#13;
"In my inaugural message I recommended&#13;
the abolition of the prison contract&#13;
system. I admit that I omitted recommending&#13;
that before the contract system was abolished&#13;
another system should be substituted. It was&#13;
a grave omission, and I suppose 1 will have to&#13;
take- the responsibility thereto;-, b u t whether&#13;
this blame rests wholly on myself does not&#13;
mattter; my duty at present is Vury clear, lu&#13;
the Egan bill there is no provision for u working&#13;
capiat to carry on .business, so that the&#13;
convicts shall be kept in employment. Senator&#13;
Belkiuiji during the debate moved to appropriate'&#13;
§£0.000." and Senator Brown moved to&#13;
appropriate a larger sum—$250,000 I think, for&#13;
n working capital. both amendments were&#13;
defeated and the bill passed without any appropriation.&#13;
Under the bill about 400 men&#13;
would go out of employment lu Jackson&#13;
and Ionia prisons ' by the " expiration&#13;
of contracts' within the&#13;
next two years, and this number would be constantly,&#13;
increasing. Now, to keep these men&#13;
to work by the state under tiie new system,&#13;
would require several branches of business to&#13;
be created and put in working order, plants to&#13;
be purchased, and in short all the processes&#13;
and paraphernalia of two large manufacturing&#13;
establishments. Until this is done the convict's&#13;
would have to be shut up in their cells and exercised&#13;
at intervals in the prison yards, to preserve&#13;
them from sickness, which scorn? of&#13;
liberty would be unsafe and dangerous ' a n d&#13;
cannot be thought of. You see, the present&#13;
contractors would necessarily remove their&#13;
plant and machinery, so that money is needed&#13;
at once. The only 'appropriation is a $10,000&#13;
"appropriation oh a separate bill for piece work&#13;
a t the Jackson prison. This is for the broom&#13;
business. A contractor furnished all the material,&#13;
and the convicts worked it up under the&#13;
-supervision of thcpiisou authoities,—But how&#13;
long would this last under the Eagan billi Not&#13;
more t h i n a few weeks. Not less than $200,-&#13;
000 to $800,000 is necessary.. I regret all this&#13;
exceedingly, but I shall not sign the bill."&#13;
m&#13;
A Firey Statement.&#13;
G e o . S c a l e s of P l a i n w e l l , s t a t i s t i c i a n&#13;
•of the Michigan Firemen's Association, gives&#13;
the following figures regarding lire service the&#13;
past year. .&lt;• It will be seen that the defective&#13;
flue gets in* a great amount of destructive work:&#13;
No. cities and villages reportiug 00&#13;
Population '. 4S8.531&#13;
No. hydrants 2,570&#13;
Cisterns 472&#13;
Steam fire engines 51&#13;
' Hand engines'". 30&#13;
Chemical engines -„ 70&#13;
Hose companies • .N)&#13;
Hook aud ladder companies .. rm 48&#13;
Men belonging 2,057&#13;
Men p a i d . ! . . . 197&#13;
Partly paid 1,12:2-&#13;
Voluhteers ^--r^viS&#13;
• Feet of hose . ' . , ^ ^ 1 4 5 . 6 0 0&#13;
No. a l a r m s ; . . . . .&gt;^&lt;f.... 1.274&#13;
.Fires ^ . . 000&#13;
Value of property destroyed ¢1.308.101&#13;
Insurance.. ..Jl&lt;&lt;^\. 3,070,:-170&#13;
Insurantr^frtufZ 817j3j&#13;
Menifljured ^-^""40&#13;
'^-Alleged causes of tire—&#13;
Incendiary .7 &gt; ^ r T . . . . 185&#13;
Fireworks -.&lt; 13&#13;
Defective chimneys 270&#13;
Ashes . . . : . . . '...-;—.. T T T . . . . . . . -.-. 4«&#13;
Sparks 13«&#13;
Explosions 32&#13;
Other causes 358&#13;
There are now 017 members of the Cass&#13;
county pioneer society. Ninety-one died durthe&#13;
past year.&#13;
Catherine A. Town, who came to Otsego&#13;
with her husband in 1832, died in that village&#13;
recently, aged 70.&#13;
Capt. Smith, a pioneer, and for many yours&#13;
a prominent citizen of Bay City, died in the&#13;
poor house recently.&#13;
Drilling for salt has commenced at Frankfort&#13;
with the expectations of Hading it at a depth&#13;
of 1,500 to 1,700 feet.&#13;
The stock for a ¢6:),000 tannery in Grand&#13;
Haven, has all been subscribed, and articles of&#13;
incorporation duly tiled.&#13;
James Prisk aud Wm. H. Clark were literally&#13;
blown to pieces by an explosion at the Copper&#13;
Falls, Lake Superior, mine.&#13;
Hon. Henry Fralick of Grand Kapids has&#13;
been chosen* president of the state pioneer&#13;
society for the ensuing year.&#13;
George French and Louis Sinclair of West&#13;
Branch, were drowned while boating on Kinsley&#13;
lake, near Ogemaw Springs.&#13;
Mrs. Jacob Insleman of Believue, was burled&#13;
a few day siuce. Mrs. Iuslcman was 00 years&#13;
of age aud weighed 400 pounds.&#13;
Ispheming ami Nega'unee are trying to have&#13;
the upper peninsula prison located at a convenieut&#13;
point b 'tween the two places.&#13;
The trial of Joe. Howard, the Coldwatei&#13;
bank robber has been set for July, 22. The&#13;
motion for a change of venue was denied.&#13;
J u n e 30 and July 1 are the dates for holding&#13;
the state sanitary "convention in Vpsilauti. A&#13;
very interesting program has been prepared.&#13;
Jonathan Dean of Charlotte, is the. • 'oldest&#13;
mason in the state," having entered his a]&gt;-&#13;
•hreuticeship in 1817. Mr. Dean is 00 vears&#13;
old.&#13;
Edward Huntley of Howell, -convicted on&#13;
J u n e 17. for burglarizing a dwelling house in&#13;
the daytime has been sentenced to two vears at&#13;
Ionia. ^&#13;
Dr. Douglass of Stony'Creek who was serving&#13;
a four year's sentence in the Detroit house&#13;
of correction for pension frauds, has been&#13;
pardoned.&#13;
Mrs. Israel of, Kalamazoo, mother of Edward&#13;
Israel of the Greely expedition will endow a&#13;
professorship in Kalamazoo college inmemory&#13;
of her son/&#13;
Ida Berkshire of Clinton countv will spend&#13;
the next 18 months in the Detroit house ofcorrection&#13;
for marrying one more man than the&#13;
law aUows. " ~~&#13;
Anuual meeting of Michigan bievclists a t&#13;
Coldwater about July 15.--The annual reunion&#13;
of the 9th Michigan cavalry will be held in th&#13;
same place Aug. 12.&#13;
James Prisk and William Henry Clark were&#13;
kjfle(l,by_ an. explosion, u n d e r g r o u n d at the&#13;
Copper Falls mine in Calumet. Clark was&#13;
literally blown to pieces.&#13;
6!Ed. Buzzard of Williams township, Bay&#13;
A Double Mnrder.&#13;
After the exhibition of Cole's circus at&#13;
Ilought-ou the other night, while Chas. Barry,&#13;
a detective belonging to tJie show, was lying&#13;
in bed in a sleeping car, one Lawrence, porter&#13;
Of thi' slot'pcT, eilini' l!l, took Iiurry by the hand&#13;
through&#13;
ball of&#13;
and tired ond shot, the ball passing&#13;
his body. Barry returned the tire, the&#13;
his own' pistol going thropnh the porter's lung&#13;
a n d severing an artery, caustug almost instant&#13;
death. Drs. Jones and Mason held a post&#13;
mortem,' muling the .ball against the back&#13;
bone. Barry will also die. An old grudge-cist*&#13;
d between the parties. They had^ltad a&#13;
fight at a former time.' The majjager and some&#13;
others are detained as witne-*ses&#13;
cj»trt&#13;
Con Michigan Raise Sugar 1&#13;
Can Mlcdjig^mproduce good sugar at a profit?&#13;
Thisj}«estion is now being solved in Lenawee&#13;
Cdtraty. Daniel Boot of--Hudson, one of the&#13;
most extensive growers of sorghum in the state,&#13;
believes'that the manufacture' of sugar can be&#13;
made a success, and last vear he erected buildings&#13;
and'machlnery, end begun experimenting.&#13;
H e produced 6.Q0O'pounds of nice sugar, which/&#13;
he readily dis]&gt;os&lt; s of, and it is of fine quality'.&#13;
J u s t the cost of production, however, we cannot&#13;
learn, but Mr. Root is enthusiastic in the&#13;
advocacy of.the industry. ' /&#13;
* /&#13;
GENERAL STATE ITEMS. /&#13;
Alpena Wants a flovh-ing mill. /&#13;
T h e aged Indian chief Petoskeyyls dead.&#13;
"Mies L, M. Adams of St. Clair/fs cultivating&#13;
silk worms. /&#13;
Grand Rapids has adopted the tower system&#13;
of electric lights. /&#13;
Van Buren county veterans held a reunion in&#13;
Paw Paw recently.&#13;
Mrs. Sarah Jeffray, president of Hillsdale&#13;
for 35 years, is dead&#13;
The supreme c o u r / adjourned on the 19th&#13;
1st. until Septernbe&#13;
-•-Houghton thinks the new mining-school&#13;
should bo locateu there.&#13;
W. A. Bancroft has been appointed collector&#13;
of customs at Port Huron.&#13;
Detroit police are trying to clean out the&#13;
gambling/ucns in that city.&#13;
A lady in Marshall SI years old makes horseback&#13;
pfaingher favorite "exercise.&#13;
rteen young men graduated from&#13;
Orchard Lake academy this year.&#13;
Edgar O. Fuller, a prominent Livingston&#13;
county farmer, has become insane.&#13;
Kalamazoo's city railway made a net profit&#13;
of $10,000 for the year's business.&#13;
, Kalamazoo college has secured the necessary&#13;
endowment, and will be continued. . /&#13;
Olivet college declines the gift of 160,000&#13;
from Ezra Bostwiek of Union City.&#13;
J a m e s Gallgher, convicted of rape in Montcalm&#13;
county, goes up for seven years.&#13;
The tf. A. R. post of Ionia are about to erect&#13;
a soldiers' memument in that village.&#13;
A Mormon convention Is to be held In the&#13;
Fowler seflool house near Qulncy, J u n e 27.&#13;
Mrs. flenjarrrin Gooch, 81 years old, is confined&#13;
in jail at Grand Brand Rapids as Insane.&#13;
Louis. Gale, a well-known journalist of Grand&#13;
Rapids filed in the Detroit sanitai .tun recently&#13;
One of t h e Inmates of the Kent county poor&#13;
bouse has four well-to-do children living in the&#13;
county, killed a black bear weighing ,'300 pounds,&#13;
Bruirrfmd-bcen feasting on the-youug lambs in&#13;
the towushp for some time.&#13;
At the coming annual reunion of the St.&#13;
Joseph pioneer society, a monument of flower?&#13;
was erected to the memory of former meufTiers&#13;
who have departe I this life. ^ ^ ^&#13;
II. P. Hoslev, foreman of ji^gang of workmen&#13;
was rtm-tm'r by a gray&gt;r^traiu 'in Mackinaw&#13;
City a few days since; and so badly injured&#13;
that he died ip^arlew dinars. ^&#13;
Mrs^JJtrifd, mother of Mrjs. Henry Waldron,&#13;
djed-iu Hillsdale recently aged 81 yeitfs. She&#13;
Ivasoue of the pioneers of Hillsdale county and&#13;
had been a resident theresJetTe 1837.*&#13;
The first a n n u a H a l r o f the Plymouth Fail&#13;
Association ivjil-be held on their" grounds at&#13;
PlymouthSefftt'itiber 20 and 30 ancf October, 1&#13;
3, l88jJr-^The prospects are very flattering.&#13;
he state militarv board has directed Quartermaster-&#13;
General Hart to advertise for proposals&#13;
for iJOO overcoats, 500 dress coats, 10C&#13;
helmets, 000 fatigue caps and .500 knapsacks.&#13;
A party of three nu'ii and several boys went&#13;
on a fishing excursion today, twelve miles&#13;
from Mt. Pleasant—George-_Hicks{ one- of the&#13;
party, aged 14 years, white crossing the river&#13;
on a dam fell in aud was drowned,&#13;
While switching ears in the railroad yard in&#13;
Bancroft, brakeman Wm. BaMeock of" Flint,&#13;
slipped and fell beneath the cars and was Instantly&#13;
killed. He leaves/ a wife and two&#13;
children. ,-&#13;
Fire at Carrvville, Lake/'eouutv, burned John&#13;
Copely's store "and the G'. R. it 1.,,-tlfpot. The&#13;
entire loss on the store , ami .goods was $4,500;&#13;
on the depot, $1,000. ,rjnj' latter was insured&#13;
for $1,00-,1. . - -"&#13;
The central-Michigan racing circuit has fixed&#13;
upon tbe-ftSTlowing dates fe&gt;r holding its meetings-&#13;
s-^Charlotte, July 15, 10, 17, 18; Mason,&#13;
, 23, 24, 25; about $4,000 in premiums&#13;
are offered.&#13;
The Michigan copper mine output for May,&#13;
in tons without fractions, was as follows: Calumet&#13;
&amp; Heel a 2,.547, Quiney 250, Atlantic 215,&#13;
Franklin 100, Huron 115, Copper Falls 65, and&#13;
Hancock 35.&#13;
George H. Winans of Kalamazoo has been&#13;
arretted at the instance of the state commissioner&#13;
of insurance for soliciting business for&#13;
the Anglo-American insurance company without&#13;
state authority.&#13;
' The supervising architect accepts the report&#13;
of the commission appointed to select a site&#13;
for the new government building in Detroit. No&#13;
work will be done on the building until after&#13;
the assembling of congress.&#13;
Noah Tyler, a much-reRpccted and wellknown&#13;
citizen of Pontiac, died recently after a&#13;
long illness, of cancer of the stomach. Deceased&#13;
was secretary of the Oakland county&#13;
agricultural society for 15 years.&#13;
Co. C, 4th Mich, cav., held a reunion at Four&#13;
Mile lake, near Lawton, the other day, and&#13;
took preliminary steps for a regimental reunion&#13;
August 28, the 25th anniversary of the&#13;
date of their muster-in by Uncle Sam.&#13;
The 3-jear old daughter of Ruben Taylor, a&#13;
farmer living in North Star, Grajtlot county,&#13;
was~~found dead a few days since hanging bv a&#13;
rope in the barn. It'fs supposed t h a t she slipped&#13;
and fell while playing with the rope.&#13;
In the second trial Edward Hickey, arrested&#13;
last winter at Chicago by a Detroit detective,&#13;
charged with stealing ¢1,200 worth of furs&#13;
from Meyer &amp; Brix of East Saginaw, the jury&#13;
disagreed. Hickey will have: another trial.&#13;
Thieves entered the tool room of the Michigan&#13;
Central freight office in Buchanan, took*&#13;
tools with which they opened the St. Jo. Valley&#13;
railroad company's passenger coach. A safe&#13;
was taken from the coach and robbed of abotit&#13;
$40.&#13;
Isaac Hanna of Gladwin, has instituted a&#13;
$10,000 libel suit against the Gladwin Record,&#13;
for publishing a ticket called the "sorehead&#13;
ticket" during the late election, on which Mr.&#13;
H a n n a was made a candidate for all t h e offices.&#13;
Reuben Yerrick, a flier in a Baw mill at&#13;
Carleton. was gumming t h e saw on an emery&#13;
wheel, when the wheel ourst, a piece of it hitting&#13;
Yerrick on the left eye. His skull was&#13;
split tb*&gt; entire length so t h a t the brain oozed&#13;
: r a t - He will die.&#13;
. While on her way to Albion, and while crossing&#13;
the M. C. track at Bath Mills, Mrs. Thomas&#13;
was struck by an engine and fatally injured.&#13;
She died in three hours. She was about 80&#13;
years of age and was the mother of J. A.&#13;
Thomas of Albion.&#13;
Frank McGraw, a prominent lumberman,&#13;
feU from the first floor of the Fraser house ID&#13;
Bay City, to the basement. H e thought the&#13;
elevator was in position, hence t h e mistake,&#13;
which resulted in a broken leg above the knee&#13;
a n d other serious Injuries. .&#13;
hav, grain, farm implements, etc, Supposed&#13;
to "have beeu lucendtarv. Loss, about $1,300.&#13;
Insured in the Branch, county mutual for&#13;
$1,000.&#13;
Anna Hotchktss, who worked for J o h n Ford,&#13;
about six miles from Farvvell, was found&#13;
drowned in a lake near the cump.the other&#13;
morning. She had a handkerchief tied over&#13;
her eyes. The cause of suicide is unknown.&#13;
Her parents reside about half way between&#13;
Clare and Mt. Pleasant.&#13;
There are five plaster mills near this city,&#13;
which emplov 150 men. They have $000,000&#13;
invested in the business, and annally pro luce&#13;
40,0(0 tons of land plaster, with a total valuation&#13;
of $100,COJ; also, 140,000 barrels of&#13;
calcined plaster of Farls, valued at $175,00.—&#13;
(fraud J\'api(is Telegram.&#13;
Thirty-five men i-mployed in digging trenches&#13;
for the in w water works' in Lansing struck the&#13;
other day. The contractor agreed to nay the&#13;
men $1,25 for digging a ".space 31 feet long, 0&#13;
feet deep and 18 inches wid&lt;-. The men claim&#13;
that they cannot earn mo-e than 80 or 00 cents&#13;
per day.'heue.' they strike.&#13;
Frauk P. Cushway died in F.,st Saginaw&#13;
recently. ag,'d 51 years, lie wm a native of&#13;
Saginaw county, rend law for a time, and afterwards&#13;
bicauie a printer. In I8i&gt;4 he was drafted&#13;
into the iirinv and served as a member of company&#13;
I&gt; of th'e 15th Miciilgan regiment from&#13;
Sept. 2S, 1S01, to t\&gt; el&#13;
)&#13;
of the wai&#13;
C. F. Moore of St, (.'ia'ir has been appointed&#13;
by the governor'a ine::il vr a-id chairman .of the&#13;
recently created SMic Live Stock and Sanitary&#13;
Commission, wiln a- commission running for&#13;
six years. 11. 11. llindv. of Str.n.on, and Thos.&#13;
Foster of Flint, are t'-e other members, their&#13;
terms being four a i ' tw &gt; years res;ieetively.&#13;
There is considerable ;.n&gt;.i \\ in Kalamazoo&#13;
over the ravage- o1' a ••mad '.'.reen worm at work&#13;
among the iv.-Vo, rry vim.-. It is new to&#13;
growers and resembles the caterpiller, i- of a&#13;
deep green, cuite small, wrinkled.' and curled&#13;
up like a leaf Th - worm bus dc&gt;troyed half&#13;
an acre of P. C. Davis1 vines and has appeared&#13;
iu couutless numbers.&#13;
A great many (icjds of corn in Wayne and&#13;
Volinia have been ruined by the cut* worms.&#13;
One farmer informs us that his fall plowed fields&#13;
suffer the most, aud that he noticed the same&#13;
to be the ease la-t year. In both eases the&#13;
fields were wheat stubble, l u erne field uf ten—i the musterin&#13;
acres he sowed 2,000 pounds of salt with no effect.—&#13;
Doicagiac Tiny.*.&#13;
The Japanese government wants to secure&#13;
the Grand Rapids' educational exhibit at the&#13;
desperadoes, and went to Work for Mr. Stone,&#13;
A few uights ago while ajone lu the house, a&#13;
mau entered and shot at him. West rau up&#13;
stairs, secured bis revolver, aud returned the&#13;
s h o t The man ran,but a second shot made him&#13;
fall on the grass. West rushed to town aftei&#13;
a sheriff, who returned with him. He found u&#13;
pool of blood ou the grass and tracks of a&#13;
team in the road. No further clew has beeu&#13;
discovered. The young man's father corroborates&#13;
his story. _&#13;
XXCHIQAir LEGISLATURE.&#13;
JUNB_15—SKXATK—The vote ou the resolufJorTTo&#13;
prlnt'copTes of the general acts of thli&#13;
session lor the use of certain ollleers was reeorstdered&#13;
ami the resolution tabled.&#13;
Bilks tussv'd: To enroll Michigan men win;&#13;
served in a New York artfllery regiment us&#13;
Michigan volunteers", to regulate the transitol&#13;
Texas cattle through the s t a t e ; umeiidingsees.&#13;
0771-2, Howell, relative to probate courts;&#13;
amending see. SM7, Howell relative&#13;
to the service of processes on railroad&#13;
companies; authorizing the transcript of judgments&#13;
from one justice to another. Adjourned.&#13;
H o r s r . — t h e House spent the afternoon in&#13;
working in committee of the whole, Ad'&#13;
journed.&#13;
JrN'E 16— S K X A T K - B i l l s passed: providing&#13;
for wjiter works iu Battle Creek; amending act&#13;
177 of 1S&gt;1, relative to delivery of grain by&#13;
railroad companies; reincorporating Clio:&#13;
making au appropriation for improvement;&#13;
at the state prison; for a g r a n t of swamp lands&#13;
to drain Hewes and Kwers lakes, Ingham county.&#13;
The bill to consolidate the laws relative t&#13;
j'ri-ons ami to ej-olish convict laboi&#13;
was discussed iii committ.'c of the whole.&#13;
Kxtra coinp'nsation at the rate of $1 a day&#13;
FOREIGN FACTS.&#13;
A F F A I R S ZN EUROPE, ASIA AND AFRICA.&#13;
uid A'ssistani&#13;
to S 'civtary Lewis'&#13;
on appropriations&#13;
timated ex-&#13;
1,400 00. fortimated&#13;
receipts for 188.^&#13;
except taxation, are foi&#13;
New Orleans exposition, to take udrfie! I f&#13;
consists of various colored shoe pegs laid vertically,&#13;
horizontally and in almost every direction&#13;
possible to describe, by pupils under six&#13;
years of age. This is to teach the little ones&#13;
the diHerent colors and lines. — - — - . ---^&#13;
-jvariy this spring Samuel -Meyer—ami ~Luk» :&#13;
MerrihcM left Otsego, bound east^with a car&#13;
load of horses. A month ago&gt;=&lt;ffd was received&#13;
that they had sold alljwftftwo of the horses&#13;
and would'be home^-ttie following Saturday,&#13;
since which tiiue'lio word has been has been&#13;
received. ^T-bey had a large sum of money, aiui&#13;
it is Reared they have been foully •dealt with.&#13;
.^The-$20.000which K.ilamazoo.agreed to raise&#13;
to endow a professorship in the college has&#13;
been subscribed. The,--prospects are good to&#13;
raise §30.000 elsewhere in the, stab', making&#13;
an endowment"of £5:),000 in addition to that&#13;
already ^tKissc-scd, and it. is understood that&#13;
th^.^uTtinuance of the institution is now in-&#13;
-stfre.d. The question will b.1 definitely decided&#13;
by the trustees soon.&#13;
Michigan university is in tuck. It has just&#13;
been presented the entire Chinese collection&#13;
now on exhibition at New Orleans. This presentation&#13;
i.8 the result of a brief correspondence&#13;
between President Angell the commissioners&#13;
in charge at New Orleans, and the British customs&#13;
representative at Pekin. The doctor's&#13;
success is undoubtedly owing to his influence&#13;
at Pekin. The exhibiteflccording to Secretary&#13;
Wade, consists of some 1,200 articles valued at&#13;
no less than 620,000.&#13;
During a severe rain storm the lightning&#13;
struck a shanty at Big Hock, C'ecial bay. about&#13;
three miles from Callan's mill, and iiiiie miles&#13;
from Mackinaw city, in Kinrm't'coulity, at the&#13;
time four pound-net tislu&gt;rfTH'u were repairing&#13;
their nets fn the^-building. Two brothers,&#13;
Henry aud Hcjijaiiiiii Vandaw, were instantly&#13;
killed, and Jack Cahal was knocked down and&#13;
received almost fatal injuries. Kelly, the&#13;
^fourth party, was not shocked at all. 'The deceased&#13;
were both young men, single and lived&#13;
in Cheboygan county.&#13;
Three well-known people living in the vicinlit,&#13;
y of Royal Oak have been' found dead in&#13;
TieTl witliiu The past few days. Frederick&#13;
Wint, aged&gt; 57, died of apoplexy. He&#13;
had an engagement at 8 (('clock a. m., a'mT~wair&#13;
discovered dead at that moment. Henry Dicke,&#13;
aged 59, failed to reply when called to'' breakfast,&#13;
and was found dead of heart disease.&#13;
Catherine Vandeuter, aged CO, died from paralysis,&#13;
six miles southeast from Royal Oak.&#13;
The others"lived three and four miles cast.&#13;
Chas. E. Spalding, a man about 40 vears of&#13;
age and a resident of Memphis, Mien., who&#13;
has been canvassing Almont for Cram's atlas,&#13;
committed suicide the other atternoon by taking&#13;
morphine. He was stopping at the" Harrington&#13;
nouse and was found dead in his. bed&#13;
by the, clerk, die. left a-l^t-te-r--addressed to,-his&#13;
wife and two daughters saying he hoped They&#13;
would forgive him, its he hoped God would forgive&#13;
him. " The verdict of the coroner's jury&#13;
was that he comi«itte4ftuieide" while laboring&#13;
under temporary insanity.&#13;
A barn scaffold fell, on which carpenters&#13;
John-Dual and Edward Pratt were working,&#13;
near Otsego. Dual was precipitated to the&#13;
ground, falling 30 feet, striking on a timber&#13;
and breaking his hip bone as well as cutting his&#13;
face frightfully. A bunch of shingles followed&#13;
him down, striking his right arm and breaking&#13;
the same, tearing the flesh from the elbow to&#13;
the wrist. He was picked up insensible and&#13;
thought to be dead, but now it is said he will&#13;
was voted .lauitor Lombard Riei&#13;
Secreiary Summer; 82 a da&#13;
M. Miile'r. The committee&#13;
p:\ sent-'d a statement of th" c&#13;
peuditures for 1SS5 to be £1,0&#13;
1880, $7:'5,071. t h e c&#13;
from other sources&#13;
1S85. Si00,1 WO, for IvJ'», Sl'.fti.OOO.&#13;
Horsii—Biils passed: Amending general&#13;
highway law; authorizing Battle Creek to construct&#13;
water works aud sewers, and to establish&#13;
a board of public works; incorporating the&#13;
public sehools of Oscoda county ; authorizing&#13;
of militarr companies at Menominee,&#13;
Muskegon, Detroit, Jackson, and&#13;
Grand Rapids'; tii pay the expenses immrredin&#13;
the examination of charges against Nelson De&#13;
Long, mayor of . Muskegon; to&#13;
prohibit —ttfn u s e - - " of tobacco Xsy&#13;
pupils and teachers in and about&#13;
schools andj&gt;»school g r o u n d s ; amending sections&#13;
14423-5-(3, Howell, relative to damages&#13;
for-iuTuries caused by defective sidewalks;&#13;
amending section 0:115,'Howell, relative to the&#13;
punishment of. libel and slander; amending&#13;
Lansfrig-cfty c h a r t er^r appre&gt;pnat:nir#tS,000"tir&#13;
recover.&#13;
hung on until rescued from his perilous situation.&#13;
Hon._G. V. N. L o t h r o p , United States Minister&#13;
to Russia sailed from N e w . York&#13;
{uoe 16:&#13;
A large new barn belonging to H. Shoemaket&#13;
about i V miles from Quincy, burned the other&#13;
Freeman Buckley of Shelby, Oceana county,&#13;
has been given a pension of ¢7,000, with $72&#13;
per month for the rest of his life. Buckley's&#13;
head was injured during his three years' service&#13;
in A c war. His mind failed subsequently,&#13;
and he wa9 sent to the asylum at Kalamazoo,&#13;
whence he was returned home incurable. He&#13;
has since been an inmate of Oceana county&#13;
house, his wife supporting herself and three&#13;
children as best she could. Two years ago one&#13;
of her eyes was put out with hot&gt; lye, which&#13;
was a terrible addition to an already heavy&#13;
burden.&#13;
One of our handsome bachelor members of&#13;
the legislature has varied the labors of statesmanship&#13;
to a considerable extent during the&#13;
session bv ajjvely flirtation with a Lansing&#13;
young lady,and nas taken her to the House until&#13;
she has all the parliamentary rules at her&#13;
finger ends. *Cn Monday as they sauntered up&#13;
to the candv stand in the legislative postohice,&#13;
he said said to her: "May I offer vou mybandfuTof&#13;
candy 4" She responded without a moment&#13;
of hesitation: "I move to amend bystrik-&#13;
] ing out all after the word ' h a n d ' . " It is said&#13;
that the member has accepted the amendment,&#13;
| and will linger some time after the session&#13;
! closes to have the bill engrossed, when it will&#13;
| be ready for the clergyman's signature.—Z*i»-&#13;
i ting HepvMican.&#13;
I R Mark West, working as a farmhand for J o h n&#13;
I Stone, near Hillsdale, tells a strange story of&#13;
vengeance which he claims is pursuing him.&#13;
He it the son of a farmer in Lapeer cou'nty,&#13;
who some time ago suffered depredations from&#13;
thieves. Young West watched for them and&#13;
one night heard a noise in the hen house,&#13;
found two men killing chickens, and shot at&#13;
them. One man fell. West went for help,&#13;
and when he returned t h e men had dlaappeared,&#13;
and ho thinks one was killed and carried&#13;
v .&#13;
off by the other. After that West was waylaid&#13;
aud shot at twice. He then left home, feeling&#13;
night wlili nearly the entire'eontents, including j he was the object of the wrath of a g a u g o i&#13;
place a statue of Gen. Cass in the old House of&#13;
representatives. Adjourned.&#13;
Ji'NE 17—SKNATE—The following nominations&#13;
by the governor were confirmed in execulive&#13;
session ; Members of the advisory board&#13;
of pardons. For four years, Henry C.Wisuer&#13;
and George R. Richards of Detroit; for two&#13;
vears, Albert M. Henry of Detroit and Chester&#13;
Warriuer of Jackson. To be n u m b e r of the&#13;
board of pharmacy, Ottmar Eberbaek of Ann&#13;
Arbor, vice Christian Eberback. resigned. Bills&#13;
passed: The general appropriation bill;&#13;
consolidating-the management of state prisons&#13;
and abolishing the contract system;&#13;
amending act 215, C. L, relative to mechanic&#13;
liens; appropriating swamp land to drain Dowagiac&#13;
creek. Van Buren county; amending the&#13;
election laws; relative to liquor tax.&#13;
HOCSH—The governor noted his approval of&#13;
the following iM4s-f-r-Abolishing tiie Marquette&#13;
fractional senool district; for a stenographer&#13;
of the ninth judicial circuit; applying to Macomb&#13;
county act JlO-of 1870 relative* to canals&#13;
and harbors"; to-protect hotel keepers; amending&#13;
section 75.7.), C. L. "relative to offenses;&#13;
amending section ^6:J.VI5&lt;M7, How.&#13;
relative to plank roads; to racilitate the giving&#13;
of bonds required bv law. for the yarding', feeding&#13;
and transportation of Texas cattle; to pension&#13;
Detroit firemen; for the indexing of the&#13;
journals of the legislature. The following&#13;
Dills pa&gt;sed unless otherwise noted : establishing&#13;
a board of pardons; to promote morality&#13;
and prevent crime; amending Sec. 5705 How",&#13;
relative to alienation by deed; amending Sec.&#13;
5009 How., relative to witnesses'; for organization&#13;
of building societies—lost; compelling&#13;
foreign mining corporations to pay&#13;
specific taxes, passed; fyr the sale&#13;
of state tax lands; lor a state r"oad in Lenawee&#13;
.county; for a state road in Grand Traverse&#13;
n u i u t y ; settling Hie claim uf-JolniMcFle; i-ontirming&#13;
the title of Martha M. Ingalls to ceri&#13;
u m portion of the present city of Menominee;&#13;
making a tax levy lor the general expenses of&#13;
the state for 1885-(1 amounting to $1,491,-774.90;&#13;
supplementary to the act annexing territory to&#13;
Detroit, rectifying the line established by "the&#13;
former act and providing for the equitable division&#13;
of school property.&#13;
J C X E 18.— S E N A T E — T h e ' g o v c r n o r communicated&#13;
his approval of the following: Amending&#13;
the law relative to punishment for libel&#13;
and slander; incorporating. Oscoda schools;&#13;
amending law relative to collecting damages&#13;
for injuries caused by 'defective sidewalks;&#13;
amending law relative' to proof, conveyance&#13;
and collection of niWlgages'; amending&#13;
law relative to the competency,&#13;
of witnesses; to promote morality and suppress&#13;
crime; establishing an advisory board of&#13;
p a r d o n s ; providing for the sale of certain state&#13;
tax lands; compelling upper peninsula miniug&#13;
and smelting companles-tQjnake reports to the&#13;
auditor general; extending the time for laying&#13;
a state road in Leelenaw c o u n t y ; extending&#13;
the time for laying a state road in Grand&#13;
Traverse county;Jto confirm the sale of swamp&#13;
Carefully Condensed.&#13;
Cholera is o a the lucrcuse In Spain.,&#13;
The entire Italian ministry has resigned.&#13;
Marquis of Salisbury will accept the position&#13;
of prime minister of England.&#13;
The queen has offered an earldom to Gladstone,&#13;
b u t the latter declines the honor. '&#13;
Frince Frederick Charles, nephew of t h e&#13;
Emperor of Germany, has had a stroke of.&#13;
paralysis. ''&#13;
T h e death of Admiral Courbet, c o m m a n d a n t&#13;
of the French fleet lu the Chines waters, i s&#13;
announced.&#13;
Baron Manteufell, the distinguished German&#13;
commander and governor of Aliace aud Lorraln,&#13;
is dead.&#13;
York, Eng., was visited by an earthquake a&#13;
few days siuce. Shocks lasted several seconds&#13;
and caused wild alarm.&#13;
Salisbury is still reluctant to form a Conservative&#13;
cabinet in Eugland because unqualified .&#13;
support by Liberals is refused. .&#13;
A terrible explosion occurred in the Pendlebury&#13;
colliery near Manchester, Kng. Over 100&#13;
lives are believed to have been lost.&#13;
The steamer Speke Hall, from Liverpool for&#13;
Bombay, has foundered iu aeyclone in the gulf&#13;
of Aden. There was only one survivor.&#13;
)j The death rat • from cholera iu Spain is appalling.&#13;
The number of deaths average a b o u t&#13;
two-thirds of the numbjr of eases reported.&#13;
Increased violence of earthquake, shocks is&#13;
reported from the vale of Cashmere. Over&#13;
2,000 people have been killed in one district,&#13;
i The government cholera commission says-the&#13;
disease in south of Spain is Asiatic cholera of&#13;
the most virulent kind, aud attacks all classes.&#13;
The mabdi has refused to release christian&#13;
prisoners who have embraced Islam, aud warns&#13;
all Englishmen that if they do not turn Mohammedans&#13;
he will destroy them.&#13;
The-German arinv has been ordered to wear&#13;
Mackrba.d;gea as a mark of respecLto the memory&#13;
of Prince Frederick Charles, and the E n g -&#13;
lish papers eulogize the dead prince.&#13;
U ^ E R A L U E W 8 .&#13;
AX IOWA CYCI.OXE.&#13;
appropri&#13;
been doi&#13;
A t o r n a d o swept over Plymouth a n d Cherokee&#13;
counties in Iowa a few days since attended&#13;
with great loss of life. Sixte'eu are reported&#13;
otgad 'terCtaTofa^'^^unty- flffi^TrTafyfitTnily^ i a -&#13;
jured. The streams rose so rap'idly that for&#13;
many hours the physicians could not visit their&#13;
patients.&#13;
HULI.IOX P H O n C C T A X l ) COIXAOE.&#13;
The special report of the directors of t h e&#13;
mint on the production of gold and silver&#13;
shows t h a t the deposits of domestic gold bullion&#13;
of t h e United S'ates mints and assay&#13;
offices from Julv 1,187), to Jan 1,1-85, amounted&#13;
to $415.()00,000: that the prediction during&#13;
the same pcrio.i am m u t e d to .^428.000.00), a n d&#13;
that the gold c linage at Unite I States mints&#13;
fir the last 12 tiscal years, alter deducting&#13;
United States gold coius reinelted, 'amounted&#13;
to $545,100,114.&#13;
- NO ECONOMY TUICKK.&#13;
J u d g e Durham, first c o m p t r o l l e r of t h e&#13;
treasury, has approved ihe action of First Auditor&#13;
Chenoweth in refusing to pass certain ac-'&#13;
counts of Mr. Luring, late commissioner of&#13;
Agriculture, for the purchase of seed amounting&#13;
to $2 ).S0;I0. The first comptroller holds&#13;
that this sum should have been charged to t h e&#13;
appropriation made for the purchase, propagatiou&#13;
and distribution of seeds, and not to the&#13;
ropriation made for the laboratory, as h a s&#13;
ne. The appropriation for "the purchase,&#13;
propagation and distribution of seeds is&#13;
that which had been reduced to 8158 on the lst^&#13;
wfMay. I t-was -origma41y-f 1(X),0J0.&#13;
AN OLD 11E1.IC. ,,-"""^&#13;
There h a s just been placed ^ b r l h c National&#13;
Museum a t Washington, foF-p"ermanent preservation&#13;
and exhibitioiii^-what is known as t h e&#13;
Ayreshire life cajv-tbc invention and property&#13;
of the venerable' Joseph Francis, known t h e&#13;
world oyer'as the- inventor of the Francis life&#13;
boa.t-a"nd other life-saving appliances. Thia&#13;
-war is the one used at the wreck of the British&#13;
ship Ayreshire on the coast of New Jersey ou&#13;
the night of Jiuiuary 12, INKI, in a severe snow&#13;
storm, saving the lives of 2)1 persons. I t is&#13;
interesting for its association and a curiosity&#13;
in its construction. I^hiw; been often publicly&#13;
exhibited in Europe and America- and has&#13;
traveled over 10.000 miles.&#13;
. A STATEMENT OF EXPOUTS.&#13;
The Chief of the Bureau of Statistics reports'&#13;
that the total values of the exports from the&#13;
United States of domestic cattle., hogs, beef,&#13;
pork and dairy products during the month of&#13;
May, 18S5. and during the five months ended&#13;
May 31, 1SS5, also of beef and pork products&#13;
during the seven months ending May ill, 1^5,&#13;
as compared with similar exports during the&#13;
.'urrespomling periods of^ -the prec-e&lt; ling- year -&#13;
were as follows: May, 1835,37.202.072;'May,&#13;
1884, $7,541,940; five" mouths ended Mav 31,&#13;
13&gt;5, $10,172 "4&gt;; for five months ended'May&#13;
31, 18.^, *?4 404.07.1; beef and pork products&#13;
for seven months ended May 31, 1885, $54,297,-&#13;
685; beef and pork products for the seven&#13;
months ended May 31," 1834, $50,207,382.&#13;
SHOT BECAUSE HE VVOUKEO.&#13;
A horrible murder was committed at Barnhill,&#13;
a small mining town in Tuscarawas counlands&#13;
to Martha M. Ingalls; the general appro- n-, b h i o , the other morning. Six weeks&#13;
priation bill&#13;
H O U S E — T h e governor noted hiB approval of&#13;
the following: Amending law relative to seri.&#13;
oe aeau, out now it I I I M I I M w m I v i c c a of processes on railroad companies; De-&#13;
Pratt c.lutehed tto; rooi^boarcTand trolt building inspection bill; authorizing&#13;
Thomastown, Saginaw eownty, to issue bonds;&#13;
amending Port Huron charter; amending law&#13;
relative to establishing and opening r o a d s ;&#13;
amending Clio village c h a r t e r ; amending&#13;
Owosso city charter; appropriating money to&#13;
drain swamp land in Van Buren county;&#13;
amending election laws; providing for the fiurchase of lands for the state prison; imposng&#13;
a tax on the business of-selllng liquor.&#13;
A F B I G H T F T / L ACCIDENT&#13;
A n Aeronaut Falls F r o m&#13;
Balloon.&#13;
B u r n i n g&#13;
•t^&#13;
, ago&#13;
Arnold Abbahl, a''Swiss,"came to this country&#13;
with a wife and two children. He went t o&#13;
Barnhill to work in the mines, and being verypoor&#13;
lived in a tumbled down shanty of one&#13;
room. Recently the miners and operators h a d&#13;
trouble about wages and the miners quit work.&#13;
Abbahl continued, however. The night before&#13;
the m u r d e r a committee waited ou' bim aud&#13;
ordered him to quit also, lie did not understand&#13;
them, and started to the mine as usual.&#13;
He got b u t a short distance when someone&#13;
crept out of the bushes bv the wavslde a n d&#13;
emptied t h e contents of a double-barreled shot&#13;
gun in his breast. Abbahl fell dead in his&#13;
tracks. Robt. Bankier, John Watkins and G.&#13;
W. Rogers, the committee who waited on him,&#13;
are in jail a t New Philadelphia, and citizens&#13;
threaten to lynch them. :&#13;
T1IK WORK OF THE 8TORM.&#13;
The house and barn of Mathew Reddy, several&#13;
mile* from Mason Citv, Iowa, in t h e&#13;
country, were carried away in t h e e t o r f t h e&#13;
other night and the family had a fearful experience.&#13;
There were hardly boards enough&#13;
left about t h e homestead tor tralld a fire. N o t&#13;
a bit of furniture nor a stitch of clothing could&#13;
be found. Mr, Reddv's brother was hurled into&#13;
a field when the house went t o pieces. Mr.&#13;
Reddy was left in a sitting position on t h e&#13;
ground. Qn looking a n n u m he saw bv a flash&#13;
of lightning that his brother was slretched&#13;
dead some yards away. He picked him up a n d&#13;
carried him into an underground milk-house.&#13;
He t h e n • commenced a search&#13;
for his wife and found her in her night clothes&#13;
p o m c t e n rods from the house iri a corn field.&#13;
She was also carried to the milk house. H e&#13;
next looked for his 5-year-old boy—searching&#13;
by the light of the electric flashes—and a i last&#13;
discovered t h e infant 8 ) rods from where t h e&#13;
house had stood. The t o y was almost driven&#13;
into t h e mud. W h e n nil were gathered i n t o&#13;
the milk house thcire Injuries were discovered&#13;
to be severe, and the mother and child will&#13;
hardly live. The brother had both ears spUt*&#13;
his head gashed and his shoulder cut a n d S ^feeS1*0"".*' _*?' JH^fod* T h e wife had three trashes o n&#13;
roken, wnue bijr cut ii&#13;
r&#13;
J&#13;
Among the attractions announced for Richardson's&#13;
circus In Charleston, W. Va., the&#13;
other day, was a free balloon ascension. Hundreds&#13;
of'people gathered on the g r o u n d s in the&#13;
afternoon to wltncM_.the aerial flight. The&#13;
aeronaut was William Patterson, aged 22, of&#13;
Wellesvllle, O , who hud been with the show&#13;
b u t three weeks, and who had never made an&#13;
ascension. At 3 o'clock a large canvass balloon&#13;
was inflated with hot air and Patterson&#13;
took his scat in the basket. The ropes were&#13;
c u t and the baloon started, b u t had not gone&#13;
ten feet when flames were observed bursting&#13;
from the canvass above his head.i The accid&#13;
e n t occurred by the overturning of a hot air&#13;
stove used in inflating t h e balloon. The burni&#13;
n g balloon shot un Into the air at a very rapid&#13;
rate. When a short distance up the crowd&#13;
yelled " l u m p ! " but Patterson did not heed the&#13;
advice, and after v o i n g several hundred feet&#13;
u p the balloon collapsed, and he fell to the&#13;
earth an almost lifeless mass. Those who witnessed&#13;
the affair descrlhe It as horlfylng in the&#13;
extreme. Patterson's body turned over a num&#13;
ber of times before reach In&#13;
baek, legs aud a m i were nrolteh, while fatal forehead, o n e on her nose, a big c a t In t h e&#13;
internal Injuries were sustained. The body f back, bruises on her legs and Is Jnlured Interwas&#13;
sent t o Wcllsville, Ohio., where his family nally. All three were ben ten blsck and DHM&#13;
reslrtes.forlntcrmnr,t ' all over their bodies by the b a i l . | -&#13;
1&#13;
I&#13;
n&#13;
resides, for Intcnncnt.&#13;
'-i.M...* V&#13;
•fWW'-*?1&#13;
.'iV-"&#13;
, . ^ -&#13;
!--«T 1&#13;
BUNRISE ON THE 8BA,&#13;
fc-&#13;
V&#13;
High tiue unci huuriH'.' un 'he sea,&#13;
Springtide nivl day's first dawn:&#13;
A day like lhi&gt; imw came to me&#13;
In years luievi r gme.&#13;
The crimson stivnk th*tt lielh tow&#13;
Above the .iceau'ti hri'ast,&#13;
Shone ou lb at, -&lt; u of lout; ago;&#13;
And memory niuy not rest.&#13;
•Tift like the opening or a book&#13;
Whose leavt'8 were closed by bunds&#13;
Long cold. And dear dead faces lock&#13;
In mine from ellrnt lauds;&#13;
And In my heart awakes a thrill&#13;
As of Borne nr at regret&#13;
80 paBBlon-6'rou &gt; that my proud will&#13;
Must all its pride forger,&#13;
Asd-hot teais till my eyeB until&#13;
My quivering lace la wet.&#13;
High tide and. SUB rise onH.bc sea,&#13;
Spring tide and day's first dawn;&#13;
The rosy light W»B gloom to mo&#13;
For all It rested on.&#13;
A dead hand clasped within my own—&#13;
A doad face raised :o mine,&#13;
And ou that face already shone&#13;
A glory most divine;&#13;
And tar away uprose a woau&#13;
From ocean's crimson line.&#13;
Sunrise, Bunset, or ebb or flow—&#13;
What matters it to mel&#13;
And what if days of long ago&#13;
Return upon the sea i&#13;
The waves that foam in crimson strife&#13;
Where sea and shore have met,&#13;
And all these things with memories&#13;
May come and go, and yet,&#13;
They cannot bring the dead to life,&#13;
N&lt;&gt;r hush one great regret I&#13;
— Vivien Caxtaue, in St. Louis Magazine.&#13;
rife&#13;
NOT WISELY BUT TOO WELL.&#13;
It was a rainy day. A train was&#13;
waiting at the Union Depot. A lady&#13;
and gentleman stood near the door of&#13;
the Ladles' Waiting-Room, while another&#13;
muffled in_&amp; gossamer, sat on a&#13;
bench in a corner.&#13;
"How you can call her pretty and&#13;
levabie,-^pusses my comprehension.'__&#13;
the lady was saying, her tones indicative&#13;
of extreme scorn and disgust,&#13;
"I-own Jessica is somewhat under&#13;
"the Weather lo-day, figuratively and&#13;
litterally," said the gentleman amusedly,&#13;
giving a quizzical glance over&#13;
at the lady in the corner. "Very few&#13;
ladies look their best when they have&#13;
a cold and when-a-ehilly_.ram.is doing&#13;
he thought to be the sweetest sister in&#13;
the world.&#13;
••Catherine will say I was right—as&#13;
I always am," retorted Jessica, audaciously.&#13;
"You'are a conceited little puss!&#13;
Come, there is our train for home,"&#13;
and then they hurried out and scrambled&#13;
on their train. Catharine did not&#13;
seold Jessica for rescuing the unfortunate&#13;
little boy of her friend from&#13;
drowning, but she had to hear all of&#13;
the'particulars—after she had put Jessica&#13;
to bed.&#13;
" I would not let Stella write you of&#13;
my 'brave deed' as she called it, and&#13;
as" I felt no ill effects from it except&#13;
this cold, I insisted on coming home&#13;
at the appointed time in spite of her&#13;
remonstrance," related the damsel.&#13;
Catherine regarded her bravely.&#13;
"Some of these days you will sacrifice&#13;
your own life for another's.&#13;
"Don't predict such^a, gloomy end&#13;
for mo," Jessica laughed. "Now, I&#13;
think if you will go away, I can go to&#13;
sleep and in the morning I shall be&#13;
well."&#13;
Jessica soon recovered from the ill&#13;
effects of her icy bath, and was her&#13;
old winsome self.&#13;
Unconsciously to himself, Raymond&#13;
La Bruce drifted into thinking" more&#13;
of his sweet sister than was good for&#13;
his peace of mind. If she were absent,&#13;
he chafed visibly till her return.&#13;
When she laughingly" related her conquests,&#13;
at festivities, of masculine&#13;
hearts—for she was very gay that winter—&#13;
iho found himself regarding her&#13;
with gloomy brows.&#13;
"I really think Jessica is becoming&#13;
serious over Tom Langtree's offer of&#13;
marriage, and I hope that she will act&#13;
like a sensible girl and take him.""'&#13;
•'Why? Are you tired of your, own&#13;
sister?" asked Raymond, half savagel&#13;
y , but still going on with his shaving.&#13;
" Catherine sat by the cheery fire&#13;
wnrminrr her pink palm*. At Ray&#13;
mond's question she turned her blue&#13;
eyes upon him wonderingly. "WThy,&#13;
Raymond, how absurd you are sometimes.-&#13;
I declare, you have changed&#13;
lately and are not'at all your agreeits&#13;
best to Tirskoit WOTSCJ,J ab 1 e self-,---• ahe-4a-Hgh¥d,&#13;
"Well, train-? wait for no one, so, if&#13;
you will be so kind as to put me on&#13;
mine, Brother Raymond, I'll leave&#13;
you to Jessica's tender mercies. Don't&#13;
'forget to tell Catharine that I utterly&#13;
disapprove of her sister Jessica."&#13;
"Very well, I'll not forget to tell&#13;
her," he retorted in a smothered voice. Unan! Who has said anything about&#13;
At which Mrs. Stenby looked at liflii j p - - .&#13;
suspiciously. .Was it possible hev&#13;
brother was laughing at-iler? Her—&#13;
the wealthy, the e^jcittsive, the tasto-&#13;
-fulMrs. -Steiibj&amp;r^vhoso dicta,-was.always&#13;
con^id^fed infallible?&#13;
Vety^vvell, let him laugh!&#13;
Lftev putting his offended and uuwieluily&#13;
plump-sister aboard the train&#13;
and bidding her a hasty good-bye,&#13;
Raymond L.i Bruce returned to the&#13;
forloin little figure sitting in its corner.&#13;
"Your sister did not like me—I&#13;
kuow she did not!" said a plaiutivo&#13;
voice hoarsely.&#13;
"Jessica, you must tako off"that&#13;
ridiculous gossamer at once," Raymond&#13;
authoritatively commanded, not&#13;
replying to her complaint.&#13;
"Why? she asked, looking up innocently!&#13;
'&#13;
"It is no longer necessary. Our&#13;
train will soon be in, and wo will not&#13;
be exposed to any more rain. I will&#13;
get you a cup of coffee&#13;
you must wrap up&#13;
Raymond smothered a sigh.&#13;
"To tell the truth, Catheria&lt; I am&#13;
not well. I had thoiigjit^to take you&#13;
all a little trip— a^y-itfnere you wished&#13;
to go—but I^supposo Jessica's marriage&#13;
wjiWfustratc my plans."&#13;
'^Jetfsica's marriage! You ridiculous&#13;
Jessica marrying?" almost screamed&#13;
Catherine.&#13;
"Didn't you?"&#13;
"Why, no; I only said I hoped she&#13;
woiild^consider Tom Langtree's 0ffer&#13;
favorably. It is not her first offer, by&#13;
any means, you must surely know."&#13;
"I don't see what she wants to marry&#13;
for anyway. Isn't she happy with&#13;
us?"&#13;
"She has never said that she was&#13;
not, only it is natural that a girl should&#13;
I one day desire a home of her very&#13;
own."&#13;
"Whv should she?"&#13;
atTonce, aTuT&#13;
well in this&#13;
afghah."&#13;
"Thanks," she answered as well as&#13;
she could between two sneezes.&#13;
Jessica Cler had not long been out&#13;
of school, and had been visiting a&#13;
school friend. She was now on her&#13;
way, to her married sister's house&#13;
which was her home. Raymond's&#13;
own sister, Mrs. Stenby, had been&#13;
visiting him and lie had come up from&#13;
~the country ou an Eas.texn-.boun.il. train&#13;
with her to the Union Depot in L ,&#13;
where he also expected to meet Jessica&#13;
Cler.&#13;
Jessica cam", and met Mrs. Stenby,&#13;
who was not charmed with her, which&#13;
was not after the fashion of other people,&#13;
for Jessica made friends wherever&#13;
she went.—Raymond La Bruce and&#13;
his wife Catherine, Jessica's sister,&#13;
adored her and thought there were&#13;
none like her. Perhaps it was because&#13;
she heard the girl's praises so&#13;
constantly sung, that Mrs. Stenby&#13;
found no beauty in this girl's peachy&#13;
complexion, wavy brown hair, and&#13;
pellucid bro.wn eyes.&#13;
Jessica stood up at Raymond's command&#13;
and he divested her of the offending&#13;
water-proof. When it was removed&#13;
there was revealed a rounded&#13;
girlish form clad in dark green serge,&#13;
whiio her dark green Derby was&#13;
adorned by a single iridescent wing.&#13;
"Now you look more like a civilized&#13;
being," commented Raymond, as ho&#13;
wrapped a long soft afghan about her.&#13;
Then he went away for the cqffee.&#13;
"You are very good," she said gratefully&#13;
as she sipped the steaming cup.&#13;
"And you have been very naughty,&#13;
Now confess and tell mo at once what&#13;
you have been doing to contract that&#13;
cold?"&#13;
"Nothing at all."&#13;
"But you have, and I shall write at&#13;
onco to Mrs. Curtis and tell her if sho&#13;
ian't take better earn of you thifn-fchls,&#13;
[ shall forbid you ever visiting her&#13;
again."&#13;
"Under such a terrible threat, I feel&#13;
that I must confess to playing the&#13;
Newfoundland again," the srirllaughingly&#13;
explained.&#13;
"Rescuing some dirty ragamuffin&#13;
irom a wnt&gt;ry giave at the risk of&#13;
your own life! Very well, we will sec&#13;
what Catherine will have to say to you.&#13;
I IflVT 4 " "fnx «fn1H ynn.aiwnrqly,"&#13;
Raymond caid, himself frowning as&#13;
severely on the girl as he could, whom&#13;
" 0 , my dear, how absurd you are!&#13;
Why, if I had not desired some other&#13;
home than aunt's, I should never havo&#13;
married you!"&#13;
Raymond put up shaving materials&#13;
thoughtfully, while Catherine gazed&#13;
into the lire with a placid smile of&#13;
sereno content.&#13;
She adored her husband and children,&#13;
and envied no woman.&#13;
"Will you drive with me ^liis afternoon,&#13;
dear?" asked Raymond on his&#13;
way out of the room.&#13;
"O, certainly," she respondod with&#13;
ready alacrity.&#13;
At the foot of the stairs Raymond&#13;
met Jessica. "Is it true—this about&#13;
your marriage"" lie demanded.&#13;
She laughingly freed her hands from&#13;
his firm clasp.&#13;
"Catherine has been babbling."&#13;
"That is no answer. Tell me, are&#13;
you to marry soon?" he persisted.&#13;
She shivered.&#13;
"O, Bro. Raymond,' don't you see I&#13;
am cold? Let me go up to Cathie's&#13;
room. She always has a good fire."&#13;
"Tellme!" ho insisted, placing -one&#13;
hand under her chin and raising her&#13;
face to his.&#13;
"I shall never marry!" Then sho&#13;
sped up-stairs while Raymond went&#13;
out of tne house with a cleared face.&#13;
"Jessica^ You are shatdng like a&#13;
leaf! Have^you a chill?" Catherine&#13;
demanded as Jesstcu^sank down on the&#13;
rug, spreading out her^iiands to the&#13;
fire, shivering audibly.&#13;
"O, I don't know—Catherine,&#13;
going away!" Jessica exclaimed witlT&#13;
chattering teeth.&#13;
Cathie and the children till my return?"&#13;
11 have telegraphed Aunt Ruth,"&#13;
answered in a low voice, unoasily&#13;
^ngering her book.&#13;
X'You can send her a seqond telegram."&#13;
" I will!"&#13;
He went out. A spasm of pain contorted&#13;
her face, while he went on to&#13;
Catherine's room.&#13;
"Very well, Raymond, we will put&#13;
off our trip to Cuba till vou return,"&#13;
she promised her husband&#13;
after he explained that important&#13;
business called him away for several&#13;
weeks.&#13;
The next day, after he had said&#13;
f;ood-bye to them all, grouped together&#13;
n the lower hall, kissing Jessica in a&#13;
brotherly way, last of all, he returned&#13;
to the sitting room for a forgotten&#13;
paper half an hour after he should&#13;
have been on the way. Jessica was&#13;
alone in the room, arms flung out on&#13;
the table, head buried between.&#13;
She looked up at the opening of the&#13;
door, and slowly rose when she saw&#13;
who it was. &gt; -~»&#13;
All her bright beauty seemed gone—&#13;
her lips were tightly drawn and ashy&#13;
Eale, her cheeks were like marble, her&#13;
rown eyes dull and dead.&#13;
"Why do you return, Brother Raymond?"&#13;
"I remembered a paper I left here&#13;
after I had gone half way to the station—&#13;
I ^ came back for it," he hurriedly&#13;
explained*&#13;
"Your will. Hero it is," and she extended&#13;
a shaking hand to him.' He&#13;
clasped both hands and paper and&#13;
drew her to his breast&#13;
" 0 , my God! Jessica, it is terrible!&#13;
Do you not know that I love you—do&#13;
you" not see that it is my mad love for&#13;
you that is driving me from my&#13;
home?" ,&#13;
She had leaned like a dead weight&#13;
pnrt&gt;;ngt- his hftarr. Now sheJUfted herself,&#13;
put both arms abojuthTsneck, and&#13;
kissed him&#13;
It was a kiss'of Renunciation—but&#13;
ho did uotrknow that.&#13;
o\ now, Brother Raymond; you&#13;
ay-returnto Catherine soon;''and&#13;
with a soft smile playing on her face,&#13;
3he pushed him away.&#13;
He went out and away.&#13;
"Come, Ray, let Aunt Jessie row&#13;
you over to that island where we went&#13;
last summer so often."&#13;
"And can't mamma and Katie come&#13;
to!" cried the little boy, clasping his&#13;
hands.&#13;
"Yes, dear."&#13;
It was three days after Raymond's&#13;
departure, and Jessica rowed the little&#13;
party safely to the island situate in&#13;
the river which ran by their Florida&#13;
home.&#13;
The little ones soon tired and Jessica&#13;
was readv to take them home.&#13;
"Jessie, you do not seem-well, dear.&#13;
I am afraid it was not prudent for any&#13;
of us to comeout-la-day.- The east&#13;
wind is so raw and chilly, and you&#13;
don't seem strong enough to row the&#13;
boat," Catherine objected.&#13;
Jessica, with a smile, took her place,'&#13;
but Catherine said she would wait till&#13;
Jessica took the children to the shore,&#13;
then she would call Sam or Jim to&#13;
come back for her. Jessica took the&#13;
children safely over, and Catherine&#13;
saw her kneel and kiss them, then giving&#13;
them to their nurse who was waiting,&#13;
Jessica once more propelled the&#13;
boat toward the island. •&lt;.&#13;
" . T n c n i n n . . i H C n n t - lil-ft yr»n to be SO&#13;
FAEW AST) GARDEN.&#13;
Seasonable tlnKgestlons to Cultivators and&#13;
Tiltcrt of the Soil.&#13;
White Pigs—Uage\ Kiddie and Small Breeds.&#13;
Notwithstanding the superiority of&#13;
some ' f the black breeds of pigs, and&#13;
in spite of the fact that the color, unlike&#13;
beauty, is not even'"skin-deep,"&#13;
the blackest pigs dressing quite as&#13;
white as the whitest, there is, in this&#13;
country, in the Northern States at&#13;
least, a prejudice against black pigs.&#13;
J* the Southern States, in localities&#13;
where the pigs run at large, and the&#13;
Paint-root grows, it is black pigs or&#13;
none at all. White pigs, if they feed&#13;
upon Paint-root (Luclinanthes tinc~&#13;
loria), become completely blind, and&#13;
their baofs drop on, while the black&#13;
pigs can eat the plant without apparent&#13;
injury. This singular fact accounts&#13;
for the prevalence of black pigs&#13;
in many Southern localities. There&#13;
are counties in Englarld in which there&#13;
are prejuices against white animals,&#13;
and others in which only black pigs&#13;
are tolerated. While in the Western&#13;
States the prejudice against swine that&#13;
are black, in whole or in part, is rapidly&#13;
disappearing, it remains quite&#13;
strong in many of the older States,&#13;
where those who keep but few swine,&#13;
or who raise the "family pig," almost&#13;
Invariably prefer white animals. Notwithstanding&#13;
that the blatjk pigs present&#13;
some of the most striking illustrations&#13;
of skillful breeding, and are&#13;
the perfection of form, and of swinish&#13;
beauty, people are prejudiced against&#13;
them "by early associations. Theirfirst&#13;
knowledge of pigs was^gained&#13;
from white ones, and in J i e i r minds,&#13;
.white is the proper color for pigs.&#13;
The number^.ol'" so-catied breeds of&#13;
white pigs-known in England, was at&#13;
one^tittle- very large; a slight-variation,&#13;
^^stich as we may expect in a strain,&#13;
was given a distinctive local name,&#13;
and called a breed. English breeders&#13;
Russian sunflower is the beat to raise&#13;
for this purpose. "~~&#13;
Every veterinarian in the country&#13;
takes strong ground"against tho use of&#13;
the over check rein. It is both barbarious&#13;
and useless.&#13;
The Gormantown Telegraph thinks&#13;
salt would be'a valuable application to&gt;&#13;
the squash plants to prevent the ravages&#13;
of the maggot which works a t&#13;
the root and below the surface of the&#13;
ground.&#13;
Dealers in butter in New York,&#13;
where they have a law squarely prohibiting&#13;
the sale of oleomargarine and&#13;
other imitation butter, state that the&#13;
honest enforcement of the law is having&#13;
the effect of increasing the demand&#13;
for genuine dairy butter.&#13;
San Jose Times-Mercury In answer&#13;
to a subscriber as to when the codlin&#13;
moth and phylloxera appear, we have&#13;
to suggest: They appear whenever&#13;
they take a notion, and are apt to&#13;
come any day in the year. Horticulturists&#13;
must be on the lookout all the&#13;
time.&#13;
Sandy soil is not good for an orchard,&#13;
though good orchards sometim*&#13;
grow on such S01I4 Clay soil is well&#13;
adapted to truit, especially to plums.&#13;
On rocky soils the apple tree is at&#13;
home; Baldwins especially succeed on&#13;
such lands. Successful fruit cultivation&#13;
depends upon feeding the trees&#13;
properly.&#13;
Pick your market chickens dry.&#13;
Note this from the Farm-Jouanal:&#13;
"Wo know of no market where dry&#13;
pieked poultry does not command two&#13;
or three cents more per pound than&#13;
scalded stock, and yet farmers in&#13;
some sections continue" the practice of&#13;
scalding, when dry picked is_ just a3&#13;
easy and expeditious."&#13;
The removal of drone comb, "says&#13;
Charles Dadant-..in_ the Bee Journal&#13;
is worth many dollars to the bee keeper,&#13;
for thirty:two drone cells occupy&#13;
as much space as fifty—worker cells,&#13;
"What&#13;
"It is&#13;
jnso!"&#13;
true! 1 fhmk I shall visit&#13;
auntie awhile."&#13;
"And just now Raymond w;as planning&#13;
a trip for us all—and I was thinking&#13;
of Cuba." grumbled Catherine.&#13;
"O, I should be no end of trouble to&#13;
Raymond, so please leave me out of&#13;
your plans."&#13;
The next day Raymond said:&#13;
"Well, ladies, how would you like&#13;
to leave home lor awhile?"&#13;
"O, splendidly, and I intend going&#13;
straight to iiuntic's this very afternoon.&#13;
I telegraphed her this more.'&#13;
iug," said Jessica nonchalantly, peeling&#13;
an orango deftly for little Ray.&#13;
Raymond looked at her and said in a&#13;
quiet voice:&#13;
"Why do you wish to pain us so,&#13;
Jessie, dear?"&#13;
"Now, Bro. Raymond:11 she said&#13;
deprecatingly but giving hi n a defiant&#13;
glance, "for"iA&gt;M tolmpniee^ilmotives&#13;
to mo is too much."&#13;
An hour afterwards he followed Jessica&#13;
into thjef library where he knew&#13;
she had gone.&#13;
"Jessica," he commenced abruptly,&#13;
'I am goin&lt;y away to-morrow to be&#13;
perverse. Why did you not call Sam&#13;
to come after me, as 1 proposed?"&#13;
"Catherine, dear, don't scold, but&#13;
kiss me, kiss me twice, once for brother&#13;
Raymond, and tell him so when he&#13;
comes home, won't you?"&#13;
"You can deliver your own kisses to&#13;
him then," Catherine laughed.&#13;
With a grave face Jessica rowed&#13;
once more shoreward.&#13;
"Catherine, writo for Raymond to&#13;
come home to-night!"&#13;
"Jessica, what ails you?--I-reaH-ybclieve&#13;
you love Raymond more than I&#13;
do," Catherine exclaimed teasingly.&#13;
"I do!" said Jessica. There was no&#13;
laughter in her face, no merriment in&#13;
her voice, but Catherine only smiled&#13;
absently. She was not thinking' of&#13;
Jessica's whims aud moods.&#13;
The boat grated on the shore and&#13;
Catherine sprang out.&#13;
But what was "this?&#13;
Instead of following—instead of&#13;
fastening tho boat, Jessica retained&#13;
her seat, the boat backed into the deep&#13;
water, Jessica rose wildly, and tho&#13;
next moment the boat was&#13;
the river—empty.&#13;
Sh&lt;Twasauite dead when they found&#13;
her body, jphelips would never again&#13;
smile in jesting^speeeh, the brown eyes&#13;
never again sparkkTSvith love and&#13;
merriment.&#13;
Raymond could come back to"&#13;
orirre now.—Annabel It. White, in&#13;
cago Ledger.&#13;
nomenclature when they grouped pigs&#13;
by their colors and sizes, and gave us&#13;
large and small breeds of white pigs.&#13;
In 1852, a well known English breeder&#13;
. .exhihitedjJ.t..onp_of_the important fairs,&#13;
several pigs of extraoruThary merit,&#13;
but too large to be. judged among the&#13;
small white breed, and not large&#13;
enough for the Large Whites. The&#13;
animals were so remarkably fine that&#13;
they could not be disqualified. The&#13;
judges met the difficulty bv making a&#13;
third class, calling it the Middle White&#13;
breed. Since then, while ' only the&#13;
largo and small black breeds have&#13;
been admitted, the white pigs have&#13;
three breeds, the Large, Middle and&#13;
Small White.&#13;
How to Get Early Garden Crops.&#13;
There are many ways of getting&#13;
early crops, or of trying to get theni,&#13;
such as starting the plants in the house&#13;
or hot-bed, and covering them .with&#13;
glass, etc., after they are set out. But&#13;
when these methods are not adopted,&#13;
there is still a chance to have early&#13;
vegetables and a good garden. It is&#13;
simply to select the warmest and drives&#13;
t soil, and sow or plant early. It is&#13;
not desirable or wise to sow or plant&#13;
the main crops before the soil is in&#13;
good working condition. But for a&#13;
few early crops on a small scale, we&#13;
can well afford to run a little risk of&#13;
losing our seed by to early sowing.&#13;
One thing however should not be overlooked.&#13;
Do not depend on this early&#13;
sowing, but sow or plant again a littlo&#13;
later when th4—soil and weather&#13;
tooie-a-itmg-^ep ui simplifyincr pip ^n H ^ ^yjoip c o m D , or 150 square&#13;
drifting&#13;
gone an indefinite time. Will you not&#13;
revoke your decision aud remain with&#13;
Ivy-Clad Walls.&#13;
Tho common belief that ivy trained&#13;
against the walls of a dwelling house&#13;
produces damp walls and general unhealthiness&#13;
is fallacious. Tho very&#13;
opposite is the case. If ono will carefully&#13;
examine an ivy-clad wall after a&#13;
shower of rain, he will notice that&#13;
while the overlapping leaves have conducted&#13;
the water from point to point&#13;
until it has reached the ground, the&#13;
wall beneath is perfectly dry and&#13;
dusty. More than this, tho thirsty&#13;
shoots which force their way into&#13;
every crevice of the structure which&#13;
will afford a firm hold, act like suckers&#13;
in drawing out any particles of inoist-&#13;
Nire for their own" nourishment. The&#13;
ivy, in fact, acts like a greatcoat, keeping&#13;
the house from wet and warm.&#13;
One mpre virtue it has, in. giving to&#13;
the ugliest structure an* ~HfetVv€o rgroen&#13;
beauty.—St. Louis GJo&amp;e-Democrat /&#13;
are more favorable. If the first sowing&#13;
succeeds, you are so much ahead;&#13;
if it fails, you have lost only the seed&#13;
and your labor. You can well afford&#13;
to run this risk. There are some crops&#13;
which can be sown the moment the&#13;
frost is out of the soil, with little or no&#13;
risk. Among these we mention peas,&#13;
cabbage, cauliflower, spinach, onions,&#13;
lettuce, celery, beet, carrot, parsnip,&#13;
etc. It is seldom that these crops are&#13;
hurt by early frost. Last year a frost&#13;
in May destroyed mauy cabbage plants&#13;
but this is,a very unu-ual occurrence.&#13;
Among the crops which we should resow&#13;
without waiting to see if the first&#13;
^sowing will escape, are beets, radishes,&#13;
cabbage, cauliflower, beans and&#13;
sweet corn. '&#13;
Farmers' Clubs,&#13;
Farmers' clubs are a great want.&#13;
We have State and County Agricultural&#13;
Societies, with their annual fairs,&#13;
which are good as far as they go, but&#13;
their meetings for discussious are generally&#13;
but once a year, and these durbfee&#13;
fair week, when the attentions is&#13;
very much absorbed with Fair matters.&#13;
We have agricultural papers&#13;
enough, but their circulation in many&#13;
of the farming towns is very limited.&#13;
AVhat we want is a farmers' club in&#13;
every town or buiness center, where&#13;
farmers come to market, or&lt;to get&#13;
their supplies, that they may have opnity&#13;
for a conference, for an hour&#13;
t\v^von somo topic previously announced,&#13;
and occasional exhibitions&#13;
of fruits and "vi&amp;ge_tables, during the&#13;
summer and falLInThisway. tho best&#13;
farmers, with their rearnhg^experiments&#13;
and methods, would bobrmiglit&#13;
in close contact with those who are 11&#13;
the back-ground, and the business of&#13;
farming be made far more attractive&#13;
and profitable. Our oensus statistics&#13;
for the last thirty years show a steady&#13;
driftof our population toward the&#13;
cities and villages. These gain at tho&#13;
exponse of the agricultural towns. The&#13;
school house and church in many of&#13;
them are half emptied. There is no&#13;
remedy for this decadence but in the&#13;
gospel of husbandry, taught and illustrated&#13;
by the farmers themselves,&#13;
who should exalt their own calling. —&#13;
American Agriculturist for May.&#13;
Timely Topics&#13;
Sunflower seeds are excellent to mix&#13;
with poultry fooa. The uuimuiui]&#13;
inches, would produce 5,000 drones iu»—&#13;
stead of 7.500 workers. Hence he argues&#13;
in favor of drone traps.&#13;
Putting printers' ink around tho&#13;
trees in the -orchard this month will&#13;
do more to keep the canker-worm&#13;
moth from ascending themj than it&#13;
will later in the season. Especially is&#13;
it needed where they were plenty last&#13;
year, as the ground may bo well filled&#13;
with them. If there are any eggs of&#13;
the tent caterpillar in the twigs, they&#13;
will be swollen enough now to be,&#13;
readily seen, and should be cut off&#13;
and the Twigs burned.&#13;
A stone smoke house a few feet&#13;
square and cheaply covered by boards&#13;
is^ very convenient around farm&#13;
houses. Besides its use for smoking&#13;
meats, it is a convenient receptacle&#13;
for wood ashes, or when not required&#13;
as a smoke house may be stored&#13;
with feed for pigs, to whose pen it&#13;
will naturally be adjacunt. On farms&#13;
where stone is abundant the cost of&#13;
such a building, aside from roofing,&#13;
will.be only lime, sand and labor.&#13;
Prof. L. B. Arnold says a dairy farm&#13;
costs ten per cent less to operate than&#13;
grain growing or mixed agriculture;&#13;
second, the mean returns average a&#13;
little more than other branches; third,&#13;
prices are nearer uniform and more&#13;
reliable; fourth, dairying exhausts the&#13;
soil less; fifth, it is more secure against&#13;
changes in the season, since tho dairying&#13;
does not suffer so much from the^&#13;
Wet and frost and varying seasons,and*&#13;
he can, if prudent, provido against- -&#13;
drought.&#13;
An Indiana farmer writes about the&#13;
proper time to sow clover seed. He&#13;
says: "For four successive years I&#13;
sowed in March, when the ground was&#13;
freezitfg^ and thawing, and failed in&#13;
getting a stand worth leavjng. For&#13;
three successive years 1 have waited&#13;
until my wheat had grown up to about&#13;
eight to twelve inches high. By that&#13;
time it was firmly rooted in the ground;,&#13;
then I dragged it with a light sharp&#13;
tooth harrbwNor drag; then I sowed&#13;
my seed while the ground- was fresh.&#13;
Then I sowed about thirty pounds of&#13;
plaster per acre, and for these successive&#13;
years I have had a good stand of&#13;
clover and good crops of wheat."&#13;
Orchard grass is a robust growet&#13;
and very tenacious of life. —It masses&#13;
its roots so as to resist the encroachment&#13;
of other grasses, covering much&#13;
of the ground with^its lapge pendant&#13;
leaves that spring out near the base of&#13;
the plant to shade, nourish and&#13;
enrich the soil not occupied by the&#13;
plant itself. This, perhaps, accounts&#13;
largely for its ability to endure excessive&#13;
drought. It will produce two&#13;
large crops of good hay on rich soil,&#13;
and submit to more abuse than any&#13;
other forage plant, except^b~Tue grass,&#13;
which is), of little value in a very dry&#13;
season; -&#13;
Spring operations will soon commence,&#13;
and with these a demand for1&#13;
good farm hands. The general rule that&#13;
is followed in this "country is to put off'&#13;
the hiring of men to the last moment,&#13;
and trust to chance for some one coming&#13;
along, and then probably some inferior&#13;
workman has to be taken, or&#13;
one at all. Men who know their busiuess-&#13;
on a farm will not wait, and are&#13;
early picked^ up in tho neighborhood&#13;
in w"hich theV~mav reside. The trusting&#13;
to men coming^along just at the&#13;
exact moment you aroc«iwded is a&#13;
bad policy. There should always be&#13;
profitable employment for a manNin^&#13;
the early spring months before seeding&#13;
commences, and it will pay auy farmer&#13;
,to secure good farm hands ej&#13;
and pay them good wages.&#13;
In 1SS4 there wcroj£8?T37,900 pounds of&#13;
nails nlaoufa«ture^irf1hc United States. The&#13;
large amountis'tJecouuted for by the fact that&#13;
it was a^ifsidentlal year and there was an undemaud&#13;
to nail campaign lie*.—fewi*.&#13;
'St/HtiVJ. —&#13;
h.'i&#13;
4&#13;
••••j/i&#13;
•*-&#13;
/&#13;
v.&#13;
&lt;£• ... -^_&#13;
^r * &gt;&#13;
&amp;.&amp;, •;? • • * ' /L&#13;
&gt; • f ~ - » m--&#13;
tv-'-:.-, • • - - - . &lt; - y r » -&#13;
'•pir&#13;
:] ;&#13;
;*&#13;
-i&#13;
&lt;&#13;
n&#13;
^&#13;
1 V&#13;
. j i H i tw-&#13;
^ - .&#13;
PlNCKNEY DISPATCH.' h e lli(1- We understand it is proposed&#13;
to see what substantial encourage-&#13;
J. L. NEWKIRK, EDITOR AXD PUBLISHER.&#13;
JJiackney, Michigan, Thursday, June 25, 188¾&#13;
FOWLERVILLE PARAGRAPHSProm&#13;
the Review.&#13;
An infant ctild of Mr. James&#13;
Miner, of Cohoctah, died on Sunday.&#13;
Luck sterns to be against Mr. Z. IJ00/~~ai~ " w e a t r ^ i f r u n ' o n ' t h o " i m e&#13;
ment will be tendered the road between&#13;
this place and Owosso.&#13;
After next Sunday the 1&gt;. It. &amp;.N.&#13;
will run traiiis according to their&#13;
summer time table. By the new arrangement&#13;
the morning train, west&#13;
will pass Howell at about 9 a. m.; the&#13;
M- Palmerton just a t present. H e&#13;
lofy; his horse on Friday,&#13;
Mr. II. E. Pfeifle, of Williaraston,&#13;
fcas opened a harness shop in ftie Scofield&#13;
building, opposite the Spencer&#13;
House.&#13;
At a meeting of the School lioard&#13;
recently the following teachers were&#13;
secured for the ensuing year: Principal,&#13;
C. E. Foster; Preceptress, Miss&#13;
Belle E . Horton; Grammar, Miss&#13;
Gertie Warren; Second Primary,&#13;
Miss Ida Dodge; Frst Primary, Miss&#13;
Jennie Spencer; assistant Frst Primary,&#13;
Miss Eva Austin.&#13;
BRIGHTON SAYINGS.&#13;
From the Citizen.&#13;
Alpheus Smith, of Genoa, has found&#13;
sorae-eopper ore on bis farm. Who&#13;
knows buf'there's millions in it."&#13;
The seventh consecutive son' made&#13;
his appearance in the home of Henry&#13;
JJamman one dav last wenfc—In "fader&#13;
land" ho would be almost a kYn&lt;*&#13;
The council are contemplating open&#13;
ing Hope street, which runs&#13;
Grand River street, from Locklin&#13;
Clark's, north to Spencer road, in order&#13;
to tap a gravel bed which is supposed&#13;
to lie on the jine of the road.&#13;
from the Argua.&#13;
This township has 96 dogs.&#13;
Complaint has been made against so&#13;
many "kids" in the village carrying&#13;
revolvers.&#13;
Keron McDonald, -father of Richard1&#13;
McDonald, of Green Oak, and an old&#13;
settler of that township, aged 87, was&#13;
buried from St. Patrick's church yesterday.&#13;
time it docs now and the evening&#13;
train will leave Detroit at 6.25,&#13;
reaching this place at 8:25: the morning&#13;
passenger east will pass here&#13;
about 8:45, the mail wil] go east at&#13;
I;31 as now, and the evening express&#13;
at about 7;45. Through coaches&#13;
and a sleeper for Petoskey and&#13;
Mackinac will be put on.&#13;
— a&#13;
There is a sad case of impossible&#13;
identity in a town in Illinois. A&#13;
mother and daughter gave birth to&#13;
female babies on the same day and&#13;
in the same house. The thoughtless&#13;
nurse dressed both alike, placed them&#13;
in the same cradle, and forgot which&#13;
was which. When t a k e h u p neither&#13;
mother was able to identify her own&#13;
child. Ts there no Solomon whef can&#13;
relieve their distress?&#13;
Life—The Tenacity of Wonen.&#13;
_- -It appears—from the gathered static&#13;
tics of the world that women have&#13;
_ greater tenacity of life than men. De-&#13;
-„-—— I suite • the -mtolk'cUml ~4ind. -physicalstrength&#13;
of the latter, the softer sex eu-&#13;
35-3C&#13;
1776. 1885.&#13;
P&#13;
HERE WE ARE AGAIN !&#13;
-With a larger stock of-&#13;
DRUGS AND M E D I C I N E S&#13;
.¾ than any house in Livingston County.&#13;
We carry a full line of the latest FLUIDS, EXTRACTS and other preparations&#13;
known to the Drug Trade; also as fine a line of&#13;
FANCY GOODS and TOILET ARTICLES as you&#13;
will find anywhere in the State.&#13;
Iri Stationery and Box Paper we have a complete stock. We have the boss&#13;
-Nickle Cigar "and don't you torget it."&#13;
W A L L P A P E R , C E I L I N G D E C O R A T I O N S A W I N D O W S H A D E S&#13;
iu all the latest patterns. We prive "Kindall's Treatese on the Horse" to every--&#13;
horse-owner who purchase goods of us. Arctic Soda Water constantly on&#13;
draught, Oranges, Lemons and confectionery of all kinds.&#13;
"Corner Drug Store." SIGLER BROS.&#13;
PATENT* MTJKM ft CO., of the ficmrrmr AMmicAy.eon.*&#13;
Unas tosot M Solicitor* for 1'nlout*, Civeats. Trxde&#13;
S*rks, Copyrights, for the Uuited BUtcit, CatuteW—&#13;
pacUnd, France, Germany, etc. Hand Book stout&#13;
PftUoU sent free. Thlrtjr-seven rears' experience*&#13;
Pttentaobtained through MUNRA CO. aru noticed&#13;
(a the SCIENTIFIC AMKBiCAK.-the largest, heat, end&#13;
most widely circulated scientific paper. $8J0» year. -&#13;
Weekly, splendid enfcravlnjis and Interesting ID- tormation. Specimen copy of theMelenilflo A M N&#13;
can sent free. Addrau MUNN A CO.. mintnrt*&#13;
AJUUUCAX Offloe, 201 Broadway, New York.&#13;
Vf'&#13;
-*• ' + •&#13;
pURNITUREl pURNTTURE!&#13;
When in want of anything in the line of Furniture, such as&#13;
SOUTH LYON DOTSFrom&#13;
the Picket.&#13;
Chas. Rogers, of this place, graduated&#13;
with honors from the Ann Arbor&#13;
High School yesterday. „&#13;
At a meeting of ihe school board&#13;
last week they decTded to re-engage&#13;
•-PfofTMilleF for another year at an&#13;
advanced salary, which, if we might&#13;
'be allowed to judge, is a wise act.&#13;
Sunday night some clothes were&#13;
kidnapped from Mrs. Nunn's yard,&#13;
belonging to Mr?. H. A. Whipple*&#13;
Fortunately the parties are known&#13;
and we understand Mr. Whipple has&#13;
commenced legal proceedings against&#13;
them,&#13;
That South Lyon will have a race&#13;
course is now an assured fact. J a s .&#13;
Duhcah has very kindly donated the&#13;
ground west of the village and last&#13;
Saturday a "bee" was made and&#13;
they succeeded in getting one turn&#13;
graded. Another "bee" next Saturday&#13;
and all are cordially invited to&#13;
turn out and give the thing a boost.&#13;
I t will be a good thing for the town&#13;
and surrounding country and we&#13;
think our farmer friends ought to&#13;
donate at least one days work.&#13;
dures longest, and will bear pain to&#13;
which a strong man succumbs. Zvmotic&#13;
diseases are more fatal to males, and&#13;
more male children die than female.&#13;
Deverga asserts thuf the proportion&#13;
dying suddenly is about 100 women to&#13;
780 men; 1,080 men in the United&#13;
States committed suicide to"285 women.&#13;
Intemperance, apoplexy, gout, hydrocephalus,&#13;
a;!ectious of the heart or&#13;
liver, scrofula, paralysis, are far more&#13;
futal to males than females. Pulmona-&#13;
Ty do: sumption, on the other hand, in&#13;
more deadly to the latter.&#13;
Females in cities are more prone to&#13;
consumption than in the covntrv. All&#13;
old countries, not disturbed by einigv:*-&#13;
tion, have a majority of females in the&#13;
population. In royal families statistics&#13;
show more daughters than sons. Th»&#13;
Hebrew women are especially long-&#13;
Uved; the colored man exceptionally&#13;
short-lived. The married state is fa-&#13;
..^arable to prolongation of life among&#13;
women. Dr. Hough remarks that there&#13;
are from 2 to 0 per cent, move males&#13;
barn than females, yet there is more&#13;
than 0 per cent, excess of females in&#13;
tTie ITvfrjg piTrrrrra+fofc—3?,«ini which&#13;
statistics we conclude that all wen&#13;
who can possibly obtain one of these&#13;
rapidly de arting men ought to marry,&#13;
arid that, as men are likely to become&#13;
so very scarce, they cannot be sufficiently&#13;
prized by the other sex.— Modern&#13;
Age.&#13;
-HOWELLCOMMENTS.&#13;
From the Republican.&#13;
Register Beach reports business in&#13;
Ms line distressingly dull which induces&#13;
a desire within him to go a visiting&#13;
There is probably no town in thel&amp;t the very outset of ray labor, and the&#13;
state of less than 10,000 inhabitant&#13;
that employs as many tailors as find&#13;
work" in Howell. From 40 to 60 constantly&#13;
plying their Deedles h e r e /&#13;
Monday James Basing, who lives&#13;
on the Marion town- line, appeared&#13;
before Justice Kiddle and/swore out ^.^,,. ^, ., -&gt;• ., , . . . .&#13;
, . . ,• ./ ^ T picture of the^-authors imagination.&#13;
a criminal warrant against Jauies ^nd how many of us are often obliged&#13;
amos, a neighbor whom he claims has «o Play +i . ^ ^ . , ^ u:„ mv&gt; «„^-^i\„.:„!,„^ „ i to reye a°vl pai&gt;t st hwiidthd ean sebnesaeu toife sd!i saAbilsi tya threatened his life « £ flourished a _ £ n i f t y 8 U p p l y a n ftrtist wifch a ^&#13;
revolver in his face. /The case is set^-lindreamed of for his landscape, so a&#13;
Salvia! and Dramatic Art.&#13;
In a late number of the Century&#13;
Signor Salvini give* his "Impressions&#13;
of Shakspeare's 'Lear,'" and in the&#13;
course of his analysis of the character-&#13;
Bays of the purpose of acting: "Every&#13;
audience has its intelligent proportion&#13;
to nole and appreciate the artist who,&#13;
with the scheme of his part determined,&#13;
regardless"of vulgar effect, isi content&#13;
to follow where truth leads; but the&#13;
actor in his skill must also strive to interest&#13;
the mass of his public and to&#13;
maintain ascendancy over all, still&#13;
walking in truth's level field. And how&#13;
shall this be done? I think it possible&#13;
to explain;'it is a question of judgment,&#13;
and that can not be proscribed.&#13;
The course to be. pursued may be&#13;
pointed out, but he who would win the&#13;
goal without stumbling must commend&#13;
himself to his own inspiration.&#13;
"And for this inspiration I forced&#13;
myself to wait five years, perhaps to no&#13;
purpose; for it is by. no means certain&#13;
that I have been able to make an audience&#13;
comprehend my own c&lt; nception.&#13;
I will not deny that the time is too&#13;
long, that, if the study of every difficult&#13;
shar/aeter were to consume so vast an&#13;
interval, the^ artist's round of parts&#13;
would prove circumscribed indeed,&#13;
But I was confronted with the difficulty&#13;
BEDROOy SUITS, PARLOR SUITS&#13;
LOUNGES, BUREAUS, BOOKCASES, TABLES&#13;
STANDS, CHAIRS, ETC. ETC. COME&#13;
IAND SEE ME.=&#13;
A. SPECIALTY.&#13;
COFFINS, CASKETS, ROBES and FUN ERA! SUPPLIES of all kinds&#13;
constantly on hand. Respectfl/i/y,&#13;
L H. BEEBE.&#13;
publication, fumiahei m most valuable enoyolopMUaor&#13;
Information -which no person should bo witboaL TM&#13;
popularity of the Scoumno AMERICAN is tuoh t u t&#13;
its circulation nearly equals that of all other paper* ox&#13;
its class combined. Price, faaO s year. Discount t w Clubs. Sold by all newsdealers. MtlNN A CO., Pub- v&#13;
iahers.No. 3611 Broadway. N. Y. - L&#13;
S M S i s . | a a A Mann A Co. hire also ATENTSe w, ^¾¾¾ | SSSSBBBISSSSBBJBBBBBSBBl fore t h e PSttDVOfflCO, and have prepared more than One h u n -&#13;
dred ThOU«and'»W&gt;licationslor p*t«&#13;
enU In the "united States and forelfu&#13;
_ countries. Caveats, Trade-Marks, Copyf&#13;
rijrhts. Assignments, *n&amp; all other papors&#13;
for securing to inventors their rights In the&#13;
United Btfttes, Canada, England, France-&#13;
Germany and other foreign oountries, prepared&#13;
• t short notice and on reasonable terms.^&#13;
Information as to ol '&#13;
•frea without charge&#13;
tioi&#13;
Information as to obtajning patents oheerlnlly&#13;
_ _ . _ _ agt&#13;
I A Go. are noticed in the Scientific American free,&#13;
ion sent free.&#13;
Ing pate&#13;
„ _ _ _ Hand-books of Infonn*-&#13;
Patents obtained through Muna&#13;
rhe advantage of snch notice is well understood by all&#13;
Mrsons who wish to dispose of their patent*.&#13;
Address MUNN AJCOL. Offloe Bcmarnyio AVWITfiii!,&#13;
«1 Broadway, New York, — ^ - ^&#13;
»d ^ s &amp; f i&#13;
i-.&#13;
D O O R S A N D B L I N D S ,&#13;
GLASS, NAILS, PAINT,&#13;
more I labored the mightier it became,&#13;
till it seemed HO nearly insurmountable&#13;
ihat I could but resign myself to await&#13;
the moment when all my energies an&lt;T&#13;
all my senses should combine in definite&#13;
snape. Every constfentiousaetor will&#13;
concur in my.opinion that^aJl momenta&#13;
ire not apt for the cjroice of colors&#13;
wherewith to reproduce the finished&#13;
BUILDING PAPER&#13;
s 3&#13;
* 'I&#13;
AND A U A&#13;
mLflMIHE Best Newspaper&#13;
,' OK ITS CLAB8 IN MICHIGAN,&#13;
U1HI&#13;
for July jSth^&#13;
Major AndersW, the jrieat rail-&#13;
^road subscription solkfTtor, was in&#13;
town Tuesday to'j&amp;6et J . M. Ashley,&#13;
with whom h ^ h a d an appointment,&#13;
Mr. Asliley did not materalize but&#13;
woman's glance may teach us some new&#13;
way to express affection; avisittotho&#13;
mad-house, some strange phase of mental&#13;
alienation; a shipwreck bring* ua&#13;
its peculiar forms of anguish, an earthp&#13;
a k e its varied aspects of horror and&#13;
"lespair; and all must be noted, pon&#13;
Jered, anatomized, appropriated with a&#13;
* i ~ I J \r » J x k*eeeenn ddiissccrriimiinnaattiioonn.. TToo ddoo tthhiiss,, ttiimee&#13;
.telegraphed. Mr. Anderson to meet I ia needed; with time^experiencS; and&#13;
him in- Detroit next morn ing, which I * ^ experience, genina"1»*&#13;
KIN0S OF BUILDING MATERIAL&#13;
AT F. L. BROWN'S.&#13;
Published every Thursday&#13;
at $2 per year; or,&#13;
CT,AHH; &lt;&gt;ne trtffc nhUhtH* VOCXGBM mm&#13;
tvmU am tht&gt; OLDER m«m*er*f thmfnmUlif&#13;
«re delight**. Xa+H number mntminm&#13;
Atfy-mix roht&gt;nn» seoIlr/IJJed *rtth torn mmmt&#13;
original ana earmfnlty *M»I*O*«4 rmmMnm,&#13;
in *DH4«H ar* artM** f« tnfr—t, mmu—,&#13;
instruct una benefit every render.&#13;
Sunday-School Department,&#13;
UNEXCELLED.&#13;
OondooUd by Jtev. J. M STfFLBR, D. JDt, of&#13;
Croier Theologioai Seminary, Peon*,,&#13;
DeeUtr &lt; W P f . « a ' 8 JWHa Wmtem&#13;
Oetitet n r f r r n n f f atmto Tett\e mrnm&#13;
Mjeeeen Kxrpemitionm nrepre ujered eemrmmbtyferthe&#13;
CMMiaTWAXMMmSAWd* •WsllM&#13;
mem* itine eet4hheerr npmempeerr..&#13;
fgr&amp;uap&amp;e copies for examination or t&#13;
n n u r u n D rmm qpoa appUoatton. Bend for thtiaT&#13;
_ MtoM,_ OHBWT1AW EBRAZJV&#13;
\&#13;
-V&#13;
W "N&#13;
' • ' \&#13;
N&#13;
, N - - - •!*&amp;•*£'; \ X - - • - - i f ' • » . * • 3fe' *fw»r&#13;
^ ^ ^ ^ ^&#13;
q*mm**m&#13;
mm&#13;
1--&#13;
V" •&#13;
./ y^ T rr A-..-. n***™T" §*** ^ ^ - -&#13;
IP&#13;
~ I 'III . .&#13;
v.*&#13;
-¾¾&#13;
THE WOOL MARKET.&#13;
The following from the Fowlerville&#13;
Review is applicable here: "Now that&#13;
the wool is Dearly ready for the market&#13;
th^fcrmer begins to look about to&#13;
tee w h e t m e can obtain the best market&#13;
price, i&amp;i right here we wish to&#13;
JTQOftrkthifrfbfr* can bexl»ui very little&#13;
if any difference in the prices paid&#13;
a t the several "#Uage8 lu ^ e county,&#13;
and in proof of t a L move assertion let&#13;
us look at the fao&amp;^&amp;be wool is nearly&#13;
all purchased Bvv^astern buyers&#13;
through their local agents at the local&#13;
market. A standard of prices is fixed&#13;
Jipon by those buyers no doubt, and&#13;
each local buyer is instructed accordingly.&#13;
Now as all these Eastern parties&#13;
are in competition with^each other&#13;
after this wool is manufactured into&#13;
the different branches of the trade it&#13;
u not reasonable to suppose that one&#13;
fcan pay any higher price for the raw&#13;
material than bis neighbor, because if&#13;
.fiWt|.^* does his goods will cost him more&#13;
are manufactur ed and w hen&#13;
m} comes to put tbem upon the market&#13;
he finds that he cannot sell, because&#13;
his price is Higher than the same&#13;
goods offered by his neighbor manufacturer&#13;
aud he must hold his goods&#13;
or sell them at a sacrifice, consequently&#13;
you will see that all Eastern buyers&#13;
tnust give their local buyers very nearly&#13;
if not exactly the same prices.&#13;
Again, nearly all of these men have&#13;
several local agents buying for the&#13;
same nVms and does it look at all&#13;
reasonableTtnat the same firm would&#13;
allow their local agent to pay more&#13;
for the same wool at..Howell than they&#13;
' would allow their other agent to pay&#13;
at Fowlerville? certainly not. One&#13;
buyer will say: " I am buying lor myself&#13;
and fix my o«vn price and will pay&#13;
you more than those other fellows&#13;
-can." Now let us look at the absurdity&#13;
of such a statement. A man who&#13;
is buying for himself puts, in his own&#13;
money, pays his own insurance, hires&#13;
his help, assumes all the mistakes of&#13;
his helpers and his own judgement&#13;
and in getting beat by some wonderful&#13;
smart farmer, who thinks it a good&#13;
joke to do up stones, tags, etc., in his&#13;
fleeces, and what does this man do&#13;
when he gets all through; sells his&#13;
wool to the very same Eastern partie's,&#13;
at the very same price, whose local&#13;
Agent bought your wool. It all finds&#13;
its way to the same Eastern market.&#13;
whether bought by their local agents&#13;
i^thejnan who loudly buys with bis&#13;
own money," and does it tor a moment&#13;
look ^reasonable that they will pay&#13;
him more than thev would allow their&#13;
local agents to pay for the same wool?&#13;
You come to Fowlerville with your&#13;
wool and get an offer, it does not satisfy&#13;
you and you drive to Howell,&#13;
thinking it a larger village, and there&#13;
you find the local agent who is&#13;
ing for the same firm. You-get into a&#13;
jam of teams and aim^er makes you&#13;
an offer. H e h a t f n o time to baggie&#13;
with yojt-^as there are many more&#13;
ng for him and you either have&#13;
to unload or get out ot the way for&#13;
the next man. You stand around until&#13;
nearly dark and then sell to some&#13;
buyer—who thinks he will make himself&#13;
soiid with his firm—for less monev&#13;
than you have been ottered at Fowler-&#13;
*(Qs, because you will "be darned if&#13;
will draw it back there and let&#13;
crow over it," and you go home&#13;
mad all over. We could give the&#13;
names, of many men who have had the&#13;
above experience and have themselves&#13;
personally told us their story. Now&#13;
just try it one year and market your&#13;
wool here and see if you are not better&#13;
satisfied.11&#13;
Newell, H. F., Flushing, creaming&#13;
can. i *' .&#13;
Notter, T. W., Ivluskegon, machine&#13;
for binding laths.&#13;
Roberts, G. A., Three Rivers, .concave&#13;
for threxhing machine. .&#13;
Schermerhorn,( S. B., Paris, dife&#13;
boat.&#13;
Schray, Frederick, Buchanan,, told*&#13;
bed.&#13;
Slocum, W. W., Jr.. Reed City, locomotive&#13;
ash pan:&#13;
t h e Greatest Mediclar of the Age.&#13;
Kellogg'n Columbian Oil is a powerful&#13;
remedy, which can be taken internally&#13;
as well 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 tmymind. In short, the&#13;
wonderful effects of this wonderful&#13;
remedy cannot be explained in writ^&#13;
ten language. A single dose inhaled&#13;
and taken according to directions will&#13;
convince anyone that it is ail that is&#13;
claimed for it. VVarranted 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, Cramning 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 WJNCHELL'S DRUG STORE.&#13;
The kidneys cannot perform their&#13;
proper office when diseased and at the&#13;
same time expel the impurities that&#13;
should pass off through their proper&#13;
action. A few doses ot Kellogg's Col-&#13;
~ nvince the—most&#13;
skeptical that it acts directly on the&#13;
kidneys; - "&#13;
Kellogg's Columbian Oil is composed&#13;
of vegetable products in a highly&#13;
concentrated form, and act* directlv&#13;
on the kidneys. It cures rheumatism&#13;
ard all other aches and pains.&#13;
An Answer Wanted.&#13;
Can any one bring us a case of kidney&#13;
or liver complaint that Electric&#13;
Bitters will not speedily cure? We&#13;
sav they can not. as thousands of cases&#13;
dlreadly permanently cured and who&#13;
are daily recommending Electric Bitters,&#13;
will prove., Bright's disease,&#13;
diabetes, weak back, or anv urinary&#13;
complaint quickely cured, ^he}' purify&#13;
the blood, regulate the bowels and&#13;
act directly on the diseased parts.&#13;
Every bottle guaranteed. For sale&#13;
at 50 cents a bottle at Winchell's&#13;
Drug Store.&#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 lor such articles as&#13;
have well-knopn merit, and are popular&#13;
with the people, thereby sustaining&#13;
the reputation of being always&#13;
enterprising, and over rolinbla.—Hav-&#13;
NEW GOODS, NEW GOOSD,&#13;
GOOD S,&#13;
mm 3gi» M I m®m mm&#13;
NEW LAWNS, CHAMBRAYS, GINGHAMS, PRINTS,&#13;
WORSTED DRESS GOODS, LACES, GLOVES, E m r&#13;
' - ' • ' • • • i i i - i ' ' • • i ' • • — • • — . - — - • • • • • • - n • • • • - * • - r - i - i _ _ . . .&#13;
A fine line of PARASOLS including&#13;
-«^® THE POPULAR COOCHING PARASOLS. (SY®-&#13;
We are constantly in receipt of New Goods in every Department.&#13;
Everything marked in plain figures. The lowest possible&#13;
price guaranteed onrevery article.&#13;
£»~BUTTER and EGGS Wanted at the highest Market Price in exchange&#13;
for GOODS. No trouble to show goods whether you want&#13;
to buy or not. Come and see us.&#13;
LAKIN &amp; SYKES.&#13;
FARMERS, REi&#13;
The undersigned having a large stock of .all kii&#13;
Shingles at their lumber vard in Pinokney, have&#13;
stock and for the 3 S T E X T S I 3 C T " y '&#13;
ROCK BOTTOM PRICE&#13;
Parties about to build wifi find it to their interest to get our prices. \vve man&#13;
u fact are our own Jtrfhber and shingles and will sell according to tnetimes.&#13;
We keep on hand a full stock of Flooring, Siding and Barn Boards, also all&#13;
lengths of Bill Stuff and Timbers, and on all bills will give special prices.&#13;
You will find our Ajrent, A.'L. HOYT, always on hand. Come and see&#13;
we will satisfy you that we mean business.&#13;
smxfiTT, cowra &amp;€0.» ?£&amp;€£££ ST.&#13;
* /&#13;
&amp;}&#13;
'K&#13;
MICHIGAN PATENTS.&#13;
The following patents were granted&#13;
Vcitizens of Michigan bearing date&#13;
ie X3f 1886. Reported expressly for&#13;
paper by Louis Bagger &amp;*(Jo.,&#13;
[echamcal Experts and Solicitors of&#13;
P a t e n t s .&#13;
Campbell, John, Muskegon, logloader.&#13;
Ellis. L. B., Vernon, steam engine.&#13;
French, A. E., East Tawas, extension&#13;
table.&#13;
Hodges, C. B., and J3. "McCoy, Detroit,&#13;
steam douae"for locomotives.&#13;
Judd, iu. B., Grand Ragids, show&#13;
stand and rack for displaying carpet&#13;
sweepers. ' &lt;*&#13;
Kock, Peter, Parkville, bee cabinet.&#13;
Lehndroff, K. F., Detroit, spring seat&#13;
for railway cars.&#13;
McCoy, Elijah, Detroit, Lubricator.&#13;
Murdick, I. H., Harttord, tjrain&#13;
weighing »P^ tallying machine.&#13;
ing secured the air^ncy for the celebrated.&#13;
Dr. King's New Discovery for&#13;
Consumption, will sell it on a pojitrv^&#13;
guarantee. It will surelv^etfre any&#13;
and every affection of-^throat, lungs&#13;
and chest, and to&gt;ht&gt;w our confidence,&#13;
we invite yj&gt;u^to call and goi a tria'&#13;
bottl^ '&#13;
To the Afflicted*&#13;
Since the introduction of Kellogg's&#13;
Columbian Oil it has made more permanent&#13;
cures and given better uatisfaetion&#13;
on Kidney Complaints and&#13;
Rheumatism than any known remedy.&#13;
Its continued series ot wonderful cures&#13;
in all climates has m&lt;*de it known^-ars&#13;
a safe and reliable agent to^-eimploy&#13;
against all aches and painsf which" are&#13;
the forerunners of^nfoVe serious d is*&#13;
orders. It acts speedily and surely,&#13;
always relieving suffering and often&#13;
saving life. The protection it affords&#13;
by its timely use on rheumatism, kidney&#13;
affection, and all aches and pains,&#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 used it never will.&#13;
It is absolutely certain in its remedial&#13;
effects, and will always cure when&#13;
cures are possible.&#13;
Call at WINCHELL'S DRUG STORK and&#13;
get a memorandum book giving morefull&#13;
details of the curative properties&#13;
of this wonderful medicine. irTO MACKINAC.&#13;
SUMMER TOUR&#13;
l o w&#13;
Vow VMya 9*&#13;
DETROIT AND MACKINAO&#13;
DETROIT AND CLEVELAND&#13;
"Plctumqur Mackinac," Ulintrttod.&#13;
Detroit A OkwUi* MaawNtvuO*.&#13;
0. D. WMtTOOMB, •«».&#13;
0m^m^^^^m^^ss^ms^im^^mssm^mm^&#13;
FOURTH OF JULY&#13;
GOODS!&#13;
All kinds epairing prompt!}' attended&#13;
to.&#13;
WATCH ASD CLOCK&#13;
—repairing a sjWcialtv.—&#13;
TO THE P U B L I C • ^ ^&#13;
Rochester, N.Y., Uvr. 91,1885. ^ - . \ ^ ' j J \ V* . ^ *&#13;
I »m acquainted with the p u b l i s h e r / / r ^ * &gt; C C c &lt; ^ 7 \ , f a~t-&amp;**C0&#13;
of the AHEIUCAN RURAL HOME, and I " V ^ J^ .&#13;
believe they will fulfil every guarantee (Mmycr »f Rockttter /or '^^Ct^^A.grfT'&#13;
they make to the public - ttnytart fiut.) *&#13;
RURAL HOME CO., Limited, ROCHESTER. W.Y.&#13;
• « « W B e i a « i e e « « « « ™ ^ i « e i i i a ™ e e » M [ B « M M B p e M M ^ p i i a M a i a ^ i ^ « i&#13;
EUGENE CAIEPBELL,&#13;
MMMM IW O O LJ&#13;
CASH FOR W O O L !&#13;
The undersigned respectfulbr announcei;o their fri.-uds and patrols that&#13;
they have completed arrangements for all the&#13;
Ross Lest, Fina Cat,*&#13;
: Navy Clippings&#13;
I andSsuffs 4$$^%^&#13;
Having rented-D. Richards1 •&#13;
BLACKSMITH SHOP !&#13;
^ajc^and every one can spare. Please remember^for&#13;
NEXT THIRTY DAYS!&#13;
we shall need all the money we oan get.&#13;
y thing in our store will be sold way&#13;
own to the lowest notch.&#13;
Hespectfully Yours,&#13;
tlJEPIiE &amp; CADWELL.&#13;
15, 1&#13;
we are now prepared to do ul! •&#13;
kmtlsof&#13;
B i P A I R I N G -&#13;
Including Horse-Shoeing.&#13;
Machine and Steel Work done to.&#13;
order. *&#13;
PARKER &amp; SPEARS.&#13;
Oar readers for 12 ceht* in v°stage stampa to&#13;
pay for mailins and wrapping, ami name* of two&#13;
book a/ente, will receive FRE^ RSiEtu F,NIS'H P*»-&#13;
LO« EWUIAVINO °f »11 0(JR PRESlOe**Ta, including&#13;
CLEVELAND, s&gt;zo ••i.'x^iuches, wortu ^ 0 0 .&#13;
ADDRESS ElDtR PUB, CC, CHICAGO, I I I&#13;
•THE.&#13;
FARMERS' STORE,&#13;
AT&#13;
ANDERSON STATION !&#13;
• Is-now filled to overtiowinff with- a&#13;
fresh, new and complete stor^k of Dry&#13;
Goods, Groceries, Bbots &amp; Shoes and&#13;
Hardware, to winch we invite public&#13;
inspection.&#13;
The ladies especially will find it to&#13;
their interest to seo our novelties in&#13;
Dress Goods before buying elsewher*.^&#13;
Every variety of country produce*&#13;
taken in exchange"foriDfdodsor money,.&#13;
U M E S T. EAXAlt A C a . ^&#13;
- H r&#13;
; !"&gt;-&#13;
• \ ^. __&#13;
'_LL- .J—~Y— • " • * • • • -»-ir~^-.:r.: : r - j r ^ t r r t&#13;
I&#13;
1 I&#13;
H&#13;
*&#13;
" p _ ' '&#13;
J . L. N K W K I K K . Publisher.&#13;
Bnterw »t «ho Po«&gt;to3ice iu &lt;a onus m»* * * .&#13;
VICTOR MABIE HUGO.&#13;
Victor Marie Hugo, who died May 22.&#13;
1885,one of the greatest writers of the&#13;
present century was born in the little&#13;
village of Besancon on the Rhine Canal,&#13;
Feb., *6th 1802. His father was an of*&#13;
ficer of the French army whose duties&#13;
led him a somewhat nomadic life, and&#13;
t h e young Victor traveled extensively&#13;
beforo he had reached: his teens. I n&#13;
1809 he w*s taken to Paris and&#13;
under the supervision of his&#13;
inother began his education.&#13;
In 1817 he published his first poem and&#13;
A. SINGULAR MTJRDEE CASE.&#13;
I Twice Convicted and now Arts a New Trial,&#13;
Hicksou Marlon has been convicted of the&#13;
murder of John Cameron twice and twlcv&#13;
sentenced to death, but each time reprieved,&#13;
and is now awaiting the decision of the supreme&#13;
court ot Nebraska, for a new trial, this being&#13;
the third application.&#13;
On the 24th of April, 1872, Marion and&#13;
Cameron, both of whom were under 20 and boy&#13;
friends siarted by wairou from Grwshopper&#13;
Falls. Ks.. lor Soutluru Nebraska. About the&#13;
middle of Mayihcy'i^clied the house of Mrs.&#13;
Rachel Warrfn, In toWrtka. Resting ther« a&#13;
few days thcvVeut VnV/Kour days later Marion&#13;
returned WMfsV-Wifrreii's aloue, having all&#13;
of Cameron'^ effects/with him. lie reported&#13;
that Cameron•tHMt-tfone to Clay Co., Ks.. and&#13;
then S t a r t s off himself towards the southeast.&#13;
In the spring of l«T3 ttle~remains j&#13;
o f Cameron were" found on the banks ; of'lndian Creek, fifteen miles from Beatrice, j&#13;
Three bullet holes in his skull told the story of&#13;
his death, and the clothing enabled the witnesses,&#13;
among whom was Marion's wife, to&#13;
identify the bodv beyoud doubt. Search was&#13;
made for Marion, but he could not be found.&#13;
Late in December. 1883, nearly eleven years&#13;
after* the murder, Marion was in jail at Sedan, ]&#13;
Ks., for larceny. Sheriff Herron went there t&#13;
and arrested him, learning that for ten years&#13;
he had been living in Indian Territory. In&#13;
18S8 Marion was convicted, the chain of evidence&#13;
being very strong, ile was sentenced&#13;
to IK- hanged September 10, 1^83. The supreme&#13;
court grained a new trial, because the jury&#13;
under the old law had fixed the penalty. In&#13;
April, lS8"i, Marion was agaiu convicted and&#13;
sentenced to be hanged June 2ti. Ever since&#13;
his arrest three years ago Marion has strougly&#13;
maintained his innocence, but lias refused to&#13;
give any particulars as to his relations with&#13;
Cameron or his career since the murder.&#13;
PASSINO EVENTS.&#13;
CONDENSED NEWS.&#13;
' in Oklahoma now.&#13;
worst since&#13;
in 1822 his first volume of poems appeared&#13;
under the title %t "Odes and&#13;
Ballads1 ' and created such a sensation&#13;
t h a t ho was granted an annuity by the&#13;
king of France. The novels and essays&#13;
from his pen were received with the&#13;
greatest enthusiasm. In 1841 he was&#13;
elected to the academy and in 1845&#13;
Hugo was made a peer by Louis Phiilippc.&#13;
He was very active in the revolution&#13;
of 1848^ and in 1845 he was one&#13;
There are no "boomer&#13;
The winter wheat crop is tho&#13;
ISBS.&#13;
The Indian exhibit at the New Orleans c r - I&#13;
position is to be given to France. J&#13;
There is due the government from the Union \&#13;
Pacific railroad company over $100,00 J j&#13;
The iron's'"ike in the Pinsbu-g district is at I&#13;
an end, the men having signed the scale.&#13;
A half-million dollars worth of property was&#13;
destroyed by tire in Knoxvillc, TVnn., recently.&#13;
President White of Cornell university has&#13;
resigued, and ihe resignation has been accepted.&#13;
It is now known that 140 men persons were&#13;
killed by the colliery explosion near Manchester,&#13;
Eug.&#13;
i A Toledo painter named Wakclee, in a fit of&#13;
j jealousy, cut his wife's throat and then shot&#13;
, himself. &gt; w - — J&#13;
j Tearman's Dork-packing establishment An&#13;
' Hamilton, Out., was burned recently. £oss&#13;
$150,000.&#13;
The warm weather had a very debtfitatine&#13;
effect upon Gen. Grant. He grows weaker almost&#13;
daily.&#13;
The" queeu of the turf, "Maud S., {&#13;
lives chiefly on w a r m mash, but oc- j&#13;
casionally eats candy and gingerbread.&#13;
The mobilizing of the Mexican army j&#13;
of twenty thousand men in Chiapas, I&#13;
on the Gautemala frontier, will, it is&#13;
said, cost $1,000,000.&#13;
" W h a t is the lirst thing to be done&#13;
in case of tire?." asked a teacher.&#13;
"Sue the insurance company,1 ' promtly&#13;
answered a boy at the foot of the&#13;
class,' whoso father had had his house&#13;
burned out twice.&#13;
A veteran of the wavos who Us devoting&#13;
his old ago to the amelioration&#13;
of the' condition of seamen, says that&#13;
"poor Jack1 1 now receives worse treatment&#13;
on the water, if not on land,&#13;
than ho did forty years ago.&#13;
At the advanced ago of 107 years&#13;
Domingo Acevedo died in Ingonio; in&#13;
the canton of Oriz&amp;va, state of Vera&#13;
Cruz, Mexico. Ho was for several years&#13;
citv treasurer of Ingonio, and was besides&#13;
an old soldier of Mexican independence.&#13;
An old and respected citi/.en of&#13;
Southold, L. I., fell from a load of&#13;
cornstalks two m o n t h s ago and broke&#13;
his hip and leg. Last Saturday, while&#13;
crossing the room, he fell, by the slipping&#13;
of one of his crutches, and broke&#13;
both his arms,&#13;
Nevada's population has dwindled&#13;
to fifty thousand, anil it is said that&#13;
the average tax p e r head on^Very man&#13;
woman, child, Indian, Chinaman, pauper,&#13;
jail-bird, and t r a m p / i n Nevada,&#13;
for county and state purposes; cau not&#13;
bo less than $30.&#13;
An enterprising CKitmruan h a s im&#13;
ported models of ayChine^e bcllo's foot&#13;
two and one-eigiifen inches long by ouo&#13;
and a quarter itfcbes wide. "Mo sells&#13;
him to Melican bollee for models to&#13;
makee h i m / b e g e e feet alloe -ssamoo&#13;
smallco fashions,1 ' says Wah Sing.&#13;
Five hundred ami thirty&#13;
A3INQTJ1&amp;RB0OK.&#13;
• —&#13;
Scintillating with Sarcasm and Brilliant&#13;
with Truth.&#13;
tfciv York CowsporritCnci Anwtcan&#13;
Rural Home.&#13;
Chap. I. " H a s Malaria;" goes to&#13;
Florida.&#13;
Chap. II. ''Overworked;" goes to&#13;
Europe.&#13;
—Chap,...III. .L'lLLsJibiiUiufttlsn;" goes&#13;
to Ems.&#13;
Chap. IV. Has-a row with his Doctor!&#13;
Tho above chapters, Mr. Editor, I&#13;
find in a book recently published by an&#13;
anonymous author. I have react"a&#13;
deal of sarcasm in ray day, but I never&#13;
road anything equal to tho sarcasm&#13;
"herein contained. I suspect the experience&#13;
portrayed is a personal eaeyinr&#13;
short, thu attthor intimates as much on&#13;
pago 31. Let me give you a synopsis:&#13;
"Malaria" as it states, is tho cloak&#13;
with which superficial physicians cover&#13;
up a multitude of ill feelings which they&#13;
do not understand, and do not much&#13;
care to investigate. It is also a cover&#13;
for such diseases as they cannot cure.&#13;
When they advise their patient to travel&#13;
or that he is overworked and needs rest&#13;
and is probably zwtiering from malaria,&#13;
it is a confession of ignorance or of&#13;
inability. The patient goes abroad.&#13;
Tho change is a tonic and for a time he&#13;
feels better. Comes home. Fickle appetite,&#13;
~ frequent headaches, severe&#13;
colds, cramt s, sleeplessness, irritability,&#13;
tired feelings, and general unfitness for&#13;
business are succeeded in due time by&#13;
alarming attacks of rheumatism which&#13;
flit about his body regardless of all&#13;
human fellings. -&#13;
It is muscular, — in his back. Articular,-.&#13;
in his joints. Inflammatory, my!&#13;
how he fears it will rly to his heart!&#13;
Now off he goes to the springs. The&#13;
doctor sends him there, of course, to&#13;
get well: at the same time he does not&#13;
tors will go forth through&#13;
TUTT'S&#13;
PILLS&#13;
2 5 Y E A R S I N U S E -&#13;
m.. &lt;w.«t««t Medical Trlnmph Of to A g *&#13;
S Y M P T O M S O f A TORPID LIVER.r&#13;
ThV h i d , with n dull MUMUlamlBCh*&#13;
Lack » « « . Pa.in ******* • &amp; • # £&#13;
Mad*. F u l l n e . . after e«tlnf, w l ' * » • * £&#13;
u o l 1 nail on t • « e « » « M ^ J r i&#13;
f l ' J w l S Iarfreietai ibnicli*ty/ a oafv tlcnm« »nterg. le^ct•e^d '• •' «" •^ •I«V* &gt;.&#13;
w £ r l . | M , Dl**l»««&gt;. * » ; " • £ • « S i ! . * Haarc, Dot* b*fore th* *r**» H t a * * 5 " f&#13;
aVar tka rla-he eye. BoitloaaneMi w i t h&#13;
S I S £ « « l Hiffiy colored C r i . e , * » •&#13;
* CONSTIPATION..• •ru-nya V1LX9 ar* especially a' jwa&#13;
to such cases, one doso effects imoh a&lt;&#13;
•han maof feell it &lt;r tm to naton lah.tho sufrereiv&#13;
* T h « l a e r e a a e t h e Appetlte.undeauaethj&#13;
^ r t . b ^ a n W ^ ^ o » t e A e t t o u «&#13;
the I&gt;ftaT*atlTe OraaM.Jtpir««*r a2S°13 »&#13;
TUTTS HAIRhDVf.&#13;
• G R A T Hxra or WmsKBua. changed to a&#13;
GUOMY BLACK by a aingio *PP»o»"0 ?J?J&#13;
S i s DTK. It imparts a natural color, acw&#13;
SitanSneouslyr Sold byJDruggUtt. or&#13;
sent by exprew on receipt of W . • •&#13;
O f n c o . 4 4 . M u r r a y St., N e w YorK»&#13;
fmproved Western Wasftei&#13;
.V&#13;
FJEUCE* No. 1 for family of 0&#13;
Jfo. SforlarsefamUy&#13;
No. S for Hotel a«d Laaadry,&#13;
Over 20,000 in use.&#13;
«8&#13;
9&#13;
1 *&#13;
- , i • u • i„ «**^r&gt;,^4-«^ tr, ! Ex-comipissloner of agriculturc/Lnoring has&#13;
of tlMJ deputies who vainly attempted to \ b e e n requi.stL.d t 0 t u m overab^rit $23,000 due&#13;
assert the rights of the assembly and to the government&#13;
preserve the constitution. For the position&#13;
he took in this affair he was exiled&#13;
and tied to the Island of Jersey in&#13;
the British Channel. After the fall of&#13;
the Empire he returned to Paris. His&#13;
works have been translajtfd into all'of&#13;
the civilized languages a n d W e know to&#13;
all classes. Almost'to the last he retained&#13;
his brilliant mental faculties,&#13;
in the naval&#13;
e reception ten-&#13;
| Fiyo' hundred vessels tool&#13;
parade on the occasion ojKtl&#13;
uefed Bartholdi's statue&#13;
/ The law prohibiting Xlw manufacture and&#13;
sale of oleomargarine/in New York has been&#13;
declared unconstitiiKonal.&#13;
Edward TayloryK palo.on keeper of Fall Hiy/&#13;
er, Mass.', has faXcn heir U) property in England&#13;
valued at,*? 1,1100.000.&#13;
A frightfuK'XpUwiou occurred at the/Bessemer&#13;
steel Wyorks rueblo. (Jol., killing ptie man&#13;
and for many days before the summons j instantly/ml frightfully mangling another.&#13;
came he would sit bolstered up iu bed, • The yoinptroHer of thercTirrency;:lra^-cxtcndpencil&#13;
in hand, correcting the manu- ed th/corporate for period of liO&#13;
scripts of some unpublished poems.&#13;
Sorrow at his loss is universal.&#13;
TIMELY TOPICS.&#13;
Trrv. nnnnnl meeting of the s/ate&#13;
corporate existence ior a pei&#13;
of the Second national ba-rik of Hillsdale,&#13;
pioneer association held in Lansing a&#13;
few days since was in many /respects&#13;
one of the most interesting meetings ever&#13;
held in the state. The programme prepared&#13;
embraced historical and biographical&#13;
sketches, remlnscences of the&#13;
early settlement of various localities in&#13;
the state, recitations, music, etc. Une/&#13;
of the papers dc/erving special mentjon&#13;
was the* one /prepared by Hon. Peter&#13;
White of Marquette on the early^istory i covered&#13;
of the u p p e r p e n i n s u t a r The.history of I Mrs. William Ghitt&#13;
that wonderful region was carefully reviewedfrom&#13;
the time of the negotiations&#13;
for/the narrow strip of land on the&#13;
southern border of the state l&#13;
-the upper peninsula, until the present&#13;
time. All the papers showed careful&#13;
preparation, and will form valuable&#13;
acquisitions to the historical records of&#13;
the state. 'Twas a pleasant sight to&#13;
witness those hardy old pioneers "with&#13;
Four cars on the Chicago, Milwaukee &amp; St.&#13;
Paul road were blown from the' track near&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa. Six/persons were seriously&#13;
injured.&#13;
Paymaster General Smith chief of the bureau&#13;
of provisions and/clothing in the navy, Is to be |&#13;
court martialed7 for negligence and crooked&#13;
trausactious,./ " ~~ ~&#13;
Buudensiefc, the Nfew York builder, arrested&#13;
a few weeks ago for criminal carelessness in&#13;
the construction of buildings, has been found&#13;
guiltjvof manslaughter.&#13;
The issue of standard silver dollars^fuom the&#13;
mints during the week' which ended Juno 13,&#13;
was $511,500. The issue during the corresponding&#13;
period of last year was ^24,938..&#13;
George Woods of Au Sable, aged 17 years&#13;
while bathing in Van Etten's creek was seized j^fa Australia, and New Zealand&#13;
with cramps and drowned in the presence of a^'T, . ' , , , , . , ;t ;„„ „4... „,.„».&#13;
number of companions. The ix»dy wos-feT the Auckland authorities, at a cost&#13;
emmiora'&#13;
Massachusetts&#13;
oh. the 1st of May to collect information&#13;
for the new census. The&#13;
nature of the inquiries v.'ill l&gt;o the same&#13;
formerly, with the addition of a&#13;
-question r e g a r d i n g parent nativity.&#13;
--'--.Tha-qwestion of agaul-, Opoiiin^ the&#13;
New Orleans exposition or. Nov. 1 is&#13;
being agitated. Notwithstanding the&#13;
expensetfiat would be entailed during&#13;
the live m o n t h s / i n t e r v e n i n g between&#13;
'tlici "closing a n d reopening of the building,&#13;
in the \yiiy ot insurance, repairs,&#13;
and police/It 'is believed that the enterprise&#13;
niay be made to pay.&#13;
A beX-boy with nearly a dollar in&#13;
him i^ be ins: mined by phy.siciaus in&#13;
Portland, Me., where he was employed&#13;
ij/a hotel. Ho was running upstairs&#13;
/with 78 cents in his mouth, when, suddenly&#13;
stopping for something, ho&#13;
gulped the entire amount—two 25-&#13;
cent pieces, two climes, and the rest in&#13;
pennies. Strange to say, there has&#13;
been no change in his internal arrangements&#13;
since.&#13;
XXoTvYoi'k club uiau has on exhibition&#13;
a talking parrot which can give&#13;
any order that"is issued on shipboard.&#13;
Tho other evening, when the wind was&#13;
blowing a p r e t t y stiff breeze, J i m&#13;
(the parrot) began to musteraft hands&#13;
on deck to take in tho light cauvns&#13;
and reef topsails, using a great many&#13;
nautical phrases that are not given in&#13;
any encyclopedia, much to the aiuu.senient&#13;
of the guests present.&#13;
The resourcos of civilization havebeen&#13;
brought into service in ^0--^:1^0&#13;
of Maxwell, the St. Louis.-murderer&#13;
who is on board a stoAnTor bound to&#13;
New Zealand.^Ar-riable message lias&#13;
b e e n ^ n t ^ f e o l r f S t . Louis via England,&#13;
P o r t u ^ L t h e Medilei-ranean, Arabia,&#13;
really want him to die on his hands!&#13;
That would hurt his business!&#13;
Better for a few days. Returns.&#13;
After a while neuralgia transfixes him.&#13;
He bloats; cannot breathe; Has pneumonia;&#13;
cannot walk; cannot sleep on&#13;
his left side; is fretful; very nervous and&#13;
irritable; is pale and Habby; has frequent&#13;
chills and fevers* everything&#13;
about him seems to go wrong; becomes&#13;
suspicious: musters up strength and&#13;
demands to know what is killing him!&#13;
"Great heaven!" he cries, "why have&#13;
you kept me so l o n g i n ignorance?'1&#13;
"Because,''said the doctor, " I read&#13;
your fate Jive y e a ' s ajio. I thought best&#13;
to keep you comfortable and ignorant&#13;
of the facts."&#13;
He dismissed his d ctor. but too late!&#13;
His fortune has all gone to fees.&#13;
But him, \vhat becomes of him?&#13;
The other day a well-known Wall.&#13;
Street banker said to me "it is really&#13;
astonishing how general bright'S: disease&#13;
is becoming. Two .of my personal&#13;
friends are now dying of it. But it is&#13;
not incurable I am v certa: n, for my&#13;
nephew was recently -cured when his&#13;
physicians said recovery was impossible.&#13;
The case s ems to me to be a&#13;
wonderful one." This gentleman formerly&#13;
represented hi-i ejovernmen'- in a&#13;
foreign country. He knowsrjvppfeciates&#13;
and declares the v;vluprof that&#13;
preparation,tecauseJnVnephew, who is&#13;
a son of DanisJi^VTce-C ^nsul Scftmidt,&#13;
was pronounce i incurable when the&#13;
remedyTwarner's safe cure, was begun&#13;
-^Yes," said his father, "1 was very&#13;
skeptical but since tak ng that remedy&#13;
the boy is well."&#13;
I regr-'t to note that ex-President&#13;
Arthur is said to be a victim to this terrible&#13;
disease. He ought to live, but the&#13;
probabilities are that since authorized&#13;
Thousands of ladtes ar? nsvns? it, afld th*y speaV&#13;
of it in the hlpjhest terms, saying tbat they would,&#13;
nther dispenses with any other houiehold article,&#13;
than this excellent Washer. &gt;'o well-regulated,&#13;
family will bo without it, as it saves the clothes,&#13;
saves labor, saves time, saves fuel, savea soap,ana&#13;
makes wft*hd«y no longer a dread, but rather a.&#13;
pleaaant recreation, as much aa such is possible,&#13;
H0RT0X BPF'G C0*f&#13;
Agents Wanted. Ft. Wayne, Lad*&#13;
about $3 50 per word, or several&#13;
dred dollars-altogeiher, J U K L J :&#13;
ot&#13;
hun-&#13;
LL_Cfi:&#13;
aged 82 years, and onejjf-tne oldest inhabitants \ t a i n s a n v of | t s o r i g i n a l m e a n i n g after&#13;
of Gem see county^Utd rewirtiy from the cf- j t h j 8 t r j p " o f sixteen t h o u s a n d m i l e s&#13;
fects of a bjokefi leg, broken early last spring,&#13;
and of j&gt;ara1ysi8.&#13;
^Jav^Cook whose failure was precipitated by&#13;
the panic ot 1873, is a familiar figure along the&#13;
t0 remedies cannot cure him, his&#13;
physicians will not advise him to save&#13;
his life, as so many thousands have&#13;
done, by the use of Warner's sa-'e cure&#13;
_. Drexelr&#13;
faces turned toward the sunset," as&#13;
they met together to recall the events&#13;
of their early experiences, and reviewed&#13;
with pride the grand achievements of&#13;
the years that are gone. Al^honor to the&#13;
hardy pioneers who have worked so&#13;
long and well and given to the generation&#13;
of to-day so godly a heritage. Bo&#13;
it ours to ever revere their memory,&#13;
and hold in sacred trust the lessons&#13;
caught by their early hardships and privations.&#13;
T H E law, cheapening postage by,&#13;
increasing t h e weight of letters&#13;
to one ounce for the single rate, to&#13;
go into effect July JL is already giving&#13;
token of its jniln'encc ia\the •orders, that&#13;
manufacturers are getting. Light&#13;
weight writing papers have had the&#13;
preference over the heavy ones to avoid&#13;
double postage, but now the tendency&#13;
is setting toward the heavy papers,&#13;
which, of course, are greatly to be&#13;
preferred.&#13;
Boardipg hpuse keepers and other interested&#13;
parties in New York, findcomconutrv&#13;
roads near Philadelphia. He dresses&#13;
like a fanner and is hardly recognizable by his&#13;
former associates.&#13;
j The letter carriers of Washington presented&#13;
i S. S. Cox. United States miulster to Turkey,&#13;
i with an elegant gold-headed cane in appreciation&#13;
of the 'efforts of Mr. ('-ox while in Congress&#13;
( to secure le^isl.-v'loa in their behalf.&#13;
1 The 'wives of three naval officers havingioin-&#13;
: ed their-husbands in Japan, the latter' 1&#13;
through all these straugo countries,&#13;
there is little doubt that Maxwell will&#13;
be in the lockup within an hour after&#13;
the ship's arrival at Aukland.&#13;
Some years ago a woman applied at&#13;
a London hospital for treatment for&#13;
a nervous affection. Af tor listening&#13;
to a recital of h e r symtoms, the doctor ! r e a ders«&#13;
made her shut h e r lips upon a clinical | ' ^ m J f n&#13;
T&#13;
e n ,d :Z0 U „ h i I 5 i " c h i&#13;
thermometer. Upon removing it tho&#13;
patient exclaimed: "Why, T declare, ii&#13;
" " T h c d o c -&#13;
aud rcwhich&#13;
CIe7i".~ChnsltanTcn, "at&#13;
Morgan &amp;&lt;o.'s., told me h e r e g i r d e d&#13;
"as a wonderful remedy." f&#13;
Well, I suspect the hero of the book&#13;
cured himself by the same means. The&#13;
internal evidence points very strongly&#13;
to this conclusion.&#13;
I cannot close my notice of this book&#13;
better than by quoting his advice to, his&#13;
the latter nave * •» , •» J M&#13;
been rieta-hed from duty for violating an order . ^ 8 d o n e m e g o o d a l r e a d y ,&#13;
forbid -ling naval oilier* from having their \ t o r h u m o r e d h e r delusipu,&#13;
wives'with them on foreign stations. | framed from any other treatment than&#13;
tonIs, aI'a. cTN.,. wHhiob biasis\ulse,_d emxopnoesy'm oarsdteerrs Ioo f hLimewseilsf /! a few more applications of the magical&#13;
lor over £50.000, has been arrested at Harrison&#13;
liiver. British Columbia. Ten thousand five&#13;
i'.undred dollars were found on his p'.rdon.&#13;
Weslev Hinckley of Morrice, SMavasscc&#13;
enuniv. "died is years ago. Heeently his reglass&#13;
tube. She was soowcurcd. A&#13;
parallel case is now cited by the Philadelphia&#13;
Medical News, an hysterical&#13;
patient having been cured by magnetism.&#13;
The m a g n e t was of wood, but&#13;
ma ne' were removed to a new. burying place c a p p e d w i t h m e t a l ; SO as to s e e m&#13;
and were foumI tp br petrified with tln-ica- ^ 4 to the t o u c h .&#13;
• tares as natural us when the bodv was buried. . " , . . , , , -&#13;
Wm. Tin-ley, who at the Centennial exposl- A K e n t u c k y g : r l w a s t o o m u c h for a&#13;
tion was given plac^ as the oldest architect in T e n n e s e e d u d e . A Louisville d a m s e l&#13;
the Unit'd btate.-. and who for mimy years has&#13;
been a l'fe member oi' the American institute&#13;
«of. architects, died recently. He was born iu&#13;
Cbntuel. Ireland, in lt04. J&#13;
Secret service agents arrested Ed. Hall In&#13;
an experience&#13;
"as I have portrayed, do not&#13;
put your trust in physicians to the excluslson&#13;
of other- remedial agencies.&#13;
They have no monoply over disease and&#13;
i' personally know that many of them&#13;
are so very 'conscientious', that they&#13;
would far "prefer' that their patients&#13;
should go to Heaven direct, from their&#13;
powerless hands than that they should&#13;
be saved b / t h e use of any 'unauthorised'&#13;
nieaiis."&#13;
And that the author's condemnation&#13;
is too/true, how many thousands duped,&#13;
and/yet rescued, as ho was, can personal&#13;
y testify? •&#13;
California conilol s with Roumania over the&#13;
idvent of tho 17 years locusts.&#13;
For all disiss.'s of the kidney, and liver.&#13;
New York for counterfeiting a Guatemalan&#13;
J10 note. The plate and paper were captured.&#13;
This is the first arrest under the law for the&#13;
punishment of counterfeiting, in the United&#13;
States, the notes of foreign government.&#13;
At the New Orleans exposition Marley Bros.,&#13;
of East Saginaw, received a first-class medal for&#13;
their displav of wrwmill lumbering tools; Chas.&#13;
W,. Coe, Fcutonville, first-class medal. fo»&#13;
blacksmith's tools; the Michigan axe anil tool&#13;
LOmpany, second-class medal for edgo tools.&#13;
Reports from Cape Breton Indicate a very&#13;
heavy storm along the coast for three days. A&#13;
terrihle gale prevailed doing great damage.&#13;
Seines, boats and fishing gear were carried&#13;
away at all the pits. It Is estimated that $200,-&#13;
was visiting Memphis, and w\'is sitting&#13;
upon a sofa with a fresh young society&#13;
man, who, as the conversation progressed,&#13;
allowed his arm to gradu-ally physicians pvescriii&#13;
fall down until lie had it around her&#13;
waist. She arose very indignant and&#13;
he made the following apology: "J&#13;
hopo you will not think anything of&#13;
this. It'is just a way I have. All the&#13;
Memphis boys act the same way, and&#13;
you will have to get used to it, 1 hopo ^ " i u V g « T t b 7 ehl-trie!&#13;
you will not take any oitenso at it as * ,.. i ?,.-•-'-&#13;
it's just my w a y . " She left tho room,&#13;
but came back in a few minutes with a - ^&#13;
married friond, and sat down on the.&#13;
•iff a -.'ci-f '!/•&#13;
Wild beast- riv: . poi'oneus (-nake* in India&#13;
make way with I ctw: 0:1 ijo.000 aMl 22.1X0 hunmn&#13;
beings every ;• e. r. '&#13;
Thehie^ieine that can search and root out&#13;
every ill of kidney- cr liv«-r, i&lt; Hunt"-; Remedy.&#13;
G-nns on divprs Fngli&gt;h vessels 1 cr.aftcrwill&#13;
itv.&#13;
Hunt's Remedy cures bilious headache, costivetiess,&#13;
and dvsvepsia, and purities the blood.&#13;
,f I, ,—"—-—~rr : :&#13;
_ „_ _ _ _ _ _ . . Aw average of one pietura per day is added&#13;
sofa again. Soon sho began to vawn: t o H h c ^ l n j o g n f s ' gallery. _&#13;
and give every indicatidn of being " f h c B o S g ^"f i ' S r - ¾ of'zinc and&#13;
bored. I m a l l y she said: " I m dread- l e a t h p l . ia^nwiostionabjy U»o best pad&#13;
anil 'oiher butter substitutes uncou&#13;
atlttii'6nal.&#13;
»f SIGHT'S INDIAN VEGETABLE PlU&amp;&#13;
ron "?UE .LSVER&#13;
i n m n f l m H g ^ t o t h p N f f l t h ^ t &gt; y t l M ^ r n - tiresome, ana you naa oetier go nome D o x t e r Curtl*. Madison, Wis 1 S J S S i ! Sfrfj0 "*? ^ P " ? f t l a ^ t a -&#13;
fluent u&gt; adjust errtain land cl^ima, has been at once. Don t bo oftended at this. I t , : -----:--, Sale to take, belnji purely vesefabifl; no gnp»&#13;
issuing bogus land patents to settlers In the Jg sfamlv^a wav H i a v o . " Ho didn't : iUttinff.BtillJias.»eufc a - present of a buffalo. , «yj&lt; iTlcewcU. All l&gt;ru^l»t*.&#13;
Northwest and pocketing the money. linp-er robe to his koM»efl»-&lt;toe pope. -'.• - x&#13;
, W3D will not cover the aggregate losses on the fully sleopy, and 1 hope you will go ..,__ w i a . ^ ' 'hVimflnitv 'demands it«Auqa&#13;
fort in the fact that the court of appeal* Wand. h o r m 3 . tfj, m u s t uoif te^0 a n v ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ 1 ^ ^ 1 ^ ^&#13;
bas declared the law prohibiting the In connection with the NoTthwost trouble a t t u i s . A l l t h o Louisville girls adt ^SSZ^K^T^iwl^vcaSL&#13;
Manufacture and sale of oleomargarine hthMe dr/e&gt;pmaebonuetatt hoaf ttRheo 1inJ ttreHrio^rP, rw,-h^o- onwiacsi asleonf t ftKhoe „sa me way. *™ *™ **^WS iffi}^^&#13;
$ \&#13;
&lt;\l .. J.J . &gt;;• y i ' X&#13;
Si,&#13;
l l i e . , . &gt; . , v :i&#13;
N&#13;
:&gt;&#13;
mm S-) ••i-L ^Mmahm&#13;
w •M mmmm PM • W mmm&#13;
FACT AND FANCY.&#13;
A. project for starting a largro pub*&#13;
•lie library is on foot iu Charleston,&#13;
•»0. C.&#13;
Nevada has 131 postoflieos of tht&#13;
fourth class, 9 of the third class, and&#13;
1 of the second class.&#13;
A South Caqalina planter raises Soa&#13;
island cotton for a French spinnnei&#13;
« n d receives $1 per pound.&#13;
The On«dia coinniunity New York&#13;
•papers published in the viciniJy say has&#13;
virtually fallen to pieces.&#13;
A Yon Iters bride recoived, among&#13;
h e r wedding gifts, a receipted bill of&#13;
¢8 for gate hinges from her father.&#13;
As high as $80 a head is offered to&#13;
otfioys of Victoria and TugeL sound&#13;
"~rs to smuggle Chinese across&#13;
AUadelphia Times celebrated its&#13;
inniversary as a newspaper on&#13;
Fth inst by publishing twenty-&#13;
^ i g f f l pages.&#13;
In Death valley, Inyo coimty. California,&#13;
week before last tho thermome&#13;
t e r for several days marked 120 degrees&#13;
in the shade.&#13;
— "Marriages a specialty, acceptable&#13;
t t Jill hours; strangers particularly&#13;
J t a r i t e d , " is the unique advertisement&#13;
jjtaipjtargynian at York, Me.&#13;
* j j l f i W. I I . Harp, of Americus, Ga.,&#13;
•ftp* a cod'oo mill which has been in&#13;
•«OBfta"nt use in his family for nearly&#13;
sixty years and is efficient as ever.&#13;
A Hying snake is on exhibition at&#13;
'Virginia City, Nev.. Tho reptile is&#13;
four feet long and has two wings att&#13;
a c h e d to its body about four inches&#13;
i&gt;ack of the head.&#13;
The juice of the curious ink-plant&#13;
of New Granada requires uo prapaTatien&#13;
before being used for writing.&#13;
T h e color is reddish when first applied&#13;
to the paper, but soon becomes a deep&#13;
black which is very durable.&#13;
The story is going the rounds that a&#13;
- Teuuussee woman, convicted of stealing&#13;
a diamond ring, is boarding at a&#13;
Jeotel under guard instead of occupy-&#13;
'!aS4|!HKuaU uuartmeut in a peuiten-&#13;
:f HM said there is hardly a telegraph&#13;
-Operator of any experience who has&#13;
n o t had a touch of operator's paralysis,&#13;
and that many of the mistakes&#13;
madu by o p e r a t o r s ' c a n bo traced to&#13;
this ailment.&#13;
Jkrgentleman at Lake Jesup, Fla.,&#13;
while experimenting with an orange&#13;
tree, placed some fertilizer on one side&#13;
anoTnone on.tho other. The sidu that&#13;
wai'tei'tilizod bore large, bright oi&gt;&#13;
angles,, and the other small, rusty-ones.&#13;
Yfele'has, in the w a y - o f trophies,&#13;
sixty-nine base-baflsT won from her&#13;
various adyjwsa'ries. .Kacli ball is&#13;
painted-the color of the stockings of&#13;
jLbe^vanquisheii nino, and is lettered to&#13;
iudicato the time and place of winning.&#13;
There are twenty thousand tons of&#13;
wheat in the various warehouses along&#13;
Snake river, Washington territory,&#13;
waiting for the prices to rise. Farmers&#13;
in that section claim to have about&#13;
half_as much more in their homo granaries.&#13;
According to a Florida paper, the&#13;
pumpkin is a perennial in that&#13;
state. It is said that there is a pumpkin&#13;
vino growing ucar Hock Ledge&#13;
which has been bearing three years,&#13;
and shows every indication of holding&#13;
outffo^ ariothor. i.-• .&#13;
—^f%ill has been introduced in the&#13;
citj^ochncil of New York to,regulate&#13;
roller skating. Tho proposed ordinance&#13;
prohibits minors, unless accompanied&#13;
by parents or guardians, from&#13;
attending roller-skating rinks, and&#13;
also forbids roller skating in parks&#13;
a n d streets.&#13;
A Sad Career.&#13;
-•- The divorccd~wiio of a ^ o n a n z a ^ m i l -&#13;
U o a a i r e recently came to a mournful&#13;
Jjtatib principally from taking chloral,&#13;
w U c h unsettled her mind and demorali&#13;
s e d her whole physical system. She&#13;
had been weakly and ailing and felt her&#13;
need of something to drown her sorrows&#13;
and braco her up. Had she taken&#13;
Brown's Iron Bitters she would have&#13;
been invigorated so that she could have&#13;
fought her sorrows off, and enjoyed&#13;
~ "iy life. This valuable medicine&#13;
general debility, tones the nerves,&#13;
gtfcens the muscles and aids dillon.'&#13;
Japanese government official 8 are to be re&#13;
quired shortly to wear European costumes in&#13;
I i g fl|o|4id, Mich., C. J . Doesbury&#13;
\puBtrshes the News, and in its columns&#13;
strongly recommends Dr. Thomas' Electric&#13;
Oil for,coughs, colds, sore throat,&#13;
catarrh afrit asthma.&#13;
f&#13;
'~&amp;sMqnaT%-nB«ckeTCrT8 being^writtenl&gt;y the&#13;
Britlahpoct Laureate.&#13;
%' A P U R E AND R E L I A B L E M E D I C I N E . —&#13;
iund fluid extract of roots,&#13;
it and berries is BURDOCK&#13;
„ _ . _ fKlts. They cure all diseases&#13;
i-blood, liver and kidneys.&#13;
Over 8,000 people visit the British National&#13;
tart gallery each day.&#13;
F O R J S A R A C H E , Tootache, Sore Throat,&#13;
Swelled Keck, a n d tho results of colds&#13;
and inflammation, use Dr. Thomas1&#13;
Electrtf &lt;*ttl - t h e great pain destroyer.&#13;
We guarantee tire speedy, painless&#13;
and permanent cure without Tcnife,&#13;
caustic or salve, of the largest pile tumors.&#13;
Pamphlet a n d references sent&#13;
for two letter stamps. World's Dispensary&#13;
Medical Association, 663 Main&#13;
•Street, Buffalo, N. Y. ,&#13;
mm&#13;
Blowing Up Hell Gate&#13;
has been a laborious and conLly work,&#13;
but the end justifies the? ofiort. Obstruction&#13;
in any important channel&#13;
means disaster. Obstructions in the&#13;
organs of the human body oring inevitable&#13;
oi-ease. They must bo cleared&#13;
away, or physical wreck will follow.&#13;
Keep the liver in order, and the pure&#13;
blood courses through tho body, conveying&#13;
health, strength a n d life; let it&#13;
become disordered and the channels are&#13;
clogged with impurities, which result&#13;
in disease and death. No other medicine&#13;
equals Dr. Pierce's "Golden Medical&#13;
Discovery" for acting up'on the liver&#13;
and purifying the blood.&#13;
Lake Ontario sturgeon, when properlv worked&#13;
over, mako'sjjlendid "smoked halibut"&#13;
. _. , t&#13;
'The Proper Study of Mankind ii Han."&#13;
says the illustrious Pope If ho had included&#13;
woman in the list, lie would&#13;
have been nearer the truth, if not so&#13;
poetical. Dr. K. V. Pierce has made&#13;
them both a life stndy, especially&#13;
woman, and the peculiar derangements&#13;
to which her delicate system is&#13;
liable Many worn (rrrTn the land who&#13;
are acquainted with Dr. Pierce only&#13;
through his "Favorite Prescription,1 '&#13;
bless him with all their hearts, for he&#13;
has brought them the panacea for a}l&#13;
those chronic ailments peculiar to their&#13;
sex, such as leucorrhoea, prolapsus and&#13;
other displacements, ulceration, "internal&#13;
fever," bloating, tendency to internal&#13;
cancer, and other ailments.&#13;
Price reduced to one dollar. By&#13;
druggists.&#13;
Kentucky promises users&#13;
crop of tobacco this year.&#13;
of the weed a big&#13;
-&#13;
VIGOR and VITALITY.&#13;
Are glfcn to the whole system by the purifying, toning,&#13;
and «treni{fheninjf influences of Hood's garsapari.]:..&#13;
If you teal "al t'one," are .tiehi)Listed by&#13;
disease, or the effects ot" changing weather, Hood's&#13;
Sarsaparilla will bUrfM o n up. We do not ask you&#13;
to take this iiiedidnAiii. rely because of what w e s i y .&#13;
The thousands of |K.-eWc who testify in its favor&#13;
should certainly convince you of its great medicinal&#13;
merit. /&#13;
"I used Hood's S:irsa;^rill:i last Fpriog and can&#13;
truly say it helped me very much. To those suflcring&#13;
with bilious complaints, nervous prostration, or rheumatism,&#13;
I earnestly nec&lt;-.:iime«:rl i t " MRS. B . C A K -&#13;
FtNTKK, Kalamazoo, Mich.&#13;
"Hood's Sarsananlh'.i* a,'mood purifier has no&#13;
equal. It tones the system, strt:n^-h*.'ns and invigorates,&#13;
giving new Jitc. J li:ue :a s-:n it for kidnev&#13;
romphnnt with the hest resuas; have u &lt;«d several&#13;
bottles in my Isnnilv an.I ;im .&gt;;v.i.-rieii th it ii* reputation&#13;
is merited." I&gt;. K. SA«;NJ&gt;KKS, SI Pearl strceet,&#13;
Cincinna'i, Ohio.&#13;
Hood's Sarsaparllla&#13;
Sold by nil druggists. *.'; ulx j'ui- c . Made only by&#13;
C. I. HOOD* CO., Aputho.MHw, I.nwell. Mass.&#13;
IOO D o s e s One Dollar.&#13;
About three dozen r-nttle to the sounre mile&#13;
manage to exist—de-plte ilepl'jtioj'i of their&#13;
ranks by butchers—in the siohle state of Iowa.&#13;
One Boston jiulL'u h;&gt;* on.-iilv expressed his&#13;
disgust (it tin? insolent ijue-thius which some&#13;
lawyers delight to put to wim^es iu court.&#13;
The"|Dcetls puhlie library was' so poorly&#13;
lighted by electricity tliat :i'return to gas was&#13;
a practical tu't--es&lt;siry.&#13;
I T WILL P A Y YOU"&#13;
TO GO T O DETROIT&#13;
AND H A V E YOUB&#13;
The old Brandeth house property on Broadway,&#13;
.New York, sold recently at $11,000 per&#13;
foot front. It was not wanted as a postonice&#13;
site.&#13;
The organ grinder who passes around his hat&#13;
for pennies, after he has ground out a tune is&#13;
not begging. So decides a Washington judge.&#13;
Cremation is very '-catching" in Italy. The&#13;
crematories already established have all the&#13;
business they can atteud to and furnaces are&#13;
building.&#13;
The poet Grav has at last,got "on a bust" in&#13;
the grounds of Pembroke coHege, Cambridge,&#13;
because he was professor of modern history&#13;
there about a cewtury ago.&#13;
A lasvl'-f&amp;vir.iiv in New York cut oS^A^T&#13;
'•jiwttch end*" of his cows' tails because"' they&#13;
l)otheied him while milki:i.r. J&amp;s revenge was&#13;
sweet, but it cost him a JiiRroi ¢10.&#13;
English and American competition has roused&#13;
Parisian journals to some display of enterprise.&#13;
When Hugo died there were &gt;Vl reporters&#13;
for the city press waiting in front ot the&#13;
house'.&#13;
Kin Yamei, called here Miss May King for&#13;
sake of euphony, has just taken the degree of&#13;
M. L). at .New York, being the first Chinese&#13;
woman who&#13;
country.&#13;
bus attained that honor In this&#13;
Colored gems and precious stoses are having&#13;
i great jryt to Ah^past ~/&#13;
Adolf Latiez, carriage manufacturer'&#13;
119 CarrrJ.Vstroet, Buffalo, N. YM stat6*L&#13;
' I was troubled with nausea of tirestom*&#13;
fcoh, j i p * heada/che and general debility •&#13;
Burdofck pMod/Bitteis cured me.&#13;
Sulphur smoko makes anyawmy" of graseiOBDwa-&#13;
yewJire4&#13;
A New Orleans paper refers editorially&#13;
to the wonderful restoration to&#13;
health of Mr. T. Posey, druggist. 225&#13;
Canal street, that city, who some time&#13;
ago was prostrated by an excruciating&#13;
attack of sciatica. After much suffering&#13;
his wife applied S:. Jacobs Oil,&#13;
which cured him promptly and entirely.&#13;
The sea is probably nowhere more more than,&#13;
five miles deep, and the tallest mountain is&#13;
not quite six miles high.&#13;
When vou visit or leave New York city, via&#13;
Central depot, save Baggage Expressage" and&#13;
$3 Carriage Hire, and stop at the (irand Union&#13;
Hotel, opposite said depot. Sx hundred elegant&#13;
rooms fitted up at a cost of one million&#13;
dollars; $1 and upwards per day. European&#13;
plan. Elevator. Restaurant supplied with&#13;
the best. Horse ears, stages and elevated railroad&#13;
to all depot. Families can live better for&#13;
less money at the Grand Union Hotel than at&#13;
any other'flrst-class hotel in the city.&#13;
A colored imitator of D. L. Moody is evangelizing&#13;
Georgia. _ _&#13;
'ROUGH ON CATABRH.''&#13;
Correct offennlve odors at IUIHU. Complete cure of&#13;
worst cases.also unequnled as Kargle for Diphtheria.&#13;
Sore Throat. Foul Hreath. floe,&#13;
There are no white servants at the White&#13;
House.&#13;
THE HOPE OF THE NATION.&#13;
Children, Blow In development, puny, scrawny and&#13;
delicate, use "Well's Health Kenewcr."&#13;
Parisian belles n o w carry pistols.&#13;
CATARRH OF THE BLADDERT&#13;
Stinging, irritation, lunammatlon. all Kidney and&#13;
Urinary Complaints, cured by "Uuchu-Palba.". II.&#13;
Greece is exceedigly "hard up."&#13;
Free from Opiates, Emetics and Poisons.&#13;
A. PROMPT, SAFE, SURE CURE&#13;
Tor Couths, Soro Throat, Hoarsen*** InflaemM.&#13;
Cold*. BronchHI*, Croup, WlKwpln* Co««n,&#13;
Asthma, Qa!n»r, Pain* In CJM»t, va otto*&#13;
•erections of tho Throat »ndLnn*«W&#13;
Price 5 0 cents a he ttle. Sola by Dmjrcistn ana D«»ii&#13;
S j5"HM«naMc to induce the*dealer topromvtly&#13;
aetit for them will rv:?ive Uco boUles^Exprmcnurgu,&#13;
Dad, by sending ont dollar to ^-&#13;
THE niAHt/FS A. V•O •f'i f IE'R 'CnnOrSfpi.A XT, . ot'.l M:iiv.,Ciij&gt;r&#13;
r . &lt;j. »&#13;
- T H E&#13;
BEST TONIC.&#13;
This medicine, combining Iron with pure&#13;
vegetable tonics, quickly and completely&#13;
C u r e * D y s p e p s i a * I n d i g e s t i o n , W e a k n e s s *&#13;
I m p n r e Blood* . M a l a r i a , C i i U l » a n d F e v e r s ,&#13;
a n d N c u r a l f f l a .&#13;
It is an unfailing remedy for Diseases of the&#13;
K i d n e y s a n d L i v e r ,&#13;
It is Invaluable for Diseases peculiar to&#13;
W o m e n , atjd all w h o lead sedentary lives.&#13;
It does not injure the teeth, cause headache.or&#13;
produce constipation—otfi*r Iron medicines do.&#13;
It enriches and purifies the blood, stimulate*&#13;
tho appetite, aids the assimilation of food, relieves&#13;
Heartburn and Belching, and strengthens&#13;
the muscles and nerves.&#13;
For Intermittent Fevers, Lassitude, Lack of&#13;
Energy, &amp; c , it has no equal.&#13;
4 * * The genuine hns above trade mark ftn''&#13;
crossed red lines on wrapper. Take no othc;&#13;
loyljby BROWN CIICXirAt. CO.. TH?.T&lt;&gt;WKr. *'•&#13;
EXAMINED A N D P I T T E D W I T H&#13;
SPECTACLES OR E Y E GLASSES&#13;
R O E H M «fc ' W I I I G - H T ' S ,&#13;
IMPORTERS, J E W E L E R S A N D OPTICIANS,&#13;
140 WOODWARD AVE.&#13;
T H E Y MAKE NO CHARGE FOR&#13;
TESTING EYES, A N D 1 SELDOM&#13;
PAIL TO GIVE RELIEF.&#13;
HALL'S&#13;
Catarrh Pure&#13;
is Recommended by Physicians!&#13;
Wo ronnufaeturs andieUitwitha positive&#13;
guarantee that 1(. win cure any&#13;
c a s e , and wo will forfeit the above amount&#13;
ifitTnifsin &amp; s i n g l e i n s t a n c e .&#13;
It is UnlikO any ether Catarrh remedy, a»&#13;
Mistaken i n t e r n a l l y , a c t i n g u p o n&#13;
t h e liJOOd. If y o u aio troubled vritlTtaii&#13;
diitressfng disease,ask yourDruggiitforit,and&#13;
ACCEPT IfO IMITATI03I (IB SUBBTITUTE. If h«&#13;
has not got it, send to u&amp; and wo will forward&#13;
immediately. Price, 75 cents per bottle.&#13;
F. I CHENEY * CO Toledo. Ohio.&#13;
. . LYDIA C. PINKHAM'S . «&#13;
VEGETABLE COMPOUND&#13;
• # • IS A P0STT1TE c u m : FOE • • /&#13;
All those painful Coni)&gt;lalBt»&#13;
» &gt;wd Wcikiiffmn-a an fninmoM '*&#13;
* 0 * « • * t o oar bcxt # * • * « •&#13;
, • FCHALE rOPULATlO?,* V&#13;
Prize $11» U^nld, yUI «r&gt;uag« form.&#13;
• n* p*rpoM ts toleli/ ft* tM itgitfinaU healing »j&#13;
ditease and th« relief ofjuti*, attd that H doe* all&#13;
it claims to do, thoutandsof ladies can gladlv tettiff. *&#13;
* It will cure eotirely »11 Ovarian trouble*, lnfl.-\nim&lt;&#13;
tlon «JIO, Ulceration, Fall in sr and I^isplMtsmeats, ant.&#13;
coudcqueai Spinal Wcakuess, and if particular!}&#13;
"adapted to the change of life. • * • • • • * • * • • •&#13;
• It removes Kaintncas, Flatulency, destroysall craring&#13;
for stimulants, and relieves Weatuts* of tlio Stomach&#13;
It cures Bloating, Headaches, Ifervous Prostration,&#13;
(leneral DebiHty, Sleeplesancss, iJepi-esaion and Indi&#13;
gestion. That UxLu* of beariDg down, causing pain,&#13;
ani baclracbo. is always permanently cured brit»uae.&#13;
* Send stamp to Lynn, Mass., for pamphlet.. Letters o.&#13;
inquiry•ontldentiallyanswered, forsaleatdr^^ffist*.&#13;
Narrow Escape.&#13;
* * * * RociMWKB, June 1,1882. "Tern&#13;
Years ago I was attacked with the moifc&#13;
Intense and deathly pains In ray back aad&#13;
—Kidueyt.&#13;
"Extending to the end of mv too and to my&#13;
brain!&#13;
"Which made me dellrioou!&#13;
"From apjouy! ! 1 !&#13;
"It took three men to hol'J uie on my bed at&#13;
times!&#13;
"The Doctors tried in vain to relieve me, but&#13;
to no purpose.&#13;
Morphine and otJier opiates '&#13;
"Had no effect!&#13;
"After two months 1 \rts given up t o&#13;
die! ! !&#13;
"When my wife&#13;
heard a neighbor tell wlat Hop Bittera had&#13;
done for her, she at once got aiid gave ma&#13;
some. The first dose eased my brain and seemed&#13;
to go hunting through uiv system for tho&#13;
pain.&#13;
Tbe second date eased me »o much that I ilept t w »&#13;
hoars, something I had not Uuae for two moalb*. Before&#13;
I had used five bottle*. I was WL-U and tt work&#13;
as hard as any man could, for over three w t c t s i b a t&#13;
I worked too hardf or my t»tren~th, and taktnjj t hart&#13;
cold, was taken wHh thfl most acute and painful&#13;
rheumatism all through my »jai.L'.n that ever vra»&#13;
known.&#13;
"I called the doctors ftgaTnTan'f after severa! ws«kt&#13;
they left me a cripple on cruichei for life, as they&#13;
said. I met a friend and toirt b!iu iny case, and h e&#13;
said Hop Bitters bad cured hlui and wuuld cure ice. I&#13;
noohedat him, but h i waa so&lt;;ariieit 1 ^vu Induced touse&#13;
them again.&#13;
In les? than four wec.es 1 tlnew away my crutch«»&#13;
and went to work ;:^hc.y and kept on u*I:ijf the fcitt»re&#13;
forflvo weeks. uii*il I became »* wc?ll as any maa&#13;
living, and have been «o for six yt'ar-t »!nce.&#13;
It has also eared my wife, who had boen sick&#13;
for years; and has kept her nn.l mv'cflil'Jren&#13;
well and healthy with from two to three buttle*&#13;
per year There is no need to be tick at all IT&#13;
these bitter are used.&#13;
J. J. BERK, ,Ex-Sr.pcrvisor.&#13;
"That poor invalid wife, Sister, MotheiV_ lOr daughter!!! 4iCan be made the picture o ' bfartlil&#13;
"With a few bottles of lloii Bitters!&#13;
" Will you let ihem suffer ! I! ! -&#13;
Prosecute thr Swindler a! !i&#13;
If when you caU-fdr'Hop Bitter (SKE OKKKS C L C I . —&#13;
OT HOFS ojt-TH^a WHITX LABKL; the i'&lt;&lt; uzjclst hand*&#13;
oat-a&amp;y sfuff called C. I). Worncr'a ''&lt;•' .VIIm» i Hop Dit« ^t«rs"or with other "Hop" name, rcfu«e it «nd"shtt»&#13;
that druggist as yon would a viper, one If lie 1 a* taken&#13;
your money for the stuff indici htm fur the f r a a i&#13;
and sue him for the damages for the s*l;iii:i: and w«a&#13;
Will reward you literally fur the er&gt;nvli:Mi&gt;n.&#13;
)1&#13;
LIQUID C L U E 1« used by thousands of first class rfacnfictnrers&#13;
knd Mecnanic* en their beet work. .Received&#13;
GOLD MEDAL.Lotidon.*83. Pronouneed*"r&gt;v&gt;r(t&#13;
e/«,&lt;l*nni. Send card of dealerwhodfwt notk»*'&#13;
It, with Ave 2c itarops for SAM PLE CAN&#13;
RwiiCeieotCfc.GloBcefff.Mas&#13;
T H K&#13;
T » B A I l E A l l s l of horses and&#13;
•E compares with Veterinary Carbollsalve. It Is&#13;
cattle, nothing&#13;
ollsalve. It Is&#13;
the only preparation that leaves no scar and Invariably&#13;
grows the hair In its original color, Sold by druggists&#13;
at SO cents and «1.00.&#13;
There are onlv 208 distinct characters In&#13;
the Abyssinian alphabet&#13;
Hard to Believe.&#13;
It Is hard to believe that a man w « cured ot a&#13;
Kidney disease after his body was swollen as big as&#13;
a barrel and he had been given up as incurable and&#13;
lav at death's door. Yet such a cure was accomplished&#13;
b y Kidney Wort in the person of M M .&#13;
Devereaux of Ionia Mich., who says:" After thirteen&#13;
of the best doctors in Detroit had friyen me up, I was&#13;
cured by Kidney Wort. I want«veryooe to know&#13;
what a boon It is. /&#13;
tW Quantity and Quality. I a the Diamond&#13;
Dyes more coloring is given than in any known dyes,&#13;
and they give faster and more brilliant colors, IOC.&#13;
at all druggist Wells,Richardson &amp; Co., Barlington,&#13;
y t Sample cardi^a colors, and book o f directions&#13;
for ac stump. /&#13;
Relief from Sfck Headache. Drowilnesa,&#13;
Nausea, Dltzi^ss, Pain in the Side, Ac,&#13;
guaranteed ta those using Carter's Little Liver&#13;
Pills. These complaints are nearly always&#13;
caused bv/torpld liver and constipated bowels.&#13;
Restorcihese organs to their proper functions&#13;
and tbe trouble ceases. Carter's Little Pills&#13;
will/do this every time. One pill is a dose.&#13;
Tony In a vial. Price 1.5 cents.&#13;
• / « J L M D — T o a i wnoant auuerui* trom «rrura Of afooioitdhj,s nea:,r!r owaisll w seenakdn aes rse, o«e*trpI»e dtheacta yw, iIllo ne aorf* m yoann-, rBHb O* CHAKQU This great remedy wae die•&#13;
oeolvf eareddd rbeya tae ds aetwnvloealoaprye ttoa SBpJIuVta. JAOnSe1rPteH** T . ItNa*d f^•&#13;
MAN 8UKOP &lt;», N a w f o t k -[.j™(&#13;
Thompson's Eyi&#13;
. sore, .eyer, use Dr. Isaac&#13;
Cater. Druggists sell It. 36c.&#13;
H " ttKUATU ^ M«5&#13;
Hr.RtetteT'8 Stomadi&#13;
Bitters conquers&#13;
nml preventsmalarlal&#13;
fevers, d y s p e p s ia,&#13;
chronic constipation.&#13;
»tendency to kidney&#13;
nnd hlHdder ailments&#13;
BlTTEfRS&#13;
nnti rheuniatlsm, and&#13;
is of the greatest&#13;
value in cases of&#13;
I'odlly trouble arising&#13;
from weakness. Old&#13;
people are generally&#13;
aided by It, and It is&#13;
TiTsiny serviceable to&#13;
convalescents a n d&#13;
ladles in delicate&#13;
health. It Is, moreover,&#13;
a useful medicine&#13;
to take with one&#13;
onions Journeys, and&#13;
counteracts the effects&#13;
of mental exhaustion.&#13;
For sale&#13;
by all l&gt;Tugglsts&#13;
a n d Dealers g e nerally.&#13;
One r-peeial feature of l.idve's IIMKI. iu eontradistlnctlon&#13;
to others, is its neutral notion upon the bowels.&#13;
&gt;\&gt;r this reason, It Is efpei-lully adapted to tliose&#13;
seasons when bowel troubles are so frequent. Remember&#13;
Kidpe's Food is an old ::nd trieil prepuratlon,&#13;
ImviiiR been In use thirty year.-* in England and&#13;
* ni".-ica. it is n snfe and nourishing diet for all conditions,&#13;
_ '&#13;
^ * 0 N C E MORE TO THE FROST U E J F The old reliable honse of ,&#13;
G R A Y , T O Y . N T O X A F O X ,&#13;
I RDeEtroit.W HeadqOuarterRs fur K• S ! Pistols, Cnps, Firecrai'tv-ers. Ilal'.iKins. Torpcdos,&#13;
Flajjs, Japanese Day Fireworks, Ftc, Ktc.&#13;
, Fxhlbltions, for cities and towns, societies s.nd prlv&#13;
«te parties i&gt;repnrcd. mid all orders tilled with&#13;
promptness at.d dlsp:.|.;h.&#13;
P O I t T K R ' S&#13;
i i \ v I . O A I &gt; I ; R ,&#13;
Atrnched to wa^on.delivers&#13;
t!ie hay out of wlnrow&#13;
orswathon to the hay rack,&#13;
wlrhou: KDV e\tra help,&#13;
and In C'tinhlpatlon with&#13;
l'or;ei's ii;v,- t';in'ler rediieesthe&#13;
expense of haying&#13;
more than half. Send&#13;
for circulars.&#13;
a. j - ; . I ' O R T E B ,&#13;
31¾&#13;
BOSS&#13;
COLLAR P A D&#13;
Of Zinc «fc Leather.&#13;
W O M O R E K O B E ^ E O I C J S .&#13;
It will porttively prevent chafing and rnre tore&#13;
W i t h e r * . Horse can se worked wnlle cure is peiv&#13;
fected. Har'4es^' rpaker-&lt; win refuna mnn»y if asik'&#13;
satisaed after n days trial.&#13;
D U X T l l p t C L K T I S , M a d i s o n , W i a . _&#13;
/S R. U . A W A R E&#13;
THAT&#13;
Lorillard's Climax' Ping&#13;
bearingn -erf tin toy ; that LorillanTe&#13;
l l o » c Leaf fine cut; that LoriUardt&#13;
V a v r Cllpping-a and that Lorillard's Snuff*, ar^&#13;
••-•" :i-.-i ch«np«»-*. ^tt.iHt.v connblorod 7 -&#13;
'YOTJXTG M E IT ^ ^ ^ I S n ?&#13;
Telegraph Institute, Kalamazoo, Mich.&#13;
Journal.&#13;
bend for&#13;
-*HE BK«T 18 CHEAPEST.'&#13;
(U.mruhhwirenn i nnLoriLnon.TCl,errne; .BiIiIM«V I&#13;
CONSUMPTION. I have a posltiva ratnedy for tho above disease; by Its&#13;
use thousands of cases ot the worst kind and of loaf&#13;
Btaadtntt have been cured. Indeed. K&gt; at rone tt a y fait*&#13;
in its efficacy, that I will send TWO BOTTLES FRKB,&#13;
tojretherwitaaVAl.UABl.ETREATISE on this disease&#13;
to any sufferer. G ITS express an &lt;i P. O. addrrts.&#13;
DH.T. A. &amp;LOCUM, 181 Pearl St., New York.&#13;
i Write for srnKKmaa.&#13;
AtaylawOik.&#13;
UDY AGEKTS ^SSSi&#13;
employment and pood salary&#13;
selling Q u w n City Skirt ana&#13;
Storkin)»rSui&gt;i&gt;or.erH.Sample)&#13;
outfit Irre. AddrexK (Inclnnatt&#13;
Suspender Co., Cincinnati, O FUN Bro. Jonathan's Jokes&#13;
80pagoa. Illustrated. Sent,&#13;
Postpaid, for Twelve Cent*.&#13;
StUHt Beefc»aaau.»ewT«B*.&#13;
KIDDER'S P A S T I L L E ^ b T E I f i 8 ^&#13;
V . N . U. 1V-8-26&#13;
OPIUM BT-trpUfa* Ebss&gt;H&lt;&#13;
Dfa. J. SimruMxa, T-tth*.TMmL O k S&#13;
I ^CKTHOUSANDS^CIVEN AWAY&#13;
BITTERS.&#13;
BLOOD PURIFIER FHEALTH RESTORER.&#13;
It Dover falls to do Its work in eases of Metis*&#13;
rlau BHIouaneas, Conat^patioii, Bead*&#13;
« e h e . loaa of Appetite and Sleep. Nervosa&#13;
Aebititr, NenrsUjrla, and all F e m a l e&#13;
Complaint*. Hope A to alt Bitters is a Veget&#13;
a b l e Compound. It is a Itledlclne not a Bar*&#13;
r o o m D r i n k . It differs a* widely as doea&#13;
day and nifht from the thonsand-and-ome&#13;
Rllxtnree of vile tvblaky flarored with&#13;
a r o m a t l e e . Hope &amp; Malt Bitters is recomm&#13;
e n d e d by P b y e l c t a n a , ffltlnlaters and&#13;
Nnraeaas beinxthe Best Family Medicine erer&#13;
compounded. Any w o m a n or c h i l d can take it&#13;
Trom my knowledge of its ingredients, trader&#13;
circumstances can it injure any one ustaf i t&#13;
contains no mineral or other deleterious sobstance.&#13;
Possessing fcal merits, tbe remedy la&#13;
dessi-Ttag success.,r ^&#13;
a KTDSPCT, ft. 0., Detroft, Mien,&#13;
nkeonryGennlne are manufactured by the&#13;
- H0M4MAiTBrrTU3Ca,Mra»l«ds.&#13;
^f&amp;rrrL/f!&amp;f7:ur&amp;r&amp;jr&amp;fm.fr&amp;^^&#13;
%1&#13;
VERY NEW SUBSCRIBER&#13;
• gels a Present valued from 35c.&#13;
to $ 5 0 0 . and no favortitm&#13;
aV%&#13;
(* =r. o&#13;
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3 • !? S5- C .&#13;
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ahown,&#13;
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t:&#13;
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Send \ / $ 1 . 0 0 t' 25 * 0°*- 3•:&#13;
and your name goes on&#13;
the books, and your present&#13;
will be forwarded. Write for Sample&#13;
"Copy with List of Presents. Everything gaei&#13;
i ^ ^ W I T H O U T RESERVATION&#13;
CO&#13;
« co&#13;
^inmiinmmammwm^i^sMmm&#13;
TO THE PUBLIC.&#13;
Rochester, N . Y . , Mar. ax&#13;
I am acquainted with the pu&#13;
of the A M B R K A N R I K A I. H O M E , and I ^ V ^ , j j i - _^^&#13;
""'" *" : " * ' " " {Afmjere/Rockttttr far "TjfocL^^drTs*&#13;
ublishers 4^dLc^iA0&#13;
believe they will fulfil every guarantee&#13;
they make to the public tin yeart pott.)&#13;
RURAL HOME CO., Limited, ROCHESTER, N.Y.&#13;
&gt;« J W \ J I U "U.'H &gt;"&#13;
rjawtfadi .«*..,•*. •—-&#13;
I&#13;
\&#13;
The Dibble Murder Trial.&#13;
HOWELL, June 18.—After excusing&#13;
for cause and peremptory over forty&#13;
jurors, a jury was at last procured that&#13;
was satisfactory, and the trial of the&#13;
Dibblo murder ca.se commenced at a&#13;
late hour yesterday.&#13;
Drs. Wells and Huntington testified&#13;
as to the nature of wound inflicted on&#13;
Edward Mann, they having made the&#13;
post-mortem examination. Death was&#13;
•caused by a single shot entering the&#13;
right eye and penetrating the brain.&#13;
It was a mortal wound and the cause&#13;
of death.&#13;
'Cass Dexter, John Walker, Nelson&#13;
Brewer, Robert Brown and others that&#13;
were present at the charivari were&#13;
sworn to-day. They all testified to&#13;
their going to Dibble's on the night of&#13;
Jan. 13 with tin pans, saws, guns and&#13;
one or two sea-shells. Two shots were&#13;
fired from an iLpper window in the&#13;
house. The first was either a blank&#13;
charge or one that went directly over&#13;
the heads of the boys.&#13;
Three or four witnesses also testified&#13;
to threats that the respondent. Alva&#13;
Dibble, made, that he would shoot any&#13;
•one that came to the house again to&#13;
"horn"him.&#13;
Eighteen witnesses in all have been&#13;
examined and the prosecution have&#13;
thirty more to examine.&#13;
HOWELL, June 19.—Considerable&#13;
time was consumed this morning in&#13;
the Dibble trial over the introduction&#13;
as testimony of the threats that the&#13;
defendant, Alva Dibble made two or&#13;
three days before the shooting occur-&#13;
Ted. The defence objected to this&#13;
class of testimony because it was, as&#13;
they claimed, too indefinite, but after&#13;
the shooting was fastened upon the respondent&#13;
the court admitted the testimony.&#13;
Alva in substance stated, as&#13;
yas testified ta by Mr. and Mrs. F. E.&#13;
Eager, Mrs. Spencer Curdy, AdanTBakeiNand&#13;
other n«ar neighbors, that the&#13;
hording party had been scared away&#13;
by blank charges before, and if they&#13;
came again he was prepared for them ;&#13;
that he had an old gun that, if properly,&#13;
loaded "never failed to do execution,&#13;
and he would give* them some double&#13;
4,B" shot. When remonstrated with&#13;
against such a course by Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Eager, Alva asked them: "Did you&#13;
«ver know or hear of a man beiug&#13;
sent to state prison for killing a man&#13;
at a horning bee?"&#13;
The prosecution rested their case&#13;
this afternoon after examining twentyfour&#13;
witnesses.&#13;
The defense then roade an opening&#13;
statement to the jury, claiming that&#13;
the horning party were "rioters," and&#13;
committing a very serious breach of&#13;
the peace. That the night the shooting&#13;
occuired the whole Dibble family,&#13;
consisting of Jas. A. and wife, Geo.&#13;
Alva and-Ida,thought thatthe rioters&#13;
were close to the house, and the noise&#13;
wag so deafening that no conversation&#13;
could be carried on.. They admitted&#13;
that Alva fired the gun, but\ claimed&#13;
it was done in haste and excitement&#13;
and with the only intention of scaring&#13;
away the persons outside. Explanation&#13;
was also advanced why Alva left&#13;
immediately after the shooting), and&#13;
that these -remarks or threats tnade&#13;
were for the purpose of scaring away&#13;
the persons and preventing a repetition&#13;
of the horning party, not from&#13;
any malice on his part or desire to kill&#13;
any one.&#13;
The jury then were given in charge&#13;
of Sheriff Cook and were taken to the&#13;
scene of the affray, a distance of about&#13;
two and a half miles from this place.&#13;
After the jury returned the defense&#13;
called Joseph A. Dibble, the father of&#13;
Alva, and he .was upon the stand wheni&#13;
court adjourned for the day.&#13;
HOWELL. June 20,—Jos. A. Dib-i&#13;
ble concluded his testimony this&#13;
morning, and described the fear he&#13;
was placed in by the so-called "rioters."&#13;
He jumped out of bed and got&#13;
an iron poker and placed that within&#13;
reacfi; said he .had been informed on&#13;
the Saturday previous that the horning&#13;
party were coming to gire him a&#13;
coat of tar and feathers; claimed he&#13;
did not know a shot was fired from&#13;
the house, or that any one was injured&#13;
or* killed until the next morning.&#13;
When talking with Alva the next&#13;
morning about going away jn avoid&#13;
Mrs. Jos. Dibble was then sworn,&#13;
and described the noise and. confusion&#13;
caused by the rioters. She did&#13;
not hear the shot fired from the house.&#13;
Court then adjourned uutil Monday&#13;
morning at 10 o'clock.&#13;
HOWELL, June 2,2.—The Dibble&#13;
murder trial was resumed this afternoon&#13;
commencing at 1 o'clock. Ida&#13;
Dibble, a girl 15 years old, and Geo.&#13;
Dibble were examined, after which&#13;
the defendant, Alva Dibble, was&#13;
sworn in his own behalf. He had&#13;
learned that his father was to receive&#13;
a coat of tar and feathers and had&#13;
prepared for it by loading UP an old&#13;
musket with powder and popcorn.&#13;
When the noise began it was so sudden&#13;
and so loud that he jumped out&#13;
of bed, and without waiting to dress&#13;
ran to the closet where this musket&#13;
was rendv loaded; tried one or tWo&#13;
windows and finally succeeded in getting&#13;
one wide open. Then with the&#13;
muzzle of the gun unfastened the&#13;
blind opened that about two inches—&#13;
just wide enough to admit the muzzle&#13;
of the gun—and fired. The crowd&#13;
answered with a cheer and jeer and&#13;
increased noise. He immediately reloaded,&#13;
this time with powder and&#13;
shot; and without looking out of the&#13;
window to locate the party,| fired ii)&#13;
the direction of the barn in the same&#13;
manner as before. He claimed he&#13;
supposed, he was holding the gun&#13;
high enough for the "shot to pass over&#13;
ihe heads of all, if they stood where&#13;
he supposed they did, or even if they&#13;
stood in the road; got the gun partly&#13;
reloaded again when the noise ceased;&#13;
did not know what had stopped it,&#13;
went right back to bed and knew&#13;
nothing of the fatal results until the&#13;
next morning,: had no talk with Geo.&#13;
about firing the gun that night: said&#13;
nothing about it the next morning at&#13;
breakfast table, nor was anything&#13;
then said about the horning party.&#13;
When he learned that a man had&#13;
been killed, he thought he had better&#13;
leave for a while to avoid arrest and&#13;
expense of trial until the excitement&#13;
had abated. His father would give&#13;
him no advice as to what to do, so he&#13;
went to Bancroft, thence to Vernon,&#13;
and finally to Atlas, Genesse county,&#13;
where he was arrested. He told&#13;
about what what he had done at all&#13;
these places, He admitted the&#13;
threats made-to various persons, but&#13;
insisted he only did that for the purpose&#13;
of scaring away the horning&#13;
party, said he had no acquaintance&#13;
with Edward Mann, who was killed,&#13;
nor any malice against him; had no&#13;
knowledge who the rioters were and&#13;
had no intention of killing or harming&#13;
one of them. He merely fired&#13;
the shot to scare them away.&#13;
The respondent is a young man, 19&#13;
years old, and is somewhat bleached&#13;
out from his long confinement in jail.&#13;
While on the stand he stood the test&#13;
very well. Some expert testimony was&#13;
then given as to various sizes of shot.&#13;
HOWELL, June 23.—The the testimony&#13;
in the Dibble case was closed&#13;
this morning. The arguments were&#13;
then begun and closed, each side being&#13;
allowed three and one-half hours.&#13;
The judge will charge the jury tomorrow&#13;
morning. Great interest is&#13;
manifested in the case and the courtroom&#13;
is full all the time.—Post.&#13;
birthday party, given by one of their Sunday&#13;
school class. They returned Monday.&#13;
Tommle Harker took Bertie Rug« to South Lyon&#13;
Saturday to remain tha reet of the summer&#13;
with J. Marker as "chore boy." We will nil miss&#13;
hiui here very much, for he was quite a favorite&#13;
in town.&#13;
•Type" and his wife went to Howell last Saturday&#13;
to see the Hoyland families. Consequently&#13;
they missed a visit from Anna Griffith and her&#13;
boys, of Pinckney,&#13;
James Eaman has engaged the services of&#13;
Frank Worden in his new store at Anderson&#13;
Station. Unadilla people think he has done a&#13;
wise thing, ae Frank is a boss boy.&#13;
Ida Tuttle started Monday morning for Detroit,&#13;
where she intends to remain as housekeeper for&#13;
her brother Charlie, who is in business there.&#13;
She ha* been engaged aa organist for one of the&#13;
city churches, the also has a class in instrument'&#13;
al music.&#13;
^PRICE LIST]&#13;
-of-&#13;
I GROCERIES&#13;
-at-&#13;
Sugrar, Granulated&#13;
" Confectioners A..&#13;
" Extra C. Yellow;&#13;
" Brown 5£&#13;
Coffee, Arbuckles 18c u Di I worth 7-.-7-... v. 18c&#13;
" McLaughlin's xxxx .18c&#13;
"• Old Government Java and Mocho&#13;
mixed 30c&#13;
" Green Rio. 12$c&#13;
Teas 15,25,40, 50,60c&#13;
Pure Spices, per lb .40c&#13;
Bird Seed,&#13;
Saleratus,&#13;
C o m Starch,&#13;
Gloss Starch,&#13;
Raisins,&#13;
Rice,&#13;
P r u n e s ,&#13;
Oat Meal,&#13;
Arrest, he told him he could doas he&#13;
flaw £t; that ifiie (Alva) "Sad done&#13;
as he had told him to, there would be&#13;
no occasion for hisjying away."&#13;
RESULT.—After being out several&#13;
hours Wednesday, the jury finally&#13;
agreed to disagree, and they were&#13;
discharged. The trial may come up&#13;
again at the next term of court, and&#13;
it may not.&#13;
n « m • ... i .&#13;
| tUNADILLA REMARKS.&#13;
From our Correspondent.&#13;
I The Westsn Housels still M. T.&#13;
1 A strawberry and ice cr.eam social this week at&#13;
jthe rink.&#13;
| Ryal Barxmm is at Howell aa one of the special&#13;
jurora on .be Dibble murder trial.&#13;
Fred and Mollie Livermore, of White Oak, called&#13;
op Unadilla friend* last Sunday.&#13;
Bert and Claud Wataon, pi Bancroft, spent&#13;
Sunday and Monday among their many Unadilla&#13;
friends.&#13;
/&#13;
Minnie Pfckell apent several d*yi last week&#13;
with her eleter, Eva Keizer, on the Wataon farm&#13;
ia lynflon. — / ' •*•' — The Doctor's family have had lota of company&#13;
the paat two weeks. T^elr friend* all know&#13;
where they can enjoy a Visit.&#13;
.Anna and Lacy Gilbert went to Jackson feet&#13;
Saturday to visit their aister; also to" attend a&#13;
8c&#13;
7c&#13;
8c&#13;
.'8c&#13;
...10tol2e&#13;
8c&#13;
. . . . . . . . . 7 c&#13;
4c&#13;
.. .Galvanic&#13;
Soap, 3 bars for 25c -j ^Ivory&#13;
(. .......Magnetic&#13;
Soap, 4 bars for 25c. j Anti" washboSS&#13;
Town Talk, 6 bars 25c&#13;
Lard, per lb .....; 10c&#13;
Herring, per box, 20c&#13;
White Fish, 101b kits :.11.00&#13;
Mackerel, 15 lb kits, $1.25&#13;
Dried Beef, sliced, per lb 18c&#13;
Sugar-cured Hams ,4 . . . . . . . . . . l i e&#13;
Mason Fruit Cans, 1 qt., per doz. $1.25&#13;
« " " 2 u " $1.50&#13;
X i l C S H I E S T&#13;
M A R K E T P R I C E&#13;
-for-&#13;
BUTTER &amp; EGGS&#13;
¢1.25 $1.25&#13;
DETROIT&#13;
WEEKLY POST&#13;
the best weekly in Michigan&#13;
19 Months for $1.25&#13;
The WEEELY POST will be sent on&#13;
all snoscrtptions received on or before&#13;
August 1,1885, until January 1, '87.&#13;
$1.25! $1.25! $1.25!&#13;
The WEEKLY POST has special&#13;
telegraph service from all the world;&#13;
has among its special correspondents,&#13;
Grant, Sherman, Dana, Gladstone, Bismark,&#13;
and all the leading writers of&#13;
the world; has complete Farm, Household&#13;
and State News departments, and&#13;
is/emphatically the best family newspaper&#13;
in Michigan? Every Democrat&#13;
should read it. No Republican eaa&#13;
do without it.&#13;
It takes but a short time for a person to see that the stock carried by&#13;
MANN BROTHERS&#13;
Is by far the most complete in town. A beautiful line of&#13;
NEW TINSEL WINDOW SHADES&#13;
XJIN-33 OP-&#13;
4&#13;
That beats anything in town. LADIES, examine the new&#13;
EMBOSSED AND TINSEL BELTS.&#13;
We must call your attention to our elegant line of&#13;
LADIES' HANDKERCHIEFS,&#13;
Our store is full, and the goods are going to&#13;
go. Prices are what knock, and we&#13;
are always ready to meet any&#13;
—competition.—&#13;
We have a fuIITihT of TinselTrlromingrBraid. GENTLEMEN, we must&#13;
call vour attention to our line of&#13;
m&#13;
'fSOFT'AND STIFF HATS*&#13;
the very latest shapes.&#13;
MANN BROS.' PINCKNEY.&#13;
- V&#13;
&amp;'iA k w w&amp;fc \tkM&amp;Ah # f&amp;&gt;&#13;
Bi&amp;Xy fe$*%BdS'&#13;
&lt;§GROCERIES»&#13;
BOOTS &amp; SHOES&#13;
*OHEAP*&#13;
E. A. MANN, PINCKNEY.&#13;
mm •1W.*1 m v y&#13;
SUBSCRIBE NOW.&#13;
Address&#13;
THE POST,&#13;
Detroit, Mich.&#13;
» • »&#13;
$1.96 911.86&#13;
PINCKNEY wm CELEBRATE&#13;
And we will e^ea^wTW ^'"'am&#13;
share towards making it a&#13;
GRAND GALA DAY for THE PEOPLE.&#13;
^ + ^&#13;
Among the seasonable attractions offered just now are&#13;
FLAGS, FLAGS, FLAGS!&#13;
Beantltul Flats, from l c up to 60c. each.&#13;
Japanese Lanterns for Evening Decoration,&#13;
Firecrackers, Torpedos and other popular Firework* for the boya,&#13;
Confectionery, Nuts and Fruits,&#13;
ICE CREAM AND SODA WATEft&#13;
Please remembef also that frur line of DRUGS A MEDICIM]&#13;
complete and price* as low as the lowest. We shall /try to appreciate yotr&#13;
trade, and to deal fairly with you. Give us,a c a l k - / i&#13;
x WINCHELL'S DRUG STORE, PINCKNEY.&#13;
^?p~&#13;
*;&gt;y&gt;,™ vmjtMmttotomiamsis sH^l..t it M I&#13;
1&#13;
V&#13;
~ * * v •'Sat ' * * • . . ri t •+tr&#13;
. - . : # •&#13;
^&gt;%'.-*ste\,*:. £&gt;•:• L n \ &lt; &amp; A w . . : ^ A J S ^ i f t t f * . *&#13;
&gt; ««*-- -zamsettttaiMimmsar :-;'^'*w*wi&lt;?m*n*k*i3&amp;HBftt. 1=7?&#13;
uriytifri*itoi</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 June 25, 1885</text>
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                <text>June 25, 1885 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1885-06-25</text>
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                <text>J.L. Newkirk</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>VOL III PINCKNEY, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JULY 2,1885. NO. 25&#13;
u&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH.&#13;
J. L NEWKIRK, PUBLISHER.&#13;
IMUBD THUR8DATB.&#13;
V J U W r i p t i o n Price, $1.00 per Tear.&#13;
ADVERTISING RATES&#13;
P^. rtmadent advertiaeraente, 2&amp; canta per inch for&#13;
?Sfi. *»*t insertion and ten cents per inch for each subswit&#13;
Insertion. Local notlceB, 5 cents per HUH for&#13;
Insertion. Special rates for regular advertiseto&#13;
by the year or quarter.&#13;
ILL ADVERTISING BILLS DUE QUARTERLY.&#13;
TWa paper may he found on file at Geo. P.&#13;
i B o w e l ! « ( V s . Newspaper Advertising Bureau&#13;
\ (10 Spruce St.,) where advertising contracts may&#13;
t- be made tot it In New York.&#13;
RAILROAD CARD.&#13;
Grand Trunk Bailway Time Table.&#13;
M I C H . ^ I R LINEDIVISION.&#13;
GOING EAST. STATIONS. GOING W E S T .&#13;
r. x.&#13;
4:50&#13;
4:20&#13;
n&#13;
8:40&#13;
2:00&#13;
8:06&#13;
7:30&#13;
6:40&#13;
6:10&#13;
4:40&#13;
^4:4R&#13;
4:26&#13;
21:40&#13;
3:00&#13;
A. M.&#13;
7:85&#13;
7:«0&#13;
«:35&#13;
6:10&#13;
A. M.&#13;
10:20&#13;
_9;40&#13;
9:15&#13;
8:55&#13;
8:40&#13;
8:25&#13;
8:10&#13;
7:80&#13;
|A. M- P . St,&#13;
RlDGEWAY «:S5&#13;
Armada K&gt;:0O&#13;
—Ilomeo—&#13;
Rochester&#13;
ipontiac-!&#13;
Wixom&#13;
dp&#13;
ar&#13;
d:»&#13;
&gt; So.Lyona.&#13;
) / d&#13;
Hamburg,&#13;
PINCKNEY&#13;
Mount Ferrier&#13;
Stockbridge&#13;
Henrietta,&#13;
JACKSON&#13;
11 :M&#13;
P . M.&#13;
ar 1--2:10&#13;
dp 5:00&#13;
6:05&#13;
-(-a^&amp;44U,&#13;
A. M&#13;
7:301&#13;
8:00:&#13;
M40&#13;
V15'&#13;
«:.%,&#13;
10:05&#13;
10:15,&#13;
P. M.&#13;
5:55 1 6:15&#13;
l 7:05&#13;
:95&#13;
:001&#13;
r.-30&#13;
3:30;&#13;
3:40^&#13;
3:55;&#13;
4:10&#13;
4:25!&#13;
5:05!&#13;
All trains run by '"sentral standard" time.&#13;
All trains run daily, Sundays excepted.&#13;
W.J.SPICER, JOSEPH HICKSON,&#13;
Superintendent. General Manager.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
J. H HO AG, M. D.\ — ~&#13;
(HOMCEOPATRIC.)&#13;
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.&#13;
Office at resid«nce on Kaet Main street.&#13;
PUBLISHER'S NOTiCE.&#13;
C y T h o s e 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;
signifies that the time hae expired, and that, in accordance&#13;
with our rules, the paper will be oil&#13;
tinned until subscription is renewed, iacoa-&#13;
HOME NEWS.&#13;
TRESPASS NOTICE.&#13;
All persons are hereby forbid trespassing&#13;
in my huckleberry swamp and&#13;
picking berries therefrom after this&#13;
date. LEWIS LOVE.&#13;
Dated, Pinckney, July 2, 1885.&#13;
W A I T YOU CATHCAUT—The photographer.&#13;
He will be in Pinckney&#13;
soon witlrhis car, and make you pictures&#13;
satisfactory and reasonable.&#13;
Flags and Fourth of July goods at&#13;
Wincheil's Drug Store.&#13;
BOWERY DANCE AT THE RINK—day&#13;
and evening of the 4th.&#13;
C. F. LARUK.&#13;
CATHCART, TifE PHOTOGKAHHER—intends&#13;
coming here soon. If you want&#13;
some good pictures taken wait for&#13;
him and he will give you satisfaction.&#13;
ABERDEEN ANGUS GRADES.-Tbe P o i - L M u c h w ° o 1 h a 8 b e e Q marketed here&#13;
led Aberdeen bull, '"The Don" at the&#13;
Scotch Stock Farm, will serve a limited&#13;
number of cows at not less than&#13;
$5 per cow, cash. Apply early to&#13;
23tf. WM. COLLIE, Herdsman.&#13;
Japanese Lanterns and Fireworks at&#13;
WinchelTs Drug Store.&#13;
I have on hand some first class cider&#13;
vinegar wiiiclL.I WJII sell cheap. Inquire&#13;
at Pettvsville cider mill.&#13;
24w3. " S . M . C O O K E .&#13;
PETTYSVILLE MILLS.—Having repaired&#13;
my mills I am now ready to do, first&#13;
class work. Flour, as good as any&#13;
brand on band, we also keep feed for&#13;
sale. 24w5 S. A, PETTYS.&#13;
James Markey, of this place, has secured&#13;
the agency of the Allan Lire of&#13;
Steamers He is also agent for the&#13;
celebrated Jones Scales.&#13;
D M. G R E E N E , M. D.,&#13;
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,&#13;
PLAINFIELD, MICHIGAN.&#13;
Omce at residence. Special attention siiven to&#13;
•urgery and (IiseaseXoTttiTrttrnTHt-atttl-luage.&#13;
r A M E S MARKEY,&#13;
NOTARY PUBLIC&#13;
A n d Insurance Agent. Legal papers made on&#13;
• h o r t notice and reasonable t»&gt;rm«. Ouice on&#13;
Main St., near Postolflce Pinckney, Micb.&#13;
Farmers, call at -AJEarkey^r—an4-seefche&#13;
new Climax light MOWER, for which&#13;
he is agent. It is a model of beauty&#13;
and perfection.&#13;
\YANTED.&#13;
Wheat, Beans and Clover Seed,&#13;
highest prices paid.&#13;
Tompkins &amp; Ismon.&#13;
RIMES &lt;fc JOHNSON,&#13;
Proprietors of&#13;
r&#13;
G&#13;
PINCKNEY FLOURING AND CUSTOM&#13;
MILLS,&#13;
Dealers in Flour and Wed. Cash paid for all&#13;
kinds of grain. Pinckney, .Michigan.&#13;
IIT P. VAN WINKLE,&#13;
ATTORNEY &amp; COUNSELOR at LAW&#13;
and SOLICITOR in CIIANCEKYOffice&#13;
over giglerVDru* Store. PINCKNEY&#13;
D. D. BENNETT,&#13;
PAINTER AKD PAPER HANGER.&#13;
All work in this line executed with neatness&#13;
and dispatch.&#13;
T&gt;ANGS &amp; K1UKLAND,&#13;
ATTORNEYS,&#13;
8 3 0 O P E R A H O U S E BLOCK, CHICAGO, attend&#13;
• v? carefully to business sent them from other places.&#13;
f: ^ PINCKNEY EXCHANGE BANK&#13;
, : G. WrtEEPLE,&#13;
^BANKER,!-&#13;
Does a General Banking Business.&#13;
Money Loaned on Approved Notes.&#13;
_ The Greatest Medicine of the Age.&#13;
KertoggAs"CnrinnbTtrri Oil is a powerful&#13;
remed\*. which can be taken internally&#13;
as well 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 in written&#13;
language. A single dose inhaled&#13;
and taken according To directionsTwill&#13;
convince anyone that it is all that is&#13;
claimed for it. Warranted to cure the&#13;
following diseases: Rheumatism or&#13;
Kidnev Disease in anv form, Headache.&#13;
Toothache, Earache, Neuralgia,&#13;
Sprains, Bruises. Flesh Wounds, Bunions,&#13;
Burns, Corns, Spinal Affections,&#13;
Colic, Cramping Fains, 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 WIXCHKLL'S DRUG STORjEi~+'features.&#13;
The kidneys cannot perform their&#13;
proper office when diseased and at the&#13;
same time expel- the impurities that&#13;
should pass off through their proper&#13;
action. A few doses ot Kellogg's Columbian&#13;
Oil Tv-ill convince the most&#13;
skeptical Miat it acts directly on the&#13;
kidneys. * —&#13;
Full program of the 4th on last page.&#13;
Pretty cool for ice cream and lemonade.&#13;
Last Thursday was a good business&#13;
day for Pinckney.&#13;
M.W. Bullock, of Howell, was in the&#13;
village last week.&#13;
John • Weimeister, Howell, visited&#13;
Pinckney Tuesday.&#13;
Chas. Ellis erected his swing on the&#13;
square Wednesday.&#13;
and still some comes in.&#13;
Chas. Root,of ATEIDL Arbor, is"visiting&#13;
his nephew, R. W. Lake.&#13;
J . W m c h e l l and Dr. J. H. Hoag&#13;
visited Stock bridge Friday,&#13;
Don't forget the dance at the Monitor&#13;
House Friday evening.&#13;
— MrjJ?rank_ Rumsey, of_ Jackson,&#13;
visited Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Parker last&#13;
week.&#13;
Mr. F. N. Monroe, of Howell, was&#13;
over to see the machinery display last&#13;
Thirsday.&#13;
The M. E. parsonage has received a&#13;
coat of paint; as has also J. H. Barton's&#13;
new barn.&#13;
Two excursion bains to Whitmore&#13;
-Lake passed nvpr this rnad from Jackson&#13;
Saturday,&#13;
T. R. Shields will orate a.t Gregory,&#13;
and the old Unadilla band will furnish&#13;
music the 4th. v—&#13;
Miss Millie Barnard will heve an&#13;
ice cream parlor in Reason's new stcre&#13;
on the Fourth.&#13;
Salaried postoffices... are on the decline.&#13;
The reduction in postage makes&#13;
their earnings less.&#13;
An exhibition of Waldon's combined&#13;
road builder will be held on the streets&#13;
to-morrow afternoon.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Ransome Densmore,&#13;
of Dansville, were guests at Wm.&#13;
Hendee's Thursday last.&#13;
-The M. E. Sunday school is planning&#13;
an excursion to Whitmore Lake&#13;
to take place in the near future.&#13;
Master Jay Wilcox, of Jackson, is&#13;
visiting his grandfather, W. A. VYiK&#13;
cox, and other Pinckney friends.&#13;
None should miss-feeing the street&#13;
parade Saturday, as it will be one of&#13;
magnitude and composed of many new&#13;
Kellogg's Columbian Oil is composed&#13;
of vegetable products in a' highly&#13;
concentrated form, and acts directly&#13;
on the kidneys. It cures rheumatism&#13;
ar.d all other aches and pains.&#13;
.). Croulea and family start to-day&#13;
for his former home in Ohio. He has&#13;
not made up his mind definately where&#13;
he will locate.&#13;
Mat. Wixom's show exhibited here&#13;
lasT'night to a good sized audience and&#13;
Deposits received.&#13;
. ' ' • • . . Certificates issued on time deposits,&#13;
And payable on demand.&#13;
* * v COLLECTIONS A SPECIALTY.&#13;
™jft* -,&#13;
"•;*** The HERO to the front again for&#13;
1885. Farmers, look to your interest&#13;
and get the Hero Reaper and save&#13;
your grain and clover seed, a reaper&#13;
that you can depend upon in all kinds&#13;
and conditions of gram. Don't be&#13;
deceived by buying a poor, cheap machine&#13;
because you can get it at a low&#13;
price. The Hero is sold on its merits,&#13;
any good farmer can have one on trial.&#13;
I keep a few here in stock, also a full&#13;
• line of repairs always on hand. I also&#13;
sell the Hoosier Grain Drills which are&#13;
acknowledged to be the best drill made.&#13;
I have corn and field 'Cultivators for&#13;
one or two horses, shovel plows and&#13;
horse hoes and plow repairs lov variou8plows.&#13;
l a m also agent for the&#13;
J . 1.-Case .celebrated threshing maohines&#13;
and steam engines.&#13;
J AS. MARKET, General Agent.&#13;
22tf Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
THAT HACKING COUGH can be so&#13;
quickly cured by Shiloh's-Cure. We__|.&#13;
guarantee it.&#13;
" W I L L YO"U"SUFFEH w i f b - D w&#13;
pepsia and Liver Complaint? Shiloh's&#13;
Vitalizer is guaranteed to cure you.&#13;
SLEEPLESS -N Id KTS, made miserable&#13;
by that terrible cough. Shiloh's&#13;
Cure is the remedy for vow&#13;
.CATARRH CURED, health and&#13;
sweet breath secured, by Shiloh's Catarrh&#13;
Remedy. Price 50 cents. Nasal&#13;
Injector free.&#13;
For la mo back, side or cbest, use&#13;
Shiloh's Porous Plaster. Price 25 cts.&#13;
SHILOH'S COUGH and Consumption&#13;
Cure is sold by us on a guarantee.&#13;
It cures consumption.&#13;
SHILOH'S VITALIZER is what^&#13;
you need for constipation, loss of.appe-*&#13;
tite, dizziness, and all symptoms of&#13;
dyspepsia. Price 10 and 75 cents per&#13;
bottle.&#13;
CROUP, WHOOPING COUGH and&#13;
broncnitis immediately relieved by&#13;
SkhildVa Cure.&#13;
For sale, by H. F. STgler &amp; Bro.&#13;
all seemed to be well pleased with the&#13;
entertainment.&#13;
J. McGuiness and wife were called to&#13;
Dexter Monday to attend the funeral&#13;
of Miss Rose Dolan, (Mrs. Ms. sister)&#13;
who died Sunday.&#13;
Rev. Fred M. Coddington has accepted&#13;
the call to become pastor of Congregationalchurch&#13;
a t tbis_rpiace_and yviU&#13;
begin his labors on Sunday, July 12.&#13;
The Pinckney base ball club proved&#13;
an easy victim to the Pleasant Lake&#13;
team last Saturday, and not a very&#13;
close game was played on either side.&#13;
G. A. Richards, who is at Grand Bapids&#13;
learning the tinner's trade, is visiting&#13;
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. Richards&#13;
and other Pinckney friends this&#13;
week. )&#13;
An Ann Arbor man whose eyesight&#13;
is a little dim plantedsome glass beads&#13;
this spring and was sorely disappointed&#13;
that they sent forth no pea sprouts.&#13;
Added to the many attractions of our&#13;
celebration will be a^wrestling match&#13;
between Mr. Ileine/ot Fowleiville, and&#13;
Chas. B u r d e n , / ^ this township, for&#13;
$1Q a side,&#13;
Teeple's bank building. Mr. Teeple&#13;
has also added some fine curtains to&#13;
his windows.&#13;
F. 9. Rose, of this place, while visiting&#13;
his sons at Bay City last week, received&#13;
a severe paralytic stroke, and&#13;
still lies quite low from its effects.&#13;
This is the second shock that Mr. Rose&#13;
has received. «&#13;
C. R. Mabley, Detroit's great business&#13;
man, died at his residence in that&#13;
place on Tuesday morning, the funeral&#13;
serviees being held to-day at his&#13;
late residence and the remains will be&#13;
laid at rest at his former home, Pontiac.&#13;
The schools at this place close tomorrow&#13;
afternoon arith rhetorical exercises,&#13;
beginning about 2 o'clock. It&#13;
would show to both teachers and pupils&#13;
that their labors and efforts are&#13;
appreciated if you-^ould visit them on&#13;
this occasion.&#13;
Leslie Local:-—"A soap man struck&#13;
Leslie laat week and instantly quite a&#13;
crowd gathered, bent on'swindlTng"&#13;
him right under the nose ot the village&#13;
officers. As to how badly he was&#13;
hnnfoTi y n n i r n rpfprrpri in Mrr C „ M r -&#13;
— and Mr. ."&#13;
Delivery Day.&#13;
The delivery day of machinery sild&#13;
by G. W. Reason held at this place on&#13;
Thursday last was the grandest thing&#13;
of the kind ever known in this section.&#13;
It was also a good boom for the Buckeye&#13;
machines and showed that the farmers&#13;
in this vicinity consider them the?&#13;
best. Mr. Reason had sold this season&#13;
and delivered that day 21 mowers, 16&#13;
binders, 3 reapers (mostly Buckeye) and&#13;
a Birdsall traction engine, amounting&#13;
in all to about 15,000.00 worth. By&#13;
noon on that day the streets of the village&#13;
were well crowded with people&#13;
and teams f.nd i t appeared to be quite&#13;
a gala day, the purchasers of machines&#13;
taking dinner at the Monitor House at&#13;
Mr. Reason's expense. At about 2:30'&#13;
o'clock p. M.—the machines having been&#13;
previously loaded into the farmers'&#13;
wagons at the depot—the procession&#13;
"W2F formed on Pearl street, headed by&#13;
the Birdsall traction engine drawing a&#13;
Birdsall separator and the Cornet&#13;
Band, after which came a Buckeye&#13;
binder in motion, the loaded binds&#13;
reapers and mowers, on some of which&#13;
were appropriate mottoes and banners&#13;
armh a«a ' - T K P B n r » V p p l^ftds t h e m a l l / 1&#13;
Parker/&amp; Spears have.buiMtaarwy&#13;
neat a n i i t r o n g iron door fory.Gu.W. | sent up:tbroe cheers for the Buckeye.&#13;
About 20 tickets were sold at this&#13;
station yesterday for Jackson, but a&#13;
break-down to the engine ^trPontiae&#13;
delayed th«i morning train so that it&#13;
did not reach hSre until about noon,&#13;
and we hardly think the passengers&#13;
enjoyed the Fourpaugh afternoon performance.&#13;
—Min F i t " ft™**™ /Ongpd hftr labors&#13;
as teacher in the Fowlerville Union&#13;
School on Friday - k s t r a n d Saturday&#13;
returned to her home near this place.&#13;
Miss Brown has taught at that place&#13;
two years and leaves with the best ot&#13;
recommendations from both officers&#13;
and patrons ot the school.&#13;
We wilLprint 1000 4th of July programs&#13;
and scatter them among the&#13;
crowd Saturday morning, We have&#13;
secured a card irom most of our business&#13;
firms to place upon it, and it&#13;
there are any whom we have not seen&#13;
that wish one inserted they should&#13;
make arrangements with us to-day.&#13;
The 4th of July subscription hst^isnow&#13;
in the hands of the trejasuier. J .&#13;
McGuiness, ana it isjto-^e hoped that&#13;
all who haye--sulSscribed will march&#13;
proniptiy"up to the "captain's office"&#13;
and pay the same. The money ought&#13;
all to be in the hands of the treasurer at&#13;
least by to-morrow night, so that he&#13;
can meet the expenses that must be&#13;
paid.&#13;
The Air Line road will sell round&#13;
trip tickets at halt fare on July 3d and&#13;
4th, good to return until the 6th, inclusive.&#13;
A special train will also be&#13;
run on the 4th between South Lyon&#13;
and Jackson, leaving this place at 8:05&#13;
A. M. and returning it leaves Jackson&#13;
at 6:30. On that day the mixed trains&#13;
(No. 5 and 6) will be cancelled between&#13;
South Lyon and Jackson.&#13;
An exchange tells of a scheme by&#13;
which farmers are being swindled this&#13;
spring. A soft-spoken individual approaches&#13;
the tiller of the soil with a&#13;
document which appears to be a petition&#13;
to reduce taxes. The petition&#13;
properly -cut up becomes a .note due in&#13;
ninety days, and this note is sold and&#13;
the soft individual collars the proceeds&#13;
and skips, while the paper getting"into&#13;
the hands of another purchaser, the&#13;
farmer has to pay it.&#13;
One of S. Andrews' Deering agents&#13;
from Howell by the name of McMannis^&#13;
came over to this place on Thursday&#13;
last with tl»e intention of dissuading&#13;
some from taking the Buckeye&#13;
machines that tbey had purchased from&#13;
Mr. Reason. While this was a low,&#13;
mean and conteraptable little trick, we&#13;
can not say that it did any particulai&#13;
harm to any one with the exception of&#13;
himself, and the standing of his machine&#13;
(the- Deering) we toink was&#13;
somewhat diminished, as he took all&#13;
kinds of "bluffs" from both Reason and&#13;
State agent bellman and the crowd&#13;
"We are at the Deering's wake," etc.,-&#13;
while at the horses heads were attached&#13;
streamers with the word "Buckeye"&#13;
upon them. The procession passed&#13;
west downytfain &amp;., to Marion St.Tthence&#13;
south to Livingston St., thence'&#13;
east to Mill St., thence north to Unadilla&#13;
St., thence west to Howell St.,&#13;
thence south to Miin, where they disbanded,&#13;
each going his respective way&#13;
seemingly happy ami" well satisfied&#13;
with his purchase.&#13;
Last week's Journal alluded to the&#13;
yield of wool this soring from 20 sheep&#13;
owned by "U. w ] Clark," Newark.&#13;
The name should have read "R. W.&#13;
Lake." Their respective fleeces were*&#13;
as follows, the figures given denoting&#13;
pounds and ounces: 13.14,12.12,12.12&#13;
14.04, 13.09,13.08, 13.04,14, 15,13.08,&#13;
15.08,13.08,14, 12.12, 20.11,17,^0*,""&#13;
17. One two-year-ram shearedT 24 lbs.&#13;
Mr. Lake purchased the sheep of&#13;
Henry Padley^nd Stephen Teeple, of&#13;
Liyijttgstbn county, this State, and they&#13;
^re good ones.—Gartiot Co. Journal.&#13;
A petition has been extensively circulated&#13;
and largely signed, asking for&#13;
the establishment of a tri-weekly mail&#13;
route between this place and Gregory&#13;
Station. The purpose is to go try the&#13;
way ot the County house, Wimble's&#13;
Corners and Plainfieldto Gregory-Station.&#13;
The new route would establish&#13;
two new postoffices—one at the County&#13;
house and the other at Wknble's Corners.&#13;
Tbe southern portion of the&#13;
county is greatly in need of better&#13;
communication with the county seat,&#13;
and we hope they will succeed in establishing&#13;
the route.—Democrat.&#13;
The people of Howell are making a&#13;
gigantic effort to secure the. closing up'&#13;
ot the gap existing in the T. A. A. &amp;,&#13;
N. M. R. R., between South Lyon and&#13;
Owosso. They have raised a huge&#13;
bonus-, and are using all the influence&#13;
They can wield to have the line extend-'&#13;
ed via. that place. This route would&#13;
run parallel with the D. L. &amp; N. R. R.&#13;
from South Lyon to Howell, and also '&#13;
parallel with the I). &amp; M. R. R. from&#13;
Durand to Owosso. A for better payi&#13;
n g route wmiid have- been from Ann,'&#13;
Arbor through Pinckney and Howell&#13;
to Owosso, but it's-too late for that.— '&#13;
Ann Arbor Courier.&#13;
At Howell, Mich., the trial of a man (&#13;
who fired into a party of men engagedin&#13;
a charivari about the house of a .&#13;
newly married counle, whereby one of&#13;
the hoodlums'was Killed, has just terminated&#13;
in a tailure of the jury to '&#13;
convict. The telegraphic dispatches&#13;
to-day tell of a similar case in Illinois,&#13;
where a brother of the bride fired twice&#13;
at the charivari party, and killed one&#13;
ot them. He will probably be acquitted&#13;
; at least it is hardly to be expected&#13;
that any jury will convict him. P o p - '&#13;
ular feeling is such that every person&#13;
who joins in a charivari, or "horning"&#13;
as the rural roughs call it, takes his&#13;
lite in his hand; and it he is shot by&#13;
the victim of the insulting hubbub, a -&#13;
jurjs will be almost certain to take the '&#13;
view that it served him so nearly r i » h t '&#13;
tfrat the shooter will nut be couvicbe^M&#13;
Post.&#13;
"flF* • ^ ^ • • ^ ^ • ^ ^ ^ P&#13;
&amp;.&#13;
t&amp;Ain*t4 -:-y&lt;; — — « * - - " ' r | . • -.-.-.—r- • • * , * * * y , »,—...&gt;.)»&#13;
mm mm&#13;
iucHf-ftv NCWS.&#13;
Kadcciuj Salario?.&#13;
T h e following eliari£o* h a v e beon&#13;
made at the postoflice department in Michigan&#13;
postmasters' salaries, to go into effect July 1.&#13;
These changes are made on the basis of the&#13;
•amount under the two-cent postage reduction.&#13;
It will be observed that in some eases the&#13;
•alarles are increased. The total number reviewed&#13;
was 2,353—Hist class 71, second class&#13;
883, third class 1,76¾ re-legated to fourth class&#13;
134. The new presidential ofllces are all third&#13;
class, and on July I, the total number of presl&#13;
dentlal offices will be 2,231. The agjrr«gate of&#13;
•all postmasters' salaries iu the United States is&#13;
«5,1152,730. Following is the list of changes in&#13;
Mic.hIgx.Ti, so arranged that they may be seea&#13;
at a ckvue^;&#13;
Mace Old&#13;
/* Sahtry.&#13;
Detroit $3,700&#13;
Albion 2,000&#13;
Allegan.... 1,700&#13;
Alpena 1,900&#13;
Ann Arbor' i!.l&gt;00&#13;
Berrien Springs. 1,001)&#13;
Big Rapids. 2.300&#13;
Buchanan 1.300&#13;
Cadillac 2,000&#13;
Caluract 1,700&#13;
Caro 1,400 .&#13;
Charlotte 1,800-"&#13;
Cheboygan 1.600&#13;
Chelsea 1.100&#13;
Coldwater 2.200&#13;
Constantino 1,200&#13;
Decatur 1.200&#13;
Dowaginc 1,000&#13;
Eaton Rapids 1,500&#13;
Escauaba 1..00&#13;
Evart : 1,300&#13;
Grand Haven 1.700&#13;
Greenville 1,800&#13;
Hancock *..:. 1,700&#13;
Hastings 1,000&#13;
Holly..! 1,300&#13;
Hottgfctoihr; 1.500&#13;
Howell 1,«C0&#13;
Hudson 1,700&#13;
Ionia.. 2,300&#13;
Iron Mountain 1.500&#13;
ishpeming 1,700&#13;
Lapeer , 1.700&#13;
New&#13;
Salary.&#13;
$3,700&#13;
1.800&#13;
1,800&#13;
1,700&#13;
2,500&#13;
1,400&#13;
2,100&#13;
1.400&#13;
1,700&#13;
1,600&#13;
1,300&#13;
2,000&#13;
1,500&#13;
1,000&#13;
2,100&#13;
1,100&#13;
1,(/:0&#13;
. 1,500&#13;
1,400&#13;
1,600&#13;
1,000&#13;
1,700&#13;
1,700&#13;
1,600&#13;
1,500&#13;
1,100&#13;
A l g " Vetooalt.&#13;
Gov. Alitor lias v e t o a i ' h e E a £ * n&#13;
prison labor hill, and sends his objection to&#13;
(he legislature and people through the colurnas&#13;
of a Dctri^t paper, tbc legislature having adjourned.&#13;
He writes .from Old Orchard Beach&#13;
Maine, and says:&#13;
The measure was recommended Inmyflr.t&#13;
message to the legislature, but, f must frankly&#13;
confess, without the mature thought so important&#13;
a measure deserves. I should have added&#13;
in on-recommendation that the change be&#13;
foregoing section shall be construed to ineludf&#13;
all damage* the plaintiff may show he has suffered&#13;
in respect to his property, business,&#13;
trade, profession or occupation, and no other&#13;
damages.&#13;
Samson Canioi a flsasatioi.&#13;
During the performance of Cole's circus in&#13;
Lapeer the other afternoon. Samson, the monster&#13;
elephant, became infuriated, and uucon&#13;
trollabje, and turned himself wild on the 8,00()&#13;
people assembled finder the canvass, tearing&#13;
up the seats, smashing furniture, and making&#13;
6ad havoc generally. Women fniuted, chil-&#13;
SALISBURY'S CABINET.&#13;
THE POLITICAL DEAD-LOCK BB0KENTHE&#13;
NEW CABINET.&#13;
T h o&#13;
Other Foreign New*.&#13;
loliticnl »li?.ul-loclc in E n g l a n d&#13;
not made until some practical sabstitute could [ dren screame&lt;l, boys climbed trees, and agei^-&#13;
be matured and adopted. er u l stampede wus caused. Human life for a&#13;
The bill provide* ior al*&gt;Usi)fiiff contract Ja- j time, was seemingly at the mercy of the i,ubor,&#13;
but practieallv su! stltucs nothing Iu its furiated brute&#13;
place except to lock the prisoners in their cells&#13;
day and night, which amounts to i-olitary con&#13;
Tiie enraged elephant, after clearing the&#13;
spectators out from the canvass, made a nreak&#13;
flncmeut, after the contracts expire upon j t o r lUl- wtwds near by, and mired himself in&#13;
which they arelaboring,mitil capital is furnish&#13;
ed for a new business and it is put iu successful&#13;
operation.&#13;
Senator Belknap offered an amendment to&#13;
the bill that $50,;xi0 be appropriated for carrying&#13;
on the work on sUt" account, und Senator&#13;
BKOWII offered an amendment to the amendment&#13;
to make the amount JoOO.oOJ the latter&#13;
of which in my judgment, and according to the&#13;
experience of'the state of New York, would be&#13;
an iusutticicnt sum.&#13;
Both amendments were defeated, and there&#13;
is no appropriation that can be used for the Jmrpose except $10,001), which was set apart&#13;
or the piece system now carried on. ina limited,&#13;
way iu our prisons, which sum would not&#13;
last a'week if used to cury out the purposes of&#13;
this Dill.&#13;
It must be borne in mind that our prisons&#13;
average over 1.200 iumates, an immense fcrcc&#13;
to furnish employment for.&#13;
What, then, would we have were this bill to&#13;
become a law i A large force idle in a short&#13;
time, with no capital With-wuieh to purchase&#13;
material and the appliances necessary for carrying&#13;
along the works, establishing "agencies,&#13;
etc., and, in fact, building up an enormous&#13;
establishment, manufacturing ruauy kinds of&#13;
goods, from the commencement, without&#13;
any practical experience in such&#13;
matters.&#13;
1^4fc0 4 I t m u s t also be remembered that the present&#13;
au adjacent swamp, After much difficulty he&#13;
was extricated, with rive bullets of submission&#13;
in his hide. Amid the panic numerous limb*&#13;
were broken, aud property was lost and damaged.&#13;
Great consternation on the rfhow&#13;
grounds aud excitemeut throughout the city&#13;
prevailed fur several hours, it ai-ems a miracle&#13;
that no fatalities occurred.&#13;
His Last Circus.&#13;
Thomas McCann of ColnmbiavJllo, attended&#13;
Cole's circus in Lapeer. He started for his&#13;
home the next morning, and when near Columbiaville&#13;
he fell from the train, was run&#13;
over and both legs were amputated. McCann&#13;
died before assistance could reach him. He&#13;
had a family.&#13;
1&#13;
i i&#13;
Lowell , 1,500&#13;
Ludington 1.800&#13;
Manistee.. 3.200&#13;
Marquette 2.200&#13;
Menominee 1,600&#13;
Midland 1,400&#13;
1,400&#13;
1,500&#13;
2,100&#13;
1,400&#13;
1,800&#13;
1.600&#13;
L4W&#13;
1,700&#13;
2,000&#13;
2,10 J&#13;
1,700&#13;
1,300&#13;
-fcOObeontractors&#13;
own their business, trade "marks&#13;
and trade, none of which would be transferred&#13;
to the prison authorities. When the new system&#13;
is adopted the prison authorities must first&#13;
determine what kinds of goods thev will manufacture&#13;
and then "work up a trade," proving&#13;
1,000&#13;
1,800&#13;
l,4€0&#13;
"'1,100&#13;
1,100&#13;
1,3:0&#13;
1,300&#13;
1,500&#13;
! 1,100&#13;
1,900&#13;
1,5:0Q&#13;
1.500&#13;
1,100&#13;
1,400&#13;
1,300&#13;
21r,i»0»0 -&#13;
1,300&#13;
1,600&#13;
1,500&#13;
1,100&#13;
1,500&#13;
1,400&#13;
1.400&#13;
1,100&#13;
1,11«&#13;
1,100&#13;
1,11)1)&#13;
1,000&#13;
aiarie*fat-#8,"-&#13;
Mllford 1,100&#13;
Montague 1,200&#13;
Mt. Pleasant 1,400&#13;
Negaunee 1,500&#13;
Oscoda 1,200&#13;
Otsego 1.200&#13;
•Ovid ,&lt; 1,400&#13;
Paw Paw .,---:"... 1,400&#13;
Petoskev . . . : 1,800&#13;
Plainwell.. .&lt;..;. 1.200&#13;
Pontiac % 2.000&#13;
Portland 1,900&#13;
Qufncv 1,400&#13;
Reading. 1,200&#13;
Reed C:tv 1,500&#13;
Romeo..". 1,400&#13;
Saginaw $ 3 JO&#13;
St: Clair 1,700&#13;
St. Ignace 1,400&#13;
St. Joseph 1,700&#13;
St. Louis 1/-00&#13;
South Haven, 1.200&#13;
-Stanton 1 ,(500&#13;
Sturgis l,r&gt;00&#13;
Three Rivers 1,800&#13;
Union City 1.300&#13;
Vassar 1.200&#13;
Whitehall 1 300&#13;
White Pigeon " 1.2&lt;:0&#13;
Williamston ' 1,100&#13;
The5av4ag-thu»&#13;
JS00.&#13;
The following officers have been relegated to&#13;
the fourth class: Cassopolls, Edmore, Olivet,&#13;
Fremont, Harrison, Howard City, Kalkaskla,&#13;
Leslie, Manchester, Marshall, Morenci, Norway&#13;
and Spring Lake.&#13;
An Old Landmark Gone.&#13;
A n o t h e r a n c i e n t l a n d m a r k of Detroit,&#13;
•Of Michigan, indeed of American history, has&#13;
reached the end of its course. The Pontiac&#13;
tree is dead. For some years its virility has&#13;
been waning, and it has been known that this&#13;
interesting relic of the forest primeval and&#13;
survivor of the Bloody Pain massacre was&#13;
dying. Last year it was noticed that the end&#13;
was approaching, and the saps of his ' life have&#13;
just run out altogether. The Pontiac tree was&#13;
one of the historic trees of ^America. Its antiquity&#13;
was'demonstrate.1 by its size. Its interest,&#13;
however, came from the fact that it was&#13;
a surviving witness of one of the most melancholy&#13;
event* of the history of Michigan. It&#13;
was an old whitewor d, and in its prime a fine&#13;
looking monarch of the forest. The following&#13;
account of the event that gave the old tree it*&#13;
celebrity appeared in Harper's Magazine in&#13;
May, 1^03,in an illustrated sketch of the leading&#13;
. American historical trees:&#13;
l,3n July, 17 '3. Pontiac was encamped behind&#13;
a swamp a mile und a half north of the fort at&#13;
Detroit. Cajit. DalzeJ.I, who had arranged with&#13;
Putnam in North..r;i New York, arrived with&#13;
reinforcements at the clo«e of the month an!&#13;
obtained permission to attack Pontiac immediately.&#13;
A pei'lldion* Canal'an informed Ponitiac&#13;
and he made ready :or tip attack.&#13;
"At little past midnight Dalzeil marched to&#13;
Parent's creek. The darkness was intense. A&#13;
thousand eager cars were listening for their approach.&#13;
Five hundred dusky warriors were&#13;
lurking near the rude log bridge iu the wild&#13;
ravine'through which Parent's creek flowed.&#13;
Dal/ell's advance w'as just cros-ing the bridge&#13;
•when terrific yells in front and a blaze of musikctry&#13;
on the left »!ank revealed the presence of&#13;
tht wfly foe. Half of the advance party&#13;
were slain, and the remainder shrank back_&#13;
appalled. The main body,, advancing, .also recoiled.&#13;
There came another volley, when th'i&#13;
voice of Dalzell in the Van inspired his men.&#13;
With his followers he pushed a&lt; ross the bridge&#13;
and charged up the hill: but in tho blackness&#13;
the skulking eiietuv could" not be seen and his&#13;
•pre.senc,-' was k;iow.'j only bv the l!a+h o£ hii&#13;
guns. Word LOW readied I)a!zell that the&#13;
Indians iniarge m;m icrs had gone to cut oil&#13;
his communication with the .'orr. Hef-oundcd&#13;
a retreat and in uo id order pre- se 1 inward .Detroit,&#13;
exposed to a most perilous enfilading&#13;
fire. Day dawned wi'ii thick foir; and now for&#13;
the th&gt;t time tie enemy was si en. 'i'l cy came&#13;
darting through the r:i.&gt;t on f],n:k and rear,aud&#13;
as sudilenly di-ap;&gt;e^rcl-alter l;ring deadly&#13;
shots ur.ou the &gt;^;i«lish. O.ie of the^e slew&#13;
Capf. I)a!j5'. 11 whde he was attempting to bmr&#13;
off a wounded ser^easit. The * detachment&#13;
finally reached the fort, having lostsixtv-ono&#13;
o? their numl.or in k li. d und wounded. 'Most&#13;
of the slain fell at the 'bridge; and Parent's&#13;
Creek has ever sine.' been called, from that circumstance,&#13;
Dloody Knn. The bridge was much&#13;
"nearer the river than Jeiferson avenue, and tinhuge&#13;
tn e, sixteen fe;t in circumference, and&#13;
.scarred by the bullet•» of that battle, stood in a&#13;
thicket in a ravine between the assailants and&#13;
the assailed."&#13;
There are no surviving landmarks that are to&#13;
be compared with the old tree in historical in-&#13;
'tcTo&amp;t, c.sec()t the old Sto. Anne*? Church, I&gt;otroit,&#13;
which is itself soon to follow, full of&#13;
years and crowded with tender memories.&#13;
that they can produce go»His tna; will eojSJpete-&#13;
In the markets and llnd sale, otherwise an immense&#13;
amount of extra capital must he furnished&#13;
by tbe taxpayers to pile up goods till a&#13;
market can be found, or sell at prices that will&#13;
ruin private competition and honest labor. •&#13;
The change, »hen made, must also neoessa&#13;
GENERAL STATE ITEMS. _&#13;
There are now.Ttki prisoners in Jackson.&#13;
A huckleberry canniug institution 13 talked&#13;
of iu Rose immbn.&#13;
Cadillac has 15 saw mills, 10'shingle mills,&#13;
and live planing mills.&#13;
Michigan bicyclists hold • "meet" in Cold*&#13;
water some time in July.&#13;
The jury in the Dibbell shooting cas« at&#13;
Howell failed to agree.&#13;
The. legislature adjourned sine die with due&#13;
formality at noon JuneSO.&#13;
Edward Furnace of Chase, fell from a logging&#13;
train near Baldwin aud was killed.&#13;
George Gripton of Brighton, Lenawee county,&#13;
is the proud owner of athree-lcgged chicken.&#13;
Many thousand aeros of land in the Upper&#13;
Peninsula are iieing turned into cattle randies.&#13;
Manistee boasts of the largest salt block in&#13;
the world. Its capacity is 6J0 barrels per day.&#13;
Work has been begun on the new Mecosta&#13;
county court house, to be erected at Big Raprilybe&#13;
very gradual and of slow growth, and&#13;
will then require the best business talent in the&#13;
state to conduct it with any degree of success.&#13;
Under the prestnt law "the wardens of our&#13;
prisons, upon whom the success or failure of&#13;
ih? system would depend, are liable to be&#13;
changed every two years, an 1 their succes-ors&#13;
would probab'ly know nothing of the duties&#13;
connected wit'h such an immense establishment.&#13;
No private business cotild be succcsfully&#13;
conducted in this manner, as "every business&#13;
and laboring man knows. The convicts in our&#13;
prisons are sentenced for their terms "at hard&#13;
labor," aud unless employed, as I have said befoii',&#13;
must neccssarilv be locked in vheii: cells&#13;
day and night, which is practically solitary&#13;
confinement, and is both illegal and'i'nhuman.&#13;
Manv other , equally forcible reasons for not&#13;
preefpitating this change without first providing&#13;
the necessary capital and then laying out&#13;
and perfecting' definite plans will" suggest&#13;
themselves to every busim s-&lt; und laboring inau&#13;
who gives tbe subject cartful thought.&#13;
(Signed) A. IX. ALQBB.&#13;
After Hidden Gold.&#13;
The reigning sensation In Howard City has&#13;
been the iact tliat a party was soon to start for&#13;
New Orleans to excavate and ret lum three aud&#13;
one-half millions 01 dollars whieu it is claimed&#13;
was buried near there .-ome 70 years ago by a&#13;
baud'of pirates, The story'is as 'follows:&#13;
Laiitte. a 1 otcd pirate of Spanish origin,,had a&#13;
baud of pirates preying on vessels in the C• 11 If&#13;
of Mexico about theyuir W J : {[is headquarters&#13;
for himself and "men was on an Island&#13;
about 4.0 mi.es bclo*- New Orleans. On this&#13;
island Lafitte had erected a hncu house and&#13;
here it was that their prizes aud trophies were&#13;
brought lor secretion. Things became too&#13;
warm and risky for the pirate and his mem and&#13;
it was decided to bury the gold ami silver coucealed&#13;
in the house. "Starting from the south-!&#13;
east corner of the brick hou.-e on t jis island&#13;
aml&amp;oing so many rods in the various directions',&#13;
using the compass, so as to have the&#13;
"signs and tokens" in utter years correet, they&#13;
buried at the foot of u gigantic live oak tree,&#13;
four feet below the suriace, this unlawfully accumulated&#13;
wealth, Tlie amount buried "was&#13;
three and one-half million of dollars, composed&#13;
mostly ol Spanish gold doubloons with some&#13;
English ai.d Auu rican gold and silver. The&#13;
weight of this specie wa-i "several tons, and it&#13;
was placed in nine woodt n chests. Ill-luck&#13;
&gt;oon eame to the pirates. 'lh.;y were driven&#13;
from their haunts aud all killed, with the exception&#13;
of "one man named Autouia.&#13;
Laiitte died on tk^ Island of&#13;
Cuba. This man Antonia, three weeks&#13;
before his death in the city of New Orleans,&#13;
called to his side a tried and old time friend,&#13;
Capf. Crabtree. then commanding a vessel in&#13;
the Southern waters. Autouia related toCapt.&#13;
Crabtree the entire details of the burving of&#13;
the gold and every mark and sign by wlliciithe&#13;
place could be discovered. Witum three weeks&#13;
from this time Autouia was dead, but not until&#13;
Capl. Crabtree had had a second talk with him&#13;
about the matter so' as to be perfectly sure of&#13;
every mark and sign. Capt. LraUree'went on&#13;
a foreign cruise immediately. ;,fter Antonia's&#13;
death und lully explained to your correspondent,&#13;
a few nays ago, his reasons for his not&#13;
returning earlier lo this hidden treasure. He&#13;
luarric 1 aud had a large family and being in&#13;
reduced clreustanccs nas l.evJJr setu the day&#13;
that h? could stand the" expense oftbetrip.&#13;
Capt. Crabtree at-the present time lives twelvft&#13;
macs uorlh.'iist of Howard City. He has been&#13;
nearly blind for eighteen years, is a verv old&#13;
man in feeble heaith aud constantly led b"v an&#13;
attendant. He has been urging several prominent&#13;
business men In Howard City to advance&#13;
money for the expenses of the party to eo there&#13;
"a~niT~WafiTtfte; arrangements--were completed.&#13;
On a recent morning a pariv of four, including&#13;
Capt. Crabtree a id his eldest son, William,&#13;
started for New Orleans, where they as confidently&#13;
believe they wid unearth three and&#13;
one-La"lf millions of money a* that thev will&#13;
reach their destination. A g«,o 1 many citizens&#13;
were at the train to see the party off, and opinions&#13;
are evenly divided as to the success of the&#13;
expedition.&#13;
The New Libel Law.&#13;
T h e n e w libel law is so i m p o r t a n t to&#13;
journalists that we give it entire;&#13;
Sci'TiON 1. In anv suits brought for the&#13;
publication of a libef in any newspaper In this&#13;
state the plaintiff shall rec .v,r only actita! damages&#13;
li it .-diall appear that the puollcation was&#13;
made in good laith and did not involve a&#13;
"criminal charure, and its falsity was due to&#13;
mistake or misapprehension of the facts, and&#13;
that in the next regular issue of ?aid newspaj&gt;&#13;
er after such mistake or misapprehension&#13;
was brought to the knowledge, of the publisher&#13;
or publishers, whether before or alter suit&#13;
brought. .1 correction was published in as con-&#13;
Bpicietus a manner and place in said newspaper&#13;
as was the article sued on as libelous.&#13;
SF.C.2. In any action or suit for the publ'c.&#13;
»tion of a libel in any newspaper in this&#13;
fetatc. Ihc plaintiiTslialb not be entitled to rdin&#13;
i d s r&#13;
Manistee claims to have pine enough in that&#13;
vicinity to keep all her mills running for 20&#13;
years.&#13;
Some Jackson capitalists are abou.t or&#13;
panizing for the manufacture of the Estee&#13;
plow.&#13;
The Edison company of Detroit will furnfsh&#13;
750 lights for the northern asvium for the insane.&#13;
, Francis B/Eagwnjhas been appointed deputy&#13;
• commissioner 0: labor with headquarters in&#13;
j Detroit.&#13;
i Gen. Logan will not be able to attend the&#13;
Benton Harbor soldiers, and sailors' reunion&#13;
August 17-31. : '&#13;
John X. Wilson, aged about 55 years, suicided&#13;
at the Central hotel in Grand Kapids by&#13;
taking morphine.&#13;
Charles Sinclair of Paw Paw will meditate in&#13;
Jackson two years upon the folly of having&#13;
more than one wife. .&#13;
In Tuscola county, wheat, oats, barley and&#13;
buckwheat are looking well, but corn is much&#13;
damaged by the cut-worui.&#13;
The stockholders of the Marquette, Houghton&#13;
AOntouagou railroad will meet at Marqut'tto&#13;
to -elect directors July 10.—&#13;
has at Jas,t been broken. Lord Salisbury having&#13;
consented to form a new cabinet. All differ"&#13;
euces between the Wings and Tories were adjusted&#13;
at a meeting of the leaderj of both&#13;
parties before the announcement, v.n made&#13;
that Salisbury had formed a cabinet.&#13;
As a result of this conference and the efforts&#13;
if the Queen the Marquis of Salisbury has reioived&#13;
to accept Mr. Gladstone'* promise to&#13;
use his Influence with the Liberals to prevent&#13;
factious opposition. Lord Salisbury has announced&#13;
the formation of a cabinet with Mr.&#13;
Bourke, probably, &amp;z Chief Secretary of Ireland.&#13;
Writs have been issued for the&#13;
-e-election of the cabinet members.&#13;
The following is au authentic list of the n«w&#13;
cabinet:&#13;
Prime Minister and Secretary for Foreign&#13;
Affairs—the Marquis of Salisbury.&#13;
First Lord of the Treasury—Sir Stafford&#13;
N'ortheotc.&#13;
Chancellor of the Exchequer—Sir Michael E.&#13;
Hicks-lieHek.&#13;
Lord High Chancellor—Sir Hardinge Clifford.&#13;
Lord President of the Council—Viscount&#13;
Craubrook,&#13;
Lord of the Privy Seal—the Earl of Harrovvby.&#13;
Secretary of the Home Department—Sir&#13;
Richard Asheton-Cross.&#13;
Secretary of the Colonial Department—Col.&#13;
Frederick Stanley.&#13;
Secretary of War—Ht. Hon. Win. Honry&#13;
Smith;-&#13;
Secretary of State for Iudia—Lord Randolph&#13;
Churchill&#13;
First Lord of the Admiralty—Lord George&#13;
Hamilton.&#13;
President of the-Local OoTerument Board-&#13;
Arthur James Bellour.&#13;
President 0! the Board of Trade—The Duke&#13;
of Richmoud aud Gordon.&#13;
Vice-president of the Council—Hon. Edward&#13;
Stanhope. J&#13;
Lord Lieutenant of Ireland—Earl of Carnarvon.&#13;
Lord Chancellor of Ireland—Rt, Hon. Edward&#13;
Gibson.&#13;
The infnor offices have not yet been filled.&#13;
Gladstone bas-prombedLord- Salisbury-that&#13;
sister. Marv had put ar?"::lc in tbe enrtp. 8h«&#13;
has IHVH in the couiitv jail since Saturday last.&#13;
Until Sunduv she had" been v^ry rctle.(t»t. She&#13;
ina )e a confession of her crime Sum&#13;
admitting Mint she had poisoned a&#13;
Dubuque and also attempted the&#13;
the Frecrer family, claiming she coi&#13;
it. She hud no reason for taking their Kres,&#13;
except an impulse which sho could not eontroL&#13;
In addition to tho attemotcd pufsou'ng of tho&#13;
Krierer family, Marv Kleiner hao confessed&#13;
that the death of her mother in July hvSf itC&#13;
Dubinpie, la., that of h'-r stater in Annuel anrt&#13;
her father's death lac: March were duo lo poison&#13;
administered by her..&#13;
^y'l'ilfj MAN.V TUA'IS.&#13;
That "murder wilt out" has jn*t been&#13;
strangely verified in Henry county, Virginia.&#13;
Peter O'rius, a colored man, has Just been df&#13;
reeled there for the murder of Mr. Geoi^ff&#13;
Ponnlll twenty years ago. The dead IXMIJ )&gt;t&#13;
Mr. Poiiuill, who was among the most rrooi"-&#13;
neut citizens of the county, was found In li*&#13;
oilJcc at that time. Bv his side was tho '&gt;i»?«&gt;l&#13;
o/ thedead man. The'circumstances surrounding&#13;
the case seemed to point to suicide. TH*&#13;
theorv was accepted and never contradicted&#13;
until a few days ago, when a daughter oX4Jffcis'&#13;
came to Martinsville and admitted a u t ber&#13;
fatU*'killed Ponnlll. She d clarodltuj* botli&#13;
she aud her mother were cognisant Of tfce&#13;
crime. The father sent the daughter I P t £&#13;
from home and"had"hts sou convicted o f j ^ r t *&#13;
stealing and sent to the penitentiary. The sudden&#13;
return of the daughter alter an exile of&#13;
twenty years aud the startling confession n\m&#13;
makes "haji caused quite a sensation. Peter&#13;
Grins will be tried for murder.&#13;
r.AI) OUTLOOK FOK WINTEK WJIEAT.&#13;
Soeclal crop reports from Dakota, Minnesota,&#13;
Iowa, Nebraska. Indiana, Ohio, Michigan.&#13;
Illinois. Kansas. Missouri, Kentucky, and Tennessee&#13;
to the .American Rural HomeofBvchetter&#13;
N\ Y. gathered bv correspondents {a eVfry county,&#13;
show that the very best wheat-prMjKir&#13;
areas do 1u&gt;t promise more than bread A r o s e&#13;
in winter wlcat. The first tweaty-cBa days of&#13;
June were exceedingly trying, ami areaVthat&#13;
were thought good fe&gt;r halt a crop ore now&#13;
turning out largely cheats. All estimates of&#13;
the spring wheat yield at present Are idle conjectures.&#13;
The most conservative estimate*&#13;
point to a ten per cent decrease as compared&#13;
with U-84. Corn is doing fairly. In ho state,&#13;
however, are the prospects above the average.&#13;
West of the Missouri the whole season has been&#13;
wet; east of the Missouri, cold aud dry. The&#13;
oat crop is much larger than that "of 188(.&#13;
because lurg'i amounts of wheat lauds were put&#13;
into eat*—Oh the whole'--the acutioa is&#13;
average one.&#13;
)&#13;
CONDENSED NEWS.&#13;
A project is contemplated of building a&#13;
street railway throueh the principal street of&#13;
Adrian from the depot to the college.&#13;
Wm, McGargle fell intenorairvat at Winsor's&#13;
salt block in Port Austin and was seriously&#13;
scalded. He will probably recover.&#13;
James Schermerhorn son of thelate editor of&#13;
-the Hudson Gazette, passed both the mental&#13;
and physical examination at West Point.&#13;
Col. Stewart Ives, a prominent lumberman&#13;
of (Irand Kapids has become insane. &gt; His&#13;
properly has been taken from his contred.&#13;
Mathew YoungTagcd 19, living near Kalami.&#13;
r'.oo, went on a protracted spree a few days&#13;
ago, and ended by suicide with strychnine.&#13;
Marquette's military company has received&#13;
a complete new outfit, consisting of uniforms,&#13;
guns and equipments', from the state.&#13;
Vicksburg spiritualists will hold a camp meeting&#13;
in Frazier's grove, south of the village,&#13;
beginning August ^7 aud closing September&#13;
7. ^&#13;
The Devo coal mine, east of Jackson junction,&#13;
has been cleared of water anil the proprietors&#13;
will soon be lifting '^00 tons of coal&#13;
per day.&#13;
Some of the farmers of LconI, Jackson county,&#13;
have planted their corn three times this&#13;
summer on account of its having been&#13;
by grubs,&#13;
A Frenchman, who says he assisted Xapo&#13;
leon in his disastrous defeat at Waterloo, is&#13;
among the inmates of the Saginaw county&#13;
poorhouse.&#13;
James Catlin of West Bay City, will get $11,-&#13;
50,) damages for being erush'ed between the carsi&#13;
tie railway's application for a new trial having&#13;
bee«n denied.&#13;
he will give the new government as much time&#13;
as possible during the remainder of the session,&#13;
and is believed that no serious trouble will follow.&#13;
In addition the following are officially but&#13;
definitely announced as members of {he new&#13;
Ministry: •&#13;
Postmaster-General—Lord John Manners.&#13;
Attorney-General lor Ireland—-Mr. Holmes.&#13;
Solicitor-General for Ir-mnd—Mr. Monroe*.&#13;
Rt. Hon. Edward Gibson, besides being Lord&#13;
Chancellor of Ireland, will have a seat In the&#13;
Cabinet—an unusual- honor.&#13;
Chancellor of the Duchy of Laucaster—Ilciirv&#13;
Ciiaulin. '&#13;
" It is believed that the Rt. Hon. Sir Wm.&#13;
Hart Dyke will be Chief Secretary of Ireland.&#13;
Fir^t Commissioner of Works—lit. Hon.David&#13;
R. Plunkett.&#13;
Parliamentary Secretary to the Treasury—&#13;
Rowland Winn.&#13;
Parliamentary Secretary to the India Office-&#13;
Lord Harris.&#13;
Secretary to the Admiralty—('has. T. Ritchie.&#13;
Civil Lord of the Admiralty—Ellis Ashmead&#13;
Bartlett. ." in Richmond, near Pittsburg, by the falling of&#13;
F„ rench. t.r oops are •xrving' try—the score darry-4—t her &gt;r oi&gt;o™f. ,;»o .. in—^-^ - T ^ n *v- 'i\^.„,,&lt;., • ' J J At Pcnn's iiiiil, near E-ne. Pa., three men&#13;
were instantlv killed by the bursting of some&#13;
The Cheyenne Indians are on thewarpath*.&#13;
j Hon. R. F. Merrick, the famous Washington&#13;
lawyer, Is dead. &amp;&amp;•-:•&#13;
I Richmond, Texas, was visited by an $100,000&#13;
I Are a few days ago. ^ '"m&#13;
j 8. L. Phelps, ex-minister to Peru, dl*d at&#13;
I Lima a few efays since&#13;
t Gen. Lawtoo h:is abandoned the trail of the&#13;
I Apaches in New Mexico.&#13;
Indian outrages In Southern Oregon are becoming&#13;
alarmingly frequent.&#13;
Ex-l'nind States Minister Lowell, has ro .&#13;
turned to the Cnitcd State.''.&#13;
•James I). 1'isk of the Marine bank of New r&#13;
'York has been denied a mw trial.&#13;
A movement for the admission of New Mexico&#13;
as a state Is already under way.&#13;
French Canadian-, are raising money to da- •' *'•&#13;
fend the half-breeds at the coming trial. V •"&#13;
""A half-million dollars worth of property waa^fciF&#13;
destroyed by fire in Knoxville, Tenn., recently.&#13;
Samuel L. Burdctt of Washington, D. C. has&#13;
In'cn elected Commander-in-chief of the G.&#13;
A. R.&#13;
Two men were Instantly killed in a coal bin&#13;
In Tonquin&#13;
An explosion occurred in a powder mill near&#13;
Lucca, Italy, resulting in the death of twelve&#13;
men.&#13;
Olhctal reports state that over .'!,( 0) persons&#13;
were killed bv the 'recent cirthquakes In the&#13;
Cashmere Valley. -&#13;
Th-&gt; seals of office were formally transferred&#13;
from Gladstone to Salisbury the dav following&#13;
the founatlon of the new cabinet.&#13;
Cholera continues its dreadful ravages in the&#13;
Spanish provinces, Hundreds are dvnig dailv". I&#13;
Alxntt one&gt;-half of the eases prove fatal.' " I&#13;
The Russian government has issued :in or- 1&#13;
der forbidding the newspapers to make anv !&#13;
reference whatever to the action of "Russia iu j&#13;
Afghan affairs. j&#13;
An American who recently passed through a f&#13;
town in Asiatic Russia on trie Black sea &gt;avs&#13;
that many gnu factories are in operation&#13;
there, uueler 'sue'h names hospitals, asylums,&#13;
etc.&#13;
Charles Warnir Adams and Miss Mildred j&#13;
C ilcridge, daught r of the lord cnief justice of ;&#13;
England, were 'marr.ed recei t.y. Lord Col- I&#13;
eridge was asked by Lis daught.r to attend tne&#13;
wedding, but reluscd. " I&#13;
r The marquis of Salisbury has telegraphed .&#13;
eaten Gen. Wolseley in Egypt that he is in full |&#13;
sympathy with his views regarding the with- !&#13;
drawal of the British troops from the Soudan, i&#13;
but that thegovernmen: is unable, for various&#13;
reasons, to continue the expedition.&#13;
„The body washed ashore near Forest, Ont.&#13;
- ^ ' " • " ' • ' • ' ' - u t y&#13;
on the&#13;
was that ot* II ink I'arrington, the.Io.^co county I "/U PP"U '8 i n t n '' tl-''st olcoinaigarine&#13;
murde'rer. His remains were buried on the ! A"L'&gt;' s t a t c ' ,Ui i t ''that case (the people vs.&#13;
Canadian sieie.&#13;
J. E&#13;
home&#13;
pnlvrebel ennon of the Isthmian war&#13;
packed in his trunk. «k&#13;
GENERAL NEWS.&#13;
DISSATISFIED DAIUYMEX.&#13;
The dairy men of New York state are not&#13;
satisfied with trie recent decision-of the court&#13;
ease.&#13;
Farx) was not'a test ease ai all, but a" bogus&#13;
Seeord a Port Huron man has rpr»m*«l' s a i t «o l t o i i , UP by t l u ' oleiimargariue manulao&#13;
^w ^ .y&gt;,.{« oxoSrw^ r11^0m^ afa^na^mla .whithl \th^e r pn U*s b c { 1 ao^nl «lhsc,t (o.OnIeJr to of f thaeniprc uol .ws n u pnounm bae r ^an.d&#13;
tented statement of facts, wh:c!i did not exist&#13;
n T v, * *.v •* ^ m -.,- ._, , In the ca-e at all, and with no evidence offered&#13;
• C. J. KInter of ths patentoffice, ^ ashington,' on the part of the people to counteract i t "&#13;
will hold an examination of candidates for I n i m u ' f , , „ . , • „ , „ . ,.&#13;
fourth assistant examiner in the U. S., patent! , 0 B 0 M ' r j I OK l i l B °' A&gt; n'&#13;
office, on July 2. at Ann Arbor. I In "'9 annual address before the secret cx-&#13;
Ex-President Durgin of Hillsdale, nrelectcd ^cutivo session of the G. A. R., in Portland,&#13;
to make a return of'marriages performed dur- Maine, the Commander-in-chief said that on&#13;
ing his administration, and he Las been fined March 31, 1885, there were 'Jti:),0S4 members of&#13;
¢5 and costs for the dereliction.&#13;
Fred Moss of Owo.-so, thinks he Is tbe solo&#13;
surviving heir to the $10,000;00'J estate ol&#13;
~th'e~oi,ganizatloii, und&#13;
baianeo on hand of $ir&gt;.yC4.&#13;
trm-t thrre was-a- cash-&#13;
H.1 said that a&#13;
Robert Moss Bart of London, Eng., and will&#13;
soon begin litigation to establish his claim,&#13;
The wat; r works strike in Lansing is ended,&#13;
most of the men accepting the contractor's tiffspecial&#13;
committee had IXJ n appointed to lay&#13;
inc. nature ami workings o: the Grand Army&#13;
before the proper ( atl.olicauthorities, and that&#13;
asaurunceshad been receive 1 Jrom Archbishops&#13;
^ Gibbons and Ryan that no hii:g 111 the aims of&#13;
urea of ¢1 30 per day'for 1:) hours'work, V'fb the soeiety prevented good Cilnolics from beno&#13;
ati.nt, or piece woVk at llvec'ents per loot. coming members, lie al 0 deprecated particl-&#13;
Mrs. 1 etta Ltwcnstein of Lapeer, has filed n j^tiem iu jiolitics is au organ ;zat. on. San&#13;
claim as an heir to the $(50,000,00.) Levi-Weil Francisco was selected as th ' place for holding&#13;
estate now in chancery in Germany, There are l ^ e U(-&gt;xt annual cncampmeaL.&#13;
n'HS applications ahead of Mrs. Lowcnstciu's.&#13;
In ttic ca^c of Eugene Sa's'mrv, charge 1&#13;
with murder in the kiding of Pete-r Milltr at&#13;
Union City, the jury after being out all day&#13;
brought in a verdiciof guilty of manslaughter.&#13;
Aim'.'.l white worm is working mischief, in&#13;
corn in .several counties. If lodges in the&#13;
young shoot above the ground, and it is onlv&#13;
by the most careful search that it cau be found".&#13;
Charles E. St. John of Hillsdale, a graduate&#13;
of the normal in '7tj, has been appointed bv tne&#13;
machinery.&#13;
Director of the mint, Burchnrd, savs le will&#13;
not resign, and IWOJKJSC- t&lt;&gt; test the power of&#13;
the Preddent to r move 1.1ns.&#13;
•Two members of the Illinois legislature are&#13;
accused of serious crimes, one e&gt;f an attempt at,&#13;
bribery aud the other of rape.&#13;
A collision on the Wabash railroad, near&#13;
Woodstock, Mo., resulted in the death of twi»&#13;
men. The conductor's wat.h was too slow,&#13;
hence the collision.&#13;
The falling olf in treasure receipts for the&#13;
past year has been greater than at Jirst supposed,&#13;
otving to the increased expenditures for&#13;
pensions. The surplus fund is about $:20,000,-&#13;
000 instead of $3U,OiX),000.&#13;
The collections of internal revenue for tho&#13;
first II months of the present fiscal year were&#13;
#10:1.(:97,104, against fl rJ,;r,T,i!oS for'the same&#13;
period last year. The rec&lt;- ]&gt;rs for Mav wcra&#13;
*l,!&gt;S^f;2il less than for May 1N.S4.&#13;
Ilemry A. Mvers of Baltimore, eonvfrted of&#13;
cruelly beating his wife, a.tec au .unsuccessful&#13;
ellort to is -ape piinishment through 1 he-court&#13;
of append, received his :3.) lashes at the hands&#13;
of tne sheriff, lit; bore the infliction well.&#13;
The dufy of placing the seal on the United w States notes, etc., has been transferred -fr«|J^&#13;
the Bureau of Engraving and Printing to Ike&#13;
Treasurer's office, with the object of insuring&#13;
greater security iu the completion and Issue of&#13;
the notes.&#13;
The Sioux Chief Sitting Bull was in Washington&#13;
recently and sought an interview with&#13;
the President, The executive was too busy*&#13;
however, to more than thakc baud., with the&#13;
son of the forest,-whereupon :he latter became&#13;
very angry.&#13;
Speaking of the Importation of Boston dependent&#13;
ctiildren into.this state, BishopOOW&#13;
pie thinks the idea of taking dependent cfci&#13;
dren from other states to care for wfeaa-we&#13;
have so many in our own state needing home*,&#13;
and just as likely to prove satisfactory, is.&#13;
wrong.&#13;
Mrs. John Wood of Clinton, Canada, a frisky&#13;
dame of 67 summers, eloped with Wm. Bradleyagerl&#13;
21. The loving couple were arrested in&#13;
Toledo. They took with them about $100 of&#13;
Mr. Wood's money, but consoled him by leaving&#13;
him the 12 children that called Mrs. Wood&#13;
mother.&#13;
I&#13;
» ..,&#13;
A STATEMENT e&gt;F EXPORTS.&#13;
The Chief of the Bureau of Statistics reports&#13;
that the total valuers of the export* from the&#13;
United States of dome'stie' &lt; attic, hogs, beef,&#13;
pork and dairy products during the monJh;of&#13;
May, 1SST), and during" the live months ended&#13;
May SI. l&amp;'o, also of heef and pork products&#13;
during the seven months ending Mav iJl, 1^85,&#13;
ascoMjKired with similar iXjioru during the&#13;
t'orresponding periods of the preceding year&#13;
weve as follows: May, lSM,¥7.2d2,G72;'Miiy,&#13;
cover, in addition to aUittl damigtn, any&#13;
greater sum than Jlntthottm&gt;td do tart.&#13;
Sue. 3. Tbe words -'actual damages" In the&#13;
C. H. C. Rynd, the postal clerk who was re- S l I E COULDN'T j i £ n « IT.&#13;
leased from the Detroit house of correction un- ' Mary Kleiner, aged 19, has been held to the&#13;
oer the recent decision ot tne mpr'erne court, -criminal court of TtfvaBaton, 111., charged with&#13;
was at once re-arrestod, charged with the same au attempt to poison the family of ^Michael&#13;
offense. ^ Freerur ox Hosehill. Mrs. Fro.ivr la Mary's&#13;
Thejr&#13;
A temporary arrahgemerit~haRT)ccn cffeeteoT&#13;
between the United States and Canada bv&#13;
which the terms of the fishery treaty of 1881*.&#13;
which would by limitation have expired July 1,&#13;
be continued until the close of the present&#13;
season. The subject will be brought before&#13;
congress at. its next session and apcrnMUteati&#13;
agreement effected. ' .^&#13;
A freight train on the Indianapolis, Delator&#13;
A Springlield railroad at North Salem, twenty*&#13;
six miles west of Indianapolis, knocked un unknown&#13;
woman and two children, aged 9 and 13&#13;
vears respectively, oil a twenty foot trestle,&#13;
killing them all. Tne woman lived some time&#13;
and said her name was Sarah Wilson.&#13;
wire evidently tramp*.&#13;
J. C. "Forbes, a celebrated Canadian artist,&#13;
was attacked with bemorrage from the nose a&#13;
few days ago and bled to death. Mr; Forbes&#13;
had been suffering from catarrh. To obtain&#13;
relief he tnjected.lb.to Ids nostrils a patent medicine,&#13;
which so ate away the cove ting of tho&#13;
arteries of the nose thatt hey burst, at d all efforts,&#13;
of his medical attendants to check the&#13;
.flow of bl od failed.&#13;
A.waterspout burst over Longvirw, Texas,&#13;
the otherattcmoon, doinjjabemt 5d.000damage.&#13;
Its main force was spent em the fields adjoining.&#13;
In some parts of the town streams of&#13;
water six feet deep ran down the streets. After&#13;
the storm had passed innumerable fish were&#13;
found In the fields and streets None of the&#13;
fish were less-than four inches long aud hundreds&#13;
ol them were eiglA inches.&#13;
«&#13;
*N X&#13;
- 3 ^&#13;
s&#13;
* •'»&#13;
A \ N&#13;
N&#13;
iiTL&gt;.^-^ *! *»*•&#13;
131 TBI DfcfcP WOODS.&#13;
rin*-time in my eoul to-day,,&#13;
of peace I seldom reach,&#13;
solemn woods my footsteps ptray,&#13;
brooks have voices and the shadows&#13;
speech.&#13;
Silent u one who treads dark minster aisles,&#13;
I wander onward r&gt;a-t those leafy shrines,&#13;
"While sunset thro' green casements softly,,&#13;
smiles U'&#13;
And awing* Its rosy censer mid the pines.&#13;
Fir overhead the beech trees' spreading net&#13;
Lets la faint glimpses of the sky's blue roof;&#13;
Tbo tired leaves, dyed scarlet by sunset,&#13;
Fall tangled Jh tho brown earth's dusky woof.&#13;
I hear the young brook whisper to the leaves,&#13;
And mark Its scattered sliver on the most;&#13;
In dreamy air the spider deftiy weaves&#13;
A filmy sail for idle winds to toss.&#13;
1 pause beside the altars of the trees,&#13;
Where iucense floats from everv buddiag&#13;
spray,&#13;
AaAHw some distant sighing of the seas,&#13;
i o t M tiie toft wind-hurps waking far awmy.&#13;
Tfee sjfffCemB as a chrlic*. and Us rim&#13;
I* OSwfloncil by sunlight's yellow wine,&#13;
A S M . some falling shadows coftly dim&#13;
. aj^e mystery of its coloring divine.&#13;
IIWHB thft vagtie, sweet odor of tlw trrans,&#13;
W«rcrfmnc of past sifirntf-tinicsceniG again,&#13;
Aa4 every breesu that down the gfeuies doth&#13;
pus,&#13;
Bears whispers of the silvery, summer Tain.&#13;
In these deep woods immortal yearnings ^nakft&#13;
The cures &lt; f &gt;i's!erday bctixne as rbeanB;&#13;
.All lessiir thingH my soul would e'er (forsake&#13;
To liacer here, 'where such enchantment&#13;
Whet'Witt in wani1?r from the world •set free,&#13;
To led tbe sofr air blow upon my face;&#13;
Oh! unmcto* rapture, he who knows not, thee&#13;
H'Jth never known life's one supremest grace.&#13;
The leaves and flowers a-e poems, every brook&#13;
That laves the slim stalk of some bendlug&#13;
reed,&#13;
Is hut a sentence hi that wondrous hook&#13;
Where Gcuius Hods its itrand, eternal creed.&#13;
Here Nature walcos atout her haunts divine&#13;
F**r swe t r anMiems than earih'a feeble&#13;
hymns,&#13;
Wh-'t 8ivam5 aerial haunt th« dusky pine.&#13;
Whoa* blacKt'Ded Suhde.tho star "oi evening&#13;
dims.&#13;
All bettor, nobler forlhurs come oire more&#13;
To 1 mrt't with me HS I wander t ere,&#13;
Like shi| s returning from :i brighter shore, "«&#13;
I ]»reet them with '.be *ik&gt;ure of a tear.&#13;
Fldu. would i dwell forever here alone&#13;
In these grea* woo'is nnnoted and forgot,&#13;
Anererla-liT)^ calm tit-otr me thrown,&#13;
-The stars of eve to seutini'i ihe spot.&#13;
I would not hear the far off -city's hum,&#13;
The tumult-* of tlie outside li'e should cease,&#13;
To th-s dim refuge naught (should nvercome&#13;
To. mar the Uit-eful perleciness of peace.&#13;
Oh. song immortal; ah. divitu^t fong!&#13;
Where shall I ihid thee, if it b.« not licre?&#13;
I will no m»re r-turn unto the '.hrong;&#13;
Here will 1 lvst and d-.-cm thee ever near.&#13;
Th-'j woods shnl! \ !eld their secrets unto me,&#13;
I he s'&lt;y smile softly thro' there leafy bars&#13;
Whilst evermore my ie-.-t shall follow ihee&#13;
Up putiiways leading to a land of stars.&#13;
—Elvira Stdun Miller, in The Current.&#13;
FOURTH COUSINS.&#13;
$ • •4&#13;
IH the_early somruer of 1860 I went&#13;
upon a visit lo a distant relative of&#13;
inine who lived in one of the Shetland&#13;
Inlands. It was early summer with&#13;
myself then; I was a medical student&#13;
with life al! before me—life and hope,&#13;
and joy and sorrow as well. I went&#13;
north with the intention of working&#13;
hard, and took quite a small library&#13;
with me; there was nothing in the&#13;
shape of study I did not mean to do,&#13;
and to drive at; tlic flora of the Ultima&#13;
Thule, its fauna and geology, too, to&#13;
say nothing of chemistry and therapeutics.&#13;
So much for goodintentions, but&#13;
—I may as well confess it as not—I&#13;
never once opened my huge box of&#13;
books during the five months Hived at&#13;
R , and if 1 studied at all it was&#13;
from tho book of nature, which is open&#13;
to every one who cares to con its&#13;
pages.&#13;
The steamboat (landed mo at Lerwick,&#13;
and I completed my journey,&#13;
with my boxes, next day in an open&#13;
boat.&#13;
It was a very coW morning, with a&#13;
gray, cold, choppy-sea on, the spray&#13;
from which dashed over the boat, wetting&#13;
mo thoroughly, and making rae&#13;
(feeY pinched, blear-eyed and miserable,&#13;
e l e v e n envied the seals I saw cosily&#13;
Mleep in dry, sandy caves, at&#13;
the foot of the black and beetling&#13;
rocks.&#13;
How very fantastic those rooks were,&#13;
but cheerless, so cheerless! Even the&#13;
sea-birds that circled_around them&#13;
seemed screaming a dirgo. An opening-&#13;
in a wall of rock took us at length&#13;
into a long, winding nord, or arm of&#13;
^&lt;ho sea, with green bare fields on every&#13;
•kUk, and wild, weird-like sheep that&#13;
gazed on us for a moment, then^jreiUcd&#13;
and fled. Right at the end of ibis-rock&#13;
stood my friend's house, comfortable&#13;
and solid-looking, but unsheltered by&#13;
a single treo.&#13;
" I shan't stay long here," I said to&#13;
myself, as I landed.&#13;
An hour or two afterward I had&#13;
changed my mind edtirely. 1 was&#13;
"seated in a charmingly and eosily fur-.&#13;
nished drawing-room upstairs. The&#13;
windows looked out to and away&#13;
across the broad, Atlantic. How&#13;
-**•: •tfange it was; for '(he loch that had&#13;
id me to the -front of the house, ami&#13;
.fce waters of which rippled up and&#13;
«|own the very lawn, was part of the&#13;
German ocean, and here at the back,&#13;
I and not a stone's throw distant, was&#13;
jthe Atlantic! Its greal, green, dark&#13;
J billows rolled up and broke into foam&#13;
' against the black breastwork of cliffs&#13;
beneath u&gt;\ The immense depth of&#13;
its waves could be judged of by keeping&#13;
the eye fixed upon tho tall/steeplcliko&#13;
rocks which shot up hero am!&#13;
there through the water a little way&#13;
out to sea—at one moment these would&#13;
appear like lofty spires, and next they&#13;
would bo almost eutiruly swallowed&#13;
OP.&#13;
Beside the tire, in an easy chair, sat&#13;
my gray haired old relation and host,&#13;
find not far oft' his wife Hospitable,&#13;
- warm-hearted and gonial both of them&#13;
wore. If marriages really are nmirein&#13;
heaven. I could not help thinking&#13;
theirs must have: boon, so mwoh did&#13;
they seem eaeh on tier's counterpart&#13;
Presently Cousin Maggie entered,&#13;
smiling to me as she did so; her left&#13;
hand lingered fondly for a moment on&#13;
her father's gray locks, then she sat&#13;
down unbidden to the piano.&#13;
On the strength of my blood relationship,&#13;
distant though it was, for&#13;
we were really only third or fourth&#13;
cousins, I was made a member of this&#13;
family from the first, and Maggie&#13;
treated me as a brother. I was not&#13;
entirely pleased with the latter arrangement,&#13;
because many days had&#13;
not passed ere* I concluded it would&#13;
be a pleasant pastime for me to make&#13;
love to Cousin Maggie. But weeks&#13;
went by, and my love making was&#13;
still postponed; it became a sine die&#13;
kind of a probability. Maggie was&#13;
constantly with mo when out of doors&#13;
—my companion in all my fishing and&#13;
shooting trips. But she carried not&#13;
only a rod but even a ride herself; she&#13;
could give mt» lessons in casting the&#13;
ivy—and did; she of ten shot dead the&#13;
seals that I had merely wounded, and&#13;
her prowess in rowing astonished me,&#13;
and her daring in venturing so far to&#13;
sea in our broad, open boat, often&#13;
made me tremble for our safety.&#13;
A frequent visitor lor the first two&#13;
months of my stay at II was a&#13;
young and well to do farmer and fisher&#13;
who came in his boat from a neighboring&#13;
island, always accompanied by his&#13;
sister and they usually stayed a day or&#13;
two. I was not long in perceiving that&#13;
this Mr. Thorforth wa« deeply in lore&#13;
with my cousin; the stato of her feeling&#13;
toward him it was some time before&#13;
I could fathom, but the revelation&#13;
came at last and quite unexpectedly.&#13;
There was an old ruin some distance&#13;
from the house, where, one lovely&#13;
moonlight night, I happened to be&#13;
soated alone.----1 was not atone, however;&#13;
from a window I could see my&#13;
cousin and Thorfoxlh—craning toward&#13;
the place, and thinking to surprise&#13;
them, I drew back under the shadow&#13;
of a portion of the wall. But I was&#13;
not to be an actor in that scene, though&#13;
it was one I shall never forget. I&#13;
could not see his face, but hers, on&#13;
which the mooabeams fell, was pained,&#13;
half-frightened, impatient. He was&#13;
pleading his cause, he was telling the&#13;
old, old story, with an earnestness and&#13;
eloquence I had never heard surpassed.&#13;
She stopped it at last.&#13;
"Oh! Magnus,"" she cried. wOh!&#13;
Magnus Thorforth, I never dreamed it&#13;
would come to this! Oh! what grief&#13;
you cause me, my poor Magnus, mv&#13;
poor Magnus, my more than friend!'1&#13;
What more was said need not DO&#13;
told. In a few moments he was gone,&#13;
and she was kneeling on the green&#13;
sward, just-on the spot where KG had&#13;
left her, her hands clasped, and her&#13;
face upturned to heaven.&#13;
Next day, Magnus Thorforth went&#13;
sadly away: even his sister looked&#13;
sad/ She must have known it all I&#13;
never &gt;aw them again.&#13;
One day, about a month after this,&#13;
Maggie and i wore together in a cave&#13;
close by the ocean—a favorite haunt&#13;
of ours on hot afternoons. Our boat&#13;
was drawn up close by. The day was&#13;
bright and the sea calm, its tiny wavelets&#13;
making drowsy, dreamy music on&#13;
tho yellow sands.&#13;
She had been reading aloud, and I&#13;
was gazing at hor face.&#13;
" I begin to think you are beautiful,"&#13;
I said.&#13;
She looked down at me where I lay&#13;
with those innocent eyes of hers that&#13;
always looked into mine as frankly as&#13;
a child's would.&#13;
"I'm not sure," I continued, "that I&#13;
shan't commeneo making love to you,&#13;
and perhaps J might marry you. What&#13;
would you think of thatP"&#13;
"Love!" she laughed, as musically&#13;
-as a sea-nymph* "love?...Love betwixt&#13;
a cousin and a cousin? Propos&#13;
terous!"&#13;
"I dare say." I resumed, pretending&#13;
to pout, "you wouldn't marry me because&#13;
I'm poor.*'&#13;
"Poor!" she repeated, looking very&#13;
firm and earnest now. "If the man I&#13;
loved were poor I'd carry a creel for&#13;
him. I'd gather -shells for his sake;&#13;
but I don't love anybody and don't&#13;
mean to, Comei!"&#13;
So that was the beginning and the&#13;
end of my love-making with Cousin&#13;
Maggie.&#13;
And Maggie had said she had never&#13;
meant to love anyone. Well, we never&#13;
can tell what may be in our immediate&#13;
future.&#13;
Hardly had we left the cave that day,&#13;
and put oil from the shore, ere cats'-&#13;
paws began «to ruffle the water. They&#13;
came in-from t.he west, and before we&#13;
had got halfway to the distant headland,&#13;
a steady breeze was blowing.&#13;
We had hoisted our sail and were running&#13;
beforcTitr wltlrtinrspeed of a gull&#13;
on the witig.&#13;
Once round f-lio point we had a beam&#13;
wind till we entered the. fiord, then we&#13;
had to beat to windward all the way&#13;
home, by which time it was blowing&#13;
quite a gale.&#13;
, It went round more to tho north&#13;
alxmt sunset, and then, for tho first&#13;
time, we noticed a yacht of small dimensions&#13;
on the distant horrizon. Her indention&#13;
appeared to be that of rounding&#13;
the island and pyobably anchoring on&#13;
the lee sido-of it. She was in an ugly&#13;
position, however, and wo all watched&#13;
her anxiously til! nightfall hid her&#13;
from our view.&#13;
I retired earlvN bwt sleep was out of&#13;
the question, for the wind raged and&#13;
howled around the house like wild&#13;
wolves. About 12 o'clock tho sound&#13;
of a gun fell on my ears. I could not&#13;
be mistaken, for the window rattled in&#13;
sharp response&#13;
1 sprang from my couch and began&#13;
*•&gt; dro.-,1-1, nml. ininii'diatnly after, my&#13;
looked younger and taller than I had&#13;
seen him, but very serious.&#13;
"The yacht is on the Ba," ho said&#13;
solemnly.&#13;
They were words to me of fearful&#13;
significance. The yacht, I knew, must&#13;
soon break up, and uothing could save&#13;
the crew.&#13;
I quickly followed my relative into&#13;
the back drawing-room, where Mag=&#13;
gie was with her mother. We gazed&#13;
out into the night, out and across the&#13;
sea. At the same moment, out there&#13;
on the terrible Ba, a blue light sprang&#13;
up, revealing the yacht and even its&#13;
peonle on board. She was leaning&#13;
well over to one side, her masts gone,&#13;
and the spray dishing over her.&#13;
"Come," cried Maggie, "there is&#13;
no time to loose. We can guide their&#13;
boat to the cave. Come, cousin!"&#13;
I felt dazed, thunderstruck. Was I&#13;
to take part in a forlorn hopeP Was&#13;
Maggie—how beautiful and darling&#13;
she looked now—to assume the robe of&#13;
a modern Grace DarlingP So it appeared.&#13;
' ~'&#13;
The events of that night came back&#13;
to my memory now as it they had happened&#13;
but yesterday. It is a page in my&#13;
past life that can never be obliterated.&#13;
We pulled out the fiord, Maggiu&#13;
and I, and up under the lee of the Island,&#13;
then, on rounding the point, we&#13;
encountered the whole force of tho&#13;
sea and wind. There was a glimmering&#13;
light on the wrecked yacht, and&#13;
for that we rowed, or rather were&#13;
borne along on the gale. No boat save&#13;
a Shetland skiffcould have been trusted&#13;
in such a sea.&#13;
As we nearcd the Ba, steadying herself&#13;
by leaning on my shoulder, Maggie&#13;
stood half up and waved' the lantern,&#13;
and it was answered from the&#13;
wreck. Next moment it seemed to&#13;
me we were on the lee side, and Maggie&#13;
herself bailed the shipwrecked&#13;
people.&#13;
"We cannot come nearer," she&#13;
x r i e d r "lower your boat and. follow&#13;
our light closely."&#13;
"Take the tiller, now," she continued,&#13;
addressing me, "and steer for the&#13;
light you see on the cliff. Keep her&#13;
well up, though, or all will be lost."&#13;
We waited-+-and that with difficulty&#13;
— for a few minutes—till wo saw by&#13;
the starlight that the yacht's boat was&#13;
lowered, then away we went.&#13;
The light on the cliff-top moved&#13;
slowly down"the wind. I kept the&#13;
boat's head a point or two above it,&#13;
and on she dashed. The rocks loomed&#13;
black and high as we neared them, the&#13;
waves breaking in terrible turmoil beneath.&#13;
Suddenly the light was lowered over&#13;
tho cliff down to the very water's&#13;
edge.&#13;
"Steady now," cried my brave&#13;
cousin, and the next moment we were&#13;
round a point and into smooth svater,&#13;
with the yacht's boat close beside us,&#13;
The place Was partly cave, partly&#13;
"noss." We. beached our boats and&#13;
here we remained all night, and were&#13;
all rescued next morning by a fisherman's&#13;
yawl.&#13;
The "yacht's people were the captain,&#13;
his wife and one boy—Norwegians&#13;
all, Brinster by name.&#13;
My story is nearly done. What&#13;
need to tell of the gratitude of those&#13;
whom Maggie's heroism had saved&#13;
from a watery grave?&#13;
But it came to pass that when, a few&#13;
months afterward, a beautiful new&#13;
jacht came round to tho fiord to take&#13;
those shipwrecked mariners away,&#13;
Cousin Maggie went with them on "a&#13;
cruise.&#13;
It came to pass also that when I&#13;
paid my very utixt visit to R , in&#13;
the following summer, I found living&#13;
at ray relatives house a Major Brinster&#13;
and a Mrs. Brinster.&#13;
And Mrs. Brinster was my Cousin&#13;
Maggie, and Major Brinster was my&#13;
Cousin Maggie's "fate."— Gordon&#13;
[DiCS*&#13;
The Happy Men in Hospitality.&#13;
The Canadian, as any one will admit&#13;
who has been his guest, possesses ifl7&#13;
an eminent and most enjoyable degree&#13;
the virtue of hospitality. l a him/are&#13;
happily blended the best characteristics&#13;
of the Englishman and the American.&#13;
Tho Englishman, hearty as the&#13;
welcome which he extends to a guest,&#13;
still compasses his house and his heart&#13;
roundabout with barriers of reserve&#13;
and suspicion, which it is not always&#13;
easy to surmount, or to throw down.&#13;
The American on the other hand, for&#13;
all his prompt courtesies* and willingness&#13;
to oblige and to entertain, is&#13;
often apt to carry what we might call&#13;
the hotel and business atmosphere into&#13;
his acquaintanceships. He entertains&#13;
royally, but it often seems as if ho&#13;
grudged the time and the personal attention-&#13;
which are requisite in order&#13;
that the guest may enjoy himself to&#13;
the utmost. The Canadian, as we&#13;
have already said, Mends in a hanpy&#13;
measure^the best traits of his British&#13;
progenitor^ind his American ueighbor.&#13;
—Philuddphia^kgnrd.&#13;
jytSCTPUN'ft IS TfTHlfATT.&#13;
Commoduie Uolliu«' Amusing Sulrctltate for&#13;
Floss jrlnjrs.&#13;
•'Veritas," in a hater to The Bun,&#13;
supplies the following interesting romini&#13;
«cences of the lute Commodore&#13;
llollins, who was the first officer to&#13;
put in force the new system of punishing&#13;
insubordinate seamen after the&#13;
abolition of flogging in the United&#13;
States navy. The letter, suggested by&#13;
reading a condensation of Commander&#13;
Farquhar's prize essay before the navaKinstitut*&#13;
v which was published in&#13;
The Sun of April 6, is as follows:&#13;
On reading an article in this morning's&#13;
i&gt;sue of 27ie Sun discussing a&#13;
fnze essay by Commander Farquhar,&#13;
recalled an epbode in tho life of the&#13;
late Commodore Hollins that I think&#13;
will be of interest to those who remember&#13;
that gallant officer and excellent&#13;
seaman.&#13;
Some time between the years 1848&#13;
and 1850 the navy department sent&#13;
circulars to all the senior officers of&#13;
the navy, asking their opinions and&#13;
sentiments as to abolishing corporal&#13;
punishment in the navy, and suggestions&#13;
as to the best methods of improving&#13;
the condition of the sailors in&#13;
tho government employ. Three officers&#13;
only advocated the abolition of&#13;
corporal punishment, or, as it used to&#13;
be termed, ".flogging," in the navy.&#13;
They were Capt. SlcKeever, Capt.&#13;
Levy, and (then) Commander Hollins.&#13;
Commander Hollin*. than whom no&#13;
oilicer ever had better discipline when&#13;
in command of men, urged the abolition&#13;
of flogging, and at the same time&#13;
commutation of the spirit ration, giving&#13;
the men money instead of grog.&#13;
At that time he was stationed at"Pensacola.&#13;
His suggestions caused both&#13;
to be chaffed by his brother officers,&#13;
who thought the service would go to&#13;
the "d—1" if flogging and grog were&#13;
done away with. He bore their laughter&#13;
and jokesrwith his unvarying amk&#13;
ability and good humor; but remained&#13;
in a woful minority. _&#13;
In 1852 he was detached from the&#13;
naval station in Florida. In the meantime&#13;
the law had been passed by congress&#13;
abolishing whipping in the navy.&#13;
Hollins came north. A sioop-of-&gt;&#13;
w*ar (I think the Cyane) was at that&#13;
time being fitted out for sea. Although&#13;
the law had been passed* there&#13;
was no substitute enacted for the*&#13;
proper enforcement of discipline, and&#13;
many of Hollins' brother officers suggested&#13;
to the secretary of the navy&#13;
that he should be sent in command of&#13;
tho sloop, on the ground that Hollins&#13;
advocated "no flogging," and they&#13;
were curious to see how he would get&#13;
on without it. He received orders at&#13;
once, and with his usual promptitude&#13;
proceeded to take command of the&#13;
first man-of-war (I imagine) that ever&#13;
went to sea without rules and regulations.&#13;
Shortly after the vessel had&#13;
sailed the officer of the day appeared&#13;
in the cabin with tho report that one&#13;
of the seamen was openly insubordinate,&#13;
and refused positively to do his&#13;
duty. The officer retired, and" Captr&#13;
Hollins remained in thought as to.&#13;
what measures he should adop^^HTs&#13;
ready wit soon suggested .^wrtJxperiment.&#13;
He went on deck and ordered&#13;
the delinquent to his presence. The&#13;
man appeased, a healthy, hardy-looking&#13;
fellow of fine physique and in full&#13;
vigor. 7&#13;
"Well, my m a n / ' said Hollins, " I&#13;
hoar you do not want to work; are you&#13;
sick?* /&#13;
"No, sir," /&#13;
"What, we)i, and not want to do&#13;
your work?'/&#13;
•Oh, you 'must be ill. Quartermaster,&#13;
"/called Hollins—the quartermaster&#13;
was there. "Take this man&#13;
and carry him below. Put him to bed&#13;
carefullv, tuck him in; don't let him&#13;
catch cold; p^ut a screen around his cot&#13;
ana place »» sentry, and see that he is&#13;
riot disturbed. He does not like work&#13;
nor exertion. Feed him yourself; put&#13;
a napkin under his chin, keep him&#13;
warm and comfortable, but by—nomeans&#13;
lot h^aTTx^i^trraaaelf."&#13;
The who/e ship's c r e w \ e r e on the&#13;
alert to sed\what was to bW the result&#13;
of this (uo doubt) test case. The man,&#13;
W., I will call him, was (Sscorted below,&#13;
and the captain's /orders were&#13;
carried out to a l e t t e r . / W. was put&#13;
to bed, tucked in. fed T&gt;y the quartermaster,&#13;
his meals served on a waiter,&#13;
and tended with great care. He was&#13;
also screened from view, but the men&#13;
were seen getting on gun-carriages or&#13;
anything else, peeping from a distance&#13;
to get a glimpse of the invalid. Had&#13;
severe measures been adopted he&#13;
would have had the sympathy and&#13;
support of the crew, but*this treatment&#13;
excited ridicule and amusement, not&#13;
sympathy for suffering or a feeling&#13;
tjiat their *niessittute was.a martyr to&#13;
tyranny an doppression. Thus "matters&#13;
rested for perhaps thirty-six hours.&#13;
At the expiration of that time, when&#13;
From that day there was no insubordination&#13;
on board that ship, and on&#13;
more than one occasion when any ono&#13;
of the men in the watch was suspected&#13;
of n desire to skulk some of his mess-,&#13;
mates were overheard saying, "You'd&#13;
better look out; the 'old man will put&#13;
you to bed."&#13;
It was an experiment that acted admirably,&#13;
and was always a source of&#13;
great satisfaction to Capt. Hollins, a&amp;&#13;
it proved to him that men could be&#13;
governed by other means than flogfjing.&#13;
On another occasion, when Holms&#13;
went on board to take command&#13;
of another ship, and while being shown&#13;
around, he saw a mysterious-looking&#13;
concern, and said: "What's this!'&#13;
"A sweat-box."&#13;
" A what?" he asked. VA sweatboxP&#13;
Open the door." He looked in,&#13;
perhaps got in, and then said: "Call&#13;
the carpenter." " The carpenter came.&#13;
"Knock that thing down and throw it&#13;
overboard," said he. It was done at&#13;
once. " J a c k " was looking on, and&#13;
the incident had its effect on those&#13;
hardy, brave, and often ill-used sons&#13;
of Neptune, for there was little or no&#13;
trouble on that cruise. Doubtless&#13;
Capt. Farquhar's suggestions will have&#13;
most excellent effects if carried out,&#13;
for, as he says, the men must be educated&#13;
and trained, and, if this is done,&#13;
success will be the result.—Baltimore&#13;
Hun, _&#13;
The Tyrant, Habit*&#13;
The Lmperor William is a man of&#13;
exceedingly economical habits, and&#13;
the study lamp on his work-table is a&#13;
simple oil lamp of a pattern such as&#13;
since the introduction of petroleum&#13;
lamps can hardly be met with on the&#13;
table of the humblest citizen of Berlin.&#13;
But it was not economy that accounts&#13;
for the fact, so much as the difficulty&#13;
which an old man has in changing a&#13;
habit. The explanation is given by&#13;
The Brit\*h Antrtcan ft-gister.&#13;
The Emperor has for years been accustomed&#13;
to screw down the wick&#13;
im I&#13;
jlloliins appeared on deck after, break-&#13;
A Faithful Secretary. ! fast, he observed a group of sailors at&#13;
Sir Henry Taylor's "Autobiography" ! the m'zzenmast. As he approached&#13;
is a very entertaining work, atttUcou- ! they touched their hats, and he knowtains&#13;
many good sotries of well-knowr^ -Jug by the position thev occupied that&#13;
characters. He 1 ells an amusing anoe-^hev wanted a p:Trl'ey, remarked to-the&#13;
dote of how he once called at the foreign , le;&gt; d&#13;
office tonsee the present Lord Ham-j "Well&gt;dQVott want anything?"&#13;
mond, then the pcrmatent under secre-J "Yes. sir.'^^ajd an old salt, i4we&#13;
tary, ot whom it used to be said that come to speak for Wr,.. sir."&#13;
he'never was absent from his' post. ! "Speak for W.?" saut-Capt. H(&#13;
whenever Ire censes writing oi readingor&#13;
leaves the room. WJien the petroleum&#13;
lamps finally came into general&#13;
use, the Emperor's valet, Krause,&#13;
brought one and put it.on the worktable.&#13;
True to his habit, his imperial master&#13;
screwed down the wick on leaving&#13;
off writing; and, as a matter of course,&#13;
the room was soon tilled with an insupportable&#13;
smoke, which greatly affected&#13;
the nose and eye* of the monarch,&#13;
and necessitated the opening of&#13;
doors and windov&amp;T&#13;
Krause finally volunteered the remark:&#13;
"No, your Majesty, that sdrtr&#13;
of lamp will not suit."&#13;
"But what are we to do, Krause?&#13;
Had we better get our oil lamp back&#13;
again? You know my eyes are weaker,&#13;
arid require a brighter light/'&#13;
"Well, your Majesty, we can have a&#13;
new lamp made with an e x t r a '&#13;
burner, so as to do away withj»etroleum&#13;
altogether."&#13;
"Quite right, Krauseflet us try it."&#13;
And Krause gpotra lamp of the old&#13;
e m . hjid^the burner enlarged to an&#13;
colossal size^a green glass&#13;
added to it, and to this day the&#13;
new lamp, defying all innovations,&#13;
asserts its place of honor on the worktable&#13;
of the most diligent of all monarchs.—&#13;
Youth''i Comnunion.&#13;
Snuffing.&#13;
A High School girl in a West End&#13;
car, yesterday afternoon, took a Jlat&#13;
oxidized silver box from her hand-bag,&#13;
carefully removed the cover, pinched&#13;
a few grains of snuff-colored powder&#13;
on the pink tips of her dainty iingers,&#13;
and pushed it up hor nostrils with a&#13;
dexterous grace that a confirmed snufftaker&#13;
would have envied. Half a&#13;
dozen passengers stared at her in&#13;
amazement. She smiled placidly,&#13;
brushed off her upper lip with a lace&#13;
handkerchief, and remarked to her&#13;
companion:&#13;
"Oh, I've such a cold."&#13;
"So've I," was the meek response.&#13;
Off came the cover again, the silver&#13;
box was passed over as a man hands&#13;
out a paper of tobacco an&lt;i another&#13;
pinch of the brown powder vanished&#13;
up another charming little nose. Both&#13;
girls sneezed once, very mildly, and&#13;
got off the car.&#13;
vA fashionable jeweller said: "We&#13;
have frequent calls for snuff-boxes,&#13;
silver and gold ones, from young men&#13;
as well as young women. It is simply&#13;
what you* mignt call a "notion." L;&#13;
can't say whether anything is put in&#13;
the boxes, but I do know that young&#13;
people buy them and carry them."&#13;
A druggist said: Oh, no; it wasn't&#13;
snuff. The girls have an idea that it&#13;
is fashionabl to carry those boxes, and&#13;
naturally enough they want something-,&#13;
to put in them, (inuuino fermented&#13;
tobacco snuff" would make them sick.&#13;
We mix them Tfp~a~ harmless compound,&#13;
perfumed like sachet powder,&#13;
pu f In a rttrte "pe?rrhrsh t a keep it&#13;
damp, and ju^t enough Scotch yellow&#13;
to tickle them a little and make them&#13;
snee/.c. When a girl putr one of those&#13;
boxes on the counter and says thai&#13;
she wants somethiug to clear a ct&#13;
i&#13;
\T&#13;
the head, we know what s&#13;
—Sash liiie A me rican&#13;
'We'&#13;
ATj&amp;krfta Towu,&#13;
rot a beautiful town," i!&#13;
On this occation he was away, and&#13;
when the doorkeeper was questioned,&#13;
ho said: Mr Hammond has gone to&#13;
"Whv, is he. not comi'ufcfcajile and&#13;
well cared for?"&#13;
Oh. ves. s'r."twits'tho replv, "he'Vj&#13;
funeral and it's tho only day's pleaMir- too ojmYoruwjtfCand we've come to&#13;
agod relative entered tho&#13;
ing he has had for two years." Sir&#13;
Henry thus distinguishesjietweon the&#13;
Wit of three bright spirits: "While thi&#13;
wit of lingers wa* the wit ofjjatTre,&#13;
and -thai of Sydney Smitji&gt;rTe wit of&#13;
comely the wit\&gt;f.iireJjl»f&lt;Tsop Whateley&#13;
might be dcs&gt;'ri.bj&gt;HCstho wit of logic."&#13;
"-^LOIldJtl&#13;
speakf&gt;-r1iim, sir. I think he'll dk\&#13;
hj&gt;^so ashumed, sir. and we"—with a&#13;
wave'bf his hand toward h s companions—"&#13;
we are willing to stand for him&#13;
and go .his security, sir."&#13;
"Weil." replied tho criptairy, "under&#13;
these circumstances, I'ii let '-him get&#13;
ft U^ktfta man at tho Palmer house.&#13;
Eighteen months ago it was a bare&#13;
prairie. Now~ wc have 2,000 population,&#13;
forty stores, seventeen saloons—&#13;
elegant, some of them—an opera-&#13;
Jiouse, four variety shows, eight beer&#13;
gardens, thirteen hotels, two breweries&#13;
aird^ stock for another one all&#13;
sold, a dinte-xiiuseum, three gambling&#13;
houses, a distillety. U paid police force,&#13;
and two steam fiiCeTvgmes."&#13;
*'How many churches imdschools?"&#13;
"Oh, yes; and they're talklngabont&#13;
buildinga church and a schooL^-i^i*&#13;
cago Herald. •&#13;
'jf&#13;
^ T '. •. •, ••! •• '.AL- &gt;'I «,V&#13;
• I... , .: a ?JLiN.it eJ**,-!!&#13;
'"&gt;..&gt;. V&#13;
.".'4&gt;&gt;&#13;
# • •&#13;
*&amp;1 •r -1 *•£*©?.'&#13;
, &gt; ; •&#13;
•*)&#13;
\&gt; -&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH.&#13;
J. L. NEWKIKK, EDITOR AND PI;I&gt;LISHER.&#13;
Pinckney, Michigan, Thursday, July 2, 18W&#13;
Dr. Hall, the distinguised writer&#13;
hygiene says that breakfast should be&#13;
eaten in the morning before leaving&#13;
the house for exercise or labor of any&#13;
description. This advice is followed&#13;
by many men who not only do no&#13;
work before breakfast, but do not get&#13;
up until their wives have been at&#13;
their work for an hour or more and&#13;
have breakfast already to eat. This&#13;
great care on the part of the husband&#13;
is a preventive measure against malaria.&#13;
The Democratic Administration is&#13;
now nearlv four months old. Democratic&#13;
officials have been in charge of&#13;
"the books" (vide* Mr, Hendricks'&#13;
campaign speeches), and their eagle&#13;
eyes have swept over the records,&#13;
page by page. Where are the startling&#13;
disclosures which were promised?&#13;
The profound and impresswe&#13;
silence on tUis subject is broken only&#13;
when Commissioner Sparks now and'&#13;
then thinks he has discovered same&#13;
more "India'rubber" contracts in the&#13;
Land Office. And it seeiwstKat these&#13;
generally prove tu^re' mere stretches&#13;
of the Commissioner's Tndia rubber&#13;
imagination.&#13;
The law which yesterday went ivito&#13;
effect raising the limit of weight of&#13;
single-rate letters from half an ounce&#13;
to an ounce will be greatly appreciated&#13;
by the millions of letter-writers.&#13;
Aside from the apprehension that the&#13;
Government may find the increased&#13;
burden of the mails a considerable&#13;
inconvenience, we see but one possible.&#13;
objection to the change, and that&#13;
concerns only the newspapers; Thethousands&#13;
of inspired (or dyspeptic)&#13;
persona in this country who are in&#13;
the habit of inditing rhymes may be&#13;
impelled to enlarge their productions&#13;
to the full weight of the two-cent&#13;
rate. An ounce of poetry will take&#13;
up a good deal of room in the wastebasket.&#13;
Reports from Mount McGregory&#13;
concerning the nuisance of sightseers&#13;
around the Grant coitage indicate&#13;
that when the General escaped from&#13;
the city he did not get 'aw y from all&#13;
its discomforts and annoyances.&#13;
Full-grown resident^ of the neighborhood,&#13;
who ought to knew something&#13;
about the every-day rules of decency&#13;
if not of politeness, gather in front of&#13;
the varimda and feast their eves upon&#13;
the sufferer as he rests in bio arm&#13;
chair. These people would no doubt&#13;
consider themselves insulted if told&#13;
their conduct was vulgar and boorish.&#13;
Yet it would be the plain trutji&#13;
they possessed the faintes^^uggestion&#13;
of a, sense,of proprietyTor of that feeling&#13;
of consideration for others which&#13;
all hjletffgent human beings ought to&#13;
e, the dying soldier in his mountain&#13;
retreat/would be left alone \Vith&#13;
his family and friends as he desires.&#13;
MICHIGAN PATENTS.&#13;
The following patents were granted&#13;
to citizens of Michigan bearing date&#13;
June 23. 1885. Reported expressly for&#13;
this paper by Louis Bagger &amp; Co.,&#13;
Mechanical Experts and Solicitors of&#13;
Patents.&#13;
Crane, 0. S., Detroit, feather renovator.&#13;
Duke, J. H., Jr, Grand Rapids, paving&#13;
sidewalks.&#13;
Harmon, W. S„ Detroit, anti-friction&#13;
bearing for roller-skates.&#13;
Jacobi, Alex., St. Clair, burglar&#13;
alarm.&#13;
Jarvis, Deming, Detroit, gas-tight&#13;
expansion joint.&#13;
Lehmer, Isaac, Sturgis, reversing&#13;
gear for traction engine.&#13;
• Parrish,M. F.. and S. J . Munn,&#13;
Niles, train signal.&#13;
Perkins, W. J., Grand Rapids, eircu^&#13;
l a r saw.&#13;
Roberta, G. A„ Three Rivers, concave&#13;
for threshing machine.&#13;
Sherwood, J. A.,Plainwell,jeweler's&#13;
dust box.&#13;
Townsend, W. R., Grand Rapids,&#13;
automatic waste-valve for engine cylinders.&#13;
Woodbury, L . S., Calumet, piston&#13;
head packing for roek drills.&#13;
^ ^ — — — — — — — — ^ • — — — .&#13;
The greatest Medicine of the Age.&#13;
Kellogg's Columbian Oil is a powerful&#13;
remedy, which eau.be taken internally&#13;
as well as^xternally by the tenderest&#13;
infant. It cures almost instantly,&#13;
is pleasant, acting directly upon the&#13;
nervous - ^vsteinT,.causing a sujdden&#13;
buoyancy ot the mind. In short, the&#13;
wonderful effects of this wonderful&#13;
remedy cannot be explained in 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, Flesh Wounds, Bunions,&#13;
Burns, Corns, Spinal Affections,&#13;
Colic, Cramping Pains, Cnolera 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&#13;
1776. 1885.&#13;
HERE WE ARE AGAIN !&#13;
With a larger stock of- \&#13;
DRUGS AND MEDICINES&#13;
than any house in Livingston County.&#13;
We carry a full line of the latest FLUIDS, EXTRACTS and other preparations&#13;
known to the Drug Trade; also as fine a line of&#13;
FANCY GOODS and TOILET ARTICLES as you&#13;
, will find anywhere in the State.&#13;
In Stationery and Box Paper we have a complete stock. We have the boss&#13;
:—Nickle Cigar "and don't you forget it."&#13;
PATENTS MUim k CO., of tho s n w m n c A K r a i r A i r . eon-&#13;
Uaue to act u Solloiturs for J'utwita, CnvHiOa,Trad*&#13;
kartfVCopyrights, for the United Sutw. d t u k&#13;
•ngland, trine*, Germany, etc. Hand Book about&#13;
tVantaaent free. Thirty-seven years' expewimaa.&#13;
? S t « o b U i n a d through MUNN&gt; CO. arenXlcB&#13;
In the SCIENTIFIC AUOUCAS, the largest, beat, and&#13;
moat widely circulated scientific pager. fg.»a yaar.&#13;
Weekly. Splendid engraving and interesting in* tonnatlon. Specimen copy of the tteleiulfle A w e r *&#13;
can aent free: Addreea M UNN A CO^SciWXWO&#13;
JJtXBlCAX Office, 2tU Broadway, New York,&#13;
W A L L P A P E R , C E I L I N G D E C O R A T I O N S A W I N D O W S H A D E S&#13;
in ill the latest patterns. We K ive "Kindall's Treatese on the Horse'' to every&#13;
horse-owner who purchase goods of us. Arctic Soda Water constantly on&#13;
draught, Oranges; Lemons and confectionery of all kinds.&#13;
"Corner Drug Store." SIGLER BROS.&#13;
!&#13;
When in want of anything in the line of Furniture, such as&#13;
bTORE.&#13;
News from the Indian reservations&#13;
in the far Northwest seems to indicate&#13;
that the general Indian war&#13;
which those familiar with the redskins&#13;
have been expecting for several&#13;
years may break out this summer.&#13;
The Indians realize that they have&#13;
been driven (before the white man&#13;
about as far as they can go without&#13;
jumping into the sea and drowning,&#13;
or extirminatiflg the whites, orjbffing&#13;
themselves extirmiuated ia-'battle, or&#13;
yielding absolutely^-to the dominion&#13;
of the whites; But few of them&#13;
k n o w i n g a n y t h i n g of the power of&#13;
wfiites, the majority of the males are&#13;
said to be anxious to have a war, not&#13;
of a single tribe with the whites, but&#13;
of all the tribes in the Northwest.&#13;
I f they could by any method unite&#13;
their forces they would, make a formidable&#13;
foe, and it would require a&#13;
large army to conquer them. What&#13;
the result would be there is of course&#13;
no doubt; but this, of which they are&#13;
ignnrant,, will not dpfpr the Tpdi«n«&#13;
from making the attempt, and should&#13;
they determine to do so, a pretext&#13;
will easily be found. \&#13;
The kidneys cannot perform their&#13;
proper oflice when diseased and at the&#13;
same time expel the impurities that&#13;
should pass off through their proper&#13;
action. A few doses ot Kelloprg's Columbian&#13;
Oil will convince the most&#13;
skeptical that it acts directly on the&#13;
kidneys.&#13;
Bucklen'x Arnica Salve.&#13;
THE HEST SALVE in the world for&#13;
Cut-' Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt&#13;
Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapned&#13;
Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all skin&#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 1)HUG STOUE.&#13;
A Wonderful Discovery,&#13;
Consumptives and all, who sufter&#13;
from any affection of*the throat and&#13;
lungs, can find a certain cure in Dr.&#13;
King's New, Discovery^ for Oonsjimj&gt;&#13;
tion. Thousands of pernurnerft cures&#13;
verify the truth of thisj^Cement. No&#13;
medicine can shojkV-"sneh a record of&#13;
wonderful (TUPCST Thousands of once&#13;
hopele$^?tinerers now gratefully procia-&#13;
«ffthey owe their lives to this New&#13;
isco_very, It will cost you nothing&#13;
to give it a trial. Free trial bottle at&#13;
Winchell's Drug Store. Large size&#13;
$1.00.&#13;
Very Remarkable Recovery.&#13;
Mr. Geo. V. Willing,of Manchester,&#13;
Mich., writes. "My wife has been almost&#13;
helpless for five years, so helpless&#13;
that she could riot turn over in bed&#13;
alone. She used two bottles of Electric&#13;
Bitters, and is so much improved&#13;
that she is able now to do her own&#13;
work."&#13;
Electric Bitters will do all that is&#13;
claimed for them. Hundreds of testimonials&#13;
attest their great curative po.v&#13;
ers. Only 50 cts. a bottle at Wi&#13;
chelUs Druj? Store.&#13;
To the Afltieti&#13;
Since the introjia^tOn of Kellogg's&#13;
ColmnbianJ}ifcl£lias made more permanent-&#13;
cures and given better satis-&#13;
, faction 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;
the forerunners of more serious dis*&#13;
orders. It acts speedily andv'surely,&#13;
always relieving suffering and often&#13;
saving life. The protection it affords&#13;
by its timely use on rheumatism, kidney&#13;
affection, and all aches and pains,&#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 used it never will.&#13;
I t is absolutely certain in its remedial&#13;
effects, anu1 will always cure when&#13;
cures are7possible,&#13;
"Will at WIKJCC HELL'S DRUG STORE and&#13;
get a memorandum book giving more&#13;
full details of the enrative properties&#13;
of this wonderful medicine.&#13;
BEDROOM SUITS, PARLOR SUITS&#13;
LOUNGES, BUREAUS, BOOKCASES, TABLES&#13;
STANDS, CHAIRS, ETC. ETC. COME&#13;
~==AND SEE ME.&#13;
A. SPECIALTY.&#13;
COFFINS. CASKETS, ROBES and FUNERAL SUPPLIES of all kinds&#13;
constantly on hand. Respectflluy,&#13;
L. H.BEEBE,&#13;
_ popular Weekly nrwapaper&#13;
_ devoted to science, mechanics, angipyanafc. discoveries,&#13;
invention* and patents ever published,&#13;
number illontrated with splendid engravings,&#13;
publication, furnishes a most valuable encyelopi&#13;
information which no person should ba witnonL&#13;
popularity of the SctZNTma AKKBIC*N'is aooh waft.^H&#13;
its circulation nearly equals that of all other papers «&#13;
its class combined. Price, $3.20 a year, DlaoounW&#13;
Clnbe. Sold by all newsdeaW MUNN 4 . 0 0 , Pal*. ,&#13;
Ushers, No. 381 Broadway. N. Y. , . _ . . »&#13;
'yhaeda rTsh' lprtryac-ttiwwV 6Met- 1 fore tho Patent Offlos,&#13;
and have prepared gflW thau On&gt; HllW»&#13;
dred ThoutTand applications lor pat-&#13;
•nTs in t&amp;""nJtad TftateaMd fmalgi&#13;
eonntriea. Caveats, Trade:lfarSa, Oopjrriphta,&#13;
Assignments, and all othai' papara&#13;
for securing to inventors their riabUln tba&gt;&#13;
United State*, t Canada, England; J^an?*!&#13;
Germany and other foreign countries, pnparaa&#13;
at short notice and on reasonable terms..&#13;
Information as to obtaining pstentachaaffnlb/&#13;
?1ven without charge. Hand-bopka of intonnalon&#13;
aent free. Patents obtained through X w i&#13;
A Co, are noticed in the Bciaotino Ajaaricanjhaa.&#13;
rha advantage of such notioe is weirunderstoodTaj all&#13;
arsons who wish to dispose of their patents.&#13;
Address MUNN A CO., Officio Baaurarxo&#13;
ft Broadway, New York.&#13;
D O O R S A N D B L I N D S ,&#13;
GLASS, NAILS, PAINT,&#13;
WILDING PAPER&#13;
AND ALL&#13;
KINDS OF BUILDING MATERIAL&#13;
/&#13;
AT F, L. BROWN'S.&#13;
"N&#13;
N N&#13;
ULLBlilHE U Best Newspaper&#13;
OF ITS CLAR8&#13;
WMICHIGAN,&#13;
m a i&#13;
n&#13;
Published every ThundAy&#13;
at $2 per year; or,&#13;
H+*&gt;»pap»r, IX ALL MWBftWkCTB 91«aMft&#13;
CLAMH; mne H*th wJatoJsMa* rOUW&amp;MMmm&#13;
icell M« thm OL.DBM member* fthm/mmnff&#13;
nrm dmUghtfrt* JBOAA a a w t i r —mtr'&#13;
flfty-mta eolwmtsa Mftt-jU&gt;*4t mUh Us«&#13;
oriffiunl amdcmrefully meteetmM r\&#13;
in « M « k nr* nrtiolea &lt;• 4*t*rmm\&#13;
tnmtruet *n* mmneJU • v a r y r+m4mrt&#13;
Sunday-School Department*&#13;
U N E X C E L L E D .&#13;
Conducted by R*r. J. MSTTWUSB, O. D 4 0 &lt;&#13;
Cicaer Thaologkal Haminary«&#13;
t*et»r BTlPLBMra MtbUt&#13;
Ittmmmn MCxpmmitUtn* mrm \&#13;
tyj*r th«e tC HMMB&#13;
|»MU&gt;4MMr&#13;
7HMIBTIAW&#13;
Omtampla eopias for aramtnatlon or&#13;
vvwtMMD m opoo ajpptkaUoa. Sand foe&#13;
i Infant CnpUBTLAJIJSMBA&#13;
,k N&#13;
ULX',&#13;
.'i^w&lt;3sa&gt;0rif;vj.i &gt; HJ*M.'K^M.'.&#13;
'."'•rjr'Hiv.aatf.vwtsy, •*• •''••""-^ ••r^snajujgp'.&#13;
rift~. tmmmm?*mm " f ^ H — ' ll H i l l i n g l . » | M --/1 V&#13;
«T«—I-»W«&#13;
t*.:*; •A'&#13;
XtM«ai Fail of the Roller RlnkUL&#13;
BY BILL X Y B .&#13;
I&#13;
T i&#13;
»4&#13;
I have once tried to ride a pair of&#13;
roller skates. That is the reason I got&#13;
down on the link and down on roller&#13;
•kates. That is the reason several people&#13;
grot down on m e . ^ h a t is. also the&#13;
reason why I now state in public manner&#13;
to a lost and undone race; and unless&#13;
the roller rink, its at once abolished,&#13;
the whole civilized world will be&#13;
plunged into arnica.&#13;
I had tried it once before, but had&#13;
not carried my experiments to a successful&#13;
determination. I made a trial&#13;
* trip around the rink last August, but&#13;
was ruled out by the judges for incompetency,&#13;
and advised to skate among&#13;
people who were hostile to the Government&#13;
of the United States, while the&#13;
proprietors repaired the rink.&#13;
On the 9th of September, I nestled&#13;
in the bosom ot a cyclone to excess,&#13;
• • d i t has required th§ bulk ot the&#13;
^JP^ceeding months for nature to glue&#13;
""^Tlfce bones of my leg together in proper&#13;
shape. That is the reason I have not&#13;
given the attention to rol'er skating&#13;
that I should.&#13;
A few weeks ago, I read what Mr.&#13;
Talraage said about this great national&#13;
vice. It .vas his opinion that if we&#13;
skated in a proper spirit we could&#13;
leave the rink each evening with our&#13;
immortal souls in good shape.&#13;
Somehow it get out that on Thurs-&#13;
~ day evening I would undotta.ke the&#13;
perfect impunity, or any one else to&#13;
whom we may be properly introduced&#13;
by our cook.&#13;
Skating on the roller skate is like&#13;
riding on a railway train. If the&#13;
management is good and we behave&#13;
ourselves, we feel safe. Rinking in&#13;
and of itself is not dangerous from a&#13;
moral point otview—with g^ood associates&#13;
and a solid road-bed we are safe.&#13;
So it is also in traveling. It our rink&#13;
tickets are good in a well conducted&#13;
rink, and our railway tickets read over&#13;
the Great Rock Island Route, we have&#13;
done wisely and the rest remains with&#13;
us. We may Wreck ourselves in front&#13;
of the engine or injure ourselves morally&#13;
and physically at the |rink if we&#13;
wish to. There are many, however,&#13;
who are not agitated over the rink&#13;
question. To such it might be well&#13;
to say that the Rock Island Road is&#13;
still carrying people with pomfort, elegance,&#13;
economy and despatch.&#13;
NEW , NEW&#13;
c s o o x&gt;&#13;
ISSK 3TO »XI f: 3S&#13;
NEW LAWNS, GHAMBRAYS, GINGHAMS, PRINTS,&#13;
WORSTED DRESS GOODS, LACES, GLOVES, ETCA&#13;
fine line of PARASOLS including&#13;
(5Y$-&#13;
feat of skating three rounds in three&#13;
hours with no protection to my scruples,&#13;
for one-half the gate money,&#13;
Talmage rules. So there was quite a&#13;
large audience present with operaglasses.&#13;
Some had umbrellas, especially&#13;
on the front rows. Thes^ were&#13;
worn spread, in order to ward off fragments&#13;
of the rink which might become&#13;
disengaged and set in motion by atmospheric&#13;
disturbances.&#13;
In obedience to a wild Wagnerian&#13;
snort from the orchestra, I came fcrth&#13;
into the arena with my skates in my&#13;
hand. It is a morbid desire to wear&#13;
the skates on ray feet that has always&#13;
been my BETE XOIK. Will the office&#13;
boy please give me a brass check for&#13;
that word so that I can get it when I&#13;
go away ?&#13;
My first thought, after getting myself&#13;
secured to the skates, was this:&#13;
"Am I in the proper&#13;
"Am I doing this in the nght^pirit?&#13;
"Am I about to skate iu-stfeh a way as&#13;
to lift the fog of^unbelief which now&#13;
envelopes jk^slnful world, or shall I&#13;
deepjwrthe opaque night jn which my&#13;
race is rapped ?&#13;
Just then, that end of the rink erupted&#13;
in a manner so forthwith and so&#13;
TOUT KNSKMALK that I had to push it&#13;
back in place with my person. I never&#13;
saw anything done with less delay&#13;
or less languor.&#13;
The audience went wild with enthusiasm,&#13;
and I responded to the encore&#13;
by writing ray name in the air&#13;
with my skates.&#13;
This closed the first seance, and ray&#13;
trainer took me in the dressing room&#13;
to attend a consultation of physicians.&#13;
After the rink carpenter had jacked up&#13;
the floor a little, I went out again. I&#13;
hadno tears about my ability to perform&#13;
the mechanical part assigned me, but&#13;
I was still worried over the question&#13;
whether it would or would not be~ of&#13;
lasting benefit, to mankind.&#13;
Those who have closely scrutinized&#13;
ray frame in ropose, have admitted&#13;
that I was fearfully and wondenully&#13;
made. Students ot the human frame&#13;
say that they never saw such a wealth&#13;
fti 4imhArnesa_and Wweness lavishftd&#13;
upon one person. They maintained&#13;
that nature had bestowed upon me&#13;
the hinges and joints intended for a&#13;
whole family, and therefore whenJE-P&#13;
1 skate, the air seems to be perfectly&#13;
lurid with limbs. I presume that this&#13;
is true, though I have so little leisure&#13;
while skating in which to observe the&#13;
method itself, the plot or animus of&#13;
the thing, as it were, that my opinion&#13;
would be of little value to the scientist.&#13;
I am led to believe that the roller&#13;
skate is certainly a great civilizer Mid&#13;
a wonderful leveler of mankind. If&#13;
we BO skate that when the summons&#13;
comes to seek our ward within the&#13;
general hospital, where each shall&#13;
heal his busted cuticle within the walls&#13;
where rinkists squirm, we go not like&#13;
the social wreck, morally paralyzed,&#13;
bnt like a hired man taking his medi&#13;
SOUTH LYON DOTSProm&#13;
the Picket. ,&#13;
The 6-yeer-old daughter of Ed.&#13;
Peach who lives near Silver Lake, fell&#13;
off a gate last Saturday and broke&#13;
both bones of the fore arm. .&#13;
Since last issue we have been looking&#13;
up the record of "Dr." Wood who&#13;
put up at the Moody House a short&#13;
time since and succeeded in fleecing at&#13;
least one innocent person out of $15.&#13;
We now have Na pigeon-hole full of&#13;
correspondence £6 prove him to be the&#13;
fraud we suppused him.—Should he&#13;
see tit to darken the doors of our village&#13;
again we shall publish them.&#13;
Dr. Brown has been having a severe&#13;
time with his teeth lately and yesterday&#13;
went to Brighton to have them&#13;
extracted. One of them was brokon&#13;
off and in cutting out the root the&#13;
dentist must hove cut an artery as he&#13;
bled profusely, hemorrhage finally set&#13;
in, which came near ending his life.&#13;
Everything that could be thought of&#13;
was tned to stop the blood, but all to&#13;
no avail and when Dr. Howes arrived&#13;
at 7 o'clock last evening his pulse had&#13;
ceased to beat. An operation was performed&#13;
however which soon brought&#13;
him to, and stopped the flow of blood.&#13;
This morning, although very weak&#13;
from the loss ofJbibod, he is somewhat&#13;
[better and if^he has no relapse will&#13;
corne-out all right. He certainly will&#13;
frame ot miniT^^*1 1 ^ friends will do it, of which he&#13;
has a host, which was shown yesterday&#13;
as the house and yard were over-run&#13;
with friends all move than anxious to&#13;
do something for the "Doc."&#13;
From the Excelsior,&#13;
Monday night when about time for&#13;
^ T H E POPULAR COOCHING PARASOLS. \.Qf , . . .&#13;
We are constantly in receipt of New Goods in every Department.&#13;
Everything marked in plain figures. The lowest possible&#13;
price guaranteed on every article.&#13;
ySg-BUTTER and EGGS wanted at the highest Market Price in exchange&#13;
for GOODS. No trouble to show goods whether you want&#13;
to buy or not. Come and see us.&#13;
LAKIN &amp; SYKES.&#13;
REAO THIS • ^ • _ • &gt; -&#13;
The undersigned having a large&#13;
Shingles at their lumber yard in&#13;
stock and for the&#13;
stock of&#13;
Pinokne&#13;
.ill kinds of Lumber, Lath andey,&#13;
have decided to reduce their&#13;
"ST 3D - A T 5 T S w i l l sell&#13;
ROCK BOTTOM PRICES.&#13;
Parties about to bnikt will find it tqjtheTr interest to get our prices. We manufacture&#13;
our own lumber and shirfiBries and will sell according to the times.&#13;
We keep on hand a-full stock^of Flooring, Siding and Barn Boards, also all&#13;
lengths of Bill Stuff &gt;rrd Timbers, and on all bills will give special prices.&#13;
You will find our-Agent, A. L. HOYT, always on hand. Come and see us,&#13;
we will satisry'you that we mean business.&#13;
FOURTH OF JULY&#13;
GOODS!&#13;
Bia&amp;EYY, COWISC &amp; CO. &amp;rac&amp;H£r.&#13;
the 7:48 west bound passenger on the&#13;
D. L. &amp; N., a drunken crank, who&#13;
probably had experienced enough of&#13;
this wicked world, determined to bid&#13;
it adeau, but was caught in the act.&#13;
He ran up the D. L. &amp; N. track near&#13;
the mill, and lay down across one of&#13;
t \ e rails. The hand-car with a gang&#13;
of men and boys :&gt;ame to his rescue&#13;
and brought him back to the Commercial&#13;
House just in time to prevent&#13;
him carrying out this rash act.&#13;
'WA.lSJrT'EJb 1&#13;
—at the—&#13;
PINCKNEY ELEVATOR&#13;
WHEAT,&#13;
BEANS, WOOL, ETC.&#13;
For which the highest market price&#13;
~"~~will be paid.""*~~ ^&#13;
THX Oldest. Brightest, and b»«t of Western Weeklies.&#13;
Uiflht pages, fifty-six column*, fine paper, new iyp«.&#13;
clear print, and the tnrait entertaining paper offered&#13;
the reading public. Suit* everr locality, discussm&#13;
•ubjecta with fairness, contains all the news of th«&#13;
world atlructively presen ed, ami i* withou a competitor&#13;
in general wcelleuco as a family paper. It&#13;
coals but&#13;
0 2 T S S O L L A S -A. T E A S ,&#13;
and e?ery subscriber receives free of chargsf postage&#13;
paid, a copy of&#13;
THE TIMES ILLUSTRATED HAND-BOOK,&#13;
alone worth the price of subscription. The Hfind-hook&#13;
is a publication or one hundred pacos of useful and enfertainiii"&#13;
reading matter, especially prepared and&#13;
jublishect for the subscribers oft he ."Weekly Times1"&#13;
All who fake the paper are delighted with it, and tho&#13;
'Hand-book will be equally satisfactory. 8end for speciineu&#13;
copy of the paper. Address, THETIMES,&#13;
230 Walnut St.,CiNciUAM, O.&#13;
THE CINCINNATI TIMES-STIR,&#13;
Ts the host arid cheapest dailr paper published in the&#13;
; WehL. Eight pages—forty-eight columns—and only sis&#13;
dollars a •year, ur twelve cent* a week. It is independent&#13;
in politics, but aims t o b e l u r in every'hlng, and&#13;
j i m t o a l l parties^ individual*, cert ion j , and nationalities.&#13;
11 von want all the nows attractively and honestly&#13;
presented, joirtscribo fnrtrr THK utfwfar cuccba*&#13;
TI03 OP AKY FiifKR IN r i x r i s * A T . &gt;&#13;
A(Jdres«, TUT. TIMES-STAR,&#13;
230 Walnut 6t.i C i v c n u ^ Q i&#13;
All kinds of repairing promptly attended&#13;
to. ._...&#13;
WATCH AND CLOCK&#13;
—repairing a specialty.—&#13;
EUGENE CAMPBELL.&#13;
Having rented D. Richards&#13;
BLACKSMITH SHOP&#13;
we are now prepared to do all&#13;
-{ kinds of&#13;
J.&#13;
THO^MAD^^ Pitickney,&#13;
MACKINAC.&#13;
Tt» Hod PtUffctfal&#13;
SUMMER TOUR&#13;
C4a ^riwUo forth -we ro-y skat« with&#13;
DETROIT AND MAOK1NAO&#13;
AaA I n r y Weik Day Batwwm&#13;
DETROIT AND CLEVELAND&#13;
4PtotMrwqa, M«kinio,MUlii|trtt*d.&#13;
M M&#13;
W O O L MM&#13;
CASH FQJLW.0.QL!&#13;
The undersigned respectfully announce to their friends and patrons that&#13;
they have completed arrangements for all the&#13;
rVGOI&#13;
Machine&#13;
order.&#13;
3 P A a: 1¾ I U T O -&#13;
Inclndiug Horse-Shoeing:.&#13;
and Steel Work done to&#13;
PARKER &amp; SPEARS.&#13;
.Onr readers for 12 cents in postage stamps to|&#13;
ay for mailing and wrapping,&gt;nuname8 of two!&#13;
&gt;t&gt;ok ajrenia, will receive RR£E a STEH FINM* P*»J&#13;
|LO« EN«IAV»M of all OUFL-i*RESIDENTS, including!&#13;
CLEVELAND, aize^keS* inches, worth $4.00.&#13;
ADDRESSJECDER PUB. CO., CHICAGO, ILL&#13;
-THE&#13;
Detroit A OlmttniJ Stum Na* Ofc&#13;
¢. 9* W M I T C O I I * , OKII. PAW. M r *&#13;
Each and every one can spare. Please remember for&#13;
THE NEXT THIRTY DAYS!&#13;
we shall need all the money we can get.&#13;
Every thing in our store will be sold way&#13;
'own to the lowest notch.^**&#13;
FARMERS' STORE,&#13;
-ATRespectfiilfyYoKrs,&#13;
TEEPLE &amp; CADWELL,&#13;
:PX5*u;B^N:grsr jrjisia i e , i 8 8 5 :&#13;
ANDERSON STATION f&#13;
Is now filled to overflowing with a&#13;
fresh, new and complete stock of Dry&#13;
Goods* Groceries, Boots &amp; Shoes and&#13;
Hardware, to wtych we invite public&#13;
inspection. /&#13;
The ladies especially will find it to^&#13;
their interest to see our novelties^&#13;
Dress Goods before buying elsewhere*&#13;
Every/variety of country produce*&#13;
taken rn exchange tor-goods or money*&#13;
JAMES T. EAMAS &amp; CO*&#13;
X&#13;
\&#13;
JJJ-,&#13;
ti*t3&#13;
'"•m&lt;k&#13;
. - ' * • • •&#13;
&gt; ~ }•'&#13;
T.Af-&#13;
;t:%&#13;
• &gt; \&#13;
—srl&#13;
~T*&#13;
i&#13;
S. y\&#13;
i&#13;
• /A&#13;
i 1&#13;
h&#13;
t a&#13;
J,&#13;
•*l&#13;
V;4&#13;
• ' * .&#13;
Y&#13;
Vf.' - ^ ' 1 ^&#13;
^ ^V.&#13;
&lt;*&#13;
/&#13;
/&#13;
J . L. NswKittK, Publisher.&#13;
»n1*re&lt;i »t the T*o»to*o* as M OIMM&gt;&#13;
TIMELY TOPICf.&#13;
Tlio principal of one of the public&#13;
schools in the state, iu hi» address to&#13;
tho graduating class, gave them a most&#13;
important bit of advice when he' told&#13;
them to "conoeutratc their energies."&#13;
One of the alarming evils of the times&#13;
is the inedci&amp;on of young men just&#13;
starting in lifj. First one thing is tried,&#13;
and then another, in tho vain pursuit&#13;
of some means of earning a livelihood&#13;
without work. All start out wrth an&#13;
ambition to occupy positions of honor&#13;
and trust, lorgetting that those who&#13;
hold such places are the ones who have&#13;
labored long and indefatigably in a&#13;
hand to hand fight with obstacles which&#13;
have beset them on every baud. /These&#13;
men marked out a course in life, and&#13;
for the attainment of the object sought&#13;
brought to bear all the energies of mind&#13;
and body. ' There are others waiting&#13;
Mieawber-like, for something to turn&#13;
up Men who have tried law, medicine,&#13;
the arts, and almost every profession&#13;
except downright hard work,&#13;
and are not as near th i goal now as&#13;
when in early manhood they staned,&#13;
for the very reason that the energy&#13;
which, if rightly applied, would have&#13;
been all potent in their aid, has been&#13;
weakened in the aimless wandering&#13;
after that which can be gained only by&#13;
work.&#13;
TnK.legislature of Pennsylvania has&#13;
passed an act \fhic:h provides that1&#13;
"from and after the lir.st day of October,&#13;
ISSo, no persons within the commonwealth&#13;
shal! be joined in marriage until&#13;
a license shall have been obtained.&#13;
Licenses must be obtained of the clerk&#13;
of the orphan's court in the county&#13;
where the marriage is celebrated.' This&#13;
does not contain a clause declaring uu-&#13;
/LNTBODCOINtt A NKW INDUST1Y.&#13;
A8eientlat'f Invention tor Extracting Aluminium&#13;
from Clay.&#13;
Important facts bearing on the extraction&#13;
of aluminium from kuoliu&#13;
(clay) on a commercial basis have&#13;
been developed in Cleveland, 0., within&#13;
tho past few weeks. Aluminium&#13;
has long been known as the metallic&#13;
basis of clay but in its nature is so&#13;
ethereal that heretofore its elimination&#13;
has been attended with great difficulty&#13;
and much expense. Within the past&#13;
few years, however, French and English&#13;
inventors have obtained results&#13;
more or loss important, so that the&#13;
present importing prico of aluminium&#13;
In this country, duty free, is $14.25 a.&#13;
pound. In England a mau named&#13;
Webster &gt;has established very large&#13;
works for the manufacture of articles&#13;
from JIB new metal, but the cost of&#13;
production has as yet limited its use&#13;
merely to tableware and small utensils&#13;
for household use. Tho problem now&#13;
is,-to (devise a method of extraction&#13;
which shall reduce the cost to from&#13;
$2 to §8 per pound, at which figure it&#13;
can be used for a great varicty*ot manufactures,&#13;
such as gun barrels, propeller&#13;
blades, wire, aud possibly bridge&#13;
and railroad works. As aluminium is&#13;
four'times lighter than silver and three&#13;
tinios lighter than iron, is non-oxtdizab}&#13;
e, of great tenacity and strength,&#13;
ductile, and of superior electric conductivity,&#13;
aud is, moreover, very widely&#13;
diffused throughout the country—&#13;
appearing in all ordinary clay banks,&#13;
but more particularly in the immense&#13;
deposits or kaolin in Connecticut,, New&#13;
York, Virginia, and Georgia, and in a&#13;
veritable mountain of sulphate of&#13;
alumina in New Mexico—the importance&#13;
of the present search for a cheap&#13;
mothpd of production is apparent.&#13;
Aluminium will bear several times&#13;
more strain than gun metal, and much&#13;
more than Bessemer steel. It also&#13;
possesses sonorous qualities superior&#13;
licensed marriages illegal; but decisions* Jiridgeport, Conn., has as thw result of&#13;
of state supreme coftrts in several other&#13;
states where licenses are re&#13;
in holdng that unlict '7&#13;
ed&#13;
uken aaggrreeee&#13;
marriages&#13;
are i legal under^stTch a statute. The&#13;
act providi^rfor a special form of license&#13;
forpKfties desiring to I e married in unisual&#13;
methods, especially when "the&#13;
parties intend solemnizing their mar.&#13;
riages themselves;" And—a-recorcLof&#13;
each marriage must be filed. If, there"&#13;
fore, the governor approv(s the act, no&#13;
marriage in Pennsylvania will be legal&#13;
without a license. One intent of the&#13;
law is to reduce the number of improper&#13;
marriages, bigamies, elopement',&#13;
to those of any other metal, and alloys&#13;
beautifully with almost any known&#13;
metal. When the secret ot its cheap&#13;
production is generally known a revolution&#13;
in the metal world will be the&#13;
certain result.&#13;
A Philadelplnacheniist named Friess&#13;
niuth about a year ago announced^'&#13;
discovery* of a very cheap metljotrrout&#13;
it has remained for Cleveland parties&#13;
to bring the much-desired end nearer&#13;
practical accomplishment than ever&#13;
before. Mr- "F. J. Seymour, a wellthere,&#13;
instead, tho dead f»c« «f her&#13;
brother. The two meu wer« entirely&#13;
unlike in appearance, one being light&#13;
and having a blond beard, and the&#13;
other very dark. Shortly aftertfartH&#13;
the lady saw on her husbands face the&#13;
expression of H not her deceased friend,&#13;
and a little later that of a third.. Her&#13;
morbid and overwrought fancv deceived&#13;
her, someone says. Could two&#13;
persons be decoived at the same time&#13;
and in the same way? I ask this because&#13;
three years ago this lady and&#13;
her sister watched beside the dying&#13;
Child of the latter. The little girl's&#13;
face suddenly changed. One of the&#13;
ladies saw that the other observed./&#13;
this, and said:&#13;
•« 'Emily, who was it?'&#13;
••'Adelaide' was the answer.&#13;
"•Yes, Adelaide.'&#13;
"The two ladios have told me that&#13;
they saw unmistakably the face of&#13;
their dead cousin, a woman, shining&#13;
out through tho face of tho dying&#13;
child. I offer no explanation of these&#13;
phenomena, and present them ouly because&#13;
tp mo they seeiu very interesting.—&#13;
Philadelphia Xorik American.&#13;
Grant as a .Smoker.&#13;
The cancer of the throat which is&#13;
slowly but Kiuely eating away the life&#13;
of Gen. Grant, has by some medical&#13;
authorities been attrubuted to the inveterate&#13;
smokin r for which the hero&#13;
of Appomattox is noted. Others again&#13;
ridicule the theory. The subject is&#13;
one that has received considerable disoussion&#13;
in the medical journals.&#13;
In the popular imagination Gen.&#13;
Grant has always been associated with&#13;
a cigar. He has been called the greatest&#13;
smoker in the world. It is a marked&#13;
peculiarity of the man. When at&#13;
The Hague," on his tour around the&#13;
world, at tho dinner tendered in honor&#13;
by the Hutch King, cigars were either&#13;
omitted in the menu, or perhaps it&#13;
was thought discourteous to smoke in&#13;
tne presence of royalty* When Gen:&#13;
HOUSEHOLD MNT9.&#13;
known practical met illurgist, late of&#13;
years of study, succeeded in producing&#13;
aluminium at a low figure at cost,&#13;
and by the aid of a novel furnace, just&#13;
designed, asserts that he can extract&#13;
the metal on a commercial basis and&#13;
in large quantities. Not to go into all&#13;
the technical details, which are extremely&#13;
interesting to metallurgists,&#13;
It is sufficient to say that Mr. Seymour&#13;
has discovered that the close affinity&#13;
existing between zinc and aluminium&#13;
can be utilized in vaporizing, "capturing."&#13;
and depositing the latter, the&#13;
separation being effected by tho application&#13;
of heat through a furnace, or&#13;
rather a series of furnace, of peculiar&#13;
construction. The charge for each&#13;
furnace is: Zinc ore, 100 parts; kaolin,&#13;
50 parts; carbon, either anthracite coal&#13;
women by mock marriages, etc.&#13;
Two men in New York, out of work,&#13;
adopted rather a novel method to get&#13;
money. Armed with a- pail of bight&#13;
colored, paint and"a brush, they went to&#13;
a number of houses on one of the principal&#13;
streets, and painted a panel of the&#13;
front doors'. 1 hey would ring the bellt&#13;
and when the lady of the house appeared,&#13;
politely inform her that they&#13;
would paint the whole door the same&#13;
color for only $5. Several houses were&#13;
visited, when one irate female had the&#13;
and especially tho marriage of children j or its equivalent in hydrocarbon gas,&#13;
of immature age, and de eption of 125 parts; pearl-ash, or its equivalent,&#13;
15 parts, chloride of sodium, 10 parts,&#13;
all intimately mixed. The retorts are&#13;
of steel, and 36 incheslong by 12 wide,&#13;
sides $ inches thick. The amount of&#13;
heat necessary to produce tho desired&#13;
result is about 2,500 degrees Fahranheit.&#13;
Properly handled, one furnace&#13;
should make two charges in 2i to 30&#13;
hours. Four men can operate fifty&#13;
retorts.^ Tho number of retorts can be&#13;
increased several hundred in a single&#13;
system. Capitalists have already&#13;
manifested an interest in this new&#13;
process, and the prospects are that operations&#13;
on an extenaivo scale will&#13;
soon follow. Independent investigations&#13;
in the same line in this city have&#13;
resulted in the fecent incorporation&#13;
painters arrested, the officers compell- of a companv wUh ample capital for&#13;
' the extraction of aluminium by means&#13;
i of electricity. Tbu* far the secret of&#13;
the process has been strictly guarded,&#13;
and nothing can therefore be given as&#13;
to its details. —New York, 'Times,&#13;
ing the men to clean the paint&#13;
restore the door to its&#13;
tion.&#13;
original&#13;
off and&#13;
condi-&#13;
A TCFXENT London dispatch says that&#13;
oi\ Mormon recruits for Utah, mostly&#13;
women, sailed on the steamer Wisconsin&#13;
:or. New York. The authorities have&#13;
•topped aud atTcstcd in New York nine&#13;
Irish girls who came over to the United&#13;
States to work in a linon mill. But we&#13;
have no law to stop these Mormon immigrants.&#13;
Men andAvomen areproh bttei~&#13;
by law of congress from" entering&#13;
this country under a contract to work,&#13;
but Mormons, under a bargain to settle&#13;
in Utah and swell the evil of polygamy,&#13;
are unhindered.&#13;
Grant was, therefore, observetHb' take&#13;
a cigar from his pocket and complacently&#13;
light it—in. the" presence of tho&#13;
King, there was a murmurof surprise.&#13;
"But, /Jlwrh^ "it was said, "he is a&#13;
gjeafman—a very irreat man." In&#13;
the simplicity of the Dutch Court it was&#13;
thought probably that none but the&#13;
very great would dare to smoke on&#13;
such/an occasion. It is generally believed&#13;
that Gen. Grant has been an incessant&#13;
smoker ever since his boyhood.&#13;
It may be news to many to learn that&#13;
it is only.since the famous battle of&#13;
Shiloh that the General became ao fond&#13;
of the weed. A Commercial Gazelle&#13;
reporter, in conversation with an intimate&#13;
Cincinnati friend of Grant, was&#13;
told the story of the "cigar."&#13;
Tho General, in speaking to his Cincinnati&#13;
friend of the popular idea that&#13;
he was a life-long smoker, said that&#13;
prior to the battle of Shiloh he rarely&#13;
—very rarely—smoked; that only once&#13;
in a" great while did he "take a&#13;
Optical Illusions.&#13;
"Many people," writes a lady correspondent&#13;
from Newark, "arc deceived&#13;
by optical illusions. On a recent&#13;
morning I looked into my brother's&#13;
room, and saw him standing&#13;
at his dressing-case. - Then I remembered&#13;
that I had heard him go "downstairs,&#13;
and I said to myself: 'This is&#13;
an optical illusion.1 Knowing that it&#13;
was~sucTr,"T lookedat theHgureTintil&#13;
it slowly faded away. Let me add&#13;
that I am in good bodily health, cheerful,&#13;
and, I believe, s&gt;ound in mind. A&#13;
friend who died lately said in her last&#13;
hours, when apparently she was rational,&#13;
that she saw her dead parents&#13;
and brother in hor room. She exclaimed,&#13;
addressing the friends who&#13;
stood at her bedside: 'There they are,&#13;
right there. Can't you sec them?' I&#13;
repeat that, as far as any one could&#13;
judge, she was thoroughly conscious.&#13;
But we will pass over her case, for it is&#13;
not exceptional, and While we can not&#13;
say she was delirious, neither can we&#13;
affirm positively that she .had her&#13;
senses.&#13;
_...... t "But here, I think, is an unusual&#13;
/TXTK Rev. Div.Wells of San Francisco ?°,rm. of optical illusion, if it was an&#13;
/von- tersely says that what ,he Apache, ~ » b ^ ' ^ f $ ^ ¾&#13;
who«havcgoneon the warpath need is passed awayT His. widow is a cloar-&#13;
"a gospclt hat will get hell but of the minded and educated lady, without&#13;
Indians-,not a gospel that will get the ftrfy morbid or superstitious taint in&#13;
Indians out ol hell." Lei ltlcso pi mod- ft* ^ l i l 1 ' 0 1 1 " 1 , 1 ' ' smrituaj-&#13;
... ,, . , ,l .,, , ism: While bending over her husband&#13;
At any rate the war department willdo-8 il o r tly before his death she observed&#13;
ytiiM to act upon this doctrine for the that the expression Nof his faoe was&#13;
present. changing, and the next moment saw&#13;
KUDNER, of the Lapeer Democrat, has&#13;
•i shrewd head, as the following item&#13;
from that worthy paper indicates. Hear&#13;
him: "Cats thrive best in an eleva'or.&#13;
A farmer who has 30,000 bushels of&#13;
oats in an: elevator need not worry&#13;
about the weather. Always raise oats&#13;
iu a gcx&gt;d elevator and keep out of a&#13;
deal with the Chicago man."&#13;
cigar, while riding over the field, and&#13;
the newspaper correspondents, seizing&#13;
upon the incident, described it graphically&#13;
in their accounts of the battle to&#13;
the papers in the North. The idea of&#13;
a victorious commander of a great&#13;
army, in the midst of frightful scenes&#13;
of carnage and destruction, surrounded&#13;
by the dangers of battle, with a&#13;
nation's lifo hanging on the result,&#13;
looking on calmly and serenely—complacently&#13;
smoking a cigar—when most&#13;
men would be overcome with excitement,&#13;
if not nervousness, was something&#13;
that appealed irresistibly to&#13;
popular admiration. Here was a man&#13;
who was not to be frightenod by tne&#13;
dangers of war; who knew that in war&#13;
the mass of men are almost frantic&#13;
with fire of battle; that it meant death&#13;
and destruction; that this was the business&#13;
of war; and the coolness of his&#13;
mind seemed to say: "The only way&#13;
to do is to strike blow upon blow, and&#13;
thus crush the rebellion." .&#13;
It was not the idea of a butcher, but&#13;
the idea of war, and the mistake of the&#13;
Army of the Potomac was in net recognizing&#13;
it and failing to follow up a&#13;
victory, or "leaving its work only half&#13;
finisheJ," as Gen. Grant expresses it,&#13;
for fear that there would be greater&#13;
losses.&#13;
Grant's admirers and friends, road- .&#13;
ing the accounts of the battle, supposed&#13;
him to be a great smoker, and almost&#13;
deluged him with cigars. Every&#13;
express brought boxes of cigars as&#13;
presents from his Northern friends.&#13;
As the General said, "There were al«&#13;
ways two or three boxes on the tablo&#13;
in my tent or headquarters free for tho&#13;
use of my staff and visitors. Having&#13;
'TEenYarways*at hand, it was but nam-,&#13;
ral that I should every little whiJe take&#13;
a fresh cigar, and in that way the&#13;
habit grew upon me so that it beoauio&#13;
irresistible, and the people no doubt&#13;
are right in calling mo an inveterate&#13;
smoker."— Cincinnati Commercial Gazette.&#13;
—&#13;
She Got the Best of Him.&#13;
A wicked chap with plenty of nion&lt;&#13;
ey was taken into camp by a keen&#13;
widow, who made him settle $100,000&#13;
Dissolve four ounces of Paris white&#13;
in oue pint of water: boil it, anil when&#13;
cool add one ounce of ammonia. This&#13;
will make a good silver polish.&#13;
Sulphur macthes placed in flower&#13;
pots, the sulphur ends down, have&#13;
boen founds to destroy tho worms&#13;
which ate so fatal to house plants.&#13;
A solution o.t six grains of chloride&#13;
of tin.aud six grains of sulphate of&#13;
cqpper dissolved in one quart of water&#13;
will be useful iu plating small article!&#13;
with brass.&#13;
For a square hall or a diuing room&#13;
n a country house a dado of colored&#13;
matting 4* very effective. It should be&#13;
surmounted by a shelf, on which may&#13;
be arrayed any ceramic treasures in&#13;
the way of plates, CUDS, vases and the&#13;
like.&#13;
To cause griddle cakes to brown&#13;
nicely, add a little molasses or coffee&#13;
to the batter; and to bake them without&#13;
that blinding smoke use a^ soapstone&#13;
griddle, ami simply rub it over&#13;
with a damp cloth each time before&#13;
putting on cakes.&#13;
Polish salad is very easily made.&#13;
Cut in very small pieces any sort of&#13;
baked or roast meat (veal, mutton or&#13;
beef,) add soft-boiled eggs and finelyminced&#13;
onion, lettuce or endive. Mix&#13;
all thoroughly with a dressing of oil,&#13;
vinegar, mustard and pepper, and&#13;
serve.&#13;
A charuiinsj panel for a square&#13;
screen is made of plush of "old red"&#13;
color, with conventionalized poppies&#13;
in silk embroidery. Tho deep red and&#13;
the brilliant flame color of tho flowers,&#13;
and the cool green of tho fohago,&#13;
are very effective upon the soft background.&#13;
Avery good sugar cake may bo&#13;
made by this recipe: One cupful of&#13;
sugar and a tablespoonful of butter,&#13;
mixed together; two enpfuls of flour,&#13;
two table spoonfuls of baking powder,&#13;
one cupful "of milkv a little salt and&#13;
ono well-beaten VA^. Flavor with&#13;
nutmeg or Jemon, aud bake in a loaf.&#13;
Try this recipe for cooking cabbage:&#13;
Boil the cabbage gently until cooked,&#13;
and drain it. Put two ounces of butter&#13;
into a saucepan; set it on a good&#13;
tire and, when meited, put in tho "cabbage&#13;
with some salt anil pepper. Add&#13;
half a pint of cream or .milk and ono&#13;
teaspoonfu-l of Hour, stirring constantly&#13;
with a wooden spoon. Simmer until&#13;
the sauce is reduced, and servo hot.&#13;
Don't put elaborate brass grates in&#13;
your rooms unless you intend to use&#13;
them. A showy brass grate unstained&#13;
by smoke or ashes suggosts in all its&#13;
glittering newness a showroom ai I&#13;
not a home. A lire place not consecrated&#13;
to a lire, ^hat has neither&#13;
warmth nor suggestion of warmth, is&#13;
a dreadful sham; il is not artistic; it&#13;
is not decorative; it kills rather than&#13;
gives pleasure.&#13;
Cold meat may be used to advantage&#13;
TUT£S"'?&#13;
PILLS&#13;
SYMPTOMS Of A TORPID LIVEL Jj—ot a»Mtli«t BiwriiciiilT*. P»l&#13;
ta« fc.»4. with * * B l 1 • • • • M I M » j&#13;
t a s k » • « , P»U « • * « » « • &lt; • • • • !&#13;
tUrifalldi*f,t aFtutullt«*« sa» zaefrtfacrlr •aaatfl n»g•, *w'i•t*h »" i_fif-e Irrtt»bimr«f t e » M r , *«w»»lrtu. wltfc&#13;
m f M l l u m t » * » l « f «««leel«* ••*© * « * »&#13;
WMrlMit, DtsmtBCi* Fl«tt*rta« a l t h *&#13;
U M H . 0«t« atftrctb* 9J—t Ha«*a*fc«&#13;
over tka right • ? • . R«»tUM"««a» mtfc&#13;
fitful d*«a«ia. Hitaly colara* Ufima. mm*&#13;
» CONSTIPATION. •&#13;
TUTT'» H L U ara •ipacially ft/ • A** to inch, « • • » , on* dn»a •tfteu *j*\* •haDf#off«ellns»^ton»innlil»tho»uffer€r.&#13;
Th«y l»«rea«« tha A »patlta,ana emuM\Mm&#13;
prMuiJed. Fries Uftet^LtMMTJt^JLSIllSLX:&#13;
TUTTS HAIR DYE. •GIU.T lUra or WHISKERS cfc»n«ed to %&#13;
Gu&gt;snr BLACK by • single application of&#13;
this DTTC. It imparts a natural color, acts imtantaneously. SoM by Drnggt»ta, oe&#13;
aunt by expreM on receiptor fl. • » , .' Office, 44- Murray St., New York. Improved Western Washer&#13;
raXCS* Ko.lfbrfamllrors $8&#13;
JfO. 2forI§.rgefiBilly... &lt;•• •&#13;
Ko. S for Hotel and Lain dry, .... 10&#13;
Over 20,000 in UM«&#13;
ippng&#13;
hour, with a little salt.&#13;
poui&#13;
Moisten the&#13;
paste with the water and roll it out&#13;
half an inch thick. Mince any kind of&#13;
cold meat, season it and add a few&#13;
spoonsful of gravy. Spread the&#13;
minced moat on tho paste and roll it&#13;
up. Tie it up in a cloth buttered and&#13;
floured and boil for an hour and a half.&#13;
To clean and freshen old matting rub&#13;
it with a cloth wet in salt water, being&#13;
careful not to allow any drops of water&#13;
to dry in tho matting, as-they will&#13;
leave spots dtllicult to femove. Heavy&#13;
varnished furniture should never rest&#13;
directly upon the matting, for even&#13;
pood varnish, becoming soft iu warm&#13;
weather, will stain the. straw. Matting&#13;
may be turned if the loose ends&#13;
of the cords aro threaded in a large&#13;
needle and drawn through to tho other&#13;
side.&#13;
DonH hang upon your walls huge&#13;
black engravings set in vast spaces of&#13;
white margin. Pictures of this sort&#13;
are very depressing. Instead of white&#13;
margins substitute a gray paper, and&#13;
if you must have black prints select&#13;
those that hava a good deal of gray in&#13;
them—pictures with tone and mellow&#13;
effects Etchings commonly have more&#13;
softness and artistic effect than engravings.&#13;
Don't hang chromos on your&#13;
wall, or colored prints; don't display&#13;
long lines of family photographs; don't&#13;
hang mosses or colored leaves or dried&#13;
grasses about.&#13;
You can iron a table cloth so as to&#13;
have a good center piece to put your&#13;
flower pot or glass'of cut flowers on.&#13;
Fold the cloth, whether square or oblong,&#13;
in four, so that the center shall&#13;
be in the doubled corner at your left&#13;
hand. Begin at this corner and turn&#13;
o'veriibonTaninch,creasing it^harply&#13;
and pressing the iron firmly down on&#13;
it. Then move this fold forward&#13;
on the cloth and croaso another half&#13;
inch, not doubling under the part already&#13;
ironed, but making a fresh&#13;
crease. So proceed until you have as&#13;
large a centersipiaro as you wish.&#13;
You can vary the distance given&#13;
to accommodate the thickness of your&#13;
cloth.&#13;
An excellent rico pudding is made by&#13;
this recipe: Wash lour ounces of rice&#13;
in cold water and set it on the lire with&#13;
Thoijsandiof lnclicinre'tJsiBfjit, and thtr*p«ak&#13;
of it in tha hi«he*t terms, »»?ii&gt;g tbat.tbny would&#13;
nther diipsnae with any othor household article,&#13;
th&amp;n this excellent Washer. J^o well-regulated&#13;
family will be without it, aa it larca the clot Lea,&#13;
•ares la&gt;&gt;or, saves time, saves fuel, saves soap, and&#13;
bakes waahdiy no longer a dread, but rather apleasant&#13;
recreation, aa much aa such Is possible,&#13;
HORTOy M'F'G CO.,&#13;
Agents Wanted. ' Ft. Wayne, Ind,&#13;
a manP" she inquired impertinently.&#13;
"Oh, I don't know," replied the lady&#13;
slightly embarrassed.&#13;
"Audybu are so attractive, too, and&#13;
could have had your choice, while that&#13;
man is no earthly good?"&#13;
"Don't worry about how good I am&#13;
or how bad ho is, I&#13;
may DO nearly&#13;
covered with it. When done, remove&#13;
it from tho tire and mix with it two&#13;
tablespoinfuls of sugar, two ounces&#13;
of butter, two tablespoonfuls of&#13;
milk, three yolks of eggs, a pinch of&#13;
salt, and, if'liked a very little nutmeg.&#13;
Put back on the tiro for&#13;
^ 7W&gt;J&gt; $ &amp; \&#13;
w HiCHTS IKD! AN VEGETABLE PILLS&#13;
ITOR THE&#13;
me nro ior a mingof&#13;
the best o: uto, stirring constantly^ Butter a mold&#13;
him, rest assured ot that." ; ; well and dust it with sugar, and turn&#13;
'•How could you? ' • ; tho rice in it. Bake in a moderate Anc? a i l B i l l O U S C o m p l a i n t *&#13;
" I got his m o n e y . " - ^ r c / ^ Tra: oven for half an hbu*. Serve With a ^ e t 0 L c j c i n , Z ' ^ Z h o " ™ eCer* sauce. \ i in*, trice ittcu* Ait Drugglsu. c *&#13;
hx* X&#13;
\ , \ ( &gt; v&#13;
-«£-&#13;
MsjiaMHWad .-... &gt; 7 \f- X? •&#13;
&gt;,--^Vv—&#13;
r r f t \ , ' .W^VA^'7" •.-:- !.&lt;.;• '«.'rv&gt; .ii-.,;&amp;&gt;&amp;iui •••?;;&#13;
1 «&#13;
/.f.v.y'- ;•.*/.&#13;
WARNER'S T I P P E C A N O E&#13;
T H I BE8T&#13;
I&#13;
u.&#13;
O I&#13;
z TONIC&#13;
I&#13;
&gt;&#13;
t*&#13;
m&#13;
O&#13;
5&#13;
o&#13;
»&#13;
X&#13;
&gt;&#13;
I&#13;
&gt;z&#13;
* *&#13;
OO^YdiaMTIO.] BI&#13;
f) SATISFACTION GUARANTEED.&#13;
XL H. WABSEB ft CO., Boshester. V.7.&#13;
.4ZZ WEAKNESSES&#13;
OF DIGESTION,&#13;
$ 1 . 0 0 A B O T T L E ,&#13;
H. H. WAKNER &amp; Co., Rochester, N. Y.&#13;
PRor. J. O,. ADAMS, South Syrarase, K. Y., recommends&#13;
Warner'* TUTKCANOE. Tim Best In, ihts&#13;
strongest terms for dyspepsia and siomuch disorder.&#13;
r-ur Toning up the System, No superior.&#13;
( I . O O A B o t t l e .&#13;
H. H. WABXEK &amp; Co. Rochester, N. Y.&#13;
.1. H. DENIO, Esq... of Athlon, N. T.. yesr* ago w u&#13;
t"&gt;ke:i with stomach disorder, sleeplessness, melsncholy.&#13;
h'+dsches. etc. He gsve up his business and&#13;
1 es A tea to farming lnthe hope that out-of-door excre&#13;
t e veoiildrestort! him. Ho exhausted all the known&#13;
means o'the best physicians In vain. In 1884 began&#13;
ta^ng Warner's TIPPXCANOX, The Best, and In&#13;
&gt;.aroi, 1*3, he str.ted that tils health was better than&#13;
tt had been foryears, and no medicine heknewofor&#13;
Lad ever hesri of equalled Warner's Tirra'Ajroa,&#13;
The Beit, for stoniacn disorder!.&#13;
- T H E&#13;
BESTTONSC.&#13;
Thta medicine, combining Iron with&#13;
rentable tonics, quickly and convpfetely&#13;
Cure* Dyspepsia, indigcstlon^M'en.uncss,&#13;
Impure Blood, iUalarla,CMrtft aud Fevers,&#13;
ana Neuralgia, j ^ " ^&#13;
It is an unfaiUm£*emedy for Diseases of the&#13;
Kidneys nnaVtnVer.&#13;
It Is ipvatiiablo for Diseases peculiar to&#13;
TVomenTand ull who leud sedentary lives,&#13;
^ Joes not injure the teeth, canst headache.or&#13;
"produce constipation—other Iron medicine* Oo.&#13;
It enriches and purifies the blood, stimulates&#13;
the appetite, aid* the assimilation of food, relieve!&#13;
Heartburn and Belching, and strengthens&#13;
the muscles and nerves. ~&#13;
For Intermittent Fevers, Lassitude, Lack of&#13;
Energy, Ac, it has no equal.&#13;
SSsr- Tho genuine has at&gt;ovo trade mnik and&#13;
Crossed red lines'on wrapper. Take no other,&#13;
Cadaaaiybr UHotv* n i m i u L ro., m m MOKE, K'&gt;&#13;
jflSJSJElfc&#13;
tffi&amp;S&#13;
JIoMottor's Stomach&#13;
lllnors conquers&#13;
nnd preventBiiiulnrlal&#13;
fevers, d y s p c p s U,&#13;
chronic constipation,&#13;
a tendency to Kidney&#13;
Riid Mmhler ailments&#13;
and rheumatism, and&#13;
Is of the greatest&#13;
value in ruses of&#13;
bodily trouble arising&#13;
from weakness. Old&#13;
people nrfi generally,&#13;
aided by It, and It Is&#13;
highly serviceable to&#13;
convnlcsreuts a n d&#13;
ladies in delicate&#13;
health. It Is, moreover,&#13;
a useful medicine&#13;
totiike with one&#13;
on h.pg Journeys, and&#13;
ceurlentcis -the effect&#13;
of mental exhaustion.&#13;
For Sule&#13;
by all Druggists&#13;
a n d Dealers g e n -&#13;
•rally.&#13;
ROCKFORDWATCBES&#13;
J.re**nequ«ll** *» EXACTING SERVICE.&#13;
~ 17a ed by t h o C h i e '&#13;
I Mechanician of the&#13;
U. S* Coast Survey :&#13;
- b y t h « A d m i r a l&#13;
&lt;:o_vtandlng in t h e&#13;
V . S . Naval Observatory,&#13;
f o r A s t r o -&#13;
n o m i c a l w o r k ; and&#13;
• b y L o c o m o t i v e&#13;
E n g i n e e r s , * ) o n -&#13;
I doctors and Kailr&#13;
w a y men. They are&#13;
r a o o i t n l t v d , a i&#13;
_for a l l u s e s i n w h i c h eloae&#13;
, c i t i e s a n d t o w n * by t h e COM-&#13;
- —— —- — J P A N T ' S e x c l u s i v e A g e n t s&#13;
' H i l i i j w l i t i . ) w h o -&lt;v&gt; a Fu.lt W a r r a n t y . THEBESn&#13;
A man at his wit's end Is not at his faith's&#13;
&lt;nd,—Matthew Henry.&#13;
"EOUOH OHliATA&amp;RtfT-" Correct off enslve odors at once. Complete cure of&#13;
worst case*al*o unequaledaa gargle fur Diphtheria.&#13;
Sore Throat, Foul Breath. 80c.&#13;
-There are-pa-wfaitg 8ervants~at the Whijc&#13;
House. THE-HOPE OFTHJTNATIOIT, Children, ilow in development, puajr, scrawny and&#13;
delicate, use •JWciriHealFhRenewer.^&#13;
Parisian belles now carry plstolsT •&#13;
CATARRH OF THE BLADDERT&#13;
VrSitnianrgyin Cg,o mIrpriltaaintitosn, ,c tuorfeladm bmy A"Otlouac,h ua-Plltt lKbaid."n eSyI . and&#13;
Lijrht-houscs rlon't ring bells and firo cannons&#13;
t o call attention to their shining; they just&#13;
«hlne. '&#13;
We recommend Carter's Iron Pills to f vorv&#13;
•woman who is weak, nervous and discouraged';&#13;
Darticularl.v those who have thtn, pale lips, colli&#13;
hand*'and feet, and who are without strength&#13;
or ambition. These are .the cases for which&#13;
€urttr's Iron Pills are specially prepared, nnd&#13;
this class can not use them without benefit. Valuable&#13;
lor men also. In metal txixes, at 50 cents.&#13;
Sold by druggist* or scut bj- mail. See advertisement&#13;
elsewhere.&#13;
MEXSMAXR' rr.rroNTZKi&gt; BKKF TOXIC, the| only&#13;
-preparation of beef containing us RNTIIIK NfTRirioirs&#13;
3'KOI'KKTIKS. It ci&gt;ntBlnsblood-inaklii){ l'oive xencrat-&#13;
Jnnand lifc-sustftinlng properties; invaluable fur Indigestion,&#13;
dyspepsia, nervous prostration, and all&#13;
fovms of Kcneral debility, also. In all Infechlrd &lt;!ondaions,&#13;
whether the result of exhaustion, nervous&#13;
prostration, overwork or acn'e lUsense, particularly&#13;
if resulting from pulmonary complaluta. Caswell,&#13;
Ha*ard A Co., ITopTietors, Sew Vork. Sold by&#13;
drutfirft*.&#13;
a w a a a M a W a w » a w M w M a w M a w M&#13;
1 r • 7 " ' " " - ~ *&#13;
^LaclrjMan.&#13;
Great excitement has prevailed here&#13;
over $5,00) havino; been drawn in the&#13;
last drawing &lt; f The Louisiana State&#13;
Lottery, May 12th, an i we sent our re&#13;
porttr to personally interview the lucky&#13;
man. Ho found him, when the following&#13;
conversation took place:&#13;
What is )our name and occupation?&#13;
H. N. Chandler, bridge carpenter.&#13;
Do you live here? Yes. I »oard at&#13;
the Slacker House and room in one of&#13;
the cottages near the park.&#13;
How long have you been patronizing&#13;
the Louisiana Lottery?&#13;
Ever since my accident last December.&#13;
Was it you that we reported lying at&#13;
the blacker House last New Year s day&#13;
with a broken arm?&#13;
Yes, while in the company's employment&#13;
I fell from the top of an ice house,&#13;
injuring myself very seriously.&#13;
Is it true that you severed your connect&#13;
;on with the company the day you&#13;
heard of your-good luck?&#13;
No, I continued at my usual employment&#13;
until t -day w^en 1 had a misunderstanding,&#13;
and left.&#13;
Where did you purchase the ticket?&#13;
Direct from M. A. Dauphin, manager&#13;
of the company at New Orleans. It&#13;
was a one-fifth ticket of $25,000.&#13;
When did you first leam that your&#13;
ticket had won a prize? I saw it in the&#13;
Kansas City Times.&#13;
Had you "any troubio in getting the&#13;
$5,000? None whatever. I asked&#13;
Adams Express Co. to col'ect it, and it&#13;
came all right without delay.&#13;
Were there any drawbacks or deductions?&#13;
No. Nothing but tbe usual&#13;
rates forco lection made by the Express&#13;
Co.—Ottawa (Kas.) Republican, June 12.&#13;
The pain of life but sweetens deathf the&#13;
hardest labor brings tbe soundest sleep.—Albert&#13;
Smith.&#13;
Childhood often holds a truth with its feeble&#13;
fingers which the grasp of manhood cannot retain,&#13;
which It is the pride of utmost age to recover.—&#13;
Ruskin.&#13;
It U good for us to think no grace or blessing&#13;
is truly ours till we arc aware that God has&#13;
blesa»d some »ac else with it through us.—Rew&#13;
Phillips Brooks.&#13;
It Is better that joy should be spread over all&#13;
the day in the lorm ot Rtrcnjjth,;than that it&#13;
should be created into ecstus'.es, fulfof danger&#13;
and followed by reactions.—Emerson.&#13;
It is a happy thing for us that this is really&#13;
all we have to concern ourselves about—what&#13;
to do next. No man &lt; a I do the s-cond thing.&#13;
He can do the flrst—-urorge MacDonahL&#13;
One earnest gaze upon Christ Is worth a&#13;
thousand scrutinies of seK, The man wh&#13;
holds the cross aud lj*hol&lt;lin" it wceusffannot&#13;
be really blind nor piTl.ouirv^elf^Borant;--&#13;
Dean Vaughn,&#13;
Seek thou thy God^aWne by prayer,&#13;
And thou slujJ4^fIoul)t—perchance despair;&#13;
But seek-HTm also by endoiivor,&#13;
A'adrtfiou shalt tiud Him gracious ever.&#13;
Aken.&#13;
-&gt;Men's lives should be like the days, more&#13;
beautiful In the evenicg; or like the seasons,&#13;
aglow with promise, and the autumn rich with&#13;
golden sheaves, where good words and deeds&#13;
have ripened on the Held.&#13;
Moments seize;&#13;
Heaven's on their wing; a moment we may&#13;
wish&#13;
When world* wunt wealth to buy.&#13;
—Young.&#13;
Rest—where death no more shall sever&#13;
Toils and tears will all be o'er;&#13;
Pain, or fever's wa.-'te shall never&#13;
Blight our fond one,,* 0:1 the shore&#13;
With the ransomed,&#13;
And the Saviour evermore.&#13;
The spirit of liberty is not merely, as some f&gt;coplejmaglne, 0. ji^alou^y of our own particuar&#13;
rights, but a respect for the rights of others,&#13;
and an "unwillingness that any man, whether&#13;
high or low should be wronged uud trampled&#13;
under foot—Chaunlng.&#13;
Men do things which their fathers would have&#13;
depreciated, ami then draw about themselves n&#13;
flimsy cordon 01 s mhistry, and talk about the&#13;
advance of humunity-and"liberal thought, when&#13;
it is nothing after all but a preference for indi-&#13;
Ylduaniceuse.—Hev. John Flail,D.D.&#13;
In the University of Berlin a sclsolarshln has&#13;
been established, open to all theological students&#13;
only on londit 0:1 that they go as missionaries&#13;
"to the East Indies, or to accept a professorship&#13;
at the European, missionary schools&#13;
In Calcutta or Madras.&#13;
Life Is a field of nettle-* to some men. Their&#13;
fretful, worrying tempers are always pricking&#13;
out through the t.mdcr fkin of their uncasiuess.&#13;
Why, if they were set down in Paradise,&#13;
carrying their cad niiud with them, they would&#13;
fret at the good angels, at the climate, and the&#13;
colors even of the roses.—Dr. Bushneil.&#13;
wm&#13;
Scrofula&#13;
Young Lady at Boarding ScnooL&#13;
At some of the French boarding&#13;
schools in Paris, the girls arc fed on&#13;
weak soup, two or thre« degrees&#13;
stronger than hot water; meat, from&#13;
which nearly all the nourishment is extracted&#13;
by boiling; coarse veal, watery&#13;
carrot and gray, sour bread. -The&#13;
young lady who comes home after a&#13;
few terms of this sort of diet may be&#13;
very learned, but is pale and poor-looking,&#13;
lacking vigor and health. Give&#13;
her Brown's Iron Bitters—the best lonio&#13;
in tho world for young ladies with impoverished&#13;
blood—and bring the roses&#13;
into her cheeks.&#13;
When the druggist is rung out of bed&#13;
at four o'cL ok in the morning by a ctrs*&#13;
Mallard 8auceggga£f2fflS!rj£us e, Only told&#13;
cUoapest..&#13;
tomer who wants to purchase a twocent&#13;
postage stamp, he begins to think&#13;
that life is not worth living,—Boston&#13;
Transcript.&#13;
SCKNE: A concert for the people.—&#13;
Dist'nguished Amateur (about to make&#13;
his first appearand'in public)—' &gt;h, I&#13;
do feel so nervous! Sympathetic Friend&#13;
—Oh, there's no occasion to be nervous,&#13;
my dear fellow. They applaud anything!—&#13;
Punch.&#13;
A Philadelphian went to a physician&#13;
with what he had feared was a hopeless&#13;
ease of heart disease, but was relieved&#13;
on finding out that tbo creaking sound&#13;
which he had heard at every deep breatn&#13;
was caused by a little pulley on his patent&#13;
suspenders.&#13;
An invalid wont into a drugstore,&#13;
tho othPr day, to buy some medicine.&#13;
"Do you keep 'he b-st drugs?" he ask*&#13;
ed. "¥« u can't get better," replied&#13;
the urbane druggist. ' can't, eh?&#13;
Well, then, there is no use for niedicine,"&#13;
said tho customer, a3 ho 9trode&#13;
T.nrVsin iheMoo-1 of Dearly every on**, in many&#13;
cases inhrntec. IU severest form is that of runoiasr&#13;
sorrsoo lh«arm* !•«• or teet. Bunches in the glands&#13;
ofrhcttrck, pimi L i , cancerous growths, swollen&#13;
Jilo a, and thickening of the upper lip, are other&#13;
symjtoms. Ilnod's SArsapa^ilU-hiu had wonderful&#13;
succets in coring scrofula. It thoroughly eradicate*&#13;
iho humor from tbe Hood, and give* it new vitality&#13;
and richnes«.&#13;
Albe-t Estts, » S E « I Pine Htfeet, Low* It, Mas*.,&#13;
had been troubled w.th scrofulous humor from boy.&#13;
hood, and in the summer of l&amp;S* bad a large running&#13;
sore 00 his l«g. On taking Hood's Sarsaparilla the&#13;
tore gradually disappeared, and be has had no indication&#13;
of the humor sirre.&#13;
Mrs. Wm. McDonald, Woorter, O , for IS month*&#13;
•offered with scrofulous »wc ling of the glands in&#13;
the neck. Hood's Saraapa'llla gave immediate relief,&#13;
tbe swellings being largely reduced. She thinks&#13;
there is nothing equal to if. ,&#13;
Hood's Sarsaparilla&#13;
Sold by all druggists. *l; sit for IV Made only by&#13;
C. I. HOOD ft CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass.&#13;
IQO Poaea One Dollar.&#13;
The greatest thing a human soul ever does&#13;
in this world Is to see some thing and tell what&#13;
it saw in a plain way. Hundreds of people can&#13;
talk for one who can think, but thousands can&#13;
think for one who can see. To see clearly Is&#13;
poetry, philosophy, and religion, all In one.—&#13;
Ruskin.&#13;
A farmer and his wife went into a dentist's.&#13;
"How much do you charge for nllin' teeth?"&#13;
asked the farmer. "From two to five dollars."&#13;
And for pullin'»" "Fifty cents." "Marlar,"&#13;
he said, turning to his wife, '-you'd better get&#13;
it pulled."—Xew York Sua.&#13;
Outoof every one thousand people born Into&#13;
this world of sin and sorrow, nine hundred and&#13;
ninety-nine either do not know a good story&#13;
when they hear It, forget it after they have&#13;
heard it, or do not know how to repeat it&#13;
themselves, or haven't good judgment about&#13;
when to Introduce it.—Cape Ann Advertiser.&#13;
"How does it happen, Bridget, that there are&#13;
as many feet of gas charged l o r this month as&#13;
last, when Mrs. Blossom and myself have been&#13;
out of town three weeks!" "Sure an' I can't&#13;
tell, sor, savin' that whin the gintleman came&#13;
to Jufcat themathur there was six fate of coal&#13;
an' wud a top of it, an' he obsarved that I&#13;
needn't bother wid it: he'd take a luk at the&#13;
pracaydln' riggers. Mavbe he added tbe six&#13;
fate of wud aed^eal, I don't know."—Harper's&#13;
Bazar.&#13;
He Kept the Whole House Awake.&#13;
—WxsmwGToy, D. C—Mr. F. O. Mc-&#13;
Cleary, a prominent solicitor of patents&#13;
of this city, was troubled for several&#13;
weeks with a severe cough, which not&#13;
only deprived him of sleep * ut annoyei&#13;
others. The only thing which did-tolm&#13;
any good, he sa\s, w?s tbrejiew preparation&#13;
R e i Star Cougii^Cure, a purely&#13;
vegerable compoatfoVfree fr m opiates,&#13;
Narcotics or^poisons of any kind.&#13;
A celebrated physician declares that "Hunt's&#13;
Remedy will cure any case of kidney disease&#13;
that can be cured."&#13;
IT WILL PAY YOU&#13;
TO GO TO&#13;
AND HAYE YOUR C—arr6erd,l *wnl«thmontictee7ovnVricneeonrvs? nrTt abMv lQkH« ie1U"y «v«r«« wicnoweonnatn,' nt bv the&#13;
rCIVIALE TREATMENTS&#13;
howlrmTy&lt;a atwisiedln Anuria*a*I&lt;4* ••lUsnerlt*&#13;
•Stta.se eerstca* laeairvrsw (at* leboM, orenr^&#13;
Ky-seekers). l*nr* Hluatrated verk en tjiiiiires&#13;
f0flfm},9:^r,nmTy &lt;ii«s*s.Brala mmifttrr&#13;
Lsaeileasff f/ve» a\ *»e»*i «m In s t « | | t p j t M w u S , . ^ l . . _ l . l " l l .&#13;
'i?4&#13;
. ,/or *c»nulr»sUMip4.;Oi*rstu«tl mo&#13;
EXAMINED AND PTfTED WITH&#13;
SPECTACLES OR EYE GLASSES&#13;
R O E I O d C &amp; T O I G H T 8 ,&#13;
IMPORTERS, JEWELERS AND OPTICIANS.&#13;
140 WOODWARD AVE.&#13;
THEY MAKE NO CHARGE FORI&#13;
TESTING EYES. AND SELDOM'&#13;
FAIL TO GIVE RELIEF.&#13;
CHENEY'S&#13;
Stomach &amp; Liver&#13;
.REGULATOR!&#13;
O U B M COMSTIPATIO. .&#13;
JRobrepaldin aLtiivJemr,, InPdallapeieuttiloonn, Hofe atrhtbeu Hrne,a Mrt awlahreian, aOrfi jtihnog gf rtoomma IcnhdTig^eicsktio nH oera ddearcahneg eodr cKftwisnHatitman, lPeUiaeoe Iann tah Fe ewmoarlled ctohmaptla^in u. TxabeAwOuajuaviiannaS,&#13;
FeMUiTely *D«ir«n '•^-Tttpatifjn,&#13;
Btiati t l . 0 0 per bottle; 6 bottles, »#*00&#13;
r.ef. CHENEY A CO., Prop'rs, ,&#13;
*i*a«fa«t«rts&gt;j rkisiiisi.&#13;
T O L I D O . «&gt;&#13;
Ri Dill D III&#13;
RADWArS&#13;
READY&#13;
RELIEF.&#13;
A CUBE FOU ALL&#13;
SUMMER COMPLAINTS&#13;
)0[e oft finds help who doth his grief impart,&#13;
And to tell sot row half en's sorrow's smart.&#13;
—Spenser.&#13;
A celebrated doctor says that "other preparations&#13;
as subi-titutes for Hunt's Kidney Remedy,&#13;
are worthless in comparison to i t&#13;
If the heart be given, all is given.—Hugh&#13;
Stowell. - —&#13;
A M E H H E B of the Pioneer Press staff, troubled&#13;
for eleven years with olistlnnie tetter on his&#13;
hnnds, h»B completely &lt;Ured It In let* than a month,&#13;
by the use of Cole's Csrwllsalve,"—Pioueer Tress.&#13;
St. Paul.&#13;
An average of one picture per day is added&#13;
to the Berlin rogues' gallery.&#13;
When vou 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 depot. Six uuudred elegant&#13;
rooms fitted up at a cost 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 depot. Families can live better for&#13;
less money at the Grand Union Hotel than at&#13;
any otherYirit-class hotel in the city.&#13;
A colored imitator of D. L. Moody is evangelizihg&#13;
Georgian; •&#13;
S. B. Durfey, mate of steamer Arizona,&#13;
had his foot badly jammed.&#13;
Thomas' Electric Uii cured it. Nothing&#13;
equal to it for a quick pain reliever.&#13;
As surely as day conquers night, the cause of&#13;
heaven shall prevail, and He shall reign whose&#13;
right it is to reign.—Baptist Magazine, London.&#13;
TIIZ CLKRGY, TUB MEDICAL FACULTY&#13;
AND TRK PEOPLE all endorse Burdock&#13;
Blood Bitters as the best system&#13;
renovating, blood purif-.ing tonic "in the&#13;
world. Send for testimonial. _&#13;
Contentment lies within ;i man, in the heart;&#13;
and the way to be comfortable Is not by havbarrels&#13;
filled, but our minds quieted.—&#13;
T. Watson.&#13;
FOR BURNS, SCALDS, BRUISES and all&#13;
pain and soreness of f.he tlesh, the grand&#13;
household remedy is Dr. Thomas' Electric&#13;
Oil. Be sure you get the genuine.&#13;
Nothing Is so strong as gentlen?ss; nothing&#13;
so gentle as real strength.—St. Francis de&#13;
Sales.&#13;
The Rev. Wm. Stout, Wiarton, Out.,&#13;
states: After being ineffectually treated&#13;
by seventeen different doctors for Scrofula&#13;
and blood disease, 1 was cured by&#13;
Burdock Blood Bitters. Write him for&#13;
proof.&#13;
Were you building a monument to remain&#13;
for ages, how majestic and substantial would&#13;
be its construction! How much more august&#13;
and^olema ialifu^—Rev. Or. R,-SL-Storrs&#13;
•4 &lt;b TAKE&#13;
HOPS&#13;
BITTERS.&#13;
It wtfl core any ease of L i v e r and K i d n e y&#13;
troubles when properly t a k e n . It ia a perfect&#13;
renovator and mvigorator. it cleanses tbe eye*&#13;
tean of the v o l s o n o u e humor* that develop ia&#13;
L i v e r , K i d n e y and U r i n a r y diseases, ear.&#13;
ryiug away all p o i s o n o u s m a t t e r and r e -&#13;
storing- the B l o o d to &lt;\ h e a l t h y condition,&#13;
e n r l c h l n s r it, r e f r e s h lag; and Invigorating&#13;
fllnsVana B o d y . It z&gt;r»v»nt* the growth to&#13;
• e r l o n s I l l n e s s r&gt;t a D a n g e r o u s C1A*S of&#13;
D i s e a s e s that be jig In m e r e t r i v i a l aflmeats,&#13;
and are tod ape to be neglected as a a e l a .&#13;
T H O U S A N D S O F CASKS&#13;
ot t h e wont forme of these terrible diseases&#13;
have been q u i c k l y r e l i e v e d and la a short&#13;
time perfectly e a r e d by the use of H e p s de&#13;
M a l t B i t t e r s .&#13;
Do not get I f o p s and intuit Bitters eonfounded&#13;
with I n f e r i o r preparations of similar&#13;
name. T a k e N o t h i n g hut Hops ft Malt Bit*&#13;
ters if you want a sure C u r e .&#13;
HOPS k HALT BITTERS CD, Dow, i n .&#13;
T.H HINCHMAK'*SOXS. Detroit, Mich..) Wkol e&#13;
JAMES K. DAVIS &amp; CO., Dctrolf. MlcU., &gt; sale&#13;
J. J. DODDS &amp; CO., Detroit, Mica., ) Agents&#13;
e e e e e • • • • « • * • • • « • • • • • • •&#13;
. . LYOIA C. PINKNAM'S . .&#13;
VEGETABLE COMPOUND&#13;
•, »is A rosrnvB CURE yoa»./&#13;
All those »al»rul Complaints&#13;
• and Meskuetxps 10 comaoa"*&#13;
• e r e • • to oar best # • » • • •&#13;
i0 * FEX1LK POPULITIOS^ ,&#13;
Fri«« |1 la 12&lt;«U, fUl w &gt; a n him.&#13;
• Its pwrpOM U soteltf /c,- tin bgiti.naU kmtimg *i&#13;
di*ea»4 end tk4 rtlitf of pnii%, a:\d that wTd^es all&#13;
it claim* to do, thotuand* of la Jit* can gtadl* UMiff. *&#13;
* It will care enUreljr all Ovariaa trouble**, Intanunr&#13;
tlon end Ulceration, FsilLnf and biaylhotfnsrtta, an«&#13;
coosequent Sjiinal Weakness, nnd k» perliculartj&#13;
adapted to the change ef life. • &lt; • • « • * • « • • • • •&#13;
f•o rIt srtiemmuoJvaen tKi, aainadtn eressh,e FrtU-3t uWlecna^^rn, wdwtM otfr othysea 8llt eoruatv«lihif IOt encaenreds DUebldtJaUtiny,g .S leHrtepald'aatscnheexss,, Xlveprrr«owuds oPnr aoonvdr aItnlodnl, *yonj£it ibonac. k^Tchu.irt, ifse tatalwikrn; yo^f pttHir-iarruiiDk*eD dtolvw ncu, rceadn rbirn sit sp auisne, I*n Squenirdy setoanmflpde tnot tLs,Uniyn ,s nM^aw*^*.r, efdo.r Fpaamr phtlaeUt. atLder^ttjeprtst *0&#13;
Ststistlrs show that the mortality among children&#13;
Is far greater in the summer morttbs than at any other&#13;
season. Healta and perfect action of the bowels are&#13;
assured by the use of Ridge's Food. It Is neutral In&#13;
Its action, is readily tafcm l y th? little ones, occasions&#13;
no tax upon the digestive organs, and Is assimilated&#13;
when the stomach rejects all else,&#13;
TM£ GREAT AN RE MEDt&#13;
oat in disgust.&#13;
O U R E S&#13;
Rheumatism, neuralgia, Sciatica,&#13;
SorLeTumhbtawgno,t .BSawck«aJclhlen. tH^.e!a«dpacrhael, nTeo.oBthra«clhse«, sv . , AM) lAlLnLr nOTaI.I XSnc aBlOd»!sL,T F ?rUoTs tS BAi.\l0e As .f THS.&#13;
Sold hy Uru^uu and D*»t»r» •v»rrwh«r*. Fifty OsaU 4 betlta&#13;
DlrM-CcnsIa 11 Lsnfu^m.&#13;
TnacMAm.sie t w n t i g i o e ,&#13;
THE GREAT&#13;
O H I O&#13;
WELL DRILL&#13;
cDortitfttsn tyhss woefl lt hane dD praillc sssst&gt;oe etathche sat )b oolleee u Dnrdiveres I tth teo c alostta si*t ofro ldlorwill.s tToeo»ltsi I t Rhou nws« Uea swieitrh tohuatn raenmy oovthinegr faansdte rd.r' oWpse atlhs«o mtoaoklse ^ ..fmsaancdh i tnoeosls - M \ \ tor borine&#13;
WSLLSI&#13;
U P T U R E&#13;
KG AX'S IMPERIAL TRUSS&#13;
This new truss has a spiral spring and&#13;
onADt'ATxn PBKsseKK; yields to every motion,&#13;
retalntnjr the hernia always. It cures.&#13;
Worn DAY and M«HT with comfort. Enclose&#13;
stamp for Circular. Used In both Hospitals.&#13;
Ask your druggist. EUAN'S IMPERIAL TRUSS CO,&#13;
Box 338S Ann Arbor.Mich.&#13;
* f H t B « « T IS OMKAPIST.** BJim&amp;hTtinH RESHERS CUflsWtsIrlIsQUSsTsI&#13;
A teaapoonfnl In half a tumbler of water wfllfas&#13;
few moments cure CRAMPS, SPASMS, SOUR STOMACH.&#13;
NAUSEA, VOMITING. HEARTBURN, NERVOUSNESS,&#13;
SLEEPLESSNESS. SICK HEADACHE,&#13;
D1ARRHCEA. DYSENTERY. CHOLERA MORBUS.&#13;
COLIC, FLATULENCY, AND ALL INTKSNAX&#13;
PAINS.&#13;
CoFmorp lCaiHntOs,L sEeRe Aoa arn pdr isnetveder dei reeacsteiosn osf. the foregolaf&#13;
MALARIA IJT 113 TARIOU*&#13;
FEVBJt AND AGUX.&#13;
There Is not a remedial scent in this world that wtS&#13;
cure Fever and Ague and all other Malarious, Billon*&#13;
and other feverstalded by RADWAVS PILLS) as&#13;
qulcklyas RAPWAVS READY RELIEF.&#13;
RADWAY'8 READY RELIEF IS A CURE FOB&#13;
EVERY PAIN. TOOTHACHE, HEADACHE. SCIAT*&#13;
ICA, LUMBAGO, NEURALGIA, RHEUMATISM;&#13;
SWELLING OF THE JOINTS. SPRAINS, BRUISES,&#13;
PAIN8 IN THE BACK. CHEST OR LIMBS.&#13;
Tbe application of tbe READY RELIEF to the part&#13;
or parts where the pain or dlf&amp;culty exists will afford&#13;
Instant esse and comfort. _&#13;
It was the first and U THE ONLY PAIN REMEDY&#13;
that Instantly stops the most excruciating pains, atla/i&#13;
Inflammation, and Cares Congestions, whether oftni&#13;
Lungs, Stomach, Bowels, or other glands or uj-jaas bj&#13;
one sppllcatlon. .^^&#13;
PRICE, SO CENTS per bottle. Sold by druggist*&#13;
^ b R . R A D W A Y ' 8&#13;
SARSAPARILLIAN RESOLVENT,&#13;
The Great Blood Purifier-&#13;
Chronic Rheumatism, Scrofula, Glandular Sweiitng,&#13;
Hacking, Dry Cough, Cancerous Affections, Syptillltle&#13;
lints. Bleeding of the Lung* Dyspepsia. Wa'.er&#13;
White Swellings. Tamors, Plmjile* Blotches,&#13;
)ns of tbe Face, Ulcer* Skin and lllp Disease*&#13;
Mercurial Dlsesses, Female Complaint* Gout, Dropsy,&#13;
Rickets. Salt Rheum. Bronchitis. Consumption, Kidney,&#13;
Bladder. Liver C'omplulnt* etc.&#13;
DrRadways Sarsnparillan Kcsolvcnl.&#13;
A remedy composed of Ingredients of extraordinary&#13;
medical properltles, essential to purify, heal, repair&#13;
and Invigorate the brofcen-down iuid wasted body -&#13;
Oricx. rausANT, S i n and ?KI:MA.\EXT In its treatment&#13;
and cure.&#13;
SOLD B Y - _ X DRUGGISTS. One Dollar s bottle.&#13;
Dii\ RAUWAJPS&#13;
R E G U L A T I N G PILLSt,&#13;
The Qreat Liver and Stomach Bemedy.&#13;
Perfectly tastetess, elegnntly roated, purge, regulate,&#13;
purify, rteunse and strKU^'thea.&#13;
Dr. IUdway's Pill* for the ture of ull dis'jrders ol&#13;
the Stomach, Livrr. Bowels, Kidneys, Rlndder,&#13;
Nen'ous Diseases, Loss of Appetite, Headache, Constipation.&#13;
Costlvenf.'S. Indigestion. Dvupepsla, Blllrtusnes*&#13;
Fever, luflamnistlon of ihe Bowels. Pile* and all&#13;
dearangements of the Iuti-rn:il Viscera, l'ureis&#13;
vegetable, containing no mercury, mineral* or dele&#13;
terous drugs.&#13;
Price 26 cents per box. Sold by all druggists.&#13;
READ "FALSE AND TKUE."&#13;
Send a letter stump to DR. RAD WAT * CO., No. a&#13;
Warren Street, New York, orioforraatioa worth&#13;
housands will be seat to ) on. C The Oldest Medicine in the World is sat&#13;
probably Dr. ISAAC THOMPSON'S I I elebrated Eye WateR This article Is a carefully prepared physician's ftrescrtpUon. and has been rn constant use for near*&#13;
y a century, an-l notwithstanding the many other&#13;
preparations that have boen Introduced into tqe&#13;
market, the sale of this article Is constantly Increas-,&#13;
IDS. If the directions are followed it will never fall.&#13;
We particularly lnvlte b« attenUon of physicians to&#13;
Its merits,&#13;
John L. Thompson. Boas. A Co.^ Troy, X V IF PAGE'S L^^IQiBU.HIDm G.mLwUaE'ig&#13;
^&#13;
AwMardaseodn G* OHLaDm lMinE ODrA«aLn. aLnOdN PDisOnNo. C1fS&gt;S..3 P. uJUlnseiaJa /&#13;
MMlacJe uC_arT C.foi.,O ft&gt;e O. JVlfd,O UoCnElv8 TbEvR -t hMe ARSUSSlSSLIAS EVERYWHERE. S»-8»inpie Tin Can by Mail, fie,&#13;
1&#13;
-'1 11&#13;
V&#13;
&gt;l&#13;
. • » • • ' • • * •9 1;&#13;
•Vii&#13;
*1&#13;
• f&#13;
»*.»«T»SlC-4 a AY I , « A UKRT Attached to wagen.dellvers&#13;
the hay out of wlnrow&#13;
or swath on to the hay rack,&#13;
without any extra help,&#13;
and In combination with&#13;
Porter's Hay Carrier reduces&#13;
the expense of haying&#13;
more than half. Send&#13;
for circulars.&#13;
a. E/PORTER,&#13;
OTTAWA. ILL&#13;
FJ&#13;
re**Vw the worst t ip;effe^e*iresw&#13;
I J J O ^ t D r n ^ r K o ^ S a l .&#13;
. fori-l&#13;
'herealPl rnichesdm fsJL d\&#13;
Bams&#13;
CONSUMPTION. vs1e stahvoes saa paodssi toifv ee arseesss sedry t fboer Uw»oer ssbt ekvien dd lssasede oef" bteya1s5 lstaaleud lias g nave been eared. Indeed,sestroagts say faltS efleaey.tbat X will send TWO IOTTLXS FBUL&#13;
legttber with s VALUABLB TBsUTISsTes tbU disease&#13;
^ ¾ r S ^ ^ i Y t ,L?it!y.w-Terk.&#13;
R. U. AWARE&#13;
THAT "mr V Lorlllard's Climax Flog;&#13;
bearing a red ft* toflMhaTLorlllard'S&#13;
-,.. B e e e X e a f f l a e c u t ; thatLorlilartPA&#13;
&gt;wnTL.ci,?»L*«*L*Bd tb9* Lorlllard's 8najTa&gt;aivt&#13;
the best ind ofaeapest, quality considered ? _*,. FUN Bro. JflMihan's M«s&#13;
80 nhtstrsted, Seat,&#13;
, for Twelve Cents.&#13;
I Sure re Her 1&#13;
" ^e*town,Msj»,&#13;
ftUV IATTOHT AND SITUATIONS&#13;
-I.V31 £KftSJSHKD- Circulars free,&#13;
T I N E BKOS., Janesvllle. W U . .&#13;
DR. THOMAS' ECUCTRIC&#13;
&lt;»»««•«» w A-YW_«*C0J Ballla«f«.a*UC.I.A.&#13;
CURBS Rheumatism, Lumbago,&#13;
Lame Back, Sprains _ _ , — , „ , _ , , ,&#13;
and Bruises, Asthma, Catarrh. Coufhs, Colds, Sore Throat, Diphtheria 3urna&#13;
1 Frost Bites, Tooth, Ear, and Headache, and ail pams and I ^ f 'I&#13;
&gt;8TEK. MJUilWMtVQMl'AjT. P r e ^ t e f e r s . BM#nto. X™TJ*™M A&#13;
" &amp;k*« -.^_^^- _v&#13;
l&gt;«.'yyfc. ut • iJi LiLSiJF?':~/;- \. - ~7&gt;r ^ B W C T K , .y ^ 1&#13;
e&#13;
mi*- m N~&#13;
UNADILLA REMARKS.&#13;
From oar Correspondent.&#13;
Where are you going the 4th?&#13;
Minnie Newton, of Dexter, ia a&#13;
guest at the Unadilla House this&#13;
week. . .&#13;
Sammie Nutting has engaged to&#13;
work for A. S. Montague for three&#13;
months.&#13;
An ice cream and strawberry festival&#13;
at the basement of the M. E.&#13;
church this week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. S. L. Bignall, Mr.&#13;
Glenn and Maggie Anderson, of&#13;
Fowlerville, were in town a few days&#13;
^ a g o .&#13;
Kitsie Doty is visiting Fred and&#13;
Mollie Livermore at White Oak, and&#13;
Kittle Livermore has gone to Chelsea&#13;
to see her many friends in that city.&#13;
The Presbyterian festival at the&#13;
rink last week was a complete success&#13;
in every respect, the receipts were&#13;
about $18.&#13;
M. C, Weston and Maggie Marshall&#13;
attended the graduating exercises&#13;
of the Dexter Union School last&#13;
Friday evening, and felt well repaid&#13;
tot their long ride in the hot sun-&#13;
Mr. Davis, of Leslie, who is visiting&#13;
Dr. DuBois, made a splendid&#13;
addition to the M, E, choir last&#13;
SCEXE 1.--The witching hour of midnight,&#13;
.under a bedroom, window on&#13;
Piety Hill. Laddie ax\d Laissieso engaged&#13;
in courtship they jdid not notice&#13;
the pmnrbus cloud approaching until&#13;
suddenly Che full contents of a waterspout&#13;
deluged them. The most singular&#13;
phenomena was that a dipper descended&#13;
with the water.&#13;
SCENE 2.—Laddie clears the fence&#13;
at a bound, nor did he stop till safe in&#13;
the paternal home.&#13;
PRICE LIST&gt;&#13;
-of-&#13;
I GROCERIES &gt;&#13;
-at-&#13;
Sunday evening with his fine tenor&#13;
voice.&#13;
There are many false reports in the&#13;
papers in regard to the depredations&#13;
committed in our little town. There&#13;
has been much really done without&#13;
trying to add anything which has&#13;
not been done,&#13;
STOCKBRIDGE NOTES.&#13;
Prom the Sun.&#13;
Born, Monday June 22, to Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. C. A- Nims, an 8 pound girl.&#13;
Caleb Clark, son ot'E.S., who has&#13;
been absen&gt;_ibjL_thfl_pfl§t nine years,&#13;
returned home last week. He bad&#13;
changed so that his fathe/ did not recognize&#13;
him.&#13;
Mrs. David Leek was buried at&#13;
Waterloo last Monday. Her illness&#13;
was very brief, having been sick but&#13;
two-or three days. She died of a con&#13;
festive chill.&#13;
Marshall Isbell, of Jackson, and coworkers&#13;
have begun laying the foundation&#13;
walls for Isbell &amp; Co's. grain&#13;
elevatorr This building wbbh is to be&#13;
placed at the west fend of their produce&#13;
house, will be one of the -most useful&#13;
buildings in the village, and with their&#13;
present one will give tbe above enterprising&#13;
firm the best of faciltiies for&#13;
handling whatever the farmers have&#13;
to sell. .&#13;
»^I¾IOIi-A-s.I^s, i-w&#13;
It takes but n short time for a person to see that the stock carried by&#13;
MANN BROTHERS&#13;
Is b£ far the most complete in town. A beautiful line of&#13;
NEW TINSEL WINDOW SHADES&#13;
A*&#13;
XilJSTK OP-&#13;
8&#13;
GRAND&#13;
PLAINFIELD SPLASHES&#13;
From oar Correspondent.&#13;
Fine weather for haying.&#13;
The last end of this year's clip of&#13;
wool is near at hand and tho money&#13;
changed hands two or three times.&#13;
We hope some will find its way around&#13;
here.&#13;
Martin Kuhn, -who has been attending&#13;
school at Yrsilauti, is home&#13;
to spend the vacation. We wish him&#13;
well, as he is one of the self-made&#13;
men.&#13;
The ice cream and strawberry festival&#13;
held last week by the M. P. society&#13;
was well attended and an enjoyable&#13;
time was had.&#13;
The Plainfield nine expect to match&#13;
the Stockbridge team at Gregory the&#13;
4th.&#13;
M. Topping &amp; Sou have bought&#13;
and shipped 100,000 pounds of wool&#13;
and still it comes.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. N. Greene, of the&#13;
Michigan University, are spending&#13;
their vacation with his brother, Dr.&#13;
flrefne, of this place.&#13;
FOURTHiJULY&#13;
CELEBRATION&#13;
Sugar, Granulated *Jc&#13;
" Confectioners A *c&#13;
" Extra C. Yellow...&#13;
" Brown )&#13;
Coffee, Arbuckles. 18c&#13;
» Dilworth...: l»c&#13;
" McLaughlin's xxxx 18c&#13;
" Old Government Java and Mocho&#13;
mixed., -¾0&#13;
" Green Rio 1 2 k&#13;
Teas 15,25,40,50,60c&#13;
Pure Spices, per lb 40c&#13;
Bird Seed, " • go&#13;
Saleratus, !' 7c&#13;
Corn Starch, " gc&#13;
Gloss Starch, " y'"£c&#13;
Raisins, " 10 to 12c&#13;
Rice, " 8c&#13;
Prunes, " ' c&#13;
Oat Meal, -" •• ; . -ic&#13;
Galvanic&#13;
Ivory&#13;
Magnetic&#13;
Soap, 4 bars lor 2 5 v | XiitV washboard-&#13;
Town Talk, 6 bars, 25c&#13;
Lard, per torf. 10c&#13;
Herring, per box, 20c&#13;
White Fish. 10 lb kits $1.00&#13;
Mackerel, 15 lb kits $1.25&#13;
Dried Beef, sliced, per lb 18c&#13;
Sugar-cured Hams '* He&#13;
Mason Fruit Cans, 1 tit., per doz. $1.25&#13;
« 2 "• " $1.50&#13;
That beats anything in town. LADIES, examine the new&#13;
EMBOSSED AND TINSEL BELTS.&#13;
We must call your attention to our elegant line of&#13;
LADIES' HANDKERCHIEFS,&#13;
Our store is full, and the goods are going to&#13;
go. Prices are what knock, and we&#13;
are always ready to meet any&#13;
•—competition,—•&#13;
We have a full line of Tinsel Trimming Braid. GENTLEMEN, we must&#13;
call vour attention to our line of&#13;
4»&#13;
- « - — «&#13;
—AT—&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICHIGAN&#13;
Oration by&#13;
TERRENCE J. McDONNEU,&#13;
of Toledo.&#13;
PINCKNEY and STOCKBRTDGE&#13;
Mr. Day, of the Topping House,&#13;
has sent for 20 pair of roller skates&#13;
and Plainfield youngsters expect to&#13;
take a tumble and learn to skate.&#13;
Grand Street Parade&#13;
Of Bands, Emblematic Kepresetations,&#13;
Equestrian and Comic Troops,&#13;
Four Horse Turn-outs, Car-&#13;
—riages, etc.—&#13;
MATCH GAMi; OF BASE BALL,&#13;
Athletic Sports, Races and Oddities.&#13;
Bowery Dances, Swings, Booths and&#13;
Stands for the Amusement and Entertainment&#13;
of the People.&#13;
'JKXGKEXSS.T&#13;
MARKET PRICE&#13;
-for&#13;
BOTTEIL&amp; EGGS&#13;
4S0FT AND STIFF HATS*&#13;
the very latest shapes.&#13;
MANN BMSA—» PINCKNEY,&#13;
t&#13;
m&#13;
1*!&#13;
$1.25 $1.25&#13;
OFFICERS OF ©AY,&#13;
President - W. P. VAN WINKLE&#13;
Orato/TERRENGEJ. McDONNEU&#13;
Reader, Dr. G. W. HAZE&#13;
FOWLERVILLE PARAGRAPHSFrom&#13;
the Review.&#13;
There are nine graduates frcrarTtbe&#13;
Fowlerville Union School this year.&#13;
They are Ella Nichols, Belle Smith,&#13;
Tillie Dunn, Olive Bohm, M. Edith&#13;
Baldwin, Delia Greenaway, Eva Austin,&#13;
Dolhe Nichofs and Bernett Benjamin.&#13;
—Mr. Arthur ^Austin—received^, ajtelegram&#13;
on Wednesday notifying him of&#13;
his appoihtmeht as resident housephysician&#13;
of St.Mary's Hospital, at Detroit.&#13;
He is working hard at his profession&#13;
and the above appointment&#13;
shows how well he is succeeding.&#13;
Rev. Geo. Paddock, of Wa}Tie, and&#13;
Miss Anna Ruel, of this place, who has&#13;
been teaching at Henefer, Utah, tor&#13;
the past two years, were married at&#13;
Kansas City^ Mo.,.on Monday, June&#13;
15th. Mr. Paddock has accepted a call&#13;
to Argentine, Kan., and will preach&#13;
there during the coming year.&#13;
Chaplain, - Rev. H. GARTLEDGE&#13;
Marshal, - Dr. J. H. H0AG&#13;
ts't Marshals.D. HALL,E.MURPHY&#13;
VICE PRESIDENTS:—DR. H. BROWN,&#13;
Stockbridge; THOMAS BIRKETT,&#13;
Birkett; HON. E. B. WINANS, Hamburg;&#13;
HON.' THOMPSON GRIMES,&#13;
Pinckney: HON. GEO. COLEMAN^&#13;
Maridn; HALSTEAI) GREGORY,&#13;
Gregory; E. G. EMBLER, Howell; F.&#13;
A. WARREN, Fowlerville; L. D. ALLEY,&#13;
Dexter; JAMES GILBERT,&#13;
Chelsea.&#13;
D E T R O I T&#13;
WEEKLY POST&#13;
'the best weekly in Michigan&#13;
19 Months for $1.25&#13;
&gt;!~o^e~&lt;.&#13;
^GROCERIES*&#13;
BOOTS &amp; SHOES&#13;
ill&#13;
*CHEAP«N _^&gt;&#13;
*\E)&#13;
FROGH&amp;SgigS;&#13;
The WEEBLY POST will be sent on&#13;
all subscriptions received on or before&#13;
August 1, 1885, until JAnnarj 1, '87.&#13;
$1.25! $1.25! £1.25!&#13;
The WEEKLY POST ha&amp; specialtelegraph&#13;
service from-all the worldT&#13;
lias among its special correspondents,&#13;
Grant, Sherman, Dana, Gladstone, Bismark,&#13;
and all the leading writexs.of&#13;
the world; has-eomplete Farm, House&#13;
DEXTER CLIPPING*&#13;
From the Leader.&#13;
During 1884 there were in our county&#13;
579 births and 347 death*.&#13;
Wm. Andrews, of Dexter township,&#13;
has received 1400 back pension, and&#13;
will also receive a monthly pension.&#13;
The Congregational church have extended&#13;
a call to Rev. Mr. Bailey to become&#13;
their pastor. He will commence&#13;
his labor* the first Sunday in July.&#13;
SALUTE AT SUNUISE, 13 Guns.&#13;
STREET PARADE at 0:30 a. ra.&#13;
EXERCISES at SPEAKER'S STAND&#13;
at 11 a, m.&#13;
Mnslc byXornet Band.&#13;
Prayer by Chaplain.&#13;
Vocal Music.&#13;
Reading of the Declaration.&#13;
Music by Cornet Band.&#13;
_ Oration.&#13;
Vocal Music.&#13;
Adjournment for Dinner.&#13;
BASE BALL GAME at 2 p. m.&#13;
March and Drill of KU-KLUX-KLAN&#13;
at 8 p. m.&#13;
Sports k Athletic Games at 3:30 p. m.&#13;
BRILLIANT DISPLAY OF FIRE WORKS&#13;
AT 8 P. M*&#13;
hold and State News departments, a&#13;
is emphatically the best faniUynews&#13;
paper m Michigan. Evefy Democrat&#13;
should read i t ^ - ^ o Republican can-'&#13;
do with^&#13;
SUBSCRIBE NOW.&#13;
E. A. MANN, PINCKNEY.&#13;
Address&#13;
THE POST,&#13;
Detroit, Mich.&#13;
» • •&#13;
$1.2f5 $1,25&#13;
Pratt* with BK OTTTKXD *OR THI FOLLOWING :—&#13;
HandsomeB Baby (in carriage) under one year of&#13;
age. Baby ehow to be held on the square at 8:80&#13;
p. ••; Fat Man's Raw, fur men * dulling over&#13;
2*. pounds, distance 60 yards; Climbing Greased&#13;
Pole; SackB*£er Boy's Race, (age between 10 and&#13;
14;) Girl's Race, (between 10 aud 14;) Running&#13;
Race, open to all; Wheelbarrow Race; Running&#13;
Race between man and horse, 10 rods and return;&#13;
a prize also awarded «#. most comical character&#13;
fbors* aa«m&lt;fcf)feTKB-Klw-KTiB.-&#13;
IMPORTANT.&#13;
When you visit or leave New York CUy. save&#13;
baggage expressage and carriage hire and stop at&#13;
the Grand Union Hotel, opposite Grand Central&#13;
Depot.&#13;
Elegant rooms fitted up at a cost of one million&#13;
dollars, reduced to $1.00 and upwards iver&#13;
day. European plan, Elevator. Restaurant supplied&#13;
with the Dest. Horse cars, and elevated&#13;
railroad to all depots, families can live better&#13;
for less money at the Grand Union Hotel than&#13;
any other first-class hotel in the city&#13;
WANTED! AGENTS&#13;
TO SELL&#13;
T XT 3SJ" I S O 3ST'&#13;
yew and superior subscription Atlases, Maps'and&#13;
Chart*. ArpayliiKM auy aacnty injhewefld,&#13;
For catalogue." free, address H. c. TUN1SON.&#13;
Chiaago, 111.; New York City, N. Y.; Cincinnati,&#13;
- * - * !do: ~&#13;
alogne.&#13;
_. ».m.;N' , . .&#13;
O,; Atlanta, Oa.; London, Canada; St. Paul,&#13;
Minn., or Kansas City, Mo.&#13;
DANIEL F. EWErV ,&#13;
OCNERArAOCNT, _/' WNCKNEV, MIOH.&#13;
V /&#13;
PINCKNEY wm CELEBRATE&#13;
And we will endeavor to do o n r&#13;
share towards making it a&#13;
GRAND GALA DAY for THE PEOPLE&#13;
Among the seasonable attractions offered just now are&#13;
FLAGS, FLAGS, FLAGS!&#13;
vv&#13;
Beantitnl Flags, from lc. up to 50c. each.&#13;
Japanese Lanterns for Evening Decoration,,&#13;
Firecrackers, Torpedos and other popular Fireworks for the boys,&#13;
Confectionery, Nuts and Fruits,&#13;
ICE CREAM AND SODA WATER.&#13;
• p i , n « . M W I M I I W BJan that nnr linp nf ttRTTftS &amp; M E D I C I N E S 18 Vftiy&#13;
complete and price? as low as the lowest. We shall try to appreciate your&#13;
tradexand to deai'fairly with you. Give us a call.&#13;
WllCHELL'S DRUG STORE, EDfCKNEY. '&#13;
A&#13;
\ • "•f'l 'N • * i . ' x-&amp;&#13;
&gt;*$*;•, 4</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 July 02, 1885</text>
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                <text>July 02, 1885 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>VOL III PINCOEY, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JULY 9.1885. Na.au&#13;
r&#13;
• *&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH. _ INTERESTING TOPICS.&#13;
J. L. NEWKIRK, PUBLISHER.&#13;
ISSUXD THCBSDAT8.&#13;
Subscription Price, $1.00 per Year.&#13;
ADVERTISING EATE8 .&#13;
fransient advertisements, 26 cents per inch for&#13;
first Insertion and ten cents per Inch for each eubse-&#13;
QHent Insertion. Local/notices, 5 cent* per line for&#13;
each insertion. Special rates for regular advertisements&#13;
by the year or quarter.&#13;
ALL ADVERTISING BILLS DUE QUARTERLY.&#13;
n i l s paper may be found on file, at Geo. P.&#13;
Bawell &amp; Oo's. Newspaper Advertising Bureau&#13;
A t Spruce bt.,) where advertising contracts may&#13;
be made for It in New York.&#13;
RAILROAD CARD.&#13;
Grand Trunk Railway Time Table.&#13;
MICH. AIR LINE DIVISION.&#13;
GOING EAST. 8TATI0NS. GOING WEST.&#13;
V. X-&#13;
4:50&#13;
4:20&#13;
3:50&#13;
2:40&#13;
8:05&#13;
7:30&#13;
6:40&#13;
3:00&#13;
A. X.&#13;
7:35&#13;
7:30&#13;
7:0fr&#13;
«:86&#13;
HTW&#13;
A. X.&#13;
10:20&#13;
9:40&#13;
9:15&#13;
8:55&#13;
8:40&#13;
8:35&#13;
8:10&#13;
7:30&#13;
RlDQEWAY&#13;
Armada&#13;
Romeo&#13;
Rochester&#13;
ipJ*»H«&#13;
: \&#13;
Wixom&#13;
(a.&#13;
So. Lyon&lt; Id.&#13;
Hamburg,&#13;
PINCKNEY&#13;
Mount Ferrier&#13;
Stockbridge&#13;
Henrietta,&#13;
JACKSON&#13;
A. x.&#13;
9:85&#13;
10:00&#13;
10:80&#13;
11:30&#13;
p. x.&#13;
P. ¥ .&#13;
5:00&#13;
6:05&#13;
6:40&#13;
A. M.&#13;
7:80&#13;
8:00&#13;
H:40&#13;
&lt;t:15&#13;
9:351&#13;
10:(15&#13;
10:45&#13;
2:25&#13;
3:00&#13;
3:20&#13;
3:40&#13;
3:55&#13;
4:10&#13;
4:25&#13;
5:05&#13;
p . x .&#13;
5:55&#13;
6:15&#13;
6:30&#13;
7:1«&#13;
43a&#13;
All trains run by '"sentral standard" time.&#13;
All trains run daily, Sundays excepted.&#13;
W. J. 8PICER, JOSEPH HICKSON,&#13;
Superintendent. General Manager.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
T H HOAG, M. D'., .&#13;
' (HOMOEOPATHIC.)&#13;
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.&#13;
Office at residence on East Main street.&#13;
D, M. GREHNJE^L-D^&#13;
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,&#13;
PLAINFIELD, MICHIGAN.&#13;
Office at residence. Special attention given to&#13;
surgery and diseases of the throat and lungs.&#13;
rAMES MAUKEY,&#13;
NOTARY PUBLIC&#13;
And Insnrsnce Agent. Legal papers made on&#13;
short notice and rttaaonabie term*. Office on&#13;
Main St., near Postofflce Plnckney, Mich.&#13;
RIMES &amp; JOHNSON,&#13;
G Proprietors of&#13;
PINCKNEY FLOURING AND CUS-&#13;
_——TOM MILLS,&#13;
Dealers In Flour and Food. Cash paid for all&#13;
kindBof grain. Pinckney, Michigan.&#13;
* t f P. VAN WINKLE,&#13;
ATTORNEY &amp; COUNSELOR at LAW&#13;
and SOLICITOR in CHANCERYOffice&#13;
over 8igler's Drug Store. PINCKNEY&#13;
D. BENNETT,&#13;
PAINTER AND PAPER HANGER.&#13;
All work in this line executed with neatness&#13;
and dispatch.&#13;
T&gt;ANGS &amp; KIRKLAND,&#13;
ATTORNEYS,&#13;
8 3 0 O P E R A H O U S E BLOCK, CHICAGO, attend&#13;
carefully to business sent them from other places&#13;
3 .&#13;
PINCKNEY EXCHANGE BANK&#13;
G. W. TEEPLjP&#13;
-iBANJCER,!*'&#13;
Does ajknerat Banking Business.&#13;
yaLonej Loaned on Approved Notes.&#13;
\&#13;
• V&#13;
Deposits receivedr&#13;
Certificates issued on time deposits,&#13;
"—""Shd payable on demand.&#13;
COLLECTIONS A SPECIALTY,&#13;
OUR PRODUCE MARKET.&#13;
CORBECTED WEEKLY BY&#13;
July 9,1885. TOMPKINSdbISMON&#13;
Wheat, No. 1 white, % .90&#13;
«• No. 2 white, K5&#13;
No. 2 red, 92&#13;
No. 8 red, 85&#13;
Oats, 8n&#13;
Corn.: SB&#13;
Barley, 1 OQfcl SO&#13;
Beans, 75@l no&#13;
Dried Apples... 08® .00&#13;
Potatoes, «6&#13;
Butter,* 10&#13;
Eggs, 11&#13;
Dressed Chickens 12&#13;
Clover Seed . . . . &amp; 4.50&#13;
Drissso^Pork 5.00&#13;
• WANTED.&#13;
Wheat, Beans and Clover Seed,&#13;
highest prices paid.&#13;
Tompkins A Ism on-&#13;
1 ' s . •&#13;
FARMERS, buy your Binding Wire&#13;
and Twine of&#13;
J AS. T. EAMAN &amp; Co.,&#13;
Anderson, Mich.&#13;
CARPENTERING AND JOINEBING.—&#13;
Those wishing anything done in this&#13;
line will do well to call on&#13;
26 w4. . JOHN SMITH.&#13;
FOR SALE—X good revolving swing.&#13;
Inquire of CHAS. ELLIS.&#13;
REWARD.&#13;
A reward of $25 will be paid, and full&#13;
protection guaranteed, to any person&#13;
who will furnish information that will&#13;
lead to the conviction of the person or&#13;
persons who committed the recent outrages&#13;
upon the church property and&#13;
cemetery in this vicinity. By order&#13;
of Protective League, of Unadilla.&#13;
Dated, July 7, 1885.&#13;
TRESPASS NOTICE.&#13;
All persons are hereby forbid trespassing&#13;
in my huckleberry swamp and&#13;
picking "berries'" therefrom after this&#13;
date. LEWIS LOVE.&#13;
Dated, Pinckney, July 2,1885.&#13;
WAIT FOR CATHCART—The photographer.&#13;
He will be in Pinckney&#13;
soon with his car, and make you pictures&#13;
satisfactory and reasonable.&#13;
Kelley, the photographer, is in town&#13;
and will put those fine cabinet photographs&#13;
for one week at $2.50 per dozen.&#13;
CATHCART, THE PHOTOGRAHHER—intends&#13;
coming here soon. If you want&#13;
some good pictures taken "wait for&#13;
him and he will give you satisfaction.&#13;
I have let my huckleberry swamp to&#13;
Mrs. Thomas Carrol, and all persons&#13;
are forbidden to pick berries without&#13;
her consent. MRS. O. W. HAZE.&#13;
ABERDEEN ANGUS GRADES.—TheTolled&#13;
Aberdeen bull, "The Don" at the&#13;
Scotch Stock Farm, will serve a limited&#13;
number of cows at not less than&#13;
$5 per cow, cash. Apply early to&#13;
23tf. WM. COLLIE, Herdsman.&#13;
I have on hand some first class cider&#13;
vinegar which I will sell cheap. Inquire&#13;
at Pettvsville cider mill.&#13;
_2±w&amp; : „S^M.Q&lt;&#13;
PETTYSVILLE MILLS.—Having repaired&#13;
my mills lam now readyTo do TTrsT&#13;
class work. Flour, as good as any&#13;
brand on hand, we also keep feed for&#13;
sale. 24w5 S. A. PETTYS.&#13;
James Markey, of this place, has secured&#13;
the agency of the Allan Line of&#13;
Steamers He is also agent for the&#13;
celebrated Jones Scales.&#13;
Farmer?, call at Markey's and see&#13;
the new Climax light MOWER, for which&#13;
he is agent. It is a model of beauty&#13;
and perfection.&#13;
The HERO to the front again for&#13;
1885. Farmers, look to you*,interest&#13;
and get the Hero Reaper and save&#13;
your grain and clover seed, a reaper&#13;
tfaaTyou can depend upon in all kinds&#13;
and nonditinns of grain. Don't be&#13;
deceived by buying a poor, cheap machine&#13;
because you can get it at a low&#13;
price. The Hero is sold on its merits,&#13;
any good farmer can have one on trial.&#13;
I keep a few here in stock, also a full&#13;
line of repairs always on hand^-T also&#13;
sell the Hoosier Grain Drills which are&#13;
acknowledged to bejthe b%St"drill made.&#13;
I have corn ajjd-^fTeld Cultivators for&#13;
one or two^hprses, shovel plows and&#13;
horse-rloes and plow repairs lor varus&#13;
plows. I am also agent for the&#13;
J. I. Case celebrated threshing machines&#13;
and steam engines.&#13;
JAS. MARKEY, General Agent.&#13;
22tf Pinckney, Jtfich.&#13;
THE REV. GEO. H. THAYER, of&#13;
Bourbon, Ind., says: "Both myselt&#13;
and wife owe our Jives to_SHlLOH'S&#13;
CONSUMPTION CURE."&#13;
ARE YOU MADE miserable by indigestion,&#13;
constipation, dizziness, loss of&#13;
appetite, yellow skin? Shiloh's Vitalizer&#13;
is a positive cure/&#13;
WHY WILL YOU cough when&#13;
Shiloh's Cure will, give you immediate&#13;
relief. Price 10c, 50c.&#13;
SHILOH'S CATARRH REMEDY—&#13;
a positive cure lor catarrh, diptheria&#13;
cankered mouth.&#13;
"HACHMETACK" a lasting and&#13;
iragrant perfume. Price 55 and 50c.&#13;
SHILOH'S CURE will immediately&#13;
relieve croup, whooping cough and&#13;
bronchitis. ~r&#13;
FOR DYSPEPSIA and liter complaint,&#13;
you have a printed guarantee&#13;
on every bottle of Shiloh's Vitalizer.&#13;
It never fails to cure.&#13;
A NASAL INJECTOR free with&#13;
each bottle of Shiloh's Oataroh Rem-,&#13;
edy. Price 50 cents. «&#13;
For sale by H. F. Sigler &amp; Bro.&#13;
PUBLISHER'S NOTICE.&#13;
t V T h o s e receiving their papers with a red&#13;
X over this paragraph, will please notice that their&#13;
subscription expires with nest number. A bine X&#13;
signifies that the time has expired, and that, in accordance&#13;
with oar rales, the paper will be discontinued&#13;
until subscription is renewed.&#13;
HOME NEWS.&#13;
Quite a warm rain on Monday last.&#13;
The wool crop is nearly all bought&#13;
in this vicinity.&#13;
There was a hen pic-nic at Silver&#13;
Lake last Tuesday.&#13;
Mrs. G. R. Ismon visited Jackson&#13;
friends last week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Beebe are visiting&#13;
at FowlerviHe.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Parker spent last&#13;
Sunday in Jackson.&#13;
Miss Kittie. Tremain visited friends&#13;
in Detroit last week.&#13;
John Sigler and wife, of Leslie,&#13;
Fourth-ot-July-ed here.&#13;
Master O. T. Baker is visiting in&#13;
Stockbridge this week.&#13;
—Fred C. Parker visitied friends here&#13;
a couple of days last week.&#13;
Daniel Stnttlef, of Eaton Rapids,&#13;
visited Pinckney friends last week. *&#13;
Edward Height and his sister Rosa,&#13;
of Genoa, was in Pinckney on the 4th.&#13;
Miss Madison, oi Wixom, is a guest&#13;
of E.G. Tremain's family this week.&#13;
Mr. Frank Cooke is visiting his sister,&#13;
Mrs. H. Cart ledge in this village.&#13;
Mr. G. W. Dickerson and family, of&#13;
Marion, celebrated the 4th in Pinckney.&#13;
Misses Lanra Rainer and Bertha&#13;
Sigler, of Leslie, are visiting friends&#13;
here. K&#13;
Roy R. Darwin, of Ypsilanti, visited&#13;
his grandfather, S. A. Darwin, last&#13;
week. ,&#13;
Ch&amp;t. Hicks, ot Jackson, spent the&#13;
Fourth with his parents near this&#13;
placel —-. ~~&#13;
Mrs. David Dickei'Ron, of' Marion,&#13;
is visiting H. 0. Barnard and family&#13;
this week.&#13;
Miss Mary Clinton, of Jackson, celebrated-&#13;
the 4th-witb—her—parents in&#13;
this village.&#13;
Mr. H. Haire and family, of Stockbridge,&#13;
visited D. Baker and family&#13;
over Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. Frank Birney, cf Eaton Rapids,&#13;
is visiting her sister, Mrs. J as. Markey&#13;
in this village.&#13;
Waldon's combined road builder did&#13;
some very fine work on Webster street&#13;
first of the week.&#13;
Miss Josie lsbell, of Stockbridge,&#13;
was a guest of her sister, Mrs. Jay&#13;
Claris last week.&#13;
nev. F. M. Coddington will preach&#13;
at Pinckney and Hamburg churches&#13;
Sunday next—at usual hours.&#13;
Mrs. Chas. Day and two children, of&#13;
Grand Rapids, are visiting at E. A.&#13;
Mann's this week.&#13;
W. A. Wilcox, of Jackson, spent&#13;
Sunday and Monday with his old&#13;
friends in this place.&#13;
H. STMann and little son, of East&#13;
Earl Mann and Mamie Sigler are&#13;
visiting in Leslie this week.&#13;
M. V. McWethy, of Marshall, sheared&#13;
64 fine wooled sheep in one day for&#13;
S. M. Smith, of Marion. Who can&#13;
beat it?&#13;
Read* the advertisement of Wm. Mc&#13;
Pherson &amp; Sons, Howell, in another&#13;
column this issue, entitled "The School&#13;
Examination."&#13;
Miss Belle Kennedy and her mother&#13;
started Wednesday morning for Nebraska&#13;
to visit friends. They will be&#13;
absent several weeks.&#13;
Mr. Kelley has painted his photograph&#13;
car a dra'o color and trimmed it&#13;
with a bright red, which gives it quite&#13;
an attractive appearance.&#13;
Miss Kate Brown started for Chicago&#13;
Monday last, where she will visit&#13;
her brotner, J. P. Brown and other&#13;
friends. Mrs. F. L. Brown accompanied&#13;
her as far as Jackson.&#13;
School closed last Friday' afternoon&#13;
with some very fine exercises, for which&#13;
much credit is due the teachers, Prof.&#13;
W. A. Sprout, Miss Hattie Haze and&#13;
Miss Belle Kennedy and their pupils.&#13;
S. C. Gannon last week sent a box&#13;
of flowers from Ellindale, Dakota, to&#13;
Mrs. Catherine Morgan, near t.his&#13;
place. They were a nice token of esteem&#13;
and looked nice after their long&#13;
travel.&#13;
Mr. F.G.Rose, who received a paralytic&#13;
stroke while on a visit to his sons&#13;
in Bay City a few days since, was&#13;
brought home to this village Tuesday&#13;
last. He is yet very helpless but is&#13;
improving slowly.&#13;
While it seemed odd not to hear any&#13;
fire-cracker shooting on our streets&#13;
Saturday, it was also quite a noticeable&#13;
fact that we had no runaways or&#13;
any other accidents that are usually&#13;
the result of that kind of patriotism.&#13;
We don't know as^ there was any&#13;
liquor selling in onr village the 4th,&#13;
but we do know that there was a erreat&#13;
deal of liquor drinking, and we think&#13;
the officers who have sworn to uphold&#13;
and protect the laws should investigate&#13;
the matter.&#13;
The wrestling match which occurred&#13;
on the 4th between Chas. Burden, of&#13;
Marion, and James Heine, of Fowlerville,&#13;
for $10 and the gate money, resumed&#13;
in an easy ^victory for the former.&#13;
The match was called at 8 p. M.&#13;
and lasted just nine minutes. The first&#13;
fall was made in one minute and a halt.&#13;
The general opinion is that Burden is&#13;
altogether too much for Heine.&#13;
—Sharpers have a now dodgo. iXh.ey&#13;
buy a load of produce or something&#13;
else of a farmer, and count the money&#13;
out by turning over the ends of the&#13;
bills right before his eyes, so that he&#13;
can see it is all right, then hand it to&#13;
him, and he puts it into his pocket,&#13;
when he comes to» pay it out he finds a&#13;
five or ten dollar bill doubled in the&#13;
center, and that both ends of the bill&#13;
son,&#13;
Saginaw, are visiting friends and relatives&#13;
here this week.&#13;
Percy Teeple started yesterday for&#13;
Toledo, Ohio, -where lie will&#13;
friends and relatives.&#13;
Geo. Hendee and wife, of Fowler*&#13;
ville, visited his brother, William and&#13;
other friends here Saturday.&#13;
A. Rockwell and family, ot Williamston,&#13;
and Chas. E. Frost and wife, of&#13;
WheatQeld, celebrated here.&#13;
Those wishing ice cream can find it&#13;
at the Monitor House every afternoon&#13;
and evening.&#13;
Thos. Read purchased about 30,000&#13;
pounds of wool here\ this season and&#13;
Mr. Starr about 35,000 pounds.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Densmore, of&#13;
Dansville, were the guests of friends&#13;
at and near this place over the Fourth&#13;
A . J . Beebe and family, accompanied&#13;
by Miss Jennie ButtontfOf Milford,&#13;
came to Pinckney to* hear; the eagle&#13;
sereaiB.&#13;
had been counted.—Brighton Citizen.&#13;
The sheep on exhibition in the tent&#13;
on the sqvare the Fourth was quite a&#13;
curiosity. It has a horn about nine&#13;
mches long and seven inches in circumference&#13;
projecting from its right&#13;
side, just back of the shoulder. The&#13;
visrf/f8aeef* is six years old, raised a lamb&#13;
this sprmg and sheared &amp; pounds of&#13;
wool. It was raised by Patrick Kelley&#13;
who lives near this place, and will&#13;
be on exhibition again on the square&#13;
Saturday afternoon and evening.&#13;
The 4th quarterly meeting will be&#13;
field in the M. E. church next Sunday&#13;
morning, Love Feast at half past 9 A. M.,&#13;
sermon at half past 10, to be followed&#13;
by the administration of the LorcTs&#13;
Supper. P$av. Dr. McEldowney, of&#13;
Detroit, will be present to conduct the&#13;
service* and preach. A cordial invitation&#13;
is extended to all. The quarterly&#13;
conference will be held next Saturday,&#13;
July 11, at4:30' p. ii. in the M. E.&#13;
church at this place. As this is the&#13;
last conference of the conference year,&#13;
ail the members are especially requested&#13;
to be present&#13;
H. CABTLKWB* Patior.&#13;
THE CELEBRATION.&#13;
The morning of the Fourth was&#13;
everything that could be looked of&#13;
hoped for. It was bright and warm&#13;
and the streets were beautifully trim*&#13;
med with evergreens and decorated&#13;
with stars and stripes. The exercitef&#13;
of the day began by the salute of 13&#13;
guns at sunrise. At 8:30 A. X. the&#13;
Stockbridge Cornet Band (with a torn*&#13;
horse rig) appeared, very nicely rendering&#13;
the air, "The Old Arm Chair."&#13;
At about 10:30 A. M. the procession,&#13;
formed on Unadilla St. in the following&#13;
manner:&#13;
1. Marshal ot the Day. 2. Stockbridge&#13;
Cornet Band. 3. Pinckney&#13;
Cornet Band. 4. President and Orator.&#13;
5. Chaplain and Reader. &amp;r&#13;
Wagon contaning ladies representing&#13;
the 13 original States, and gentleman&#13;
representing Uncle Sam. 7. Wagon&#13;
containing young ladies representing&#13;
tie 38 States of the UnionT 8. "The*&#13;
Happy Family." 9. Equestrians and&#13;
comics. 10. Boys' band. 11. Girls'&#13;
tend. 12. ^Cleveland and sister." 13^&#13;
Four-horse turn-out containing bojrs*&#13;
band. 14. A comical representation&#13;
of a mother and "99 children and one*&#13;
astray." 15. "Belva Lockwood" m &amp;&#13;
one-horse gig. 16. Citizens and visit-.&#13;
ors in carriages. Much labor and in-,&#13;
ventive genius was bestowed upnn this*&#13;
procession and those who took part in&#13;
and aided in making this part of thecelebration&#13;
such a success should be&#13;
praised. * They traveled east on Una-\»&#13;
dilla St., to Pearl St., thence south tov&#13;
Main St., thence west to Marion S t ^&#13;
thence south to Livingston St., thenceV&#13;
east to Mill St, thence north to the&#13;
grove, where a masterly oration was&#13;
delivered by Terrence J . McDonnell,&#13;
of Toledo, and the usual exercises were*&#13;
listened to.&#13;
At about 3 p. M. the game of base'&#13;
ball came on between the Pinckney club1&#13;
_and Mill*Rights, which resulted in a&#13;
victory for the home team, the score*&#13;
standing 32 to 27, for which they received&#13;
a purse $12. The baby show&#13;
drew out quite a number infancies'&#13;
and the prize ot $2 was awarded to the •&#13;
bright little six-months-old child of&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. William Swarthout.&#13;
At 5 o'clock a slow horse race was in-,&#13;
dulged in (for the entertainment of the&#13;
people) by G. W. Brown, D. D. Bennett&#13;
and R. W. Lake. This occasion'&#13;
ed some sport and proved Mr. BrowtrV&#13;
horse the slowest animal. "The fireworks&#13;
in the evening were very fine&#13;
and included three baloon assensions.&#13;
On the whole the celebration rTconsidered&#13;
a success, although some little1&#13;
irregularities and omissionsoccurreot/&#13;
whioh were unavoidable under tl*e^&#13;
circumstances, and the very large&#13;
crowd in attendance seemed to b^ welL&#13;
pleased. All who had stands, dances/&#13;
etc., we think did well. Both the"&#13;
Pincknev and Stockbridg^ bands fur-,&#13;
jiishedus with .excellent music, and*!&#13;
the night of the )&lt;XHh anniversary&#13;
of our independence closed in upon a*&#13;
happy and joyous people.&#13;
Common Council Proceedings.'&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICH., July 6,1885. '&#13;
Council convened and was caUed to&gt;&#13;
order/by President Grimes.&#13;
Present, Trustees Henry, Wheeler,'&#13;
Carr.&#13;
Account presented by F^L. Brown,&#13;
anvt 48c; Oh motion accounT^was allowed&#13;
and an order drawn for same.'&#13;
Yea—Henry, Carr, Wheeler and the&#13;
President. "&#13;
Account presented by J. L. Newkirkr amount, $1.05. On motion'acc.'t was&#13;
allowed1. Yea—Henry, Carr,- Wheeler'&#13;
and the President.&#13;
On motion, account of J . L. Newkirk&#13;
was taken from table. Oh motionacc't&#13;
was albwed and an order drawn&#13;
for same. Yea—Henry, Carr, Wheeler&#13;
and the President.&#13;
Account presented by John Lenon/&#13;
total, $24. On mbtiofa aetft was allowed&#13;
by following vote: Yea—Henry,&#13;
Carr, Wheeler and the President.,&#13;
Accounts presented by C Henry, D.«&#13;
Carr, S. Grimes, T. Grimes, J, Monks,&#13;
W. Goodrich, total am?t, $21.5»; On&#13;
motion accounts were allowed and an&#13;
order drawn for same. Yea—Henrys&#13;
Carr, Wheeler and the President.&#13;
On motion Council adjourned until*&#13;
next regular meeting,'&#13;
•* 5&#13;
4 ^ 1&#13;
to&#13;
! '.-ft&#13;
i •••;&#13;
r&#13;
r . ,.-&#13;
\l-m&#13;
V&#13;
WILL. B. HOT?* Clark,&#13;
IS&#13;
?&gt;r *N&#13;
/&#13;
m&#13;
' • ' ' ' * A , j , i !&#13;
. i ' . , — , — &gt; -&#13;
• - • * - -v-&#13;
7 rv&#13;
% .&gt;. &lt; .h^-'&#13;
-J _ _ _ _&#13;
1 0 CORRESPONDENTS.&#13;
Anconitrumteatloni for thin pnpcnhould b« icconv&#13;
MBltd by the name of the auihur. not necesaary foi Ebllc*tfon, but as »n evidence of good faith on th«&#13;
rtof the writer. Write miiy on one tide of the&#13;
per. Be particularly e r e nil about giving namea&#13;
and datea, fohuve the W'tters and figure* plain and&#13;
distinct. Proper nanien are &lt;&gt;i:en difficult to decipher&#13;
oecaute of the care lew muuuer la which they &amp;r«&#13;
written.&#13;
« ^ n — — ^ - — B » &gt; ^ — a — • — a — • — .&#13;
ABOUND A GItEAT STATE.&#13;
Brief Freedom.&#13;
' Charles W. Fonda has been discharged from&#13;
t h e Detroit house of correction on a habeas&#13;
corpus where he was serving a rive-years' sentence&#13;
for embezzling $4,000 from the Farmers1&#13;
national baud at Coustantiue In 18S2, was rearrested&#13;
by Officer Bailey immediately on&#13;
leaving the train In Coustantiue, on the old&#13;
charge, the warrant being issued at the instance&#13;
of the bank officials, and he is now iu&#13;
jail at Cerjtervllle. Fonda's ..discharge was on&#13;
the ground that he was tried and convicted on&#13;
Information and not on indictment by a grand&#13;
jury.&#13;
C. H. C. Rynd, the Adrian postal clerk who&#13;
was released from the house of correction a t&#13;
the same time was also rearrested, and Is now&#13;
held for trial iu the sum of $1,000.&#13;
HTNOB STATE HAPPENINGS,&#13;
Clare Is to have a system of water works.&#13;
July 16 is the date of the bicycle meeting at&#13;
Coldwater.&#13;
Mauley, the Detroit rlother, died at his home&#13;
in that city, of heart disease, J u n e 39.&#13;
Babeock &amp; Go's shingle mill in Manistee&#13;
was burned on the 2d lust, at a loss of $4,000.&#13;
A vein of galena in almost inexhaustible&#13;
quantities has been discovered near lshpemlng.&#13;
A teacher's institute will be held in Grand&#13;
Rapids in August. Over 300 teachers will be&#13;
present.&#13;
A. H. Ray, one of men arrested for the murder&#13;
of the Sage girl near Allegan, has been discharged.&#13;
The Smith lumber company's mill a t Kalkaska,&#13;
was burned a few days since, entailing a&#13;
loss of $7,800.&#13;
The Coon's gold mining company has been&#13;
organised at I s h p i n i h g w i t h a capital stock of&#13;
$1,000,800, in 100,000 shares.&#13;
Sam. Lightner of Allegan, a local tough, has&#13;
also been arrested for complicity in the death&#13;
of the Sage girl near Allegan.&#13;
John • Lalone, charged with killing&#13;
Archie Hule in Kawkawlin township, has&#13;
been convicted of manslaughter.&#13;
Eugene Saulsbury, convicted in the circuit&#13;
court at Coldwater'of manslaughter, has been&#13;
sentenced to 10 years in Jackson.&#13;
The West Michigan furniture Co., of Grand&#13;
Rapids, is a new association; capital $100,000,&#13;
with $79,000 subscribed ami articles tiled.&#13;
Roscommon was visited by a serious fire a&#13;
few days ago. But for the new water works&#13;
the -entire village would be a pile of ruins.&#13;
, J o h n Batcheller of Pleasant Lake, Jackson&#13;
county, began his one hundredth year in July,&#13;
a n d is hale and heartv as the average man of&#13;
40.&#13;
Leonard D. Sale, a prominent Detroit journalist,&#13;
has been api&gt;ointed librarian of the&#13;
bureau of patents iu Washington. Salary $1,-&#13;
800.&#13;
Robert Collins, engineer at the Pontiac kritt&#13;
i n g works, lias just received $2,000 back pension&#13;
money for injuries received iu the late&#13;
^war.&#13;
Gotlieb Wiersfng, a farmer west of Saginaw,&#13;
is out $800 by the burning of his barn and its&#13;
contents by lightning during a thunder&#13;
storm.&#13;
A. H. Ray has been arrested, suspected Oi&#13;
being the murderer of Eliza Sage, whose dead&#13;
body was, found about a mile from Allegan&#13;
recently.&#13;
William Andruss died in Jonesville recentlv,&#13;
aged 8') years. Mr. Andruss moyeel i n t o j a c k -&#13;
s&lt;&gt;n--eouR4vi&amp;48 3~, an 1—resided-—there-aln&#13;
continuously until his death,&#13;
The jury in the case of Margaret Ryan vs. J/1&#13;
Brown, the Heed Citv suloou-keeper-Avho sold&#13;
Mrs. Ryan's h u s l a n d liquor, which resulted in&#13;
his death, brought in u verdict of $1,000 in her&#13;
favor.&#13;
Minnie Young?, a former friend of J u d&#13;
Orouch of Jackson, but for some time past a&#13;
resident of Graud Rapids, in a bouse of illrepute,&#13;
was drowned in the river at that place&#13;
a»iew days ago.&#13;
Arrangements have been perfected for raising&#13;
$:20:),000 witu which to build the 10 miles&#13;
of road west of L'Ansc.that thcM.H.iV: 'O.company&#13;
must complete by July 1, lY)6. Work&#13;
will'begin iu August.&#13;
The committees appointe.l by the business^&#13;
men's association of Negaunce and Ishpeming&#13;
are lalxmng'THItgwtty to secure the sitr^ for&#13;
the new branch prison Jut a point half way between&#13;
the two places. " • N&#13;
Chas. Bllbach. a 10-year o'd boy, was loading&#13;
a calf to pasture uear Grand Rapids, and tied&#13;
the rope around bis waist. The calf ran away,&#13;
dragging the boy and killing him by bumping&#13;
Sits'head on the stones,&#13;
A sperialelection is to belt-Id at Otter Lake&#13;
•on the 14th lust, at which time a proposition&#13;
to bond the village f&lt; &gt;r £5 )0 lor the purpose of&#13;
purchasing and titting up land suitable for a&#13;
cemetery will be decided.&#13;
The board of inspectors of Jackson prison&#13;
•expect t« soon begin a new boiler bouse, in&#13;
which they will put two new boilers. They&#13;
are also 'considering plans for putting an&#13;
•electric light in the,prison.&#13;
Daniel-Mull, owner of a saw-mill at Fruitport,&#13;
fell against the saw, cutting his head&#13;
nearly off and dying almost instantly. He&#13;
-&gt; leaves a wife aud three children, and was a&#13;
•.much respectjd man. lie was about 35 veara&#13;
•old.&#13;
The aggregate earnings of the Marquette,&#13;
Houghton &lt;&amp; Ontonagon road from Jan. 1 to&#13;
J u n e 26. 1885, have been ¢945,947; for the same&#13;
period last year thev were $1,118,1*53, showing&#13;
a falling off'in net earnings of $272,216 in iiaQ&#13;
.a year.&#13;
Tom Milligan escaped from the Ionia house&#13;
• of correction the other morning, but was re-&#13;
.captured an hour later b y n former employe of&#13;
the institution, who recognized him. He is a&#13;
four-years man, desperate and subject to litsof&#13;
Insanity. ""&#13;
Miss Almira Root, aged IS. daughter of Asa&#13;
Root, living one mile rorth of N'ovi Corners,&#13;
• on the Wailed I/Jke roa-i, suicided the other&#13;
evening by banking while the remainder of the&#13;
Mrs. Gaylord has at her home in Charlotte&#13;
30,000 silkworms in all stages of existence, and&#13;
in a thriving condition. The cold spring retarded&#13;
the growth erf the mulberry uud osage&#13;
orange leaves, on which the worm* feed, uud&#13;
delayed in consequence the hatching season.&#13;
A passenger train on the D. L. &amp; N, ran into&#13;
an open switch about a mile from louia the&#13;
other night. The engineer, fireman and baggage&#13;
man were injured, and the passengers&#13;
badlv shaken up. None of the latter were injured.&#13;
A reward of $500 is ottered for the man&#13;
who opened the switch.&#13;
Three children in Grand Rapids, Harry Edgarton,&#13;
Glen and Ida May Strickland, aged 4,&#13;
4 and 21.. veara respectively, played with&#13;
matches which they obtained froni colored&#13;
children, in a barn, setting tire to the straw&#13;
aud before the youngest, Ida Strickland, could&#13;
get out she was suffocated and burned beyond&#13;
recognition.&#13;
A kettle of asphalt boiled over on a stove In&#13;
the Grand Rapids manufacturing company's&#13;
factory setting tire to the building and a boy&#13;
threw'water ou the tire, spreading" it in the&#13;
room and setting fire to a large wooden storeroom&#13;
and setting-up room and a large fourstory&#13;
brick block, destroying the same. The&#13;
loss is estimated at $15.000.&#13;
While a little daughter of Anthony Kuttel&#13;
of Bay City, was playing aliout a tire on a common,&#13;
her clothing became ignited. She&#13;
rushed home, where her mother was badly&#13;
burned in her efforts to extinguish the dames.&#13;
The little one was frightfully burned, her&#13;
shoulders and knees having 'been literally&#13;
hnkcd. She died the next day.&#13;
The Michigan Manufacturer says t h a t ou&#13;
January l.Wm. A.Berkey of Grand'Rapids.will&#13;
meree his furniture business into a corporation&#13;
under the name of the Wm. A. Berkey furniture&#13;
company. The incorporators will&#13;
?robably be Mr. Berkey, Wm. H. Jones, Lewis&#13;
. Peck'and several foremen uow interested iu&#13;
the establishment in a financial way.&#13;
A son of Robert Sargent of Bush Run township,&#13;
Geuessee county, was badlv injured while&#13;
riding a horse iu his father's field. The horse&#13;
became frightened and ran when the boy lost&#13;
his balance and in falling bt came entangled In&#13;
the harness. He was dragged a long distance,&#13;
receiving injuries which will prove fatal.&#13;
Among other Injuries, his skull was broken.&#13;
Yesterday we were shown a somewhat antique&#13;
look"ing-glass_byMr. B, L._Webb,_who&#13;
told us it was bought by his mother's greatgreat&#13;
grandfather in 1742, and has been in the&#13;
tarally ever since, a period of 143 years. H e&#13;
also showed us a fiatiron and cut glass decanter,&#13;
each of which had been in the Webb family&#13;
over 100 yea rs. They were all in a remarkably good state of preservation.—Coidwater Htpubcan.&#13;
Clio and vicinity was visited by several&#13;
severe storms of rain, thunder and "lightning&#13;
aud wind, on J u n e 2rth. A barn belonging to&#13;
Win. Darwood, Iu the town of Montrose, seven&#13;
miles west of Clio, was struck by lightning,&#13;
killing a hired mau who was in the barn. A&#13;
barn belonging to C. E. Hunter, in the' town&#13;
of Birch Run, was also struck, nearly killing a&#13;
horse. The heavy wind has lodged ' the wheat&#13;
very badly.&#13;
The Coon's gold mining company has been&#13;
founded in Ishoeming with u capital stock of&#13;
$1,000,000-10J.'OOO share* at $10 each. This&#13;
prospect was considered erne of the best In the&#13;
district outside of the Ropes, but owiug to&#13;
some driuculty among the parties holding the&#13;
option no work has been done upon it4'or several&#13;
months past. Fiftv thousand shares have&#13;
been set aside for a working capital, and work&#13;
will be commenced ut once. .&#13;
The uead body of Eliza Sage, daughter of&#13;
Loren Sage of" Allegan, was discovered by&#13;
Judge DL'JT Arnold while he was searching&#13;
through the Moore farm about one and one&#13;
half miles west of the village center for stray&#13;
sheep. The IRHIV was found iu a thick clump&#13;
of oak bushes. Her throat was cut and evej-y&#13;
indication points to the belief that she hail&#13;
been outraged un 1 then murdered. The woman&#13;
was about 31 ye&gt;ars old aud of weak intellect.&#13;
An investigation will be made to find out&#13;
. who were her murderers. " "• 4&#13;
Solomon KofTman,'employed in the frieght&#13;
ids, died a few days since from the result of a&#13;
pistol shot tired into the side of his head by his&#13;
own hand, Kufl'man's wife made an application&#13;
for a divorce ami papers had been served&#13;
on him. The trouble grieved him so t h a t be&#13;
eh'termined to take his life. He went to bis&#13;
wife's room, laid d o w n em the l&gt;ed and tired the&#13;
fatal shot. His wife became uncontrollable&#13;
when she realized what her husband had doue&#13;
and begged him to live.&#13;
Heurv ('. Wisner, George R. Richard*.- AU&#13;
bert M. Henry of Detroit, and Chester Warritier&#13;
of Jackson, constituting the state advisory&#13;
board of par.Ions, met in tin1 otliee of Henry C.&#13;
Wisner in Detroit July 1, aud perfected an' organization&#13;
by electing" Henry C Wisner p r e s i -&#13;
dent, Chester Warriiier vice-president, aud Js.&#13;
n Wil* ^ nf t;r;nul Rapids secretary. The&#13;
lx&gt;8l will flesritfter meet in the Telegraph block&#13;
in Detroit on t b M i p n l Tuesday of each month,&#13;
or if'iuvessnry at arry&lt;jtlier place in the state.&#13;
No petitions are tk'fo're' tlre4&gt;oard at present,&#13;
Three years ago Hejnry Zornrr-and wife lived&#13;
apparently hr-ppdy together iu GraheHownship,&#13;
Uceana county, anil being a fairly welMcwio&#13;
farmer lleury sent to Germany lor ins brother"&#13;
son Robert, who came to theiyi. It is alleged&#13;
that shortly alter Rol&gt;ert's arrival an—HnpmoeFintim.'.&#13;
ev sprang up between him a n d h i s u u c l e ' s&#13;
wife, which led to frequent quarrels between&#13;
the two men. A few days ago the woman&#13;
visited (Taybanks, leaving the two men on the&#13;
farm. That evening Robert went to a neighbor's&#13;
and said his uncle lay dead in his potato&#13;
patch, where he was found with his skuil smashed.&#13;
Knowing of the family trouble's, the neighbors&#13;
had Rotwrt arrested, and he was l o d g e u i n&#13;
TaiTat'HTrrcm^SatnTrtay. The dead man was&#13;
years old, his wife is 40,"and Robert is 28.&#13;
ANGRY AFGHANS.&#13;
STARTLINO DEVELOPMENT IN T H E&#13;
A J O H A N - R U 8 8 I 0 AFFAIR,&#13;
Minor Foreign News.&#13;
•&#13;
It is reported from Cabul that Isa Khan,&#13;
supported bv Russian allies, has risen against&#13;
Abdullah Khau.^ He marched upou Khana 1-&#13;
bad and seized the treasure there, valueel al&#13;
£1,000,000 sterlings belonging to the Ameer ol&#13;
Afghanistan. The inimical dilliculties ol&#13;
Kashgaria are becoming serious, and reinforcements&#13;
of troops are going northwards,&#13;
Abdullah Khau Is the governor of Kunduz,&#13;
the extreme northern province of Afghan-&#13;
Turkestan. The town ot Khana-I-Nad is situated&#13;
al&gt;out 60 miles south of the river Oxus,&#13;
wijich river separates it from the Kusslan protected-&#13;
state ot Be&gt;kbaru. Khana-1-Bad was th*&#13;
headquarters of the present ame\r of Afghanistan&#13;
nefore he was summoned to the throne,&#13;
and thereat took plae^e the negotiations between&#13;
the ameer and British omVers&#13;
The new English cabiue* will ubumlon coercion&#13;
in Ireland, anil instead seek a strict administration&#13;
of the general law,&#13;
Twentv villages in the vicinity of Vienna&#13;
were ignited bv ligutning iiml burned iu the&#13;
storms. Six men we're killed wheu trying to&#13;
extinguish the llame's. Great damage was&#13;
doue to crops by a hurricane.&#13;
The Gordon memorial fund, which is now&#13;
$90,000, is to be devoted to the establishment&#13;
u f an institution to be called the Gordon 1M&gt;V3:&#13;
home, to train, boys for cither military or civil&#13;
life according to their powers aud iucltuatiou*.&#13;
The ''Conservative news agency" has been&#13;
founded in Loudon.-with a capital of $.^)),000,&#13;
to supi&gt;ort and subsidize conservative newspapers&#13;
In the province and supply them with&#13;
matter aud Illustrations. Churcuill is president.&#13;
THE COITNTBY AT LABGEf&#13;
FISH SKNTKNTED.&#13;
James D. Fish, president of the Marine bank&#13;
of New York, has been sentenced to ten years&#13;
at Auburn prison. Although sentenced to the&#13;
full extent of the law the senteuce is regarded&#13;
as just. Fish'Js—nowlVj years old. Fy good&#13;
conduct his term of imprisonment will expire&#13;
in six and one half t e a r s .&#13;
ently without parlous injury. Meanwhile&#13;
Theodoro Trau, the altlanced of Miss Melsel,&#13;
who had also occupied a room in the house,&#13;
rushed through the : flumes and smoke, searching&#13;
for hlf sweetheart. He called to ker, but&#13;
received uo responce. He was about te&gt; give&#13;
up the search N wjjeu he stumbled against a&#13;
crouchiug female figure. Llftiug the girl in his&#13;
arms he rushed to the wh.dow and jumped. In&#13;
the lt^ap he broke his arm aud received serious&#13;
internal Injuries. Ou looking into the fae'e&#13;
of the girl it was found that it was not Miss&#13;
Meisel, but one of the Cohn girls. At that&#13;
same moment Kosie uud her two&#13;
room-mates were struggling with death in the&#13;
room above. The noise had not awadeued the&#13;
girls until it was too lute to save them. While&#13;
the other occupants were leaping from the&#13;
windows a cry ruug out that there were three'&#13;
girls in a rear room. The firemen climbed into&#13;
the windows, but found no trace of human&#13;
beipgs. Some time afterward a citizen uumed&#13;
Stewart made a search ami found the charred&#13;
and blackened bexlie* of Rosie Meisel, aged 3.1.&#13;
and Sarah and Jennie Rosenberg, aged 10 and&#13;
S yean*, respectively, The po.sitious of the&#13;
beidics gave evidciue of a desperat" struggle.&#13;
Miss Meisel was umloubtedly suffocated, as&#13;
she was scarcely touched by the Haines. The&#13;
other two girls, however, were so terribly&#13;
burut It is lm|K)sslble to *tate whether they&#13;
were burueel or smothered to elcath. The three&#13;
bodies were removed to the morgue. The chief&#13;
of the tire department is of the opinion t h a t&#13;
the tire originated in the saloon and was of tncendlarv&#13;
origin. The lo&gt;s will not aggregate&#13;
more th'au $o,000. Miss Meisel and Theodore&#13;
Trau were to have been married soon.&#13;
W H E R E IS I T 1&#13;
A Million Dollars Gone aad Unaccounted For.&#13;
A New Orleans paper publishes a statement&#13;
that e&gt;ver if 1,000,000 have been c o n e d at the&#13;
New Orleans mint of which there is no official J i i e value of o i » exported during the samerrl&#13;
A GOOD SHOWING.&#13;
There has been a decrease of about $10,ri00,&#13;
000 In the public debt during the month&#13;
J u n e . This will make the total reduction foi&#13;
the fiscal year which ended J u n e JSO, $(:5,100,-&#13;
000. The'reduction during the previous fiscal&#13;
vear was $101.000,0,)0. The expenditures d u r i - w h i c h the mint&#13;
A Briton who has been to Texas&#13;
writes to one of his home papers that&#13;
"a person who cannot help swaggering&#13;
hbout British superiority had much better&#13;
keep the broai Atlantic between&#13;
himself and Texas, while another p.-rson&#13;
with h s mouth shut and his eyes open&#13;
will thoroughly enjoy that country.&#13;
An English farmer reports a strange&#13;
friendship between his ferrets and&#13;
you ng-—rats—natnraL—j-ort Twice,&#13;
family were attending- d m u a , — N o came Is [ J i a J j a j y t U i a ^ r&#13;
assigned for the deed.-&#13;
A G-year old child of Jamo* Douillon'of Minden&#13;
City, died after swallowing a nuantitv of&#13;
when his ferret has had a litter, young&#13;
rats have been ijiven her for food, and&#13;
each time she has saved and suckled&#13;
two of them, with her young, until they&#13;
Ing the fiscal vear were about $310,00,),000 anc&#13;
the receipts $321,000,000 or about $7,500,001&#13;
less thau estimates.&#13;
IN'SAXK BY. GRIEF.&#13;
The funeral of the victims of Cleveland's fin&#13;
occurred the next morning. The parents am&#13;
frienels were wild with grief. Several faintet&#13;
and some had to be forcibly restrained from&#13;
tearing open the coffins. Tlieoelore Trau, whe&#13;
woulel have been married t ) Rosie Meisel the&#13;
next Suneiay. and who was made believe hit&#13;
swe'etheart had escaped, on learning the trutt&#13;
seized the coffin in his mangled and bandagel&#13;
arms, and it required the services of three ineu te&#13;
empower him. He will probably b j i.crmanently&#13;
insane.&#13;
RIKI.'S Tit ML.&#13;
Mayor Seott, of Regina, N. W. T., has been&#13;
retained as one of the cmuiscl ou behalf of the&#13;
c r o w n l u the case of Rlel. As it Is maintained&#13;
that the prisonerwill readily prove his citizenship&#13;
of the United State's, it is generally belleved&#13;
that he will t&gt;e charged with a felony&#13;
under HI Vic. chapter 14. sec. 12 and 3. This&#13;
law provides for the trial of individuals, members&#13;
of foreign states, accused of a felony', and&#13;
was Instrumental in the conviction of the , . . . ,&#13;
Fenian raiders in l^Vi. Capt. Steele. M e s s r s . j ^ } ^ ^ t y . w a s taken by tue lederal force.'&#13;
Burbridge and Osier have been engaged in tak&#13;
ing depositions of some of the probable wit&#13;
nesses in the tri-.tl. inelmlimr Geor»r(. Kerr. Tht&#13;
triakwill commence&#13;
15.&#13;
it is understood, ou July&#13;
- T h e s t e&#13;
"iork froi&#13;
ATTENTION COXOKKSSMAX.&#13;
amship Wisconsin arrived in Jtew&#13;
in Liver|&gt;ool ou the morning of the 1st&#13;
with 541 Swedish and Danish converts to Mormonism.&#13;
The s • people were in the care ol&#13;
Elder J, Hansen, president of the immigration&#13;
company. All ages were represented, from&#13;
grav haired grandfathers and grandmothers tc&#13;
lii-tie grandchildren. Fifteen missiouariei&#13;
we're; with {Tie ltock:--Thi^—tH-t4t^largest coinpany&#13;
of Moriunn immigrants that has arrived&#13;
in the United States since last summer, and it&#13;
is stated it wili !&gt;e soon followed by anothei&#13;
equally as large. Nearly all the .people will&#13;
settle in the rural dist'ricls of Utah. Sonu&#13;
slot) in Salt Lake City and a very few will gc&#13;
to Mexico. It should be remetnb' red that&#13;
Mexico has not yet become a, popular e o n n t n&#13;
for Mormons. There has been something of a&#13;
revival of Mormon missionary worl: in Europe&#13;
and it may be expected t h a t ' t h e tide of immigration&#13;
to this country will be increased during&#13;
the next few years.&#13;
PUGILISTK' POLAXOERS.&#13;
"~For a long time there has been/ serious troahle&#13;
inTta^PoltstrCatholic'"churc'Vriti Toledo between&#13;
the priest ami his followers and a faction&#13;
who were oppoSedto him. Over a year ago, in&#13;
a row growing out o&#13;
killed, and the failure "ttK^couvict the parties&#13;
guiltv of the offence stimulated the opposition,&#13;
which has been Increasing in ferocity. A fe-w&#13;
days ago an attempt was made to blow u p thi&#13;
church building with dynamite. The trouble&#13;
record. The coinage law of 1873 maeie it the&#13;
duty of the director e»f the mint to have a general&#13;
supervision of all United States mints and.&#13;
assay offices. The first director acting uuderi&#13;
that* law was the Hon. H. R, Lindcrman, and&#13;
in his report on the subject he gives statistics&#13;
of the,coiuttge in the several mints, showing&#13;
total amouuts and the denominations of money&#13;
JU ide at each place for each .year of their existence.&#13;
The New Orleans mint was opened&#13;
for business in LS3S. Subsequently mouey of&#13;
every denomination was made there. The director's&#13;
statement is brought down to J a n u a r y&#13;
31, 18 51, up to which time.there had be^en a tev&#13;
tal coinage of $10&gt;11S,740 in gold and $^,7l&gt;4,-&#13;
3f.3 iu silver, making a grand total at t h e mint&#13;
of $»&gt;9,913,093. The date at which the&#13;
director's report closes ^was^7the date at&#13;
fell luto the&#13;
hands of the confederates, Louisiana having&#13;
se'ee^ded from the Union by an ordinance adopted&#13;
in the state convention January 16, 18 d,&#13;
and on the 29tu~of the same mouth all the federal&#13;
oiiices in the state, including the mint.&#13;
were ordered by an ordinance adopted that day&#13;
to be transferred to the custody ot the state of&#13;
Louisiana, auel the 4th of March following they&#13;
were ordered to be transferred to the care of&#13;
the confederate states. Documents lately&#13;
brought to light show that subie;iueiitly to&#13;
the uilut going iuto the bands of the Loulsiauians&#13;
and the confederates-ami up to May :-10&#13;
of the same year there were coined ¢254,0(0&#13;
in gold double eagles aud $101.21(5.50 iu silver&#13;
half dollars, thus making a total coinage of&#13;
$1,355,21(5.50 while the mint was in the revolutionists'hauels.&#13;
What was elone with this&#13;
money does not appear from auy available&#13;
record, but the fact e&gt;f coinage as stated is&#13;
shown on the books of the.coiner at t h a t time,&#13;
and in order to make up the true a m o u n t of&#13;
the actual coinage of the New Orleans mint&#13;
this sum must be taken into acccoun't. There&#13;
was uo regular coinage of the precious metals&#13;
inJo confeilerat' sp-cie under confederate auspices,&#13;
although the New Orleans mint remained&#13;
in their control until April 2 &gt;, IS0'2, when&#13;
A PROHIBITIONIST TICKET.&#13;
Nominated by the Pioaibitiouista of Ohio,&#13;
Convention&#13;
B. Leonard of Sprlng-&#13;
.•rnor—rrof. W. G. Frost of&#13;
-Gideon Stewart of Huron&#13;
A.&#13;
Maxwell, the man suspected of the murder&#13;
of Prellar whose dead body was found la a&#13;
trunk In a St. Louis hotel, 1.4 making preparations&#13;
for a long tight.&#13;
Mrs. Dudley, the assailant of O'Dorovan&#13;
Rossa, re-.'eutly acquitted on the grouuel of insanity&#13;
has been sent to the asylum at Middleton,&#13;
N. Y., uatll pronounced saue.&#13;
Canada has ordered new quarantine regulations&#13;
against Mediterranean and Loudon vessels,&#13;
to remalu iu force till October 13 next,&#13;
Victoria and Syduey aie made quarantine stations.&#13;
The death roll of Texas horse thieves killed&#13;
by vlgilants now numbers 12? men. News has&#13;
been received of the hunglngof Frank Morgan,&#13;
Wm. Williams and a lx&gt;y mimed Moore near&#13;
Haldstown, Tex.&#13;
A visitor at the White house the other day&#13;
assertcei that he was on a divine mission. H e&#13;
was arrayed in white linen and ornamented&#13;
with flowers. He said be had a residence in&#13;
heaven aud another iu California.&#13;
A. J. Huneke, a miner, brought in news&#13;
from Froutera-i of an engagement between the&#13;
Indians and whites,!! I miles southeostvof F r o n - '&#13;
teras, iu which be rcnoricd : 6 Indians and 10&#13;
Americans killed and several wounded.&#13;
Five hundred aud forty-one mormons, In&#13;
charge of Elder J. Hanse'u, arrived in New&#13;
York on the steamship Wisconsin the o t h e r&#13;
morning. They are Danes, Swedes and Norwegians.&#13;
They started for the west at once.&#13;
Second Lieut. Carroll Mercer, of the United&#13;
States Marine Corps, who was tried by courtmartial&#13;
In New Yorrk for drunkenness on t h e&#13;
Jiaiiaiuaoixpedition, has been sentenceei to two&#13;
years' suspension on half pav, and to retain,&#13;
his present number on the register during t h a t&#13;
time.&#13;
The bureau of statistics reports that d u r i n g&#13;
the 11 months ended May 31, \ti\&gt;, there were&#13;
exported {nun the Un'ited States 520,8^8,124 .&#13;
gallons of mineral oils, valued at $45,583,066. *&#13;
This amount is nearly $4,000,000 greater t h a n&#13;
I&#13;
•I&#13;
period in U8L&#13;
The marble statue of the late President Garfiiild,&#13;
presented by the state of Ohio to t h e&#13;
national statuary hall, was unveiled recently&#13;
withemt ceremony in the presence of Governor&#13;
Hoadlev and two or three members of t h e&#13;
committee from Ohio. They expressed themselves&#13;
very much pleased with the statue a u d&#13;
-will recommcneljts acceptance.&#13;
L . N . Hibbs, the defaulting Idaho postmastef.&#13;
Is in the Victoria (B. C.) jail; He takes&#13;
the lnattcr eooly. The money on his person,&#13;
alxmt $10,000, was sewed iu' the leg of his&#13;
trousers. The suprem • court refused to admlt&#13;
Hibbs to balL pending the arrival of evideuce&#13;
irom the United Stat-8. His couusel&#13;
are confideut-hecanuot be extradited.&#13;
f&#13;
4&#13;
DETROIT MARKETS.&#13;
Wheat—For some days past the&#13;
the v h e a t market has been cxc.itin&lt;„&#13;
have fluctuated. We quote&#13;
(«ft%'A". July 05-..0(9.5&#13;
features of&#13;
and prices&#13;
White—cash !*},!£&#13;
Aug. 0,caOf)i&lt;?A;&#13;
Sept.&#13;
Julv&#13;
W4'K.isi£A. licet• - C a s h HN^mW'./A;&#13;
\ u g . W%{aM6^] Sept.&#13;
$ 1 . 0 0 ¾ ^ ¾ ¾ .&#13;
Flour—The market Is quiet at unchanged&#13;
quotations, as folle)ws:&#13;
Mich, winter wheat, stone process,£4 75c?5 00&#13;
Mich, winter wheat, redler process. 5 00..^5 25&#13;
Michigan-winter wheat, patents&#13;
Minnesota bakers'&#13;
Minnesota patents (5 00(o)li 25&#13;
Low grueles winter wheat !i 25'o:3 75&#13;
Ryi&gt; Flour—Market st-'eadv. Fine western&#13;
brands are quoteel at $4o&gt;l *0.&#13;
Oat M e a l - F o r Akron. $'.5&#13;
$5 75.&#13;
Feeel—The market Is linn and steady. Bran&#13;
inavbe quoteel at *12 75Vtfl3; coarse middlings,&#13;
$12"75(«13; line middlings.'$13«r-14.&#13;
Corn—The market is sluggish and weak.&#13;
Prices range fit&gt;HI 47:U&gt;4-&lt;i,':ie.&#13;
Oats—Dull and weak, with prices fluctuating&#13;
between I &lt;5 «^Se.&#13;
Butter—There i» a slightly improved inquiry&#13;
though the market otherwise' shows no improvement&#13;
• quotations for daUy continue at&#13;
12('&lt;14&lt;:, the outside for lanew; creamery,&#13;
15((/1 lTc&#13;
!o; steel cut,&#13;
The Ohio State Prohibition&#13;
nominated the followiug ticket:&#13;
Governor—Rev.&#13;
field.&#13;
Lieutenant Gov&#13;
Lorainc County.&#13;
Supreme .Judge-&#13;
County.&#13;
Treasurer—John H.Danner of Stark County.&#13;
—Attorney General—AT T—CliaUuigexajlUilih^&#13;
tern County.&#13;
Board of Public. Works—F. S. Neville of&#13;
Hardin County.&#13;
The platform demand- a prohibition amendment&#13;
and opposevs a license, t^y ,,r rcgulatii u&#13;
of the liquor trallie. It s:iys friends-of prohibition&#13;
should not be controlled by either of the&#13;
old parties because notli iiive shown tbi'inse'lve:&gt;&#13;
subst rvieiit to the lique.r i r t i r e s t . It eleciarci&#13;
th; n u n pow,-r inusi i,c va ,ip:i&gt;h:d by a&#13;
new party devoted expressly to tnar purpose.&#13;
It describes the two enemies &lt;,t the great&#13;
liquor party—one as advocating a li •ense and&#13;
the other taxation a n t regulation i f (he liquor&#13;
tiaflic, leaving no loyal citizen any alternative&#13;
except to j o i n theJ/ruhibition partv. it favors&#13;
moral su:fsiou as a means e&gt;f nfe.rm; favors&#13;
civil service reform: full protection to, the&#13;
ballot: wants divorce based on ihv.ne law; expresses&#13;
sympathy for the Negro race: oppos.-s&#13;
violent changes in the tar.If; in iorscs voters'&#13;
union memorial; favors a civil Sabbath a n d .&#13;
recognizes civil government as ordained bv&#13;
God'.&#13;
Cheese—Prime state&#13;
7(u,Hv; skims, 5(rtuV.&#13;
Eggs—Weaker and &lt;f&#13;
12l.;c.&#13;
Apples— New crop, in .-&#13;
]KT 1)1)1, *3((( 4.&#13;
Dried Fruits—Apples,&#13;
evaporated, tK" 7c; pear&#13;
pears, 10.&#13;
Gooseberries—Per shni'&#13;
and Ohio full cream&#13;
generally selling a t 1&#13;
1)11 oOW 5:)., oe;&#13;
Peach&#13;
I'luins&#13;
sun&#13;
Per \ . bu box.oU'i'.'iOc.&#13;
dried. V*&lt;i:&#13;
peaches-,&#13;
i:&#13;
'e r i Tn e^TtrtTd brrxT?!:&#13;
Melons—Arc coining more 1'ro •lv&#13;
ida and (ieorgia, and .selling at&#13;
100.&#13;
Strawberrte&#13;
supplied most&#13;
sells at *l.2.'(&lt;£2&#13;
Beans—Cit\' 1&#13;
. m m store,&#13;
mand ligirt:&#13;
Beeswax—Per&#13;
Hay—Market or.&#13;
ick ; selling&#13;
Straw is in&#13;
..om Flor.&#13;
'^hi{"&gt;) per&#13;
abundantly"&#13;
fruit, which&#13;
27(//1.:10;&#13;
" £ 1 : elct:&#13;
motl-v&#13;
smallci"&#13;
demand ar-&#13;
A FATAL FIBE.&#13;
Three Girls Incinerated in a Tenement House&#13;
Three sons and two daughters rf Gen.&#13;
Lee survive him. His sous are farmers&#13;
carboiic acid." The ac:d ii'ad been diiutcd with ! in Virginia, and the daughters are both water njnl left iu an old cuplward t.) kill rats.&#13;
T h e child found it. thought it was sauce, took&#13;
j t , with the above result.&#13;
The last legislature provided for the erection'&#13;
of a building for t'.w mechanic arts, a veterinary&#13;
laboratory, a military drill hall and a cottage&#13;
for the professor of mi ehunic arts ut the&#13;
state agiicultural io 1 g &gt;, all of which are uow&#13;
i n active process of coii-truction.&#13;
At Wiggins kv. Co &gt;p r's m'll. Fouth Sagliiaw,&#13;
Charles Ste'e e was struck bv a piece of&#13;
board, and in fading threw out his right arm,&#13;
which was struck by the circular saw and cut&#13;
off near the elbow." S t e l e Is 25 years of age,&#13;
unmarried, and resides near Owosso.&#13;
J u d g e Hilton of Paw Paw. has presented t o&#13;
t b e L. G. \V« o.lman ]x»s*. of the G. A. It., of&#13;
I.awton, an cxceile.it portrait of the late Dr.&#13;
Woodman after whom the post is named a n d&#13;
who was hin) ljjdi l--i&gt;3 assistant sunrgnt oonu of the 3d&#13;
Co.r E. in lio-5 surge m o. the 11th Co.&#13;
great travellers,, the elder having ex&#13;
plored .•Australia, Japan. China, India&#13;
and Egypt, in addition to the European&#13;
circuit of sights.&#13;
One of the two free circulating libraries&#13;
in Philadelphia, that of the Friends&#13;
in (ierrr an town, permits no work of&#13;
fiction upon its shelves, yet it loans&#13;
nearly 15/)(«! volumes a year, and about&#13;
•25,000 pe pie come annually to read in&#13;
its rooms.&#13;
The lakes and streams in the vicinity&#13;
of *t. Johnsbury, Vt.. were stocked last&#13;
week with 75,'*)0 land-locked salmon.&#13;
As many more of the tish will be p t in&#13;
the tributaries of the Connecticut River&#13;
in the Uict-u MuuuTaiu-UaU}.—:&#13;
By the burning of a frame tenement house&#13;
at 3-19 and 353 Broalway, in Cleveland, Ohio,&#13;
the, other night. Rosie Meisel, aged 20, Sarah&#13;
Rosenberg,, ag-d 10, and Fannie Rosenberg,&#13;
aged 8, were smothercil to eleath. Tiiertw'ri hater&#13;
were horr.bly burne 1. but the llames ap-&#13;
-par^iiU^ did-ivot t'&gt;uch Miss Meisel.&#13;
The burned tenement bouses were owned by&#13;
Daniel O'Dell. The loWcr floor of 340 was occupied&#13;
by Max Strauss as a tailor shop, and&#13;
Louis Deutch occupied 3"&gt;3 as a saloon. Theii&#13;
families occupied the r&lt;'nr parts of the grounil"&#13;
floors as living appartrucnt*. The u])per floors&#13;
were occupied by three families—the Kaufman&#13;
family, consisting of the husband, wife and&#13;
two childien; the Cohen family, consisting ot&#13;
husband, wife and four childrem:&#13;
and th^ Rosenbergs, mother and&#13;
three daughtt rs. Rosie Meisel, a niece of Mrs.&#13;
Rosenberg, occupied the same room with her&#13;
two cousins. About 3 o'clock a son of Cohen&#13;
awoke his father and said he smelled smoke.&#13;
The father, on opening thr» door, found the&#13;
hall full of smoke-, and quickly gave the alarm.&#13;
In less t h a n three minutes 'uftcr Cohn was&#13;
awakened the house was one sheet of fire.&#13;
Men, women and children rushed through the&#13;
smoke, wringing their hands i;nd crying for&#13;
help. A neighbor had in the i n c u t me raised a&#13;
ladder to the front windows, down which the&#13;
Kaufman family descended in safety. While&#13;
the Kaufmans were &lt; siaplng the Cohn family&#13;
jumped iron! the W'ludlwi una uVfapiJu, UIi;iar-&#13;
A Comparative Statexnc&#13;
The following is a^osOparatiye statement ,f&#13;
, . . , , ! - • . . • u- , ,. -L A resolution of sympathy with Gen. GTant&#13;
culminated in a general not, in which flreanns &gt; ^ adopted. Ad'ourned.* /&#13;
and all manner of weapons were freely used. \ r ' , '&#13;
Two men were killed and several injured, while&#13;
quite a number of houses were partially or en-,&#13;
tlrtly destryed. The police made a largt&#13;
number of arrests and an extra force was stationed&#13;
on the grounds to prevent another outbreak.&#13;
The scene of the riot is over two miles&#13;
from the police station, but a force of policemen&#13;
was on the ground as soon as possible and&#13;
arrested twelve' Or fifteen of the leading rioters&#13;
and jailed them. Not less than 100 men,&#13;
women and children were engaged in the nghu&#13;
the receipts and expenditure&#13;
States.&#13;
REC&#13;
United&#13;
18S5.-&#13;
Source. June.&#13;
Customs $13.9:-6,358 07&#13;
Inter. Revenue 9 , 3 1 0 , ^ 13&#13;
Miscellaneous :3,910,5.0 35&#13;
' T o t a l $27,157,015 55&#13;
EXt'EXiu:ri:F.s.&#13;
Since&#13;
Julv 1, 1884.&#13;
.51^1.110.770 89&#13;
112,;v00,324 37&#13;
:.6 mO.OSO 88&#13;
£322.59(),776 I4&#13;
Ordinary&#13;
P c n s m n s .&#13;
Intcre.-t..&#13;
T o t a l . .&#13;
.$n.(i«').ssi 0;&#13;
sid.iisl 47&#13;
. 1 to.'.09-1-56-&#13;
$153.0:15,194&#13;
58,:)0.-),7¾&#13;
.$15,:5"),(').xS 11 $262,77.4,452&#13;
KECKp'TS. .-&#13;
, . : 1884.&#13;
S mrce. J u n e .&#13;
Customs $14,701,145 (54&#13;
Inter, revenue. 10,-104.1(51 f-7&#13;
Miscellaneous 2t0 56,7&gt;0 74&#13;
Total $2.,932,088 :¾)&#13;
EXtinXDITrKES.&#13;
Ordinary ¢9,709,4,¾ :«)&#13;
Pensions 3,:555 4 W 27&#13;
I n t e r e s t . . . . . . . 2,851,300 :13&#13;
Sine &gt;&#13;
Julv I. 1S83.&#13;
$19"&gt;,U&gt;7.48.1 7rt&#13;
121,5&gt;'.-.,072 51&#13;
31,,-5(5(),:1^ t-i&#13;
$:^48,519,809 92&#13;
$134,118,037 79&#13;
55,429.228 06&#13;
54,57S.37S 4&gt;&#13;
baled in ear :r&gt;&#13;
quantities aj/'sl"&gt;((n0.&#13;
^^((rlOon^track. —-&#13;
IIc&gt;ue&gt;3'&lt;—Dull; single frames. $10((/.12, 51b&#13;
casesin light request at 8IVI9J; strained, 9(.¾&#13;
Vfc/&#13;
/ O n i o n s — M a r k e t very liberally supplied^&#13;
southern. $l.40(«;1.50 per bu,and "^3..50^/4 per&#13;
ld)l; Bermudas, $1.50(//:1.75 per hu.&#13;
Poultry—Spring chickens, 30(&lt;i75c: fowh^.&#13;
S(&gt;i'i)e ]XT lb; roosters, 6(iti7e; turkeys, 9((&amp;l0c;&#13;
pigeons, per pair, old, 30c; 8quabs,/35c per&#13;
|)air.&#13;
Pea?—-Common tleU, pe^r bu, 8()(tf)90c; Wisconsln&#13;
blue, $1.10(¾ 1,25; state l&gt;lue, 75cW$l.&#13;
Provisions—Mess pork, new,/$11.25^)11.53;.&#13;
family, $11.37(VU1.62; short, /clear,- *13.U)@&#13;
13.25; lard in tierces, 6 T ^ 7 c ; kegs. V4&lt;&lt;tT\&lt;i\&#13;
polls, 7!j,(#8c; smoked hanis.9(.^9^0; shoulders&#13;
5¾@k", breakfast bae'on, 7^4@Sc;,.dried i&gt;eef&#13;
hams, $13.00(dil:j.50; extra mess beef, $10.50(0}&#13;
^ 0 , 7 5 . /&#13;
P o t a t o e s ^ O l d in cars lots are selling a t 30(¾&#13;
35c per bu&gt;as to condition; irom store !30((i35c.&#13;
New s o u t h e r i i ^ t i . ^ f y 2.50 per bbl.&#13;
Tallow—Dull at/4l-;(Vt'5c.&#13;
~Te'irrratoiii!-^New s o u t h t c n — i t r ^ - bu boxes*&#13;
$1 25tYel 53. / ~ .,&#13;
- — -r- "t7tvE-~s?roes.— ^ - ^&#13;
CATTLE—Good natives and Texab&gt;,.rule&#13;
stronger; shipping r t w r s , $5(^3 5 ) ; stoekor*..&#13;
and fecilers, $3(/i'4 95: cows, bulls :&gt;D&lt;1 mixed,&#13;
$2 20(.//4 50; through Texas cattle corn feed, $4&#13;
(iz;5; grassers.$2 75((/4. At the Liverpool cattle&#13;
market there is a light supply of l»oth American&#13;
anel Canadian, and only a f a i r i y large geueral&#13;
supply. The market ?u!e lc. higher, best&#13;
American cattle, selling at 14;.jc per lb dressed&#13;
weight. 1&#13;
Hoos—Market opened 5e lower, but closed&#13;
tinner; r»mgh a n d mixed. $3 0.5(/1)4 05; packing&#13;
and shipping $4 05^/t4 15; light weights, $3&#13;
19(/0: skips,' $3(^3 60.&#13;
SUEEP—Market weak and 10@25c lower?&#13;
natives, $3(«4; Tcxans*$2 50@3; lambs per&#13;
head, $1@S 75.*&#13;
.1&#13;
T e t a l . ..$16,11(-,113 90 $244,126,244 33&#13;
CONDENSED N E W S .&#13;
Lake Shore's senv-annual s t i t e m e n t shows&#13;
a deficiency of $85,6 0.&#13;
Employes in the Cleveland Voll'my mill ere&#13;
,-ui a strike. Over 15,0 XI men are id.e lu couiequenee.&#13;
Secretary Whitney 1 as revoked the order&#13;
prohibiting naval onic rs irom having their&#13;
w.vi-a \\W\i t h t m whlli- a&gt; fu.i-lgu \\,.TJ».&#13;
The celebrated rocking stone at&#13;
iBuckstone, in Wye valley. England,&#13;
was accidently thrown over recently.&#13;
Some performers i-i a yariotv company&#13;
used too much force in rocking it, and&#13;
the stone fell from its posit on on the&#13;
summit 0 a hill into a wood below.&#13;
f his ancient Dru dical alter is the property&#13;
of the crown, and was the object of&#13;
great interest tu tuuiisLa.&#13;
*&#13;
, ' • : •&#13;
V&#13;
TC*-&#13;
• * . . * v&#13;
~N&#13;
Willi i WINGS.&#13;
I fen' jin rn^lc \'&lt;-u:r. i::v :irk,&#13;
V.'iirn u 1 tti'o inl unb iXu'A und (lurk,&#13;
And vat cued it in it took Its iliiflit&#13;
(Jnwurd ami upvvurd t&lt;&gt; a height&#13;
Bujii'i'ine'v grun I; its wings cutspreafi&#13;
Mudc K black canopy o'erhcad .&#13;
Thtougu which no ray of comfort ^tole,&#13;
Nur prora:^c of a peaceful v.v&amp;l. -&#13;
I scut 11 novefrom out the ark,&#13;
When all around was dull and dark,&#13;
And watched it a* It Daren on h gh,&#13;
If a whl.e wiuga brighteniug the ttky—&#13;
AB if beaven'B gate stood wide apart—&#13;
Uotll the radiance reached my heart,&#13;
And on the pinions of a dove&#13;
I found the anchorage of toy?.&#13;
Too oft ambition clouds the gaze,&#13;
Removes the sunshine from life'swaya,&#13;
And, like an e*gle in its flight&#13;
Is lost upon'some giddy height;&#13;
While 0» white «lnga the c.tirier dove&#13;
BeHrs the poor burdened soul above,&#13;
Into an atmosphere of peace,&#13;
Where all these surgtug billows cease.&#13;
—Josephine Po lard, &amp;* Independent&#13;
THE TWO SISTERS.&#13;
"Joan,'1 said Grizzle, "have ye seen&#13;
aught o' my black cat the morn?"&#13;
'On, ay. I saw the beast an' gave&#13;
him a kick for his thievin'. He had a&#13;
bit o' ray tripe in his mouth, an1 was&#13;
chokin1 an' glowerin1 as though he&#13;
wad gang clean out o' his head. Gin I&#13;
catch him at his tricks again there'll&#13;
no be eneuch 01 him lett to mak' a&#13;
t dinner for AuUl Sandy's dog."&#13;
"Hoot, hoot, Joan! Ken ye no the&#13;
words o1 Holy Writ: 'The merciful&#13;
nion is merciful unto his beast/ an1&#13;
'With what measure yo mete it sail be&#13;
measured to you again?" '-' •&#13;
"Weel, Grizzle, the beast is nane 01&#13;
mine, an1 gin any mon catches raestealin1&#13;
his dinner frae him he may&#13;
serve me as he chooses."&#13;
"There now, Joan, ye're clean wrang.&#13;
The puir beast hae no the sense to ken&#13;
like a human. An1 his nature bein1 to&#13;
steal, it is clear that he maun hne henm _&#13;
\ \&#13;
predestined to live in that way for the&#13;
glory 01 God. Hoo, then, can ye reconcile&#13;
it wi1 yer ain conscience to&#13;
abuse the puir beastie?"&#13;
"An' hoo cud I hae kicked him for&#13;
it, gin J had na been predestined to&#13;
do it? Answer mo that noo, Grizzle."&#13;
"Hech. I sadly fear ye were so predestined,&#13;
an' that it shows yo to be yet&#13;
in the gallo' bitterness an' the bondo1&#13;
iniquity, bein1 even as Pharaoh,&#13;
whose heart, was hardened by the&#13;
Laird."&#13;
"Gin Pliarnoh were like ye, Grizzle,&#13;
an1 cared mair for a beast than for a&#13;
human, 'fwas no a hard matter to&#13;
harden his heart."&#13;
"The Laird kens weel that a puir&#13;
beastie is better nor a human, whiles.&#13;
Deed, I misdoubt me sair that He'll&#13;
hae some o' them in glory, for though&#13;
the Gudelfook says 'Without are dogs,'&#13;
it savs nae word o' cats."&#13;
"Hoot, toot, what bla¥p¥emy are ye&#13;
savin', Grizzle? I fear ye are ane o'&#13;
these unwary souls 'wresting the Scriptures&#13;
to their ain description,' a8 Paul&#13;
says. Min' ye not the words o' John :&#13;
"if auv mon shall add—anything to&#13;
*&#13;
this book, God shall add unto him the&#13;
plagues in this book?' Hand yer&#13;
tongue, Gri/zlle, an' be more carefu'&#13;
hoo po speyke o' the Laird's decrees."&#13;
"It's no blasphemy. Let no mion&#13;
think o' himself more highly than he&#13;
ought to think, said the Gude Book;&#13;
and I hae thoughtlang syne, Joan, ye&#13;
were takin' too much upo1 yersel'.&#13;
The Laird did na ask you aboot His decrees,&#13;
an' whan gat ye private information&#13;
o' them?"&#13;
"Gin-ye speyk that gait to me, Grizzle,&#13;
I'll never speyk to ye again."1"&#13;
"Sma1 loss will it be then Joan, gin&#13;
ye spend yer time tellin' me the Laird&#13;
has predestined me to the ill place. I&#13;
hae nae wish to hear ye talk ye can&#13;
say something pleasanter to hear nor&#13;
that,"&#13;
The fury of the sisters was now at&#13;
white heat. They sat, each with kilted&#13;
skirt, on her own side of the fireplace&#13;
without speaking for an hour. Then&#13;
Joan suddenly rose and. going to her&#13;
huge work basket that stood on the&#13;
east window ledge, took out a piece of&#13;
chalk and string. Coming back she&#13;
measured accurately from the middle&#13;
of the one door the little cottage&#13;
possessed to the middle&#13;
of the fire place, and dr^w a chalk&#13;
line connecting the two, Some articles&#13;
of Grizzle's that were on her side&#13;
she put across this lino, and then sat&#13;
flown and, taking up the big old Bible,&#13;
began to read. Grizzle watched her a&#13;
minute, and then muttering to herself&#13;
"Gin she gacs to heaven she'll fin' mo&#13;
there too!" took up an old Bible that&#13;
lay on her side of the room and began&#13;
to pore over it.&#13;
The cottage had but a singlp room.&#13;
It faced the south, and opposite the&#13;
^Id-fashionexLdiyided door was tho&#13;
narrow tire-place. On each side of&#13;
the chalk line that now lay across the&#13;
red brick ftoor was a bed, a chair and&#13;
a little stand. Tho upper half of the&#13;
door was open, and the summer sunshine&#13;
and the sweet summer air carno&#13;
in lik-e a benediction, while tho two&#13;
cray old women— for they were past&#13;
fifty years old—sat like incarnations&#13;
of hate and wrath and read their&#13;
Bibles.&#13;
When the sun began to set Joan&#13;
rose, and bringing out tho simple&#13;
stores that were in the cottage, divided&#13;
them and the dishes without a&#13;
word. Then she gave Grizzle half&#13;
the ready money, and then, closing&#13;
tho door, began to prepare her evening&#13;
meal. Grizzle did the same.&#13;
This was the beginning; of a terrible&#13;
life. And the rest of it was aocording&#13;
to-thls beginning. For twenty years&#13;
they lived, those two sisters, one on&#13;
each side of that hideous chalk line.&#13;
Every tender thought and loving acthat&#13;
should navp&#13;
trangement. It was a sight to make&#13;
angola weep whon the two knelt down,&#13;
each at her own bedside, at night, and&#13;
prayed tho Lord to have mercy upon&#13;
the heathen,and those in foreign lands,&#13;
to prepare His true servants for their&#13;
entrance into glory, ending with the&#13;
awful cry, ••Come Laird, Jesus, come&#13;
quickly, an' tak' Thine ain hame, an1&#13;
let Thino enemies who will na repent&#13;
perish in vlhe ill place forever. An&#13;
Thine sail be1 the glory. Amen!"—&#13;
or, at morning, when the rosy llush&#13;
of the dawn came through Joan's window&#13;
and tinged the gray faded forms&#13;
with a lovely hue. as they knelt by&#13;
their separate little stands and said&#13;
"Our Father!"—or to watch them&#13;
walking on the Sabbath day to kirk,&#13;
and sitting decorously side by side in&#13;
the narrow pew, while they joined in&#13;
the psalm singing or said Amen, with&#13;
solemn unction to tho prayers, or listened&#13;
to the Gospel of peace and forgiveness.&#13;
A strange and horrible&#13;
sight, and one never seeu before or&#13;
since. Yet hold! Are there no husbands&#13;
and wives, no brothers and sisters&#13;
and friends, who have knelt down&#13;
with hot hatred in their hearts and&#13;
said the "Our Father" together? Let&#13;
him that is without sin among us cast&#13;
the iirst stone.&#13;
The neighborhood everywhere came&#13;
in, of course, to remonstrate with the&#13;
wretched pair aud to go home and gossip&#13;
about them, but the sisters turned&#13;
a deaf ear to all remonstrance, and&#13;
even when occasion demanded sent a&#13;
atone into the enemy's camp that&#13;
mightily discomfited them. For to more&#13;
than one Joan niade answer: "Look at&#13;
hame an' min' yer children that quarrel&#13;
like cats on a simmer night. As for&#13;
me I pray daily that_Gri/.zie_may be&#13;
converted gin it be the Laird's will' for&#13;
I wad na dictate to him what ho sail&#13;
do."&#13;
And Grizzle, in answer to all entreaties&#13;
to leave, said: 4rNa, na. There's&#13;
room eneuch, an' I maun be here. Gin&#13;
Joan repents, I maun be at hand to&#13;
forgie her, though I sair misdoubt her&#13;
heart has grown as hard as the nether&#13;
millstone, being, as the Apostle says,&#13;
without natural nfteetion."&#13;
The summers went and came and&#13;
went and came again with late sweet&#13;
flowers and tender breaths of wind&#13;
across tiieiiills,otrflthe sisters watched&#13;
them, Joan from the east window,&#13;
Grizzle from the west. The winter&#13;
storms howled around the cottage, and&#13;
the snow drifted high against the windows,&#13;
and the sisters listened as they&#13;
sat, each oh, her own side of the lire,&#13;
in dreary, unconipajiionable companionship.&#13;
And twenty years went by.&#13;
It was a wild, wet morning in&#13;
March.v Mr. Maclesie, the minister,&#13;
was coming down tho road that leads&#13;
from the manse into the village, when&#13;
"a~wT5man came running up to liim.&#13;
"Oh, sir, come quick to the Gray&#13;
Cottage.. The sisters has had a stroke,&#13;
an' they're baith lyin' helpless in their&#13;
bees. Hech, sir! it's an awsome sight!"&#13;
"Oh, whnn did this happen? when&#13;
itik&#13;
sister as he said:&#13;
"The Laird mak* His face to shine&#13;
upo' thee. The Laird lift up the light&#13;
[ o' his countenance upo' thee an' gie&#13;
thee peace." Then he went away.&#13;
But at midnight there was a knock&#13;
and a cry at the manse door. "Come&#13;
to the Gray Cottage, sir, sune's ye&#13;
Uon In thu past&#13;
diawn them together once more was&#13;
recalled to add bitterness to that esdid&#13;
this happen?"&#13;
"I dinna ken, sir. I gaed in this&#13;
morn, for there was nae reek fro' the&#13;
chimney, an' I thought it strange, an'&#13;
I found them there, baith stricken in a&#13;
3ingle night. Hech, sir. Poor Grizzle&#13;
has lost her mind, an' lies talkin' o'&#13;
the. cornfields fifty years syne, an'&#13;
singing auld sangs as gin she were a&#13;
lassagain. But Joan does na speyk."&#13;
They hurried to tho cottage, and&#13;
found it even as Elsie had said. Tho&#13;
moment they entered Joan called the&#13;
minister. He came to her.&#13;
"Send Elsie away," she said, speaking&#13;
with -difficulty but distinctly. "I&#13;
wad speyk wi' ye."&#13;
Mr. Maclesie dismissed the old woman,&#13;
and then returned to Joan's side.&#13;
He sat down by the narrow bed and&#13;
listened to what she had to say.&#13;
" I aye thought," she said, still&#13;
speaking with difficulty, but yet clearly,&#13;
"that the ministers were right&#13;
when they said that the Laird's decree&#13;
provided for the prayers ov the righteous,&#13;
He foreknowin the same fro' a'&#13;
eternity, an' I've heard ye preach that&#13;
same doctrine, ye ken weel, Mr. Maclesie."&#13;
"I ken na ither way to reconcile the&#13;
decrees 01 the Laird wi' our ain free&#13;
will," he answered thoughtfully.&#13;
"Now, gin the Laird has made provisions&#13;
for ye to pray for puir Grizzle&#13;
tnat she"—the hard voice shook for a&#13;
moment, but she went on—"may come&#13;
to hersel an' let me forgie her ere she&#13;
gacs a w a ' - a n ' ye suld not do it—ye&#13;
ken that the Laird's a hard task-master,&#13;
an' He'll be sair displeased wi' ye,&#13;
Mr. Maclesie,"&#13;
The old man looked at her with&#13;
keen, sad eyes. "I'll pray for Grizzle,&#13;
Joan, but "&#13;
She broke in eagerly. **Ye -mrgh&#13;
forget, Mr. Maclesie. Yc'regettin' an&#13;
auld mon, ye ken. Mibbies yo cud&#13;
pray her, an' now, an' then i suld&#13;
know that a' hitd been done that cud.&#13;
It's a fearsome thing, sir, to think o'&#13;
me bein' inside the gate a-singin' an'&#13;
a-h:irpin' an' a-dahcin' for joy an' my&#13;
puir Grizzle, that wa3 sic a bonnie&#13;
lass whan she was young, skreelin'&#13;
outside in the dark an' the cold. She&#13;
was a afear'd o' the dark. Grizzle, an'&#13;
she was sic a bonny young thing an'&#13;
gude to me. Hech, sit! it seems as if&#13;
it were only last week when MePherson&#13;
was dround, an' she cam' to me&#13;
an' sent awa' a' the auld women an'&#13;
tuik me in-her young arms an' cried&#13;
o'er me, an' said she'd serve me a' her&#13;
life. An' she was gude to me. Aye,&#13;
gude for mony a weary year an' long.&#13;
Mr. Maclesie, think ye that she'll no&#13;
ken onything again 'before sho gaes&#13;
awa'?".&#13;
" I canna tell, Joan."&#13;
"Hech. sir! It's sair to bide here&#13;
noo the Laird h:is ta'en awV the&#13;
poo'er. O Mr. Maclesie! pray! pray&#13;
wi' a' yer ujicSrt! 1 maun Jieav h&lt;-i&#13;
speyk till me ouct an' say, 'Joan, good&#13;
night!' Tho voice of the speaker had&#13;
risen almost to a scream, and suddenly&#13;
it pierced the dull ears of tho form&#13;
that lay gibbering and laughing on the&#13;
other bed.&#13;
"Joan, puir Joan!" it said. "I&#13;
maun send tbe ithers a' awa' an' comfort&#13;
Joan, for she has nane but me&#13;
noo."&#13;
Then the voice died away in a sigh.&#13;
Mr. Maclesie wnet over to the other&#13;
bed, and half lifting, half dargging,&#13;
brought it across that little room,&#13;
across that dividing line, and set it&#13;
close to Joan's. As Grizzle's bed&#13;
touched hers, Joan burst into tears.&#13;
The old man lifted the poor, helplesf&#13;
hand and laid it on her sister's. " I&#13;
forgive thee, Grizzle, as I hope to be&#13;
forgiven," he said solemnly, and Joan&#13;
repeated the words after him. Then&#13;
he knelt and prayed.&#13;
Oh, what a scene was that ! Without,&#13;
a leafless rose bush was tapping&#13;
against the narrow little window in&#13;
the wild March wind. Within, those&#13;
two poor beds stood side by side and&#13;
both inside the line that had divided&#13;
them so long, and on the beds those&#13;
stricken forms lay motionless as death.&#13;
One "babbling 01 green held*," and&#13;
one, with face of agony, and wild, beeyes,&#13;
lifted to the old min-&#13;
FAMOTJS MEN WHO SMOKK.&#13;
seeching&#13;
ister's face as he lifted it to hpaven&#13;
and prayed.&#13;
"I? at her, forgive them, for they knew&#13;
not what they did !" he said, and Joan&#13;
sobbed "Amen!"&#13;
"They've beenjstuniblin' along owre&#13;
the reuch stanes side by side, but far&#13;
apart, Imrtin1 one another sair ilka&#13;
day an1 a day lang. Oh, tak' them&#13;
hame to Thee and hap t^iem up in one&#13;
another's airms till they hae learned&#13;
Thy name is love. An' Thine be the&#13;
poo'er an' the glory. Amen."&#13;
As he rose from his knees and&#13;
looked down at Joan, the tears were&#13;
running down her face, but it had lost&#13;
Mr. Arthur's Fragrant Havanas—(Jen. 8herman's&#13;
Odd Habit with a Glyar—Congressmen&#13;
who are Fond of Smoking—&#13;
Representatives ymoke Cheaper&#13;
Cigars thjin SenMonr&#13;
If Gen. Grant's use of tobacco was&#13;
excessive, there are very many men in&#13;
seeming vigorous health, and of very&#13;
active nabits, who must regard themselves&#13;
as very intemperate users of the&#13;
stimulant. Many men smoke more&#13;
cigars a day than Gen. Grant was accustomed&#13;
to do, although physicians&#13;
say that it is not the number of&#13;
cigars so much as the strength of them&#13;
that effects the health. Among public&#13;
men it is the exception to find one&#13;
who does not use tobacco in one form&#13;
or auother, sometimes in two ways,&#13;
and almost all of them firmly believe&#13;
that tobacco does not hurt them.&#13;
Judge Kelley's case has been cited as&#13;
one where cancer was caused by the&#13;
excessive use of tobacco, but he told&#13;
the writer that the cancerous affection&#13;
of the cheek from which he suffered&#13;
was due to the habit he had of going to&#13;
sleep with a quid of tobacco tucked&#13;
into his cheek, and resting his head on&#13;
that side. Judge KUley, now 70 years&#13;
old, smoked and used the best"" hne&#13;
cut immoderately for fifty years. The&#13;
operation which he-submitted to in&#13;
Paris restored his health, and ho has&#13;
abandoned the habit.&#13;
Vice President Colfax for many&#13;
years smoked ten to fiften very strong&#13;
cigars every day. He was suddenly !&#13;
attacked by a serious vertigo*''while i&#13;
vice president, and he attributed it to&#13;
the narcotic poison. He at once stopped&#13;
smoking; yet Vice President Wi 1-&#13;
son, who never used tobacco, was&#13;
strickened" almost "precisely as Mr.&#13;
Colfax was, The late Senator Carpenter&#13;
frequently smoked two boxes of&#13;
cigars a^ week, aud,his sudden collapse&#13;
is attributed—by those who did—notits&#13;
look of hopeless helpless a s o n y - ^ e Uvea to the age of o5 after living&#13;
He laid one hand on the head of either a l l f e o f a l m 0 3 t constant deiiance of&#13;
can 1 "&#13;
The minister dressed himself hurriedly&#13;
and wen^ down. There was a&#13;
ktiot of neighbors at the door, but&#13;
they made way for him to pass. And&#13;
there with the moonlight streaming&#13;
through the open door upon them,&#13;
and the firelight on the old divided&#13;
hearth flashing and dancing and&#13;
throwing its kindly flames high as&#13;
though it would fain see them more&#13;
clearly, and the flickering of the dying&#13;
candle that the old woman who&#13;
had been watching held above her&#13;
head, casting the faces now in light&#13;
and now in shadow, lav the two sisen'&#13;
she not ken. It's mony a year I&#13;
micht hae talod to her an' did na, an'&#13;
ters dead in one another's arms.&#13;
" I had-ga'en asleep, sir," said the&#13;
0I4 woman, "in the chimney neuk,&#13;
when of a sudden there cam' a screech&#13;
fit to wak' the deul. I jumped up an'&#13;
luiked.an' there were Joan an' Grizzle&#13;
happed in one anither's airms, sittin'&#13;
up straight in bed. But before I cud&#13;
get there they had fa'en back_AS-they&#13;
are now, an'-baith-wer^gahe."&#13;
Two days afterward the sisters were&#13;
buried in tho old kirk yard. And&#13;
over the grave the old minister put a&#13;
simple stone with the words:&#13;
"In their death they were not divided."&#13;
—Ena L. Ogdcn, in Chicago Current.&#13;
Buried Alive.&#13;
A word of caution against reckless&#13;
haste in burial can hardly be uttered&#13;
too often. It is not necessary to search&#13;
the records of the past and bring forwnrd&#13;
many horrible stories of premature&#13;
burial which can be found in&#13;
them, for, during tho first month of&#13;
the year 1885, the daily press reported&#13;
twocases of this kind. One was that&#13;
of a young_,niaiu_the other a young&#13;
woman. Both reports come from&#13;
southern cities. Both tell how the position&#13;
of the body and other circumstances&#13;
discovered on re-opening the&#13;
coffins, disclosed proofs that tho unfortunate&#13;
yictims regained consciousness&#13;
in the grave and found escape impossible.&#13;
It is, perhaps, in southern&#13;
countries that such things are most&#13;
likely to occur, owing to the custom&#13;
of speedy burial; but in every country&#13;
and in every case of supposed death&#13;
some sufficient test should be applied&#13;
before going on with the preparations&#13;
for interment, and perhaps the safest&#13;
way would be to wait for some small&#13;
indication oJ_Aiissolution. It, in southern&#13;
countries there is danger of bury&#13;
iug A person alive through haste to&#13;
gel. the body under ground, there is in&#13;
northern countries a chance of subjecting&#13;
living bodies to death in the&#13;
ice-box. Any one expressing a preference&#13;
in such matters would, of course,&#13;
prefer to be frozen to death before being&#13;
buned rather'than be buried alive,&#13;
It°seoms horrible to contemplate the&#13;
occurrence of either of these mistakes&#13;
at this stage of science and civilization.&#13;
—Dr. Footca Health Mnnihfu.&#13;
know how for twenty-five years he had&#13;
burned the candle at both ends, to&#13;
that habit. That Mr. Carpenter should&#13;
-'&#13;
A Cabbage Sent to tue President&#13;
A colored man toiled up tho steps&#13;
leading to the white house portico with&#13;
a box about two feet square, recently,&#13;
and said it was for the president. On&#13;
one side of the box was "GroverClevo.&#13;
land,, president of tho United States,"&#13;
and on tho other, "From the Fort&#13;
Worth Grocery company, Fort Worth,&#13;
Tex." Through the apertures between&#13;
the boards could be seen the leaves ol&#13;
a massive cabbage.—It weighed twen&#13;
ty-oue pounds.&#13;
all the laws of health is regarded by&#13;
those who knew him ,as remarkable.&#13;
Siro Delmonico and Mr. Ives, a wellknown&#13;
manufacturer of New Haven,&#13;
died of perfectly well-defined symptoms&#13;
of narcotic poisoning, but "both&#13;
were well along in years, and both&#13;
were never without the stimulant.&#13;
Ex-President Arthur smokes less&#13;
than formerly, lighting his cigar now&#13;
seldom before dinner, but when in the&#13;
late hours he was busied with work&#13;
his companion was a cigar, sometimes&#13;
three or four. Dr. Hammond,.-is" reported&#13;
to have once said tjiat generally&#13;
three or four cigars after dinuer harmed&#13;
few men of-trVerage consfitution,&#13;
and Mr. Arthur thought they did him&#13;
good. At all _ev_ents,__aU of_ messages&#13;
to congress were written under the&#13;
stimulus of the fragrant Havana.&#13;
Most of Mr. Arthur's cabinet officers&#13;
were good smokers, Mr. Frelinghuysen&#13;
did not use tobacco, though the assis-&#13;
- -tant-seeretary—of—state, Mr,—IXav-i&#13;
liked good cigars, aud plenty of them.&#13;
Tobacco was the only thing that erer&#13;
made Secretary Chandler turn pale.&#13;
It was a rank poison to him and though&#13;
he tried many years ago to overcome&#13;
the evil effects, as became a good&#13;
poliUciajir yet he never could. Al-&#13;
M-crmioirexcept in almost homecepathic&#13;
doses of the very best wine, affects the&#13;
ex-secretary of the navy in the sarne^&#13;
way. But Gen. Gresham was a great&#13;
smoker. He smoked on the public&#13;
streets, at his work, and wherever he&#13;
could. Secretary teller liked a cigar&#13;
that would last a l o n g time and was&#13;
not very strong. Secretary Lincoln&#13;
smokes a good many pretty stiff cigars&#13;
every day, and Atty. Gen. Brewster&#13;
liked one with body to it.&#13;
Gen. Sherman is a pretty constant&#13;
smoker, and he smokes as he does&#13;
everything else, with nervous haste,&#13;
so that the cigar is more than half&#13;
chewed up. Gen. Sheridan likes a&#13;
good black Reina after each meal,&#13;
with one or two thrown in between&#13;
whiles.&#13;
Nearly all the senators use tobacco,&#13;
some of them constantly. Vice President&#13;
Hendricks likes a cigar, but he&#13;
dearly loves the sweet Detroit tine&#13;
cut, which he buys in bulk. Perhaps&#13;
Senator Frye is the most presistent&#13;
smoker of the senators, I! there be a&#13;
long session of the senate he will leave&#13;
his seat several times in the course of&#13;
it, and retire to the cloak-room for a&#13;
smoke. In his committee room and&#13;
other places of unrestraiut he frequently&#13;
lights one cigar at the stup of&#13;
a n t h e r . Poker Jack Bowen, from&#13;
Colorado; smokes constantly, and&#13;
when he can't smoke he has a paper&#13;
of line cut at hand. The two New&#13;
"—\ Hampshire seriatjQrg^^Biair^and_ P|ke^&#13;
do not u.»e tobacco,- nor do Senators&#13;
Dawes and Hoar. The new Senator&#13;
Chace, of Rhode Island, does not&#13;
smoke, but Mr. Edmunds smokes a&#13;
few choice cigars a day, and now and&#13;
then rolls a little pill of navy plug&#13;
under his tongue. Both Senators,&#13;
.Hawley and Piatt, of Connecticut, are&#13;
constant smokers, Gen. Hawley not&#13;
disdaining a good old fashioned chew.&#13;
It is hart:ly"possible for anyone to&#13;
hmoke more, bigger,- or stronger cigars&#13;
than the" living skeleton called&#13;
Mahone does, and his colleague, Riddleberger,&#13;
is an almost constant smoker.&#13;
All of the southern senators except&#13;
Gorman and Joe Brown, use tobacco,&#13;
and the most of them use it in&#13;
two ways. Jones, of Florida, is not&#13;
particular about the« flavor of his cigars,&#13;
and it is a standing joke among&#13;
senators when they get a poor cigar to&#13;
send it to him. He smokes it as hap*&#13;
pily as though it cost $1. Jones, of&#13;
Nevada, on the other baud, will smoke&#13;
none but the best, and ho ruitkos away&#13;
with ten or twelve every day. Beck,&#13;
aside from a few strong cigars everyday,&#13;
likes to titillate his nostiils with&#13;
a pinch of snuff now and then, but he&#13;
does not do it so publicly as Senator&#13;
Thurman did. Yonng Senator Kenna i»&#13;
a great smoker, and John Logan&#13;
puffs fiercely at big black cigars. John&#13;
Sherman smoked little cigars, light&#13;
colored, and has them made spefnaHlv&#13;
for him. Ben. Harrison likes a pipe^&#13;
in his office, bnt is oftenerseen on the&#13;
street with a cigar than without one.&#13;
Senator Conger likes to smoke three&#13;
cigars a day. Senator Allison would&#13;
rather smoke a good cigar and bluff&#13;
out a king full than to dine at the&#13;
most epicurian table. David Daviswas&#13;
a great smoker. Senator Conkling&gt;&#13;
practically gave up the habit some&#13;
years ago, but he occasionally outs a&#13;
cigar in two and chews the cut emirs:&#13;
Dorsey has been for years a constant&#13;
smoker from the time he arose till he&#13;
retired. He always, lights a cigar as&#13;
soon as he gets out of bed, sometimes&#13;
smoking two or three before breakfast.&#13;
Blair, Chace, Gorman, and Camden&#13;
not only used no tobacco, but are total&#13;
abstainers from alcohol in all forms.&#13;
Mr. Randall does not use tobacoo&#13;
at all, but Speaker Carlisle would bo&#13;
frantic if he had to go long without a&#13;
quid.. He does not smoke. Holraan&#13;
chews constantly, but docs not smoke.&#13;
Sunset Cox does not use tobacco, nor&#13;
does A. S. Hewitt, nor Gov. Dingley,&#13;
but there are very few members bf&#13;
the house who do not smoke or chew,&#13;
very many practicing both habits. A&#13;
member of the lower house, as a general&#13;
thing, buys a much cheaper cigar&#13;
than a senator, two for a quarter&#13;
being considered rather expensive,&#13;
and a 2o-cent cigar an extravagance.&#13;
Threc-for-a-quarter cigars are genera&#13;
l l y b o u g h t , , but there are many&#13;
shrewd congressmen who have discovered&#13;
that you can get the same cigar&#13;
for 0 cents. Some representatives,&#13;
hmvpvftrT smoke the very best. Congressman&#13;
Muller. of New York, has&#13;
made many frieuds with his superb&#13;
Reinas, and ex-Congressman Morse, of&#13;
Boston, was reputed to smoke the finest&#13;
cigars that came to Washington.&#13;
Many of the most active business&#13;
men in New York do not smoke or&#13;
touch spirits until dinner time. Dr.&#13;
Norvin Green, the president "Of the&#13;
Western Union, tells with what surprise&#13;
he discovered, when he came to&#13;
New York to assume the management&#13;
of the telegraph company, that many&#13;
of the most busy men neither smoke&#13;
nor drink until business hours are*&#13;
ovor.—A'ew York Sun.&#13;
Osrnan Digma, a FrencTmianv&#13;
It may not be generally known that&#13;
Osman Digma is a Frenchman by&#13;
birth, and was born in 1832, in a small&#13;
hotel in Rouen. His father dying a&#13;
year or two after, his mother married&#13;
aa Alexandrian merchant in 1837, half&#13;
French and half Egyptian? of the name&#13;
oTOsinan Digma, wtyo, (at that time;&#13;
taking a great fancy to young Osman&#13;
named Alphonse Vinet,) inhaving&#13;
his name changed to&#13;
his own, and, dying—m 1842, left him&#13;
about 500,000 franco After the death&#13;
of his step-father he was left to^the^&#13;
guardianship of Ali Khana, a^krnd of&#13;
half partner of the elojer^Osman, ft&#13;
Mussulman, who, at-thedeath bf Mme.&#13;
Digma, in 18&gt;irtook young Osman&#13;
into hisJboUse. His religion at that&#13;
time&lt;*Jerng very much of the Christian&#13;
-unattached type, was soon converted&#13;
into Mohammedanism. AH Khana&#13;
was a very wealthy man, and lived in&#13;
great Oriental pomp and splendor.&#13;
Though intending to be very kind to-&#13;
Young Osman, his kindness was of a&#13;
very Spartan order, indeed. lie had&#13;
numerous professors for various&#13;
branches of learning, and would often&#13;
be examined by Ali himself, who, if&#13;
he did not consider that he had made&#13;
progress, would have bim severely&#13;
bastinadoed.&#13;
At the age of 15 he was sent to Cairo&#13;
to an ex-French officer to be taught&#13;
the various methods of European&#13;
warfare. CapL Meraie had some fifty&#13;
boys resitting in his house studyingwar&#13;
in all its branches, two or three&#13;
of whom have since become famous,,&#13;
not least among them being Arabi&#13;
Pasha. It is strange, as illustrating&#13;
the old saying that "the boy is father&#13;
to the man." that both Osman and&#13;
Arabi distinguished themselves as&#13;
leaders in the mimic battles fought in&#13;
the grounds of Capt. Meraie, the&#13;
former in a dashing swooping kind of&#13;
way, carrying everything'before him.&#13;
and the latter as a tactician. The&#13;
consequence was that a rivalry existed&#13;
between the two, both having&#13;
about an equal number of their^ehool&#13;
fellows siding with them. Osman remained&#13;
here until his 19th year, whenhe&#13;
was sent by his guardian to Franco&#13;
on matters relating to "Ali's buslnessr&#13;
In 1866 he obtained the command of&#13;
his regiment, but shortly afterward,&#13;
oflending the khedive. he'had to leave&#13;
Egypt, and had his property confiscated.&#13;
He then went to Suakira and entered&#13;
business as a ship chandler and&#13;
coal agent under an assumed name;&#13;
but while on a hunting expedition, ho&#13;
was captured by a roving band of&#13;
Arabs, and was sold as a slave to tho&#13;
man who at present calls himself tbe&#13;
mehdi. The mehdi was charmed with&#13;
his new slave, as a man of unbounded&#13;
learning, and who would be able to&#13;
train his numerous supporters in the&#13;
art of war. He gave Osman hia&#13;
daughter in marriage, and has ever&#13;
since treated him as a son.&#13;
Cincinnati druggists sugar-coat dried pra*&#13;
and sell them for pills. On some accounts&#13;
these are preferable to dough or bread p 11».&#13;
They will not d ge*t-a« readily, am hence tfci&#13;
patient, be nr remind? 1 .that they are *Wf&#13;
doiui; jjnsMiosat U'o o'U nUutl will hare rann&#13;
.faith iu t'leiu.—1 \\-';'t $&gt;ett.&#13;
.J.. 1..LJ&#13;
[^1&#13;
ft.I&#13;
\ V.&#13;
N&#13;
b^-"':&#13;
^ r ~&#13;
PlNCKNEY DlSPATCBL.&#13;
J. L . NKWKIRK, EDITOR AKD PUBLISHER&#13;
Finckney, Michigan, Thursday, July 9, ^8h^&#13;
A Letter or the Poet Keats.&#13;
In one of his letters to his siat-or b«&#13;
•ays, exprewing a momentary high&#13;
feeling: "Oh, thete is nothing like tine&#13;
weather, and health, and books, and a&#13;
contented mind, and diligent habits of&#13;
reading and thinking, and an amulet&#13;
against the enemies, and please heaven,&#13;
a little claret wine out of a cellar a mile&#13;
deep—with a few, or H good many, ratafia&#13;
cakes—a rocky basin to bathe in;"&#13;
and he enunciates much else, tapering&#13;
off into a series of rollicking whims, and&#13;
ending with about thirty-^ix lines of&#13;
doggerel rhyme. But Keats always&#13;
had a breezy way of rattling off his&#13;
wishes and feelings in his correspondence,&#13;
of which we will give but one&#13;
ftjore sample. It is from one of the&#13;
letters to his sister written from Winchester.&#13;
He-says: "I should like now&#13;
to promenade round your gardens ( ?)—&#13;
apple-tasting, ^ear-taBting, plum-judging,&#13;
apricot-nibbling, peach-scrunching,&#13;
nectarine-sucking, and melon-carving.&#13;
I have also a great feeling for antiquated&#13;
cherries, full of sugar-cracks&#13;
—and a white currant tree, kept for&#13;
company. I admire lolling on a lawn&#13;
by a water-lilied pond, to eat white&#13;
currants and see gold-fish, and go tc&#13;
the fair in the evening, if I'm good&#13;
There is not hope for that—one is sure&#13;
to get in some mess before the eveniag,"—&#13;
Joel Benton, in theManhattan,&#13;
Three nf « Kind.&#13;
"This is Mr. Brown, of Jamestown, 1&#13;
believe?"&#13;
".No, I hain't." My name is Simon&#13;
Plunket, Mho be vou?"&#13;
"Oh, excuse me, I took you for my&#13;
friend irown. How much you do look&#13;
like him. But did you &gt;av your name&#13;
was Planket. Why, I know your uncle;&#13;
bliuke bauds."&#13;
"Wul, now, I reckon that's queer,"&#13;
said hi'uon; "which one was it you&#13;
knowed, A&gt;UOH or Dave.-*"&#13;
"It was Dave; why I'm very glad to&#13;
have met you. Plunket. old boy, many's&#13;
the time I've heard Dave speak of bis&#13;
nephew Si."&#13;
"You don't Hny so. Wall now, 'tis&#13;
strange 1 should have run agin you."&#13;
•'Perhsps I can be of some use to yoo&#13;
if you are a stranger here."&#13;
"Vans, mebbe you iau tell mo where&#13;
to bunk. 1 hain't got a power o' raone&gt;&#13;
witli me, but then it's a good thing to&#13;
not liave much arougul you, ,you know,&#13;
in a strange pluce."&#13;
"Yea, yes, you're right, but wouldn't&#13;
you like to make a little more to put&#13;
with it?"&#13;
"Wai, I don't care if I do, but how?"&#13;
"Come with me, nnd I'll sho vyou."&#13;
"Take a drink. Mr Plunkot,*' he said,&#13;
as they entered a si loon. Then they&#13;
went into ah inner room, and he introduced&#13;
Plunket to a very particular&#13;
friends they all tfit down to a c^rd&#13;
table ami took a hand. Plunket became&#13;
very much evened,"and was sure&#13;
he could makn a good ileal of money.&#13;
One of tinm but heavily on his hand,&#13;
the other -doubled it.&#13;
Plunket smiled benignly, anc] *aV&lt;ct;&#13;
1776. 1885.&#13;
HERE WE ARE AGAIN !&#13;
-With a larger stock of-&#13;
Giraffes Fighting.&#13;
The author of "Under the the Snn"&#13;
humorously describes the giraffe as s&#13;
"sky-raking animal that passes its^life&#13;
looking out of a fbrth-story jwrndow."&#13;
This zebra gone to seed bas such an&#13;
original- method of fighting that the&#13;
wild beast killing^ Romans used to&#13;
amuse themselves with combats between&#13;
two giraffes. —&#13;
?he giraffe has neither claws nor&#13;
tusks nor beak nor sting nor poisonfangs&#13;
nor sharp teeth, nor yet hdbnailed&#13;
boots.&#13;
So when it is out of temper with one&#13;
of its own kind it does not fly in the&#13;
face of Providence by trying to scratch&#13;
its antagonist's bowels out, as a tiger |&#13;
might, or toss it like a rhinoceros, or '&#13;
peek its eyes out like a vulture, at i&#13;
sting it like a scorpion, or strike it&#13;
tike a cobra, or fly at its throat like a&#13;
wolf, or jump on it as the costermonger&#13;
does.&#13;
On the contrary, the giraffe, remark*&#13;
jng that it has been provided by nature&#13;
"Now, keep c&lt;*ol, gentlemen, keep cooL&#13;
I got a real good hand* and I'm just&#13;
goin'to do something with it: don't get&#13;
excited now," and he reached into hil&#13;
pocket and took out an immense oldfashioned&#13;
wallet, which was exceedingly&#13;
-fat he opened it and removed a huge&#13;
something wrapped in newspaper. He&#13;
proceeded to slowly unfold it. The two&#13;
sharpers looked eagerly on, almost&#13;
breathless with expectation; but paper&#13;
after paper was laid aside, and still&#13;
there seeme 1 to be nothing but paper.&#13;
Finally a-small tin box_was brought to&#13;
light, about the size of a thimWer-Wkat&#13;
possibly could such a small box contain&#13;
of any value? A priceless gem&#13;
perhaps. Their mouths fainy watered.&#13;
The cover was lifted, displaying a Bmall&#13;
silver coin.&#13;
"I've been keepin'it for luok&lt;* remarked&#13;
Plunket, taking it tut. '.Say,&#13;
kin you c h a n g e s Canada five-cent&#13;
pioce?"—Car I PreizeVs Weekly.&#13;
DRUGS AND M E D I C I N E S&#13;
than any house in Livingston County.&#13;
We carry a full line of the latest FL U/DS, EXTRACTS and other preparations&#13;
known to the Drug Trade; also as fine a line of&#13;
FANCY GOODS and TO/LET ARTICLES as you&#13;
will find anywhere in the State.&#13;
In Stationery and Box Paper we have a complete stock. We have the boss&#13;
Nickle Cigar "and don't you forget it."&#13;
W A L L P A P E R , C E I L I N G D E C O R A T I O N S A. W I N D O W S H A D E S&#13;
in ill the latest patterns. We give "Kindall's Treatese on the Horse'' to every&#13;
horse-owner who purchase goods of us. Arctic Soda Water constantly on&#13;
draught, Oranges, Lemons and confectionery of all kinds.&#13;
"Corner Drug Store." S1GLER BROS.&#13;
ffijRNITUREl pURNTTUREl&#13;
With a long and pliable neck, terminating&#13;
in a very solid head, uses the&#13;
upper half of itself like a flail, and&#13;
swinging its neck round and round !&#13;
in a way that does immense credit to&#13;
its organization, brings its head down&#13;
at each swing with a thump on its&#13;
adversary.&#13;
The other combatant adops precisely&#13;
the same tactics; and the two animals,&#13;
planting themselves as firmly as possible&#13;
by stretching out all four legs to&#13;
the utmost stand opposite each other&#13;
hammering with their heads, till one oi&#13;
the other fractures its skull or bolts,&#13;
Their heads are furnished with two&#13;
stumpy, horn-like processes, so that the&#13;
giraffes, when busy at this hammer and&#13;
tongs, remind the spectators somewhat&#13;
of two ancient warriors thumping each&#13;
other with spiked balls they used to&#13;
carry for that purpose at the end of $&#13;
chain, ~ - —-&#13;
Bncklen's Arnica Salve.&#13;
THE ISEST SALVE in the world for&#13;
f'nt-' Bruises/ Sores, Ulcers, Salt&#13;
-R'leum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapned&#13;
Theater Vices,&#13;
The stage has its vices as well as the&#13;
audience. One of the worst of them it&#13;
the slovenly enunciation of many of the&#13;
actors of the present day. They do not&#13;
pronounce their words with anything&#13;
approaching distinctness; tlrey do not&#13;
take the trouble to speak ioud enough&#13;
to make all the audience hear. They&#13;
mutter and mumble and shuttle off their&#13;
words as if they were in a hurry to get&#13;
through. Probably the "combination/&#13;
system, with its demoralizing sameness,&#13;
i* largely responsible for this, though&#13;
it is sometimes seen among the younger&#13;
members of established stoclc companies.&#13;
It is a refreshing contrast to&#13;
this slipshod work when a well-trained&#13;
actor—very often a young actor—appeargrsrticulating^&#13;
his T?ordsdistinctly&#13;
and speaking in a tone, whether low&#13;
or loud, that carries^nem to every part&#13;
of the house. These careless players&#13;
otfgnt to remember that they are&#13;
neglecting a detail which is one of the&#13;
first requisite^of success.&#13;
Another Utile stage vice which seems&#13;
to be in v^gue now is that of actors reappearing&#13;
to acknowledge applause&#13;
after ah exit during the progress of a&#13;
scene; This completely destroys the&#13;
illusions, and is in violation of all the&#13;
es of art. Yet it lias been seen&#13;
tiring the past week in one of the&#13;
best of the few stock companies in New&#13;
York.&#13;
As for the vices of audiences, their&#13;
name is legion. The people who come&#13;
in late, the people who talk loud, tho&#13;
p«ea-&#13;
Hands. Chilblains, Corns, and all skin&#13;
Eruptions, and positively cures Piles,&#13;
or no pay required. It is guaranteed&#13;
to tfive perfect satisfaction, or money&#13;
refunded. Price 25 cents per box.&#13;
! For Sale, at WINCHELL S DRUG STORE.&#13;
K e l l e r ' s Columbian Oil is composed&#13;
of vegetable products in a highly&#13;
concentrated form, and acts directly&#13;
on the kidneys. It cures rheumatism&#13;
ar.d all other aches and pains.&#13;
A Wonderful Discovery.&#13;
Consumptives and all, who suffer&#13;
from any affection of the throat and&#13;
lungs, can find a certain cure in Dr.&#13;
Kind's New Discovery for Consumption..&#13;
Thousands of permanent cures&#13;
verify the truth of this statement. No&#13;
medicine can show su,cn a record of&#13;
wonderfnl cures. Thousands of once&#13;
hopeless sufferers now gratefully proclaim&#13;
they owe their lives to this New&#13;
Discovery. It \yfll cost you nothing&#13;
to give it a trial. Free trial bottle at&#13;
Wincheirs Prug Store. Large size&#13;
§1.00.&#13;
Tery7 Remarkable Recovery.&#13;
Mr./jeo. V. Willing,of Manchester,&#13;
MicV, writes. "My wife has been&#13;
mojst helpless for five years, so helpless&#13;
t)rat she could not turn over in&#13;
[/alone.' She used two bottles of&#13;
trie Bitters, and is so much improve'&#13;
that she is able now to do her&#13;
.&#13;
Electric Bitters will do all that is&#13;
claimed Mr them. Hundreds of testimonials&#13;
attest their great, curative po «vers.&#13;
Only 50 cts. a bottle at Wincheirs&#13;
Drug Store.&#13;
To the Afflicted.&#13;
Since the introduction of Kellogg's&#13;
Columbian Oil it has made more permanent&#13;
cures and given better satisfaction&#13;
on Kio'ney Complaints and&#13;
Rheumatism than any known remedy.&#13;
Its continued series od 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;
the forerunners of more serious dis*&#13;
orders. It acts speedily and surely,&#13;
always relieving suffering and often&#13;
saving life. The protection it affords&#13;
by its timely use on rheumatism, kidney&#13;
affection, and all aches and pa&#13;
wounds, cramping pains, chojemrinor&#13;
bus, diarrhoea, coughs, cojdtff catarrh,&#13;
people who "talk in a sibilant whisper and disorders among^eftlldren, makes&#13;
that is worse than talking aloud, the it an invaluab&gt;-remedy to be kept al&#13;
•women who wear big hats, the mea ways on jjarfo: in every home. No&#13;
who go out every tune the curtain i&gt;erY&#13;
drops, climbing over a whole row of Jj^jg&#13;
in every&#13;
&gt;erso&gt;-can afford to be without it, and&#13;
, —. ~. v. I . '1U -^~"*s*ew w" hnov h»»a«v.»eo ou inlc^ec uUsi-eCdU iltbn HevC*V»Tr wWiillll .i persons to do it, and come .pyij j p t t r it, 1B absolutely certain in its remedial&#13;
tar-room odors chngmg a b o u t ^ h ^ ^ ^ d * • „ , h the people who take the seats^they are&#13;
not entitled to and causeroonfnsion and p o M at &amp;,""'' *. rio™ « ™ » . a„A&#13;
noise when theyjarfstbe turned o u t - ? • W , ? ^ E L L 8&#13;
U&#13;
D ? U 0 ?T.°™ a n d&#13;
these are some^ofthe criminal classes f ' « ; memorandum book giving more&#13;
in a tiHtfteT andience.-tf«e YvtJ*1}***** &lt;&gt;f &amp;* cnrative properties&#13;
tribune^. ^ fof this wonderful medicine.&#13;
When in want of anything in the line of Furniture, such as&#13;
BEDROOM SUITS, PARLORSUITS&#13;
LOUNGES, BUREAUS, BOOKCASES/TABLES&#13;
STANDS, CHAIRS, ETC. ETC. COME&#13;
M D SEE ME =&#13;
.A. SPECIALTY.&#13;
/&#13;
COFFINS, CASKETS, ROBES and FUNERAL SUPPLIES of all kinds&#13;
constantly on hand. Respectflluy, - — L. H. BEEBE.&#13;
D O O R S A NO B L I N D S ,&#13;
GLASS. NAILS, PAINT,&#13;
BUILDING&#13;
A N D ALL&#13;
KINDS OF BUILDINI&#13;
PATENTS KTTHN A CO., of tho 8riEVTmr AiWKhiCAN. continue&#13;
to act ua Solicitors for 1'iitoiits, (\ivcats. Tr«4«&#13;
Htrki CoDTrtahtH. for the Utuu»l kutu»a, CttUMtak&#13;
K S K n a / f f f i e dennnny. eto. Hand Book ftbS«&#13;
Putent*obtained thnmirh MlINy A CO. arenoUoed&#13;
btheSciKNTiKie AMKHKAN. tuo larnaU. batt. aud&#13;
moit wtduly circulated • w:lentlflo paper, fs.20* y«w.&#13;
Weekly. Splendid entfravlnjw and 1nt*re«tlpg Information.&#13;
rV«jlmen e&lt;&gt;i&gt;y &lt;'£ tho Beirut I Be A«i«r»&#13;
ic*h Bentfrt'*. Ad&lt;in&gt;ss MUNN A CO.. 8&lt;'I*NTm«&#13;
4J1UUCAN Office, :\ll Broudwuy, New Yi**.&#13;
c_o verdieeTs,o itnodvo tnotio nscgi eanncde p, mateecn t! pa . . Lumber illustrated wiat hm sopslte vnadliudn belne» ern«cTylnclco«p. edTiah oiif&#13;
popular Week ly newspoj*&#13;
aechanics, nngineeripj^«»»&#13;
ttenti ever pablisnea. «2W»&#13;
splendid engmvingt. Thii&#13;
lost valuable enoyclopedlao*&#13;
lulu,-„.„..v- - — ,.,..^on8bonld be withouU Tba&#13;
popularity of the SCIENTIFIC AMEBJCAN• U «uch tt«|&#13;
lt» circulation nearly e&lt;i&lt;iala that of all other papers ol&#13;
its olaus combined. Prico. «3.20 a year. P ' « o u ^&#13;
Clubs. Sold by alluewadealers. MU^N A CO., **Uw&#13;
lishsrs. No. 361 Broadway, N. Y.&#13;
publication, furnishes ^ - ,. .&#13;
information which no person should be witnouU&#13;
ATENTS. Mhaudn nT Ah Clrot.y b-n8veev aelnso y e a r V practice be-&#13;
" ^ ^ ^ ^ • ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ Sore the Patent Office,&#13;
and have prepared more than O n e ""&#13;
dred, Thpuapnd applicationsi for&#13;
enU in the united states and tr&#13;
countries. ^Caveats, Trade-Marks,&#13;
riphta, Assictunciits, and all other&#13;
'cr Bccurint; to inventors their right*&#13;
United ritutea, Canada, Engl and, ""&#13;
Gertunny and other foreign countries,&#13;
at short not ii-o and on reaaonnble terms.&#13;
Information as to obtaining patents chafafaUjr&#13;
(riven without chnrce. Hand-books of information&#13;
sent free. Patents obtained through Munn&#13;
— . &amp; Co. are noticed in the Scientific American free,&#13;
["he advantage of such notice in well understood by all&#13;
leraonswho wish to dispone of their patents.&#13;
AddrensMUNN A CO., Offloo ScuaiMlflO iTtmaiQAM.&#13;
SI Broadway, Now York.&#13;
o&#13;
p&#13;
SM&#13;
t 5 ^ *T5 - a c&lt;a ^&#13;
' 5 cr. 0 f 3 S3 g&#13;
ir era&#13;
a. b o&#13;
Yfitl ODDS THE&#13;
-Best-Hawspapgr:..&#13;
OKITl CLASS IN MICHIGAN,&#13;
U THX&#13;
y Thursday&#13;
eryear; or,&#13;
AT V.L BROWN'S.&#13;
!"«%r«SMffi» ITS* •nr tvith **&gt;Meh th« rOVXBMMmm&#13;
iemtiatth* OLDER m^mbmrtmf *A« f*m*l*&#13;
«»«*» rtriiahtrd. Boeft •uuntbmp tgmtminm&#13;
ftftu-*ljc roltnnnm «*U-flU*a wif* t*sa h*mi&#13;
aUgtnnl nn*t *xtr*f*ttlv atel«»e«e^! r«&lt;M«n#,&#13;
n which *r* artMvmtm 4nt«r**if mmu—,&#13;
Sunday-School Department,&#13;
IXEXCELLED. '&#13;
Oondnotedby R*t&gt;. J. M 8TTFLER, D, I&gt;«at&#13;
Croter TneOloglcal vemluary. tmasKT&#13;
Dffr mTtFLBR'» Bihlm Xmt** mn4&#13;
t&gt;un»*N ExptMrttionm arm pr+mmr*d *xpr«M&#13;
iyfrrthm bHRinriAN UKMAIJa «HMlsaja&gt;&#13;
is^str in ti* 0th«rpmp*r.&#13;
s^*8ample copies for examination or oaovstttaf&#13;
TVRXuaxD nunnpon application. Beiid foj tbeak,&#13;
AddNM, CHBJSTIAir HSBALD,&#13;
\&#13;
Z -z*L&#13;
/&#13;
N&#13;
\ • &gt; &gt; - » *&#13;
\&#13;
'&lt;W5P»T&#13;
• « M n f W « « a « - ' &gt; .&#13;
- • ' • • • • * . I « - A&#13;
. &lt; • . - i . . • , ' ' • •&#13;
r. False&#13;
The simplest forma of insanity art&#13;
those which consist merely of false perceptions,&#13;
and they are not of such a&#13;
character as to lessen the responsibility&#13;
of the individual. There are two forms&#13;
of false perceptions—illusions and hallucination*.&#13;
Uncomplicated illusions&#13;
are rare; still there is no doubt that&#13;
there are illusions not the results of disease&#13;
in the organs of sense or of cireumstaaces&#13;
unfavorable to exact perception,&#13;
but whioh are due to a morbid&#13;
condition of the perceptional ganglia,&#13;
aae&gt; the unreal nature of which is&#13;
dearly recognized by the individual.&#13;
H - Illusions of sight often relate merely&#13;
to the size of objects. Thus, a young&#13;
lady who had overtasked herself at&#13;
school saw everything of enormous sue&#13;
at which she looked. The head of a&#13;
Seraon seemed to be several feet in&#13;
iameter, and little children looked like&#13;
giants. So far as her own person waa&#13;
concerned there was no illusions. Her&#13;
own hands appeared of the natural&#13;
size, but those of other people seemed&#13;
to be of enormous proportions. Sauv-&#13;
4|ges refers to a case in which a young&#13;
.toiean, is suffering from epilepsy, had&#13;
&amp; • illusion of seeing objects greatly&#13;
saagnined. A fly seemed to be to her&#13;
as large as a chicken. In the case which&#13;
came under my observation, the unreal&#13;
character of the perception was fully&#13;
recognized, and hence the intellect was&#13;
not involved.&#13;
Morbid illusions of hearing, unaccompaniedby&#13;
other evidences of-mental&#13;
derangement, are not very common.&#13;
One case only has come under my obeervation.&#13;
It was that of a gentleman&#13;
to whom tho ticking of a clock wis reeolved&#13;
into articulate words. Generally&#13;
the expressions were in the form of&#13;
commands. For instance, if at dinner,&#13;
they would be, "Eat your soup J"&#13;
"Drink no wine 1" and BO on. One day&#13;
he made the discovery that, if he&#13;
closed the right ear firmly, the illusion&#13;
disappeared; but, if the left ear were&#13;
closed, the words were still distinctly&#13;
heard. It whas hence clear that the&#13;
center of hearing on the right side was&#13;
the one affected, and that that on the&#13;
left side was normal. For a long, time&#13;
this gentleman resisted accepting- any&#13;
of these illusions as facts, but after a&#13;
time he begun to be influenced by them&#13;
to the extent of regarding them as&#13;
guides. Evidently he put clocks in&#13;
every room in his house, and professed&#13;
to be governed altogether by the directions&#13;
they gave him.—Popular&#13;
Science Monthly.&#13;
Matrlmonymanlaoi.&#13;
An Okokomee octogenarian, who is&#13;
now a widower for tho fifth time, is&#13;
looking arouod for a new helpmeet.&#13;
In Shelbyville. Ky., there is a widow&#13;
who hot* buried four husbands, and now&#13;
seems anxious to prepare another for&#13;
the silent tomb.&#13;
A Chicago woman is now living&#13;
happily with her third husband, the&#13;
others having obtained a divorce on the&#13;
ground of incompatibility of temper.&#13;
A Maine man secured a divorc•&gt;: from&#13;
his wife because she made faces at him&#13;
in the dark. He married again, and&#13;
now wants to be separated from his&#13;
second charmer on account of her proclivity&#13;
for snoring in church.&#13;
A negro barber was arrestod in the&#13;
South for having half a dozeii wives in&#13;
different towns.—^no York&#13;
An Aiircdiite of Lincoln.&#13;
"The lnM tiine I saw him was aboul&#13;
two wet k* before his assassination. Me&#13;
sent me word by my brother James,&#13;
then in his Cabinet, that lie tie ired to&#13;
see me before I went home. I went&#13;
into hi&lt; oflice about 11 o'c ock. He&#13;
looked a«bil and weary. I s'a^ed in&#13;
the room \\n il his lour for callers was&#13;
over. He ordere I the door closed, and&#13;
looking ovi-r to where I was sitting,&#13;
asked me to draw up my chair. But&#13;
instead of being alone, as he supposed,&#13;
jn the o&gt; po ite direction from where I&#13;
sUt. and across the fire-place from him,&#13;
f&#13;
N&#13;
pat two hum ble looking women; Seeitf&#13;
them there seemed to provoke him, an&#13;
he said: 'Well, ladies, what can I do&#13;
for you ?' One was an old woman, th«&#13;
other young. They both commenced&#13;
talking at once. The President soon&#13;
comprehended them. 'I suppose/«aid&#13;
he, 'that your son. and your husband is&#13;
in prison for resisting the draft in&#13;
Western Pennsylvania. Where is your&#13;
£etition ?' The old la ly replied: 'Mr.&#13;
iincoln, I've pot no petit on; I went to&#13;
a lawyer to get one drawn, and I had&#13;
. not, the hib'ney to p ty"him and come&#13;
here too, so I thought I would just&#13;
come and ask you to let me have my&#13;
bov.' Mud it's vourhusbiwid you want?'&#13;
said he, turning to tiie young woman&#13;
^Y»s,' said shn'. He rung his bell and&#13;
called hi-* scrvaut, rind bado him 30&#13;
and tell General Dana to bring him the&#13;
_list of prisoners for resisting the draft&#13;
in Western Pennsylvania&#13;
The General boon came, bringing a&#13;
package of papers. The President&#13;
opened it and, counting the name, said:&#13;
'General, there are twenty-seven of&#13;
these men. Is there any difference&#13;
the degree of their guilt V 'No,* saidihe&#13;
General; 'it is a bad case arid a merciful&#13;
finding.' 'Well,' sjud^tfie President,&#13;
looking out of the \Mfidow and seeming&#13;
talking to himself^'those poor fellows&#13;
have, I thMSk, suffered enough; they&#13;
haVeJbeen in prison fifteen months. I&#13;
fe been fhlnkmg "so for some time,&#13;
and have so said to Stanton, and he&#13;
always thereatens to resign if they are&#13;
released. But he ha* said so about&#13;
ether matters, and Merer did. So now,&#13;
fcsrhile I have the papers in my hand, 7&#13;
yri\Hum out th« flock.' So he wrote:&#13;
Let the prisoners named in the within&#13;
^&#13;
a p r be discharged,' and signed it.&#13;
he General made his bow and left.&#13;
Then turning to the ladies he said:&#13;
'Now, ladies, you can go. Your son,&#13;
Madame, and your husband, Madame,&#13;
is free.'&#13;
The young woman ran across to him&#13;
end began to kneel. He took hor by&#13;
the elbow and said, impatiently: 'Get&#13;
up, get up; none of this.' But the old&#13;
woman walked to him, wiping with her&#13;
apron the tears that were coursing&#13;
down her cheeks. She gave him her&#13;
hand, and looking into his face, said:&#13;
•Good-bye, Mr. Lincoln, we may never&#13;
meet again till we meet in Heaven/ A&#13;
•hangs came over, his sad and weary&#13;
face.—He clasped her haod in both ol&#13;
his, and followed her to the door, say*&#13;
fog as he went: 'With all that I hare&#13;
to cross me here, I am afraid that I will&#13;
never get there; but your wish that we&#13;
will meet there has fully paid for all&#13;
I have done for you.' "—Extract from %&#13;
$k$tch 0/Joshua F. Speed.&#13;
The Discovery of Quinine.&#13;
It is not generally known that to a&#13;
woman the European world is indebted&#13;
for the greatest febrifuge extant. The&#13;
Countess of Chinchon, a noble Spanish&#13;
lady, daughter of the Marquis of&#13;
Astorga, and wife of the Viceroy of&#13;
Peru, lay ill of a fever. The Indians&#13;
of Peru had long known of the febrifugal&#13;
qualities of the bark, whioh they&#13;
called quinaquinn, bark of barks.&#13;
They communicated their knowledge to&#13;
a Spaniard-in high authority, who consented&#13;
to use it, and was cured of a&#13;
fever. This gentleman, Don Juan&#13;
Lopez de Canizares, imparted the information&#13;
of this cure to a physician&#13;
who was in attendance on the Countess&#13;
of-Chinchon, at the same time sending&#13;
the lady a parcel of the valuable bark.&#13;
Consenting to, use it, her fever was&#13;
allayed, and when she returned to&#13;
Spain she carried aotnj of the Peruvian&#13;
bark with her, t*nd made its qualities&#13;
known.&#13;
Linnaeus named the genus whioh&#13;
C* elded it ehinuhona, in houo;- of tie&#13;
dy. In con equence of her introducing&#13;
it into Europe it wad called "Countess'&#13;
bark."&#13;
The Jesuits promoted greatly its introduction&#13;
into Europe, hence it was&#13;
sometimes called Jesuit's bark; and&#13;
many attributed its introduction to&#13;
them, when, in reality, they only diffused&#13;
its knowledge and encouraged its&#13;
use.&#13;
Louis XIV. purchased the secret of&#13;
preparing the qainquina from the bark&#13;
from Dr. Talbor, an English physician,&#13;
paying him 2,000 louis d'ors, and&#13;
granting him a pension and a title.&#13;
NEW GOODS, NEW GOODS,&#13;
GOODS,&#13;
/ mm s o BKX m®m mmi&#13;
NEW LAWNS, CHAMBRAYS, GINGHAMS, PRINTS,&#13;
WOKSTED DRESS GOODS, LACES, GLOVES, ETC.&#13;
A fine line of PARASOLS including&#13;
- @ ^ &lt; THE POPULAR COOCHING PARASOLS. SYSWe&#13;
are constantly in receipt of New Goods in every Department.&#13;
Everything marked in plain figures. The lowest possible&#13;
price guaranteed on every article.&#13;
STRUTTER and E6GS wanted at the highest Market Price in exchange&#13;
for GOODS. No trouble to show goods whether you want&#13;
to buy or not. Come and see us.&#13;
LAKJN &amp; SYKES.&#13;
- x - .&#13;
"XKrj^JSTTJElJD I&#13;
—at the—&#13;
FARMERS, READ THIS&#13;
The undersigued having a large stock of Ml kinds of Lumber, Lath and&#13;
Shingles at tb,eir lumber vard in Pincknev, have decided to reduce their&#13;
stock and for the 2 S T E 2 C T S I X T V 3 D A ^ T S will sell&#13;
A . T -&#13;
ROCK BOTTOM PRICES.&#13;
Parties about to build will tincTiTTb their interest to get our prices. We manufacture&#13;
our own lumber and shingles and will sell according to the times.&#13;
We keep-on band a full stock of Flooring, Siding and Barn Boards, also all&#13;
lengths of Bill Stuff and Timbers, and on all bills will give special prices.&#13;
You will find our Agent, A. L. HOYT, always on hand. Come and see us,&#13;
we will satisfy vou that we mean business.&#13;
s U f t a W T r . COW£H &amp; CO., FtfitCKSEY.&#13;
' FOURTH OF JULY&#13;
GOODS!&#13;
PINCKNEY ELEVATOB&#13;
WHEAT,&#13;
BEANS, WOOL, ETC.&#13;
FoTwfitch"th er high est market price&#13;
' will be paid."^»a&#13;
THOS. READ, Pinckney,&#13;
QUAKER 2s th.o Desk&#13;
T ABIES AM. T^rtTicTtidsnf irtii'lrsa/c nowmainfactn red that&#13;
in t'nnucr years had to/&gt;o irapriUeil, paying hlgl&#13;
imiwt ilutyas it is n-wbriri;,' il &gt;!:&lt;&gt; on Lra fcptfi&#13;
i iu&gt; t ililo sauce ; tr.cr&lt;* * KKU 'I .\I;LK :- j^fiUkes&#13;
its ;; ,.1 ,'t; ; it has b;cu pruuinin. •&lt; ii h^&lt;- upetect&#13;
judges just as^ooti and otxn Ixuvr'TixtA VUAKIR&#13;
SAiirp. Has Slowly but eurpiysujie i great importance&#13;
and ia l'cpl.ii k ^ t h o -r&gt;/ k'ct imported&#13;
aaure on tho Bhelf^ru tbo t/voccr,' 1I10 tables&#13;
of tho resUurac&gt;-&lt;ud tho tables of thn rub and&#13;
poor raen^peatly prized and reliBbcd by all on&#13;
accuun^OT its piquancy. an*ina, taste, strcnglh&#13;
and&gt;piiren««s. The inventor has by years of&#13;
*tudy of tho Bcorct virtups contained in the aromatic&#13;
apices of tho Indies and China, auch as&#13;
mace, nutmeg, ctonamoo, genuine Jamaica ginger&#13;
aad peppers and buds of tree* ni.kccwn to moKt&#13;
men, sad by long practice eucreeded to combine&#13;
their extract* in such a liquid form as we now&#13;
find it of agreeable taste, and so invigorating as&#13;
to be taken iu plaoe of stomach bitters. By manufacturing&#13;
this sauce here, heavy import duties&#13;
and freight! are saved, and it is sold at a lower&#13;
ft go re to the dealer, who making a better profit on&#13;
Quaker Saaee can sell it to the consumer cheaper&#13;
than be very best imported article hardlyeqnatingours.&#13;
If your grocer does not keep it. write&#13;
us for prices, e t c Bold in bottles or by the gallon.&#13;
CHARM MANUFACTURING CO.,&#13;
SoU Pryprittort and M am^acdsrtrt,&#13;
10« A 108 S. 8 J ST., SU **•!». M*.&#13;
MACKINAC.&#13;
Tb* Most DeUghtfal " * SUMMER TOUR&#13;
DETROIT AND MACKINAO&#13;
Aatf Bvov* Weak Day Between&#13;
DETROIT AND 0LEVEUND&#13;
Wofjimq«t M*oklnao," llluttrittd.&#13;
Mpflt 4 Otovwtend Stttm Nav. 0«.&#13;
^TasOld*^^-Brightest, and be»t of Western Weckliei.&#13;
Kight pageB, fifty-nii -rnlumna, fine-paper, new iyne.&#13;
clear print, and the most entertaining paper offered&#13;
the reading public. Suits evert localitr, diicuues&#13;
•ubjecta with fairness, contains all the hews of the&#13;
world attractirely preaen ed, and is withou a competitor&#13;
in general excellence as a family paper. It&#13;
costs bat&#13;
O I T S : D O X J X * . A . I &amp; .6. 1&#13;
and every subecriber receives free of charge,&#13;
paid, a copy of&#13;
THE TIMES ILLUSTRATED MXHD-B00K,&#13;
alone worth the price of subscription^ The Hand-book&#13;
is a publication of one hundred"p»ges of useful and entertaintng&#13;
reading m«tte&gt;f especially prepared and&#13;
.. (jublished for the sube«fTbers ofthe "Weekly Times*"&#13;
All who take the-paper are delighted with it. and the&#13;
Hand-boot wjU^be equally satisfactory, fiend for spedpaper.&#13;
Address, "THE TIMES,&#13;
230 Walnut St., CISCOTATI.O.&#13;
All kinds of. repairing promptlj&#13;
tended to.—&#13;
WATCH&gt;M) "CLOCK&#13;
—v&amp;p^iring a specialty.—&#13;
ItiQENE CAMPBELL?&#13;
r\&#13;
INCINNATI TIMES-STIR,&#13;
Is (he best and cheapest dally paper published In the&#13;
West. Eight pages—forty-eight columns—and only six&#13;
dollars a year, or twelve cent* a week. It is independent&#13;
in politics, hut aims tobeiair in everything, and&#13;
j Jst to all parties, individuals, section-*, and nationalities.&#13;
Ii you want all the news attractively and honestly&#13;
presented, subscribe for it. Tsi LASOXST CISCCLAtto&#13;
» c* Airt rarsa IJ» cisci»&gt;«*Tt.&#13;
Address, THE TTMB8-8TAB,&#13;
330 Walnut 8t„ CuRnamati^ (X&#13;
Rose Leaf, Fine Cut&#13;
Navy Clippings&#13;
and Snuffs&#13;
C A S H F O R W O O L !&#13;
The undersigned respectfully announce to their friends and patrons that&#13;
-they have completed arrangements for all t h e —&#13;
mox* MBXX&#13;
Each and every one can spare. Please remember for&#13;
THE NEXT THIRTY DAYS!&#13;
we shall need all the moneys tan get&#13;
Every thing in our stprcf will be sold way&#13;
ffSHnwn to the lowest noteb^^^&#13;
Respectfully Yours,&#13;
TEEPLE # CAD WELL.&#13;
Having rented D. Richards'&#13;
BLACKSMITH SHOP !&#13;
we are now prepared to do all&#13;
kinds of&#13;
BP'AIRINO:-&#13;
Including Horse-Shoeing.&#13;
Machine and Steel Work done to&#13;
order.&#13;
PARKER &amp; SPEARS.&#13;
Onr nadera for 12 cents in postage stamps t&gt;&#13;
pay fox mailing and wrapping, and names of tw&#13;
book a/ente, will receive FREE » STC»L FI»I»« P»f&#13;
10* E^OM^M of all O0R PRESIDENTS. *J«lj"tt»*&#13;
CLEVELAND, 8 i z e 2*x* inches, worth $4.00.&#13;
ADDRESS ELDER PUB, Co., CHICAGO, I I I&#13;
FARMERS' STORE,&#13;
AT&#13;
ANDERSON STATION^&#13;
Is now filled to overflowinjr^wlth a&#13;
fresh, new and complete stock of Dry&#13;
Goods, Groceries, Boots* &amp; Shoes and/&#13;
Hardware, to which we invite publ&gt;&lt;&#13;
inspection. /&#13;
—The ladies especially Will findat to&#13;
their interest to see our novelties in&#13;
Dress Goods before buying elsewhere.&#13;
Every, variety of eoun^ry produce'&#13;
taken in exchange for go*4ior&lt;money.1&#13;
JAMES T. E l * i N A 0 0 / —&#13;
-x-&#13;
- - ^&#13;
- 3 W H - / \ \ N. • - \ if*.* ' N&#13;
\&#13;
I 1 ' « I M I I » » I I iiii • •» m y &gt;»——ri»&#13;
.&#13;
i K I&#13;
\t&#13;
*&#13;
,-i-i&#13;
11&#13;
I&#13;
giitchneu §in^n\^[.&#13;
J. L. NXWKIKK, Publisher.&#13;
Batere« at the PoatoCoe u #x eia»» matte*.&#13;
rTp IMELY TOPICS.&#13;
A BACHELIK German immigrant who&#13;
went west three years ago, and who&#13;
had succeeded in getting a farm under&#13;
a good state of cultivation. Westly&#13;
sent to Castle Garden to have a wife&#13;
selected for him. His request was published&#13;
in a New York paper, and he&#13;
now prays that the marriageable maidens&#13;
be informed that he is no longer in&#13;
the market. He has been deluged&#13;
with letters from all sorts of feminine&#13;
creatures—slim, fat, tall, short, blonde,&#13;
brunette, fair, freckled, and with black,&#13;
brown, rod and gray hair, and coming&#13;
from every part of the country. He&#13;
says that he would require the bank account&#13;
of a Gould and a Tegiment of&#13;
stenographers to reply to the letters&#13;
he has received, which ask him about&#13;
the size and value of his property, the&#13;
climate soil, products, population.&#13;
schools, churches, and age and description&#13;
of the minister. He is married&#13;
now.&#13;
m i&#13;
AMONG other reasons for fearing a&#13;
visitation_ni±he cholera this summer*&#13;
the peculiar climatic conditions that&#13;
have prevailed during June are especially&#13;
noticeable. The very sudden and&#13;
severe changes from excessive heat to&#13;
cold are conducive to interference with&#13;
the healthy action of the bowels,and persons&#13;
who are affected by these changes&#13;
are thus predisposed to cholera.. A'&#13;
sudden chill to the digestiye. organs i&gt;&#13;
sometimes fatal even- without the&#13;
symptoms of cholera. In the East&#13;
Indies this^dtfhger is so well understood&#13;
tha£J2tiropeans take special precautions&#13;
^against it, wearing at all times, next the&#13;
skin a band or close-fitting apron of&#13;
flannel, covering the who'e abdomen.&#13;
The bowels are thus protected against&#13;
sudden changes of temperature&#13;
THREE prominent men m New York&#13;
are stated to have lately tested the&#13;
"oxygen cure." The first drew a long*,&#13;
deep breath from the receiver, and re&#13;
ported that the sensation was delightful;&#13;
he felt it tingle to the ends of his&#13;
fingers. The second took an inspiration,&#13;
and became pale and agitated; he&#13;
was told that the oxygen had found the&#13;
weak spot in his anatomy. The third&#13;
man declared he felt nothing; ho could&#13;
oould take the stuff in all day. Then it&#13;
was discovered that theJ^Professor''&#13;
had forgottenihaJtmorningpto connect&#13;
the tube with the oxygen reservoir.&#13;
The patients had been breathing ordinary&#13;
atmospheric air,&#13;
IN an address to young men, Dr. W.&#13;
Pratt of London savs that married life&#13;
is by far the mos" healthy. In 1,000&#13;
married men of 25 to 30 years of age&#13;
there are b deaths; 1,000 bachelors&#13;
burnish 10 deaths, and 1,000 widowers&#13;
22 deaths. In young men married before&#13;
20 years the figures are unfavorable,&#13;
being 50 per 1,000. In unmarried&#13;
men under 20~~the rate is- "but 7 per&#13;
1,000. If girls marry before 20, a like&#13;
mortality befalls them. Married people&#13;
from 18 to 20 die as fast as people from&#13;
60 to 70. After 21 marriages should be&#13;
contracted as soon as practicable.&#13;
BLKMISIIES KKLUW ti^L&#13;
Disftguremeau A^olishnt by Means of Electricity.&#13;
\&#13;
A man with a small mole on his chin&#13;
climbed up the stoop of a doctor's office&#13;
in West Nineteenth street, N^ew&#13;
York, not long ago.&#13;
"I wan't to get rid of the mole," ho&#13;
said, when the young doctor came out&#13;
and asked what the matter was.&#13;
'•Step right in and I'll do it,1' the&#13;
doctor responded, as he reached for a&#13;
large mahogany box containg a polished&#13;
electrical machine, with insulated&#13;
wire running from the battery to&#13;
a neat carved handle. The doctor sat&#13;
the patient down in an easy chair,&#13;
threw his .head .back and dressed the&#13;
mole deftly with a local -JtnajMhetic&#13;
that gradually bemuhed the tlesh until&#13;
it was robbed of all sensitiveness.&#13;
Then the doctor fitted a tiny strip of&#13;
platinum into the handle and turned&#13;
on the full force of the battery. The&#13;
platinum was aglow with a pure white&#13;
heat in a twinkling. The doctor drew&#13;
it sowly and carefully through the&#13;
mole as if he were using a razor blade.&#13;
The patient felt the glow of the intense&#13;
heat through tho cheeks, but the burning&#13;
away of the mole was as painless&#13;
asjjt was rapid. When a soothing salvo&#13;
had been applied the doctor sent the&#13;
patient away happy. He told him&#13;
that in less than a month the woun,d&#13;
would heal without leaving a scar.&#13;
"Few of the public know of the process,&#13;
although it is simply an elaboration&#13;
of the one used to removo cancer&#13;
and similar growths on the neck and&#13;
body," young Police Surgeon Satterlee&#13;
said. "Ladies who would be otherwise&#13;
faultless in complexion can have&#13;
blotches-painlessly removed by tho&#13;
same process without marking the&#13;
flesh. Superfluous hair can be permanently&#13;
eradicated in a second's time&#13;
by a single touch of the pkilkriim needle.&#13;
Its greatest usefulness is in removing&#13;
tattoojng marks from the&#13;
arms and hitnds. About nine boys out&#13;
of every dozen are crazy to disfigure&#13;
JJiemselves that way; and they regret&#13;
it for years afterward, because they&#13;
think the disfigurement is for life.&#13;
Nobody ever mady a bigger mistake.&#13;
"Any kind of tattooing upon the&#13;
body ean be entirely removed, and if&#13;
properly done no scar need bo left,&#13;
The process is a gradual one, because&#13;
the eradication has to be done piecemeal,&#13;
and care exercised to prevent&#13;
the platinum needle from buwiing&#13;
more than half through the cuticle.&#13;
This caution will render scarring of&#13;
the skin after the wound heals imposble."&#13;
"Well, I swan !" cried one of Capt.&#13;
Wiliy&gt;ms' sergeants, suddenly baring&#13;
his arm and displaying some tine sailor&#13;
tattooing; "I'll come around to-morrew-&#13;
and have you begin on that. It's&#13;
made me unhappy for twenty years&#13;
to look at it."—Sew York Journal.&#13;
• * • • . i . i . i -&#13;
The Cigar Factories of Madrid.&#13;
Before the every-day tourist had&#13;
learned to babble of Velasquez am&#13;
W E now have in this country that be.&#13;
nignant new system of postage which&#13;
makes an ounce, and not half an our&#13;
the standard for letters. Evej?y^Tovei&#13;
and every sweetheart will^now be able&#13;
to double the endearing lengtbf of their&#13;
affectionate^^communication*. How&#13;
much^hi&lt;wnij.dd't)the sum of human&#13;
finess^-it' is not necessary to&#13;
estimate. -&#13;
-'i&#13;
A WRITES in the New England Medical&#13;
Monthly says that unreasonable apprehension&#13;
of possible ca'amity depresses&#13;
the vitality and thus indirectly increases&#13;
the power of disease. He cites&#13;
the case of a man so-panic stricken&#13;
about cholera that he rushed immediately&#13;
out of his town, leaving his family&#13;
to follow. He died in a few days, not of&#13;
cholera, but of fright.&#13;
JusTicr, has been meted out- to one&#13;
villain at least, in the sentence of James-&#13;
P. Fish, cx-president of the Marino&#13;
bank. Fi h was c mcerned with Ward&#13;
in the swindles that ruined Gen. Grant&#13;
and his family. /A cell in the penitentiary&#13;
now yearns for Ward, and when&#13;
he is safely incarcerated under a long&#13;
sentence the public will heartily ap«&#13;
plaud.&#13;
Murillo, and regarded it es9ential""to&#13;
to his reputation as a man p^taste to&#13;
go into ecstasies over Moorish arches,&#13;
the cigar factories^of Madrid were&#13;
among the principal show-places of&#13;
the unjjiteresting capital which, for&#13;
some-tnilitary or other reasons* _has_&#13;
.been dropped down in the middle of&#13;
one of tho dreariest areas in Christendom.&#13;
You know you are approaching&#13;
it by the odor of tobacco, and the Babel&#13;
of voices which hails the arrival of&#13;
the "Gringo"', can be compared to&#13;
nothing except a gigantic boarding&#13;
school with all tho masters' backs&#13;
turned to the pupils. Thousands of&#13;
women—young, middle-aged, and old,&#13;
—are busy rolling up cigars so deftly&#13;
that the unpracted eye has some dilliculty&#13;
in catching the movement of&#13;
the artists1 fingers. A pinch of leaf&#13;
here, a turn of the wrist there, tno&#13;
the slightest possible touch of the&#13;
tongue when the case demands it,&#13;
and a "Claro,11 or a "Maduro," or&#13;
*'Color adbn is r e a d y f o r t h e market.&#13;
Here cheroots are being turned out by t the thousands, here cigarettes by th&#13;
tens of thousands. In another bu-Hding&#13;
boxes are being made, labehfcf, and&#13;
tied up, and in and arowtaand. over&#13;
all resound.tiie no|sy-^hiim of female&#13;
tongues that \viH^not be tied. But not&#13;
a hand isfprti moment idly. The workers,&#13;
JjkCsoience . teachers at Southern&#13;
sington, are "paid by results," and&#13;
it requires a great number of government&#13;
cigars before the madrilena can&#13;
earn the wherewithal for an olla podrida,&#13;
a gay mantilla, or the measure&#13;
of sour wine which tempers on&#13;
high days and holidays the frugal faro&#13;
of the water-drinking Spaniard. Some&#13;
of the old crones are as hideous as any&#13;
of the ancients whom Gustavo Dore&#13;
loved to draw. _Rnl.jniiny_.oi Uxamat^&#13;
rons are slightly ladies, while the&#13;
Hashing eyes and roguish fun of the&#13;
young ones 'soniewhaLembarras a visitor&#13;
who is unaccustomed to face such&#13;
a battery of criticism without being&#13;
able to exchange a cpmpliment with&#13;
the company who are so ready to express&#13;
their individual opinions of the&#13;
caballero. In truth, it requires some&#13;
courage to venture into the great cigar&#13;
manufactory of Madrid, thoucrh those&#13;
who are fond of a picturesque sight and&#13;
not afraiil of the smell of tobacco&#13;
or the play of Spanish eyea might&#13;
wander through tho peninsula from&#13;
Vigo to Malaga and not come across&#13;
a spectacle which would live half as&#13;
long in their memories.— London Telegi&#13;
aph.&#13;
• * i '&#13;
A Good Article.&#13;
••That article you had in last week's&#13;
paper, was the "funniest thing I ever&#13;
read," said a lady to an editor,&#13;
" I am glad to hear you say so."&#13;
"Oh, not at all. It would make a&#13;
dog laugh. I thought my husband&#13;
would split his sides."i-Arkunsaw&#13;
Traveler*&#13;
tJlL* BLACK REPUBLIC&#13;
A Knllnr* '»f I&gt;mocrtioy 1» Ilaytt—ChiriK't*:1-&#13;
iities u! ikfl People--A SlckenhiK History.&#13;
Sir Spencer St. John, who wsus for&#13;
Home years the Knglish minister resident&#13;
and consul general in Ilayli, has&#13;
recently published a history of that&#13;
country, showing what a failure it&#13;
is as a republic, and how long in the&#13;
scale of civilization. Sir Spenser lias&#13;
lived for more than thirty-five years&#13;
amongst various colored races; for&#13;
twelve years lie was in familiar inter-&#13;
[ course with Haytians of all ranks.&#13;
He thinks Santo Domingo one of tho&#13;
Itnest islands in tho world, in regard&#13;
to geographical position, soil, climate,&#13;
scenery, \and health, and yet it has&#13;
beon so ruined by misgoverninent that&#13;
of all countries it is the one to be most&#13;
avoided. The political history of the&#13;
island has, from its beginning, been a&#13;
sickening record of murder, robbery,&#13;
revolution, plots, anil every form of&#13;
selfishness; but there have been a few&#13;
interval;} of comparative peace, during&#13;
which thtrtslaml has had some prosperity.&#13;
Under French rule, during&#13;
tho greater part of the eighteenth&#13;
century, Hayti became one of the&#13;
richest colonies of its size in the worJd,&#13;
made so by the large importation of&#13;
negroes from Arrica, and by a very&#13;
harsh system of slavery. It Is to this&#13;
slavery and slave trade that Hayti&#13;
now owes its depressed, barbarous and&#13;
disgraceful position. In its history&#13;
before independence there is one interesting&#13;
and noble episode, the life of&#13;
Tous3aint L'Ouverture, the only real&#13;
hero and patriot ti&gt; be found in the&#13;
dismal records.- of Haytian wars, and&#13;
he JfeU &gt; victim to the despotism of&#13;
Napoleon. In 1804 Hayti declared&#13;
itself independent, and chose Gen.&#13;
Dessahnes governor general for life.&#13;
His first act was a massacre of nearly&#13;
all the ^French in the island. Soon&#13;
after, following the example of Napoleon,&#13;
he-doclured- himself emperor,&#13;
thus causing an insurrection, in which&#13;
he was shot; and from that time to&#13;
this insurrections, new constitutions,&#13;
and the jmirder of presidents and ministers&#13;
have followed each other in&#13;
rapid succession. At present Gen.&#13;
Salomon is at the head of the government;&#13;
he was elected in October, 1879,&#13;
for seven years, and it seems probable&#13;
that he will complete his term of oilice&#13;
—a rare ocoure'nwiii Hayti. His administration&#13;
has been marked by illegal&#13;
military executions, murder and&#13;
pillage.&#13;
The population of HayU is- not- m?^&#13;
curatelv known, but must be moro&#13;
thau 1,'000,000. Nine-tenths of the&#13;
population are black and one-tenth&#13;
colored, and the colored is moro an&#13;
more approaching the black^type.&#13;
The mulattoes are sup.e_nor^to the&#13;
blacks in intelliirence^^antrhavegreater&#13;
capacity for gjjyefhmcnt, but even&#13;
they have liad-no marked success. Both&#13;
racussjiesffe political power for the&#13;
BaJiCof the spoils, and the general&#13;
otto is that "to take government&#13;
lrgin Mary&#13;
money is not theft." Between blacks&#13;
and mulattoes there is bitter hostility;&#13;
and mulattoes hate the whites also.&#13;
The ""characteristics of the different&#13;
races in Hayti appear in the popular&#13;
fables. One of theso relates that God&#13;
onco asked a white man, a mulatto,&#13;
and a"negro"what-each- most desired.&#13;
Tho first asked for a knowledge of the&#13;
arts and sciences, the second for fine&#13;
horses and beautiful women, the third&#13;
for a bit of gold lace. Again, it is&#13;
said that if arrested, a white man demands&#13;
paper and ink, in order to&#13;
draw up a protest, the mulatto looks&#13;
about for means of escape, while the&#13;
negro lies down, sleeps twenty-four&#13;
hours, wakes, grumbles, turns over&#13;
and goes to sleep again. This perpetual&#13;
quarrel betweon the black a&#13;
the mulatto is as bitter now asJifnas&#13;
ever been, and is the principal cause&#13;
of the barbarism of H^ytfT The blacks&#13;
still retain the religion and many of&#13;
the custonaj^ofthieir African ancestorsr&#13;
^ o t i d o o worship- and cannibalism-&#13;
iscommon among them. This is&#13;
e worship of the non-venomous serpent,&#13;
and is accompanied by dancing,&#13;
drinking, horrible crimes, and the&#13;
most extravagant and disgusting debauchery,&#13;
carried on under the direction&#13;
of Voudoo priests, both male&#13;
and female. No words can describe&#13;
the loathsome scenes. One sect of the&#13;
Voudoos condemn human sacrifices;&#13;
but the accepted Voudoo religion includes&#13;
not only the killing, cooking,&#13;
and eating of children at religious gatherings,&#13;
but the use of humane beings as&#13;
food—canibalism for pleasure as well&#13;
as for worship. The Voudoos are&#13;
so numerous that their practices are&#13;
seldom interfered with by the government.&#13;
They are ignored in order to&#13;
avoid Doliticai—trouble. The-Voudoo&#13;
priests have also a wonderful knowledge&#13;
of vegetable poisons, with their&#13;
antidotes, and this gives them immense&#13;
power. The snake-worship&#13;
and debauchery of the Haytian&#13;
blacks seem even worse than that of&#13;
the Moqui Indians,, which resembles it&#13;
in many respects. Anions the strangest&#13;
things ;n modern history are Lieut.&#13;
Burke's recently-published account of&#13;
the serpent worship of the Moquis and&#13;
this chapter on Voudoo worship and&#13;
cannibalism. Sir Spenser St. John&#13;
gives the proofs of these horrible&#13;
things. They are of great importance,&#13;
but are sickening in their vile&#13;
details. He says, at the close of this&#13;
account, thatic must be remembered&#13;
that the republic of Hayti is not a savage~&#13;
re^toirtET~Central. Africa, bTTTaiT&#13;
island m the midst of civilized communities;&#13;
that it has a government&#13;
modeled on that of France, all theparaf)&#13;
hcrnalia of courts of justice and poice,&#13;
a free press, and a Catholic&#13;
this wide-spread barbarism. The&#13;
Voudoos have added to their disgusting&#13;
worship a soil of film or veil of&#13;
Catholicism. They seek the blessing&#13;
of Catholic priests, aud in the places&#13;
where the huge sacred &gt;tiakes are kept&#13;
they hang pictures of the V&#13;
ami of Jesus.&#13;
Sir Spenser St. John gives full information&#13;
in regard to the present&#13;
political and commercial condition of&#13;
Hayti. He has carefully studied tho&#13;
problems of race and government&#13;
there. His conclusions are important.&#13;
He says that one by one his illusions&#13;
havepassel away. He now believes&#13;
that the negro is incapable of holding&#13;
an independent position*,. As long as&#13;
he is influenced by contact with the&#13;
white man, as in our southern states,&#13;
he gets on very well. But away from&#13;
suoh influence, as in Hayti. ho falls&#13;
baok to savage customs. The negro&#13;
is an inferior type of man. Ho may&#13;
be greatly improved, but he is incapable&#13;
of self-government, or making-&#13;
progress by himself. Politically&#13;
speaking, the Haytiaus ai*e a&#13;
hopeless people, and the best educated&#13;
among them are more.and more&#13;
inclined to despair, as they see tho&#13;
cruelty, incapacity, weakness, wickedness,&#13;
and violence of each government&#13;
in turn that comes into power.&#13;
The present government is in fact a&#13;
military despotism, with every department&#13;
badly and dishonestly managed.&#13;
Neither tho white man nor the colored&#13;
man ha^ any rights which the black&#13;
man is bound to respect.&#13;
These ar4j-\uijjy--se-riau.s charges, but&#13;
they are founded on trustworthy evidence&#13;
collected in Hayti. and supported&#13;
by the persons who have the best&#13;
knowledge of the couiitry. Mr. J. J.&#13;
Aubain, a Haytian mulatto, who has&#13;
held many important olHees, and who&#13;
has been banished several times, has&#13;
recently, in New York, given an account&#13;
of Hayti quite as that given by&#13;
Sir Speucer St. John, excepting that&#13;
Mr. Aubain thinks cannibalism infrequent,&#13;
although he acknowledges that&#13;
the Voudoo worship is widespread&#13;
and powerful. Both Mr. Aubain and&#13;
Mr. Lazare, who is one of the representatives&#13;
of the United States in Hayti,&#13;
speak in the severest terras of the&#13;
government there. Hayti has nothing&#13;
good to show as the result of her&#13;
eighty years of independence. The*&#13;
blacks increase in power and in barbarism;&#13;
the mulattoes, once theJieplT&#13;
of the country, are disappearing.&#13;
What Hayti needs is annexation by&#13;
some-civilized eoun^ryv In that lies&#13;
her only hope-tff salvation. — boston&#13;
Adpertisep^&#13;
Springs in Bavana.&#13;
The AUgeineine Zeuicag gives some&#13;
interesting particulars of remarkable&#13;
success in indicating the presence of&#13;
water springs on the part of a man&#13;
named Beraz, who seems to be a recognized&#13;
authority in such matters.&#13;
The scene of his performance wns in&#13;
the Bavarian highlands, at a height of&#13;
more than1,300 feet above the level of&#13;
the sea. The commune of Roth enberg,&#13;
near Hirschhorn, suffered greatly&#13;
from want of water, and iuvited&#13;
Beraz last autumn to endeavor to find&#13;
some source of supply for them. He&#13;
inspected the locality one afternoon in&#13;
presence of the public authorities and&#13;
a~ reporter~of the" Allycrheine Zeitunq\&#13;
and announced that water was to be&#13;
found in certain spots at depths which&#13;
he stated. The first spot was in the,&#13;
lower village, and he gave the likely&#13;
depth between 62 fact'and TjMeetT a(i*&#13;
ding that the volume ot^water which&#13;
the spring would -ffive would he of&#13;
about the diajaeter of an inch and a&#13;
quarter^^Aftcr incessant labor for&#13;
four^weeks, consisting mainly of rock&#13;
asting, the workmen came on a copious&#13;
spring of water at a depth of almost&#13;
67 feet. What he declared about&#13;
a water source for the upper village&#13;
was very singular. He pointed to a&#13;
spot where, he said, three water&#13;
courses lay perpendicularly under one&#13;
another, and running in parallel&#13;
courses. The first would be found at&#13;
a depth of between 22k and 26 feet of&#13;
about the size of a wlteaten straw,&#13;
running in the direction from southeast&#13;
to northwest. The second lay&#13;
about 42-feet deep, was of about tho&#13;
size of a thick quill, and ran in the&#13;
samo direction. The third, he said,&#13;
lay at a depth of about 50 feet, running&#13;
in the same direction, and as&#13;
large as a man1? little finger. The actual&#13;
results were as follows: The first&#13;
water-course was struck at a depth of&#13;
27.} feet, running in the direction indicated,&#13;
and having a diameter of onefifth&#13;
of an inch. The workmen came&#13;
on the second at a depth of 42¾ feet; it&#13;
had a diameter of seven twenty-fifths&#13;
of an inch. The third was found at&#13;
62|-feet below the surface, and having&#13;
a diameter of three-fifths of an inch—&#13;
all three running in the direction Beraz&#13;
had indicated. Unfortunately, no&#13;
hint is given of his method of procedure.&#13;
ohuroh, yet no powor (with the exooption&#13;
of President Getlrard during one&#13;
year) has yet dared to grapple with&#13;
The Small Boy as a ttelic-Huntor.&#13;
Scientists and their imitators have&#13;
suggested that the young of any species&#13;
betray during their process of development&#13;
tho instincts and habits of&#13;
their prehistoric progenitors. Apply&#13;
this theory to the small- boy, and it&#13;
becomes plain that one of man's earlier&#13;
states was that of the bower bird.&#13;
Restless, inquisitive, and acquisitive,&#13;
the bower bird collects every brightly&#13;
colored or oddly shaped object it can&#13;
find, and with this plunder decorates&#13;
its-bower. So tho small.boy at the&#13;
bower bird period wanders up and&#13;
down the face of the earth after bird's&#13;
eggs, stamps, coins, postmarks, newspaper&#13;
headings, autographs, monograms,&#13;
buttons, advertising cards,&#13;
and mn\U,—Jio#ton A(lv«rti66P,&#13;
The Chinese languuyc una several thousand&#13;
letters, but T is the one most UteJ.&#13;
T.UTTS&#13;
25 YEARS IN USB»&#13;
A t Or—tit MtdJcal Triuagh tf th* Af4&#13;
SYMPTOMS OP A ^ TORPID LIVERS&#13;
Z*M«ritMtU*» BtW«llMllJT«,Ptlita&#13;
Ik* hMd, with « dull •vaMtlva »•**•&gt;&#13;
bwk part. Puis uo*«r th* i h n M i r *&#13;
•Ia4«, Fnila«M after *aUac, wttk »**•»&#13;
iMliaatiaa t* •xcrclaaaf bm4r «ratla*V&#13;
Irritability•ftvmper, Law «»lrlc»fwith&#13;
Rfaallag * i t a r t a r a*«laeia4 • • • • * « ? - ,&#13;
WaartaoM, Dtaalaaaa. Flattarlas at taa&#13;
Haart, Bat* bafar* tba ***•• Haataea*&#13;
• r * r taa rival ara. Ra*tt**aa**a» with&#13;
QtfaJ a&gt;*aai*. Hlthlr eolaraa Urlae, a*«&#13;
O CONSTIPATION. • M TUTT'lt M X * ar* especially a/- *•&amp;&#13;
to «uea eaaaa, on* dnsa effect* *t&gt;on »&#13;
•bana* of feeling** to ft* ton Uh the sufferer.&#13;
Th*7 laereM* t h e Appeilte.wi cauMtaa a%*94mT rf*t* kT*a4b. *a n*d&gt; *)b jrr ltih«oiUr ,T tehnu«lo i hAj ewtlaetmcm oIas th* fctajaaUve Ornaa.1te««lar Stool*»g* tffriWfflE #OsuT HAHI or W H I S U R S changed to a&#13;
Gu)iir BLACK by a single application of&#13;
thin Drs. It Imparts a natural color, acta&#13;
lnstantaneoualy. Bold by Druggist*, or&#13;
sent brexpreecoa receipt of SI. • #&#13;
Office, 44 Murray St.. Now York.&#13;
Improved Western Washer'&#13;
FJULCE. No. 1 for family of 6 $8&#13;
Ko. 2ftr large UrnUy ..".:... 9&#13;
No. 8 f«r Hotel and Laandrr, .... .^0&#13;
Over 20,000 in u&lt;«.&#13;
Thousands of ladles are ntlng it, and they speak&#13;
of it ia the hiphftut terms, saying that they would&#13;
rather dispense with any other household article,&#13;
than this aicollent Waaher. No well-regulated&#13;
family will be without it, a* It aares tho clothe*,&#13;
saya* labor, aaveatime, aares fuel, aayea soap,aod&#13;
makes washday no longer a dread, but rather a&#13;
pints*t recreation, as much ai such la possible,&#13;
H0BT0N JFFG CO.,&#13;
Agenta Wanted. Ft. Wayne, Ind.&#13;
?f RIGHT S INDIAN VEGETABLE PlLLS&#13;
FOB TBB LEVER&#13;
Ana all Blllauo Complaint* late tldo gta' ke,t tbieoienigb poutiw. ly •ruen^traubgl^eK; an,o gris* f• ;&#13;
h T"&#13;
fB^^ ^ ^ ^ ^ T 3 V ^ 1 %&#13;
%&#13;
W A R N E R S T I P P E C A N O E&#13;
TH BEST&#13;
Lb&#13;
0&#13;
I [corvmaHTto]. T O X I C&#13;
&gt;&#13;
H&#13;
X&#13;
m&#13;
o&#13;
r-&#13;
10&#13;
^ ^ ^ [cOEVWIQHTtO,] BITT:E3__R_ s . # SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. •&#13;
H. EL WA-UTEJEt * CO., BootkMter, tf.Y.&#13;
SKIN ERUPTIONS&#13;
AND B A D BLOOD&#13;
l l . O O A. B O T T J L E ,&#13;
%. H. WAKNER &amp; Co., Rochester, N. Y.&#13;
W. T. HUDSON, of Brownevillc, Ala., makes&#13;
afldavit that four bottlea of Warnerls TII*PECANOE,&#13;
The Best, cured him of a case of blood&#13;
piilaonlng of twenty years'standing. "&#13;
FOR&#13;
SPRING &amp; SUMMER&#13;
$ t . O O A . _ b t o t t l o .&#13;
H . H . W A R N K K t&amp; C o R o c h e s t e r , N . Y .&#13;
REV, AfM. WATSON, Watortown, N. Y., reports&#13;
that his wife is Indebted for a thorough&#13;
tone of the svsUm and restoration for her&#13;
strength, to Warner's TIPPKCAXOE, The Best.&#13;
t =&#13;
BRISK5.&#13;
, « * • _ _ *&#13;
_C&#13;
•&lt;&#13;
w&#13;
_**&lt;**__!_- s ,&#13;
e:&#13;
55&#13;
P A S S I N G E Y E N T S .&#13;
W1M flowers a r e iu b l o s s o m t h r o u g h&#13;
o u t C a l i f o r n i a .&#13;
A r i z o u a c l a i m s t o product) t h e b e s t&#13;
w h e a t a n d Hour i n tlm w o r l d .&#13;
T h u y s a y t h « m a r e o n l y tifty dpruoc&#13;
r a t s after t h e C h i c o , C a l . , postolliue.&#13;
A tiflhin£ p a r t y a t S a n D i w g o , C a l . ,&#13;
c a u g h t 1...0 b a r r a c u d a r e c e n t l y , w e i g h -&#13;
i n g iu a l l 1 , 6 0 0 p o u n d s .&#13;
It m a y bu t h e i r o n y of f a t e , b u t ft is&#13;
true a l l t h e s a m e , " t h a t ' - w h i p - l a s h e s&#13;
a r e n o w u t m o s t i u v a i i u b l y m a d e . of&#13;
h o r s e - h i d e s .&#13;
A n e w l o c o m o t i v e t u r n e d o u t t h e .&#13;
o t h e r d a y a t A l b a n y o u h e r trial t r i p&#13;
a t t a i n e d a s p e e d of o v e r s e v e n t y m i l e s&#13;
a n h o u r . H e r w h e e l s a r e s e v e n t y&#13;
i n c h e s i n d i a m e t e r .&#13;
T h e r e is a g r e a t ditt'erence b e t w e e n&#13;
t h e u n c u l t u r e d a n d t h e c u l t u r e d o w l .&#13;
T h o u n c u l t u r e d bird, y o u k n o w , s a y s :&#13;
J^3?4i w-_-it t u w h o o , " b u t t h e c u l t u r e d&#13;
o n e s a y s " T u w h i t t u w h o m . "&#13;
It i s s a i d t h a t c o r u n d u m , t h e n e w&#13;
m o t a l , i s f o u n d i n e v e r y c o u n t y i n&#13;
N o r t h C a r o l i n a w e s t of I r e d e l l t o t h e&#13;
T e n n e s s e e l i n e . I n s o m e l o c a l i t i e s i t&#13;
is s o a b u n d a n t t h a t it l i e s o n t h e s u r -&#13;
f a c e a n d m a y b e p i c k e d u p b y t h e&#13;
b a s k e t f u l .&#13;
A n e w s p a p e r w h i c h h a s t w i c e r e -&#13;
c e n t l y e r r e d i n a n n o u n c i n g t h e d e a t h&#13;
of p e o p l e a n n o u n c e s t h a t h e r o a f t o r&#13;
a n y y o u n g m a n b r i n g i n g n e w s o f a&#13;
d e a t h a t a n h o u r s o l a t e a s t o m a k e&#13;
v e r i f i c a t i o n i m p r a c t i c a b l e m u s t b e a c -&#13;
c o m p a n i e d b y t h o r e m a i n s , n o t n e c e s -&#13;
s a r i l y f o r p u b l i c a t i o n , b u t a s a g u a r -&#13;
t e e of g o o d f a i t h .&#13;
T h e E n g l i s h u n i v e r s i t y c o n s t i t u e n -&#13;
c i e s i n c l u d e t h o w h o l e m a s s o f g r a d u -&#13;
a t e s w h o c h o o s o t o k e e p t h e i r n a m e s&#13;
u p o n t h e b o o k s , t h e l a w y e r s a n d t n e&#13;
p h y s i c i a n s , t h e s q u i r e s a n d t h e p a r -&#13;
s o n s , t h e b a n k e r s , m e r c h a n t s a n d&#13;
w r i t e r s — m e n of e v e r y t r a d e a a d of&#13;
e v e r y r a n k i n e d u c a t e d E n g l a n d . O x -&#13;
ford h a s 5 , 4 0 0 s u c h e l e c t o r s , a n d C a m -&#13;
b r i d g e a b o u t 1,000 m o r e .&#13;
S a r a h S t o r y , of L u d l o w , M a s s , , w h o , ,&#13;
Weak and Weary&#13;
Describes the condition of many people just now.&#13;
The warm weather, l»fe in coming, -eims mor4&#13;
^ defoliating than evtr. You may be wenk ;tnd tired&#13;
in the morrHDK, without appetite and without energy-&#13;
Ifsn, you tteud Hood's Sar *a piEJlla to build up and&#13;
•trm^thtn jour body, purify and cjuiftiun the slutjjji-&#13;
h blooJ, and restore the lost appetite. This medicine&#13;
will do }Ou good.&#13;
"f wan siliuosl completely run do wo, and was (or&#13;
four year, under medical treatment, bdnfj piven up&#13;
to die by ph&gt;bk,u»*. I have never taken anything&#13;
which Kive me ac much benefit u_ Hood's Sarsapa.&#13;
rilla,which restored mMo he_.!l!i and vijjor. I recommend&#13;
it to any invalid whose i»ysicm is pro_lr;ited.&#13;
lt will rebuild the system and give new life." NtXlA&#13;
XOHI.X, r curia, 111,&#13;
"UuruiK'the summer months I have beta somewhat&#13;
debilitated or run down. I liave taken Hood's&#13;
S;&lt;rtapirilla, which gave me new vijjor and .•-.torrd&#13;
me to my wonted he ilth and strength." W M . If.&#13;
CLOL'OU, Tilton, N. I£.&#13;
Hood's Sarsaparilla&#13;
Sold by all druKKlxts. il; six for av Made only by&#13;
C. 1. IIOOU &amp; CO., ApothecarieH, Lowell, Mass.&#13;
IOO Doses One Dollar.&#13;
IT WILL PAY YOU&#13;
TO GO TO DETROIT&#13;
AND HAY'S- YUUI*&#13;
Fi^ raising is proving to be a very profitable&#13;
Industry in Calliurnia. ~ *&#13;
R e m a r k e d b y K. O? J o i n e r , o f A l l e n&#13;
P. O . , H i l l s d a l e C J . , M i c h . : " N o t h i n g&#13;
g a v e m y r h e u m a t i s m s u c h q u i c k relief&#13;
as D r . T h o m a s ' Electric O i l — b e l i e v e it&#13;
infallible f o r r h e u m a t i c s . "&#13;
The Bavarian will see if it can't find some&#13;
good use for bicycles.&#13;
T H E T H R E E O U T L E T S of d i s e a s e a r e&#13;
_the h o w e l s , t h e skin, a n d t h e k i d n e y s .&#13;
- T H E&#13;
BESTTOI&#13;
This medicine, crjmblnlng^Iron with pure&#13;
vegetable tonics, quickly and completely&#13;
(.'urea I&gt;Y*pop*1n,XMdlfie«tlon, Wealtneaa,&#13;
Impure ulood^ttalarla,CliUlBandFeyerg,&#13;
una NeuraUrfa. , ,&#13;
It la anrunfalliriff remedy for Diseases of the&#13;
sya and l.lrer.&#13;
is invaluable for Diseases peculiar to&#13;
Women, and all who lead sedentary lives.&#13;
Itdoes not injure the teeth,cause headache.or&#13;
produce constipation—of/cr Iron medicinrx do.&#13;
It enriches and purifies the blood, stimulates&#13;
the appetite, aids the assimilation of food, relieves&#13;
lTpiirtbiirr: nnd Belching, and strengthens&#13;
the muscles and nerves.&#13;
For Intermittent Fevers, lassitude, Lack of&#13;
Enerjry, Ac, it has no equal.&#13;
-•a?" The pemilne Las above trade mark and&#13;
Crossed red lines on wrapper. Take no other.&#13;
0*41« Obi. &gt;&gt;; !!l:0"N t ' l t l - M . AI. CO., BAl.TIJtORE, HP.&#13;
tU DrutfgtM* IM«1 L*e„.er_ generally.&#13;
"1»n&lt;!tctt(,r-H Strnnn_&#13;
h Hitter*, ns a «ppclllr&#13;
for lIHIIKcsrion.&#13;
elands iilone. When&#13;
11)0 resourced of The&#13;
j&gt;lmrniaci)|Hi'ln lwve&#13;
•eu exhausted.wltli&#13;
out, ftt. !e:list, lUilML'&#13;
1111)1-11 than niltfgni-&#13;
Inp tilt: eoniiiliillit. c.&#13;
course oi t!i!s wholesome&#13;
s t o m a c h i c&#13;
effects » perfect umi&#13;
poi :ii;ii ent cure. In&#13;
;iil C:)SCH(II' &lt;lv-pep.-l 1&#13;
the l:&gt;•(&gt;!• is more or&#13;
less dlsovilei od, ninl&#13;
upon this ltn]nirti(!i!&#13;
^tilliil the Hitters ne!&#13;
with vexulnr d'stinct'&#13;
nevs, ! c&gt;;u!itlinK mid&#13;
liivlxnratiiij,' e v e r.v&#13;
^eeiellve uiul asstmi-&#13;
1 n t I ii x o r K si r on&#13;
which h « d 11 y a n d&#13;
inental health depend.&#13;
For sale by&#13;
o u t&#13;
a c c o r d i n g t o b c r o w n s t a t e m e n t , w a s&#13;
108 y e a r s , 8 m o n t h s , a n d 2 1 d a y s o l d ,&#13;
d i e d r e c e n t l y . S h e w a s p a r t I n d i a n&#13;
a n d part n e g r o . S h e w a s i n t h e h a b i t&#13;
of s a y i n g t h a t h e r m o t h e r t o l d h e r&#13;
t h a t s h e w a s " b o r n in o l d C o n n e c t i c u t&#13;
the b e f o r e i n d e p e n d e n c e w a s d e c l a r e d ,&#13;
t h a t h e r f o l k s w e r e g o i n g t o m o v e I n -&#13;
d e p e n d e n c e d a y , b u t s h e c a m e alor&#13;
so t h e y c o u l d n o t . "&#13;
. A B a l t i m o r e o y s t e r m a a ^ t h e o t h e r&#13;
d a y fished u p a bot£le"fo w h i c h a l a r g e&#13;
b u n c h of b i y a l v - c s i i a d g r o w n . I n s i d e&#13;
t h e bottle^-vvas a iish t o o l a r g e t o go&#13;
m o u t h . I t is s u p p o s e d t h a t&#13;
fish w e n t i n t o t h e b o t t l e a n d e i t h e r&#13;
l i k e d i t s q u a r t e r s s o w e l l t h a t it tarr&#13;
i e d t o o l o n g o r before it c o u l d find&#13;
its w a y o u t h a d g r o w n s o l a r g e a s t o&#13;
n e a r l y fill t h e b o t t l e . T h e b o t t l e d fish&#13;
w i l l be s e n t t o t h e S m i t h s o n i a n i n s t i -&#13;
t u t i o n a s a c u r i o s i t y .&#13;
T h e r e p o r t of t h e N e w Y o r k S o c i e t y&#13;
for t h e S u p p r e s s i o n of V i c e f o r 1885,&#13;
classifies t h e c r i m e s of t h e y o u t h of&#13;
b o t h s e x e s , u n d e r 2 1 , n s f o l l o w s : M u r -&#13;
d e r , 7 4 ; a t t e m p t e d m u r d e r , 1 0 4 ; b u r g -&#13;
l a r y , 179; h i g h w a y r o b b e r y , 8 4 ; g r a n d&#13;
l a r c e n y , 72; l a r c e n y , 230; f o r g e r y , 18;&#13;
a r s o n , 4 ; m a n s l a u g h t e r , 2. c o u n t e r -&#13;
f e i t i n g , 5; t r a i n - w r e c k e r s , 6; m a i l robb&#13;
e r y , 4 ; p i c k i n g p o c k e t s , 8. s u i c i d e ,&#13;
37; a t t e m p t e d s u i c i d e , 2 4 . A ' b a n d of&#13;
a d o z e n boy_s is m e n t i o n e d — a l l u n d e r&#13;
10 y e a r s of a g e — w h o hail v o t e d t o kill&#13;
t h e i r m o t h e r s . O n e of t h e m p r o p o s e d&#13;
to pr;tr!t.ino upon n. s e r v a n t g i r l first,&#13;
but s h e o b j e c t e d , a n d t h e p l o t w a s d i s -&#13;
c o v e r e d .&#13;
. F o r t h e l a s t t w e l v e y e a r s o n o of t h o&#13;
m o s t r e g u l a r a p p l i c a n t s f o r a l e t t e r&#13;
at t h e B a t h , M o . , p o s t o f i i c e - h a s . b e e n&#13;
a m a n w e a r i n g a blue a r m y c o a t , w h o&#13;
is u p w a r d of 75 y e a r s of a g e . H e h a s&#13;
h a r d l y m i s s e d a d a y d u r i n g t h i s t i m e .&#13;
H e is e x p e c t i n g his p a p e r s g i v i n g h i m&#13;
a p e n s i o n . H e e n l i s t e d i n 1 8 6 4 , t h e&#13;
l a s t y e a r o f t h e w a r , a n d o n l y w e n t t o&#13;
A u g u s t a w h e r e h e c l a i m s h e c o n t r a c t -&#13;
e d w h a t i s k n o w n a s t h e " s t r a w r h e u -&#13;
m a t i s m , " a n d i m m e d i a t e l y a t t h e&#13;
c l o s e of t h o w a r a p p l i e d f o r a p e n s i o n . .&#13;
H e is " l i v i n g i n h o p e , " a s e v e r y d a y&#13;
h e h a s a n i d e a t h a t tho p a p e r s w i l l a r -&#13;
r i v e . H e m a k e s a s c a n t y l i v i n g b y r e -&#13;
p a i r i n g u m b r e l l a s , a n d p e o p l e a s s i s t&#13;
h i m i n m a n y w a y s . _&#13;
R e g u l a t e their action w i t h t h e b e s t purif&#13;
y i n g t o n i c , B u r d o . k B l o o d B i t t e r s .&#13;
There are 100 legal holidays every year in&#13;
France, bundays included.&#13;
B U R D O C K B L O O D BiTTERsSllaakkee n after&#13;
e a t i n g wi l l r e l i eve any feelinigl*bof we i g h t&#13;
or o v e r f u l l n e s s of t h e s t o m a c h . S o l d&#13;
e v e r y w h e r e .&#13;
Sixty thousand trees shade the streets and&#13;
avenues of Washington.&#13;
Mrs. M. S e h a e n b e r g e r , B e a v e r D a m ,&#13;
Wis., w r i t e s : " W e have" u s e d D r&#13;
T h o m a s ' E l e c t r i c Oil i n p u r f a m i l y f o r&#13;
C o u g h s , C o l d s , Croup a n t l R h e u m a t i s m .&#13;
It c u r e s B v e r v t i m e .&#13;
Unemployed capital is rapidly increasing in&#13;
amount in the metropolis.&#13;
EI/Y'S CKKAM BALM Is an,article of undouhte&#13;
l merit. ' It lias no riyai-as a catarrh remedy.&#13;
It is pleasant aiid&gt;yrsv to use, being applied&#13;
with the hntryj^^lt i^'i'isorlH-d, cleansing the&#13;
passagMj»f^u&gt;Ison6us virus and healing the&#13;
soHMtnu inflamed membrane. Beneficial rets&#13;
are obtained from a few applications and&#13;
a thorough treatment will cure. Price 59&#13;
cents. At druggists. By mail 6'J c. Ely Bros.,&#13;
Ow'ego, N._Y.&#13;
This country takes the lead in the consumption&#13;
of caraway seed.&#13;
E X A M I N E D A N D F I T T E D W I T H&#13;
S P E C T A C L E S O R E Y E G L A S S E S&#13;
R O E H 1 W C &lt;fc W R I G H T S ,&#13;
I M P O R T E R S , J E W E L E R S A N D O P -&#13;
T I C I A N S 140 W O O D W A R D A V E .&#13;
T H E Y M A K E N O C H A R G E F O R&#13;
T E S T I N G N E Y E S . A N D S E L D O M&#13;
F A I L T O G I V E R E L I E F .&#13;
P a t * n U oliral^ed by&#13;
neyu, WaMhltiKtuii, J&gt;. C.&#13;
Loul* Bajfyier &amp; Co., Attor-&#13;
Kst'd IH64. Advice free.&#13;
A Quaker's length of life, on&#13;
is ft) years. ^ *&#13;
A celet^atfiddbct^r says that "Hunt's Remedy&#13;
Is a fure c^seCIur-Jueart disease, aad there&#13;
la no suhijtitutfc for*It'"&#13;
There are 125.000 paupers In "Paris.&#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 depot. Six hundred elegant&#13;
rooms fitted up at a cost 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 depot. Families can live Iwtter for&#13;
less money at the Grand Union Hotel than at&#13;
any other flrat-class hotel in the city.&#13;
Llghtrhouse9 don't ring bells and fire cannons&#13;
to call attention to their shining; they just&#13;
shine. _ _ _ ^ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ - _ _&#13;
I HAVE USED ONE BOTTLE of Ely's Cream&#13;
Balm. I am cured of Catarrh. I could scarcely&#13;
smell anything and had a headat-he most o'f&#13;
the time.—Henry Lily, Agt._ Am. Exp. Co.,&#13;
Grand Haven, Mich. "&#13;
Springfield, Mass., will be 250 yeara old next&#13;
spring. ;&#13;
If afflicted with sofe ever, use Dr. Isaac&#13;
Thompson's Eye Water. Druggists sell it. 25c.&#13;
Something that will quiet the nerves, give&#13;
'strength to the body, induce refreshing sleep,&#13;
•fmprnvp thp ftn«lit,y"nf the Mood, a n d purify&#13;
e i -&#13;
For&#13;
day&#13;
Hunt's [Kidney and LivcrJ Remedy Is&#13;
cellent in all of the diseases "of females,&#13;
delicate women, no medicine equals it.&#13;
In Austria the legal limit of a working&#13;
is 11 hours.&#13;
A C A B P . - T o nil who are suftcrinpfmmerrorsof&#13;
youth, nervous wcnknoiw, carlv decay, in__ of man-&#13;
Hood, etc.. I will nerni u recipe tli;it will cure you.&#13;
KKKK OF CHAKtrK, Thl»j,n'at remedy was discovered&#13;
by A missionary to .South America.' Send oelfaddressed&#13;
envelope to KEY. jO_K_'H T. 1NMAK,&#13;
Nation 1), New Yui'k.&#13;
Cleveland can sing tenor.&#13;
FOK 2"&gt; YKARS 1 was afflicted with Catarrh.&#13;
For two months at a time confined to my&#13;
room. I tried Elv's Cream Balm, from the first&#13;
I found relief. I t is the best remedy I ever&#13;
tried. W. C. Mathews, Justice of the" Peace,&#13;
Shenandoah, Iowa.&#13;
Chinese are increasing in numbers at 8au&#13;
Fiauciso at the rate of nearly 300 a month.&#13;
Caucusian petroleum well* yield far better&#13;
than the wells we have in this laud of thejree^&#13;
the of the ancient&#13;
heard iu Scot-&#13;
BITTERS,&#13;
• *&#13;
i _f you wlah a f c r t a . n e n r e f o r a l l R l o o d&#13;
I diseases. K"thing waa ever Invented th»t will&#13;
_.-i__c____a_L_he Blood -and jjurify tha System equal&#13;
' to H o p * a n d M A L T B i t t e n . It t o n e s&#13;
, up the S y a t e m , puts new B l o o d in your&#13;
v e i n s , rwtnres your l o s t a p p e t i t e and&#13;
s l e e p , aad iringa you p e r f e c t h e a l t h , lt&#13;
,V fcerer falla to gire relief In all caat&gt;« of K i d n e y V » W L i v e r T r o u b l e s , B l l l o n a n e a a , I n d t -&#13;
w k e s t l A n , Constipation, Sick Headache*. D y a -&#13;
f p e p a l s , Nervous disorders, and all F e m a l e&#13;
C o m p l a t n t s ; when properly ta,l:en it in a sure&#13;
cure. Thousands have been b e n e f i t e d by it&#13;
to this aad other Western States, It Is the b e s t&#13;
Combination of V e g e t a b l e remedies an yet&#13;
discovered for the restoration to health of the&#13;
W e a k and D e b i l i t a t e d . Do not get __Uops&#13;
a n d W A L T B i t t e r s confounded with Inferior&#13;
preparations of similar name. X prescribe&#13;
Hops __ Malt Bitters regularly In my practice.&#13;
Robert Turner, il. D,, Flat Kock, _&lt;_]___. Tor salo&#13;
by all druggists.&#13;
HOPS _ HALT BITTERS CO, D E W , l e t&#13;
T.H. HIN'CHMAXASONS, Detroit. Mirh.. ^ v * ! ? ' e '&#13;
JAMKS K. DAVIS 4 CO, Detroit. Mich.. \ Agents&#13;
JQUED GLUE Isaiedby taottisiidief Untelui _ts_nf_etsTsrf&#13;
aniMiiehanioi ca th*»r bait werk. Reo»l»«d&#13;
OOLD MEDAL.Londoi..1&amp;. PronoirMed«K«^ri&#13;
J._.APNW-_, Send card offteaWvhodo^i not k '&#13;
ILlth flr. S_ .uinpa tof &gt;AM&gt;*L» CAN&#13;
. stoSiCertCjuCte^Mia.&#13;
"0h! Cast that Shadow from thy Brow."&#13;
Y o u c a n ' t d o i t if y o u h a v e l i v e r c o m -&#13;
p l a i n t o r d y s p e p s i a . — _ _ 4 r e — d a r k e n e d&#13;
c o u n t e n a n c e tells t h e s t o r y o f i n w a r d&#13;
c o m m o t i o n a n d w o e . C l e a r y o u r s t o m -&#13;
a c h , s t r e n g t h e n y o u r d i g e s t i o n , r e g u l a t e&#13;
y o u r l i v e r , t o n e y o u r n e r v e s , a n d . t h e n&#13;
a w a y g o e s t h e s h a d o w f r o m y o u r b r o w&#13;
a n d y o u a r e h a p p y b e c a u s e y o u are w e l l .&#13;
Mrs. M. J . A l s t o n of L i t t l e t o n , N . C ,&#13;
s a y s : " I r e c o m m e n d B r o w n ' s I r o n B i t -&#13;
ters t o t h e n e r v o u s anil d e b i l i t a t e d . I t&#13;
- g r e a t l y b n o l i t t e d r_ie_M&#13;
Sheep and cattle arc playing '-hob'' with th&gt;&#13;
California forests. The animals delight to&#13;
nibble at the seeding tives.&#13;
The. Austrian explorer, Merr (.laser, is preparing&#13;
to ret irn to south, r.i Arabia.&#13;
They are bound to grow good t.'a, and plenty&#13;
of it in Ceylon, in course of time.&#13;
An ostrich r»e\-cr has dyspepsia. It carries&#13;
its stomach in its hack hetw_ieu its wings.&#13;
I.uthcr loved to play at ninepins and Calvin&#13;
rather enjoyed throw tug dive, when alone.&#13;
Bagpipes charmed the cars&#13;
Romans long before thev were&#13;
land.&#13;
Four foundries"in New York city are equipped&#13;
for casting of large bronze statues.&#13;
About eisht per cent of the sugar we cat iu&#13;
•his country is boiled down from maple&#13;
sugar.&#13;
l'izarro's bones (or- what there is left of&#13;
them) lie in the crypt of the Lima cathedral,&#13;
which editice be'started in 1510.&#13;
There are 4t&lt;) members of the British house&#13;
of l'Td* who derive the whole of their incomes&#13;
from the rents of lands.,&#13;
A fire which nearly annihilated the Hungarian&#13;
village of Nemed'i was started by a youngster&#13;
playing with matches.&#13;
The voung daughter of Harrison ITahn, o&#13;
Wind (lap, ra., has no ears; but she hears&#13;
whatever she wants .3 hear through her nose&#13;
anil mouth.&#13;
Robert Walnole was premier of England, altogether,&#13;
for "jr. years, William Pitt lor nearly&#13;
.0, and William * Ewart Gladstone for more&#13;
than 10.&#13;
.....Five telegraph linemen have gone from the&#13;
United States to Siam, within as many weeks,&#13;
to show the natives how to build a telegraph&#13;
line.&#13;
T h e d i s t i n g u i s h e d . U - S. S e n a t o r f r o m&#13;
I n d i a n a , H o n . D a n i e l W.- V e o r h e e S ,&#13;
certifies t h a t i n a case &lt; f r h e u m a t i s m&#13;
in t h e b a c k , h e o b t a i n e d i n s t a n t a n e o u s&#13;
relief f r o m St. J a c o b s Oil. H e s a y s It&#13;
is a r e m a r k a b l e r e m e d y .&#13;
Thus far this vear 000 miles of railroad have&#13;
been built in the I'nitcd Statej^&#13;
IK'YOr WANT A DOO&#13;
Send IT) cents fur Doo IU'wits' G r i m ; 100 engravlnn,&#13;
colored plate. Atwoclated V'miclcrs, '-iu Sk&gt;uth Eight&#13;
Street. t'hll_dc1;tliti..&#13;
"BOUOH ON CATARRH."&#13;
Correct offensive oilom ;it once. l.'_!nplete cure of&#13;
worst eusox.i»l*&lt;&gt; urn^inalod a* it&amp;rglc for Diphtheria.&#13;
Sovc Tlmmt, ''l,(&gt;' MrcsitU. Cdc.&#13;
There are no white servants at the White&#13;
House. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _j&#13;
THE HOPE OF THE RATION. ^ ^&#13;
Chllrtren, nl &gt;w in ilmeioptuiMt,- puny, _crawj_y and&#13;
delicate, u__ "Weil'i Health Ucncwor."^^"&#13;
- Parlsinn belles no\vcarry-plstohC . ,&#13;
CATARRH 0 ? THE^BLADDER.&#13;
StlngtnK. Irriutloa. ivi^ivw it-o i. all Kidney and&#13;
Urinary ComplalnU^rtireJ by "Ilu. hu-Paioa." 11.&#13;
imbia" Is S7 years old.&#13;
B FFI.* 11 riockfcd, in., _:vys he finds Veterln&#13;
• »ry rarVoilitHlve uncqualca for the cure of cuts&#13;
*H_ .erHTcrici, sn-Utie longer lie u__n It tti. butter&#13;
c like. It ui a rciuoiy f_r gcueral ataule use.&#13;
^-______^ Absolutely&#13;
j &gt; e e from Opiate*, Jimtties ana _P»t_**#.&#13;
A PROMPT, SAFE, SURE CURE&#13;
FOP Coufks, Bw Tawat, BaarsaasM, ^ T * * *&#13;
Cold*. BrMckttla, Croaa, W a a ^ l a * CtmsK&#13;
jUiama, Qatasr. PrtM la Ckaat, aa« otrlActloni&#13;
of th» Tkiwat »«&lt; La»«a,&#13;
Price BO e*ats » bottlf. Wd _wproyj^»»dDMV-&#13;
. - g ^ } y g _ m tcMr_^|^fcO«fW&gt;g*yfWC*wy**&#13;
paU% ty SMOISKUB A.Toa«iim c o w u r t ,&#13;
B__Ua_M, a**ji»*. C »»*•&#13;
and brighten the complexion, is what many&#13;
persons would be very glad to obtain. Carter's&#13;
iron Pills are made for exactly this class of&#13;
troubles, and are remarkahly successful In accomplishing&#13;
the ends desired, as named above.&#13;
Thev are useful for l&gt;oth men and women.&#13;
Sold by druggists. Price, CO cents a box. See&#13;
advertisement.&#13;
FOR DYSPEPSIA, INDIGESTION, (tepre.»?on oi spirits&#13;
and KPneral debility. In their various form*; also •« a&#13;
preventive against fever nnd ague and ather intermittent&#13;
fevers, the "Fcrro-Phosphorated Elixir of&#13;
CalUaya" made by (.'nswell Hazard &amp; Co., New York,&#13;
and sold hy all OruRKluts, 1» the be»t tonle;»and for&#13;
patients recovering f rum fover or other stckueaa, U&#13;
haa uo equal.&#13;
1n4aauIOf nrrOH OCaanUrCpef-^pressly for family use. Only Ml. ) u f,0t_iea. Oest and c..h enpeitt.&#13;
This remedy contain* no injurious drug*:&#13;
E L Y S&#13;
Cream Balm&#13;
when applied Into the&#13;
nostrils w;tl be absorbed,&#13;
effectually cleansing the&#13;
bead of catarrhal virus,&#13;
causing beaithv secretions.&#13;
Itallass In_!»____atlons&#13;
protects tbe mem&#13;
brsne from frefh- colds,&#13;
comple'elv heals ih_&#13;
sores and restores the&#13;
•ante* of tast., btoell and&#13;
hearing, l t Is&#13;
NOT A LIQCID OR SXCFF&#13;
A few applications rollere.&#13;
A thorough treatment&#13;
will cure. AKTeabletouse.&#13;
Trice 60 cents&#13;
by mall or at druggists.&#13;
Send tor circular.&#13;
E L Y HKOTHERS, Oweeo,&#13;
HAYrFEYER&#13;
Mew York: HALL'S&#13;
Patarrh Pure&#13;
Is Recommended by Physicians!&#13;
$1QO_lWASDfilL.feA os .Jg»&#13;
We manufacture and sell it IT! tha p o s i t i v e&#13;
guarantee that V. will cure any&#13;
c a s O i and wo will forfeit the aboTeamouAt&#13;
iiniaiisin a singlo Instance.&#13;
It is u n l i k e »"? &lt;-tb.r Caurrh remedy,**&#13;
It ii taken internally, acting upon&#13;
t h e BlOOd. IfTOuarlHrouWed^ritirtliiS&#13;
distressing disease, ask your Druggist for it, and&#13;
ACCIPT NO m i T A C T O X OK SUBSTITtrrB. I f h «&#13;
haa cot gat It, send to us and we will foriwd&#13;
immediatelT. Price, 75 c.nta per bottle.&#13;
F. 1 CHENEY « . CO Toledo. OhlaV&#13;
l i s t e n to xour Wife.&#13;
The Manchc.tcr (.I-..I.O,.VN, une Sth, 1888,&#13;
bays: At o u c o f the&#13;
''Windows''&#13;
Lcokinjj on the woodland ^^•a- 8! With clump*&#13;
of rhododendrons and i&lt;reat iuaA*e_ of May&#13;
blossoms! ! ! '"There was an interesting group.&#13;
It- included cne who Lai tx«a a "Cotton&#13;
epluncr," but was no.v&gt;o&#13;
Paralyzed! ! !•&#13;
That bo could only bear to li«in a reclining&#13;
position.&#13;
This refers to my case.&#13;
I was first Atta*'kcd twelve years ago with&#13;
"Locoinoter At;ixy" ,,&#13;
(A parrlytic disease of nerve fibre rarely eyer&#13;
cured) aud was for several years barely able&#13;
to get about.&#13;
And for the last Five vears not able to attend&#13;
to my business, although •&#13;
Manv things u^v^ been done for me.&#13;
The last experiment belii£ Nerve stretching.&#13;
Two years u'»o I was voted into the&#13;
Home for Incurables! Near Manchester. In&#13;
May, 1833. ' " ]&#13;
I am no "Advc »cate": "For anything in the&#13;
Shape of patent'' Medicines;&#13;
And made many objections _• my dear wtfa'a&#13;
constant urgiuj^jo' try Hop Bitters, but tLnally&#13;
to pacify her-_-J&#13;
Consented! !&#13;
I had not quite flnisbod the Irst bottle when&#13;
I felt a change come over au\ This was Saturday,&#13;
November 3d. On Sunday morning I feit&#13;
so "strong I said to my room cJmpanlons, I w__»&#13;
sure I could&#13;
"walk!&#13;
So started across the flour and bapk.&#13;
I hardly knew bow to contain myself. I wa*&#13;
all over the house, I am gaining strength eacidav,&#13;
and can walk quite safe without any&#13;
"Stick!"&#13;
Or Support.&#13;
I am now at ray own hous-, and hope soon&#13;
to be able to earn my own liviug again. I have&#13;
been a member of tGe Manchester&#13;
"Royal Exchange"&#13;
For nearly thirty years, and was most hearttlv&#13;
congratulated on" going into the room on&#13;
Thursday last. Very gratefully yours, JOHV&#13;
BLAC'KBL'RN. MANC!HErtTEK (El)g.) 1.^0.24,1^-3.&#13;
Two yeara later am pretty wt II.&#13;
I&#13;
Pro»€c%U€ the Swindlers!!!&#13;
It when yon call for Hop Dltter [s E OEBKJT c i u r n s a&#13;
or HOPS OX T U * WHIT* LAUKLI the drux_"l*t handout&#13;
any stuff calif J C. D. Warner*. German Hop B!6»&#13;
tere or with otht;r "Hop" name, "T. ra_'u&gt; t t a u d s t n i l -&#13;
that druKKlst as you would a viper, and If be l a i talcen&#13;
your tnohey fur the _tuiT indict nlm fur thu fraud&#13;
ami sue hint fur the damage- fur the swindle and we&#13;
will reward you lllx.'r.illy fur the conviction.&#13;
A -ufferer from chronic uiarrhrea writes: "I triad&#13;
vsrlous preparations: lac even the simplest gruel&#13;
caused i&gt;aln at night, .'unimenclng with Ridge's&#13;
Fo»,d. I fuund full satHfaetlon" to the appetite"ana It&#13;
wan never attended with the slightest discomfort Indigestion.&#13;
To te.t 1« efficacy, the supper was changed&#13;
a few times, but always with a return of distress la&#13;
the night.&#13;
NEW ENGLAND CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC B o s t o n , M a m . , O L D E S T fn America: L a r g e s t&#13;
a n d B e s t E q u i p p e d in he WOItLI&gt;— tOOInstructors,&#13;
1971 Students l;i.t year. Thorough Instruction ia&#13;
Vocal and Instrumental Music, yiauo and Organ Tuning,&#13;
Klne Arti. Ontt.iry. Literature, Krench, German,&#13;
ami Italian LanBiiaftes. English Kratichcs, tlvmnasflcs,&#13;
etc. Tuition, S-'ito $_.: hoard and room, $45 to ITS&#13;
per term. _r"allT*Tn\t»ejfi'is Soptember 10,188*. For&#13;
Illustrated Calendar, icmiu' full information, address,&#13;
B. TQL'ltJKK. Dir., Kraukllti S.|.. UO.STQX, _.__•&#13;
With this WONDERFUL&#13;
Q- Art Appliance beginners&#13;
'" wion rival artists u.ingold&#13;
method.. Coinmand Better&#13;
price, and ready sales.&#13;
Thousands having tu.te&#13;
in art, i f developed bv'nse&#13;
oftheAIHBRrsH,cinserure&#13;
pleasant and profitable&#13;
employment. Send for&#13;
particulars. Free. A I R B H I S H f*lFC_ C O . ,&#13;
Address So. « Na_5^rSJ H o t k f o r d , 111.&#13;
jiir^rtlM&#13;
JOSEPH CI L U T T S&#13;
STEEL PENS J&#13;
8am BY ALL DE_ALERSTwwu«__vr"rHt WO RL0&#13;
^OLOrVEDAL PARIS EXPOSITI0N~!B78.I&#13;
R. U. AWARE THAT Lorillard's Ciimai Ping&#13;
beaxinc a -ed tin tag; that Lorlllard'-&#13;
Erne L e a f fine cut; that LorlLlard't&#13;
Navy Clivplora and that LorLllard's 8nn_Ta.a.l&#13;
rH.&gt; ix»st aiil oheauvet, quality considered ?&#13;
. • LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S . .&#13;
VEGETABLE COMPOUND&#13;
• # • is A r o s m n : CURE rort* . •&#13;
All those painful Complaints&#13;
• and Wesknrss-s so eo_s_non ^&#13;
• a • a • • t© onr best « • • • * *&#13;
i« • F E H i L I POPULATION.« .&#13;
TrU* | 1 la lla-ld, »IU *r . i m p fcna.&#13;
dtiwnw aad tA_ rtlty of patn, and that* don mii&#13;
it cfaim to do, taauaanrf*of ladie* eon gladiv t**ttf% "&#13;
• It will cure entirely all Orarian trouble*, InftisiSBt&#13;
tlonand Ulceration, FaUlng and Wsp__«»»E_e_it_, an«&#13;
consequent Spinal Weakness, and if nanici_U-!&gt;&#13;
adapted to the ahange of life, • , • _ • _ • • " • " •&#13;
• .tremor.* Kai_tn-s«,_TatulencT.de«t-«WaUeraT_ng&#13;
for -tlinulant'*, and rell. Tf_ Weakness of %b» Stomect.&#13;
It euro* Bloating, Headaches, ^orvous Prortration,&#13;
Osneral IVbiluy, SleepUj-snesa. Uepreasion and Ina*&#13;
gestlon. That ferirttg-^f-^eaftag-d^wn, canning pala,-&#13;
an_ bactaclie. is always pennanontly cured oritsuse&#13;
• Send stamp to Lynn. Ma**., for annphle;. Letters p.&#13;
In-ltilrTeonnclentlallyajiswered, tor _cw_afar__v««*&#13;
LADY ABENTS - •"""&#13;
and&#13;
m CI&#13;
inpoi&#13;
Cincinnati&#13;
employment and&#13;
Lfinjf Qu&lt; MtocklnfrSn]&#13;
perai»eat saia&#13;
seuiDj&#13;
_. good salart&#13;
•en City Skirt anj&#13;
„ Supporter*. Sam pit&#13;
outfit free. Aadress Cinclnn&#13;
Suspender Co-, Cinrinnsli. O&#13;
YH1 M s J T 1« O M I A P I S T . '&#13;
I•iSmNStImT HBESHERS&#13;
(8«_«s_l_aaB&#13;
i_a1.-_Ai&#13;
CUrer l i l l a i&#13;
V n u f e r n&#13;
_tTay-_rOs_.]&#13;
$ S&#13;
A B A __•__&gt;_?_? Send ns T U CMT9 SILTKS,&#13;
a W r R E K i andwewUlmailyou v a l u -&#13;
a b l e a a m p l O S of anewba.ineas.wUa pui-kuM.&#13;
of good*, wmch will help yon to make rnorf&#13;
m o n e y than anythingrerer advertised. Either - • '&#13;
H__i» •&gt;-&amp; CO., Chlcaf_,IU. Special-A Gold F&#13;
free to each of the firtt ZiO who armoerthu&#13;
_%r_ll_r_IC NEW LAW; O _ i o « r s ' pay/from&#13;
U L U i X f l d commissions:DesertersreneTed;&#13;
P e n s i o n s and increase; expertsaca is vears|&#13;
successor no fee. Writ, fnr circulars aad laws.&#13;
A. W. Mci.ORMICKA 8 0 9 , CUiciaaat-TOfllft.&#13;
___aa__i &gt;ar»rell&#13;
/&#13;
KIPPERS P A 8 T » L l l S . ^ ^ i w ^&#13;
U-tart^stowa. f * —&#13;
W. K, P, P — 3 - - / 2 1&#13;
a m * • - " • • • * * •&#13;
f f c f t l l l B f l M o r p h i n e HAfclt Cnredlrt 10&#13;
IuI rH iI Iml lnH DtoE t o.jd.-ai-y»su. _N.\osu,i»eyW ti-lnl ,C outnre,&gt;d. .&#13;
Bur«wete&#13;
BITTERS&#13;
Cures Dizziness, Loss of Appetite, Indigestion, Biliousness, Dyspepsia,&#13;
Jaundice, Affections of the Liver and Kidneys, Pimples and Face&#13;
Crt/bs, Blotches, Boils, Humors, Salt Rheum, Scrofula £ Erysipelas. THE BEST BLOOD PURIflLR OH UflTH. roSTX-S, __n__BTO-H 4» CO, Proprietors, SnflkJo, New Tot*.&#13;
CLKHART CARRIAGE Hs HARNESS M F 6 CO. Lvakarsaf all styles efJX__t__IA«_^BVM__a,in___l« V__M_IIJQISU * IMVIII1&#13;
»_.__ Ttaa BaiMss _^A___tf *_» «mp)or M SMBt« and if s f i O K • * * TwT*_'&#13;
_____ f f t O s X .o^^SftwbJkt you order is not SMSO*- 9 0 0 jj^t&#13;
3:»tf_A&#13;
1 M as&#13;
lmcierr. *M pay «'«_a_snwt«a&#13;
Qor -larakaMass aari e&#13;
I^NititfT.lSis&#13;
our:&#13;
. • a r t .&#13;
\ , ; '''^^•KL&#13;
\ *&#13;
ESS7" mmm:&#13;
r mm&#13;
"A&#13;
/&#13;
i&#13;
I&#13;
Real Estate Trausfers.&#13;
Daniel P. Wells to Seth A. Darwin,&#13;
lot in Pinckney, $250.&#13;
Lucinder M. Allen to Albird Hoyt,&#13;
lot in Pinckney, $200.&#13;
Sophia Webb to (J. E. Bullis, lot in&#13;
Pifickney, $1,400.&#13;
Lewi? Dorr et a), to Peter Loch, lot&#13;
in Brighton, $1,200.&#13;
,H. Gregory to A. H. Kay, lot in&#13;
Gregory, $/»0.&#13;
P. J. Kich to Samuel Peterson, 20&#13;
acres in Oceola, $350.&#13;
Esther J. Whittacre to Chas. Culver,&#13;
20 acres in Oceola, $850.&#13;
Chas. Culver to Josephus Lare, 20&#13;
acres in Oceola, $550.&#13;
Wm. Barnard to E. C. Barnard, 5&#13;
acres in Handy, $250.&#13;
N. Lake, Sr. to Pncilla Lake, 21&#13;
acres in Howell, $1^500,&#13;
W. W. Kenyon as Guardian to Lewis&#13;
M. Smith, lots in Howell, $225.&#13;
Town Board of Health to the ^ lllage&#13;
of Howell, land.&#13;
W. A. Faze to Thos. Hilton, land in&#13;
Brighton.&#13;
UNADILLA REMARKS.&#13;
From our Correspondent.&#13;
I expect all who didn't go any&#13;
where the 4th stayed at home.&#13;
Rev. B. F . Pritchafd and wife&#13;
spent a few days wi^li their son in&#13;
Lansing last week.&#13;
Pluma, Edith / a n d "Grand-ma"&#13;
DuBois are visiting relatives around&#13;
Mason this weejc,&#13;
Ella Kartsjiff spent Friday, Saturday&#13;
and Sunday among Pinckney&#13;
friends. /&#13;
Georee Keizer, of Francisco, visit-&#13;
-ed-gtr^l rickell's Saturday and Sun&#13;
&lt;teyy&#13;
.Frank Greenman and family of&#13;
Bancroft, are at Q. S. May's this&#13;
•week for a visit.&#13;
The festival at the M. E . basement&#13;
was a very enjoyable affair. The receipts&#13;
were over $ l i .&#13;
Flo Watson and Kitsie Doty have&#13;
gone to/Eaton Rapids to visit their&#13;
uncle. Nelson Howell and family&#13;
Qra Scribner came very near loseing&#13;
a foot while he was in Jackson a&#13;
few days ago. H e ,attempted to get&#13;
on a freight train while it was in motion,&#13;
when he took hold of the handle&#13;
it came off and he swung around&#13;
in such a way that the car wheel&#13;
grazed his heel, bruising it quite&#13;
badly.&#13;
A protection vigilance league has&#13;
been formed at Unadilla, for the purpose&#13;
of suppressing misdemeanors&#13;
and outrages upon property.&#13;
» m -&#13;
Files. *&#13;
In a file twelve inchea long, the first&#13;
kix inches from the point does the most&#13;
of the work. In a machine-cut rile the&#13;
teeth of this part are shorter, and in&#13;
practice will not bite as well as they&#13;
will further up. This ie because of the&#13;
etiftpe of the files, in many instances&#13;
making it impossible for the machine to&#13;
work on all ports with the same effectiveness.&#13;
Out of a dozen or more machine-&#13;
cut files you will not find more&#13;
than one that is perfect-looking, and&#13;
rery few machine-cut files wilt bite as&#13;
well as the hand-cut article. For thia&#13;
reason their teeth break out less easily&#13;
—because they won't bite.&#13;
Flash Times In California.&#13;
"The prices of everything ran tremendously&#13;
high in the year '49; so high,&#13;
, indeed, that they Bound almost incredible&#13;
to people nowadays. Everybody&#13;
in Sacramento lived in tents, most of&#13;
them with only the bare ground for&#13;
floora You can appreciate the reason&#13;
lor this when I tell you that when I&#13;
bought lumber" to^iilre—a^fhror-ami&#13;
front to my tent I had to pay $700 in&#13;
cash for one ihousamlfect, and it wasn't&#13;
very good lumber at tha\ A pie or a&#13;
loaf of bread cost $1, potatoes w^rr* $1_&#13;
a pound, and onions £2 a pound, and in&#13;
—OjriifirtQmake.an-jeg^iD^-utvXlw4&gt;itnjft9&#13;
day I paid $16 for u dozen eggs. Ihat&#13;
was a holiday price, you understand. I&#13;
turned my hand to building, and put up&#13;
the first house in Sacramento, tho material&#13;
b£ing adobe bricks. That those&#13;
—flimsy building* were rather expensive,.&#13;
you can imagine from the fact that I '&#13;
paid my bricklayers—men who'had&#13;
been journeymen masons in the east—&#13;
$25 a day, and my hod carriers $10 a&#13;
day. I commenced to make real bricks,&#13;
and early in '50 Upton and I started&#13;
the first lime-kiln on the coast, at White&#13;
Rock springs. Until that got to working&#13;
we had to.pay$16 a barrel for lime,&#13;
ail of which was bought around the&#13;
horn. The first firo in Sacramento&#13;
started in my tent, just after the big&#13;
flood at the close of '49. One of my&#13;
men was getting the place in order, for&#13;
return from a ship out in the stream,&#13;
and managed to set the canvass walls&#13;
on fire. There vr&amp;c&amp;tonr kogs of powder&#13;
on the bed, and after that went off I&#13;
never succeeded in finding a square inch&#13;
of anything we'd left in the tent.—San&#13;
JPranctwo Call&#13;
THE SCHOOL EXAMINATION.&#13;
TiMK--Last week.&#13;
PLACE -Public schools of the county-&#13;
PKKSONS—Anxious mother investigating&#13;
teacher and'intelligent scholar.&#13;
TKACHKK---What is a bargain?&#13;
SCUOLAUT-AU agreement to sell and&#13;
to buy.&#13;
TKACHKU. Correct, What is a good&#13;
bargain?&#13;
SCHOLAR—When buyer and seller&#13;
both make a profit and are both satisfied.&#13;
TKACHKK—Right again. Can you&#13;
tell me where good bargains can always&#13;
be made?&#13;
SCHOLAU—Mother knows pretty&#13;
much everything, and about all the&#13;
stores, and she alwavs takes me to Mc&#13;
PHKRSOXS,' .says "she never had a&#13;
bad bargain there m her lite, was always&#13;
treated well and got her money's&#13;
worth.&#13;
TEACHKK—How can McPHEKSONS&#13;
give so much as they do for the&#13;
money?&#13;
SCUOLAK—They have been long in&#13;
the business, have had large experience,&#13;
buy in large quantities at the&#13;
lowest, prices, and can, therefore, sell&#13;
at low prices.' Pather says they give&#13;
theiv customers the benefit of their experience&#13;
and purchases, and* that is&#13;
why the}'' make such large sales&#13;
at such good bargains for the people.&#13;
TKACHKU—You are an observing&#13;
boy, your mother is a lady of good&#13;
sense. Examination is now closed.1?&#13;
you have passedit with honor and may&#13;
you have a happy vacation.&#13;
MOTHKK—(Once anxious but proud&#13;
and happy now) come, my son, " I&#13;
must buy you some tine- clothes for&#13;
Sundays, and stronger ones for every&#13;
day. I can get both kinds, of the right&#13;
qualitv.and at the lowest nrices, at&#13;
HU• PI1EKSOy?; ybu~Knc&gt;w yourTatjjer&#13;
buys his suits there all ready-made&#13;
and they fit him better than some that&#13;
arecut-t*or other people. ^ °&#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 tendered&#13;
infant. It cures almost instantly,*^&#13;
pleasant, acting directly upon the&#13;
nervous system, causing a sudden&#13;
buoyancy of the mind. In short, the&#13;
wonderful effects of this wonderful&#13;
remedy cannot be explained , .in written&#13;
language. A single dose inhaled&#13;
and taken according to direotiuw-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, Xounilgia,&#13;
Sprains, Bruises, Flesh Wounds. Runions-,&#13;
Burns, Corns. Spinal Affections.&#13;
Colic, ('rampmg Pains, Cholera Morbus,&#13;
Flnx, Diarrhoea. Coughs, Colds.&#13;
Bronchial Affection, Catarrh, and all&#13;
aches and pains, external or internal.&#13;
Pull directions with each bottle.&#13;
For Sale at WIXCHKLL'S Dure STOKK.&#13;
The kidneys cannot perform their&#13;
proper office when diseased and at the&#13;
same time expel the impurities that,&#13;
should pass off through their proper&#13;
action. A few doses ot Kelloyg's Columbian&#13;
Oil -rvill convince -the -most&#13;
skeptical that it acts directly on the&#13;
kidneys.&#13;
Very Remarkable Recovery.&#13;
Mr. Ceo. V. Willing, of Manchester,&#13;
Mich., writes: "My wife has been almost&#13;
helpless for five years, so helpless&#13;
that she could not turn over in bed&#13;
alone. She used, two bottles of Electric&#13;
Bitters, and is so much improved&#13;
that she is able now to do her own&#13;
work."'&#13;
Electric Bitters will do all that is&#13;
claimed for therm Hundreds of testimonials&#13;
attest their great.curative po.vers.&#13;
Only 50 cts. a bottle at Winchell's&#13;
Drug Store.&#13;
To the Afflicled.&#13;
Since the introduction of Kellogg's&#13;
Columbian Oil it has made more pert&#13;
cures ami 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 refhtbfe—rrgmt trr ~eTrr)7toy"&#13;
against all aches and pains, which" nre&#13;
the forerunners of more serious disorders.&#13;
It acts speedily and surelv,&#13;
always relieving suffering and often&#13;
saving life. The protection it affords&#13;
by its timely TisTrOTrrherniiinttsni, kidney&#13;
affection, and .all aches and pains,&#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 cjnrirttbrd to bo without if, and&#13;
those who have once used it never will.&#13;
It is absolutely certain in its remedial&#13;
effects, nnd will always cure when&#13;
cures are possible.&#13;
Call at WIKCIIKLL'S DRUG STORK and&#13;
get a memorandum book giving more&#13;
full details of the curative properties&#13;
of this wonderful,medicine.&#13;
BucklenN Arnica Salve.&#13;
THE BEST SALVE in the world • for&#13;
Cut" Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt&#13;
Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped&#13;
Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all skin&#13;
Eruptions, and positively cures Piles,&#13;
or no pay required. It'is guaranteed&#13;
to give perfect satisfaction, or money&#13;
-UPRICE LIST&gt;&#13;
-of-&#13;
-at-&#13;
H^RIOHABDS' 1-W&#13;
Sugar, (Jranulated 7 | c&#13;
Confectioners A &lt;c&#13;
Extra C . Yellow 6 |&#13;
Brown.. &amp;$&#13;
Coffee, A rime Wes 18c&#13;
"• Dilworth 18c&#13;
McLaughlin's xxxx 18c&#13;
Old Government Java and Mocho&#13;
mixed 30c&#13;
" Oreen Rio 12£e&#13;
T e a s , . . .. . 15, 25, 40, 50, tk)c&#13;
Pure Spices, per lb. 40c&#13;
7c&#13;
8c&#13;
—g«J-&#13;
'.!'.'.'.'.'. .10 to i2c&#13;
8c&#13;
Bird Seed,&#13;
Saleratus,&#13;
Corn Starch,&#13;
({loss Starch,&#13;
Raisins,&#13;
Rice,&#13;
Prunes,&#13;
Oat Meal,&#13;
(t&#13;
it&#13;
u&#13;
i .&#13;
7c&#13;
Soap, 3 bars for 25c T&#13;
4c&#13;
. . . . rOalvanic&#13;
y . . . . .-^.-.. .Ivory&#13;
( Magnetic&#13;
. , , o r i .Lenox&#13;
s,oap, 4 bars for 2oc. j A n t i w a s h b o a r d&#13;
Town Talk. 0 bars ,..-...25c&#13;
Lard, per lb ...10c&#13;
Herring, per box, .. .20c&#13;
White Fish,40 H&gt;kits. . . . . , . . . .$1.00&#13;
Mackerel, 15 lb kits $1.25&#13;
Dried Beef, sliced, per lb 18c&#13;
•Sugar-cured Hams '' l i e&#13;
Mason Fruit Cans, 1 qt,, per doz..§1.25&#13;
" 2 " " $1.50&#13;
lEilGHEIIEST&#13;
MARKET PKICE&#13;
-for-&#13;
BUTTER &amp; EGGS&#13;
81.25 «847 1.25&#13;
IDETROia?&#13;
WEEKLY POST&#13;
the best weekly in Michigan&#13;
19 Months f o r $1.25&#13;
o&gt;*o*£e»&lt;;o .&#13;
Tho WEEKLY POST will he sent on&#13;
all siibssoriptfons received on or before&#13;
August 1, 18S5, until January 1, ' 8 7 .&#13;
$1.25! $1.25! $1.25!&#13;
The WEEKLY POST has special&#13;
telegraph service from all the world;&#13;
has among its special correspondents,&#13;
Orant, Sherman, Dana, Gladstone, Bismark,&#13;
and all the leading writers of&#13;
the world; has complete Farm, Household&#13;
and State News departments, and&#13;
is emphatically the best family newspaper&#13;
m Michigan. Every Democrat&#13;
should read it. No Republican can&#13;
do without it.&#13;
— • i » i&#13;
SUBSCRIBE NOW.&#13;
Address&#13;
refunded,' Price ii5 cunts' per box&#13;
For Sale, at WIVCIIELL'S DKUO SSIT piiK.&#13;
THE EQST,&#13;
Detroit, Mich.&#13;
$1.25 $1.25&#13;
IMPORTANT.&#13;
V\rlien yon vinit or lfuve New York City, save&#13;
l&gt;a'irtrii;-:** i'xpri'sna«p and carria^o hire ami Htop at&#13;
trie (ivand Union Hotel, opposite) Grand Central&#13;
l)t»l)Ot.&#13;
Kleyant roomn flttori np at a cost of one million&#13;
dollars, reduced to ¢1.0() and upwards per&#13;
day. European plan. Elevator, Kestanrant supplied&#13;
with the b«-5*t. L'orfie car», and elevated&#13;
railroad to all depot*', families can live better&#13;
for lens money at the (Jrand Union Hotel than&#13;
any other lirnt-elaHM hotel in the city&#13;
WANTED/ AGENTS&#13;
TO. MH1X&#13;
I t takes but a short time for a person to see that tfce stock carried by&#13;
MANN BROTHERS&#13;
, Is by far the most complete in town. A beautiful line of&#13;
NEW TINSEL WINDOW SHADES&#13;
i&#13;
1 -A. LINE OF&#13;
That beats anything in town. L A D I E S , examine the new&#13;
EMBOSSED AND TINSEL BELTS.&#13;
We must call your attention to our elegant line of&#13;
LADIES' HANDKERCHIEFS.,&#13;
Our store is full, and the goods are going to&#13;
go. Prices are what knock, and we&#13;
are always ready to meet any&#13;
- —competition.—&#13;
We have- a full line of Tinsel Trimming Braid. G E N T L E M E N , we must&#13;
call your attention to our line of&#13;
4IS0FT AND STIFF HATS!&#13;
the very latest shapes.&#13;
MANN BROS/ - PINCKNEY.&#13;
TO^CHELL'S DRUG STORE&#13;
•Will say something right here-&#13;
NEXT WEEK.&#13;
$3§ *0*Bi|ls,.*&#13;
GROCERIES^&#13;
BOOTS &amp; SHOE&amp; • j&#13;
.4&#13;
*CHEAP«* •X5)&#13;
"^3)&#13;
E. A. MANN, PINCKNEY.&#13;
DANIEL F. EWEN,&#13;
GENERAL AGENT, . PINCKNEY, MICH.&#13;
m * ' 1&amp;..JIW..4I ~ wwxy} &lt;v&lt;&#13;
/&#13;
/&#13;
ji «*;&amp;. ^. V-&#13;
' \ ' - — - v ^ v&amp;Wl^mW)' •'••&#13;
YtHM&gt;&#13;
1&gt;H(ill««iii</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>July 09, 1885 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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      <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>VOL. Ill PINCKNEY, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JULY IG, 1885. NO. 27&#13;
S B&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH.&#13;
J. L N E W K I R K , PUBLISHER.&#13;
IHQID THUBBDATH.&#13;
SnbMription Price, $1.00 per Year,&#13;
ADVERTISING RATES .&#13;
rrindent advertisements, 26 conte per inch for&#13;
Ant insertion and ten cents per inch for each subsequent&#13;
Insertion. Local notices, 5 cents per line for&#13;
each Insertion. Special rates for regulsrsdwrtiaementa&#13;
by theyear or quarter.&#13;
ALL ADVERTISING BILLS DUE QUARTERLY.&#13;
This paper may be found on file at Geo. I*.&#13;
BowtTl T C'o'e. Newspaper Advertising Bureau&#13;
Otlpruce St..) where advertising contracts may&#13;
' * • made for It in New York.&#13;
INTERESTING TOPICS.&#13;
Light weight Gloves and Mittens&#13;
c h e a p , a t * L A K I N &amp; OYKrar. " f^prdance with oar rulee, the papor will be (libera-&#13;
RAILROAD CARD.&#13;
Grand Trunk Railway Time Table.&#13;
MICH. AIB LINE DIVISION.&#13;
GOING EAST. STATIONS. GOING WEST.&#13;
P. X&#13;
4:60 ^3m:60-f rm&#13;
2:40&#13;
2:00&#13;
8:05&#13;
7:20&#13;
6:40&#13;
6:10&#13;
5:40&#13;
5:20&#13;
4:4!S&#13;
4:25&#13;
8:40&#13;
8:00&#13;
7:35&#13;
7:05&#13;
tt:a5&#13;
6:10&#13;
!A. M. V. K . l P . M.&#13;
10:20&#13;
9:40&#13;
9:15&#13;
8:55&#13;
8:40&#13;
8:25&#13;
8:10&#13;
7:80&#13;
RlOOEWAV ! H:&amp;&gt;"&#13;
-• Armada 10:001&#13;
Romeo j 10:30. !&#13;
Rochester ill:*: \&#13;
d P f P o n t i a c { - : ^ | 2 J&#13;
Wironi J 6:05 3:00;&#13;
d. V— ( a. 6:40,&#13;
V So. Lyon- A. M. 3.--¾)1&#13;
a. jd. 7:30! i&#13;
Hamburg, I 8:0(): 3:401&#13;
PINCKNEY j n:40, 3:.¾i&#13;
Mount Ferrier ! ^:15. 4:10|&#13;
Stockbridge I 9 :.'3.51 -1:25(&#13;
Henrietta, '• 10:05 J&#13;
JACKSON 10:45: SKHI&#13;
5:55&#13;
6:15&#13;
6::¾)&#13;
7:05&#13;
7:30&#13;
All trains run by '"sentral standard" time.&#13;
All trains run daily, Sundays excepted.&#13;
W.J. SPICEK, JOSEPH HICKSON,&#13;
Superintendent. General Manager.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
T H HOAG, M. D.,&#13;
' (T10M(EOPATHIC.)&#13;
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.&#13;
Office at residence on East Main street.&#13;
T\ M. GREENE, M. D.,&#13;
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,&#13;
PLAINFIELD, M I C H I G A N .&#13;
Office at residence. Special attention given to&#13;
surgery and diseases of the throat and luni»s.&#13;
TAMES MAHKEY,&#13;
NOTARY PUBLIC&#13;
And insurance Agent. Leeal pajyers made on&#13;
•hort notice and reasonable term*. Ollico on&#13;
Main St., near Postofflce Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
RIMES &amp; 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;
VLT V. VAN WINKLE,&#13;
ATTORNEY &amp; COUNSELOR at LAW&#13;
and SOLICITOR in CHANCEKYOffice&#13;
over Slgler's Drug .Store. PINCKNEY&#13;
T \ D. BENNETT,&#13;
PAINTER AND PAPER HANGER.&#13;
All work in this line executed with neatness&#13;
and dispatch.&#13;
T&gt;ANGS &amp; KIRKLA.NT),&#13;
ATTORNEYS,&#13;
8 3 0 O P E R A H O U S E BLOCK, CHICAGO, attend&#13;
carefully to business sent them from other places.&#13;
PINCKMY 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;
Certificates issued on time deposits,&#13;
And payable on- demand.&#13;
COLLECTIONS A SPECIALTY.&#13;
FARMERS, buy your Binding Wire&#13;
and Twine of&#13;
JAS. T. EAMAN &amp; Co.,&#13;
Anderson, Mich. •&#13;
CARPENTERING AND JOINERING.—&#13;
Those wishing anything done in this&#13;
line will do well to call on&#13;
26w4. JOHN SMITH.&#13;
REWARD.&#13;
A reward of $25 will be paid, and full&#13;
protection guaranteed, to any person&#13;
who will furnish information that will&#13;
lead to the conviction of the person or&#13;
persons who committed the recent outrages&#13;
upon the church property and&#13;
cemetery in this vicinity. By order&#13;
of Protective League, of Unadilla.&#13;
"Hated, July 7, 1885.&#13;
TRESPASS NOTICE.&#13;
All persons are hereby forbid trespassing&#13;
in my huckleberry swamp andpiekingberries--&#13;
there from after—this&#13;
date. . LEWIS LOVE.&#13;
Dated, Pinckney, July 2, 1885.&#13;
WAIT FOR CATHCART—The photographer.&#13;
He will be in Pinckney&#13;
soon with his car, and make you pictures&#13;
satisfactory and reasonable.&#13;
Any quantity of huckleberries wanted&#13;
at Anderson Station for cash or&#13;
trade.&#13;
27tf. J A S . T . EAMAN &amp; Co.&#13;
CATHCAR7, THE PHOTOGRAHHER—intends&#13;
coming here soon. If you want&#13;
some good pictures taken wait for&#13;
him and he will give you satisfaction.&#13;
I have let my huckleberry swamp to&#13;
Mrs. Thomas Carrol, and all persons&#13;
are forbidden to pick berries without&#13;
her consent. MRS. O. W. HAZE.&#13;
"ABERDEEN ANGUS GRADES.—The Polled&#13;
Aberdeen bull, "The Don" at the&#13;
Scotch Stock Farm, will serve a limited&#13;
number of cows at not less than&#13;
§5 per cow, cash. Apply early to&#13;
23tf. WM. COLLIE, Herdsman.&#13;
I have "on hand some first class cider&#13;
vinegar which I will sell cheap. Inquire&#13;
at Pettysville cider mill.&#13;
24w3. S. M. COOKE.&#13;
PETTYS\7LLE\MILLP. —Having repaired&#13;
my mills 1 am now ready to do first&#13;
class work. Flour, as good as any&#13;
brand on hand, we?-also keep feed for&#13;
PUBLISHER'S NOTCE.&#13;
j y T h o s e receiving their papers with a red&#13;
X over this paragraph," w\\\ please notice that their&#13;
subscription expires with next number. A blue X&#13;
signifies that the time has expired, and that, in actio&#13;
tied until subscription is renewed.&#13;
HOME NEWS.&#13;
3^:&#13;
Warm days.&#13;
Very dull times.&#13;
Nice fishing weather.&#13;
Oat harvest is nearly here.&#13;
Very good ice cream weather.&#13;
Where are our base ball players?&#13;
Nearly time for squirrel hunting.&#13;
The M. E. parsonage has received a&#13;
coat of paint.&#13;
H. O. Barnard is in Brighton this&#13;
week on business.&#13;
El Mahdi, the Egyptian prophet, is&#13;
reported to be dead.&#13;
ssaall e. 24w5 S. A. PKTTYS.&#13;
James Marker, of this place, has secured&#13;
the agency of the Allan Line of&#13;
Steamers He is also agent for the&#13;
celebrated Jones Scales.&#13;
Farmers, call at Markey's and see&#13;
the new Climax light MOWER, tor which&#13;
he is agent. It is a model of beauty&#13;
and perfection.&#13;
•The HERO to the front again for&#13;
1885. Farmers, look to your interest&#13;
and get the Hero Reaper and save&#13;
your grain and clover seed, a reaper&#13;
that you can depend upon in all kinds&#13;
and conditions of grmn. Don't be&#13;
deceived by buying a poor, cheap machine&#13;
because you can get it at a low&#13;
price. The Hero is sold on its merits,&#13;
any good farmer can have one on trial.&#13;
I keep a few here in stock, also a full&#13;
line of repairs always on hand. I also&#13;
sell the Hoosier Grain Drills which are&#13;
Xv OUR PRODUCE MARKET.&#13;
&gt;&#13;
CORRECTED WEEKLY DY&#13;
Jnly 18,1885. TOMPKINSdbtSWON&#13;
Wheat, No. 1 white $ ,86&#13;
" No.2white, -. K&gt;&#13;
No. 2 red 90&#13;
N o . S r e d , H5&#13;
Oats , .¾&#13;
Corn i '&lt;«&#13;
Barley, 1 00®l 50&#13;
Beaniy. 7ft@i 00&#13;
Dried Apples 03® .00&#13;
Potatoes, ;.....„, .25&#13;
Butter,, ,rf.„„. 10&#13;
B M » , . \ • — ' . 10&#13;
Dressed OJiickens ,«-.. 12&#13;
Clover Seed,..., (¾ 4.50&#13;
Bresaseri Pork 5.00&#13;
WANTED.&#13;
Wheat, Beans and Clover Seed,&#13;
hiffhftst prices paid.&#13;
Tompkins &amp; lsmon.&#13;
acknowledged to be the best drill made.&#13;
I have corn and field Cultivators for&#13;
one or two horses, shovel plows and&#13;
horse hoes and plow repairs io»' various&#13;
plows. I am also agent for the&#13;
J. I. Case celebrated threshing machir^&#13;
s and steam nnrrlnes.&#13;
JAS. MARKEY, General Agent.&#13;
22tf Pinckn?y, Mich.&#13;
' T H A T HACKING COUGH can be so&#13;
quickly cured by .Shiloh's Cure. We&#13;
~gu~arafilee~it: —&#13;
WILL YOU SUFFER with Dyspepsia&#13;
and Liver Complaint? Shiloh's&#13;
Vitalizer is guaranteed to cure you:&#13;
SLEEPLESS N IGHTS, made miserable&#13;
by that terrible cough. Shiloh's&#13;
Cure is the remedy for vou.&#13;
CATARRH CURED, health and&#13;
sweet breath secured, by Shiloh's Catarrh&#13;
Remedy. Price 50 cents. Nasal&#13;
Injector free.&#13;
For lame back, side or. chest, use&#13;
Shiloh's Porous Plaster. Price 25 cts.&#13;
t SHILOH'S COUGH and Consumption&#13;
Cure is sofcLhyus on a guarantee.&#13;
It cures consumption.&#13;
SHILOH'S VITALIZE!! is what&#13;
you need for constipation, loss of appetite,&#13;
dizziness, and all symptoms of&#13;
dypepsia. Price 10 and 75 cents per&#13;
bottle.&#13;
CROUP, WHOOPING COUGH and&#13;
bronctiitis immediately relieved by&#13;
Shiloh's Cure.&#13;
For sale by H. F. Si^lei &amp; Bio. —&#13;
Will Harris, living on Dexter street,&#13;
has painted his house.&#13;
G. A. Richards returned to Grand&#13;
Rapids Saturday last.&#13;
Thomas Conklin called on his- two*&#13;
sons in Jackson last week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. J. Clark visited Stockbridge&#13;
friends ovei Sunday.&#13;
Miss Carrie Dailey, of Detroit, visited&#13;
her parents ;»ear this place last&#13;
week.&#13;
Mrs. Royce, of Hamburg village, is&#13;
a guest of EL A. Mann's family this&#13;
week.&#13;
Messrs. L. F . an4 M. A. Rose, ot&#13;
Bay City, were in town a few days&#13;
last week.&#13;
Mr. M. H. Melvin, of Detroit, visited&#13;
his brother Martin, near this place first&#13;
of the week.&#13;
Miss Millie Tucker, of Howell, is&#13;
visiting her sister, Mrs. Ed. Parker,&#13;
in tnis place.&#13;
Sirs. Geo. W. Crofoot, of Howell, is&#13;
visiting her mother, Mrs. Sophia Webb,&#13;
near this place.&#13;
Miss Amelia Loch, of Brighton, is&#13;
the guest of her friend, Miss Julia&#13;
Barnard this week.&#13;
Mrs. Estella Graham, of Detroit, is&#13;
visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A.&#13;
Green, of this place.&#13;
Good harvest weather, and the farmers&#13;
irn i m p r o v i n g ^ n t'lH" fiathpr-'&#13;
ing in the sheaves of wheat.&#13;
Mrs. Jennie Curtis and little daughter,&#13;
of Lansing, are visiting their aunt,&#13;
Mrs. C. F. LaRue this week.&#13;
Miss Madison, who has been visiting&#13;
friends here returned to her home&#13;
at Wixom first of the week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Spears, of Howell, are&#13;
spending a few days this week visiting&#13;
their son John, in this place,&#13;
A party of fishers consisting cf&#13;
ladies visited Silver Lake Wednesday&#13;
last and reported a good time.&#13;
Fred Parker, conductor on the railroad&#13;
at East Saginaw, visited his wife&#13;
at this place first of the week.&#13;
The'Milford/ri'me-'s has changed itsform&#13;
to a 6-column quarto, and. is&#13;
otherwise very much inproved in looks.&#13;
The musical entertainment on our&#13;
streets with the banjo and mouth organ&#13;
Friday ftyftrnrglast w a s very&#13;
good.&#13;
«&#13;
Miss Clella Stocken. of West Branch,&#13;
will visit friends and relatives in&#13;
Pinckney and vicinity for several&#13;
weeks.&#13;
Road master Lenon has fi\ed up&#13;
Stewart and Webster streets in fine&#13;
shape with Waldon's combined road&#13;
builder.&#13;
Mann Bros, have built a salt rack&#13;
on the west side of their store and&#13;
have a quantity of salt displayed&#13;
thereon.&#13;
Mr. Ed. C. Brown and family, of&#13;
Sheldon, Iowa, visited Mrs. Brown's&#13;
parents, Mr. and Mrs. J . M. Kearney&#13;
last week.&#13;
The other night James Bogan, of&#13;
Genoa, had a social hop in bis n e *&#13;
barn. About 30 couples enjoyed a&#13;
goodtime., : -&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. John Jackson called&#13;
on their sons in Uaadilla the first of&#13;
this week.&#13;
A cheap excursion over the M. A. L.&#13;
railroad to Detroit, including a ride on&#13;
the river, will be .given early in August.&#13;
One hundred three-year-old weathers&#13;
of A. Buck, of Hamburg, sheared&#13;
920 pounds, and the clip was sold for&#13;
24 cents straight.&#13;
W. R. Bigham, formerly of the South&#13;
Lyon Excelsion, will work in the Stockbridge&#13;
Sun office, and has moved his&#13;
family to that place-.&#13;
M*iss Minnie Westfall, Mis3 Floy&#13;
Haire and Mrs. E. S. Clark, o-f Stockbridge,&#13;
are here taking rousic lessons&#13;
of Prof. L. A. Tuttle.&#13;
Master Willie and Benn-ie Page, of&#13;
Ann Arbor, who have been visiting&#13;
Emil Brown for a few days, reku-ned&#13;
to their home Tuesday last.&#13;
Mrs. Parker and son Ruel and Mr.&#13;
Pennington, of Vermont, are visiting&#13;
Mrs. J . D. Benaett and family. They&#13;
will remain for several weeks.&#13;
Bert Wassoo and family, Kitsie&#13;
Doty and Mrs. A. G. Weston, of Unadilla,&#13;
are enjoying a vacation camping&#13;
on the banks of Orchard Lake.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. T. G. Beebe started&#13;
Tuesday morning for Wheatfield,&#13;
where Mr. Beebe will help his brotherin-&#13;
law, Chas. Frost harvest his wheat.&#13;
Mr. Thos. Read has built an addition&#13;
to the west end of his elevator to&#13;
store lime and plaster in; he is a'so&#13;
having tbe elevator lettered, ft. E.&#13;
Finch is doing the work.&#13;
Mr. L. H. Beebe returned Tuesday&#13;
from a visit among friends and rela-&#13;
-fcives in Fowlerville and Dansvilte.&#13;
Mrs. Beebe, who accompanied biro will&#13;
remain with their son at Fowlerville&#13;
for a short time.&#13;
The.. Ladie's Mite • Society, of St-&#13;
Stephens' church, Hamburg, will meet&#13;
on Saturday July, I8jth. tor a social&#13;
and the annual election of officers at&#13;
Hon.' E. B. Winans. The election&#13;
will be held at 4 p. ii\&#13;
Ira Cook, of South Lyon, was in&#13;
town Tuesday last and talks &lt;&gt;f buying&#13;
the barber business of John Yancy.&#13;
j Ira is a good barber, and a fine young&#13;
mrm, therefore we would like to have&#13;
him come and live with us.&#13;
Quite a number from this village&#13;
attended the game of ball at Howell&#13;
Tuesday between the Howell&#13;
team and the Hiawathas of Detroit.&#13;
The game was not very clo^e, the score&#13;
being 19 and 12 in favor of the Hiawathas&#13;
club.&#13;
W. B. Doff, our enterprising boot&#13;
and shoe merchant will close out his&#13;
stock by Sept. 1, 1SS5, at cost. Now is&#13;
the time for people to get their supply&#13;
of boots and shoes at greatly reduced&#13;
prices. Read his advertisement&#13;
on last page, it will interest you.&#13;
James Markey, Esq., of this place,&#13;
started Tuesday morning tor Sandusky,&#13;
Ohio, to see the New Hero Selfbinder&#13;
work in wheat. This machine&#13;
is manufactured by the Saadusky machine&#13;
.and agricultural works, for&#13;
which he is State Agent.&#13;
There will be a Pionotsa meeting oithis&#13;
County held at Howell, on Thursday,&#13;
August 27th, 18S,\ Jerome Turner,&#13;
of Owosso, will deliver the address.&#13;
All are invited to attend this&#13;
meeting as it will be one of interest.&#13;
Program will be issued next week.&#13;
The following is the program for&#13;
Normal Music School at public school&#13;
house in this place: 1» Harmony and&#13;
thorough bass class at 2 p. M. 2.&#13;
Piano and organ class at 8 p. M. 3.&#13;
Class in voice culture at 4:30 p. M. 4.&#13;
Guitar class at 6:30 P. M. 5W Notation&#13;
and reading class at 8 p. a.&#13;
The following ought to be observed&#13;
in tbis village: "Three- cases of cholera&#13;
reported in Toledo, which is getting it&#13;
pretty near home. Qur health officer&#13;
shoufdsee that our village is kept well&#13;
cleansed, and every citizmn should do&#13;
all in his power to aid biui xn his&#13;
work/V-South Lyon Picket.&#13;
Miss Frank ie Bards, of this place,&#13;
who has been teaching school at Unadilla&#13;
for the-past three months, closed!&#13;
it oe Friday last with appropriate exercises.&#13;
This is the third term Miss.&#13;
Burch has taught in that district and&#13;
she i^yery much liked by her pupils&#13;
and the people of that vicinity.&#13;
The installation of officers of the I..&#13;
0. 0. F., of Plainfield Lodge, No. 40,.&#13;
took place last Saturday evening.&#13;
Following the installation was a bountiful&#13;
ice cream treat. The occasionwas&#13;
one of tbe most pleasant in the&#13;
history of the lodge. This lodge is in&#13;
excellent condition, and with its newlyelected&#13;
N. Gt., B . Bueb, Esq., its prospects&#13;
are-bright.&#13;
Here is a hint for farmers. I&lt;astfall&#13;
a man at Clyde, N. Y., had a n u m -&#13;
ber of stumps which he wished to remove.&#13;
He bored holes m them, inserted&#13;
saltpeter, filled* \*p. wiih water, and&#13;
then plugged : tha Knl^a. AbOnt a&#13;
month ago- he took out tbe- plugs, poured-&#13;
in kerosene oil amd set fire. To©;&#13;
stwmpe have smouldered away with-.&#13;
out Mazing, and now there is nothing&#13;
left but ashes*—Caro Advertiser.&#13;
There is said to be one lavyyer in .&#13;
heaven. How he got there is not pos- ;&#13;
itively known, but it is conjecturedthat&#13;
he passedhimself off for an editor&#13;
and slipped in unexpected. When his.&#13;
dodge was discovered they searched.&#13;
the realms of felicity in all their length&#13;
and breadth for another lawyer todraw&#13;
the papers for his ejectment, but&#13;
they couldn't find one and of course&#13;
he held the fort.—Ex^ •&#13;
Prof. L. A. Tuttte. assisted by Miss&#13;
Ida E. Tuttle, gave a corucert-at the M. \&#13;
E. church on Monday evening last toa&#13;
fair siaed. audience^ This concert&#13;
was for tbe purpose- of organizing.&#13;
classes in vocal and instrumental music&#13;
including piano, organ, violin, violoncello,&#13;
guitar, banjo, musical notation,&#13;
theory, harmony,.chorus practice&#13;
and voice culture. After the concert&#13;
be explained his method of teachings&#13;
the classes and announced that hewould&#13;
have a meeting at the school&#13;
house on Tuesday evening, (which he&#13;
did) to see if he could organize a class^&#13;
in either of the branclues, and by taking&#13;
the names of those who wished tojoin&#13;
found that he could get enough;&#13;
for two or three branches, and proceeded&#13;
with the- school at once. Prof. Tuttle&#13;
is a graduate of the New York&#13;
Normal Academy ot Music, and having&#13;
been a teacher fdr the past&#13;
twenty-five years, ought to give satisfaction&#13;
to his pupils.&#13;
A PREACHER I&gt; LUCK.&#13;
A trained preacher becomes some- .&#13;
wThai instinctive, and is both a setter&#13;
and a pointer. He can sit in his buggy&#13;
and point strait to ap ice cream social,&#13;
a birthday party or to a wedding with&#13;
small intimation to the affairs. But&#13;
my piece is about being in, luck. Last&#13;
Saturday,-the 11th inst., was-Mrs. My- %&#13;
roaWasson's sixty-fifth birthday, theold&#13;
gentleman had prepared a surprise&#13;
for his wife, and vvhen Samw and Mit."~&#13;
with their excellent wives, bringingchoice&#13;
viands came abotiit 4 p. M. the&#13;
old lady began to '^rn^ll the rat."&#13;
About this time of day I left my homo&#13;
in TTnnrUnn " " &lt; * maffa A w r y f n r n j n&#13;
the road strait to that table fall of eat* .&#13;
ables, and not the least intimation of&#13;
the affair had I received. But blood&#13;
will teii. Said the old gentleman "I&#13;
am glad you cams, it is the eld lady's.&#13;
birthday and we are having a nice&#13;
little time." I fotwdi that all true. l\&#13;
think Sam. and Mit. CA* eat more ica&#13;
cream than any two men in Plainfield/&#13;
Just as we sit down to the table Myron&#13;
(that's tbe old gent) brought out a.,&#13;
beautiful silver caster, that he had ,&#13;
k^pt hid, and set it on the table saying&#13;
"there, naotbcMS your birthday present,&#13;
bow (io you l i k e | i t r "Why father,&#13;
that's just what I wanted, it is&#13;
splendid," said grand-ma Wasson, A&#13;
new bright spot was made in the lives&#13;
of father and mother Wasson which,&#13;
they will not* forget. It was a pleas- j&#13;
ant occasion, and I was all there ju.f t&#13;
as though I had been invited» 'H*&#13;
...J&#13;
b&#13;
..X&#13;
" •&#13;
• • « .&#13;
,. \&#13;
\ &gt; .&#13;
^1.1^,-.,1 ^ wrtftf ; .&#13;
vr&#13;
. . . ^ . ' i ^ . C i . -&#13;
4&#13;
TO CORRESPONDENTS.&#13;
•1&#13;
J. I&#13;
,;'&#13;
i ;&#13;
All communication* forthti nupcriUoultl be accompanied&#13;
by the nime or the nuilior. not «e*ieMtry foi&#13;
Sbllcatfon, )mt •« »n rvldenec of icood faith on the&#13;
rl of the writer. Wrlio mny on one tide of the&#13;
per. Be particularly CRP-IUI about ftvluf namet&#13;
anil d t t e h i o have (lie lei "n nud tlRurn plain and&#13;
4iitlnct. Proper name* in1 i&gt;r;nu difficult to decipher&#13;
•ecauae of the careleu maimer ID which the/ art&#13;
written.&#13;
AROUND A GttEAT STATE.&#13;
A Michigan Cyclone.&#13;
A cyclone struck the southwest portion of&#13;
Allegan township al»&gt;ut midnightJufy 9, doing&#13;
damage that will aggregate ft'SJJOO. Hannibal&#13;
Hart loses a barn 'worth $1,000, and cattle,&#13;
timber and grain worth ¢200 mor*. The&#13;
Thompsou brothers' barn was unmdfed, 40&#13;
acres of wheat toru uii utnl their orchaid badly&#13;
hurt, damage $500. The Semon brothers lose&#13;
30 acres of fine titular and fruit trees, to the&#13;
amount of |1,0J0. George .fewett loses 35&#13;
acres of timber, worth ¢1,200. and Win. Knapp&#13;
loses 100 fruit trees, worth 11.0 JO. The course&#13;
of the cyclone was from southwest to northeast&#13;
and it lasted several minutes. The destruction&#13;
was absolutely complete wherever it&#13;
touched. Besides the above detailed estimates,&#13;
numerous others lose small numbers of fruit&#13;
trees and timtMjr, and wheat Is in many instances&#13;
completely 'ruined. No person was&#13;
injured and no residences damagctt, a.* far as&#13;
kcard from. ^ - J * * ^ ^&#13;
m&#13;
The Mill Men's Strike.&#13;
T h e strike of mill men in the Saginaw Valley-&#13;
Is assuming serious form. Both the Saginaw's&#13;
and Bay City arc now in possession of the&#13;
strikers. The strikers went from Hay City to&#13;
the Saginaws and compelled the mills in both&#13;
placcs'to shut down. Mill men In the Saginaws&#13;
were generally satislied with the hours&#13;
of work, and there" were no Indications of a&#13;
strike until the Bay City strikers incited them.&#13;
In the main the strikers are generally orderly,&#13;
but one or two cases of violence having oc-&#13;
•curred, and those were quickly suppressed.&#13;
The manufacturers show no disposition to&#13;
yield to the strikers, and on the other hand,&#13;
t h e strikers are generally determined.&#13;
Representative Barry is acting as the leader&#13;
of the strikers.&#13;
M I N 0 B STATE HAPPENINGS.&#13;
Charles Kicfer is erecting a&#13;
Hillsdale.&#13;
$20,000 hotel in&#13;
&amp;S4.343 barrels of&#13;
struck to have 10&#13;
There will be 83 agricultural college gradu&#13;
a t e s this year.&#13;
Gov. Swineford of Alaska, sails for Sitka&#13;
about August 1st.&#13;
T. C. Phillips, a prominent politician of the&#13;
10th district, is dead.&#13;
During J u n e there were&#13;
s a l t inspected in Michigan.&#13;
Bay City mill men have.&#13;
h o u r s lixed as a,day's work.&#13;
The Ninth Michigan infantry will have a reu&#13;
n i o n a t F o w l e r vilie, "Aug. 12."&#13;
Isle Royalc is suggested as a suitable place&#13;
for the upper peninsula prison.&#13;
Albert Jennings was killed by a falling rock&#13;
iff Uie-Quiney mine near Marquette.&#13;
Fires in Alpena township. Al]&gt;ena county,&#13;
have partially destroyed the hay crop.&#13;
A human skeleton was found buried near&#13;
t h e Flint school building Wednesday.&#13;
Benton Harbor and St Joseph shipped- 31,-&#13;
500 bushels of strawbcrries'in one week.&#13;
T h e Jackson paper company has again commenced&#13;
operation, employing thirty hands.&#13;
Fowler Bros.' saw mill in Marion township,&#13;
near SagiDaw City, was burned recently. Loss&#13;
• 18,000.&#13;
The street railway connecting St; Joseph&#13;
and Bentou Harbor will be completed by&#13;
August 15.&#13;
Rev. P. V. Smith of Nebraska has just given&#13;
$10,000 to Hillsdale college for the endowment&#13;
o t a chair therein.&#13;
Jos. Hal Ion of Jackson died rct^ntly, aged&#13;
80 years. Mr. Hullon hud been a resident of&#13;
-Michigan since 1S42.&#13;
The tenth Michigan state camp meeting takes&#13;
place at Petoskey July 21 to Aug. 9. Special&#13;
railroad rates to 'attendants.&#13;
John lliggins, an industrious young--fellow&#13;
of Clinton, was disappointed in love, and took&#13;
the Paris green route to glory*&#13;
| Mrs. E. Blcomtield of Decrfield, Lenawee&#13;
county, has 2, COO .silk cocoons and has met&#13;
with splendid success in silk-production.&#13;
.Collector Bancroft of Port Huron, has discovered&#13;
a law which comp.ds him to refuse office&#13;
to any person who has passed HOth his year.&#13;
Prof. Harrower of the state agricultural college,&#13;
has resigned the chair of pjlitical economy.&#13;
He will continue his studies in&#13;
Germany.&#13;
Heirs of the late Mr. and Mrs. Smith of Detroit,&#13;
who were killed by tlui cars a short time&#13;
ago, have brought suit "against thu company&#13;
f o r $10,000.&#13;
A $5,000 monument is to be erected in the&#13;
central portion of the viliage of Petoskey to&#13;
t h e memory of the great chief whose name the&#13;
town bears*&#13;
July 1 there were "78fl prisoners at Jackson&#13;
During J u n e 29 prisoners were received; 14&#13;
were discharged; 1 died, and uo one escaped&#13;
•as far as reported.&#13;
Rev. Dr. Samuel Graves of Grand Rapids,&#13;
lias accepted the presidency of the Atlanta&#13;
theological scminarv, uad will enter upon the&#13;
work early iu the fall.&#13;
E. A. Ainsworth, charged with writing obcceuc&#13;
l i t e r s to a Charlotte lady, has been held&#13;
lor triiit at the .September term of the U, S.&#13;
*ourt at Grand Rapids. .&#13;
••"WtrlhmvAndruss died-in Jonesville-reeentlv,&#13;
aged SO sears. Mr. Anuruss moved into Jackson&#13;
county in 18-Ji', and resided there almost&#13;
continuously until his death.&#13;
Evidence against Sam Lightncr was not&#13;
s t r o n g enough to hold him for the murder of&#13;
Eliza Sage, whose deivl body was found near&#13;
Alice an! The mystery deepens.&#13;
George Hendrir, e. Texas cuttle drover, while&#13;
attempting to board-a si.' &gt;t.'\ truln on the Michigan&#13;
Central road near Jackson, fell under the&#13;
•cars and was horribly mangled. He will die.&#13;
§Geo. Watts of Ionia dropped'a lighted match&#13;
into an empty \vh:?ky banvl. The barrel exploded&#13;
and bitw Watt* across the to..in nearly&#13;
killing him and blew out the glass front of the&#13;
sa.'ooii.&#13;
Will Copeland, a young unmarried man of,&#13;
Flint was, buried in"a water works trench in&#13;
wb; eh he was at work. Efforts were made to&#13;
rescue him, but life was extinct when he was&#13;
reached&#13;
Prof. F . *A. Barbour, for several vears superintendent&#13;
of public schools in Coldwater&#13;
has been appointed to the chair of English&#13;
literature at the state normal, vice Prof. Theodore&#13;
Nelson.&#13;
The St. Clair post-office was burglarized of&#13;
$35 worth of stnmps a few nights ago. The&#13;
thieves came from Canada. AS they were leaving&#13;
the postofllce, they shot at uud wounded&#13;
the "watchman.&#13;
Thompsctt, a farmer at Cannonsherg, while&#13;
celebrating the Fourth had a leg-blown off bclow&#13;
the knee by the premature discharge of a&#13;
small cannon, the ramrod passing through i t&#13;
I t was amputated.&#13;
Notwithstindlng the ex'sting depression in&#13;
the labor m-.u k t ' tl e ollicials'at the Jackson&#13;
prhon 'announce that they have the labor&#13;
of 100 convict- which they will let to the highest&#13;
and l&gt;est bidder for cash.&#13;
The helrsof Louis DeTruef of Grand Raptda,&#13;
win, wns*killed bv a l)etri&gt;ft. Grand Haven &lt;fe&#13;
I i&#13;
ed their claim aaraln-t the company, accenting&#13;
¢3,500. The heirs sued for $1M.00J.&#13;
Collector George \V. J)avis of Grand Rapids&#13;
has appointed as two of his deputies Jas. S.&#13;
Trult of Niles a democrat and a fanner, Bud&#13;
G. Major Tabor of Ionia, formerly clerk »1 the&#13;
prison and a Greenback Vusionlst.&#13;
Harry Stone of Howell, reported as having&#13;
died at"Chicago of heart disease, actually met)&#13;
his death from an overdose of morphine, the&#13;
drug being taken to allay severe pain. Young&#13;
Stone's remains were buried at Howell.&#13;
Frank 1). Lambert, an old and respected&#13;
citizen of Sault Ste. Marie, died suddenly the&#13;
other alternoon. H e was formerly assistant&#13;
superintendent of the old canal, under Capt.&#13;
Gordon. The doctors pronounce the cause of&#13;
his death --.heart disease. He was u master&#13;
mason.'&#13;
"If any man Is discontented with Michigan&#13;
let him compare her crop prospects with those&#13;
of other states and be happy. A trip through&#13;
central and southern Michigan will convince&#13;
the most fastidious that there Is no more pro&#13;
ductive state in the Union."—Uta/ui liapida&#13;
Denuyra'.&#13;
The body of a young man named Fields was&#13;
found on the Chicago «V Grand Trunk railroad&#13;
near Imlay City tlie other morning. The remains&#13;
were badly mutilated, several train* having&#13;
passed over him dur ng the n i g h t Postal&#13;
cards were found indicating that he had relations&#13;
in Armada, Mich., and Litchfield, Ont.&#13;
Ex-Congressman Houseman of Grand&#13;
Rapids, has b.;cu eon,missioned by Secretary&#13;
Manning to present two gold and one silver&#13;
medal to Daniel ¥. Miller. P. H. Daly and&#13;
David Miller, for braverv in rescuing the crew&#13;
of the H. C. Aekelcy, in'November 1883. The&#13;
gold medals contain $48 worth of 'metal each,&#13;
Messrs. C. W. Richardson, F. W. Gilchrist.&#13;
W. H. Johnson and Thomas Collins of Alpena&#13;
have recently purchased ii large amount of&#13;
pine land In the Georgia Bay region, Canada.&#13;
The amount reported"paid'for said land Is&#13;
1185,000. It is the intention to bring the pine&#13;
to the Alpena city mills and there manufacture&#13;
ft into lumber.&#13;
Hillsdale is excited over the determination&#13;
of the Lake Shore &amp; Michigan Southern railroad&#13;
to close-up the walk extending direct&#13;
from the city to the depot and to College hill.&#13;
It has been used as a publ h* w a Ik more than&#13;
thirty years. Cars arc left standing across the&#13;
walk", compelling a long and circuitous route.&#13;
The final outcome is yet uncertain.&#13;
Harrv Stone of Howell suicided in Chicago a&#13;
few days agd. Young Stone was a dry goods&#13;
clerk while in Howell, and had recently taken&#13;
the agency of a sugar house. Ill luck in the&#13;
new posit.on made him despondent, and is the&#13;
supposed cause of his suicide. His father is a&#13;
respected citizen of Howell, to which place the&#13;
young man's remains were taken lor inter&#13;
m e n t&#13;
SlHon. W. Wco'.nough of the Battle Creek&#13;
Daily Moon office, a 'journalist there for 40&#13;
years, celebrated his tvlth birthday July 10.&#13;
when he was -presented by the employes of the&#13;
Moon office with a handsome caster, replying&#13;
in an eloquent speech. The day before he set&#13;
7,000 cms of type for the paper", corrected the&#13;
proofs,aud tkeu wrote over two columns of editorial.&#13;
Obed H l ' n d e r w o o d , | a g e d 12, of Allegan,&#13;
was drowned the othtr evening, and his body&#13;
was recovered the next morning, after an all&#13;
night search. He and his little brother were&#13;
playing in the logs, when Ids brother fell into&#13;
•the'mi'll race. Obed attempted to save blm,&#13;
but became exhausted and went down. The&#13;
ITttlc fellow was rescued by a teamster named&#13;
Libbie.&#13;
Ex-Collector of Internal Revenue Stone of&#13;
Detroit bus in his possesion the original wtH--&#13;
nance order ng the . transfer ot .. certain&#13;
funds In the New Orleans mint to "the government&#13;
of the Confederate states of America.''&#13;
The document was signed M irch 7. H H . It&#13;
was found in the archives of the Confederacy&#13;
after New Orleans had been taken. It accounts&#13;
for the -reported shortage of funds in&#13;
the New Orleans mint.&#13;
At the annual meeting of the state press association&#13;
the following ollicers were elected:&#13;
A. J. Aldrich presid ut. Frank Moore, O. W.&#13;
Rrtllni and Jessie Murvner vice-presidents, J.&#13;
W. Fitzgerald,secretary. Robert Smith treasurer.&#13;
TAic next annual meeting will be held at&#13;
Coldwater. Memorial badges will be presented&#13;
by the editors to Perry Hannah, of Hannah,&#13;
Lav A: Co.. Traverse City, and officials of the&#13;
Grand Hnp'ds &amp; Indiana railroad.&#13;
A terrible hail storm passed over a section of&#13;
country in the'vicinity of Sand Beach three or&#13;
four miles, wide " by 10 long, going&#13;
over the lake at Port Hope. Great damage resulted&#13;
to standing crops, and even the lives Of*&#13;
men and animals were endangered. The hailstones&#13;
which were from one to four inches In&#13;
diameter* beat out windows on the west side&#13;
and otherwise damaged buildings. From a distance&#13;
the storm-cloud looked like a cyclone.&#13;
A man aged about 50 vears supposed to be&#13;
named McLean and to reside in Grand Haven,&#13;
was taken ill a few mornings since in a house&#13;
of prostitution just, outside of Big Rapids, ami&#13;
diet} in much pain two hours later. But $S in&#13;
money was found on his person, while it is said&#13;
that before he entered the house he had a much&#13;
larger sum. Nettie Golden and "Jim, Crow,"&#13;
two inmates are in jail. The stomach of the&#13;
dead man was removed, and will be submitted&#13;
to a chemist for examination.&#13;
The cooper shop and warehouse attached,&#13;
connected with L. B. Johnson *fc'"0o.'s stave&#13;
factory, in Coldwater, Mas burned the other&#13;
afternoon, together with all the contents. Loss&#13;
on budding, stock and tools probably $3,000,&#13;
with onlv nominal insurance. The cause wits&#13;
a defective chimney. Truman C i u n d a l l a n d&#13;
Fred. Millard, firemen, were crushed by a fall-,&#13;
ing ehirowy and injured seriously, Crandall's&#13;
spine and head beiiisr'hurt, and .Millard's head&#13;
and arm and m h t leg badly bruised.&#13;
Asa Weaver, a fanner of Byron township&#13;
Kent county, has commenced proceedings in.&#13;
the circuit court against Susana F.. his wife,&#13;
for bigamy. In i s : s lie was adjtidcre.l insane&#13;
and sent to Kalami/.oo, but returned two years&#13;
ago and lived on a farm. In his absence his&#13;
wife became enamored of Timothy Riley, a&#13;
young farmer, and last month marrif-i- him.&#13;
Su-'fiha and Asa were married over tlrirty&#13;
vears and lived happy until insanity, cause")&#13;
by a fractured skull received in a tight, separaicd&#13;
them.&#13;
done ana it would ne t, p r i o n s oiow to the city.&#13;
The principal reason for not closing down "is&#13;
the great cost which It would necessarily entail.&#13;
The mining outlook is far from a pleasant&#13;
one" and many of the mining men think&#13;
that the worst has not vet been seen , .&#13;
itfiiwiiukw train last winter, have comproiaia-.&#13;
The remains of a man were discovered lvina&#13;
in a thicket mntrlhc--errek ami—a-Uuut. threV&#13;
rods from the track of the Chicago i\:. West&#13;
Michigan railroad in Big Ra; i i s . From appcaruntvs&#13;
the body bad lain t h - r e . several&#13;
months and had been dvag&lt;red into tne place of&#13;
concealment by the coat collar. Th:' skull had&#13;
been crushed and the pants pockets were inside&#13;
o u t The pants and vest were of-light material&#13;
and the coat a little darker. A pair of&#13;
shoes were on the feet. But little more than&#13;
ttoncs remained. The man was probably of&#13;
about medium h e i g h t No one is able to Identity&#13;
the remains-&#13;
Jennie Beemrui, a &gt;oung woman of Kalamazoo,&#13;
took oil of tansy with, it was supposed,&#13;
suicidal intent, a few days ago. The next day&#13;
she gave birth to a child—a girl, weight eight&#13;
pounds. The room presented a sight of&#13;
wretchedness, for *he had lain there for days in&#13;
labor, and the agony she must have suffered,&#13;
being unable to'move off her bed/ Is horrible to&#13;
thirjt of. * It is said l u r groans were heard the&#13;
day before, but no one offered relief or gaye&#13;
any notice of the poor-girl. She has worked in&#13;
prfvate houses and restaurants, and is the victim&#13;
of seduction and debauchery. The case&#13;
has caused great excitement.&#13;
The West Repnblic mine, near Ishpemlng,&#13;
has retired from the list of active producers,&#13;
throwing lOO men out of employment There&#13;
is some -Idea upon the part of the management&#13;
of cloein; down the Lake Superior mine also&#13;
It I* the largest iron mine in the world, and In&#13;
* More S t a U - l r o o p s .&#13;
f l i e l e g i s l a t u r e h a v i n g a u t h o r i z e d t h e&#13;
e^j'sting, organizing, equipping and mustering&#13;
of six additional infantry companies for the&#13;
state service, to be located at the following&#13;
r o l p t s : The company raised by Sylvester C.&#13;
!£ov aud associates at Menominee; the company&#13;
raised by Daniel Aleumback and assoei&#13;
atea a t Muskegon; the company raised by&#13;
Mart G. Borgman and associates at Detroit;&#13;
the compauy raised by John E. Tyrrell and associates&#13;
at Jackson; the company raised by&#13;
Joseph P. Babcock and associates at Grand&#13;
Rapids; the company raised by Edward A.&#13;
Corbiuaud associates at Houghton.&#13;
They have been accepted by the governor.&#13;
The ollicers in charge of these orgauization8&#13;
will, when their respective companies are ready&#13;
for muster, report to Iblj;,-Geu. J. H. Kidd,&#13;
Iuspcctor-Geueral at Ionia, who will, without&#13;
delay, muster them into the service of the&#13;
state.&#13;
The companies at Muskegon and Jackson&#13;
are assigned t o t h e First Regiment. The company&#13;
at Grand Rapids is assigned to the- Second&#13;
Regiment The companies at Menominee and&#13;
Houghton are assigned to the Third Regim&#13;
e n t The formation of the Fourth Regiment&#13;
at Detroit, under General Order No. 24,&#13;
December 23, 1^84, having been adjudged illegal,&#13;
Is set aside, aud it has been organized as&#13;
follows:&#13;
The First Batallion, stationed at Detroit,&#13;
and Companies D (Capt. Adam Rupp) and F&#13;
(Capt. Joseph H. Manning), First Regiment&#13;
stationed respectively at Monroe and Ypsilantl,&#13;
and when mustered into service the companies&#13;
raised by Mart. G. Borgman, at Detroit,&#13;
are assigned to the First Batallion, which is&#13;
designated as the Fourth Regiment.&#13;
Commanders of companies assigned will report&#13;
for duty to their respective regimental&#13;
commanders; those of the First to Col. D. II,&#13;
McComas, at Lansing; those of the Second to&#13;
Col. J. 1). Sumner, at Kalamazoo; those of ihe-&#13;
Thlrd to Col. C. S. Brown, at Flint, and those&#13;
of the Fourth to the regimental commander at&#13;
Detroit.&#13;
DETROIT MARKETS.&#13;
W H E A T — T h e market is exciting and active,&#13;
at the following quotations: White—cash 93¾&#13;
0 9 3 ; July, 9¾BCa'iW}^; Aug.. 9 4 . ^ 9 3 ¾ ;&#13;
S.-pt 94l-£. Red—cash, 9 6 ^ 9 o ; July, 97(a&gt;&#13;
96^'A; Aug., 9 7 , ^ - 9 5 ¾ ; Sept., 9 8 ^ @ 9 7 ^ .&#13;
Flour—The market is quiet at unchanged&#13;
quotations, as follows;&#13;
Mich, wiuter wheat, stone process,¢4 75(«;5 00&#13;
Mich, winter, wheat, roller process, 5 OOXu-.") 25&#13;
Michigan wiuter wheat p a t e n t s , . . . 5 50(^05 75&#13;
Minnesota bakers' 5 00(&lt;£;o 25&#13;
Minnesota patents 0 00(a}tS 25&#13;
Low grades winter wheat 3 25(((3 75&#13;
Rye Flour—Market steady. Fine western&#13;
brands are quoted at ¢4(44 50.&#13;
Oat Meal—For Akron. ¢6 2 5 ; steel cut,&#13;
¢5 75. ...-'--"""&#13;
Feed—Tb » market Is firm and steady. Bran&#13;
mavbe quoUn. at 112 75:ctl3; coarse middlings,&#13;
$12" 75(rt'.l3-f fine middlings. $13(414.&#13;
Corn—The market is veyy dull, at 47(4&#13;
48 cent*.&#13;
Oats—Dull and weak, at from 34 to 36c.&#13;
Butter—The market is dull and unchanged.&#13;
Dairv rules 1 U«'13c. creamery. 15(4Ulc, while a&#13;
fancy article occasionally brings lc more than&#13;
the outside figures named.&#13;
Cheese---Prime state aud Ohio full cream&#13;
7(48c; skims, 5&lt;46c.&#13;
Eirgs—O^uiet and steady at 12e.&#13;
Apples—Easy at 40(a5 !c % bit box.&#13;
Cherries—Per basket $1 25(tfl 50; fancy,&#13;
$4 75.&#13;
Dried Fruits—Apples, sun dried, 3(43¼&#13;
per lb; evaporated, 0(47c; peaches, 12c: peurs&#13;
10c.&#13;
Gooseberries—Per,bu $2 50(3)3.&#13;
Peaches—Per % bu box, 75C(4J|1 25.&#13;
Plums—Per bu $ I 50(43, and scarce.&#13;
Strawberries—Scarce and selling at $4(44 50&#13;
per stand,&#13;
Water Melons—Market well supplied, sell"&#13;
ing a $ 3 0 $ : « per 1(X).&#13;
Beans—Citv picked, on track, $1.27((/1.30:&#13;
from store, $1.30(&lt;(1.35; unpicked. 75c(«$l; demand&#13;
light.&#13;
Beeswax.-y-Per lb 27(430c: dull.&#13;
Hay—Market quiet at $12(413 for best timothy&#13;
haled in car lots on track; selling in smaller&#13;
quantities at ¢14(415. Straw $8(4-10 on track.&#13;
Honey—Dull; single frames, $10(412, 51b&#13;
cases in" light request at 8(49c; strained, 9(4&#13;
10c.&#13;
Onions—For southern, $2 75(43 per bbl.&#13;
Poultry—Spring chickens, 30(475c; fowls,&#13;
8(49c per lb; roosters, tj(47c; turkeys, 9(410c;&#13;
pigeons, per pair, old, 30c; squabs, 35c per&#13;
pair.&#13;
Provisions—Mess pork, new, $11(411.25;&#13;
family, $ 1 1 . 1 2 ^ 1 1 . 3 7 1 , ' , short, clear. ¢12.50(4&#13;
12.75; lard in tierces. 6&gt;„'(4'7c; kegs, 7 . ^ ( 4 7 ¾ ^&#13;
pails, 7lt,(4Sc; smoked hams, 9 ^ ( ^ 9 ^ - : shoillders5%(&#13;
4ji&gt;c; breakfast bacon, 7;}4(4Sc.; dried beef&#13;
fift-ms. $13.50((114.00: extra mess beef, $10.50(¾&#13;
i'0.7'5.&#13;
Potatoes—Old in cars lots arc selling at 20(4&#13;
25c per bu as to condition; from store 30(435c.&#13;
New southern, $1.75f42.&#13;
Tallow—Dull at 4 ^ ( 4 . ^ .&#13;
Tomatoes—New southern in W •bu box*^&#13;
$1 25(41 50:&#13;
Vegetables—Lettuce, 25c per b u ; spinach,&#13;
25.' per b u ; pie plant, 20c perdoz bunches; radishes.&#13;
25c per doz bunches; onions, '2i):1 per doz&#13;
qunches: vegetable oyster, 35c per doz bunches;&#13;
cucumbers, 3oc per doz; asparagus, 35c per doz&#13;
bunches; new peas, 05c p e r b u ; string beans.&#13;
$t 25 p-T b n x t wax^boms, per btr, $1 4 0 r cnbbacres,&#13;
$2 per two bbl. crate; beets, 30c per&#13;
doz bunches', new southern cauliflower. $l(«v&#13;
,1 75 per dox headu; carrots, 40c per doz; beets,&#13;
30c per doz bunches.&#13;
LIVK STOCK.&#13;
CATTI.E—Market strong and prices lf)(41oc&#13;
higher; shippinc steers,' $4 90(4ft 25; stockers&#13;
and feeders, ¢3(44 60: cows, bulla ami n v v ' ^&#13;
$2 10(44 40; through Texas cattle lU(«15e&#13;
burner at Si ^^yv¢l :.5.&#13;
Hoos--Market tirm on l i g h t with heavy 10c&#13;
lower; rough and mixed, | S S(Y«;4; packing&#13;
and shipping 250 to ; 5) lbs, $4(44 15; light&#13;
weights, $3 'V(44 2 i : skips, $3(a)3 15.&#13;
SIIKKP—The best rute«i strong; natives,&#13;
$ ! i. «04 '.(); western $ M 0 @ i 5 0 : Texans,&#13;
$2 50(33 40. .&#13;
gALISMIUrS SENTIMENTS.&#13;
—^ *&#13;
IN A I R I E Y ADDRE85 HE BAYS HE WILL&#13;
CONTINUE GLADSTONE'! RUSlIAff&#13;
POLICY.&#13;
Foreign F l a i h t i .&#13;
When parliament reassembled Salisbury&#13;
made an address stating iu substance that&#13;
Oludstone's Russian policy would be continued.&#13;
The Marquis considers affairs in Central Asia&#13;
In a very unsatisfactory condition, an is alsn&#13;
affairs in Egypt, When the new government&#13;
get&lt; fairly ih working order these matters will&#13;
be carefully considered, and such measure!&#13;
adopted as "will accrue,to the beat interests of&#13;
all. England's many 'pledges must and shall&#13;
be kept at all hazards.&#13;
Re[)orts from Spain place the number of new&#13;
cholera cases at between 1,200 and 1,500 dally,&#13;
aud the deaths at over one-half of this number&#13;
The Welsh university college, a t Abergwill,.&#13;
Carmarthenshire, Wales, burned to the grouiui&#13;
the other morning. The college was built at&#13;
a cost of £400,000.&#13;
The French Chamber of Deputies has revised&#13;
the old law in force during the French revolution&#13;
under the provisions of which the statt&#13;
maintains and educates every seventh chile&#13;
bom in French lamilies.&#13;
5The London Pull Mall Gazette has been pub&#13;
llshing a scries of articles ex|*osing the tralik,&#13;
in young girls for immoral purposes. The articles&#13;
created a regular furor in the city. Tht&#13;
prince of Wales gave orders that the' papci&#13;
should hereafter he kept from his house. A&#13;
number of London newsdealers have been ar&#13;
ralgned on the charge of selling obscene litera&#13;
ture for handling the paper.&#13;
The first public breach between the Parnel&#13;
itcs and the new government occurred In tht&#13;
House of Commons, when Mr. Holmes the a t&#13;
tornev general for Ireland, refused to inquir&lt;&#13;
into the dismissal of Police Inspector Murphj&#13;
and justified his dismissal on the ground thai&#13;
he was connected with the crimes of Inspectoi&#13;
French and Secretary Cornwall. Mr. Parnel&#13;
declares that he heard the government decislot&#13;
with amazement.&#13;
T H E COUNTRY AT LARGE.&#13;
TUB FLAG STII.I. FLOATS; ^&#13;
July 4, Mormons in Salt Lake City insisted&#13;
upon'having the I'nitcd States flag at hull&#13;
mast. Loyal Americans objected, and resented&#13;
the i n s u l t a»d proceeded to lorce the .Mormons&#13;
to raise the flag. After much demurring&#13;
the flag was run up at full mast.&#13;
LOOKS SKHIOl'S.&#13;
Reports received from Ihe Indian country&#13;
state that the Cheyenncs are committing sen&#13;
ous depredations, and the lives and property o.&#13;
the settlers are in jeopardy. Twelve companies&#13;
of infantry were sent by" special train frou:&#13;
Omaha. 'Gen. Sheridan has been ordered to&#13;
proceed to the seat ot war;&#13;
A COMI'AHISON.&#13;
The failures in the United States for the first&#13;
half of 18S5 are 0,004 in lumber, ns compared&#13;
with 5,51() for the same period last year, an increase&#13;
of 4'4. The liabilities, Imweycf, for t h r&#13;
tirVt half of the present year, show a marketl&#13;
decline, amounting to only 74 millions, as compared&#13;
with 124 millions for the first half ol&#13;
1884.&#13;
STOltM SWEPT.&#13;
A storm of wind and rain, with all the deathsdealing&#13;
concomitants swept over portions til&#13;
Wisconsin July 9. Depots, churches aud&#13;
houses were demolished, lorests swept away,&#13;
and crops leveled to the ground; New York&#13;
state was also visited by a severe storm on tht&#13;
same day, and the usual damage is reported;&#13;
WII.I, COME HOME.&#13;
A cablegram from Auckland, New Zealand.&#13;
to Chief of Police Harrigan of St. Louis, announces&#13;
the arrival tht re of the police depart&#13;
ment's messengers sent from.St. Louisa month&#13;
ago and the acknowledgement of the requisition&#13;
for W. H. Lennox Maxwell, who murdered&#13;
C. Arthur Preller at the Southern hotel in&#13;
that city on April 5, and fled to New Zealand.&#13;
The ollicers will return with Maxwell by the&#13;
steamer which sails on the 21 st iust. There&#13;
was no serious legal complications. The murderer&#13;
was turned Over to the ollicers at ouce.&#13;
MOKE ( O t ' K T S NKKDKO.&#13;
A special to the New Orleau* Times-Demo&#13;
crat from F t Smith, Ark., s a \ s 29 murderers&#13;
from the Indian ttrriiory are confined In tht-&#13;
United States jail in Ft. Smith aw tilting.trial.&#13;
The court convene:! July tj with a criminal&#13;
docket of 192 cases, all for crimes committed in&#13;
the Indian territ &gt;ry, O v e r l K) in lian witne. ses&#13;
are prt sent to attend the court, and more an&#13;
exp.'ctt-d to arrive daily. The jurisdiction ol&#13;
t h i w n u r t extend* over 62,(0.1 square miles ol&#13;
territory inhabited by men of all colors and&#13;
classes "and the wor&gt;t criminals in the c o u u t n .&#13;
rooit l'uosi'KCrs.&#13;
Six days of st-'adv' rain have practically&#13;
ruined the wheat crop throughout eastern&#13;
Kansas and western Missouri. Harvesting is&#13;
at a complete standstill. Stacked wheat has&#13;
been r u i n e l , and estimates place the loss in&#13;
Kansas alone at 1.()00,000 bushels. This does,&#13;
not include standing wheat. The state board's&#13;
estimate of 10,000.00.1 bushels of w'k&lt;at was&#13;
based on alleged improvement In southern&#13;
Kansas. This estimate took no account of&#13;
last week's storms. Fears are entertained&#13;
that the potatoes will rot iu the ground. Minor&#13;
crops are also suffering.&#13;
l)Et'I,AKi:i) INSANE.&#13;
Several weeks ago the Polk street depot iu&#13;
Chicago was the scene of a most startling&#13;
tiageoy. A nuri named Reaume, a passenger&#13;
on an incoming train from Denver, went mad&#13;
outside the city limits. When the train reached&#13;
Chicago his capture was attempted by a&#13;
platoon of police. In an encounter which followed&#13;
OfTVeor Barrett was shot tleatt"'by the&#13;
maniac. The latter was wounded, it was&#13;
thought mortalU', but taken to the hospitil.&#13;
The other morning Reaume was taken into the&#13;
county court and declared insane.&#13;
DISAllM T H E INDIANS.&#13;
There is official authority for the statement&#13;
that government ollicers in the Indian teirkoryhave&#13;
recommended that thciJiuiyefwit^^Te^dis&#13;
armed, and that Col. Sumner, who is on the&#13;
ground, concurs in t( at'view. (Jen. Schofmldj&#13;
however, does not think there are now sullicient&#13;
troops in the tcrr-tory to accomplish the&#13;
work ami -tin this account 4m*Issued an ^&gt;rdff&#13;
concentrating the troop* about the Cheyenne&#13;
reservation. Should tuc troops make aii unsuccessful&#13;
attempt to disarm the Indians (it-n.&#13;
Schoficld intimates that a bloody Indian war&#13;
would ensue.&#13;
RIKL m O X ' T M E A N - T O .&#13;
W o r d has"been received 'bv Dr. Liset from&#13;
I&#13;
parlurv a-id : ! ;!r.'time &lt;f s a i l i n g This Information&#13;
must be used to determine the&#13;
liability of vessls to lw ordered Into quarantine.&#13;
The president has decided to establish a national&#13;
patrol along the o a s t .&#13;
T H E COt NTUV'S WHEAT 81'1'I'I.Y.&#13;
The J u n e report of the Agricultural Department&#13;
.-hows a. slight improvement In winter&#13;
wheat, which advances the general average&#13;
from 02 to nearly 65. In Michigan,"Indiana,&#13;
Illinois and Missouri there has been a slight&#13;
Improvement The winter wheat region,&#13;
which does not Include the territories, now&#13;
promises about 215.UTOOC0. The condition of&#13;
spring wheat continues higher, though the&#13;
average is slightly reduced. The indications&#13;
now ' oiut to a crop of about 14\000.000 bushels,&#13;
making an aggregate of 303,000,(:0:) bushels.&#13;
The condition of corn is higher than is higher&#13;
than in uuv year since ISSO, except the last;&#13;
the area ls'74,'(Kk),tXK) a -res. Wiuter rye has au&#13;
average of 87 and oats 97.&#13;
CAN KMPI.OY CONVICT LABOR.&#13;
| T h e secretary of the treasury has decided a&#13;
contract case Involving an 'important labor&#13;
question. Bids were recently opened for stone&#13;
work on the postofiice at IVorla, 111. Messrs&#13;
Brainerd «fc Co., of Jollet, 111., were the lowest&#13;
bidders. A protest against their being awarded&#13;
the contract was, however, filed by Messrs.&#13;
Straub A Co., of Buffalo, the next lowest bidders,&#13;
on the ground- that Brainerd•-&amp; Co., are&#13;
contractors for the labor of the Illinois state&#13;
prison and would employ convict labor on the&#13;
postofiice. The mutter was referred to Solicitor&#13;
McCue, who gave an opinion thut the department&#13;
should not bo expected to dictate the&#13;
means by which the contractors pcrlorm their&#13;
work, and that he did not l)elieve;the protest a&#13;
valid one. Secretary Manning sustained the&#13;
solicitor, and the contract will be awarded to&#13;
Brainerd &amp; Co.&#13;
A DAUINU HOBBEHY.&#13;
Two men representing themselves to be&#13;
plumbers called at the resideuce of Thomas&#13;
Smith, 50 Eldredge Court, Chicago, about uoou&#13;
a few days ago, and stated to Mrs. Smith that&#13;
they had" been sent there by the landlord. Sus-&#13;
W t i n g nothing1 wrong, Mrs. Smith admitted&#13;
ihem to the hous*, when they at once assaulted&#13;
her, and bound uud gagged her. The robbers&#13;
tore open the bosom of her dress and took&#13;
about ¢1,000 which her husband had giveu her&#13;
iu the morning. The robbers proceeded to&#13;
ransack the house and then returned a n d coolly&#13;
discussed the best ami most .expeditious way&#13;
of killing Mr*. Smith. Burning and drowuiug&#13;
were considered, but after a brief consultation&#13;
the robbers left theliouse. and Mrs. Smith securely&#13;
bound. Attcrsomc hours she succeeded&#13;
iu attracting the attention of passers-by. and&#13;
tlie police were notified. Mrs, Smith is utterly&#13;
prostrated, anil her llf£ is, despaired of.&#13;
A D C A D C O M M O D R R .&#13;
Henry H. Gorringe, late Lieutenant Com"&#13;
mander United Stat«fS Navy, died at the resi&#13;
dence of his sister, Mrs. lliland, in New York&#13;
July 6. Mr. Gorringe- wa» the son of an&#13;
Episcopal clergyman and was born at Barbadoes.&#13;
He was finely-ediwiiied, but his taste&#13;
was for the sea, which he followed almost con&#13;
stantly from the-age of 14. He was a captain&#13;
iu tbe'-tticrchant service wheu the war broke&#13;
out and at once volunteered bis service to the&#13;
Federal navy aud served through the war in&#13;
the Mississippi squadron umUrr F a r r a g u t At&#13;
the close of the war hewaa-.tnade commander&#13;
of the steamer Memphis, and from 1S6S' to 1871&#13;
commanded the Portsmouth, then In the South&#13;
Atlantic squadron. Four years, from 18?2 to&#13;
17ii, he served in the Hydrographk oittce at&#13;
Washington. Commander Gorringe won his&#13;
?reatest lame by landing the obell&lt;k in New&#13;
orkharl&gt;or July 20, ISSO.aftera perilous voyage&#13;
from Egypt. The Commander took occasion&#13;
to criticise the American Navy Department,&#13;
ami for doing so was disciplined by Secretary&#13;
Chandler. Then Commander Gorringe resigned&#13;
from the nayv and became President of the,&#13;
American Ship Building Company, but the en&#13;
terprise was a failure. While engaged in settling&#13;
up the affairs of the compauy Mr. Gor&#13;
riuge met with au accident which eventually&#13;
caused his death. While hurrying from New&#13;
York city to his ship yard one day last fall he&#13;
jumped irom a moving train and received severe&#13;
spiual injuries, He died a bachelor, his only&#13;
relative being his sister.&#13;
BRUTAL TKK ATM K.ST O f &lt;- OSVICT*.&#13;
About the middle of J u n e Gov. Thompson&#13;
of South Carolina, was informed that&#13;
the convicts employed in grading the&#13;
Savannah Valley railroad ia Abbeville&#13;
'county were cruelly treated: that one&#13;
convict had died in "consequence of brutal&#13;
whippings bv the guards; that they were overworked,&#13;
aud that excessive mortality prevailed&#13;
among them- The governor immediately instructed&#13;
the superintendent of the penitentiary&#13;
to Investigate tlie charge-. The official report,&#13;
which has just been made, shows that 16&#13;
deaths have occurred since J a n u a r y 1, out of a&#13;
total foice of alnuit 120 convicts; that seven&#13;
are u n a b i t io^uork : that the convicts are required&#13;
to march nearly three miles to their&#13;
work with shackles on their legs; that on account&#13;
of the bad quality of their food scurvy1'&#13;
has made its appearance and that there has'&#13;
been excessive cruelty in punishing the convicts.&#13;
In describing the effects of the beating of Henry&#13;
I'orter by A. W. Jackson, who hud. temporary&#13;
charge" of the convicts during the abaence&#13;
of the regular overseer, Dr. D. S. Pope, penitentiary&#13;
physician, says: "As evidence of the&#13;
severity of the whipping inflicted. I would statt;&#13;
that the tissues have sloughed, leaving an open&#13;
sore IS inches long by 10 inches wide. The&#13;
punishment must have been very cruel. I&#13;
doubt his complete recovery." Other convicts&#13;
were also cruelly beaten, although the condition&#13;
of those now at work is said to be "ver.v&#13;
fair." Jackson, the inhuman guard, has fled&#13;
to Georgia, but efforts are being made to secure&#13;
his arrest. There is great indignation at&#13;
these outrages, and steps will probably be&#13;
taken at The next session of the legislature to&#13;
discontinue the practice of farming out the&#13;
convicts to railroad companies and phosphate&#13;
miners.&#13;
T H E BED FIENDS.&#13;
C~ayexrae Indians on the i n p.&#13;
From a report just issued by the&#13;
British agricultural department, it appears&#13;
that during 1884* of live animaU&#13;
imported from Canada, 668 cattle, 1,-&#13;
770 sheep, and one pig were thrown&#13;
overboard, and 81 catile and 824 sheep&#13;
landted dead. Of those imported from&#13;
the United States, 1.57») cattle and 8o7&#13;
sheep were thrown overboard, and 85,&#13;
; ^ ^7- *"'5o^'ft^»"-,v V """ Q"v"iVJL auA "J cattle and 92 sheep landed dead,oo-to 1882 shipped 800,000 torts of ore. Seven •Wt wMd.be. ^ftycLfltttjatHprk 5 huitndred ^ i ^ a 3 n t A am .,»i».„i,. WM i trt low oM.BoO animate,&#13;
Louis Kiel to the effect that he wishes hi* trial&#13;
to t i k e place in Lower Canada, a; it Is therealone&#13;
h • can get all his witnesses. He dwells&#13;
on the fact that he never dreamt of war, but&#13;
was invited In the couitry from the I'nitcd&#13;
.State-* to help petition t;ie government for the&#13;
redress of their grievances. He asks not to be&#13;
treated like a murderer, and not to be chained&#13;
before the jury has pronounced upon his .case,&#13;
and feels confident that they will not find him&#13;
guilty. He savs his incarceration is telling&#13;
upor. his health, notwithstanding the kind a t&#13;
tcntion of the jailers. ^&#13;
• NO CHOLEUA H E R E ,&#13;
Secretary Manning has IsauetT a circular to&#13;
the officers of the rcven«c marine, directing&#13;
t h e m t o t r u i s e acJjYrty with the revenue&#13;
steamers undep^tteir command upon the outer&#13;
lines of thij^h^eruising grounds, and to exercise&#13;
spotd&gt;t"v1zilance in speaking all vessels arrivfrom&#13;
foreign ports or Irom soulhern ports&#13;
of the United States, directing inquiries to the Sort from which the vessel sailed, and t j the&#13;
oallh of thuac o n — b o a n j — a t the time of dc-&#13;
A dNpaLch from Topcka, Kansas, aaleJI J u l !&#13;
9, says&#13;
.The she-rtff «rf Kingman states that uews b*&gt;&#13;
been received thatNescatuuga, a liitL* town of&#13;
:50 people 4- i.-i the possession of the Indians,&#13;
ami that Coldwater, -oiue mile*- further West,&#13;
is surrounded by I hem. T!u- sheriff says these&#13;
'reports may Tie s» iir-iitIiVnTiT. T-iit he reouestsi&#13;
Gov. Martin to v i a l :iru&gt; ft) licit they may be&#13;
prepared. The goveninr has ovih red the&#13;
military companies at Lurried. Wii.i'ul.l, Wellington&#13;
and Moiling to be ready 1o move at a&#13;
moment's notice, and has din eted the sheriff&#13;
of JTiuney county and m i n o r of Dodge&#13;
City to o r g a n i c foiVc&gt;" and send&#13;
runnnrti to notuy—xctllcr,—Uwn,- Augur telegraph?&#13;
Gov. Mai tin that he hns no tnformn;&#13;
tion from Fort Ken., ot an outbreak therjvttnt&#13;
he has ordered three companies *ofjarvalry to&#13;
Bariour county.&#13;
The gererafsuperintrndeflt'of the Topcka «fc&#13;
Santa r e railroad h a v t f e e n directed by the&#13;
quartermaster, GjltKTat Fort Leavenworth, to&#13;
send ears toJ^rtft Kiley at once to transport..&#13;
troopsjiprfflT A force of men was at work at&#13;
tlie^afsenal here n y s t of last night getting&#13;
,ate arms ready lor shipment.&#13;
A report conies fiotn Pratt Center that a&#13;
large nuufber . of settlers had arrived there,&#13;
fleeing from the Indians, who Mere reported&#13;
moving north. They also report the massacre&#13;
of a family named Nhoiicld on Spring creek.&#13;
Great excitement prevails.&#13;
The famous PfetYers hot springs, ne?u&#13;
Ragatz, Switzerland, which gave out ar&#13;
the time of the recent eruption of Vosu-&#13;
Tiua, arc running again.&#13;
f&#13;
\&#13;
. . * • &lt; • •&#13;
\&#13;
J&#13;
IIY W0T3T QI-0 HEAJtT AND L&#13;
r1&#13;
/&#13;
\&#13;
/&#13;
t *&#13;
My •tout old heart und I ore friends,&#13;
Two bivouac friemH together!&#13;
Nor dally wars, nor daly blown,&#13;
Have colled out our wblte feather.&#13;
We've 'Hated till the campu^a eud»—&#13;
For calm or atorwy weather.&#13;
My stout oM heart and I have been&#13;
Throuuh serious scenes o( treublo.&#13;
"We've been deuied; our hopes have died;&#13;
Our load'B been morctbau double.&#13;
Asd vet we've lived. An&lt;l we have Been&#13;
Some Rrlefa In Lethe bubbk.&#13;
Mv stout old heart and 1 have fought&#13;
borne bitter ngfr B to ending;&#13;
And if or not we've victory got,&#13;
We've not been hurt past mending!&#13;
The wounds are all In front we've caught,&#13;
Aud easier for the tending.&#13;
My stout old heart and I, you see,&#13;
We understand each other.&#13;
—Old comrade true, my hand to you!&#13;
On honor, tell roe whether&#13;
You're daunted \el&lt; —"To arms!" beats he,&#13;
"Retreat Is for another 1"&#13;
Eye* right! Guide centre! Forward marckt&#13;
Jht*x where the colon Jty!&#13;
—Six feet of ground, or triumph'* arch —&#13;
M'J stout oW heart aiul J!&#13;
—E. Hough, in The Current. * *m •-&#13;
A TALE UF RUE.&#13;
Of all tired passengers of the midnight&#13;
express bound eastward over the&#13;
Old Colony road, perhaps there was&#13;
not one more thoroughly used up than&#13;
John Coleman, Esq., of the law linn&#13;
of Coleman &amp; Risrgs, Ashland* Massachusetts.&#13;
From the morning of November&#13;
1, when he had started for San&#13;
Francisco, till the evening of this December&#13;
1, he had been constantly on&#13;
I he wing. To aggravate his fatigue,&#13;
the trip, in a business viewv had been&#13;
highly unsatisfactory, if not unnecess&#13;
a r y /&#13;
But as he drew nearer home his&#13;
.scowl vanished, and the lines about&#13;
his lirm mouth" "softened. Stretching&#13;
his long-suffering limbs across the&#13;
scat, he spread the Evening Journal&#13;
between his aching eyeB 'and the glare&#13;
of the bobbing lamps", and indulged in&#13;
tender speculations. How would Rue&#13;
look when he appeared before her&#13;
next morning, two days earlier than&#13;
he had promised? She might be watering&#13;
her plants in the bay window",&#13;
and he would walk in nonchalantly, as&#13;
if he had left her the evening before,&#13;
and say, ' Good morning, Rue," and&#13;
she would drop her watering-pot and&#13;
rush toward * him, all smiles and&#13;
blushes, crying, ' O h , John! John! how&#13;
glad I am to see you! how I've missed&#13;
you!"&#13;
Dear, warm-hearted, impulsive little&#13;
Rue! She certainly' waa fond of him.&#13;
He wished he had never been such a&#13;
brute as to reproach her about Mr.&#13;
Lynde. He was convinced now that&#13;
she had not really cared for the fellow.&#13;
She hail not only been cordial with&#13;
him in her free, girlish way. What&#13;
charming, inimitably ways she had!&#13;
The lover's reverie merged into a&#13;
dream. Mr. Coleman was unconscious&#13;
of the slacking up ot the train at B — ,&#13;
and of the entrance of two young gentlemen&#13;
into the scat in front; but the&#13;
name of Miss Rue Haywood, spoken&#13;
almost in his ear, aroused him like an&#13;
electric shock.&#13;
"Mr. Lynde is bewitched with her,&#13;
that's, p l a i n / ' continued the voice.&#13;
" H e is having a line time out of Colem&#13;
a"«jT s~ absence -'' : .&#13;
"Pluperfect/1 said an answering&#13;
voice. "They say Miss Rue wouldn't&#13;
mind Coleman's taking himself oft for&#13;
good."&#13;
" H e ' s an able man. You know there&#13;
is talk of running him for congress."&#13;
"Oh, yes; ne's a dig, and all that;&#13;
but lie's a crotchety old fellow, Makes&#13;
Miss Rao walk Spanish, I hear. By&#13;
the way, how are she and Mr. Lynde&#13;
coming on with the operetta? 1 had&#13;
to cut last rehearsal."&#13;
"Famously. Miss Rue's solo will&#13;
bring down the house. Lynde thinks&#13;
the entertainment will root tip at least&#13;
one hundred dollars toward the new&#13;
organ. He is jubilant. I believe that&#13;
instrument comes next te Miss Rue in&#13;
his affections. Can't ho get the music&#13;
out of it, though? Halloo, here's&#13;
Ashland!"&#13;
Wincing beneath his newspaper,&#13;
Mr. Coleman had recognized the voices&#13;
as those of two college students returning&#13;
from the lecture at,. B N - — .&#13;
Forgetful^ai last of travel-stain, weariness&#13;
and headache, he waited tilV Uie&#13;
youths had left the car, then walked&#13;
out at the opposite end, his whole energies&#13;
engrossed in weighing the evidence&#13;
so gratuitously afforded. .How&#13;
far could ho rely on current go:&#13;
What attitude should hp^^lfssume&#13;
toward Rue? Morningjolfnd him undecided.&#13;
He muAt^ne governed by&#13;
Rue's own mjHTner. As a test of her&#13;
feelinjjMts'ward him he would ask her&#13;
fpjr-'nis sttko-^to-^vHh4Fftw—itorn—the&#13;
operetta. If she loved him she would&#13;
do this cheerfully. Jf she would not&#13;
do it—Mr. Coleman had not provided&#13;
for the latter contingency when Bridget&#13;
ushered hint into Mr^Hay-WoaiUs&#13;
parlor. Miss Rue and Mr. Lynde were&#13;
"practicing H duct for—the * oporotta,-&#13;
both too wrapt to observe the intruder&#13;
—a fact inexplicable on musical&#13;
grounds to poor Mr. Coleman, who&#13;
did not know the notes auart, or c a r&#13;
to know them. According tohi*"Tn&#13;
ference, the young pcopjje^w'erc absorbed&#13;
in each otheivawTne was oft* in&#13;
limbo. Under UM»S^ circumstances it&#13;
may not bcMrtfange that his face, that&#13;
i n s t a p ^ p i o d by 5M*S Rue, was not the&#13;
•..of an simiiilvKj man. It promptly&#13;
emimU'il Mr./Kynde of a waiting pupil,&#13;
and having congratulated Mr.&#13;
Cole in nn ori his safe return, he hustled&#13;
his mnsi£ under his arm and departed&#13;
lue wheeled the bin rasy-ehair&#13;
ni/iiont ot tin* grate, playfully forced&#13;
er sullen Hiilor Into it, aiHi perched&#13;
;eis«'!t on its arm to hear about his&#13;
lnnriM'V.. ll:ul he been ill? N o ? ' T h e n&#13;
his head ached. Shouldn't she try to&#13;
niaffneUzo it and put aim U&gt; sleep?&#13;
No, he preferred that she should&#13;
not. He had kept his eyes closed too&#13;
long already.&#13;
As well might a zephyr have attempted&#13;
to pet an iccburg. With a&#13;
shiver Miss Rue slipped from ner&#13;
perch, and seated herself with her&#13;
work in a neighboring rocker. W h a t&#13;
had come over J o h n ? She had never&#13;
seen him like this before. He did not&#13;
seem a bit glad to meet her. H e&#13;
turned away Iram the distracting vision,&#13;
mentally p r e p a r i n g his brief—&#13;
this astute lawyer, as ignorant of the&#13;
nature of a girl as an elephant of the&#13;
structure of a rose. Presently he began&#13;
about the festival He admitted&#13;
that Rue had once confided to him her&#13;
intention of participating in an operetta,&#13;
but be had supposed an operetta&#13;
to be something like an oratorio, not&#13;
a jumbling of silly love songs. Did&#13;
she think it becoming in herself, an&#13;
engaged young lady, to carol amorous&#13;
ditties from morning to night with&#13;
a tuneful swain?&#13;
"They are burlesques, John, only&#13;
burlesques. If 1 had dreamed of your&#13;
disapproving I wouldn't have promised&#13;
to sing, but I can't retract n o w / 1&#13;
" N o t when I particularly request it,&#13;
Rue?"&#13;
"Indeed, no, John. I have the&#13;
leading part. I c a n ' t refuse t" act&#13;
without offending Mr. L y n d e . "&#13;
"On the other hand, you can't persist&#13;
in acting without offending m e / '&#13;
"Now, John, do be reasonable.&#13;
How should 1 feel, announcing at the&#13;
next rehearsal that I must be excused&#13;
—Mr. Coleman was not willing t o&#13;
have me connected with the operetta?&#13;
What would Mr. Lynde t h i n k ? "&#13;
"Oh, if his opinion has more weight&#13;
"with you than mine, I will r e t i r e . "&#13;
" J o h n , you're too absura. C a n ' t&#13;
you see how ridiculous it would look&#13;
for me to- throw up my part the moment&#13;
you came home? People would&#13;
say you are jealous of Mr. Lynde/.1&#13;
" T h e jackuapes!"&#13;
"And that you were a blue-bird.&#13;
John, I'm not sure but they'd be&#13;
r i g h t . "&#13;
"If I'm a tyrant, Rufelle, you're an&#13;
amazingly fearless F a t i m a . "&#13;
" I don't propose tcftje yotrrFatima,&#13;
J o h n . "&#13;
W h a u l id Rue intend by thatP T h e&#13;
wrinkle in Mr. Coleman's forehead&#13;
deepened into &amp; trench, his brown&#13;
face Hushed like an oak in October.&#13;
"Please lay aside paradoxes, Rufelle.&#13;
Do you mean you d o n ' t wish&#13;
to marry me? Rumor has told nae a s&#13;
m u c h . "&#13;
In truth, Miss Rue had meant nothing&#13;
of the kind, but her lover's insulting&#13;
tone exasperated her into silence&#13;
H a d it come to this, that she could not&#13;
wink without first consulting his lordship.&#13;
Her blue eyes Hashed ominously,&#13;
the steel hook in her lingers darted in&#13;
and out of her crotcheting with a murderous&#13;
rapidity.&#13;
•'Rumor has told me as ' m u c h , "&#13;
repeated - Mr. —GolemanT as impressively&#13;
as if he had been addressing&#13;
a jury.&#13;
And you let people talk about&#13;
me, John, and listen to w h a t they&#13;
say _? "&#13;
might have known that a girl&#13;
who would not respect my dignity&#13;
could not value my esteem.&#13;
Tyrant or not, Rufelle, a t l e a s t I'vo&#13;
no desire to rivet galling fetters.&#13;
Henceforth you are free to&#13;
smile upon Mr. Lynde or any o t h e r&#13;
g e n t l e m a n . "&#13;
Ha&lt;T he omit te d t h e 1 ast sentence,&#13;
affectionate, kindly little Rue could&#13;
even then have " m a d e u p " with John,&#13;
but this was too much for her&#13;
temper. Snatching the golden circlet&#13;
from her engagement finger,&#13;
she flung it at her lover, with cheeks&#13;
aflame.&#13;
••Take back your r i n g , " she cried;&#13;
" t h e girl who wears it should be a saint&#13;
or a simpleton, and I ' m neither. Goodbye,&#13;
J o h n . "&#13;
Auburn head erect, chin in air.&#13;
she swept out of the room with&#13;
all the stateliness psssible to a slight&#13;
girl of five feet two. She felt hers to&#13;
be a righteous indignation. J o h n had&#13;
much as glanced at any other girl.&#13;
That he had not wanted to glance at&#13;
any other girl had no bearing whatever&#13;
upon the case, yet the lawyer's&#13;
stern eye moistened as he thought of&#13;
the three months of happiness which&#13;
had been his beiore this brilliant now&#13;
organist appeared upon the scene with&#13;
the graces and uccraplishments admired&#13;
by ladies, and scorned by himself,&#13;
matter-of-fact J o h n Coleman. From&#13;
the outset he had distrusted the winsome&#13;
gallant's influence over Rue,&#13;
with what reason the sequel had&#13;
proved.&#13;
Shocked at his p a r t n e r ' s ill looks,&#13;
Mr- Riggsin greeting him asked if ho&#13;
had had a chill.&#13;
"Yes, something of that n a t u r e , "&#13;
was the grim reply. " H o w about the&#13;
suit of Ingalls versus Wade? I find a&#13;
flaw in the i n d i c t m e n t / 1&#13;
Mr. Coleman was in the mood foi&#13;
finding Haws. His habitual self-control&#13;
had deserted him. Once he nearbj&#13;
annihilated Mr. Riggs for casually&#13;
mentioning Mr. Lynde and his reported&#13;
engagement.&#13;
"Oho! I recollect now; Coleman&#13;
had a lien on the young woman himself.&#13;
Queer I should have forgotten,"&#13;
mused the discomlitted advocate, dip&#13;
ping his pen in the ink.&#13;
That night Mr. Coleman had a chill&#13;
—no metaphorical heart ague, but a&#13;
genuine physical bone-shaking rigoi&#13;
that demanded blankets and hot bricks&#13;
and a heroic dose of quinine.&#13;
" H e ' s caught malaria from some oi&#13;
those confounded western bog-holes/1&#13;
said ihe doctor aside to the landlord.&#13;
"Un.ess we break it up he's in for a&#13;
fever. See that he has a good nurse.&#13;
I'll be roUnd in the m o r n i n g . "&#13;
The landlord himself sat up with the&#13;
patient, and a busy night he had till&#13;
daybreak, when Mr. Coleman sank intc&#13;
a drowse. The weary watcher improved&#13;
this opportunity to Steal away&#13;
for a nap, and sent his son to take his&#13;
place by the bedside. After an hour's&#13;
sleep the sick m a n awoke refreshed,,&#13;
the ringing in his ears greater, but the&#13;
throbbinsr of his temples less, the pain&#13;
in his limbs no longer absolutely unbearable.&#13;
"Heigho! that you, H a r r y ? " he said,&#13;
catching sight of the boy munching an&#13;
apple for entertainment. Where were&#13;
you when I came home last night? 1&#13;
d i d n ' t see you." '&#13;
" A t St. Mark's, sir, blowing the organ.&#13;
—Mr. Lynde has hired me for the&#13;
q u a r t e r . "&#13;
"Oh, he has, has h e ? " Mr. Colem&#13;
a n turned over in bed and scowled&#13;
jrt the smoky lamp-chimney. Soon he&#13;
flopped back again. "Do you like this&#13;
Lynde fellow, H a r r y ? "&#13;
"Tip-top; everybody d o e s / '&#13;
Mr. Coleman groaned.&#13;
"Is tho pain corning on again,&#13;
Can I do anything for y o u ? "&#13;
"Nothing^ thank you, my boy;&#13;
pretty essentially done for. I'd&#13;
to hear you talk, though. Tell&#13;
what's happened since I've been away.&#13;
W h a t ' s this Lynde been up t o ? "&#13;
"Oh, he's been Hying around, you'd&#13;
better believe."&#13;
"Been doing a stiff business,.I supposerTtrtving&#13;
out with the ladies?"&#13;
" l i e ' s been driving out with Miss&#13;
Haywood some. I haven't seen htm&#13;
with anybody else."&#13;
The invalid suppressed another&#13;
groan.&#13;
"They've been looking at dishes and&#13;
curtains and t h i n g s . "&#13;
Mr. Coleman rose savagely upon his&#13;
elbow. Thrs was ten thousand times&#13;
worse than he had dreamed. " T h e&#13;
story I've heard, then, is true, Harry;&#13;
Mr. Lynde is going to be m a r r i e d . " "&#13;
"Why, how did you know, Mr. Coleman?&#13;
He said it was a secret. He&#13;
let me go all over his /house yesterday&#13;
—he's hired Lunt's cottage, corner of&#13;
Vine street—and things shine, I tell&#13;
you. You just ought to see those carpets.&#13;
Miss Haywood helped him pick&#13;
'em out. The other woman don't suspect&#13;
a t h i n g . "&#13;
" W h a t other woman'*"&#13;
" W h y , the woman he is going to&#13;
marry. She lives down in Maine. She&#13;
thinks after the wedding on Christmas&#13;
she's coming with Mr. Lynde to his&#13;
bpardrng-house; but, instead of that.&#13;
SCOTTISH CLERICAL UFR.&#13;
sir?&#13;
I ' m&#13;
like&#13;
me&#13;
treat her so. She would not per^otiato&#13;
patient Griselda for the aniusement of&#13;
thevtflage. ^^" -&#13;
" J o h n wants--tb bend the whole&#13;
world toliis^vUl," mused she, angrily,&#13;
peepi«g"through her chamber blind,&#13;
le stalked away chewing his black&#13;
mustache; " h e wants to bend the&#13;
whole world to his will, and I w o n ' t&#13;
be bent. Our engagement is broken,&#13;
and I'm glad of i t . "&#13;
For full fifteen minutes she was unequivocally&#13;
glad.&#13;
JuhikColeman thought that he, too,&#13;
was glad.^ Walking fiercely on, he&#13;
squared his shoulders, and told himself&#13;
that the engagement had been a&#13;
mistake—an error of judgment,&#13;
grave self-made man of t l i i r t ^ s t i o u i d&#13;
have been wiser than to^trtfst""his. happiness&#13;
to the k e e p i j ^ o f a gay, capricious&#13;
m a i d e n s - W h y had he been so&#13;
dotingly-ioha of the child, so hoodwj^&#13;
keaby her coquetries? Bliud driveing&#13;
idiot* that he was, the sooner he&#13;
was b u r n e d again in the law the better.&#13;
The m a n ' s soul was hot within&#13;
him. Ho reviewed his lonely, joyless,&#13;
orphanhood, his sharp tussel with the&#13;
world to wring from it his present&#13;
/competence^ £LQ1iintil the latter had&#13;
been secured had he allowed himself to&#13;
think of m a r r y i n g this bright&#13;
no reason—no earthlv reason—to-""sir, he's eroing to fetch her right home&#13;
younsr&#13;
beauty, who as a school girl had first&#13;
captivated his imagination. To have&#13;
asked Rue Haywood to become&#13;
wife while he had no adequate moans&#13;
for her support *voUld- hiiv** bent in hi*&#13;
opinion dastardly and eoiuomp+rple.&#13;
&gt;,•,!• i^.» ),-.\,\ ;&gt;u-ijt'ed the tim*&lt;whcn into&#13;
his bully cottage. I'll bet she'll be&#13;
surprised.&#13;
Mr- Coleman dropped back upon the&#13;
pillow with an expression a R a p h a e l&#13;
might have despaired of reproducing.&#13;
He lay there a few minutes reflecting,&#13;
then sat Dolt-upright, his towel-begirt&#13;
head in bold relief against the mahogany&#13;
head board.&#13;
"Blow out the lamp, Harry, please;&#13;
draw up the curtains and hand noeinvwriting&#13;
desk there on the table. I'll&#13;
give you a dollar if yem'trcarry a message&#13;
to Miss Haywood for me this&#13;
morning,"^- "&#13;
'•Bb3*s'"niy soul, Coleman, you are&#13;
rfough as a pine knot!" exclaimed&#13;
the doctor, bolting in as his patient&#13;
sealed the note. "You had ague enough&#13;
last night to shake a sensitive mortal&#13;
into the grave, and here you're up and&#13;
attending to business. Let's feel your&#13;
pulse. Rapid yet, but softer. If you're&#13;
prudent you'll be out in a few d a y s . "&#13;
Harry rushed off on his errand, and&#13;
delivered Mr. Qoleman's billet into the&#13;
hands of Miss Rue herself, who in his&#13;
private opinion looked very sober and&#13;
red-eyed,&#13;
' D I : A R RUK:—-(thus ran the missive)&#13;
I've been having a chill, one of the bond&#13;
JuJ&lt; " " -- - - -&#13;
Pom« of the Annoyances to Which Minister*&#13;
are SuujScted in the "Braw Lund."&#13;
A not uncommon and perhaps little&#13;
Suspected cause of clerioal worry and&#13;
anuoyance, sometimes even of peril,&#13;
lies in tho vagaries of people who are&#13;
mentally ur.sound. Religious mania&#13;
is a yery frequent form of such unsoundness,&#13;
and this often leads to the&#13;
clergy being objects of attentions far&#13;
more marked than agreeable. Extrav&#13;
a g a n t devotion to, or equally extravagant&#13;
detestation of, some special&#13;
clergyman, is very common. The&#13;
former once, in our own experience,&#13;
gave rise to what, considering all the&#13;
accidental circumstances and surroundings,&#13;
was • probably the most&#13;
ludicrous scene ever witnessed in a&#13;
church. In a city boasting the p o ^&#13;
session of one of the finest cathedrals&#13;
in England there lived a spinster lady&#13;
somewhat weak in intellect, one whose&#13;
state, however, did not render any further&#13;
supervision necessary than the&#13;
constant a tendance of a trustworthy&#13;
companion. The rector of the parish&#13;
in which she lived was the object of&#13;
her most ardent devotion. To her&#13;
great despair he resigned his living&#13;
and went abroad. Some few- years&#13;
later, on returning to England, he&#13;
happened to be in the neighborhood,&#13;
and having been intimately acquainted&#13;
with many of the chapter, he went one&#13;
afternoon to the cathedral in order to&#13;
see some of them. The service was&#13;
just over, and he was standing in the&#13;
nave, to which there were always&#13;
many visitors in the afternoon, waiting&#13;
to greet his old friends when they&#13;
should have disrobed.&#13;
J u s t at-the moment when_choristers&#13;
and clergy were coming in procession&#13;
down the nave, the poor little woman&#13;
entered at t h e west d o o r ^ She instant*-&#13;
ly espied her former rector, and before&#13;
her companion could interfere,&#13;
rushed toward him. She was extremely&#13;
small; he a very tali man.&#13;
Fearing thM in her excitement her&#13;
greeting woo Id be r a t h e r more noisy&#13;
than was so*inly u n d e r the circumstances,&#13;
he bent down, as she drew&#13;
near, to speak to her in a whisper.&#13;
Rash man! In a moment she clasped&#13;
him around the neck with both arms&#13;
and bestowed upon him a painfully&#13;
audible apostolic salutation. The&#13;
magnificent cathedral na^e echoed to&#13;
strange sounds that afternoon. Jsot&#13;
even the portentous solemnity of a&#13;
cathedral verger, in the very presence&#13;
of the canons in residence, was proof&#13;
against the t r i a l ; and the white-robed&#13;
procession disappeared from the sacred&#13;
precincts with a most indecorous rapidity.&#13;
The victim of this astounding&#13;
reception, a m a n possessed of remarkable&#13;
power over the muscles of his&#13;
face, was the only person in the cathedral&#13;
who preserved an unmoved&#13;
gravity of deportment.&#13;
A very common form of religlou*&#13;
craze i s a desire to argue out privately&#13;
with a e'ergymansome question he&#13;
has touched upon in proacaing. We&#13;
once heard a clergymau preach on the&#13;
text: "All scripture is given by inspiration&#13;
of God," and he chanced to&#13;
make some r e m a r k s upon the occasional&#13;
value of apparently unimportant&#13;
portions of the scriptures. For&#13;
some time afterward he was sorely&#13;
besieged by a hearer who wished to&#13;
insist on having proved to them the&#13;
importance of verse 9, chapter iii.,&#13;
Song of Solomon, "King Solomon&#13;
made himself a chariot of the weOd of&#13;
Lebanon.41 Fortunately, the clergyman&#13;
in question had only been officiating&#13;
for a friend. Had he been vicar&#13;
of the parish, liable to be buttonholed&#13;
as he walked about the streets, his&#13;
fate would have been pitiable. Worst&#13;
of all, and often absolutely dangerous&#13;
to the clergy, is the craze of amission,&#13;
either to insist upon or prevent the&#13;
promulgation of some particular doer&#13;
trine. We remember, some years&#13;
since, seeing the vicar of a large*London&#13;
parish officiating for several Sundays&#13;
under protection of the police.&#13;
One of these crazy enthusiasts had&#13;
taken it into his head that he was to&#13;
prevent some part of the service being&#13;
performed, and hail chosen that particular&#13;
cl.urch as the Held of his operations.&#13;
His threats asjainst the vicar&#13;
were sufficiently vehement as to cause&#13;
it to be deemed advisable, pending&#13;
.measure* for some restraint beimj.&#13;
women in the Southern states; 632,000&#13;
are in manufactories, of whom a b o u t&#13;
one-half are in New York, Massachusetts&#13;
and Pennsylvania; 282,000 a r e&#13;
milliners, etc.; 50,000 are tailors. Of&#13;
the forty-four occupations recorded a»&#13;
"personal service" forty And women&#13;
in them. The 525 female surgeons of,&#13;
1870 have increased to 2,478; the 7&#13;
lawyers to 75; the t&gt;5 clergymen t o&#13;
165. The number of laundries has increased&#13;
from 61,000 in 1870 to 122,000,&#13;
a n d of the l a t t e r 108,000 are kept by&#13;
women. This large increase shows a&#13;
fjreat lightening of the housewife's&#13;
abor.—St. Louis Globe-Democrat.&#13;
Sunshine.&#13;
A reporter from China says that the&#13;
French, after being defeated at Lang-&#13;
Son, withdrew to Chu. Well, trie&#13;
heathens gave them something to Chu&#13;
on, no mistake.&#13;
A nen in a neighboring town haa&#13;
just died at the age of fifteen years.&#13;
Aha, that accounts for all the wayworn,&#13;
earthweary eggs I have met at&#13;
the breaktast table during the past decade.&#13;
The weight of a bushel of beans has&#13;
been . fixed by'"law at sixty pounds.&#13;
Reckoning from that basis a Bostoo&#13;
girl must be full ninety pounds heavie&#13;
on Sunday evenings than at auy other&#13;
time during the week.&#13;
A telegraph report says that the&#13;
daughter of a New Jersey farmer ran&#13;
off' with one of her father's hands. It&#13;
does not state which hand, but if i&#13;
was the one the old gentleman used&#13;
to slap mosquitos with it was a&#13;
most untflial act.&#13;
A Massachusetts boy recently swallowed&#13;
a larg« five-cornered jackstonft&#13;
and at l a s t accounts was doing-well.&#13;
If the small boy continues to evolve&#13;
_at.this rate he will soon supplant th&#13;
ostrich and billygoat in the affection*&#13;
of humorists.&#13;
According to the eternal fitness or&#13;
thing3 negroes should drive coal carts,.&#13;
cro9s-eyed men should be detectives,.&#13;
Bonr old maids should run pickles factories,&#13;
deaf m u t e s should be barbers*&#13;
and go-ahead boys should be district&#13;
messengers. But somehow it is o t h e r -&#13;
wise ordered.&#13;
The explosives used by the insurgents&#13;
of the United States of Colombia&#13;
must be very mild. During the seige&#13;
of Cartagena a shell entered a bedroom&#13;
and burst without disturbing t h e&#13;
slumbers of its four young lady occupants.&#13;
1 could do more execution, by&#13;
hurling a can of Chicago beef with m y&#13;
strong right arm.&#13;
An ostrich egg weighs nearly thirty&#13;
times as much as an average hen's&#13;
pgg, but to hear the hen's r e m a r k s «fter"&#13;
laying an e c g one would suppose&#13;
she had beat the ostrich out of sight.&#13;
It is a good deal the same way with,&#13;
human beings. Some will make m o r e&#13;
fuss and br.tg over their little thinshelled&#13;
achievements than o t h r r s d o '&#13;
over an invention or work that becomes&#13;
historical.—Jack's Sun.&#13;
placed upon the man. that a policeman&#13;
in plain clothes-Should be on du-&#13;
The Affliction of Money.&#13;
You have observed the sulcTde&#13;
of a broker named Kane, I believe.&#13;
The only importance of K a n e ' s life o r&#13;
death to me is the revival it brings u p&#13;
of his father-in-law. Several years pgo„&#13;
in Washington City, 1 s a w a k e e u little&#13;
man who made ehoes at Poughkeepsie„&#13;
N. Y., and had accumulated a considerable&#13;
a m o u n t of money in t h a t&#13;
buMness. He was nominally a Democrat,&#13;
but his money obtained him t h e&#13;
Republican support. While at Washington&#13;
he was generally against t h e&#13;
Democratic party on the sly. 1 k n e w&#13;
him a little and studied him with moderate&#13;
interest, and it was apparent t o&#13;
me that he was designing to have m e&#13;
write a speech for him, something&#13;
which I never did for any Congressman,&#13;
and my bashfulne&amp;s and the old&#13;
fellow's bashfulness, as studied by a n&#13;
outsider, would have matched almost&#13;
any courtship in comedy. I think henever&#13;
made his big speech, though heperhaps&#13;
got permission to have it&#13;
printed. He would take his creaturecomforts,&#13;
and yet was exceedingly&#13;
particular about the purity of thosenearest&#13;
to him. On one occasion, theold&#13;
nlau came tn from a Scotchy kiu*l&#13;
of a spree, which he sometimes indulged&#13;
in, and pointing with his thumbto&#13;
the next door, he said: "Gentlemen,&#13;
now be particular; I have offV&#13;
spring in t h e r e . " 1 had forgotten al!:&#13;
tv in the chanref during the services. \ about this poor old man with his sev-&#13;
The possibility that the church might ; eral hundred thousand dollars, until I&#13;
become at any moment the scene ot a ; saw the other day that his son-m-law&#13;
"sudden struggle between a stalwart&#13;
policeman ami an excited lunatic could&#13;
not be held one likely to aid a calm,&#13;
devotional spirit on the part of either&#13;
the vicar or those of the congregation&#13;
who were aware of the circumstances.&#13;
— Scottish h'evifiv.&#13;
rc'ordefT&#13;
favor to bolievt&#13;
your houst&#13;
behaved&#13;
I hope sou'11 th&gt; me&#13;
e o n i i n i on&#13;
*4w»-&#13;
it was^eOnmig at&#13;
If Ij^-ved furiously atyd&#13;
w q p H ^ t h a n a savage, as I&#13;
his know Ld-trC do forgive me, dear. , I'm&#13;
oormTig to beg pardon oiwny knoVs us&#13;
'^•MMI a*' they'll-., tjnp enough. Inclosed&#13;
nu&#13;
eemld'oiler her a n a u i e ^ y j a position,&#13;
He had wooed her honoraplv. and&#13;
i.&#13;
use find your vitig. Ever vhm-e,&#13;
/ ,Jl))IN\&#13;
account with*&#13;
The Sexes in the United States.&#13;
Almost all the Southern States have&#13;
a nearly equal number of each sex. In&#13;
Jlassachus^ttTIhe teTimle^iretween - ^&#13;
and 50 years of age exceed the males&#13;
of the same age by about 44,000. In&#13;
seventy-eight cities the excess of females&#13;
is 148,000. That illiteracy provajls&#13;
more among women is due probably&#13;
to the foreign population.&#13;
Women contribute less to pauperism,&#13;
thejpretfortion being 31,000 to 3(3,000.&#13;
The ratio of prison inmates stands&#13;
ft/,068 women to 54,190 males. W o m e n&#13;
are in excess among the insane; men&#13;
in excess among the idiotic," blind ~Smt~&#13;
deaf mutes. The proportion of women&#13;
who engage in occupations outside jof&#13;
the household is smaller in the United&#13;
States than in foreign countries, but&#13;
in no c o u n t r y . is the proportionate&#13;
engaged&#13;
had banished his wife from his presence,&#13;
and then cut his t h r o a t with a&#13;
carving knife, so it oeeur^ed to me&#13;
that nothing had saved myself and m y&#13;
friends except our failure to make thesame&#13;
amount of money. To a fool&#13;
money is a great affliction. The fool&#13;
is sure to do something wrong with'&#13;
money. He will either go and g a m b l e&#13;
or go a n d make another family, orbreak&#13;
somebody 1 s family, or keep a&#13;
faat- hnT*n n n d break his neck. You&#13;
endow a fool anil you equip a tireballoon&#13;
to go where it pleases,— Goth&#13;
in Boaton Globe.&#13;
V. S. ^Bon-'t mv&#13;
be iini.t be kv.rt'u'.ly t u r d , She knew | frum that day to this had hardly M&gt; | -Toor. dear soul, lufvwll he must agriculture&#13;
draw from ,the o\&#13;
rrrr&#13;
oi&gt; :Mvtta.&#13;
n u u r&#13;
trirl&#13;
-country&#13;
ier&#13;
occupations&#13;
-Of the&#13;
-rtr superior iudu*&#13;
equal to that in th&#13;
2.647,000 women in&#13;
is*, «&#13;
W o u l d n ' t Do.&#13;
" S o you d o n ' t believe in J a s p e r ' s r e -&#13;
ligion? , said the secretary of state, addressing&#13;
an old negro.&#13;
" N o r ' sah, I d o a n / '&#13;
" W h y ? . '&#13;
"Case ho failed tor pervide fur his&#13;
owu Iwusuhol'.-snTh; __ __&#13;
" H o w did he fail?"&#13;
" W a l l , sah, he tuck er sheep w h e n&#13;
or hog wnz jes' ez handy. Any body&#13;
o u g h t e r know d a t ' a hog will go much&#13;
furder 'uiotig chillun den er she&#13;
Lenum*—h44—y^ri—W hen&#13;
eep.&#13;
-04;:—tint a&#13;
occupations ire engaged in , pusson.&#13;
of thciu ' colored | Arkausu&#13;
steals a : / doan steal do fees', jes&#13;
him down ea er hippercrit an' er&#13;
l ' a t sorler uiau woli't&#13;
put&#13;
bad&#13;
w 'I r u y ir.&#13;
^ ^_i .&#13;
._ ./&#13;
" l,«-i»'\:.&#13;
V----,.-_. ',&#13;
:.-1,-.-&#13;
- ^ \&#13;
"=«r A '% *LW&#13;
*4u\&#13;
'•*yfi vjW"^1 ^ w " " "&#13;
i^f*» * ' &gt; * i&#13;
.1 - 1 , ^ ^ - . 1 .&#13;
i&#13;
V;&#13;
I&#13;
r&amp;r.&#13;
"i. v .&#13;
PlNCKNEY DESPATCH.&#13;
—— w—j^y..-x— -—-&#13;
J. L. NEWJIBK, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER&#13;
Hackney, Michigan, Thursday,&#13;
- &gt; : - •&#13;
July 18, 18W&#13;
Considering the Kelley matter and&#13;
the utterance at the Stallo banquet it&#13;
looks as if the memory of Victor&#13;
Emanuel and the status of King Humbert&#13;
are to play an important part in&#13;
bur politics.&#13;
Is it the fear of beintf reduced to&#13;
peppermint as. a tonic that throws the&#13;
0. G. into convulsions of ^rath? If&#13;
that is all, we have no hesitation in&#13;
assuring our neighbors that, in spite&#13;
of all that Dr. Leonard can do, the regular&#13;
old fashioned beverages will be&#13;
disturbed for some time to come.&#13;
Although the indications point to&#13;
a short wheat crop the country will,&#13;
in all probability, be blessed this season&#13;
by an nbundant yield of com,&#13;
cotton and oats. The condition of&#13;
corn is the highest since 1880, reports&#13;
from the cotton producting sections&#13;
are most promising, and probabilities&#13;
- a r e favorable for one of the largest&#13;
Crops of oats that this country has&#13;
ever raised.&#13;
Secretary Manning's order regarding&#13;
the transit of goods across Canada&#13;
was not as objectionable as. the&#13;
first telegraphic reports made it appear.&#13;
I t has been customary heretofore&#13;
for vessels to drop down, say from&#13;
Port Huron to Windsor, and there&#13;
unload a cargo into cars which would&#13;
then at once be sealed up by a Unit-&#13;
« ^d States custom officer from Detroit,&#13;
and the carload would be hauled to&#13;
" Suspension bridge and into the United&#13;
States without payment of duties&#13;
either in Canada ox in this country.&#13;
It is this practice that has been stopped&#13;
by the secretary's order. The&#13;
right of cars loaded in this country&#13;
and sealed here to pass across Canada&#13;
and into the United States again&#13;
without paying duty is one provided&#13;
for by the act of July 28, I860, scc-&#13;
, tion 3006 of the United States revised&#13;
statutes. The amount of business&#13;
affected by the secretary's order is&#13;
small compared with that supposed to&#13;
be interferred .with at first. As the&#13;
Post stated Thursday, it seemed impossible&#13;
that Secretary Manning&#13;
should issue so arbitrary and injurious&#13;
drti order as that which was first attributed&#13;
to him.—Post.&#13;
The practical abandonment of-the&#13;
campaign against the Arabs is likely&#13;
to have even more serious results in&#13;
•t.&#13;
the future than have befallen the&#13;
Egyptians and English during the&#13;
past few years. Cardinal Lavigerie,&#13;
who is said to be the best living authority&#13;
in regard to the extent and&#13;
influence of Mohammedanism in Africa,&#13;
savs that "the influence of El&#13;
Mahdi, especially the influence of his&#13;
successes, will be immeasurably great&#13;
throughout all Islamic Africa, since&#13;
victory is to the wild, fanatical tribes&#13;
conclusive demonstration of the divine&#13;
character and mission of the&#13;
prophet." There are at present, he&#13;
says "from the Soudan £o tfie Niger&#13;
and the Senegal more than sixty,million&#13;
Mussulmans—that is to say half&#13;
savage men—to whom Mohammedanism&#13;
has been an elevation, and at the&#13;
same time the religion that best suits&#13;
their instincts." .No one can think&#13;
without misgivings what this mass ot&#13;
men would do if ever they find chiefs&#13;
to lead them, and obtain modern firearms&#13;
and learn how to use them; and&#13;
England has foes who will gladly supply&#13;
these needed articles if the opporfcunity&#13;
offers.&#13;
enjoyment through 'the year, Whtn&#13;
this may be done by processes so simple&#13;
asTo~be_possible in every neighborhood&#13;
then the grower may hope to&#13;
realize a more adequate price for&#13;
what he raises. The soldering it up&#13;
in tin cans, as now done, is a very&#13;
crude, and in many respects, unstisfactory&#13;
way to do what we hope to&#13;
live to see much better done in due&#13;
time. Ho! you American inventor,&#13;
why do you not set about devising&#13;
something far more in keeping with&#13;
the spirit of the age than the clumsy&#13;
and in every way primitive method of&#13;
preserving fruits fresh and pnlatable&#13;
for the table by putting it in a tin&#13;
can and soldering it up? There is a&#13;
better method, and it is now time to&#13;
be finding the secret out and making&#13;
vour fortune bv it.—Cin. Times Star.&#13;
1776. 1885.&#13;
When fruit is produced with such&#13;
Abundance as this year all over the&#13;
country it is practically impossible to&#13;
find profitable sale for it all, As stated&#13;
a day or two since our strawberry&#13;
crop began to ripen on the Gulf of&#13;
Mexico and continued all the Way to&#13;
Northern Michigan, and the same&#13;
may be said likewise of reaches and&#13;
acmie other fruits mid in the mM-ket*&#13;
of Cincinnati. The genius of the&#13;
American inventor has got tb devise&#13;
more perfect method, ^ r e ^ S ^ C ^ S ! %**"*&#13;
tfefe frttit fre«h and luscious for our For Sale at WINCWELL'S DRIJG"STORE&#13;
Biicklen's Arnica Salve.&#13;
THE BEST SALVE in the world for&#13;
Cut" Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt&#13;
Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped&#13;
Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all SKIII&#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 rents pe_r_box.&#13;
For Sale, at WINCHELL'S DRUG STORE.&#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 Kidney Complaints and&#13;
Rheumatism than any fcnovvn remedy.&#13;
Its continued series ot wonderful cures&#13;
in all climates has made it known—a&amp;&#13;
a safe and reliable agent to emplov&#13;
against all aches and pains, which are&#13;
the forerunners of more serious dis'&#13;
orders. It acts speedily ,and surely,&#13;
always relieving suffering and often&#13;
saving life. The protection it affords&#13;
by its timely use on rheumatism, kidney&#13;
affection, and all aches and pains,&#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. x ^ r o&#13;
person can afford to be without it, antk.&#13;
those who have once used -itnever. wilLIt&#13;
is absolutely certain_.in its remedial&#13;
effects, and will always cure when&#13;
cures are possible.&#13;
Call at WINCHELL'S DRUG STOKE and&#13;
get a memorandum book giving more&#13;
full details of the curative properties&#13;
of this wonderful medicine.&#13;
t&#13;
A Walking Skeleton.&#13;
Mr. E. Springer, of- Mechani^sburg,&#13;
Pa., writes: "I was afflicted with lung&#13;
fever and abcess on luncrs, and reduced&#13;
to a walking skeleton. Got a free&#13;
trial bottle of Dr. King's New Discovery&#13;
tor Consumption, which did me so&#13;
much good that I bought a dollar bottle-.&#13;
After using three bottles, found&#13;
myself once more a man, completely&#13;
restored to health, with a hearty appetite,&#13;
and a gain in flesh of 48 lbs."&#13;
Call at Winchell's Drug Store and&#13;
get a free trial bottle of this certain&#13;
cure for all lung diseases. Large bottle$&#13;
l.&#13;
Thousands Say So.&#13;
Mr. T. W. Atkins, Girard, Kansas,&#13;
writes: "I never hesitate to recommend&#13;
your Electric Bitters to my customers,&#13;
tttey give entire satisfaction&#13;
and are rapid sellers.'' Electric Bitters&#13;
are the purest and best medicine&#13;
known-and will positively cure kidney&#13;
and liver complaints. Purify the&#13;
blood and regulate the' bowe.s. No&#13;
family can afford to be without them.&#13;
They will save hundreds of dollars in&#13;
doctor's bills every vear. Sold at 50&#13;
cents a- bottle at Winchell's Drug&#13;
Store?&#13;
Kellogg's Columbian Oil is composed&#13;
of vegetable products in a highly&#13;
concentrated form, and »acts directly&#13;
on the kidneys. It cures rheumatism&#13;
ard all other aches and pains.&#13;
The kidneys cannot perform their&#13;
proper office when diseased and at the&#13;
same time expel the impurities that&#13;
should pass off through their proper&#13;
action. A few doses ot Keilogg's Columbian&#13;
Oil will convince the most&#13;
skeptical that it acts directly on the&#13;
kidneys.&#13;
t h e greatest Medicine of the Age.&#13;
KelloggV Columbian Oil is a powerful&#13;
remedy, which can be taken internally&#13;
as well as externally by the tendered&#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 in 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;
fallowing diseases: Rheumatism or&#13;
Kidney Disease in any form, Headache,&#13;
Toothache, Earache, Neuralgia,&#13;
Sprains, Bruises, Flesh Wounds, Bunions.&#13;
Burns. Corns. Spinal' Affiantim™&#13;
HERE WE ARE AGAIN !&#13;
With a larger stock of-—&#13;
DRUGS AND M E D I C I N E S&#13;
than any house in Livingston County.&#13;
We carry a full line of the latest FL UIDS, EXTRACTS and other preparations&#13;
known to the Drug Trade; also as fine a line of&#13;
FANCY GOODS and TOILET ARTICLES as you&#13;
will find anywhere in the State.&#13;
In Stationery and Box Paper we have a complete stock. We have the boss&#13;
Nickle Cigar"and don't you forget it." •—&#13;
W A L L P A P E R , C E I L I N G D E C O R A T I O N S &amp; W I N D O W S H A D E &gt;&#13;
in ill the latest patterns. We give "Kindall's Treatese on the Horse" to every&#13;
horse-owner who purchase goods of us. Arctic Soda" Water constantly on&#13;
draught, Oranges, Lemons and confectionery of all kinds.&#13;
"Corner Drug Store." SIGLER BROS.&#13;
pURNjTORETpUROTTUREr&#13;
When in want of anything in the line of Furniture, such as&#13;
BEDROOM SUITS, PARLOR SUITS&#13;
LOUNGES, BUREAUS, BOOKCASES, TABLES&#13;
STANDS, CHAIRS, ETC. ETC. COME&#13;
~?=AND SEE ME.====&#13;
-A. SPECIALTY.&#13;
COFFINS;-,CASKETS, ROBES and FUNERAL SUPPLIES of all kinds&#13;
constantly on hand. Respectflluy,&#13;
L. H. BEEBE.&#13;
0 0 0 R S A N D B L I N D S ,&#13;
GLASS, NAILS, PAINT,&#13;
.- f.&#13;
Colic, Crammng Pains, Cholera Mor&#13;
bus, Flux, Diarrhoea, Coughs, Colds,"&#13;
Bronchial Affection, Catarrh, and all&#13;
BUILDING PAPER&#13;
AND ALL&#13;
PATENTS teifnTuJNe Nto &amp;ne tC aOs. .S oofl ictihtoor s8 &lt;f'TorJC l'NjtTti«rnif!t «A. MCKavHeIaCtAs.V T, rcaodne- M- arkk-gs',, - CC• *oopp*yy rrilgghiutss-,,* If ,o, rr *th-ueu —*1'•u Ju-U" J dH aSntadt eBso, oCka aobuodua,t&#13;
England, Frauoe, Geriiiany. etc.&#13;
Patents sent free. '1 'hirty-joven^years'experience.&#13;
InPtabteeSnct*iK obNtTaimneod AthMrKoBuIgChA M.VU. tNhNe &amp;U rCgOe. aatr, eb enaott,iacnedd&#13;
most widely circulated hclentlflo peper. •*.»» year.&#13;
Weekly. Splendid engravings and interacting Information.&#13;
Specimen copy at the HcieuilJlo A men*&#13;
teeni sent free. Addresa MUNNACOy g c u w r m o&#13;
AMJUUCAM OiHce. -all Broadway, New York,&#13;
popular Weekly ne&#13;
_. _ .. . necnauics, engjneeri&#13;
covories, inventions and patent* ever published.&#13;
_ The most , , .&#13;
devoted to science, mechanics, engineer!&#13;
number illustrated with splendid engraving*&#13;
publication, f urninhes a most valuable enqycloM«&gt;«*&#13;
information which no person should be without. Tne&#13;
ity of the ScncNTryio AMKBICAX is mon that&#13;
ilation nearly equals that of all other papers pi&#13;
a combined. Price, $3.20 a year. Discount *.&#13;
popular&#13;
its circulat&#13;
its clubs or . . Clnbe. Sold by all newsdealers.&#13;
iiahers; No. 361 Broadway. N. Y. ATENTS.&#13;
and have prepared more than One&#13;
dred T h o u s a n d application* *&#13;
ents in the United states and&#13;
MUNN « CO., Pub-&#13;
Mnnn A Oo. have ale*&#13;
had Thirty-Seven&#13;
Year*' practice belore&#13;
the Patent Office,&#13;
" ,o r Hpuatn-- foreign&#13;
. count„r.i.e*s„. Caveats, Trade-Marks. Copy.&#13;
rights. Assignments, and all other 9*Mf*&#13;
or securing to inventors their rigMf^BUke&#13;
United States, Canada, England,&#13;
Germany and other foreign countries,&#13;
at short BOttee-aad-ea reasonable *&#13;
Information as to obtaining patents c |&#13;
flven without charge. Hand-books of i&#13;
ion aent free. Patents obtained throng* Hnna&#13;
— A Co. are noticed in the Scientiflo Americani free,&#13;
rhe advantage of such notice is well understood brail&#13;
Mrsonswho winh to dispose of their patents.&#13;
AddreesMUNN A CO., Offioe Ocixsnrio AaTCTMlIt,&#13;
Bl Broadway, New York.&#13;
E f i f&#13;
si&#13;
HILMMIBE , sncrevuib*****.. fjfcO-* -¾ *A&gt;:^eM*Me^eWe^e^e^e^a»aBeBllll^a^ae^e^a»^— BesLHewspaper ()" l i s CLASS&#13;
IS T B I&#13;
KIN0S OF BUILDING MATERIAL&#13;
AT F. L. BROWN'S.&#13;
IN MICHIGAN,&#13;
11&#13;
Published ft very Thursday&#13;
at $2 per year; or,&#13;
Nine HiMor$1.00 A ldre« KtgM'paam KeUat*&#13;
newnpnper, II..VV AAMl..t*t MRttKcMufPtCKC TS V fM«1T -&#13;
MWII am the OLltEtt m«titt&gt;era •/1fee/email?&#13;
nrr ttfHtfhtcU. Karh itHmeer emntmtnm&#13;
fifty-mix rolmnn* trell-/tll^«i teitft (fee eeef&#13;
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inmtruet and benefit e v e r y recMfer.&#13;
Sunday-School Department,&#13;
UNEXCELLED.&#13;
Conducted by Rm&gt;. J. M STTFLEB, D. A , at&#13;
Cffjeer Theult%l«d Mamillary, PcmMfcj&#13;
tMOMeetne rB xBpoTmITitMfo.nKmtV Ba ire Bpirbml*t areJaTte fee mnm&#13;
ly/*r th*CHUM9TIAMMJBlLAJU&gt;mmA&#13;
p*mr i n tee etfcer pmp«r.&#13;
Csf^Suavle ooplee for examination or i&#13;
Ttnununo FKBB upon applloatton. Bead for tbeaa,&#13;
Addreea, OHBItTIAK HBBAXD,&#13;
C ^ ^ f e n l e Wmn$*d* Denote, Hftm I&#13;
&gt;. f&#13;
\&#13;
^&#13;
r&#13;
HOWELL COMMENTS,&#13;
from th« Republican.&#13;
James Basing and James Amos.&#13;
near neighbors in Mariop, had a quarrel&#13;
and the tormer wanted Justice&#13;
Kiddie t3 place Amos under bonds&#13;
to keep J h e peace. Basing couldn't&#13;
make his case strong enough and A.&#13;
was discharged.&#13;
Andrew Crawford, of this place, for&#13;
some years past a brakeraan on the f).&#13;
L. &amp; N., had. his right foot badly crushed&#13;
last Friday noun, by slipping and&#13;
f i l i n g under the cars at Trowbridge.&#13;
k *f he foot-war-am pufcated by the comfcMiny's&#13;
physician the same day. I t&#13;
will be so me time yet before he can&#13;
be brought home.&#13;
Harry, son of Orange Stone, ot this&#13;
village, was a promising young man&#13;
of 21 years, and for about a year past&#13;
acted as clerk in Hickey &amp; Goodnow's&#13;
•tore, severing his connection there&#13;
- ^ * n e 27th, to become a salesman on&#13;
,f (the road for an eastern firm.&#13;
On Tuesday morning of last week ne&#13;
started west and Wednesday wrote h\&#13;
people that he was in Chicago and&#13;
would start farther west the next&#13;
day. I t seems that he was not feeling&#13;
well and remained. F n lay morn in g&#13;
^ j e arose, went to bteakfast but did&#13;
not eat anything. He then requested&#13;
the clerk to have_ jus bej, made as he&#13;
did not feel well. For some time past&#13;
he has often complained of pains in&#13;
his stomach, and it has been his custom&#13;
to take a little morphine, which&#13;
would generally relieve him. On this&#13;
occasion he-took too much and probably&#13;
died without an effort as servants&#13;
were constantfy in the hallway near&#13;
his room, and heard no noise. Missing&#13;
him at dinner and supper the&#13;
« l e r k a t 7 : 3 0 o'clock p. M. went to his&#13;
room to call him. The door being&#13;
locked he looked over the transom iind&#13;
found him lying dead.&#13;
The next mornins? seeing mention of&#13;
the circumstance in the papers, Frank&#13;
Kelley, formerly of Howell, at once&#13;
telegraphed to Mr. Stone, that being&#13;
the first news he had received.&#13;
Mr. Stone left for Chicago Saturda&#13;
evening and was present at thfv-ftost&#13;
It was discovered last week that the&#13;
arm ot Mr. Z. M. Piilmerton was not&#13;
properJy .set, having failed to knit.&#13;
Mr. Palmerton went to Howell last&#13;
Saturday and had the ends of the&#13;
broken bone irritated and je-set. It&#13;
may be necessary to open tho arm and&#13;
saw the bcnes oft,a trifle, but we hope&#13;
that he may not have to suffer such an&#13;
operation to be performed.&#13;
C:~&#13;
SOUTH LYON DOTSFrom&#13;
(he Picket.&#13;
Married, July 4th, 1885, Mr. Wm.&#13;
H. l^entiee, of Whitmore Lake, to&#13;
Mi«s Kittie M. Belding, late of Big&#13;
Rapids, Mich., Rev. Mr. Calkins officiating.&#13;
Frank Meyer, ot Oxford, had his leg&#13;
blown off with a fragment of a cannon&#13;
Saturday. A salute »vas beisg fired&#13;
and Meyer was standing close to the&#13;
cannon when it exploded, a iragment&#13;
.Striking his leg and tearing it completely&#13;
from his body. He died soon&#13;
after.&#13;
While Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Lane&#13;
were returning from the celebration&#13;
Saturday, their horse became frightened&#13;
at Mrs. Lane's parasol and ran&#13;
J_away, throwing Mrs. Lane from the&#13;
car r i age "ana*d i s 1 o eating" he r"i:eft s1ro~u1 -&#13;
der. Dr. Brown w*as called and set&#13;
the injured portion, and she is now&#13;
improving rapid4y-.&#13;
Carries Anderson, brother of Mrs. T.&#13;
A. Sayre, who has been gradually failing&#13;
with consumption for the past&#13;
year, died Monday morning at six&#13;
o'clock. He was a young man of •moist&#13;
excellent qualities, and just in the&#13;
prime of life, being but 33 years of&#13;
age, his birthday occurring the day he&#13;
died. His funeral was held at the&#13;
Presbyterian church Tuesday afternoon,&#13;
Rev. S. Calkins conducting the&#13;
services. A large' number of friends&#13;
and relatives attended the funeral, and&#13;
one sister, Mrs. Mitchell, of Freeport,&#13;
111., arrived on tlie evening train Tuesday,&#13;
too late to attend the last sad rites.&#13;
mortem Sunday, the verdictl&gt;eiug that&#13;
he died from an oyer dose of morphine.&#13;
H i s ' remains arrived here Monday&#13;
morjungand were at once interred in&#13;
beautiful cemetery.&#13;
From th« Democrat.&#13;
A new school house will be built in&#13;
District No. 2, Iosco.&#13;
Mrs. McNamee, an old settler of&#13;
&lt;}reen Oak, died last week, aged 74&#13;
years.&#13;
It i« estimated that 975 acres in the&#13;
towi.ship of Brighton are planted to&#13;
beans this season.&#13;
John Webb, living near Williamston,&#13;
received a sunstroke on the 1st&#13;
inst, from which he died.&#13;
Mrs. Sarah Head, of Webberville,&#13;
died la*t week. The deceased was a&#13;
daughter of 0 . H. Jones, of Fowlerville.&#13;
Mrs. John Herbst, who has been sick&#13;
over a year, was conveyed to St. Luke's&#13;
Hospital in Detroit one day last week.&#13;
She bore the journey w&lt;»ll. The citilzens&#13;
of Ho Weil have raised a consder&#13;
able sum to pay her bills in that institution.&#13;
A daughter of Willis Fenner, of&#13;
Deerfield, while picking wild strawberries&#13;
on the 2d inst., was bitten by&#13;
_a massauga. Promp_t t emedies saved&#13;
the child.&#13;
F0WLERV1LLE PARAGRAPHS&#13;
From the Review.&#13;
"MrrW . H. Sprencer^ornrerly-of this&#13;
place, lies very low at his residence in&#13;
^Detroit&#13;
An infant daughter of H . J. Van&#13;
-Oittette, of Webberville, died on Monday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Younglove were&#13;
called to Dansville on Friday to attend&#13;
the funeral of his brother's wife, who&#13;
resides at that place.&#13;
A telegram received here on Monday&#13;
announced the serious illness of&#13;
Mrs. Cornelia Chase, of Cherry Creek,&#13;
N. Y* Mrs. Chase is a sister of C. E.&#13;
and J . P. Spencer, of this place, and&#13;
Dr. H. N. Spencer, of Howell.&#13;
Joseph, son ot Edward Scully, of&#13;
near Webberville, died on Friday of&#13;
STOCKBRIDGE NOTES,&#13;
f r o m t^-Soln.&#13;
arles Rose wintered one swarm&#13;
of uees through and has had three&#13;
—at the—&#13;
P1NCKNEY ELEVATOR&#13;
WHEAT,&#13;
BEwisrwootrrrc:&#13;
For which the highest market&#13;
- #^w4il~be-pau&#13;
price&#13;
77/0(9. READ, - Pinckney,&#13;
MACKINAC.&#13;
The Xoat DeUchtftal SUMMER TOUR&#13;
\ filMa StetBMn. Low Sates. '&#13;
Vour Tripe per Week Between&#13;
DETROIT AND MACKINAC&#13;
And avery Week Day Between *»&#13;
DETROIT AND CLEVELAND&#13;
I la»t week, of spinel fever, aged five i write far our&#13;
•years. The funeral services were held •'Picturesque Micklnsc," Illustrated.&#13;
I t the catholic church in Oceola, Rev. j 0nMa* * * * * * * * * ***** " » •&#13;
Father Doberty, of Brighton, official-j Detroit A Cleveland Steam Nav. Co.&#13;
. * • C. D. WMITCOMB, OCN. PMt, ACT.,&#13;
Ing.v * &gt; DETROIT, Ml CM.&#13;
NEW GOODS, NEW GOODS,&#13;
G-O O X&gt; S ,&#13;
WXSX- SIB BRT W mm&#13;
NEW LAWNS, CHAMBRAYS, GINGHAMS, PRINTS,&#13;
WORSTED DRESS GOODS, LACES, GLOVES, ETC.&#13;
A fine line of PARASOLS including&#13;
-Wl' THE POPULAR COOCWNG PARASOLS. ® Y ^&#13;
We are constantly in receipt of New Goods in every Department.&#13;
Everything marked in plain figures. The lowest possible&#13;
price guaranteed on every article.&#13;
ABUTTER and EGGS wanted at the highest Market Price in exchange&#13;
for GOODS. No trouble to show goods whether you want&#13;
to buy or not. JJorae and seeJis. _ ^&#13;
LAKIN &amp; SYKES.&#13;
s FARMERS, READ THIS - * - .&#13;
The undersigned having a large stock of all kinds of Lumber, Lath and&#13;
Shingles at their lumber yard in Pincknev, have decided to reduce their&#13;
stock and for the 3 S T E 2 t T S I X T - ^ r &gt; - A T 5 T S will sell&#13;
A.T&#13;
^ M C K BOTTOM PRICES.&#13;
Parties about to build will find it to their interest to get our prices. We manufacture&#13;
our own lumber and shingles and will sell according to the times.&#13;
We keep on hand a fall &gt;tock of Flooring, Siding and Barn Boards, also all&#13;
swarms from them.&#13;
Born, July 5tli, to Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Wm. Cantrill, a daughter.&#13;
Lightning struck a tree in Lyndsy's&#13;
woods last Wednesday nig lit.&#13;
The second annual Farmer's picnic&#13;
will be held at Pleasant Lake Aug. I t ,&#13;
as twelve townships will be represented&#13;
a big time is expected.&#13;
C. W. VanEtten let a rig the other&#13;
day to a fdlow who just wanted to go&#13;
to Plainfield, and the next he heard of&#13;
his "ig was that it was at South Lyon.&#13;
Th,e fellow had skipped.&#13;
The other day as Edwin R. Hawley.&#13;
of Bunkerhill, was drawing logs to&#13;
Fitchburg he was doing something&#13;
about his wagon while it was in motion,&#13;
the wagon run over hitn, dislocated&#13;
his shoulder, and bruised up Vi is*j&#13;
arm and body badly. Dr. Conlan was&#13;
called and set the shoulder and at&#13;
present he is doing well.&#13;
lengths of Bill Stuff and Timbers, and on all bills will give special prices.&#13;
You will find our Agent, A. L. HOYT, always on hand. Come anU see us,&#13;
we will satisfy you that we mean business.&#13;
QUAKER Is ih.e Best&#13;
TABLE SAUCE. Thousands of a r t i c l e arc now manufactured t h a t&#13;
in former years L-iJ to be imported, paying high&#13;
i m p o r t d u t y as i t is now bciDji d"tio c u Lea &amp; Per*&#13;
i rius tible sauce ; tb« QUAKER 'IABUK SAi:c*tmke«&#13;
i t s p i a c o ; it has bt-ea pronnuin't &lt;k»by competent&#13;
j mines j u s t aw good and evtn Ut'.n. The Q U A K E *&#13;
grwrr&#13;
T H I Oldest. Brightest, and best of Western Weeklies.&#13;
Eight pages, fifty-six columns, fine paper, new type.&#13;
clear print, »nd the most entertaining pnper ofltred&#13;
the reading public. Suits' every locality, discusses&#13;
tubjecta with fairness, contains ail the news of tho&#13;
world attractively presea cd, and is withou a competitor&#13;
in general excellence as a family paper. It&#13;
coats but&#13;
O I T E S O L I i A B .A. T T E .A. R ,&#13;
and every subscriber receives free of charge, postage&#13;
paid, a copy of&#13;
THE&#13;
SAUCE i.as Slowly uuT surely ^aiiirM great importance&#13;
and is replacing the VTV (wiHznporled&#13;
sauce on the fehelf of t h e prever, the tables&#13;
of the restaurant aud t h a tables of the liili a n d&#13;
poor IIILU, preatly p r i Z ' d a u d relished \&gt;y all on&#13;
account of its piquancy, arvina, ta*te, strength&#13;
and pui-ent'S'?. Tho m v e u t o r h a s by years of&#13;
study of tan secret virtues Contained in the aromatic&#13;
s p u e s cf t h " Itidiea and China. *uch s s&#13;
mace, nutmeg, eitiiiiuuotr, penuii'.e Jamaicagiijgpr.&#13;
and peppers and buds of t r e e s ui.known to moat&#13;
men. aud bv long practice succeeded to combines&#13;
their extracts in such a liquid form as we now&#13;
find it of agreeable taste, and so invigorating a s&#13;
to be taken in place of stomach bitters. By manufacturing&#13;
this sauce here, heavy i m p o r t d u t i e s&#13;
and freights arc saved, a n d it is sold a t a lower&#13;
figure to the dealer, wlio making a better profit on&#13;
Quaker Sauce cau Bell it to t h e c o n s u m e r cheaper&#13;
thau h e very best imported articleiiardly e q u a l .&#13;
int.' o u r s . If your grocer does not keep it, w r i t e&#13;
us for i rices, etc. Sold in bottles or by the gallon.&#13;
CHARM MANUFACTURING CO.,&#13;
Sole Proprietort and Afanufmcturert,&#13;
1 Q 6 A 1 0 S S . £ J f c T . , S t , L o * i » - J U .&#13;
copy&#13;
TIMES ILLUSTRATED HAND-BOOK,&#13;
alone worth the price of subscription. The Rand-book&#13;
is a publication or one hundred pages of useful and entertaining&#13;
reading matter, especially prepared and&#13;
published for the subscribers ofthe ''Weekly Times-"&#13;
All who take the paper are delighted with it, and the&#13;
Hand-book wil) be equally satisfactory. Send for specimen&#13;
copy of the paper. Address, THE TIMES,&#13;
*• 230 Walnut St., Ciacuwan, 0 .&#13;
THE CINCINNATI TIMES-STAR,&#13;
Is the best and cheapest daily psper published in the&#13;
West. Eight pages—rorty«eigtit columns—and only six&#13;
dollars a year, or twelve cents a week. Itis independent&#13;
irrpolitics, but aims to be iair jn ryerything, and&#13;
just to nil parties, individuals, sectior j , and nationalities.&#13;
It you want all the news atrructiveiy and honestly&#13;
presented, subscribe for it. THK LABI/EST .CIBCCUITIOH&#13;
0» AST fAFUS IN r i M ' i s v i ' 1 .&#13;
Address TftF. TIMES-PTAR,&#13;
r aaaWalantrtt.. C r v c n * x i , 0 .&#13;
H H W O O L .&#13;
CASH FOR WOOL! , . r*&gt;&#13;
The undersigned respectfully announce to their friends and patrons that&#13;
they have completed arrangements for all the&lt;&#13;
I Rose Leaf, Fins Cut,&#13;
, Navy Clippings&#13;
! and Snuffs&#13;
ijyv&#13;
Having rented D. Richards'&#13;
BLACKSMITH SHOP i&#13;
we are now prepared to do all&#13;
kinds of&#13;
R E P A I R I CT-Gk -&#13;
Including Horse•SiioeTirg'r&#13;
Machine and Steel' Work done to&#13;
order.&#13;
PAUKER &amp; SPEARS.&#13;
Each and every one can spare. Please remember for&#13;
THE NEXT THIRTY DAYS!&#13;
we shall need all the money we can get.&#13;
ANDERSON STATION!&#13;
Is now rilled to overflowing with a&#13;
fresh, new and complete stock of Dry&#13;
Every thing.in our store will be sold w a y l S ^ T S J f t f n W f c&#13;
{C^down to the lowest notch/ilSg I™*pect™&#13;
A. PRESENT 1&#13;
Onr readers for VI df&gt;nts i n poat&amp;ge s t a m p s t o&#13;
iav for mailim: and w r a p p i n g , find n a m e s of t w o&#13;
look agents, will receive FREE a STE&gt;L F»«&gt;»N P«HLOH&#13;
E^oRAy,»o of all OUR PRESIDENTS, i n c l u d i n g&#13;
CLEVELAND, s»ize * . ' x * inches, worth $4.00.&#13;
ADDRESS ELDER PUB, Co., CHICAGO, I I I&#13;
THEFARMERS'&#13;
STORE,&#13;
AT&#13;
; , Respectfully Yours,&#13;
TEEPLE 4^ CAD WELL.&#13;
PUSTUrofrT^ry JX73STB 1 5 , 1 8 8 5 -&#13;
Th^i lad to* especially will. fin&#13;
their interest to see our novelties in.&#13;
Dress Good^ before buyttTli? elsewhere.^&#13;
Every variety of country produce \&#13;
taken in exchange for poods or money.'&#13;
, •, JAMES T. EAMAN &amp; COf&#13;
•1 •;i&#13;
'I&#13;
"I&#13;
i ]&#13;
J --&#13;
giilihtwj gispattff.&#13;
J. L. NKWKIUK Puhlihher.&#13;
Satoieo »' the Po»u&gt;»»* u M\ OI«U*I&gt; Ktaitet.&#13;
TIMELY TOPICS.&#13;
S I R M I C I I / V K L E D W A R D H I C K S - B E A C H&#13;
who vras made-Chancellor of the Ex^&#13;
chequer upon the accession of the&#13;
Marquisof_Salisbury_to the Fretuiership&#13;
of England, was born in 1837. He&#13;
was sent to Eton and Christ church to&#13;
be educated, and in 1861 received the&#13;
degree of Bachelor of Arts, HBTs first&#13;
spurs in&#13;
when he was elected to serve in Parliament,&#13;
representing East Gloucestershire,&#13;
win h district ho still represents.&#13;
Being elected as a Conservative, he has&#13;
never wavered from his faith and has&#13;
stock"to h's party in both prosperi y&#13;
and adversity.&#13;
PRESIDENT CLEVELAND is undei-stood&#13;
to be dissatisfied with the^way in which&#13;
the Utah commission hai executed its&#13;
duties. Its somwhat tentative, timid&#13;
methods are attributed to the fact that&#13;
•the members of the commission are all&#13;
old men. The president thinks that&#13;
the work of the commis-ion might be&#13;
much more vigorously done. He regards&#13;
polygamy as an unmixed evil&#13;
which ought to be stinsped out, and he&#13;
does not think the commission does its&#13;
part in the attempt to effect that end.&#13;
It is understood ihat after his summer&#13;
vacation the president will reorganize&#13;
the Utah commission, with a view to&#13;
more elective work on its part. There&#13;
are now three Republicans and two&#13;
Democrats on the commission. They&#13;
will probably all hi removed, and&#13;
younger, more vigorous men appointed&#13;
in their places. The prcsiden* is determined&#13;
that all the anti-polygamy&#13;
CONDENSED NEWS.&#13;
Great Barrington, Mass., hud a fclOO.OOOflre&#13;
.July 7.&#13;
Lake Shore's semi-annual statement show*&#13;
a dendeney of *S5,t&gt;0(5.&#13;
Over 100 jicr?ons have been lynched in Texas&#13;
ID the past six months.&#13;
(icn Lew Wallace, ex-1'tilted States minister&#13;
to Turkey, has rctui IUHI to America.&#13;
Bi£ Bear and a portion of his humi have hern&#13;
t.aptured. The vest of the band will surrender.&#13;
John Russell Young s'nys China does all in&#13;
her power to prevent emigration to the Lulled&#13;
States.&#13;
Spanish Americans want the Vs»ited .State'&#13;
fjovernment to buy the northern tier of state*&#13;
a Mexico.&#13;
Employes in the Cleveland rolling mill arf&#13;
on a strike. Over 15,000 men are idle in consequence.&#13;
Prof Karnard of the Vanderhilt observatory&#13;
at Nashville, Tenn., discovered a new comet on&#13;
the evening of July 7.&#13;
Dr. R. II. (filbert, projector of the New York&#13;
elevated railroad system, is dead, lie had long&#13;
been troubled with'cbroific diarrluca.&#13;
Secretary Whitney has revoked the ordei&#13;
prohibiting naval othoeis from hnviny their&#13;
wives with tbi^u while at foreign por:s,&#13;
The doctors say John McCullou^h 1 as progressive&#13;
paralvs-s of the brain, which will had&#13;
to imbecility niul.d.'uth in u year o&gt;- t.\&lt;&gt;.&#13;
Maxwell, the man suspeetet] of the inurdei&#13;
of Prellar wlio-e derd body was tVim.l in u&#13;
trunk in a St. l.ouis bond, is making preparations&#13;
for a loin; fmht.&#13;
Mrs. Dudley, the assailant n( &lt;V!Wo*'iir&#13;
Ros.-a, rerently acquitted on tl'.e ti'roinid of in&#13;
sanitv hus b.'cn sent totlie asylum at Middle&#13;
ton, ST.'Y.. until pronounced si;ne.&#13;
Canada has ordered new ^uarantiti'1 Tegtr&#13;
latioiisiiiiainst Mediterrane:i'n and Loudon vessels,&#13;
to remain in force till (October V&gt; next&#13;
Victoria and Sub.iey arc made ij'.uirantir.e stations.&#13;
The .strike of Chk-a^o street car iiriwrs anc&#13;
conduct'ws still &lt;-ontinues. The eom;ia:iy refuse&#13;
to yield to th.' demand of 11 to striker.- and&#13;
the belief i&gt; ^jejieral that a gvea' struggle is&#13;
pending.&#13;
The insult to our (lag in Salt Lake City, was&#13;
under the direct ion of the Mormon church.&#13;
Leading Mormons say half mas, was th ; prooer&#13;
-place fur it, as the Monmms have only hall of&#13;
their rinhts.&#13;
politics were w o n in 1864, f - - r h c N&gt;w York Conmnvhtl Bulletin estimates&#13;
the aEwrcjrate lire ivu.-t" of ti:e country&#13;
for June at $&gt;-».750 t&gt;0J&gt;. The total lire Josses in&#13;
the United Slates tor the first half ol 1-iSJ ja&#13;
*.\0,75. .),0 W.&#13;
A bill ip before tl&gt;c Canadian parliament&#13;
making a charge of $50 on -eai-h Chiin'inan entering&#13;
the Dominion, and restricting vessel?&#13;
bringing in Chines-' immigrants to one foi&#13;
every 50 tons of tonnage.&#13;
Ehen E. Rexf.&gt;rd. author of -'Sijver Tares, 1¾&#13;
Among the Gold," and other popaiae »ou«js,&#13;
has been a[&gt;poiuted postmaster at Shioctoa,&#13;
Wis. The salary of the postmaster ot Shiocton,&#13;
Wis., is $24:2 a year.&#13;
A visitor at \h- White house the other dav&#13;
asserted that he was on a divine mission, iff&#13;
was arrayed in whit" linen and ornamented&#13;
with llowers. He saLl he hud a residence in&#13;
heaven aiid Another In CalifonriHr^&#13;
A. J. HuneU". a miner, brought in news&#13;
from Fronteras of an enja'eiivnt between the&#13;
Indians and whites.:n miles southeast of l-'ronteras.&#13;
in which he reported .(3 Indians and 111&#13;
Aiucrieaus killed and several wounded.&#13;
John lhtssell Yo.imr. just arrived from th&lt;&#13;
Flowery Kingdom, says China does all in he;&#13;
power to prevent emigration t&gt; the I'n.ted&#13;
States, and that our restriction act merely offends&#13;
thr pride uf the pigtail goveriini/ut."&#13;
Catholics of Pennsylvania vigorously* protest&#13;
against the readi'ui: of the 'bible 'in the&#13;
public.'schools of that state. The matter is&#13;
under advisement by Judge Mehard, but whatever&#13;
the decision, un appeal will be taken.&#13;
Five hundred and forty-one mormons, in&#13;
charge of Elder J. Hansen, arrived .in New&#13;
York on the st.'anishm Wisconsin the other&#13;
morning.. They are Danes, Swede* aud Norwegians.&#13;
Thoy started for the west a-t ouce.-&#13;
4- The Secretary of the State Board o* Agriculture&#13;
of Missouri est'nntes the yield of wheat&#13;
at seven and three-tenths' bushels per acre, oi&#13;
a total of 11.:234,010 bu-hels. The condition ol&#13;
corn is yp 5 pi r cent.: oata 'Jvi.ti: hasSS.V; spring&#13;
wheat 64.7. :'&#13;
Somebody at Utiea. N. Y., had a sky rocket&#13;
left over from the Fourth and sent it up Monday.&#13;
It st.itick the loading department of th«&#13;
Remington Armory, destroyed that stnietur*&#13;
and $50.00.") worth of cartridges. Smoke and&#13;
water $25.u0&gt; mere damages. '&#13;
John L. .Mc'cktruiv. wh.) ultont tv&gt;-.&gt; s'ears age&#13;
as grain! treasurer of the Catholic Knights ol&#13;
America cmLr-zy.led some $22,00tJof tliatorder's&#13;
money and suddenly disappeared irom his&#13;
home at (Jraftrn* -W. Va., has l&gt;een found and&#13;
will probably sulVcr for his crime.&#13;
Hibbs. ex'postmaster at Lewiston, I. T.. whe&#13;
stole ¢15,0.0 and er.me near getting 140.000,&#13;
has written a letter to Atton.ey-Cbneral Bryant,&#13;
of the pcs.tollice department, C( uinlaining&#13;
that a registered ,'ett r he sent to a friend containing&#13;
$£0J never rea-hed its destination.&#13;
f In the case of t'le widow of Stephen A. Doug&#13;
lass vs. Ch-.ciigo L'uiv. rsity, to rceovrr title LC&#13;
the property, it lifting a'l •gcd that the trustees&#13;
had forfeit'd their ir.istin sniTeriny; a mortgage&#13;
to he foreclosed, the tru-tees aic "iilercd. by tiie&#13;
court to convey the premis -s to compluina'ut.&#13;
Second Lieuh. (."ari-i;ll Meiver. of the V niter]&#13;
States Marine Ce^rps,.-who . was. trie.dj&gt;v court.-&#13;
martial in Ne»v York for dvnuUenr.c-^oT) tht&#13;
Panatna e\] C'.litton. ha:&gt; he n sentenced to twe&#13;
veaTs^suspcnsion on half pay, and to retain&#13;
his present uutnber on thi; legist t during that&#13;
time.&#13;
The bureau of statistic- r&lt; p.its that, durlnfl&#13;
the 11 months cndcd^May ..1, V'"i&gt;5, there .Avert&#13;
exported froin^rhe United State's 5'i0.S&gt;S, 121&#13;
gallons of^-mtrieral oils, valut--"!. fit £45.5^1.0^1.&#13;
Thl^^rrfouiit is nearly $4.0ihj.iA') greater that:&#13;
^thr- value of oils cxp'oVcd clr.riug the sami;&#13;
period in U84.&#13;
laws n?h«\-U be honestly aad earnestly&#13;
puforocd,&#13;
, - • ' '&#13;
*" A IUL'MG man in Brooklyn, after consulting&#13;
his watch, dropped it into his&#13;
pocket, when he was startled by an explosion,&#13;
which was followed by many&#13;
others in rapid succession. Before he&#13;
could remove'his clothing it had beei&#13;
burned through to the flesh and a&#13;
painful wound inllicted. The hand in&#13;
which he held the watch was also severely&#13;
btiraed. An examination proved&#13;
the explosion to have been caused by&#13;
chlorate of potash tablets, which he was&#13;
in the habit of can ying loose in his&#13;
pocket, and which were ignited by the&#13;
watch being dropped quickly upon&#13;
t com.&#13;
Tiia national museum at Washington&#13;
has received some relics of the first&#13;
iron furnace in America'; This was at&#13;
FalTing-Gree-ki in Chesterfield, county,&#13;
Virginia, a few mi'es below^Richmond,&#13;
but on the opposite side of the James.&#13;
I h e works were begun in 1619, b u t i a -&#13;
1622 were dest-oved in an Indjiwr'mas-j Wm. H. Tudnty. the need sexton of r-.-t,&#13;
„•;, ••"• - -..-^- , , I UeQUie's church. Nxw_Yorl; has been sentem-. sacre They were nevcr^renowed, and i ^ t 0 .J0 Vl...irsi hnpri.-ouinTirr •orT.T.nTnaTlj&#13;
the goxt—AttoavpV^to manufacture •isaultiiv-j a irirl lu vein-.- of age. Wiien th.&#13;
J " " g ' - prnrr)',:||( eij i;.e se'.il eii&lt;.'C ruur.i'V fcli iron wa* Gov. Spottswood,&#13;
neartm; present site of Fredericksburg,&#13;
)out 172G. Tod;his"the plantation oi&#13;
senseless to the lb oi&#13;
'Chamber street Vnn.pitai.&#13;
lie \Vas ta.ki u to tin&#13;
dl:ig 111r» I")a&#13;
Go rge Washington's father^ Angus«&#13;
t'ne, contributed much ore.&#13;
Gen. Nelson A. Miles ei.mini&#13;
partment, of ti-e Cohoaoi:-,, HA&gt; u.'e.i o.-de; e.l tc&#13;
; relieve (icn. (.',. C. Auuu.-. eommarvlircv the. I)etpartment,&#13;
of the ,Mi;s';u-::, Avho has re'ired&#13;
fr6m octi&lt;-f service, lien. Miles .', ill go imt-nc-&#13;
-diatcly into li:c iield to as^iune ^o.nr.iandol&#13;
T _. ,. . ^ , - , , thVforees in 'he Trdiuu territory who are&#13;
IN Berlin a so-iety has been formed . watchmg4he Indians.&#13;
for the development of New Guinea, President"Andrew D.Whit: ofCornollr.nland&#13;
its first stop h to be taken by med- JJJSJ. *%?&gt; " ^ " a E ^ S " " ^ ''"' v S&#13;
ical pioneers, whok are advertised for in I do not consider myself 1v.uny mt-ans&#13;
., ^ A. , . . T , . the right m a n to i&gt;e nominatcil. MY pans I'oi&#13;
the G e r m a n m / d i c a l j o u r n a l s . Their anothe--line of life have been uiade'ih'hherate.&#13;
first d u t y wiLr be to r e p o r t u p o n t h e h' a i v u carefully, and I can see no adequate&#13;
. , , / , . i j .1 , • , reason for chanir ng them.':&#13;
physical, zoological and ethnological&#13;
aspects of ^he country. Tho Medical&#13;
Times thinksnvi^method has some advantages&#13;
over the variable English custorn&#13;
of bringing isolateiL peoples to a&#13;
knowledge of the advantages of trade&#13;
by tho slow measures of missionary societics.&#13;
The Hessati fly has made groat devinvtation&#13;
in the win at Helds of Aariou.- town* in Wnyne&#13;
COm»ty, New Yorli. In .Vrcaoi:'. t h e i c - s is cstiniated&#13;
at *&gt;'J0.O0O. In the immcdintc vicinity&#13;
of Lyons the loss is ot'tnate.l l&gt;v cnrcful observers&#13;
at £'00()0. In MHIIC jlaccs ll.e ianners&#13;
Rre' bunting lie AVIK at lieh'.r in order tc&#13;
exterminate tin- in-ict i^ far us possible,&#13;
It is the purpose of the malingers of the new&#13;
rvufminnr^ wiiieii is fo lie o'oi-lied ;;t' NeAV&#13;
Oncans in NM^-c-'iMer ti, vetidn and (",ila::;e tlio&#13;
•» M(-xieau exhii-.if. and to M-etirc e\Vib..':v fio:n&#13;
A n Oregon man has htdhnved out the stump tl;e r»out!t Am rirmi ami (.'en;rnl Aim i-ii-an.&#13;
of a hug: tree itj the fashi n of a room, cut a states and the West India thirds, e'eeii'tary&#13;
"tfrmrnnd AviUiLoAvs In it, and bus there tuk&lt;:u Hwyard proinis-s that this-project. Aviil i-avcjlw&#13;
up histJLo.le. friendly support of the slate dcparti-ient.&#13;
Bill Nyo to a Coiumuuiat.&#13;
DEAR SIK: Your courteous letter of&#13;
the l»t \inst., in which you cordially&#13;
consent to share my wealth and dwell&#13;
together with me in fraternal sunshine,&#13;
is duly received. While I difliko to&#13;
appear cold and distant to one who&#13;
seems so veurnfuland so clinging, am!&#13;
whilo I do not wish to be regarded as&#13;
purse-proud or arrogant, I must decline&#13;
your kind otter to whack up.&#13;
You had not heard, very likely, that&#13;
I am not now &gt;*' communist. I used to&#13;
be, 1 admit, and tho society no doubt&#13;
neglected to strike my name off the&#13;
role of active members. For a number&#13;
of years I was quite active as a&#13;
communist, I would have been more&#13;
active, but I had conscientious scruples&#13;
against being active in uuything&#13;
then.&#13;
While you maybe perfectly sincere&#13;
in your belief that the great capitalists&#13;
like Mr. Gould and Mr. Vanderhilt&#13;
should divide with you, you will have&#13;
great dilliculty in making it perfectly&#13;
clear to them. They will probably&#13;
demur, and delay, and hem, and haw,&#13;
and procrastinate, until finally they&#13;
will get out of it in some way. Still I&#13;
do not wish to throw cold water on&#13;
your enterprise. If the other capitalists&#13;
look tavorably on the plan, 1 will&#13;
cheerfully co-operate with them. You&#13;
go and sco what you can do with Mr.&#13;
Vanderhilt, and then come to me.&#13;
You go on at some length to tell me&#13;
how most of the wealtii is in the hands&#13;
of a few mon, and then you attack&#13;
those men and refer to them in a way&#13;
that makes my blood run. cold. Ytrtr&#13;
tell the millionaires of America to beware,&#13;
for the hot breath of a bloodylianded&#13;
Nemesisi is~~aTreftdy~in the ain&#13;
You may say to Nemesis, it you&#13;
please, that I have a double-barrel&#13;
shotgun standing at the head of my&#13;
bed every night, and that I am in the&#13;
Nemesis business. You also refer to&#13;
the-fact that the sleuth-hounds of eternal&#13;
justice are camped on the trail of&#13;
the pampered milt'toTiaire, a~nd"you ask&#13;
us to avaunt. it you see the other&#13;
sleuth-hounds of your society within a&#13;
week or two, I wish you would say to&#13;
them that at a regular meeting of the&#13;
millionaires of this country, after the&#13;
minutes of the previous meeting had&#13;
been read and approved, we voted almost&#13;
unanimously to discourage any&#13;
sleuth-hound that we found camped&#13;
on our trail alter 10 o'clock p. m.&#13;
Sleuth-hounds who want to ramble&#13;
over our trails dnriuir oilice hours may&#13;
do so with the utmost impunity, but&#13;
after 10 o'clock we want to use our&#13;
trails f.or other purposes. No man&#13;
wants to go to the great expense of&#13;
maintaining a trail winte-r and summer,&#13;
and then leave.it out nights for&#13;
other people to use and return U-w4^u&#13;
they get ready.&#13;
I do not censure you, however. If&#13;
you could convince every one of the&#13;
utility of communism, it would certainly&#13;
be a great boon to you. To&#13;
those who are now enjjajred in feeding:&#13;
themselves with fiat beer out of a tomato&#13;
can, such a change as you suggest&#13;
would fall Ike a ray of sunshiue&#13;
in a rat hole; but alas! it may never be.&#13;
I tried it a while, but my ell'orts were&#13;
futile. The effect of my great struggle&#13;
"seemed to be that men's hearts&#13;
grew more and more stony, and my&#13;
pantaloons got thinner and thinner on&#13;
the seat till it seemed to mo* that the&#13;
world never was so eold. Then I&#13;
made some cxptvlmcts 1 ti manual labor.&#13;
As 1 began to work harder and&#13;
sit down less, 1 found that the world&#13;
was not so cold, it was only when 1&#13;
sat down a long time that 1 felt how&#13;
cold and rough the world really was.&#13;
Perhaps it is so with you. Sedpntary&#13;
habits and s^ale beer are apt to&#13;
make us morbid. Sitting on the stone&#13;
door sills of hallways and public&#13;
buildings during cold weather is apt&#13;
to give you an erroneous impression of&#13;
life.&#13;
Of course, I am willing to put my&#13;
money into a common fund if 1 can&#13;
j be convinced that it is best. I was an&#13;
! outside passenger on a Leadville coach&#13;
i some years ago, when a few of our&#13;
! friends suggested that we ail put our&#13;
j money into a common fund, anil I was&#13;
almost the tirst one to sec that thoy&#13;
j.w.ere.rjgj.it. They went away into the&#13;
' mountains to apportion ""the"" money&#13;
they sfot from our party, but I never&#13;
got my dividend. Probably they lost&#13;
my post olhce address. — Nctv York&#13;
Mercury.&#13;
• ' • - • - i ^ ^ &gt; - i • • • • • • .&#13;
The Pay of Shurcrs.&#13;
"What voices are paid tho highest?'*&#13;
asked a.'reporter of The Mail and l&lt;h&gt;&#13;
pnas of Now York, of a prominent&#13;
singer of that city.&#13;
*^Afl things -eOjUarl, asoprauo voico&#13;
commands a larger salary in church&#13;
choirs than any other. Next a rich&#13;
contralto, which is worth a gueat deal,&#13;
"TmcaTisre to few pcorphr- pof*ttss-a-eon—&#13;
tralto voice. Then follows the teaor,&#13;
A good tenor is a rarity,"and is always&#13;
in.demand. Altos get very good salaries,&#13;
but 1 hey must be far abovetho&#13;
common in voice. Last comes the&#13;
bass. They get about the poorest salary&#13;
of any. In view of the fact that&#13;
church choir singers have had their&#13;
salaries reduced, aud not a fe&gt;v have&#13;
position at all, it is expected that themusic&#13;
presented next winter at tho&#13;
churches will uot bo up to the usual&#13;
-.staiidurd."&#13;
&lt;a Noi'thwi'st Indian Tribes.&#13;
The Imffan tritmn- of tho—Nurihwest&#13;
have been!" musci! loving little*. liu&lt;\&#13;
•slipping the cherished ring back upon&#13;
her linger. "But I hope he isn't going&#13;
to bo subject to these chills.1 ' sho&#13;
added1 with a doleful look. " I d o hope&#13;
he i s n ' t , for the s a k e of both of u s . " —&#13;
I'cnn Shirltu/.&#13;
tiyelasdies.&#13;
Said a West Side belle to the writer&#13;
the other day: "There are so many&#13;
new things employed to make us real&#13;
sweet that it is really hard to enumerate&#13;
them. Hut to give you some idea&#13;
uf the labor we go through to captivate&#13;
our admirers, I will mention face&#13;
powder lirst. As you see, I am a&#13;
blondo and am compelled to use a&#13;
pink powder, but my brunette cousin&#13;
fixes her complexion up with a white&#13;
powder.11&#13;
"And how does she get such nice&#13;
red lipsP11&#13;
"She uses rouge, of course. Hut&#13;
previous to putting anything of this&#13;
kind on our face wo have to prepare&#13;
the ground-work, so to speak."&#13;
To illustrate what she said, the&#13;
belle opened a bu'ieau drawer and&#13;
took out a (jueer-lookiug object, It&#13;
wtis a mask which perfectly tilted her&#13;
face. "When 1 retiie at night," slio&#13;
s a i d , " l take thisj up and rub the inside&#13;
with cream. I tie it on ami sleep&#13;
in it. You see, the lotions 1 use make&#13;
ihe skin of my face rough, and the&#13;
application of the cream has a tendency&#13;
to open the pores of the skin,&#13;
and when 1 wake up my face is smooth&#13;
and soft, Then here is tho 'hare's&#13;
foot.1 This 1 _ use to put the powder&#13;
on." Tho belle kindly-displayed all&#13;
the articles required to "make her&#13;
up11for tlio &lt;vpera. There was the&#13;
face powder, the cream and the ,7ha~reV&#13;
foot" mentioned. Then she had a cake&#13;
of nicely perfumed soap, a large bottle&#13;
of elegant cologne, a bottle of toile&#13;
t w a t e r , perfumed, a balm for the&#13;
skin, a little bottle of vaseline&#13;
a wash for the scalp, a metalic brush,&#13;
an eyebrow pencil and a dark liquid&#13;
to put on the eyebrow nud lashes; a&#13;
cake of camphor-ice for the hands if&#13;
they become chapped; a bottle of haudoline,&#13;
one of hair oil, and it box of&#13;
beauty spots. The latter were simply&#13;
little pieces of sticking-plastev-eut into&#13;
the shape of stars, crescents, circles&#13;
and hearts. Another little bottle containing&#13;
a black liquid .was marked&#13;
"headache cure," and the belle assured&#13;
her visitor that she used it frequently&#13;
after attending a ball. The&#13;
list of her toilet articles of course included&#13;
a comb, a tooth-brush and a&#13;
nail brush, a sponge of delicate text-'&#13;
ure, a Turkish towel, a bottle of shoe&#13;
dressing.^ a wash rag, an atomizer for&#13;
throwing cologne over herself, a fleshbrush&#13;
aud a hand-glass. "Then I always&#13;
keep a breath perfume" suid siie,&#13;
and she displayed a small box of silvercoated&#13;
cachous. The top drawer of&#13;
her dressing-caso contained a paper&#13;
of sachet powder, and a china box of&#13;
tooth-paste was part of the complement.&#13;
"There, I think you have the whole&#13;
list,11 she said. "But, by the way.&#13;
did you ever know that ladies are now&#13;
shaving off their eye-lashes? It is a&#13;
fact. After the get them 'shaved off&#13;
they take fal-e ones and-slick them&#13;
on, Makes 'em look awful sweet. 1&#13;
don't .do it, because I have long&#13;
lashes." — Chic ago Tribune. -*«&#13;
TUTT8A,&#13;
PILLS&#13;
25 YEARS IN U8E»&#13;
Aa Qr« a f t Medical Trlaaph of th&gt; kfj&#13;
SYMPTOMS O f A ^ TORPID LIVERS L»Mct«pMtlte. B«w«UeMtlT«,Pat»l»&#13;
t»« k u d , with a dull s«as»tU» »• »*•&#13;
ha«k »»rt. * • ! « ond»r tho •hMltofa&#13;
fcl&amp;A«, F u l U u s after eating-, with »*la»&#13;
tatllaatUa to exertloaof body oral«4»&#13;
Irritability of tcnyer, jbowaolrlta, with)&#13;
afoolUf orhaviNfaeiloetod io*»o daty,&#13;
WOarlaeaa* Dlaslaeia, Flvttoria*at tho&#13;
Heart, Dati boforetho eyop» Iteadaeh*&#13;
•vor tho right oyo, Roitloataoaat with&#13;
fitful dreams, Highly eolorod Urlao, aa4&#13;
0 CONSTIPATION, a M&#13;
T C T T ' a PILLS aro especially a/ - Aed&#13;
to such case*, one dnse effects such %&#13;
fhang«r&gt;ffee!iiigM4to&gt;\su&gt;nUntliesufferer.&#13;
Th*y lneroo.se the A ppctlte,*fi« cause tho bnood*yr Vlsih T«do,kAon don Fleitt.tin^ ibe sjntem U tt« WtseoUve O rtbrya inhso.tiUrTao-unllaer As tcotioolns aorao pro*^p»&lt;. Hrlca U5e» 4 4 M n r r a y Wt..K.T. TUTTS HAIR DYE. •GSAT H i n t or WHUKSKS changed to a&#13;
GLoasr BLACK by a slnjjle application of&#13;
tbi* DTK. It imparts a uaturat color, acta&#13;
instantaneounly. Sold by Druggists, O*&#13;
sentby expvoe* on receiptor 9 1 . « 9&#13;
Offlco,44 Murray St., New York.^ Improved Western Washer&#13;
M i l C S . Ho. lfor family of 0 98&#13;
Ko. 2 fbrlarye fiially 9&#13;
Ko. 3 for Hotel and Laandry, •... 10&#13;
Over 20,000 in use*&#13;
the&#13;
The Burro.&#13;
Apart fiom the Indians and&#13;
Mexicans, these animals are the most&#13;
characteristic anil ubiquitous objects&#13;
in New Mexico. The shaggy little&#13;
brutes range from the size ot a small&#13;
Newfoundland to that of a six-months&#13;
old heifer. It is practically impossible&#13;
to overload them. They will carry&#13;
all that can be piled on their backs.&#13;
1 have frequently seen a solid heap ol&#13;
wood gliding mysteriously into town,&#13;
with no apparent motive power, but 1&#13;
knew that somewhere underneath the&#13;
pile there was hidden a burro. When&#13;
released from their burdens they will&#13;
immediately set to work, with diligences/&#13;
and gusto picking up a living in J.ke&#13;
midst of stones and dry cactu^-where&#13;
any other animal wouluV""starvc to&#13;
death. Joe proceededfo attach them,&#13;
by..a wonderful scries of'khoTsVlo t h e -&#13;
sujwportin-g posts under the house. I&#13;
watched him curiously as he tied knot&#13;
after kuot, and at length ventured to&#13;
inquire whether burros usually employed&#13;
their spare time in performing&#13;
juggling tricks.&#13;
Joe regarded me with a smile which&#13;
was compounded of one part of goodnatuied&#13;
contempt, two of superior&#13;
knowledge, and thrco of genuino&#13;
amusement. 4 '\Wal,M he said, ''you are summat&#13;
of. -a tenderfoot; that's &amp;o. Whyv. a.&#13;
burro is a born devil.5-- ^&#13;
"Do you mean to say that a bvprro&#13;
can undo one-tit those knots with his&#13;
TlJelhT^r^slrCTt '&#13;
- — ^ don't pur-foas-U) say wliatlie does&#13;
Thousands of ladies arc tiring it. and ibty speak&#13;
of it ia the highest terms, saying tuat they would&#13;
rather dispense with any other household article,&#13;
than this excellent Washer. No well-regulated&#13;
family will be without it, as it tares the clothes.&#13;
sares labor,, aavea time, seres fuel, saves soap, aad&#13;
makes washday no longer a dread, bat rather a&#13;
pleasant recreation, aa much as such la possible.&#13;
H0KT0N BPF'G CO.,&#13;
Agents Wanted. Ft. Wayne, Ind.&#13;
I&#13;
'i&#13;
i&#13;
».&#13;
E 3b - §ifi f«e p&#13;
Sw§ 1&#13;
1 British-'territories number about 34,-&#13;
: (ion. Tlii're are ('htppewas and Crees,&#13;
', 17.11^0*, Crees of the plains and woods;&#13;
I 8,1.')7; lHaek&amp;Hjt. 0.07:5; Sioux, 2,000,&#13;
' There are also about 1(5,000 in the r«-&#13;
' i m i i t n t n v itf lli,&gt; l l m N r m P,;i,y 1 ;om)):iny1 S&#13;
territory. The Crees are a troublesome&#13;
lot and giivo our fronlior post.;&#13;
in Moutauua some trouble last sum-&#13;
! mer.&#13;
it with. He may do it with his tail for&#13;
all I know, but If you will learn me a&#13;
knot that a burro can't undo, if you&#13;
give him time enough, I will toll you&#13;
thank*. Why, the father of all evil is&#13;
not a patch on an old jack burro fur&#13;
infernal cleverness and mischief."—&#13;
fliryc Harrison, in Harper*s Magazine&#13;
for i/ay.&#13;
m, , . _ - • — » • sen •— •—• ,^ -&gt;&#13;
The Proper Way to Retaliate.&#13;
"Don't know What to do," remarked&#13;
a millionaire to his doctor. "I want&#13;
to i&gt;,o into the country and live quielly&#13;
and without ostentation."&#13;
, "Why don't you do it? Your health&#13;
demand* a rest of that sort."&#13;
"Yes, 1 know it," repliod the p.-..&#13;
tient, "but my money gives me away.&#13;
What shall I do?" -&#13;
"in that case,/' nnswerei: TtTTT&#13;
physician, "why don't you give j&#13;
your' money away ?"— ..Veto )-&gt;r/i,&#13;
&gt;4JraphUr&#13;
WRIGHT'S INDIAN VEGETABLEPlLLS&#13;
• OB T H E&#13;
And ail Bilious Comptaiht©&#13;
Sale to take, bolnp; purely vepe'nbin; no arialux&#13;
rriceiii cu. All Dr-.w^uu -&#13;
r "'..&lt;JH%&#13;
je&#13;
rWm WARMER » • «W-1 T I P P E C A N O E&#13;
THE BC8T&#13;
u.&#13;
O&#13;
Xw&#13;
•a*&#13;
z&#13;
u&#13;
UJ&#13;
X&#13;
,&#13;
(CQS-VRIQHTID}, TOXIC&#13;
*&#13;
Z&#13;
ffl&#13;
O&#13;
r-&#13;
O&#13;
tt&#13;
z &gt;&#13;
s &gt;m z&#13;
FACT AND FANCY.&#13;
TC_ I T? ^p £ j&#13;
' # SATISFACTION GUARANTEED.&#13;
H. H. WASHES 4 CO., SoobMtor, H.Y.&#13;
FO_T" A_ll SENSATIONS.&#13;
. $1.00 A BOTTLE,&#13;
g. H. WAKSER&amp; Co., Rochester, N. Y.&#13;
J H J L L I P V A N T A S E L , Newark, N . Y . , tul-&#13;
"crod for m.tnv years from dv-pepsi* and malassimlation&#13;
of food, and nport* t h * i h - derived greater&#13;
&gt;enefit from Warner's TII^MCANOK, The Beat,&#13;
hea from any other medj__&gt;c he ever used. His&#13;
laughter also used it w i t j f l f c v x u when every other&#13;
(nown remedy failed, V&#13;
AS A&#13;
Oonstitutioral Toric.&#13;
I T M A S N O E Q U A L .&#13;
$ 1 . 0 ( ) A B o t t l e :&#13;
li. Hr WAKNER &amp; Co Rochester, N, T.&#13;
W, K. SAGK of St. Johns, Mich., w&gt;s completely&#13;
rrroetrattd hy l a * ha&lt;^t4»i|M-«*«iurcd during; die late&#13;
war. He returned home wrecked both in mind and&#13;
body. For twenty year* he tdmply existed, half&#13;
the time more tieau than alive uolil he w a s restore—- _.&#13;
tohealthby W - r n c r V T i r r s x a N O i , tl»e West. He&#13;
ad*m&gt; s all old vei_ to Uy it. Write to him at ot.&#13;
John*, Mich *&#13;
BRM5&#13;
wee&#13;
- T H t&#13;
BEST TONIC.&#13;
T h _ medicine, combining Iron with pure&#13;
Tegetable tonics, quickly a n d completely&#13;
Cur e* I&gt;try»\a pe.|.&gt; »la, Indl_« e a t l on. Weakness*,&#13;
I m p u r e B l o o d , M a l a r i a , (Jhtllaaud F e v e r s ,&#13;
l * i a t It l e a n unfailing remedy for Diseases of the&#13;
a n d N r u r a l c i a .&#13;
K i d n e y s a n d I . l v e r .&#13;
It la invaluable -for Diseases peculiar t o&#13;
W o m e n , and all w h o lead sedentary lives.&#13;
It does not injure the teeth, cause h e a d a c h c o r&#13;
produce constipation—OULT Iron medicine* do.&#13;
Itenrlches'nnd purifies the blood, stimulates&#13;
t h e appetite, nuls the assimilation of food, re-&#13;
Prof. IJcokmoro nays that lobsters&#13;
are now taken almost entirely from&#13;
deep water, and at Um present rate of&#13;
decrease will shortly become ouriosities,&#13;
to be found only in museums.&#13;
* Brick houses avo a loti^-felt want in&#13;
Texas, according to The .vw Antonio&#13;
Times, which chronicles with joy the&#13;
fact that preparations are being made&#13;
at Columbus to erect such buildings.&#13;
An old man in Allegheny county,&#13;
Pennsylvania, received $o,0!.)0 from his&#13;
chirdren on ngroeina: not to marry a&#13;
fascinating girl of 17. Then he married&#13;
her and gave her the money, and&#13;
fcvhe disappeared with it.&#13;
A suit for $5,000 damages has been&#13;
instituted by a resident of Rome, Ga.,&#13;
against a local grocer who displayed&#13;
in front of bis store a card with the&#13;
name of the prosecutor on it and the&#13;
words "Deadbeat, $6.38."&#13;
The dude collar this season, it is&#13;
authoritatively announced, will be&#13;
narrow and will have the corners&#13;
slightly turned down. He will now&#13;
have an opportunity of looking around&#13;
bim and of seeing what is going on in&#13;
the world.&#13;
The Baltimore American truly says a&#13;
man who will give up the editorship&#13;
of an influential, American paper for a&#13;
second-rate foreign appointment is&#13;
not made of that sterner stuff which&#13;
enters so largely into the make-up of&#13;
all good editors.&#13;
It is well, sometimes, to have a care&#13;
and not yawn too loudly or to open the&#13;
mouth to wide while indulging in this&#13;
peculiar pastime. A Rochester lady a&#13;
few days since was unfortunate&#13;
enough to dislocate her jaws while&#13;
indulging in an ordinary everyday&#13;
yawn.&#13;
,;Yest s i r / ' said the entomologist,&#13;
"I can tame Hies so that when I whistle&#13;
they will come and alight on my&#13;
hand." "Pshaw!" naid the bald-headed&#13;
man, "that's nothing. They come&#13;
and alight on my head witho&#13;
n_y whistling." T_e nctomologist s*&#13;
down.&#13;
A citizen of Boston, in looking over&#13;
the genealogical records of his family,&#13;
noticed the'following: "Abiah—died&#13;
1799, aged 17. Tradition says she&#13;
went to a ball dressed in the manner,&#13;
of later days, 'beauifully but not&#13;
warmly;'caught cold, and "died four&#13;
days after. The dress was an heirloom&#13;
in the family of Ira."&#13;
A man at Union City, Pa., puzzled&#13;
his neighbors by frequently carrying&#13;
a paper bag, evidently containing&#13;
something heavy, to his room. What&#13;
he could do with so much flour was&#13;
a mystery, bnt the other night the&#13;
matter was explained when the man&#13;
slipped upon the ice and burst the&#13;
bag, disclosing atin pail lilleil with&#13;
beer. , '&#13;
. The kirmess which opened recently&#13;
in New York is a festival which originatct!&#13;
«a the Netherlands many years&#13;
ago. It is supposed that Hie word is&#13;
derived from kerk, the Dutch for&#13;
church, and messe.feast and was origi&#13;
nally a church festival. Teuier airdother&#13;
Flemish artists have illustrated&#13;
the old-time scenes of the "^kefmesse,"&#13;
as it was then called.^-&#13;
The many Ameffeans who have&#13;
viewed wijh^wonder and admiration&#13;
the rejaratns of Heidelberg castle,&#13;
licves Heartburn and Belching, and strength- spkrh'did e v e n in d e c a y , will be g l a d t o&#13;
e n F o V h ! m e r m ^ *-** l h e r e p o r t e d i n j u r y ' t o t h e&#13;
Energy, &lt;fcc, it has no equal.&#13;
J&amp;- The genuine has above trade mark and&#13;
crossed red linos on wrapper Take no other.&#13;
uuuijkf DKOW* n i E « y u i ; co., BALTIMORE, an&#13;
MALT —BITTERS,&#13;
If you wish to be relieved of those _terrib!e S i c k&#13;
H e a d a c h e s - and that miserable S o u r Stoat*&#13;
a e t i . It will, when taken according to direc-&#13;
_•&amp;*, c u r e a n y caae o f S i c k H e a d a c h e&#13;
er S o u r S t o m a c h . It cleans the lining of&#13;
actioni aaenhd satnr ede tt oswecerelt*io, nsp. roImt omtea*k esh epaluthrye&#13;
M o « d and gives it free flow, thus sending&#13;
n u t r i m e n t to every part. It is the safest,&#13;
a p e e d l e a t and ' a n r e s t V e g e t a b l e Remedy&#13;
i-ver invented for all diaeaaoa of the s t o m a c h&#13;
and l i v e r .&#13;
J. M. M-ore, of Farmlni^on. Mich., says: My&#13;
•nflTerlng from Kick H e a d a c h e and S o u r&#13;
S t o m a c h was terrible. O n e bottle of Hops&#13;
and Malt Bitters cured me.&#13;
Do not get H o p s and m a l t Bitters confounded&#13;
with inferior preparations of similar&#13;
name. For sale by all druggists.&#13;
f"B!TT!rirtJtJ;IJETilOIT,tlCH,&#13;
T . H . IlIVeHM AN * W N S . i*t-ro1t,ttlrtr.r^ ^ . ¾ ^&#13;
JAMES _ . DAVIS &amp; CO- Detroit, Mlch„ ( A " e ' ° t f&#13;
CHENEY'S&#13;
StomachI Liver&#13;
I REGULATOR]&#13;
feUREg COMSTIPATIO. .&#13;
TRohrepuidm Latliysemr.,l nPdallgpeistatltoionn, Hoef atrhteb uHrnea, rMt walahreina, aorJitshineg s ftroomma icnhd,i gSeisctkio nH oera ddearcahneg eodr cHonigdriatiionn, jlPeUtaees Iann at.h Fe ewmoarlldec toam*5p laiats. Tha ^on^S r m^ed^&lt;&#13;
P a a l t i r c l y C a r a i C ^ n s t l p t f n .&#13;
• 1.00 per bottle ; 6 bottles. §4.00&#13;
•EMD r o i l CIKOULARS, FBBK.&#13;
C H E N E Y A C O . , Prop'ro,&#13;
UaaaXaetartV'Y Oaaatots,&#13;
T O L E D O . O*&#13;
foundations by the railway tunnel beneath&#13;
them existed only in imagination.&#13;
A commission appointed to&#13;
makfl_an examination says it linds the&#13;
foundations in perfect condition.&#13;
The. ex-Empress Eugene wrote the following&#13;
pathetic sentence in a private letter to Monsij;-&#13;
nor (lodduril tit Chiselnurst: "t am left alone,&#13;
the solo remnant of a shipwreck which prove?&#13;
how fragile and vain arc the grandeurs of tinworld."&#13;
Everybody in Lomlon who has daughters t&lt;&#13;
marry gives a hall, if possible, inasmuch us, if&#13;
they du not, their girls, unless possessed o!&#13;
some extraordinary attraction or very higl&#13;
rank, receive sca*vc;'ly any invitations "to sucL&#13;
entertainments. ,&#13;
. Health, Wealth and Happiness&#13;
Are mofe intimately connected with a&#13;
sound stomach and good condition ot&#13;
the blood than most people suppose&#13;
Thin blood means weakness, languor&#13;
and misery. A dyspeptic stomach&#13;
means all the horrors you can think of.&#13;
Brown's Iron Bitters means euricheJ&#13;
blood, good digestion, healthy appetite,&#13;
swegt_«leep and vigorous strength. Mr.&#13;
Henry Hallarn;; »"o &lt;th 17th street, St.&#13;
Louis, says, "brown's Iron Bitters relieved&#13;
me of dyspepsia,, purified my&#13;
blo':d, and gave me an appetite.r"'&#13;
Thousands of others testify in the same&#13;
wav.&#13;
Recent army lists contain the nain^s of only&#13;
three .Waterloo oJllcers—Gen George Whichocote,&#13;
who joined the arniv in 1^11; the Earl of&#13;
A fbetttftrie, w ht+- tnite-1 e-1 -.-.the a 'M ny +mly t w. &gt;&#13;
months lxfore the battle; and Lieut. Andrew&#13;
tiarJne-Vwh,&gt; e n t e r a l the j.rULiidXL 1*J.L&#13;
If you feel nervous as to your kidneys, liver,&#13;
ior urinary organs, use Huut's,Remedy'.&#13;
Mr, Kegnn Paul. tJie^l^ndorFjnil-li?B^r71)nnT&#13;
$27.i5i.) for theuwluiseript of Gordon's diary.&#13;
Manv^rrfan who had lost nrrve, vigor anr&#13;
energyThas been cured by Hunt's Remedy.&#13;
The nicAcl, which wa; unt 1 r.uite recentlj&#13;
looked UTKin with contetnt&gt;t in San Francisco,&#13;
has already revolutionized the prices of certiiir.&#13;
things and. services in that city, and the&#13;
Chronicle expresses t\v opinion that eoppoi&#13;
cents will soon be as current as the nickel.&#13;
Woit'i Knowing.&#13;
Trio worst scnhl nr 1 urn run he&#13;
• car If Cole'!* («rt&gt;&lt;)H sulvc Is projj&#13;
PrutJKists «t ;Ti mul Hi cent*.&#13;
&lt;a*»etrvplthout i&#13;
7 used. Sold 1)&gt;&#13;
r.*&lt;&#13;
A gentleman tlshifrtf in Lough Currane, In^-&#13;
land, and antxTTul and a half trout, whose&#13;
stoma&lt; hafpearedTThtlsuallv distended. Vpoi&#13;
ripnuijf'tt open he found a fully tiedgeil spar&#13;
row; quite perfect, without even a feather disturbed.&#13;
Let fly ilslu rtnen take the hint.&#13;
Joshua Tuthill, Saginaw, Mich., had Bright1!&#13;
Di-'jease, aud was cured by Huut's Remedy.&#13;
Tired Laoguid Doll&#13;
Kxat'.ly cxprc»«C8 tti&gt; condhloti of lliomands of peo'&#13;
pie at this season of ttic year. TU« depressing effectf&#13;
of the waiin wcaDifi1 and the v.'4'iilci'r)L'd condition of&#13;
^he boly, are quickly ovurcomc by tin* use ot Hood's&#13;
Sur»a[i^rllla. Why nufferi ouycr when a remedy 1» »c&#13;
cloa*! at hand? Tak&lt;: It uow. K will Klvt: you health,&#13;
utreugth, and ciierity.&#13;
"I took Hood'n Surnapartlla for lo.i* of app«tlt«*.&#13;
dyxpepnla, and Kt'tieral Un^uor l i did me a van;&#13;
amouat of Kood, and 1 h.ist'iio hesitancy in recoin&#13;
nn-udlog It to my frlendu »mrt till uuedlotc medicine."&#13;
J. W. WiM.KKDur', (julncy. III.&#13;
"ll'wd'j* San*aparllU toru-ii up my system, purlflpiroy&#13;
blood. »hurjx*n» m/ api&gt;etlti*, and S-CIUK to build&#13;
nie over." W. .(. HI.XIK, ConiliiK. N. V.&#13;
"1 could not sluep, and In the uinmlng had hard!&gt;&#13;
'lfe enoujjji to Kft out of tx'd. I had no appetite, aud&#13;
my fac«* would breali our with piinpliiH. I decided to&#13;
take. Hood's Karxaparllla, and uooti bc^an lo slee1'&#13;
soundly; could get up without that tired and languid&#13;
feeling, uzid ray appetite Improved." it. A, SAMKQBD,&#13;
Kent, O.&#13;
Hood's Sarsapariila&#13;
g o l d b y all drugalatH. SI m i x for «i. Made only by&#13;
C. I. HOOD &amp; CO., A p o t h e c a r i e s , L o w e l l , Maas.&#13;
IOO Poses One Dollar.&#13;
At Mr. Beckert Dcnison's. r e c n t sale the&#13;
Duke of Hamilton bought back SOIUL* of hi*&#13;
own pictures for half tlK' price he had given&#13;
for them. »&#13;
Queen Victoria has commanded that the&#13;
Princesses Louise of Wales an 1 Victoria of&#13;
Teck are no:, to go out much, but are only to&#13;
be taken to a few specially favored houses.&#13;
She strongly disapproves of unmarried Princesses&#13;
attending parties, ex: e;jt at the palace,&#13;
presumably, says the Loudon Truth, because&#13;
none of her own daughters were, allowed to&#13;
do so.&#13;
The Duke of Schleswig-Hol-tein-Augu-tenburg,&#13;
it is said, will shortly proceed to England&#13;
to become a suitor for the hand of the&#13;
Princess Louise of Wales. He came of aare&#13;
last Feruary, is the nephew of Prince Christian,&#13;
possesses large family estates in Silesia,&#13;
and enjoys an allowance of £15,000 u year from&#13;
the German government; so, for a German&#13;
prince, he is a decided ^&gt;arf(,&#13;
Over 375 candidates applied for admission to&#13;
Harvard college this year, of which number&#13;
218. took their examinations at Cambridge. Of&#13;
these. 162 passed, '.#* without conditions; 49&#13;
put off part of their work until the fall, and&#13;
seven were rejected. "This is a good showTng.&#13;
When the results from the examinations in&#13;
other places are received it is anticipated that&#13;
the next freshmen class at Harvard will prove&#13;
to be the largest on record.&#13;
The Pamoaa Notre Dame.&#13;
On the 30th of last January, the Sis-&#13;
&lt;ers of the most noted Catholic ladies&#13;
seminary in the United States, the&#13;
famous Notre Dame, at Govanstown.&#13;
near Baltimore, Md., made public a&#13;
card, certi ying to the beneficial results&#13;
attending the use of Red Star Cough&#13;
Cure in that institution. They state&#13;
that they found ittiticacious alike for&#13;
relieving coughs, oppressions on the&#13;
chest and irritation of the throat.&#13;
Officials of the Board of Health of&#13;
Brooklyn. Baltimore and other cities&#13;
have likewise publicly proclaimed the&#13;
virtues of this new discovery, which is&#13;
entirely free from opiates, poisons and&#13;
other objections.&#13;
Young ostriches are warmed out of their&#13;
shells by incubators in California, and mani&#13;
fest great astonishment when they dis&#13;
they are not in an African desert. Jthe'y have&#13;
• not" yet b'-eo-rie a; customed to&#13;
this continent.&#13;
M. L. B l a i r ^ - A T d e r m a n , 5th W a r d ,&#13;
Scrnnton^-PtC^ s t a t e d N o v . 9 ' 8 3 : H e&#13;
hao^v^ed Dr. T h o m a s ' E c l e c t r i c Oil for&#13;
&gt;rains, bMrns, cuts, bruises a n d r h e u&#13;
m a t b n i . Cured every t i m e .&#13;
^&#13;
A man from Canada was in Toledo. Ohio, a&#13;
few days ago l.uutiug for his wife. &lt;&gt;7 vears old,&#13;
who, he says, eloped'in April last with an Ohio&#13;
man of -1." Th" woman has twelve children&#13;
and several grandchildren.&#13;
B*.D DRAINAGE causes rairh sickness,&#13;
and bad and tmproper action of the&#13;
liver and kidneys is bad drainage to the&#13;
'human system, which Burdock Blood&#13;
Bitters remedy.&#13;
It is estimated that the annual product of&#13;
the marble quarries of Vermont is 1,^01),0^0&#13;
cubic fe.'t, with an increase of about 75.000 feet&#13;
a year.&#13;
BEWAKE OF FRAUDS—Be sure you&#13;
get the genuine Dr. Thomas' Kclectrij&#13;
Oil. It cures Colds, Croup. AstTTma.&#13;
Deafness and Rheumatism.&#13;
A story comes from Cali'ornia that a )&gt;oV\v?&#13;
officer at Los Angeles has become delirious&#13;
from the too frequent brushing of his teeth.&#13;
George Campbell, TTop^insviHe, Ky.,&#13;
says: Burdock Blood Bitters is the best&#13;
preparation for the Blood and Stomach&#13;
ever manufactured.&#13;
IT WILL PAY YOTJ&#13;
TO GO TO DETROIT&#13;
AND HAVE YOUR&#13;
EXAMINED AND PITTED WITH&#13;
8PECTACLE8 OR EYE GLASSES&#13;
R O E H M ^ W R I G H T S ,&#13;
IMPORTERS. JEWELERS AND OPTICIANS.&#13;
140 WOODWARD AVE.&#13;
THEY MAKE NO CHARGE FOR]&#13;
TESTING EYES. AND SELDOM&#13;
FAIL TO GIVE RELIEF.&#13;
-Dsmdp. i t i r « Jtecay, W e a a a M *&#13;
Itcbllitr In M « a from «*r1j&#13;
. lantiocd, fret _&#13;
_&gt;r«l«a and all forma or Itcbllitr In M«a from early&#13;
error, ignorance, vtcaorezr «-»•*• Qylckljraad £atUy&#13;
Cwrr4 wltlioutronrtnt-m-nt h\ ihn&#13;
Z C I V I A L E T R E A T M E N T S Bow firmly e«- abnahed In Americaaaietir •nltaascrlta&#13;
PUCK to curneat iaiiilrcra. (not to boys, orcurioilty-&#13;
aeekrrs), lar^e til minted work on JHarsaeaW&#13;
U s ti*m\l»-Vriuury Orgtana. Qrala m « N m t a&#13;
CBealed,forSeeuulurtampa.) Olvrstentimonlala, bossV&#13;
net*and medical ref.Tenitrs.Ac. C'*u»u\iai\»m_fr*m.&#13;
CIVIAUC ACEN« V. 1 7 4 &gt; n l t o « ht., N t w f wrfc&#13;
Bi Ki Ki&#13;
RADWAT'S&#13;
READY&#13;
RELIEF.&#13;
A C U B E F O R A X L&#13;
"Hail Columbia" is 87 years old.&#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 Orand Union&#13;
Hotel, opposite said depot. S x hundred elegant&#13;
rooms fitted up at a cost of one million&#13;
dollars; $1 and upwards per day. European&#13;
plan. Elevator. Restaurant supplied with&#13;
the best. Horse earn, stages and elevated railroad&#13;
to all depot. Families can live better for&#13;
less money at the Grand Union Hotel th&amp;n-at&#13;
any other'flrat-elass hotel in the city.&#13;
Cleveland can sing tenor.&#13;
ng born on&#13;
Hojtettrr's Stomach&#13;
Bittern, as a specific&#13;
f'ir Indigestion,&#13;
utatids alone. When&#13;
the resources of the&#13;
r&gt;hnrmar.op&lt;r!a have&#13;
hern c:.!;; U'ted.wlth&#13;
out, r.t leisf, dolrijf&#13;
nMre than mlt'g.f'&#13;
iuK the &lt;•&lt; mplalnt, a&#13;
course of thU wholesome&#13;
&lt;* t ii m a c h I c&#13;
i!fleet* n perfect and&#13;
P'rniur cot cure. In&#13;
all ( »se»of drupepnia&#13;
the liver Is more or&#13;
le*,* disordered, and&#13;
upon thin inipt'rtRnt&#13;
liipiul the I'.lrti-r^ iicf&#13;
with rejtularrl bttnetiie&lt;&#13;
«, M'Kiilntlnx arid&#13;
ItivitforHtlnif e v e r y&#13;
M'creth e and aR»lmi-&#13;
1 K t i n tt &lt;» r ft a r on&#13;
which 1&gt; o d 1 1 y an d&#13;
ittenrnl health _d,»-&#13;
pe;iJ. i'or sale&#13;
J j IDru^gfats aiidTTt .lie! s g e n e r a l l y . ^&#13;
A colt was born recently&#13;
tveigh'-'d twelve pr.•urn's only&#13;
forcied and is diung welL&#13;
in Indiana which&#13;
It was perfectly&#13;
'BOTJOH ON CATARRH."&#13;
Correct offensive o j o r s ;it mi.-e. (\&gt;\n\&gt;:ete enro of&#13;
A-orst ca*es,also u i i e n w l e d ns ^;irgte tor Diphtlierla&#13;
Sore Thro.nt. Koul Hreuth. .Nn.-.&#13;
There are no white servant-* at the Whit?&#13;
I louse/,&#13;
^ THE HOPE OF T S E NATION.&#13;
Children, slow in development, puitv, scraway aa.l&#13;
lellcate, use "Well's Health Renewer."&#13;
Parisian belles now carry pistols. «&#13;
CATARRH OF THE BLADDER.&#13;
SttnglnK. Irritation, inrtainmat'cn. all K i d n e y and&#13;
t'rlnavy Complaint*, cured hy "I'lK-hu-^alha." 11.&#13;
•W&#13;
If afflicted with sore ever, use Dr. Isaac&#13;
Thompson's Eye Water. Druggists sell I t 35c.&#13;
Those nersons whodo not need Iron, but who&#13;
are troubled with Nervousness and Dyspepsia,&#13;
will find in Carter's Little NERVE PUls a most&#13;
desirable article. They are mostly used in com*&#13;
bination with Carter's Little Liver Pills, and In&#13;
this way often exert a most magical effect.&#13;
Take just one pill of each kind immediately&#13;
after eating and you will be free from Indigestion&#13;
and Dyspepsia. In vials at 23 cent*. Sold&#13;
by all Druggists. .&#13;
TF YOU WANT A DOG&#13;
Send 15 cents for I)oo B.CTKK9' GVIDJE, IUO eajrraTlnira,&#13;
eolored plate. Asaoclated Fanciers, J37 South Et«ht&#13;
Street, Philadelphia^,.&#13;
The purest, sweetest and best Cod Liver Oil tn the&#13;
world, manufactured from fresh, healthy livers, up&#13;
on the sea-shore. It Is absolutely »ure and sweet.&#13;
Patients who have once taken tt prefer It to all others.&#13;
Physicians have decided It superlor-to a n y o f the&#13;
other oils In market. Made by CASWELL HA.Z.U$D, *&#13;
Co.. S e w York.&#13;
Chapped Hands, Face. Pimples, and Rough Skin,&#13;
cured.by U»lOK Juniper Tar Soap, made by CxawxLL,&#13;
HAZ AJI* «fc Co., New York.&#13;
High Priced Batter.&#13;
Dairymao ofien wonder how their more favored&#13;
c mpelilors get such h u h prices for their butter the&#13;
year round. It is by a^wavt- having a ua.fortn p i t&#13;
edged article. To put the "gilt edge" o i , when the&#13;
Mistures d o not do it. they use Wells, Richardson&#13;
_ OG'S Improved Butter Color. Evert butter&#13;
maker can rlo the .sam.-. Sold everywhere and&#13;
warranved as harmless as salt, and perfect in operation.&#13;
•&#13;
A C A R © . — T o all who are suffering from errors ofyouth,&#13;
nervous weaksie**, early dm-ay. li*» of .mtfnjiood.&#13;
etc.. 1 will send a reel.pi* that wili^cwe you,&#13;
FRKfc OF CH.VP.trK. ThU srreut remejlyVrHis discovered&#13;
bv a missionary to South Auiefu-a. Send selfaddressed&#13;
envelope" to KEV.,.^OSKPH T. 1SMAX,&#13;
Station D, New York. ^^_&#13;
nUaaHl laa'rj»uH aCaauufWtft- -*iJ&gt;rB!,H''&gt;'forfan'11}r Q8('- Only sold&#13;
I n bottles. lle-*t aud c h e a p e s t .&#13;
bUMMEB COMPLAINTS&#13;
A t«s_moonf-1 la half a tumbler of water will 1B •&#13;
few rioraents cure CP.AMP8. SPASMS. SOUB 8T0MACHTNAUSEA,&#13;
VOMITING. HEABThURN, NEKV-&#13;
0USNEH8. KLEEPLESSNESS. t4U)K HEADACHE,&#13;
D1ARRHCEA. DYSENTEKY.CHOLEKA MORBUS&#13;
COLIC. FLATUIJJ&amp;'CY. A_fD ALL IXTEKNAl&#13;
PAIX8.&#13;
For CHOLERA and severe eases of the foregoloj&#13;
Complaint*, see our printed directions.&#13;
MALARIA J2f ITi VARIOUS FO&amp;X9&#13;
FMYEM AXB AQVEf&#13;
_ | e r e Is not a remedial agent In this world that will&#13;
ore Fever and Ague and all other Malartous,_BIUous,&#13;
H " ttltUATU ^ ¾&#13;
~W&#13;
% • LYDtA E. PINKHAM'8 • &lt;&#13;
VEGETABLE COMPQiiflD&#13;
•. • is A ro_rrrrs cur_e ?oa • - •&#13;
All those pnl-ral Ccmplaints&#13;
• and We.-uefttrs so eomaioa "*&#13;
* #,*-'• • * t» our best t * « * « •&#13;
0 * FEMALE rOPCLiTIOX. &lt; t&#13;
Ti\ie(l laUialJ, pU)*r L&lt;*«_«• _rm.&#13;
• H* pa~*o« t* sol^i/ A ' fi* **g.'r*'.i««f* baling ^&#13;
a:»cjst ar.i t^t T*&gt;-'f " ' 1"»'*» B i , &lt; * t k a t - 4°** • » '&#13;
** eUimt i» A), thous'- i^«oj iaJ.VJ can Qladlv teatifi. •&#13;
• It wiU cure enUrely »J1 yrariaa tiovMe*, Ir{_.n_o_&#13;
Hon and Ci^raticni, Filling and V. pl_ecut_ts, aat&#13;
consequent Spi-rU Weakness, and if paxUcularlj&#13;
adapted to the eliango of life. • • • • • » * «.-• • • •&#13;
• It removes Kalitrie^,VTatu!enrv,d^roysallcrwr__f&#13;
for stimulants and rellevis &gt;V««krii6» of theStoirunch&#13;
It cures Elwitiag, Htadacben, ;&lt;&gt;;t-vous Pro»vr_Uon,&#13;
Osneral IVbiHiy, Siecpleiiwessi, Liepresfsion and Indi&#13;
gtcrtion. That leclintc ot bearing down, causing pain,&#13;
antf backache. 1s alwuyn permaneotly enrvd br ltaua*.&#13;
• Bend stamp to Lynn, Ma**, for yftinphlet. Letters o.'&#13;
t«qu-r7«o&amp;fldent__iy_—werod- 'fnftaUat_r_ja_rta&#13;
I&#13;
Especia'Jv "In Cholera&#13;
'ildjfe's K^td&#13;
Infantum 1» the use of&#13;
1 liivaluabie. Manv ciise* oonld he cited&#13;
wl-.ere everything else had faffed, ami l.ldgo's Food&#13;
has been tried and retained. Hy the »rreugrh trnpai&#13;
ed and Its tieutrnl action «&gt;n the bowel*, the phyi»u»rfin&#13;
has heen ahleto use-»tte4t-re!ie'&lt;ii&lt;'s ss to i'ttctH^wrleriresloratlon&#13;
of the patient to health.&#13;
Prills thovrc&gt;_n_ yet raps out thcuttu.&#13;
jy^rf tha Diill at e_eh&#13;
stujii^rnrtvi-s, -,he c.vsir.jror diii.*&#13;
•le limit r it i&gt; It-t it follow.&#13;
re»t»TTu' »iil vl;B&lt;n;t r,-nioviii)i'&#13;
•vo—l K_i_t-^si»):- than ul.y oilier&#13;
an l dr..-* tlio too'.*&#13;
faster: AVo a_.tj rt*a_«&#13;
KI a i- ui 11-^¾&#13;
R-^aitd 1oo'4&#13;
L i j - C S . v | \ Vlwrburing&#13;
JiWV ^ s _ * . f a. •_• LAKOK,&#13;
^ . W I L L S '&#13;
&amp; HYMAN,&#13;
T i r r i N , O H I C&#13;
Lumbago, Backacht&gt;H*_a&gt;'che. Toothache,&#13;
B o r e T h t ^ a U 9 w e l H ^ s ^ . t * p r * i i l M i » . B r « i a « _ &gt;&#13;
Bnrna»J»&gt;5ul«la&gt;, F r o a t U l t r a ,&#13;
_. * « A-M&gt;rnK* nontLY PAIXS A^o *«•«».&#13;
SoW by Dryafftu.nd P-»l«r*ev&lt;rywti-r«. Fifty CauUaU&gt;__,&#13;
DIPT, iiotn In 11 L»U(U«CM.&#13;
TI1E OOAKLES A. VOCE LEU CO.&#13;
lt»_. VOQ_L_i*C04 XUlUagr*. 1 4 ^ 1 . 1 . 4 ,&#13;
TAt'CTIT AST) SITUATIONS&#13;
l-'l'it N IMU:n Cin-iilar« free&#13;
i T I X K I t K n S . , . I n n e s k l U e . W i s .&#13;
enr&#13;
and other fevers (aided&#13;
quickly as KADWAY'S&#13;
RADWAY'fc READY&#13;
by RADWAT'S PILLS) ao&#13;
READY RELIEF. ^^ _ T&#13;
_ . RELIEF I S A CFREFOR&#13;
EVERY PAIN. TOOTHAt HE, HEADACHE^ SCIATICA,&#13;
LUMBAGO, NEURALGIA. RHElT^ATIbM.&#13;
SWELLING OF THE JOI-NTS. SPRAINS, BRUISES,&#13;
PAINS IN THE BACR\. CHEST OR LIMBS.&#13;
The application of the READY RELIEF to the part&#13;
or parts where the palu or difficulty exists will afford&#13;
instant ease and comfort. _ _ ^ . „ _ _ . . _ _ . _ ,&#13;
It was the first and U m K ONLY PAIN REMEDY&#13;
that instantly stops the most excruciating pains, allays&#13;
inflammation, and Cures Congestions, whether of the&#13;
Lungs, Stomach, Bowels, or other glands or organ* OJ&#13;
one application.&#13;
PRICE. 3u CENTS per bottle. 8old by droggistt.&#13;
DR. RADWAY's&#13;
SARSAPARILLIAN RESOLVENT,&#13;
The Great Blood Purifier-&#13;
4_&#13;
Chronic r.heumatism. Scrdfula.' Glandular Swetllng.&#13;
Hacking. Drv Cough, Cancerous Affection*. Syphilitic&#13;
Complaints. Bleeding of the Lungs, Dyspepsia. Water&#13;
Brash. White Swellings, Tumwrs. Pimples, Blotches,&#13;
Eruptions of the Face, Ultera Skin and Hip Diseases;&#13;
Mercurial Diseases. Female Complaints, Gout, Dropsy.&#13;
Rickets. Salt ltheum. Bronchitis, Consumption, Kidney,&#13;
Blsdder, Liver Complaints, etc.&#13;
Dr Radway's Sarsaparillap Resolvent.&#13;
A remedy composed of Ingredients of extraordinary&#13;
medical properties, essential to purify, heal, repair&#13;
and Invigorate the broken-down and wasted body—&#13;
&lt;jvicx. PLKASA?ixr^Ar_ and P«BMA.VXXT In Its treatment&#13;
and cure.&#13;
SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. One Dollar a bottle.&#13;
BR. RADWAY'S&#13;
REGULATING PILLS,&#13;
27½ Great Liver and Stomach Remedy.&#13;
Perfectly tasteless, elegantly coated, purge, regulate,&#13;
purify, cleanse and strengthen.&#13;
Dr. Radway's Pills, for the cure of all disorders of&#13;
the Stomach. Liver, Bowels, .Kidneys, Bladder,&#13;
Nervous 1)1 senses. Loss of Appetite. Headache, Con-&#13;
Blipatlon. &lt;•ontlvenes*. Indicention. Dyspepsia, ntlrous&#13;
nesa. Fever. Inflammation of the Bowels, Piles, and all&#13;
dearariifement* of the Internal Vlsi-era. Purely&#13;
vegetable, containing no mercury, minerals, or delaterous&#13;
drugs.&#13;
Price 25 cents per box. Sold by all druggists. _&#13;
READ "FALSE AND TKUE."&#13;
Bend s letter Ktamp to DR. RADWAY *CO„ No. C&#13;
Warren street. New York. £ _ f Information worm&#13;
housands w.Ul he sent u&gt; yuu.&#13;
".fTTl-&#13;
N O M O R E&#13;
BOSS&#13;
COLUW PAD&#13;
Of Zinc A Leather.&#13;
Tt will positively pre«veOntH cbEa Ong5 EaaCd cKare8 .s ore&#13;
W i t h e r ? . Horse can be worked while cure Is perfected.&#13;
. Har e.j maker* win refual money If not&#13;
sa-ltoai after :&lt;&gt; days trial. UliXTKR CLHTIS, Madison, Wi_-_&#13;
$50 REWARD&#13;
will _• r«4« *&gt;' -ajr firala P a a&#13;
•T *a-M ««• —-4 «aa tl-aa aa4&#13;
ka&gt; u aaeh braia t SOTS la M «&#13;
a_T M*«r P i t a t , stOXAJtCM&#13;
Crata aad M * d a«-«ra_»r&#13;
•*4 Itaasfs* M- *ar l a t p r a r M&#13;
W a r « « * a N MU1 * t - Isaa-U&#13;
t*r wkluS v* • _ « _ n » . Ctrsa-&#13;
U , M &lt; PrtM L M _ - t M tnt,&#13;
IEWM»«ICHIKtO.,&#13;
If PAGES&#13;
LIQUID GLUE&#13;
«8MK_kkW,H«IUttWiH3S _ . Awarded QOLO MEDAL, LONDON, 1S8J. Csud&#13;
ZM by Masoa k Hamlin Orran and Piano Co.. Pall mas&#13;
¢ 1 Palace Car Co . *e. Mfd nnl- by th« K U S 8 A&#13;
EvtRYWHERl. aar8atnpi«Tin Can by Mail. Oc.&#13;
lASTHMA cujSiSl i G e n t a a Am J m a C a r e neveryaiiJtogl-* iw.1&#13;
|sMdia(« rt'io/in the worst c*Bes4ns_rsjs com fort-1&#13;
I abte sleep; effects e a r c a where ail JthersJ aiL-41&#13;
ltriale&lt;&gt;nri*e**ttomottikep&lt;teat PrlewoOCTSnal&#13;
R. U. AWARE&#13;
THAT&#13;
rd's Clima-- Pl_g&#13;
bearing a -rd tin tag; that LorUlardl&#13;
I t u s e f . e n f fine cut; that Loiill_rd'«&#13;
iTy ('Urf'tnga and that Lorillard's J*nufla,ai1&#13;
"t T!.i chejuy-'. vi'inllty cons'iered ? ^&#13;
•I'i&#13;
.I •&#13;
:- t t l&#13;
; v&#13;
- t f t 5 - U — J * . __. %/.&#13;
KGAVS IMPERIAL TRUSS&#13;
This new truss has a spiral sprlng.-anc &gt;(iR\i&gt;t A ff.D t'KfcssrrRKrytinasTo everr,&#13;
Tion. retHlnlittf t h e h e r n i a a l w a y s , ^ f r u r e s .&#13;
)\\'&lt;&gt;rn i n v and M « I H T w i t h cemftfff. E n c l o s *&#13;
sraiiiT&gt; for ("'TCTil^vr^t'T^din-trottrHTisTrftals.-'&#13;
Auk v . m - d ' r u / c ' s t . F.t.AN'S lXLWKTTlAL'TRUSS CO..&#13;
B o x i &gt; S A;ti&gt; Arl&gt;or,MU-h.&#13;
• i-MB B f j r f i a&#13;
BirwMtri&#13;
CHSAPIST.**&#13;
HESHERSS i f , n t t&#13;
.»•_- Clirtrlilln&#13;
att«Mttoall awctoo* &gt; Wnftae rai-UBtQm.&#13;
aadi.-i(_staT_»Aaia&gt;«_r * T_y_» Oos, M___U_»kl.&#13;
,I*-__-MSW-_i-i !• _niai«.&gt;urerelieT tBTtfWI&#13;
"stowf 11« Co*&#13;
lostowa, 1&#13;
B l l r * l l B s T l i » o « o U » y s . N o | » y tl I C o r a d .&#13;
W l I V 111 Da. J. brii'iiK.MS Leoa..oa, Ohio.&#13;
—^ff&amp;^ffS'^Si&#13;
CURES Rheumatism. l W | T l | I F l l I _ ^ I .LB U I I L .&#13;
bago, Lame Back, Sp/alns • • ^ • • ^ • • m l ^ s y ^ r i a _ s l !&#13;
and Bruises, Asthma, Catarrh,Cou»hs,Colds, Sore Throat. Diphtheria, Burns,|&#13;
I Frost Bites, Tooth, Ear, and Headache, and all pains and Aches.&#13;
FOSTER, jmnVlty* COMPANY. Vr*prlrtor»t&amp;uffnlo, 2»&gt;tr York, V. 8. A.&#13;
i&#13;
i&#13;
i&#13;
* 1&#13;
i 3&#13;
\&#13;
Zy&#13;
--&#13;
V^^.T^*'*,.. V•&#13;
Mi&#13;
. SOUTH LYON DOTS&#13;
Prom the Excelsior,&#13;
, Willie Monehan, son of 'John and&#13;
Elizabeth Monehau, of Given Oak,&#13;
iiied last week Tuesday of consumption,&#13;
in his 9th year.&#13;
. The brick work on A. E. Bullock's&#13;
building and the new bank is completed.&#13;
Thej carpenter work will be&#13;
pushed rapidly until finished.&#13;
Rev. John Gourleyand family started&#13;
Monday for a tour weeks adsenee&#13;
in Pennsylvania. Hispulpit will be&#13;
supplied by Revs. Brown and Gilford&#13;
during his absence.&#13;
The village cannon that was stolen&#13;
about two weeks a&lt;ja—from Ch&amp;llis&#13;
"Bros, blacksmith sho|r\vas found on&#13;
the morning of the 4th. The guilty&#13;
parties placed a postal in the postoffice&#13;
addressed to Geo. Hamilton&#13;
stating where the niissin&#13;
artillery could be found. I t was concealed&#13;
in the bushes in James Duncan's&#13;
woods a few' rods north of this&#13;
place.&#13;
BRIGHTON SAYINGS.&#13;
From tbe Argus.&#13;
Viola O'Neal, after a six year's&#13;
adsenee, has returned to the paternal&#13;
roof for a few weeks visit.&#13;
Mrs. J. S. Holden, of Green Oak,&#13;
was prostrated last week by a stroke&#13;
of paralysis. She still lies very low&#13;
and vague hopes of her recovery are&#13;
entertained.&#13;
/&#13;
/&#13;
Someone not inclined to walk, took&#13;
one of L. Moon's mules from the&#13;
pasture the other night, rode him'&#13;
nearly to Howell, and then let him&#13;
go. The beast was recovered at Mr.&#13;
Pless' in Genoa, Sunday night last,&#13;
Mr. Wm, Fay returned Monday&#13;
from Memphis, Teun., where he has&#13;
been for several years past. H e reports&#13;
his brother Peter well, and as&#13;
steady as a clock, having lost b u t ^&#13;
just one week's time$ since liir'two&#13;
years stay there./CPeter"^ foreman&#13;
~7n a large refine'ryC '&#13;
The farm house of Mr. Charles&#13;
Hartwipk, in Genoa, was discovered&#13;
to be/ on fire last Thursday about&#13;
nodn. Mr. H . was absent at the&#13;
/time, but the neighbors after a strong&#13;
fight succeeded in subduing the&#13;
flames. The insurance had been allowed&#13;
to expire a short time ago.&#13;
Hack feu's Arnica SalTe.&#13;
THK BXST S.VLVE in the world for&#13;
Cut" Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt&#13;
Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapned'&#13;
Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all sliin&#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 WIXCHF.LL'S DKUO STOKE.&#13;
To the Afflicted.&#13;
Since the introduction of Kellogg's&#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;
the forerunners of more serious dis*&#13;
orders. It acts speedily and surely,&#13;
always relieving sutf&gt;ring and often&#13;
saving life. The protection it affords&#13;
by its timely u&gt;e on rheumatism, kidney&#13;
affection, and all aches and pains,&#13;
'^Wounds, cramping pains, cholera morpiece.&#13;
or bus, 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, andthose&#13;
who have once used it nevor will.&#13;
It is absolutely certain in its remedial&#13;
effects, and will always cure when&#13;
cures are possible.&#13;
Call at WINCHELL'S DKVG STOKE and&#13;
get a memorandum book giving-more&#13;
full details of the curative properties&#13;
of this wonderful-medicine.&#13;
Thousands Say So.&#13;
Mr. T. W. Atkins, Girard, Kansas,&#13;
writes: u l never hesitate to recommend&#13;
your Electric Bitters to my customers,&#13;
they give entire satisfaction&#13;
and arerirapid sellers.1 'Electric-Bitters&#13;
are the purest and best medicine&#13;
known and will positively cure kidney&#13;
and liver complaints. Purify the&#13;
blood i and regulate the bowels- No&#13;
family can afford to be without them.&#13;
They will save hundreds of dodars in&#13;
doctor's bills every year. Sold at 50&#13;
cents a bottle at Winchell's Drug&#13;
Store.&#13;
$1.25 $1.25&#13;
DETEOIT&#13;
WEEKtY POST&#13;
the best weekly in Michigan&#13;
19 Months for $1.2]&#13;
V !&#13;
r M&#13;
DEXTER CUPPINGS-&#13;
?rom the Leader .,&#13;
A party of Ypsilantians are in camp&#13;
at Base Lake.&#13;
. A young man was baptised at the&#13;
Baptist Church last Sunday.&#13;
H. Wilson, of Webster, has received&#13;
$1,100 back pension, and hereafter $6&#13;
monthly.&#13;
A valuable cow.belonging to Y^rffT&#13;
Aprill, of Scio, was killedjiy4tg4ttttmg&#13;
recently.&#13;
Last Sunjlay'a party ot six of our&#13;
youn^people—of equal gender—startf&#13;
%&#13;
••&lt;*&#13;
a quiet excursion to Wintmore&#13;
Lake to recuperate from the effects of&#13;
the 4th. The driver—a well-known&#13;
salesman, with an habituaP'getting&#13;
lost" propensity—after spending the&#13;
forenoon in driving devious ways—&#13;
all but the right one—pulled up at&#13;
Nofthfield, where a cheap guide was&#13;
procured, and the excursion proceeded.&#13;
After several minor "catastrophes" the&#13;
lake was reached, and a boat-ride indulged&#13;
in; but fortune did not lavor&#13;
the brave, for a "rdTjapfisnT"was the&#13;
outcome. The ride home eventful for&#13;
its-various way, beautiful music, and&#13;
very drowsy el^cufsion,sts. ' "&#13;
Mr. TleynoTHs,of Ahn"Arbor, drove&#13;
to our place last week, and hitched his&#13;
horse m front of one of our stores.&#13;
Two men helped themselves and dr^vtf&#13;
away. The horse was fawicf next&#13;
morning between Ann Arbor and Dexter,&#13;
and'died shortly alter being taken&#13;
home, from over-driving,&#13;
As Mrs. Win. Stevens and Mrs.&#13;
•"Stunley^wcre riding on Monday, they&#13;
drove up to the Stebbins House and&#13;
stopped a moment, when a guest of&#13;
wind blew a piece of drapery from&#13;
the carrage, -frightening the .horse,&#13;
which commenced running, throwing&#13;
both ladies out, brusing them considerable&#13;
and smashing the buggy&#13;
yp.ry badly hrforo the horse was stop,&#13;
ped. For the ladies it was a marrow&#13;
«scape..&#13;
The WEEKLY POST will lie sent on&#13;
all subscriptions r^ceivtfil on or before&#13;
August 1, lNS^'-TiiTtll January 1, &gt;.N7,&#13;
$1.2o! $1.25! $1.25!&#13;
The WEEKLY POST has special&#13;
telegraph service from all the world&#13;
has among its special oorrespojidtfhts,&#13;
Grant,Sherman, Dana Jj4irdstone, Bis-&#13;
4nrtrk, and all JjiiMeading writers of&#13;
the world&gt;bas complete r a m i , iiousohoid-&#13;
alfd State News departments.and&#13;
is emphatically the best family newspaper&#13;
m Michigan. Every Democrat&#13;
should read it. No Republican can&#13;
do without it.&#13;
SUBSCRIBE NOW.&#13;
+•—&#13;
Address&#13;
THE POST,&#13;
Detroit, Mich.&#13;
$1-35 $1.9©&#13;
^1&#13;
&lt;!&gt;\ PRICE LIST&gt;&#13;
•of-&#13;
-I GROCERIES d. r&#13;
-atjsrRIOHARDS'&#13;
I-^a&#13;
Sugar, Granulated. ..., 7fe&#13;
'• Confectioners A 7c&#13;
" Extra 0.. Yellow b ' |&#13;
" Brown . &amp;a&#13;
Coffee, Arbuckles 18c&#13;
» Dilworth. 18c&#13;
McLaughlin's xxxx 18c&#13;
Old Government Java and Mocho&#13;
mixed ..Me&#13;
" Green Rio 1 2 | c&#13;
Teas 15,25, 40, 50, GOc&#13;
Pure Spices, per lb.. 40c&#13;
Bird Seed,&#13;
Saleratus,&#13;
Corn Starch,&#13;
Gloss Starch,&#13;
It ai sins,&#13;
Rice,&#13;
Prunes.&#13;
Oat Meal,&#13;
u&#13;
u&#13;
u&#13;
a&#13;
u&#13;
(4&#13;
Soap, 3 b ^ s f o r 25c&#13;
8c&#13;
&lt;c&#13;
8u&#13;
8c&#13;
.10 to 12c,&#13;
8c&#13;
» • * • . . » f V&#13;
4c&#13;
.Galvanic&#13;
Axmj-&#13;
Magnetic&#13;
Soap, 4 bars for 25c. j XntV washboard&#13;
Town Talk, G bars, 25c&#13;
Lard, per&#13;
Herring, per box, .'.. .20c&#13;
White Fish,101b kits. . . . 7 7 . . . .ft.00&#13;
Mackerel, 15 lb kits $1.25&#13;
Dried Beef, sliced, per lb 18c&#13;
Sugar-cured Hams •* . ..^-11 c&#13;
Mason Fruit Cans, 1 q t , per tloz. $1.25&#13;
u u o &gt; ' " $1.50&#13;
I t takes but a short time for a person to see that the stock carried by&#13;
MANN BROTHERS '&#13;
Is by far the most complete in town. A beautiful line of&#13;
NEW TINSEL WINDOW SHADES&#13;
V • A . I J I I T I E J O O F -&#13;
IMPORTANT.&#13;
'"Whfn vou-vialt or loav*&gt; New York City, save&#13;
kiutrii'..'*' ^NprosPUj.'t- and carrum*1 liirt&gt; ami ptop at&#13;
tin' (irund Union Hotel, oppoe i[,» Uramf (JPtitral&#13;
Depot.&#13;
Kle L'iint roomp flttted up at a coyt of one mil&#13;
lion dollars, rt'ituccii to $1.00 arwl upwards&#13;
dav. European plsirf, EiVvsitoi'. Ke«tn&#13;
plied with the lie^t. H o w carp-ftHffplevHted&#13;
railroad to all dopyts. KaniiHtyt-^fan live better&#13;
for lens money at the (irjyKt^T'nion IU*tt&gt;l than&#13;
any other rtrst-cltissJis+ttH in the city&#13;
WANTED! AGENTS&#13;
TO *EU,&#13;
TUNISOIST'S&#13;
New ami superior subscription Atlases, Maps and&#13;
Charts. AJ&gt; payinp as any agency in the world.&#13;
For cataloKiie." free, address II, "»•&lt;. Tl'NlSON.&#13;
Chhiai:o, ill.: New York City, N. Y.: Cincinnati,&#13;
(),; Atlanta, . (ia.: London, Canada; St. Paul,&#13;
Minn., or Kansas City, Mo.&#13;
DANIEL F. EWEN,&#13;
GENERAL AGENT, - PINCKNEY, MICH. '&#13;
Kello^'s-Columbian Oil is composed&#13;
of vegetable products in a highly&#13;
concentrated form, and act* directly&#13;
on the.kidneys. It cures rheumatism&#13;
and all other aches and pains.&#13;
The kidneys cannot perform their&#13;
proper office when diseased and at the&#13;
same time expel the impurities that&#13;
should pass off through their-proper&#13;
action. A few doses ot Kelloprg's - (Columbian&#13;
Oil will convince the most&#13;
skeptical that it acts directly on the&#13;
kidnevs.&#13;
CLOSING&#13;
Desiring to close out ourjoasrmess by Sept. 1st, 1885, we offer all&#13;
BOOTS, SHOES AND RUBBERS&#13;
-in stock-&#13;
T CO S T !&#13;
This is a Genuine Clearing Sale. The business will positively be closed as&#13;
soon as the gooda can be sold. You are cordially invited to inspect&#13;
^stock and compare prices.——&#13;
LADIES' Calf Shoes $1.25, reduced frem $2.00&#13;
LADIES' Goat Shoes $1.75, " " $2.50&#13;
and a proportionate reduction un all goods. Big drive in&#13;
GENTLEMENS' CALF AND KIP BOOTS.&#13;
W. B. H0FF, PINCKNEY.&#13;
That beats anything in town. L A D I E S , f a m i n e the new&#13;
EMBOSSED AND TINSEL BELTS.&#13;
We must call your attention to our elegant line of&#13;
LADIES' HANDKERCHIEFS,.&#13;
Our store is full, and the goods are going to&#13;
go. Prices are what knock, and we&#13;
are always ready to meet any&#13;
— —competition.— _&#13;
We have a full line of Tinsel Trimming Braid. G E N T L E M E N , we musir&#13;
call vonr attention, to ovir line of&#13;
AN^TIFF-HAISt&#13;
the very latest shapes. ~&#13;
MANN BROS/ - PINCKNEY.&#13;
YOU WILL ALWAYS&#13;
1ST GOODS AND LOW PRICES&#13;
AT WINCHELL'S DRUG STORE.&#13;
m^MmfmmMmkB w&#13;
* % $&#13;
;V&#13;
4&#13;
GROCERIES&#13;
BOOTS &amp; SHOE&amp;&#13;
^€HEAP^ »AS)&#13;
»xa&#13;
E. A. MANN, PINCKNEY.&#13;
-4-1.&#13;
m j^mi w; XT** Wtf*8&#13;
* i&#13;
-^i&#13;
• \&#13;
mm±±^*Mm^H*k&#13;
\ . v_^-. V - s ' •*«*' .JW^-V ^' ^' » . r&#13;
*m k.Vi.k'</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 July 16, 1885</text>
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                <text>July 16, 1885 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1885-07-16</text>
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                <text>J.L. Newkirk</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>VOL. Ill PINCKNEY, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JULY 23.1885. NO. 28&#13;
•T&#13;
I&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH.&#13;
J. LNEWKIRK, PUBLISHER.&#13;
ItttUKD THCK8DAYS.&#13;
Subscription Price, $1.00 per Year.&#13;
ADVERTISING RATES .&#13;
transient advertisements, 2b cants per inch for&#13;
Ant insertion and ten cento per inch for each subsaqaent&#13;
insertion. Local notices, 5 cents per line for&#13;
each insertion. Special rates for regular advertisement*&#13;
by the year or quarter.&#13;
ALL ADVERTISING BILLS DUE QUARTERLY.&#13;
INTERESTING TOPICS.&#13;
GO AND HEAR&#13;
The Drummer Girl, Miss IDA E.\ w e e k i n t h i s v i c i n i t v &gt;&#13;
TUTTLE, in the grand patriotic scene, J&#13;
as the "Daughter of the Regiment."&#13;
For date and particulars see bills.&#13;
This paper may be found on file at Geo. P.&#13;
Howell £ (&gt;o's. Newspaper Advertising Bureau&#13;
&lt;10 Spruce St.,) where advertising contracts may&#13;
be made for it in New York.&#13;
RAILROAD CARD.&#13;
Grand Trunk Railway Time Table.&#13;
MICH. AIR LINE DIVISION.&#13;
GOING EAST.&#13;
P. v.&#13;
4:50&#13;
4:i»&#13;
8:50&#13;
S:40&#13;
3:00&#13;
9:06&#13;
7:90&#13;
$'M&#13;
«:M&#13;
a :40&#13;
fi:»)&#13;
4:45&#13;
4:25&#13;
8:40&#13;
3:00&#13;
A U.&#13;
7:85&#13;
7:20&#13;
7:05&#13;
11:95&#13;
8:10&#13;
\&#13;
A. m.&#13;
10:i»&#13;
9;40&#13;
9:15&#13;
H:55&#13;
8:40&#13;
8:ii&amp;&#13;
8:10&#13;
7:80&#13;
STATIONS. GOING WEST.&#13;
(A. M. P . * . P. M.&#13;
RlDGEWAY : »:35 Jj;Mj&#13;
Armada 10:(X&gt;' . 6:15&#13;
Romeo 10;30r fi:80&#13;
Rochester. jlI:M| 7:05&#13;
dprr^-Vi^iaT^Tit^ i-rao-&#13;
^ V P o n t t a c ^ d 5:,)0, 2:2S&#13;
Wixom 6:05, 3:00&#13;
d. J ( a . 6:40&#13;
V So. Lyon-? .A. nc.i S:20&#13;
a. | Id. 7:301 i&#13;
Hamburg I 8:00, 8:40!&#13;
PINCKNEY : ^:40 8:M|&#13;
Mount Ferrier : &lt;«:15 4:10&#13;
Stockbridge ; 0:35 i :%&#13;
Henrietta, '10:05&#13;
JACKSON JJfrtfS: 5:05:&#13;
All trains run by '"tieMrtl standard" time.&#13;
All trains rundailyToundays excepted.&#13;
^ . J . S P I £ B « ; JOSEPH HICKSON&gt;&#13;
jerlntendent. General Manager.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
T H HOAG, M. D.,&#13;
(HOM(EOPATHIC&gt;&#13;
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.&#13;
Office at residence on East Main street.&#13;
All persons owing me on account&#13;
are respectfully notified thattne same&#13;
must be settled immediately.&#13;
W.'B. HOFK.&#13;
Light weight Gloves and Mittens&#13;
cheap, at LAKIN &amp; SYKES.1&#13;
SHILOH'S VITALIZER is what&#13;
you need for constipation, loss of appetite,&#13;
dizziness, and all symptoms of&#13;
dy«pepsia. Price 10 and 75 cents per&#13;
bottle.&#13;
For sale by H. F. Sigler &amp; Bro.&#13;
FARMERS, buy your Binding Wire&#13;
and Twine of&#13;
J AS. T.-HAMAN &amp; Co.,&#13;
Anderson, $Iicb,&#13;
DO NOT FAIL&#13;
To go and hear Miss IDA E. TUTTLE&#13;
inthe grand Gipsey scene and duett,&#13;
from the-opera of the "Twin Sisteis."&#13;
For date and particulars see bills.&#13;
C A R P E N T E R I N G A N D J Q I N E R ' I N G&#13;
Those wishing anything do&#13;
line will do well to cal" ^&#13;
2Gw4. ^ ^ ^ JOHN SMITH.&#13;
SHH&gt;OH^COUGH and ConsumptiofrtJure&#13;
is sold by us on a guarantee.&#13;
It cures consumption.&#13;
For sale by H. F. Sigier &amp; Bvo.&#13;
_ TRESPASS NOTICE.&#13;
All persons are hereby forbid trespassing&#13;
in my huckleberry swamp and&#13;
picking berries therefrom after this&#13;
date. LEWIS LOVE.&#13;
Dated, Pinckney, July 2, 1885.&#13;
Miss Kate Brown returned this&#13;
morning from Chicago.&#13;
Much wheat has been harvested this&#13;
this&#13;
T \ M. GREENE, M. I&gt;.,&#13;
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,&#13;
PLAINFIELD, ' MICHIGAN.&#13;
Office at residence. Special attention given to&#13;
surgery and diseases of the throat and Lungs.&#13;
&lt;f .&#13;
TAMES MAKKEY,&#13;
NOTARY PUBLIC&#13;
And Insurance Agent. Loral papers made on&#13;
•aort notice and reasonable term*. Ottke on&#13;
Main St., near Postofflce Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
CUSGRIMES&#13;
&amp; JOHNSON,&#13;
Proprietors of&#13;
PINCKNEY FLOURING&#13;
TOM M&#13;
I&gt;ea1ers In Flonr^airtl Feed. Cash paid for all&#13;
kinds of gTalBr-'Tinckney, Michigan.&#13;
P. VAN WINKLE,&#13;
ATTORNEY &amp; COUNSELOR at LAW&#13;
and SOLICITOR in CIIANCKKYOfflce&#13;
over Sigler's Drug Store. PINCKNEY&#13;
v?o&#13;
' )&#13;
-T| D. BENNETT,&#13;
PAINTEH AND PAPER HANGER.-&#13;
All work in this line executed with neatness&#13;
and dispatch.&#13;
THANGS &amp; K1RKLAM&gt;,&#13;
ATTORJ^YS,&#13;
8 3 0 O P E R A H O L ^ E ^ B L O C K , C H I C A G O , attend&#13;
carefully to businresoent them from other places.&#13;
PINCKNEY EXCHANGE BANK&#13;
G. W. TEEPLE,&#13;
^BANKER,!*&#13;
Does a General Banking Business.&#13;
Money Loaned on Approved Notes.&#13;
Deposits received.&#13;
Certificates issued cm time deposits,&#13;
And payable on demand.&#13;
COLLECTIONS A SPECIALTY.&#13;
The HERO to the front again for&#13;
1885. Farmers, look to your interest&#13;
and get the Hero Reaper and save&#13;
your drain and clover seed, a reaper&#13;
that you can depend upon in all kinds&#13;
and conditions of gram. Don't be&#13;
deceived; by buying a poor, cheap machine&#13;
because you can get it at a low&#13;
price. The Hero is sold on its merits,&#13;
any good farmer can have one on trial.&#13;
I keep a few here in stock, also a full&#13;
line of repairs always on hand. I also&#13;
Mil the Roosier Grain Drills which are&#13;
acknowledged to be the best drill made.&#13;
I have corn and field Cultivators for&#13;
one or two horses, shovel plows and&#13;
~~hoTga~ jroe^twrd plow repairs -ley various&#13;
plows, l a m also agent tor the&#13;
J . I. Case celebrated threshing machine*&#13;
and steam engines. 1 J A « . MARKEY, General Agent&#13;
22rf Pinckney,. Mich,&#13;
CROUP, WHOOPING COUGH and&#13;
broncnitis immediately relieved by&#13;
Shiloh's Cure.&#13;
For sale bv H. F. Sigler &lt;fc Bro.&#13;
Seed,&#13;
erries wantfor&#13;
casii or&#13;
Hottest day of the season—Monday,&#13;
July 20—106 degrees.&#13;
Mrs. J . A. Cad well and son are visiting&#13;
Wsterloo friends.&#13;
Miss Nellie Bennett is visiting&#13;
friends in Fowlerville this week.&#13;
Jerome Wincheil will . raise his&#13;
building another story next week.&#13;
The report of the press excursion&#13;
crowds somewhat our local space this&#13;
week.&#13;
Clark says, ptease return the wheelbarrow&#13;
you tocJc last week from his&#13;
market.&#13;
Lakin &amp; Sykes have something new&#13;
to say to you in their advertising space&#13;
this week. ^ ^ " '&#13;
WANTED.&#13;
Wheat, Beans and Clover&#13;
highest prices paid.&#13;
Tompkins &amp; Ismon.&#13;
CATARRH CURED, health and&#13;
sweet breath secured, by Shiloh's Catarrh&#13;
Remedy. Price 50 cents. Nasal&#13;
Injector free.&#13;
For sale by H. ¢. Sigler &amp; J i&#13;
Any quantity of hue,&#13;
ed at Andersoii^Station&#13;
trade&#13;
OACT' J A S . T . E A M A N &amp; C O .&#13;
CATHCART, THE PHOTOGRAHHER—intends&#13;
coming here soon. TTyou want&#13;
some good pictures taken wait for&#13;
him and lie will give you satisfaction.&#13;
SLEEPLESS M [G KTS, made miserable&#13;
by that terrible cough. Shiloh's&#13;
Cure is the remedy for you.&#13;
For sale by H . F . Sigler &amp; Bro.&#13;
ABERDEEN ANGUS GRADES.—The Polled&#13;
Aberdeen bull, "The Don" at the&#13;
Scotch Stork Farm, will serve a limited&#13;
number of cows at not less than&#13;
$5 per cow, cash. Apply early to&#13;
23tf. WM. COLLIE, Herdsman.&#13;
PETTYSVILLE MILLS.—Having repaired&#13;
my mills I am now ready to do first&#13;
class work. Flour,'as good as any&#13;
brand on hand, we also keep feed for&#13;
sale. 24wo S. A. PETTYS.&#13;
WILL YOU SUFFER with Dyspepsia&#13;
and Liver Complaint? Shiloh's&#13;
Vifalizer is guaranteed to cure you.&#13;
For sale by H. F. Sigler &amp; Bro;&#13;
James Markey, of this place, has se-&#13;
Tmrfcd the agencv of the Allan Line of&#13;
Steamers He is also agent for the&#13;
celebrated Jones Scales.&#13;
For lame back, side or chest, use&#13;
Shiloh's Porous Plaster. Price 25 c.ts.&#13;
For sale by H. F._SigIer'^'T5ro7_^-----&#13;
Farmer*, call at Markey's and see&#13;
the new Climax light MOWER, for which&#13;
he is agent. It i s a mo del of beauty&#13;
and perfection.&#13;
James Tiplady^blcT 11 sheep killed&#13;
and 12Jbad1y wounded by dogs last&#13;
rday evening.&#13;
Rev. K. H. Crane, of Addison, has&#13;
been in the village the past tew days&#13;
shaking_hands and visiting with his&#13;
many friends here.&#13;
One of R. C. Auld's hired men, of&#13;
Putnam, started for Scotland last&#13;
night, where it is expected he will&#13;
take unto himself a wife.— Republican&#13;
Win. Jewell, of Iosco, died at 10&#13;
o'clock Saturday evening last, of dropsy,&#13;
aged 66, and the funeral was held&#13;
Tuesday. He Iea/vel a Wife and son.&#13;
Mr. F. G. Rose is slowly recovering&#13;
from his paralytic stroke, under the&#13;
care of Dr. Hoag. He can move his&#13;
arm and limb some, but still keeps, jmciTfrom all parts of the county, but&#13;
pretty quiet. ^-^" . . - - -&#13;
The Lamborn R^ajljkl^clnne, a very&#13;
neatly put-up^apparatus for making&#13;
roads^J^^n^exhibitiott-rfl-front of Teepbri\&#13;
fCadwell's. Its working powers&#13;
THAT HACKING COUGH can be so&#13;
quickly cured by Shiloh's Cure. We&#13;
guarantee it.&#13;
For sale by H. F. Sigler &amp; Bro.&#13;
PUBLISHER'S NOTICE.&#13;
J S T h o s e 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 hae expired, and that, in accordance&#13;
with our rules, the paper will be discontinued&#13;
until subscription is renewed.&#13;
will be tested soon.&#13;
Donaldson &amp; Rich's circus is billed&#13;
for Pinckney Friday, July 31. This&#13;
is the same show that was here last&#13;
season and gave such universal satistaction,-&#13;
w4th4he exception of the fire&#13;
—which was not on the program.&#13;
In connection with the teachers' institute&#13;
arrangements have been made&#13;
for a special course of lectures on the&#13;
Philosophy of Education by Prof. W.&#13;
H. Payne, of the University. This&#13;
will be of vast 'nterest and will doubtless&#13;
draw a large attendance.&#13;
In the Daily Press and Dakotian.&#13;
published at Yanktown, Dakota, we&#13;
find the following concerning one ol&#13;
Pinckney's former citizens: "Ed. T.&#13;
Kearney has been offered the position&#13;
of assistant postmaster by the new&#13;
postmaster, a place to which he is admirably&#13;
adapted."&#13;
Rev. F. M. Coddington will preach&#13;
at the Pinckney Congregational church&#13;
Sunday next, morning and evening;&#13;
also at Hamburg Union church in the&#13;
afternoon. Mr. Coddington will arrive&#13;
Friday or Saturday, accompanied&#13;
by his wife, and they expect soon to be&#13;
settled injheir new home at the parsonage.&#13;
_ Gej^Ii.„I)ay^r&gt;rQpdetQr oitheTopr.&#13;
HOME NEWS.&#13;
DEAD.—As we go to press the news is received&#13;
by telephone that (ipn. Grant died this morning,&#13;
and the old hero i r beyond suffering.&#13;
Percy Teeple returned from Toledo&#13;
Saturday&#13;
£. L. Thompson spent the Sabbath&#13;
at Fowlerville.&#13;
The small bo* is delighted at the&#13;
idVa of a circus here.&#13;
ping House, Plainfield, will give an&#13;
opening and harvest party at his place&#13;
on Friday eve., Aug. 7th. Bill', including&#13;
supper, $1.25. HofF &amp; La&#13;
Rue's orchestra, of this place, will furnish&#13;
the music. Floor managers, E.&#13;
Murphy, of this place, and J. In gals,&#13;
^t Plainfield. Geo. says he will use&#13;
you well.&#13;
Prof. L. A. Tuttle and Miss Ida E.&#13;
Ttittle, assisted by their pupils and&#13;
singing class, give a musical entertainment&#13;
at this place some time next&#13;
week, the date and particulars of&#13;
which will be announced by bills.&#13;
Knowing the abilitw&amp;of the Prof, and&#13;
»-|-Migs Ida in_thi3 line^we daresay all&#13;
will get theirmoney's "wortiii WBo-atwas&#13;
driving the reaper for Wm. Steptoe,&#13;
just north of the track, and the&#13;
horses became frightened at the cars.&#13;
They soon became unmanageable and&#13;
Mr. Wheeler jumped from his seat&#13;
and let them go. They ran 80 rods&#13;
and through a gap which shook things&#13;
up a little, breaking the reel and&#13;
rakes, but doing no vtry serious damages.&#13;
The Michigan Air Line railroad-will&#13;
give a grand harvest excursion from&#13;
Stockbridge, Gregory, Anderson,&#13;
Pinckney, Hamburg and South Lyon&#13;
to Detroit on Saturday, August 8th,&#13;
1885. Round trip tickets from th&#13;
station will cost about $ 1.60^Girildren&#13;
between 5 and 12, half fare. It will&#13;
give at least five hours in the city for&#13;
busine.ss-oFpleasure. Further particulars&#13;
will be announced soon both by&#13;
bills and the__paper.&#13;
The 17th annual regatta -of the&#13;
Northwestern Rowing Association occurs&#13;
at Detroit July 28 and 29. The&#13;
Detroit Grand Haven &amp; Milwaukee&#13;
railway will sell special return tickets&#13;
frdta all stations on its line to Detroit&#13;
at one and one-third fare for the above.&#13;
Same rates will also apply at all stations&#13;
on the Detroit division of the&#13;
Grand Trunk railway, and on the&#13;
Michigan Air Line. Tickets will be&#13;
sold July 27th to 29th, good to return&#13;
up to July 30th inclusive.&#13;
INSTITUTE NOTICE.&#13;
To THE TEACHERS OF LIVINGSTON&#13;
COUNTY: The State Teacher's Institute&#13;
be held in Pinckney, commencing&#13;
Monday, Aug. 3, promises to be-one-of&#13;
the most succ^ssfurever held in this&#13;
county^- We hope for a full attendespecially&#13;
from the southern section,&#13;
whose teacheis will now have an opportunity&#13;
,_aiiittleL4xouble or expense,&#13;
of attending a first class institute.&#13;
Prof. I . N . Demmon, of Ann Arbor, as&#13;
conductor will have charge of the work&#13;
assisted by Prof. E. P. Church, of&#13;
Greenville, and Prof. Geo. Barnes, of&#13;
Howell. These are all men of thorough&#13;
training and large experience in&#13;
educational work, and their instruction&#13;
will be full of interest and practical-&#13;
utility to teachers. Attention'is&#13;
particularly calied to the circular issued&#13;
from the Dept. of Public instruction.&#13;
Teachers can expect to be cordially&#13;
welcomed by our people, and&#13;
ing to receive good accommodations at&#13;
rates at least as reasonable as is customary&#13;
in other places. Teachers wishto&#13;
secure boarding places in advance&#13;
will communicate with the undersigned.&#13;
WM. A. SpRorT, Local Com.&#13;
" Pinckney, July 21. 1885.&#13;
DONALDSON &amp; RICH'S CIKCDS&#13;
Will exhibit in Pinckney, July 31,&#13;
afternoon and evening. Since visiting&#13;
this place last season they have nearly&#13;
doubled the size of this eompany.&#13;
which now consists of one hundred&#13;
and fifty men and horses with thirtyfive'first&#13;
class performers, making it&#13;
the largest and most talented show for&#13;
twenty-five cents on earth. Grand&#13;
parade consisting of several beautiful&#13;
Tandem Teams driven by young and&#13;
handsqroe ladies. Band Chariot,&#13;
drawn by eight magnificent horses,&#13;
w-itfc Proi. Sehade^ grand Mil+tary&#13;
Bandv followed by a number of men&#13;
and women on horseback, dressed most&#13;
gorgeously. All the paraphernalia,&#13;
tappings and wardrobes' are entirely&#13;
new and very expensive. This will&#13;
1&gt;e the most complete eweus that ever&#13;
visited your city. Remember we have&#13;
five large new tents, (covering nearly&#13;
two acres of ground) which will bedecked&#13;
with a variety of handsome&#13;
flags, banners, shields and emblems of&#13;
many devices. Bear in mind that we»&#13;
show more outside, tree of charge, than*&#13;
tend the entertainment&#13;
Yesterday morning asttltemailtraianulled&#13;
out of the depot C:, it, Wheelan&#13;
every one you see that this Ais the la*gest&#13;
and most talented combination ever&#13;
exhibited foe twenty-five cents.&#13;
JUBILANT EDITORS.&#13;
They excursion to and banquet at the&#13;
beautiful summer resorts of the north,&#13;
through the liberality of the railroads&#13;
of the state, Hannah, Lay &amp;&#13;
Co., of Traverse City, and the hospitable&#13;
citizens of Traverse City,&#13;
Charlevoix, Petoskey and Harbor&#13;
Springs.&#13;
On Monday, July 6, the State Press&#13;
Association and the Western Michigan&#13;
Press Association calied a joint meeting&#13;
at Travjjrsje-€ity, to the members&#13;
of which-and their wives the railroads&#13;
the state furnished free transportation,&#13;
the Flint &amp; Pere Marquette and&#13;
the Grand R?pids &amp; Indiana roads&#13;
.putting Ott a special tram for the better&#13;
accommodation of the craft, the&#13;
G. R. 4i I. speciaLccnsisting of six passenger&#13;
coaches and baggage car drawn'&#13;
by engine No. 49, and was accompanr&#13;
ied by train dispatcher, E. Fitzgerald,&#13;
who attended to the wants of the party,"&#13;
Leaving Grand Rapids aV. 1 P. M. on&#13;
Monday with about 100 of th¥^gang'T&#13;
and their wives (or some one else*s|on&#13;
board, their number was constantly ih«^&#13;
creased from the stations along the line,&#13;
especially at Howard City, where the&#13;
Detroit, Lansing &amp; Northern had safely&#13;
and comfortably landed~ye editors''&#13;
from along their line. At Reed City the&#13;
Flint &amp; Pere Marquette special brought&#13;
many to swell our" ranks and when&#13;
Traverse. City was reached at 7:30 p.&#13;
M» they numbered nearly 400.&#13;
Here the vast array of newspaper&#13;
men and women was met by a largo&#13;
delegation of citizens and a-splendid&#13;
cornet band, who escorted the company&#13;
to the elegant Park Place hotel, a&#13;
grand structure built upon either sides&#13;
of .the street and connected by an enclosed&#13;
elevated hallway. This is thei&#13;
property of Hannah, Lay '&amp; Co., a t&#13;
whose hands the~"Pfess"Gang" received&#13;
such excellent treatment on this neverto-&#13;
be-forgotten excursion. Although,&#13;
the attendance was much larger than&#13;
had been expected they were all furnished&#13;
with good quarters and plenty,&#13;
of good vituals, about 100 finding re*&gt;t'&#13;
and food on the staunch lake steamer,&#13;
City ot Traverse, also owned by Han-,&#13;
nah, Lay &amp; Co., while some were esconsed&#13;
at comfortable private houses. Mr.&#13;
Perry Hannah, the bep.d of the firm,&#13;
and a genial old gentleman personally&#13;
saw that all were well cared for, and&#13;
his sunny smile and kindheartedness&#13;
will always be remembered by the&#13;
Michigan editors. The Western Michigan&#13;
Pi ess Association held a profitable&#13;
meeting that evening, and' Tuesday&#13;
morning and afternoon an enjoyable&#13;
and beneficial session of both associations&#13;
were held. In rthe evening'a&#13;
grand reception was held at the Park&#13;
Place, where a lady elocutionist entertained&#13;
them for a short time and music&#13;
from the bands and converse of the&#13;
people proved it an enjoyable affair. -&#13;
Throughout the day carriages were at '.&#13;
the door of the hotel to carry any of&#13;
the party about the beautiful city&#13;
gratis. Two noticeable features here&#13;
were Hannah, Lay k Cos. mammoth&#13;
mercantile establishment and the new&#13;
Insane. Asylum. The former is a.&#13;
building 320x120 feet on the grouffdl&#13;
*«drHb«r ^tei4«s-higT^-wherein «atf&#13;
be found almost everything from at&#13;
darning needlo to a threshing machine.&#13;
The Asylum is 1,000 feet in&#13;
length, 560 feet" deep and three stories&#13;
high. It ha» a very pleasant site overlooking&#13;
the bay, and some of the editors&#13;
thought it would be a pleasant&#13;
abode for their wives. Judge Ramsdell's&#13;
feuit farm was also visited and&#13;
its fine productions and pleasant&#13;
grounds were much praised. Traverse&#13;
City as a whole is one of the most famous-&#13;
Fesorts of Northern Michigan, situated&#13;
any other show will exhibit in lhis&gt;| ^ it is on~the Bouth shore of G r a n *&#13;
city under canvas this season* for 25&#13;
cents. The great show of the season,&#13;
and for one-half the price of admission&#13;
charged by other shows. • L*otly, tolb&#13;
Traverse Bay, wh?re the healthfullake&#13;
breezes fan her shore and dama&#13;
nature has done so much toward mak-&#13;
TagTh"e"auP"ggffIRlratfS romantic, health"&#13;
fbland grand. Her people are enter-*&#13;
taining hospitable and enterprising*&#13;
, ' ' (CoDiifiiwd on UM paflt.)&#13;
,\.&#13;
%&#13;
"A&#13;
mmc 7&#13;
hSttMBSMMBI&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
tttCOEEEEPOHDEKTB.&#13;
1 » —&#13;
Aneemmnntcar.'ons for nil* r&gt;aper»hou1d b« accomtMaieil&#13;
bv (be name of tlir uutiior, cot neceunry foi&#13;
publication, liui it «n rvJileuce or good fslth on the&#13;
•cut sf the writer. Write on|y on one tide of the&#13;
P*per. Be psnHnl*rly can-mi about clvlnr nmnei&#13;
«»a Sate*, tolmve the leuen anil flKUiei plain and&#13;
4Utlnct. Proper name* air* often difficult to decipher&#13;
•ttauiQ of the care let* manner in wblch ths/ are&#13;
wrltwn.&#13;
STRIKING MILL MEN.&#13;
THE STATE TB00P8 CALLED OUT.&#13;
Both Sides Determined.&#13;
Gov. Alger arrived at Bay City and&#13;
E a s t Saginaw Tuesday morning the f-ith.&#13;
I t la evident that, after looking the situation&#13;
carefully over, he concluded that more troops&#13;
were necessary, and he therefore sent the following&#13;
order by telegraph to Col. Robinson&#13;
«&gt;f Detroit:&#13;
B A V CITY, July 14.—Col. Eugene Robinson,&#13;
commander fourth r e g i m e n t M. 8. T.: You&#13;
will at once report t o Sheriff Brennan of Bay&#13;
county, this city, with three companies of your&#13;
regiment, fully armed and equipped, to afd in&#13;
suppressing riots, preserving lire and property.&#13;
You will arrange.with the Michigan Ceutral&#13;
railroad for transportation. It is hoped you&#13;
can report here early tomorrow morniug.&#13;
R. A. AI-OKK,&#13;
Commander-in-chief.&#13;
immediately on receipt of the above order&#13;
from the Commander-in-chief Col. Robinson&#13;
issued the following:&#13;
HEADQUAUTKKS F O U R T H R E C M. S. T., )&#13;
D E T R O I T , July 14,1SS5. )&#13;
[Special Order No. l.J&#13;
Companies A. B. C and D a r e hereby ordered&#13;
t o report immediately at the Firemen's Hall&#13;
armory, fully uniformed and equipped, in&#13;
obedience to a telegraphic order from Russell&#13;
A. Alger, Commander-in-chief, dated Bav&#13;
-City,-Mich., July 14. Each enlisted man will&#13;
be furnished with forty rounds of ball cartridge.&#13;
Quartermaster F. W. Brede Mill see that all&#13;
ball cartridges in the possession of the differ-&#13;
•«nt companies of the City will accompany the&#13;
-battalion.&#13;
The battalion will proceed via the Michigan&#13;
Central Railroad to Bay City under my comm&#13;
a n d&#13;
Bv order of&#13;
* E U G E N E ROBINSON,&#13;
l^ieutenaat-Colonel-ConUBanding.-&#13;
Official:&#13;
J . L. If AIGHT, First Lieutenant and Adjutant.&#13;
So effectual were Col. Robinson's arrange&#13;
t n e n t s that soon four companies were on special&#13;
trains en route for the scene of the strike.&#13;
Simultaneously with his order for troops&#13;
•Gov. Alger issued the following proclamation:&#13;
To T H E P E O F L K OK T H E SAGINAW V A L L E Y —&#13;
Knowing of the existing condition of things in&#13;
t h e valley and the means by which vour great&#13;
industries have been stopped, I deem it proper&#13;
t o say;&#13;
First—To those who have been engaged in&#13;
acts pf violence and lawlessness, who have&#13;
taken part in tumultuous and unlawful assemblages,&#13;
one and all, I appeal to you to take the&#13;
: sober second thought.&#13;
You know that law and order must be enforced.&#13;
You know that h a d any person been killed in&#13;
ti»e closing of any of-the mills while resisting&#13;
your unlawful acts every man connected with&#13;
the assemblage could have been tried and held&#13;
accountable therefor.&#13;
You know that ail concerned in these unlawful&#13;
assemblages arc responsible for any act&#13;
which any of you may commit, and many of&#13;
you have wive? and families who will suffer in&#13;
consequence of your misdeeds.&#13;
I appeal trt you all to assist the proper officers&#13;
in the support of the law and the enforcement&#13;
of order, in your iuterest, and in the interest&#13;
of your families.&#13;
You have no right to cuter upon the premises&#13;
-of another without his consent. --.&#13;
If you enter with force and prevent any man&#13;
from carrying on his business?, or prevent any&#13;
laborer from pursuing his accustomed employm&#13;
e n t ; or if bv intimidation such result follows,&#13;
J-ou are guilty of offenses for which you tjee&#13;
iable to imprisonment.&#13;
And youv unlawful conduct not only injures&#13;
•yourself and endangers your personal liberty,&#13;
b u t rnjures the cause which you espouse.&#13;
Second—To nil officers in Saginaw Valley&#13;
^charged with the execution of the .laws.: .&#13;
Ienjoin upon you to see that the law 1$,&#13;
faithful!v executed without fear or favor.. stiS&#13;
I assure You that you shall have ,.the'whole&#13;
power o f the stat?," if necessary; to support&#13;
- you.&#13;
See that the leaders in these unlawful measures&#13;
tire apprehended and prosecuted accordi&#13;
n g to law-, that, they may receive their just&#13;
deserts.&#13;
Should complaint lx&lt; made to me that, any&#13;
official is guilty of neglect of d u t / . inefficiency&#13;
or misconduct "in office, I shall not hesitate to&#13;
use tile ]'Owt r- reposed in me for the sirs\&#13;
fiion, removal os punishment of such officia&#13;
prescribed bv law.&#13;
Third—To nil: Sufficient force is now on&#13;
b a n d to insure the preservation of order.&#13;
F u r t h e r unlaw ful assemblages will not be permitted.&#13;
Acts of violence and intimidation will&#13;
fee promptly punished, and allworkingmen and&#13;
o t h e r s will "be protected in the enjoyment of&#13;
the rights guaraut &gt;ed by law. /&#13;
Everv citizen is requested to aid in the support&#13;
of" the law by his peaceful and lawful behavior&#13;
and by giving information of any infraction&#13;
thereof which may co.rae/to his&#13;
•knowledge. /y&#13;
R U S S E L L A. A L ^ A R .&#13;
&lt;&gt;overnor/6f Michigan.&#13;
T h e situation of the ten hour strike at Bay&#13;
City has not changed materially. The saw&#13;
•mill of Sclh McLean&gt;\: Co., started running,&#13;
o n the ten hour system, but was closed, ^be&#13;
cause the management would not sigiKaf tide |&#13;
of agreement-™ run on the tenfbour plan the&#13;
balance of/fhc season, or ...until, the ten-hour&#13;
law wear into effect. Green &lt;k Stevens' mill&#13;
startell up on the ten-hour system, and that&#13;
h Miller Bros.' are the only ones running. ;&#13;
T h e strikers m a d e a raid on-Miller A Lewis—&#13;
planing mill, pulled out the tire and drove the&#13;
—rncrra-way.—Tte-nrrH-was r a n ni'ng terfhoTrnr&#13;
.at usual wages. Pitts it Cranage's salt block&#13;
was shut down in a similar manner.&#13;
The governor in his address asked the men&#13;
. if they would obey the • laws of 'the state of&#13;
Michigan. They answered loudly in the aflirm&#13;
ativc. When J u d g e Marston spoke he asked&#13;
if the men would molest those who desired to&#13;
work. They said, •'Yes, yes, we will stop&#13;
•them." He endeavored to state the law to&#13;
hem, b u t they hissed, jeered and_ marched&#13;
-away. I t was after this demonstration that&#13;
the call for troops was found necessary.&#13;
A meeting of the mill owners was held in&#13;
t h e afternnon at which resolutions were&#13;
&lt;*d declaring that they would not^yielol to the&#13;
•demands of the strikers, a n d ^ t h a t the mills&#13;
should only be r u n j ^ t h t f h o u r s of labor and&#13;
rate of wjtfces adopted by other than the em&#13;
ployes.&#13;
^ ^ T f i e temporary weakness of some of the mill&#13;
' .owner* Incident to the scare, occasioned by the&#13;
" forcible closing of the mills Friday a n d S a t u r -&#13;
day, waa Worn off a n d there Is now no talk of&#13;
yielding, a n d unless the mill employes throw&#13;
*•*» the snoftffe there will iw? very little lamber&#13;
i s p e&#13;
:ial .&#13;
lias&#13;
sawing during the ensuing four weeks The health officers throughout many parts of the&#13;
fact thut there are large numbers of men who state on the best methods of restricting this&#13;
. , . ., . . . , .. . ,1 disease has done something in the way ot drill&#13;
were forced by the strikers to quit work and | a the two important methods applicable in&#13;
who arc willing to go to work again if assured case of cholera, disinfection of all bowel illssecurity&#13;
from personal violence teudsto weaTamTrTlmrges a U ( i the protection of the pu rity of the&#13;
the cause of the strikers. The matter of arbitration&#13;
is out of the question since every employer&#13;
asserts that he will not allow disinterested&#13;
parties nor any organization except shown&#13;
employes to treat with him. Some of tht1&#13;
manufacturers state that when the ten hou&#13;
law goes into effect in September they propose&#13;
of their own accord to adopt it.&#13;
Both Bides Determined,&#13;
A staff correspondent of a Detroit&#13;
paper sums up the situation of the strike o s&#13;
the 15th as follows:&#13;
The strikers are more than ever determined,&#13;
but, fearful of Pinkerton's men, they resort only&#13;
to small, quiet gatherings at the halls. The&#13;
mill men don't care much whether the mills&#13;
s t a r t o r not, and are determined not to yield,&#13;
and are loud in their [ praises of Pinkerton's&#13;
men as protection to property. The officials&#13;
l&gt;elieve the militia necessary, and will allow no&#13;
labor demonstrations, and will resist to bloodshed&#13;
any violence.&#13;
The Saginaw mills are at a standstill. The&#13;
utmost quiet prevalant. Not a single case of&#13;
Intoxication was reported among the strikers&#13;
yesterday. Meetings commenced this nioru.&#13;
ing at] 9 o'clock In the , Knights&#13;
of Labor hall, addressed H b y ,, Barry.&#13;
The attendance remains about&#13;
500, the personnel constantly changing. James&#13;
H. Wylie of ' Kalamazoo, followed Barry.&#13;
Speaking will be continued throughout the&#13;
day. The tone of the address is the same as&#13;
yesterday, urging firmness aud abstinence from&#13;
any violence.&#13;
Whitney &amp; Batehelor's and Hamilton &amp; Me.&#13;
Clure's mflls down the riverr which started&#13;
yesterday, «ontlnued^unniug ttk-day-umnolested.'&#13;
To-morrow Rust, Eaton i t Co.'s mill at&#13;
Zilwaukee, five miles down the river, will start,&#13;
employing 100 hands, at old time and wage?.&#13;
Military companies from Fliut, Port Huron&#13;
and Alpena are expected to-day. Officers&#13;
MlUett, Sperry and Atwood of Flint, arrived&#13;
this morning. Col. Brown, of the Third regiment,&#13;
came last night. The mill men will not&#13;
dismiss t h e Pinkerton detectives to-day. They&#13;
attribute the present quiet to the detectives'&#13;
presence.&#13;
The Knights of Labor have taken part i n t h e&#13;
strike for the first time as an organization,&#13;
A committee met Mayor Estabrook&#13;
this morning, presenting to him resolutions&#13;
demanding the withdrawal of the Pinkerton&#13;
men from the city. Mayor Eastobrook received&#13;
the men coldly, pocketed the petition and&#13;
commenced arguing that t h e detectives were&#13;
not enemies to the men but are kept to protect&#13;
property from violence Finallyvioning&#13;
down he said that he could give n J positive&#13;
answer/that he would coufer with his advisors.&#13;
Gov. Alger and the prosecuting attorney at&#13;
Sagiuaw conferred last night and the governor&#13;
advised the withdrawal of the objectionable&#13;
Pinkerton men, and it was arranged that such&#13;
a step should be t a k e n ; but the mill owners,&#13;
Mayor Eastabrook and the sheriff objected and&#13;
the men are still here. These '•detectives" are&#13;
in the employ of the mill men, ami Gov. Algtr&#13;
explicitly stated last evening that they had no&#13;
legal or moral right to interfere in the trouble&#13;
existing"~~hetween the employes—and—emidoyers.&#13;
. .&#13;
JUNE 17—There is no perception&#13;
change in the strike at Bay City or the Sa&#13;
naws. In Bay City several mills haye-started&#13;
at&#13;
water supply. Much, however, remains io 'be&#13;
done In many localities in the way of abating&#13;
nuisances, and In protecting wells* from sources&#13;
of contamination. The legislature has passed&#13;
an act granting to the state board of health&#13;
power to establish a system of inspection of&#13;
immigrants and travelers and the disinfection&#13;
of baggage, etc.. liable to be infected with&#13;
cholera, or other dangerous communicable disease;&#13;
but the act was not given immediate effect&#13;
and so does not take effect until September&#13;
IS, 1&gt;85. The contingent appropriation to&#13;
enable the board to carry on the inspection,&#13;
etc., provided for in the act can be used ou or&#13;
after Supteuiiier 18 in case the governor thinks&#13;
rta use is necessary.&#13;
Governing Shipments,&#13;
The advisory board in the matter of pardons&#13;
is now permanently established at room No. 9,&#13;
Telegraph blotjk, Detroit, where the secretary,&#13;
James B. Wilison, attends to the routine business&#13;
of the office. The board has adopted&#13;
a set of rules of procedure, to which thoti*&#13;
making applications for pardons must cooform.&#13;
/ T h e r u h s require that all applications&#13;
must bctiied with the secretary at least ten&#13;
days previous to a meeting of the board, a ad&#13;
no applications handed to individual members&#13;
of the board will be considered. Each application&#13;
must be accompanied by a certified copy&#13;
of the whole record of the case, a hrlef statement&#13;
of the grounds upon which t h e application&#13;
is based, the facts to sustain the request&#13;
-m t h e form af a history of tke ease, notes of&#13;
the evidence taken at the trial and letters from&#13;
responsible persons in the community where&#13;
the crime was committed.&#13;
A notice of the making of the application&#13;
must be given to the judge and&#13;
and was-not agaih seen ahYtf. H e w*a five&#13;
feet nine Inches tall, weighed about ISO&#13;
pounds, wore a No. 9 ^ shoe, dark clothes and&#13;
n»t, cheeked shirt and red sunpeuders; whiskers&#13;
were cut short ami were iron gray. He&#13;
tied a "bowline" knot in his rope, from which&#13;
fact it is thought lie was a sailor. No money&#13;
being found on his person it is supposed he&#13;
became despondent and took his lire. The&#13;
coroner's jury returned a vcdlct of suicide.&#13;
MINOB STATE HAPPENINGS.&#13;
Houghton will have the new- mining&#13;
school,&#13;
The Oscoda village board has decided to'erect&#13;
a jail a t onee.&#13;
There are '.000 children in the state public&#13;
school a t Coldwater.&#13;
The Grand Rapids artillery company has been&#13;
mustered as Infantry.&#13;
Owosso gas works will run their pipes from&#13;
that place to Corumia.&#13;
The Fort Gratiot M. E , church Is to have the&#13;
electric light placed therein.&#13;
Lapeer county veterans hold their annual reunion&#13;
at Lapeer, August 10-30.&#13;
The postofllce in Imlay City, Lapeer county,&#13;
was burglarized the other night.&#13;
The "gentlemauly b u r g l a r " made another&#13;
*&gt;00 haul in Detroit the other night.&#13;
A 400-barrel flour mill 1» the latest additlou&#13;
to Jackson's manufacturing interests.&#13;
Five thousand dollars worth of lumlwr were&#13;
bnrued on the docks at Aiu Sabie a few days&#13;
ago.&#13;
.William Beiderbock, one-of the oldest pioneers&#13;
of Cass county, died in Dowagiac recently.&#13;
Over 201) little ones ' between; the ages of&#13;
three aud Vi years are iu the state public&#13;
school.&#13;
. u u ^ ^ K . ^ r u n , iui- j u u ^ «u« prosecuting! ™ f "authorities of the deaf a n d d u m b a s y l u m&#13;
attorney who tried the case and to the «r«wwt-+-«JU* • » ' *'*nt t m ' n a u i e o f e v c r y deaf and dumb&#13;
A HITCH.&#13;
RUSSIAN MOVEMENTS 0 7 A T H R E A T E N -&#13;
ING NATURE.&#13;
F o r o i g n X e w i Epitome.&#13;
a tri&#13;
i- 17»&#13;
at reduced hours, ami iu severaj^-ntstances&#13;
reduced pay. , - ' '&#13;
Two more warraats'were issued for B a r n ' s&#13;
arrest yesterday. In l&gt;oth instances bail was&#13;
ipimedfaielj furnished.&#13;
The 8tate Board of Healtn.&#13;
The regular quarterly meeting of the State&#13;
Board of Health was held in Lansing. July 15.&#13;
There were present Dr. Avery of Greenville,&#13;
president, a n d — D r s . Lyster, Hazlewood.&#13;
Vaughan, Tyler and Secretary Baker. The&#13;
secretary read a report of work during the&#13;
quarter ending J u l y 13, 18ST&gt;, the leading features&#13;
of whichare as follow: The weekly and&#13;
monthly bulletins of health in Michigan, and&#13;
the meteorology and mortality rej&gt;orts had been&#13;
prepared from the, numerous reports received&#13;
a n d sent out as heretofore. The footings and&#13;
computations on meteorological registers and&#13;
on sickness reports and tables have been carried&#13;
on; and the meteorological computations&#13;
for the year 1884 nearly complete.), ready for&#13;
•abulatibn. The office bad made large distributions&#13;
of documents^ relative to the" work of&#13;
health officers, and to the restriction of contagious&#13;
diseases, to newly appointed health of-&#13;
•cers, and to others especially in localities&#13;
vhere.such. diseases have . "ocetfrred. The&#13;
proceedings of the Sanitary Convention at&#13;
Lansing have been edited; sent to the printer&#13;
and the proof on most of it read. Articles&#13;
on meteorology ..and sickness in Michigan in&#13;
li&gt;S4 have bejeflcompleted from data previously&#13;
collected/^Data collected by the office relative&#13;
to StarJet feverin Michigan in 18S4 have been&#13;
^compiled, a n J also t h a t relative to diphtheria. |&#13;
A map has been prepared showing the dlstri- :&#13;
bution of diphtheria in Michigan in 18-4. Small-&#13;
S:&gt;x has been present during the. quarter at&#13;
ellevue, Eaton county, Alba, Antrim county,&#13;
Battle Creek, Girard township, Branch county&#13;
and South Haven. The outbreak at South&#13;
Haven was confined to those first exposed, and&#13;
has been stamped out after nine eases occurred,&#13;
with one death. The infection at South Haven&#13;
waa from a German immigrant who sailed Jjrom ^&#13;
Bremen, April 12, on the ship Donaii, Xort¥""&#13;
German Lloyd Line. The immigrant was&#13;
broken -out-with -amaH-pox WIMHJ he-rvac-hed&#13;
South Haven, April i7, and might have been&#13;
quarantined en route, and the outbreak thus&#13;
confined to one case. All infected j«rsoii9&#13;
were at once vaccinated by the H e a t h Officer,&#13;
b a t the virus was not good, and thus precious&#13;
time was l o s t This outbreak is but another&#13;
added to the many constantly r( curring outbreaks&#13;
of communicable disease in Michigan:&#13;
a n d tbe Northwest, to which a faithfully^executed&#13;
immigration inspection sejvhre, carried&#13;
on by the national governmejrtTwould p u t an&#13;
end, or greatly l e a s e n . ^ A t the present time,&#13;
so far as know%jthef e is not a case of smallpox&#13;
in Michigan. T v p h u s fever was reported&#13;
at GrantKRaplds during the week ending&#13;
July-^T&#13;
"" Cholera is spreading with great violence in&#13;
Mediterranean Spain, hundreds dying dally.&#13;
I t Was reported present in Marseilles oyer a&#13;
loath ago,and J u l y f O a t Toulon. A strange&#13;
nd fatal disease, believed to be cholera, waa&#13;
lso reported from Portugal. Asiatic cholera&#13;
Will probably reach this country this year or&#13;
next year, and the state board of health has&#13;
prosecuting attorney. Proof must be&#13;
furnished that the notice of application has&#13;
been published for two cousqeutive weeks iu a&#13;
newspaper printed in the city or county where&#13;
the crime was committed. All facts relied upon&#13;
t o sustain any allegation as a ground for&#13;
pardou must be proved by depositions taken&#13;
within the jurisdictiou of the court where the&#13;
eonvictton took place, or by" the stateiuent of&#13;
the judge who tried the ease, or officers or persons,&#13;
connected with the orison in which the&#13;
applicant shall be confined.&#13;
In applications for pardon based upon a mistrial&#13;
or improper conviction, the allegation&#13;
all be sustained by such reasons aud evidence&#13;
would have been good grounds for a new&#13;
ai, and which upon a second trial shoulU&#13;
aye produced an_acjjuitlaL- -Wherethe-courthas&#13;
overruled" the same reasons for a new trial,&#13;
on a motion based thereon, they will not be reconsidered,&#13;
except on the recommendation of&#13;
the iudge before whom the case was tried. All&#13;
apoflcatious properly on tile will be considered&#13;
by "the board, whether the applicant is represented&#13;
by council ( r not. No application that&#13;
has !&gt;een refused bv the board will be reheard&#13;
or reconsidered unliss substantial grounds for&#13;
reopening the ease are presented "to and ai&gt;-&#13;
proved by the board, and Mheu the application&#13;
is again submitted all the rules must be complied&#13;
with the additional reasons filed with the&#13;
original papers.&#13;
About the Soldiers' Bame.&#13;
r&#13;
Tbe first meeting ot the Board of Managers&#13;
of the Soldiers''Home was held in Gov. Alger's&#13;
office In Detroit a few days ago. There were&#13;
present Gov,-Alger, Gen."Bvrou H. Pierce of&#13;
Grand Rapids; Col..Aaron T. Bliss, Saginaw;&#13;
Jndge Michael Brown, Big Rapids; Col. Samuel&#13;
Well of Buchanan, and ("apt. R. A. Kemlck of&#13;
Detroit. This was the entire board, with the&#13;
exception of Col." -Cha«r ¥7 Osborne of Marquette.&#13;
Senior James Hueston,Chairman of the&#13;
.Toit Legislative Committee on Site,was present&#13;
by invitation. It was noticeable that most of&#13;
the members of the Board of Managers wore,&#13;
the lappel of the Loyal Legion.&#13;
Theboard organized by making .JuOge"Brown&#13;
Secretary. Gov. Alger'is ChajjSmtliby virtue&#13;
of the provis o;is of the bi&#13;
Col. Sylvester Lap^rT"presented the merits&#13;
of the \VyandoJte-1fiver Park Hotel property&#13;
in a twet^y--iffiiiute address. He read a petition&#13;
from^tfristian 11. Buhl and nearly 100 .'other&#13;
'ominent citizens, urging the adoption of&#13;
this site in that it was ready for immediate occupancy.&#13;
The offer of site and 100 acres of&#13;
land is made by Moses W. Field and the Eureka&#13;
Iron and Steel Wooks for ?;io,0il0.&#13;
Col. O. A. Janes of Hillsdale, past department&#13;
commander of the G, A. R., spoke in general&#13;
terms &lt;x tlw locating the home near his&#13;
city, without advocating any special site.&#13;
Col. Crook of Brooklyn, spoke for the Vineyard&#13;
Lake site where it is proposed to &lt;lonat(1&#13;
5:)0 accres.&#13;
Representative CJerrit J. Diekema and ex-&#13;
Representative Van Kaalte of Holland argued&#13;
the advantages of a Holland site.&#13;
Site propositions have been received from tlie&#13;
following cities, with requests that the ltoard&#13;
visit the places: Grand Rapids, .Jackson. Muskegon,&#13;
Saginaw, St. Joseph, Benton Harbo.',&#13;
Bay Springs, Owosso, Peto.-key, Battle Creefy.&#13;
Port Huron. Pontiac. Brooklyn (Yinc\ aril&#13;
Lake), Grand Ledge, Cassopolis", Mt. Clemens&#13;
and Big Rapids.&#13;
Gordon W. Lloyd and Spier it Rhone presented&#13;
plans for bull lings, for which the thanks&#13;
of the board were tendered.&#13;
.Gov. Alger will take no part in selecting a&#13;
site and the other members of tbe board will&#13;
act as a locating committee with Col. Wells sa&#13;
chairman. _&#13;
m&#13;
Michigan Ahead.&#13;
. In reviewing its semi-monthly crop return?,&#13;
tbe Farmers' Review of Chicago under date of&#13;
July 15 says; "Since our last crop report the&#13;
winter wheat harvest has so far progressed as&#13;
to remove any doubt of the outcome of this&#13;
crop. Few recent reports show any improvement,&#13;
and many show still further depreciation&#13;
from former reports. The harvest m Tehncssce&#13;
and Kentucky is a practical failure. Much&#13;
damage has been done to the crop during harvest&#13;
in Kansas and Missouri by heavy rains*&#13;
Reports from the harvest in Southern Ohio,&#13;
Indiana and Illinois, fully confirm the previous&#13;
estimates of tbe poor condition of the crop in&#13;
those sections. Michigan alone, of all the&#13;
winter wheat states, will harvest a full crop.&#13;
Our previous estimates of the shortage of the&#13;
winter wheat crop are being fully continued by&#13;
the harvest reports now coming'in.&#13;
— A s - t o t h e tfprim? wheat t ' m p it 4s- now-approaching&#13;
its most critical stage. The area-ie""&#13;
somewhat less than lastvear, and wh^e-glving&#13;
11,nusuaTpromi?es in soiTie sectioris-ts YeporTetT&#13;
thin and weedy i n ' o t h e r s ^ - W i t h favorable&#13;
weather till harvest it.w-tfiinake a good crop,&#13;
but will not.'as we—think, come up to the estimates&#13;
mailc^bysonie p a r t u s . Wv see no reason&#13;
to charfge our est mates of June 1, that the&#13;
toJaHvhoat 1 rop of this year will not exceed&#13;
-330,000,000 bushels. The'corn crop is holding&#13;
"its rrwrr welt an(LOTQmlaes-_a_full average crop.&#13;
Oats promise, owing to an increased acreage&#13;
and a fairly good condition, the largest crop&#13;
ever harvested in the country, and the hay&#13;
crop will not fall short of the average. Outside&#13;
of the winter wheat the crop outlook is&#13;
encouraging." _ '&#13;
To Glory by the Eope Route.&#13;
An unknown man about 55 years of age was&#13;
found on a recent evening hanging by tbe neck&#13;
from a basswood tree growing on the bank pf&#13;
Grand River, just north of Eaton Rapids, He&#13;
p u t up at tbe Eaton Rapids house the night&#13;
before and registered under the name of J.&#13;
Nothing was found on U M , u u « . t &lt; . » ~ — » « Gooderich, Owosso. Notning was&#13;
prepared to meet the emergency by m a n y lines his person to give a clue to his name or reaiof&#13;
work, as best it could. About 12,000 eoples dence, two postal cards, a torn government&#13;
of the document on the best methods for the envelope, two red handkerchiefs, two. Jackprevention&#13;
and restriction of cholera wer* dis- knives and a pair of spectacles being his entire&#13;
A b a t e d t o the people last year. : The recent possessions. He was seen at the morning&#13;
istribu^tion of documents relative to typhoid meeting of the Saltation Ai my, wuera&#13;
fever, and especially the&#13;
t o t y p n o t d&#13;
corfespoadenpeTwith&#13;
bespoke&#13;
add said be was on the road to glory,&#13;
child In the state.&#13;
CoL Stewart Ives, a wealthy lumberman of&#13;
Graud. Rapids, has been adjudged insane and&#13;
sent to an asylum.&#13;
Aill eteaf and dumb persons betweea the ages&#13;
of 0 auul aO years are entitled to admission to&#13;
the any him at Flint.&#13;
J o * Halloa of Jackson died recently,- aged&#13;
SO years* Mr. Hallon had been a^ resident oi&#13;
Michigan since 1843.&#13;
A hoop factory is to be erected at E l k Rapid*-&#13;
soon, the product of which will be shipped by&#13;
water to- different points.&#13;
The state mining school, for which* a small&#13;
appropriation was made by the legislature,&#13;
will be located jit.ilaughtop.. _ _ -&#13;
" George B* Gregory, one of the most respected&#13;
citizens of. Lapeer, is dead. Mr. Gregory&#13;
had been a. resident of Lapeer 32 years..&#13;
D. C. Binn, editor of a labor journal at Bay&#13;
City, and leader of the strike in that.city, hai&#13;
been arrested on a charge of conspiracy.&#13;
In excavating for a water pijw at Jfcekson,&#13;
the men struck an old stone pavement near the&#13;
river bridge, three feet below the surface-.&#13;
The new state law exempting soldiers and&#13;
sailors from the payment of poll tax will become&#13;
operative ninety days from J u n e 20 ult.&#13;
The presldeut has appointed William A.&#13;
Lewis postmaster at Evatt, in the stead oi&#13;
Joseph Sayles, whose commission had expired.&#13;
A special election will be held at Bellaire on*&#13;
-Tulv i 5 to-decide the question of bonding the&#13;
township in the Sum of $1,500 to buiid.a town&#13;
hall.&#13;
George Haire, a former resident of&#13;
Macouin county, but latterly a ranchman in&#13;
Texas, was drowned near Coh&gt;rado Cit#, Tex.,&#13;
last week&#13;
Gov. Alger haa^presented to the town of&#13;
Alger an oirtieo "block of ground, on which the&#13;
seluiol^bwam will erect a building for school&#13;
s«s.&#13;
Kennedy O'Brien, manager of the Mercier&#13;
house of Mackinac City, while driving at Maekiuac&#13;
island was thrown from a carriage aud instantly&#13;
killed.&#13;
An attempt is being made to organise a eoi&#13;
operative furniture company at Grand-Rapids&#13;
' with a paid up capital Of $fj0,000t which mav be&#13;
increased to f 100.000.&#13;
The Lapeer county soldiers and sailors' veteran&#13;
association, which will" hold a reunion in&#13;
this city on August Hltli aud i!')th, n;&gt;*v numbers&#13;
»:i)t&gt; members.—Lapeer Democrat.&#13;
Robert Clark, a free Methodist preacher on .&#13;
trial for assault and battery n* Coldwater, has&#13;
IKH'U -found guilty and fined $2."&gt; or;«) ilays in&#13;
jail. Ho-will appeal-to the circuit court.&#13;
The house of K. Burger, at Wutersmeet,&#13;
burned t o t h e ground and the 5-year old daughter&#13;
of Burger'perished in the liamw. Two&#13;
other children- were rescued badly scorched.&#13;
A large force of men under Capt. Mercer are&#13;
at work ort the government piers at Whitehall,&#13;
on the Lake Michigan shore. New cribs-will&#13;
be built and the harbor generally improved.&#13;
(rage Begole, a nephew of ex-Gov; Begole,&#13;
was mortally injured while playing wicket on&#13;
Recreation park. Detroit, a few dars-ago. He&#13;
was taken to Harper's hospital, b u t died a lewhours&#13;
later.&#13;
It is claimed that the vein recently struck&#13;
in the Calumet i t Hecla mine will be a virtual&#13;
renewal of the lease of life of t n a t famous&#13;
miner The new vein shows up.well with the&#13;
native metal.&#13;
August Free of Fairfield, Lenawee county,&#13;
ha* tnrough Col. Eldredge secured a ]&gt;osition&#13;
as-messenger In the internal revenue b u r e a u&#13;
of the treasury department at Washington at&#13;
a salary of |720.&#13;
The agricultural college triennial calendar&#13;
now out, shows that 331"men have been graduated&#13;
since lStil, of whom lril, or nearly half,&#13;
became farmers. There are 21$ of the graduates&#13;
now living.&#13;
jKreat preparations are bei'm? made.for.Ihc&#13;
annual encampment of the soldiers' and sailors&#13;
of southeastern Michigan, which is to be held at&#13;
Devil's Lake, northeast of Hudson, the first&#13;
week in September. ^&#13;
Tbe coroner's jury in the EEas. Sagejtmlrder&#13;
case at Allegan returned a vetdict^tnat death&#13;
was not self-inflicted, but wa^etfusod by parties&#13;
unknown to the jury, 'fhe'authoritics arc as&#13;
much in the dark asjever.&#13;
Chas. II. JJootli 11 pronvnent citizen of Kalamazoo&#13;
^\*r under arrest for embezzlement.&#13;
j There'are, several counts in the charge, among&#13;
ftnern; oru?rWat^e'''fc)ok"'fr«n'hf8'''roTfsTn"^oW&#13;
through fradulent representations.&#13;
—Brine SO per cent strong has been struck in&#13;
Ionia at a depth of 6*) t'eet. They were not&#13;
alter brine, however, b u t were sinking an artesian&#13;
well from which" a supply of water could&#13;
be procured for the city water works.&#13;
An injunction has been granted restraining&#13;
Morgan Christopher of Delta from intercepting&#13;
trains of the Detroit, L a m i n g &amp; Northwest&#13;
^rain |&gt;a?smg through his fai in. This is the re&#13;
suit of the railroad trouble about two years&#13;
ago.&#13;
D. G. H. &amp; M., surveyors are looking ovet&#13;
the line of a proposed cut-off from Coopcrs-vJlle&#13;
to Muskegon, a distance of 20 miles. At present&#13;
Muskeon has to be reached in a round&#13;
nltout way from Coopersvillc, via Grand&#13;
Haven.&#13;
The branch reform.school and prison roard&#13;
held a meeting for organization at Marquette,&#13;
a few days ago. Three members of the board&#13;
favor Marquette as a location for tbe branch&#13;
prison. If the boaruVis tied Gov. Alger will&#13;
settle i t %&#13;
_ : A l v a McGann, a 14 year old boy from Cleveland,&#13;
0 . , a passenger on the schooner C. H.&#13;
Johnson, was drowred at Marquette while out&#13;
rowinz In the yawl b o a t His body was recovered&#13;
a few hours later a n d was takoa—te-&#13;
The London Daily Telegraph says ISiat th«&#13;
negotiations between England and Russia regarding&#13;
the Afghau froutier question have bebecome&#13;
serious. Russia is uerfei-ring; new&#13;
claims aud refuses to yield to Lord Salisbury&#13;
whose tone, although studiously friendly, I .&#13;
th-m. The Standard, in commenting upon- the&#13;
same subject, declares that Knajand will uerer&#13;
condyn* a second edition of the Penjdch outrage.&#13;
The Standard, in an editorial on the reported&#13;
advance ot Russian troops toZulllcarpass, says&#13;
that although more reassuring news has b.*en&#13;
received from Col'.'ittdgeway, the chief of tin*&#13;
British Afghan boundary commission, the news&#13;
from other sources regarding the Russian.-.&#13;
movemeuts- is of the gravest character. Theonly&#13;
redeeming feature of the intelligence froru-&#13;
Afghanistan, says the - Standard, ia t h a t the&#13;
Afghans have-attached themselves more tirmly&#13;
than ever to-oar Hide.&#13;
France is opposed to continuing the war in&#13;
Anam. "&#13;
Mormons are making a crusade in&#13;
Berliu.&#13;
Gen. Lord Woiseley has arrived Iu London&#13;
from Egypt.,&#13;
Queen Vic ha* given orders that 110 reporters&#13;
be allowed to-wituessthe marriage of Princess&#13;
Beatrice.&#13;
Thirty thousand eases of cholera a r j rep&gt;r t&#13;
ed lu Spain frouuthe outbreak of the disease&#13;
to the closeof the week ending July 11.&#13;
A statement htt» been published to the effect&#13;
that El Mahdi ofTeireil to surrender Gen. (ior&#13;
don for a ransoimof £5,003, but that the British&#13;
government refwsed the offer.&#13;
A dispatch1 fnomitten. Stephenson, the commander&#13;
of the British forces now in the Soudan,&#13;
states that Gen. Brackcnbury has received&#13;
a letter from one of ther friendly chiels informing&#13;
him of the death of the Mahdi.&#13;
The Montreal branch of the Irish Nationa&#13;
League has issued ai manifesto to the Irlshmei&#13;
of Canada, calling1, u p o a them for support nno&#13;
subscriptions toward a national parliamentary&#13;
fund for the pa fluent ofrfrlsh members i n t h e&#13;
imperial parliament, aud to defray their expenses&#13;
in the coming, elections.&#13;
Six men while r u n n i n g Calf Rapids, four&#13;
miles from Mnttawii| Out., were upset; four of&#13;
- t b e m e l u u g to the boat a&amp;&lt;* the other two "&#13;
swam ashore. The four 00 the boat floated&#13;
down to the Demichauge Rapkls. half a mile&#13;
below, aud were there wusheo off the lx&gt;at and&#13;
drowned. Their uames wen* George Hodd,&#13;
William Christine, Phillip Martin and George&#13;
Langlier. None of the bodies were recovered.&#13;
The anniversary of the basttle- of the Boyne&#13;
was observed throughout Ireland on the 13th=&#13;
inst. In many places riot* (X'curred between&#13;
orangemen and catholics and manv persons&#13;
from' both sides went home with badly broken^-&#13;
heads. In Waterfonl 4 row occurred betweetf&#13;
Voldlers and civilians, and a man n i i m e d r e t e r&#13;
Graut was bayoneted to death.,,,-The b a r r a c k s&#13;
were assaulted in' retalliatjonjr aud not until&#13;
many persons wcre^-seriously injured was&#13;
order rcstorcd.^^-^^^&#13;
A mas&gt;-raeeting was held h» London the&#13;
othjir-aTternoon to consider ways and means to&#13;
bte.'t \ o u n g girls from the horrible'pitfalls&#13;
of London. T h e meeting resolved that the&#13;
laws on the subject should forthwith be made&#13;
more efficient. They denounced the state&#13;
regulation of vice and. demanded a total repeal&#13;
of the contagious disease act, aud that the*-™&#13;
ageof consent be raised from; 13 to H years.&#13;
The meeting also voted to send copies of&#13;
record of its proceedings fr&gt; the hoTiTse of&#13;
commons. *&#13;
The Russians are Iveooming aggressive and&#13;
appear intent &lt;&gt;n forcing a war with the Afghans.&#13;
A correspondent of a I&gt;ondon paper&#13;
that the Russian- f o r e s uuder Col. Aiikadvaneing&#13;
en masse on Zuiticur&#13;
says&#13;
hauotT are&#13;
Pass from the various points near the frontier&#13;
held by the Russians, but primipally from&#13;
Sariahs, and makes hut little-elloiifat concealing&#13;
their intentions. The Afghans are much&#13;
alarmed by this forward inoveinent^of the Russians&#13;
ami exhibit anxiety lest the Russians may&#13;
take possession of the. pass and march oil&#13;
Herat. They are d-.'tcrmincd, however, to oppose&#13;
any further advances by tbe Russians&#13;
with.nU"the force at their command, ami&#13;
should tin* Russians persist In their course a&#13;
bloody conflict cannot much longer be avoided.&#13;
Premier Salisbury has presented a memorandum&#13;
to Kus-ia offering the alternative of a&#13;
moil us autud: or a. cessation of negotiation.&#13;
The memorandum presented by Salisbury summarily&#13;
disposes of Persia aud the aim er's territory&#13;
within his new, boundaries, as being beyond&#13;
the sphere of diplomatic actiou and inviolable&#13;
by either power; defines the Russian&#13;
boundary," roughly speaking, its north of Zulficar.&#13;
in the we.-t.'toia p.tint south of Penjdeh,&#13;
i n t h e east; the British boundary as the line&#13;
marked on the English war oilic'e maps during&#13;
the udmini.-tration of the late Lord Beaconsfield,&#13;
and known as-the "scientific frontier,"&#13;
rugged mountain ranges running in a northeasterly&#13;
direction towards Pcshawur. This&#13;
practically concedes to Russia a line well advanced&#13;
beyond the new boundaries marked on&#13;
the military maps ot Ui7X+ and to England the&#13;
only frontier she has ever seriously' claimed,&#13;
leaving a large territory between the two. It is&#13;
stated that Germauy. favors this solution of the&#13;
dispute as disposing, once and for all of the pretensions&#13;
of the ameer and contending factions&#13;
in Afghanistan, on the one hand, and thejiis^"&#13;
curbing elements o a t h e Persian s l d e ^ o a r t h e&#13;
HfierT&#13;
An American corresry&gt;ndetrtfpald a visit a&#13;
'ew days since to Aranjtffez, Spain, and found&#13;
ibundant rcason&gt;roi&gt;ubt the statement which&#13;
aas been pnt-ftfrth, by the authorities that the&#13;
eholera^is''"decreasing. Frightful scenes were&#13;
to&gt;Cwitness»d on every hand, not only evi-&#13;
-'dence of the havwc of disease, but of the heartlessness&#13;
und cowardice of the citizens. I n&#13;
several districts-the corpses of the dead were&#13;
literally rotting in the streets, where the rude&#13;
boxes "contain ttg them had been placed out*&#13;
side of the houses. It was impossible to procure&#13;
help to remove the bodies except in casoH&#13;
where the friends of the de-easel could&#13;
offer a large reward for such service.&#13;
Due o t . the causes of distress in the afflicted&#13;
town has been the {light of nearly ail the druggists,&#13;
who imitated the shop keepers by running&#13;
awav, Finally som.' oiave sisters of mercy&#13;
form Madrid went" down and reop *ned the&#13;
drug shmrs, aft.*:• the perfect of -Madrid, had&#13;
vainly offered exhorbitant salaries to regular&#13;
Chemists, if they would undertake the h u m a n e&#13;
work of affording the stricken people access to&#13;
the drugs, which alone could alleviate their&#13;
suffering. By heavy bribes, a few grave-diggers&#13;
were procured hi Mad* id to go down and&#13;
burv the corpses which had remained unattended&#13;
for manv d*\s. It may now be stated,&#13;
with confidence", that the 'cholera exists to a&#13;
greater or less extent iu :250 places in southern&#13;
Spain. _ _ _ ^ _ _&#13;
ii&#13;
0)&#13;
%&#13;
•-n&#13;
\&#13;
MfDEHOl'S POI-OOKS.&#13;
The preliminary examination of the&#13;
murderdeT?rs-'w1i6 engaged i n - t m r r t o t&#13;
ledo a fews days ago resulted in 17 beinj&#13;
for murder in the first degree and thlrt ^&#13;
tsaault with intent to kill. Six ,wi&#13;
tiiarffcd.&#13;
Cleveland for burial&#13;
If thero ia anything m-t&#13;
„han a body agopiziug&#13;
oread, it is&#13;
hunger for light.&#13;
- To be near death makes m soo tbo&#13;
truth.&#13;
•+r&#13;
. &gt; s *P 'oftfrtr V -.- •»• if^*k&gt; .ityvmffE^«m»&#13;
^ ..'* * .&#13;
WHEN KI'IUNU coatEs.&#13;
! • ' ' * •&#13;
^ 1&#13;
Alonar the yellow roads the grass&#13;
MIHII Roftlv cre-p like noiseless foet,&#13;
A thousand oJora subtly bwcet&#13;
Shall brcalue where'er the south winds pass.&#13;
The first pale blossom* shall unfold&#13;
Beside the liu^'ring drifts of suow,&#13;
The dandelion wake and glow&#13;
Er.' fadeB tlie crocus' white and gold.&#13;
The swallow on his airy tf'og&#13;
Shall Boat where skie* arc! softly blue,&#13;
In thickets wet at noon with dew&#13;
The hermit-thrush shall lurk and sing.&#13;
But who shall care for these, alas!&#13;
If from a crave the flowers Bball grow.&#13;
And warm ra ns only melt the suow&#13;
To hide JUAC dead bene &gt;th the grass.&#13;
—Maryff. Krouty in flu Current.&#13;
^ - — — • • ! • •• • ^ a ^ - ^ - i w — •&#13;
UNDER FIRE.&#13;
J:o&#13;
A True Border Story of the War.&#13;
Some time before the war a Presbyterian&#13;
clergyman from New Hampshire&#13;
went South, with his family, for&#13;
the benefit of his health. He purchased&#13;
a little farm in Virginia, about&#13;
three miles from Washington, D. C ,&#13;
access to which was had by the way&#13;
of Georgetown and the Aqueduct&#13;
Bridge. He gradually failed in health,&#13;
hOWeveT, iiud died, leaving a w i d o w -&#13;
Mrs. Gayes-—and two girls and two&#13;
boys. At the breaking out of the war&#13;
in 1861, Mrs. Gayes and her elder&#13;
daughter, who was about fifteen years&#13;
of age, took a decided stand in favor&#13;
of the Union cause. It required not a&#13;
little moral courage to do this; but&#13;
there was no element of fear* in the&#13;
make-up of any member of the family.&#13;
At first their home was within the&#13;
Oonf e derate -Hues,and communication&#13;
with Washington was very diflicult&#13;
and hazardous. Mrs. Gayes was ridiculed,&#13;
and sometimes threatenedTbut&#13;
it availed nothing.&#13;
After the Confederate lines were&#13;
driven back a fow miles in 1801, fortifications&#13;
were constructed around&#13;
Washington for the protection of the&#13;
ISational Capital.. -They consisted of&#13;
a chaiu of forts arranged in nearly a&#13;
circle... -The line crossed the Potomac&#13;
jaeaf' Chain Bridge, above Georgetown,&#13;
extending thence down to Arlington&#13;
Heights and some distance&#13;
below, recrossing the river about half&#13;
way between Long Bridge and Alexandria,&#13;
and so on around until the circle&#13;
was complete. Within this liue.&#13;
and about a mile and a half from Fort&#13;
Smith, situated on a little eminence,&#13;
was Mrs. Gayes1 modest home, protected&#13;
now from the enemy, but suffering&#13;
more, perhaps, from her&#13;
friends. Many regiments were encamped&#13;
near by; and little by little&#13;
her timber and fences and stock and&#13;
crops disappeared, until there was&#13;
scarcely anything left save the house&#13;
and the land, liven the cook stoye&#13;
was missing one morning. Very frequently&#13;
at night she was aroused by&#13;
the beating of "the long roll," the&#13;
shouting of words of command, and&#13;
the tramping of regiments as they&#13;
swiftly formed in line of battle to meet&#13;
the g r e e t e d enemy. On such occasions&#13;
all the members of the family&#13;
would hastiiy dress, secure about their&#13;
persons what valuables they had, and&#13;
patiently wait. During all* these trying&#13;
years she and her daughter were&#13;
devoted friends of the Union cause,&#13;
and their willing hands were untiring&#13;
in doing something for the soldiers.&#13;
It was a midsummer morning in&#13;
1864. Out in the field, and over in the&#13;
_jcity it was scorching hot. But in Mrs.&#13;
Gayes' house, protected as it was&#13;
from the rays of the sun by the&#13;
abundant foliage of the great oaks&#13;
which surrounded it, the heat was not&#13;
oppressive. Mrs. Gayes was in the&#13;
sitting room reading a paper. The&#13;
elder daughter was in Washington.&#13;
"Charley, the elder son —who was then&#13;
near twelvo years^ofr age, was playing&#13;
with the doiTbn the porch. It was&#13;
a pcaceiuirquiet pictiue of Virginia&#13;
cjjuatry life Suddenly there came a&#13;
oud, whistling, screaming sound, followed&#13;
by a territic explosion directly&#13;
over tlie house.&#13;
"Why!" ejaculated Mrs. Gayes, as&#13;
she started from her seat, "what a&#13;
heavy clap of—" thunder, she was&#13;
about to say, but the unmistakable&#13;
humming, twanging sounds which followed&#13;
close upon the explosion, with,&#13;
the falling of leaves and broken&#13;
branches from the trees, told her it&#13;
ing striking the&#13;
its mad&#13;
w toward t lie house,&#13;
ground at shortYmtcrvals in&#13;
course, something as a stone when&#13;
thrown violently upon the water skips&#13;
along the surface. With a shriek like&#13;
a demon it plunged through the garden,&#13;
destroying everything in its path,,&#13;
fi led the air with dust, gave two or&#13;
three more skips and* screeches, and&#13;
fiinally burst over near the road. Mrs.&#13;
Gayes turned pale.&#13;
"Come down into the cellar with&#13;
me, all of you," she said; ana they&#13;
obeyed with alacrity. After she had&#13;
quieted Eliza, the negro servant, who&#13;
was alternately praying to "de good&#13;
Lord" and to "Missus Gayes" to save&#13;
her, she said:&#13;
"Charley, you must run up to Mr.&#13;
Pierson's just as fast as you can, and&#13;
ask him to go around to the fort and&#13;
have the firing stopped. And you remain&#13;
at Mr. Pierson's until I send for&#13;
you. Don't come back. You are not&#13;
afraid to go, are you?"&#13;
"No, mamma, I'm not afraid,"&#13;
answered the brave little fellow as he&#13;
clasped his mother's hand a little&#13;
tighter.&#13;
" I knew you - w ^ H x n o t . he; and&#13;
now as soonas the next shell comes I&#13;
want you to go." When it came she&#13;
kissed him and said, "Now my brave&#13;
boy, run!"&#13;
She would gladly have gone herself,&#13;
but she thought it better to remain&#13;
that she might bo with the other two&#13;
children in case the house should be&#13;
struck and burned. It cost her a&#13;
struggle to send her son forth on sue h&#13;
a perilous errand, and her face was&#13;
very pale as she kissed him. Away&#13;
spec! Charley through—the- garden&#13;
glancing with wonder at the great&#13;
furrows the shells hail ploughed,_&#13;
climbed the fence and started to run&#13;
with all his niighi toward Mr. Pierson's&#13;
house, which was half a mile&#13;
distant. He had scarcely left the garden&#13;
fence, however, when another&#13;
shall rnmo tearing through the shrubt&#13;
was a shell from some heavy gun.&#13;
"Is it possible the rebels are making&#13;
an attack?" she said.&#13;
The children now. came running in&#13;
from their play, and one of them cried&#13;
out, '*Oh, mamma! the lightning has&#13;
stgruck the trees." Mrs. Gayes went&#13;
out on the porch and looked and listened,&#13;
but nothing unusual could be&#13;
t&gt;eo3 or heard.&#13;
_"It was a shell," said she. " I expect&#13;
a giln at "one of "the forts went off&#13;
accidentally."&#13;
"Well," said Charley, "when they&#13;
load their guns I wish they'd point&#13;
them toward Richmond. They~ej$g|i|&#13;
to be ashamed of t h e m s p h t e s ^ - ^ ' ^ " !&#13;
" I don't think wo shall be troubled&#13;
any more," said the mother as she returned&#13;
to the sitting-room, followed&#13;
by the children. She had but just resumed&#13;
her seat when another shell&#13;
buried itself in the earth a few rods&#13;
from the house and burst, throwing&#13;
up clouds of dust and dirt.&#13;
" "What can it mean?" said Mrs.&#13;
Gayes.&#13;
"" "Jrknow what it means,ma^nroal'-1 there was&#13;
cried Charley. That New York regiment&#13;
which has just been sent over to&#13;
Fort Smith has put up a target in our&#13;
field, and the fellows arc firing a"t it.&#13;
I wish I was a general I'd put every&#13;
one of them in the guard house!"&#13;
The boy was right in his surmise,&#13;
and in a few momeuts another mis*&#13;
silo thrown from one of tho, huge&#13;
siege guns with which the fort was&#13;
struck, a quarter of a milo&#13;
bery he had just p:is&gt;«d and burst&#13;
close to the house. The mother's heart&#13;
stood still for an instant—and there&#13;
was cause for it. One of the flying&#13;
fragments struck- poof Charley and he&#13;
fell to the ground with a cry of "Oh,&#13;
mamma!" Down in the cellar the&#13;
mother heard the cry of her wounded&#13;
boy, and in a moment she" was kneeling&#13;
by his side. It was a sad sSghl for&#13;
a, mother to look upon. The cruel&#13;
piece of iron with its ragged edges&#13;
had stripped a great piece of flesh&#13;
from the back ot his ankle upward,&#13;
completely severing the cord and laying&#13;
bare the bone. He was lying upon&#13;
his face, and the blood was already&#13;
staining the green grass where he had&#13;
fallen. Sp^aldngwords of encouragment.&#13;
she removed his shoo and the&#13;
fragment of stocking, and hastily&#13;
bound up the wonnd with strips torn&#13;
from her clothing. In this way she&#13;
staunched the now of blood and&#13;
quieted his fears, through she could&#13;
not alleviate his pain.&#13;
"Now, Charley, I must go up to Mr.&#13;
Pierson's myself, for a shell may&#13;
strike the house, and then Mary and&#13;
Robby will be burned. I'll put you&#13;
behind that tree, and you will 'hot be&#13;
in much danger."&#13;
"But you'll run, mamma, won't&#13;
you?"&#13;
And the tears trickled down Charley's&#13;
cheeks, though he tried very&#13;
hard to keep them back.^~The tree"&#13;
was a large chestnut, and its generous&#13;
trunk afforded a pretty^aarple protection&#13;
against the shells, two of which&#13;
had struck n e a r l y while Mrs. Gayes&#13;
was bindirrjfup the wound. Arriving&#13;
at.MfTPiergon's. she dispatched him&#13;
in great haite to the fort, while she,&#13;
with swift feet, returned to Charley.&#13;
Becky ana Berty Pierson, aged seventeen&#13;
and eighteen, with true girlish&#13;
heroism, returned with her notwithstanding&#13;
the bursting shells. On the&#13;
way they passed several negroes sheltered&#13;
behind stumps and stones, and&#13;
Mrs. Gayes vainly begged them to follow&#13;
her and assist in the removal of&#13;
the wounded boy. They found Charley&#13;
behind the tree, and he said, "Oh,&#13;
mamma! I'm so glad you'vo come&#13;
back." He could not walk at all, and&#13;
he was weak from pain and loss of&#13;
blood. So his mother and the two&#13;
girls carried him in their arms as best&#13;
they could. Down the hill, half blinded&#13;
by the smoko and stunned by the&#13;
awful explosions, slowly moved the&#13;
strange procession. They waded the&#13;
little stream in ihe hollow, stopping a&#13;
moment to bathe Charley's face and&#13;
hands, and carried their burden up&#13;
armed,&#13;
away, and camo bounding or ricochetthe&#13;
hill to Mr. Pierson's house.&#13;
By this time Mr. Pierson had reached&#13;
the fort, and the liring ceased. Tlie&#13;
other children were sent for, and in a&#13;
few moments tho regimental surgeon&#13;
-ami-hospital _a.tewfcrdcame galloping&#13;
down to express their sorrow at what&#13;
had happened and to render assistance.&#13;
Tlie surgeon's proffered services&#13;
-were most gladly accepted. Wheu he&#13;
was ready to examine die wound, the&#13;
sjiiother said:&#13;
"Now, Charley, it will hurt you to&#13;
have the wound dressed; but it must&#13;
be done; and you must try and bear&#13;
it. It will soon be over."&#13;
..••I'll try." said Charley, "if you'll&#13;
be sure, mamma, and not let niv leg&#13;
bo cut off." v She pressed him to her heart, and&#13;
assured him with loving words that&#13;
no occasion for&#13;
an operation.&#13;
"Sing to me, mamma! Sins to me!"&#13;
"Why, Charley—I—I—don't believe&#13;
I can sing now," she faltered.&#13;
"You must, mamma, you must!&#13;
Please sing to me just the same as von&#13;
always do and I'll keep.awful still."&#13;
And he reached up and put. his arms&#13;
pleadingly around her neck. There&#13;
sm'iice in tlm HHMH .H tlm litt&#13;
eyes and tried to sing. Her voice was&#13;
tremulous at first, mit by a mighty&#13;
effort she. expelled from her mind&#13;
every thought save the remembiance&#13;
of her love for her wounded child; and&#13;
she was soon able to sing to him almost&#13;
as sweetly and softly as if in her&#13;
own quiet home.. The boy's arms&#13;
.gradually relaxed and he lay, back&#13;
again quietly upon the blood-stained&#13;
bed with his head resting half upon&#13;
his pillow and half upon his mother's&#13;
lap. His eyes were closed, and his&#13;
pallid face had lost something of the&#13;
roundness and fullness which marked&#13;
it in the morning. The mother was&#13;
bending over him with one of his&#13;
hands in hers. On the other side of&#13;
the bed sat Berty' Pierson fanning&#13;
Charley's face. At the foot stood the&#13;
surgeon and tho steward. Clustered&#13;
around the room were half a dozen&#13;
neighbors looking on with sympathetic,&#13;
awe-stricken faces.&#13;
When the" mother began to 6oftly&#13;
sing the song she Knew he loved, there&#13;
was a solemn hush in the room, and&#13;
every eye was filled with tears. Even&#13;
the rough, old surgeon, as he cut away&#13;
the bloody bandages, was seen to turn&#13;
away his head and hastily draw his&#13;
sleeve-across his eyes a number of&#13;
times: and the steward was hardly&#13;
able to distinguish his instruments.&#13;
Under the soothing effect of his mother's&#13;
voice the boy allowed tho wound&#13;
to be dressed and the cruel stitches to&#13;
be taken. Later in the day he dropped&#13;
asleep and awoke considerably refreshed.&#13;
He was uncomplaining&#13;
through it all; and the fortitude with&#13;
which he bore his sufferings excited&#13;
the-admiration of every_Qn£,_&#13;
In the c^iol of the evening Charleywas&#13;
taken home in an ambulance, sent&#13;
for that purpose from the fort. The&#13;
officers uid everything in their power&#13;
to atone for the suffering they had so&#13;
carelessly but unintentionally caused.&#13;
The surgeon and his assistants attend*&#13;
ed him tenderly: and carefully until&#13;
he was well. The surgeon&#13;
offered to procure his mother a&#13;
pension, but Mrs. Gayes declined, saying&#13;
that she was too thankful that her&#13;
boy was alive to think of asking aid&#13;
from the Government. Charley was&#13;
soon able to walk with the aid of&#13;
crutches, but could not dispense with&#13;
their use for many months; -&#13;
Mrs. Gayes, now an aged woman,&#13;
loves to tell of those perilous times.&#13;
One of her daughters, a lady of rare&#13;
qualities, fills one of the highest positions&#13;
allowed to her sex in the Government&#13;
departments in Washington.&#13;
She has in her little cabinet at home&#13;
the "very piece of shell which did its&#13;
cruel work that day\ It is rusty, and&#13;
when picked up was blood stained.&#13;
Charley is a florist and brings his&#13;
flowers regularly to one of the Washington&#13;
markets. He limps a little and&#13;
will always have cause to remember&#13;
the summer morning wht&gt;n the\NfiW&#13;
York regiment in Fort Smith bombarded&#13;
his mother's house.—New-York&#13;
Tribune.&#13;
How Some Letters are Lost.&#13;
When letters are lost it by no means&#13;
follows that the postal authorities are&#13;
invariably to blame. Sometimes it&#13;
happens that, through culpable carelessness&#13;
or sjiec'f absence of mind on&#13;
the •part'of people who mail them,&#13;
Jmportant missives go astray to&#13;
the great annoyance of everybody concerned.&#13;
A postman in a northern&#13;
town has justr given the public the&#13;
benefit of his own recent experience&#13;
in this direction. In one case a gentleman&#13;
hastily jerked a letter addressed&#13;
to a business firm in France&#13;
into the aperture of a letter-box, and&#13;
lelt it sticking there. Fortunately, the&#13;
postman was approaching at the&#13;
moment to clear the box, or the letter&#13;
might have been stolen by some unscrupulous&#13;
passer by, or lost in the&#13;
street. On another occasion a gentleman,&#13;
who was running to overtake a&#13;
friend, made a dash a,t the letter-box&#13;
as he rushed past with two thin postalcards,&#13;
which caught the edge of the&#13;
opening and sprang back upon thepavement.&#13;
The gentleman was quite&#13;
oblivious of the accident, and eager to&#13;
overtake his friend, was quickly out of&#13;
sight. In the third case a gentleman&#13;
was walking down the street with a&#13;
postal-card in his hand, and as he drew&#13;
$ear the letter-box a man at a_s_hop&#13;
door gave him an advertisement card.&#13;
Instead of putting the postal-card into&#13;
tho letter-box, he carefully posted the&#13;
advertisement card, and then deliberately&#13;
folded the postal-card two or&#13;
three £inies and threw it into the gutter.&#13;
The vigilant postman was passing&#13;
along at the moment and saw the curious&#13;
blunder^and the postal-card was&#13;
duly rescued from untimely oblivion.&#13;
—London Standard.&#13;
PAB1S LEADS THE WORLD.&#13;
Her Murden More Atroeiom and Fetes More&#13;
Brilliant Thau Any.&#13;
There has-been an epidemic of murder&#13;
in France for some time past, and&#13;
many of the crimes have been of the&#13;
moit ghastly description. Britany&#13;
seems to have the unenviable distinction&#13;
of excelling in thia respect. It is&#13;
not long since a farmer's wife near S t&#13;
Brienc chopped her husband to pieces&#13;
to make him quit drinking. A still&#13;
more savage crime, writes a Parisian&#13;
to The New York World occurred in the&#13;
same district recently.&#13;
Jean Faure, a youth of 18 years, was&#13;
employed as a farm-hand by Mme.&#13;
Jossehn, a widow. He fell in love&#13;
with the widow's daughter, Celestine,&#13;
who was 16 years of age. He knew&#13;
he had no chance of marrying her, as&#13;
she was wealthy and had hosts of&#13;
admirers. Among them was a young"&#13;
farmer named Princemain, on whom&#13;
all the jealous hatred of Faure centered.&#13;
He vowed that Princemain shonld&#13;
never marry Celestine. One day the&#13;
latter went to visit her uncle, the parish&#13;
priest of a neighboring village.&#13;
She was to return home in the afternoon.&#13;
Faure determined to lay in wait for&#13;
her. He armed himself with a rifle, a&#13;
reaping-hook, and a sheath-knife.&#13;
Sister's letter was sewed beneath the&#13;
fold of the sleeve of his shirt. Means&#13;
are being taken to effect the release of&#13;
the prisoners.&#13;
The grand ball of the Hotel de Villa,&#13;
last Saturday, surpassed all official&#13;
fetes of the past season. The external&#13;
decorations * were of indescribable&#13;
variety and grandeur. There were&#13;
thirteen thousand persons present,&#13;
and the receipts amounted to $60,000.&#13;
The money will be devoted to the relief&#13;
of the poor of Paris and&#13;
the wounded soldiers in the east.&#13;
The ball was such a success that&#13;
it is intended to repeat it from year&#13;
to year.&#13;
— — I I — ..1 . I » - ^ ^ - • » II I I . ' • H l »&#13;
The Old Hoop Skirt&#13;
An item is going the rounds of t h e&#13;
papers to the effect that the old fashioned&#13;
hoop skirts are coming into style&#13;
again, and that within a year the hoop&#13;
skirt factories that have been lying&#13;
idle for years will be running full&#13;
blast, and the ladies will grow larger&#13;
around as the fashion is recognized a*?&#13;
the, thing. Who that was on earth,&#13;
twenty-five years ago, does not remember&#13;
the first hoopskirt craze? Hoops&#13;
came into fashion suddenly, and all&#13;
women, whatever their condition,&#13;
adopted the fashion at once. There*&#13;
were few regular manufactured hoop&#13;
skirts at first, and only those who were&#13;
About three hours later Celestine ap- } Very tony had elaborate hoops, but as&#13;
peared. Faure, who wtv as concealed in hoops were the fashion everybody had&#13;
a copse by the wayside, rushed forward&#13;
and seized her. .1¾ untied her&#13;
long hair, rolled itrow|fdhis hand, and&#13;
dragged her into-the copse. He then&#13;
sat down, j&gt;laced her head between&#13;
his knej&amp;j8,'and proce£il£iL_to__saw her&#13;
head'off with the reaping-hook. She&#13;
-fought desperately for a time, and&#13;
then fainted- Faure picked -up--his-.&#13;
to have something that would make&#13;
the dress stick out-,—Merchants soldi&#13;
wire and rattan, and whalebone, and&#13;
strips of brass, and »ladies made them&#13;
into skirts, and some of them were---&#13;
too ridiculous for anything^.- A' lady&#13;
would getrhcr hoops made and find&#13;
that the skirt of her dress was so small&#13;
that she woud have to use a shoe horn&#13;
rifle and tried to shoot her, but the c-ap ! to,get the skirt over the' hoops, or&#13;
had been wet from lying in the grass, i grease the hoops, and then the dress&#13;
and failed to go off. He then resumed : was so tight over the hoops that every&#13;
his reaping-hook and the sawing op- ! hoop showed as plainly as though it&#13;
eratiom ..Tlie. gkL.meantime,,had re- j had been on the outside, some queer&#13;
covered her senses, and fought her : scenes were witnessed when hoops&#13;
murderer with all energy of despair.' first came in. Lad ies* were not aceus-&#13;
After having her hands mutilated in a i tomed to walking in a barrel, and the&#13;
frightful manner she succeeded in ) hoops would act awfully contrary, and&#13;
wrestling the bloody weapon from his | show themselves on slight provication.&#13;
grasp. He then drew his knfe and hack- ! Modest ladies were frequently made&#13;
ed off her nose and slashed her face to to blush by some act of the hoops,&#13;
pieces. "You are bound to kill me,&#13;
~lnen?"~she-moaned, as oho fell back&#13;
exhausted. "I am," replied the murderer,&#13;
cooly, and hacked away leisurelj*.&#13;
Her cries, meantime, had attracted&#13;
two passers-by, Jean Couellan and&#13;
Pierre Briand. As they approached&#13;
Faure fled. Celestine was so disfigured&#13;
with blood and wounds that they&#13;
did not recognize her. On learning&#13;
who she was it was agreed that Brian&#13;
should go to the village for help, while&#13;
Couellan should remain with the vicwhich&#13;
seemed to be endowed with as&#13;
much cussedness as a mule. The*&#13;
wearer of a hoop could never be entirely&#13;
certain what an hour would&#13;
bring forth. The hoop was . liable to&#13;
go along all right, and appear to understand&#13;
its business, and to have decided&#13;
to be decent, and when the,-&#13;
wearer attempted to go into a^door,&#13;
the hoops would get on ^ s t r i k e , and&#13;
the.lady couldn't ^riv^ it in with aclub.&#13;
Men w e r e constantly laughing&#13;
at 8ome.^eccentricity they discovered&#13;
in^the'hoops. Train conductors ened&#13;
her. -&#13;
He h a i no sooner vanished than&#13;
Faure, who had been concealed near&#13;
by, reappeared. "Ah!" he exclaimed,&#13;
••ypu-told them I was the murderer.&#13;
Well, you will tell it no more." And&#13;
as he spoke he plunged his knife into&#13;
her breast. He then jumped with his&#13;
heavy boots upon her bleeding face,&#13;
and having stuffed her mouth with&#13;
clay and leaves left her for dead.&#13;
Meantime Briand, accompanied by the&#13;
pnest and a score of villagers, returned&#13;
and found the girl lying almost lifeless&#13;
on the ground. They knelt around&#13;
her and soon discovered signs of life.&#13;
She was broughc home, and for weeks&#13;
hung between life and death. The&#13;
doctors refused to do anything further&#13;
than dress her horrible wounds, as&#13;
they pronounced her recovery impossible.&#13;
The liquid food she took&#13;
used to pour out through tho gaping&#13;
wound in her throat. And yet,&#13;
in spite of the doctors, she has recovered.&#13;
Her would-be murderer hid in the&#13;
woods and swamp, occasionally venturing&#13;
out to the farm-houses when&#13;
compelled by hunger. One man, convicted&#13;
of having given him shelter,&#13;
was condemned to a montn's imprissp&#13;
jisenous&#13;
was a&#13;
sufferer&#13;
quest.&#13;
tt*-&#13;
persisted in hU rtiango re-&#13;
Thou- tho mother closed her&#13;
In the town of Cortlandt, Westchester&#13;
county, N. Y., there are twenty-&#13;
nine brick-yard?, capable of manufacturing&#13;
167,840,000 bricks in a seasou,&#13;
worth a tew thousand over&#13;
$1,000,000. These yards give employment&#13;
to fully 1,*200 workmen, not&#13;
counting the men employed on the&#13;
boats in carrying the brick to market,&#13;
a n i about 2130 horses and seventeen&#13;
steam-engines were used. The item&#13;
of wood used in the burning of the&#13;
brick comprises nearly 20,000 cordo&#13;
for a season's work, which at last season's&#13;
prices, $o.00 a cord, aggregates&#13;
J&amp;1H&amp;,000 for this item alone.&#13;
"Have you been vaccinated?" N the popular&#13;
question wlion smallpox prevails., "R.Vvc&#13;
you l&gt;oeti inoculated with mcrobic perms !' is&#13;
now the universal que^iou in the rholenstrk'ken&#13;
provinces of $Q&amp;\\\.—Cincinnati Tiw*-&#13;
• i • i . . ^ ^ - . i i i llurlni: iSSi the miml'erof persons kil'e.l o-&gt;&#13;
railways, iu Great Bi'itniu was 1, I'M (:isftn.&#13;
'lumber of injured was 4,100 (us curji: M&#13;
with 4.JS7 in 1S33.)&#13;
tirn. But as darkness set in Couellan&#13;
lost courage and, heedless of the en- j joyed a constant picnic in helping&#13;
treaties of the wounded girl, abandon- stranded females who got cast in trying&#13;
to enter a car. or a car seat. Ladies&#13;
who could not afford to buy the expensive&#13;
brass hoops would utilize the&#13;
hoops of barrels, and many a lady has&#13;
so ingeniously pressod a barrel hoop&#13;
into the service as to pass for a leader&#13;
of the fashion, until some day she&#13;
attempted to sit down in a pew at&#13;
church, when the hoop would flop up&#13;
and strike her on the nose two or threetimes,&#13;
and leave her in a situation so&#13;
uncomfortable as to bring tears to her&#13;
eyes. It is a mean hoop that wilL&#13;
strike a lady, and a meaner hoop that&#13;
will strike her on the nose, and a confounded&#13;
sight meaner hoop that will&#13;
repeat the blow two or three times,,&#13;
but there are ladies living to-day with,&#13;
scars on their noses made from these&#13;
hoops. School-girls would wear barrel&#13;
hoops, and it was an Impossibility/&#13;
to keep them anywhere except where&#13;
they ought not to be, and there are&#13;
men living to-day, who were boys&#13;
twenty-five years ago,~who~ could relate&#13;
a good deal that they ought not&#13;
to about tho way the girls were made&#13;
ashamed of the.fashions. Later, hoop&#13;
skirts were reduced to a soience, like&#13;
making watches, and the ladies became&#13;
so accustomed to wearing them&#13;
that nothing ever happened worth,&#13;
onment. For five weeks six brigades mentioning, but when two ladv friends.&#13;
of gendarmerie and a hundred peas- j of the first hoop year get together to&#13;
ants armed with rifles beat the -coun- talk over old times, and they get on&#13;
try around in search of him. He was i the subject of those old fashioned&#13;
finally captured. Last Wednesday he j hoop skirts and their experiences, they&#13;
was tried and condemned to life-long j can keep the children of the present&#13;
imprisonment at hard labor, although I day laughing nntil their sides ache,&#13;
the jury—for all French juries do that [Ladies who are leaders of fashion, and&#13;
—admitted extenuating circumstances j eminent in the Affairs of the world toin&#13;
his favor. Several murders of an day, can remember when they rook the&#13;
equalty brutal character have occurred first hoop off a flour barrel and basted&#13;
in the provinces. ' ! it into the bottom hem of a calico&#13;
Mgr. Sogaro, vjcar apostolic of cen- j dress, and felt as proud as queens, as&#13;
tral Africa, residing in Cairo, has re- I thev sailed down the village streets,&#13;
ceived a letter from one of the Sisters&#13;
of Charity held ru captivity by El&#13;
Mehdi in Khartoum. The letter is dated&#13;
from Undurman, where El Mahdi&#13;
with everybody looking at them.&#13;
Tragedies were enacted in the early&#13;
days of hoop-skirts. A lady who is&#13;
now the wife of a senator, carries a&#13;
has his be-adquar-ter*.—It is written in ! scar on__tho calf of her leg which&#13;
pencil on a hair haukkerchief, and is j causes her to often wonder, us she sitaT&#13;
illegible iujuany places. It narrates [ in the senate gallery, whether it was&#13;
briefly the unspeakable sufferings to the aog, which got into her hoop-skirt&#13;
which the prisoners have been sub- one day, to hide away from cruel boys,&#13;
jected. "It suggests a plan for their | that had bit her, or whether a corner&#13;
relief, and recommends that thalers j of a barrel-hoop stuck through her&#13;
be sent instead of gold, as^gold loses j stocking. If she was sure it was the&#13;
two-thirds of its value in the Soudan, j hoop she wouldn't be half as nervous&#13;
It warns against writing to El Mehdi ! about herself as she is when she sees a&#13;
in their favor, as such intervention&#13;
would in alL likelihood result in their&#13;
death. It states that the inhabitants i come. In the language of the lamented&#13;
dog near her. And so hoops are coming&#13;
into style again? Well, let them.&#13;
of Khartoum were ruthlessly massacred,&#13;
and that the number ot victims&#13;
slain with Gordon and the Austrian&#13;
consuL Hansal, numbered over two&#13;
thousand. This letter w*»*hr«light by&#13;
M. Santoni. who has beon dispatched&#13;
to Khartoum in the hope of rescifeing&#13;
the prisoners. He arrived at Undur*&#13;
man in the guise of a trader. He entered&#13;
the four wretched hnts occupied&#13;
by the captives. Two of these are occupied&#13;
by. tlie missionaries and two by&#13;
the Sisters. Ho was arrested ;ind. im-&#13;
•lrisoned an an Eugli.sli spv,—but ro- j m&#13;
Patrick Henry, "We repeat it, sir, let&#13;
them come," and be darned to 'em.—&#13;
Peck's Sua.&#13;
cased at the end of three weeks. I h e I \cutu.'&#13;
One day when the ground was white with&#13;
snow, Mme. Dorlau, a great whip amoni? the&#13;
Parisian "spottswomen," invited Victor Hutro&#13;
to drive out to see the skaters lu ,tbi BoU de&#13;
Bou!o:m\ As ho cot up bes'de ha on the&#13;
box of her turnout she reman ked: "You have&#13;
forgotten your overeat, won cfter maitreS*&#13;
'•My overcoat! I luvcu't any, and I never had&#13;
on-'; and I dre^s just the same way in winter&#13;
I do in tumutwr.—\fy rivr-num ta my&#13;
*&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH.&#13;
J. L. NEWKIRK, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER&#13;
Pinckney, Michigan, Thursday, July O, 188¾&#13;
Ecuador is in a ferment because&#13;
somebody is inclined to speak disrespectfully&#13;
of the equator. Not having&#13;
force enough to get up a revolution&#13;
of its own, it indulges in a paper&#13;
warfare on the United States. Not&#13;
even the peace society could object&#13;
to this; it amuses the Ecuadorians&#13;
and hurts nobody.&#13;
The speculative boom in breadstuff?&#13;
and provisions, growing out of the&#13;
rumors of a possible conflict between&#13;
England and Russia, was short-lived,&#13;
as was predicted it would be. Wheat&#13;
which had been advanced in the Chicago&#13;
market nearly 3c, took a drop&#13;
of l^c. from the high point, and provisions&#13;
also declined. In the foreign&#13;
financial markets the freight appears&#13;
to have subdued almost as quickly as&#13;
it was aroused, since there was a&#13;
marked advance in British consuls&#13;
and Russian securities.&#13;
There is a bee keeper in Michigan&#13;
who has as keen notions of economy&#13;
as the man who tried to make his&#13;
Iiorse believe shavings were grass by&#13;
forcing him to wear green -geggle&amp;s&#13;
but while in the latter case the horse&#13;
died, the Michigan man has demonstrated&#13;
the practicability oflils economical&#13;
scheme. Concluding that&#13;
there was too much risk and waste of&#13;
time by permitting his bees to graze&#13;
on clover pastures, he bethought him&#13;
to feed them on glucose. By gradually&#13;
increasing the amount of clear&#13;
glucose feed to them each day, he&#13;
finally reached the point where they&#13;
required nothing :lsc. The produce&#13;
is sold as pure honey.&#13;
The county auditors propose to pay&#13;
the four assistant justice court clerks&#13;
about six hundred dollars apiece per&#13;
annum. We do not have the opportunity&#13;
to commend the auditors very&#13;
often, and, therefore, gladly avail ourselves&#13;
of this priviledge now that it is&#13;
offered. It makes no difference, so&#13;
far as the result is concerned, that&#13;
the motive for this action is sclfi-h.&#13;
Six hundred dollars is all that any&#13;
one of these four nibblers at the public&#13;
crib can earn, Three assistant&#13;
clerks might earn eight hundred dollars&#13;
each, and two would probably&#13;
earn twelve hundred dollars each.&#13;
The auditors are right to gauge the&#13;
salaries by the quantity of work to&#13;
be done rather than by the number&#13;
of clerks to do it. There is no need'&#13;
of four assistant clerks, and if the&#13;
justices and their chief clerk insist&#13;
upon that number the individuaz salaries&#13;
should be reduced proportionately.&#13;
Six hundred dollars is a very&#13;
liberal figure for these men.—Evening&#13;
Journal.&#13;
Of the twenty or~TSbTe~"Methodist&#13;
^^missionaries who-accompanied Bishop&#13;
Taylor to Central Africa a number&#13;
have been attacked with the African&#13;
fever, and at last reports all had either&#13;
recovered or were recovering but&#13;
one, who, refusing to take any medicine,&#13;
died. When the party left&#13;
^JUnaerjoaJess than a year ago, it was&#13;
explcted that the nlajoritv, incIuding_&#13;
" a l l the children, would die of the fever&#13;
within a few mouths, and loud&#13;
protests Were made against their going&#13;
on such a perilous undertaking.&#13;
But they have survived thus far, and&#13;
the reasou they have done so is that&#13;
they have taken the precautions&#13;
which Stanley in his latest book&#13;
shows will enable one to live in Central&#13;
Africa with as litftle danger as in&#13;
America. Their leader, Bishop Taylor,&#13;
was ad experiencedA^rieaa traveler,&#13;
and was for that reason able to&#13;
avoid the mistakes which have proved&#13;
fatal to other ' missionary parties.&#13;
Despite the fears of friends in America,&#13;
the missionaries- seem likely to&#13;
- Accomplish the object of their mission&#13;
"at least to the extent of establishing&#13;
their stations, and keeping up their&#13;
work until the meeting of the next&#13;
General Conference of the Methodist&#13;
church in May, 1888, which will decide&#13;
whether the effort to evangelize&#13;
Africa shall be continued or not.&#13;
The success thus far indicates that it&#13;
will not be abandoned.—Cincinnati&#13;
Times Star,&#13;
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A Remarkable Escape.&#13;
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ot, until in'last ...October she procured&#13;
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by continuinar its use for a short, time&#13;
she was completely cured, gaining in&#13;
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Call at WixcnELL'S DRUG STORE and&#13;
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They"will save hundreds of..do.lars..in&#13;
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IMPORTANT.&#13;
When yon visit or leave Xew York HUv. save&#13;
icjrage expressasp an"&#13;
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bacjrage expressase and carriage hire and atop at&#13;
tne Grand U, '&#13;
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not&#13;
ter for less money at the Grand Union Hotel than&#13;
•8,&#13;
vated railroad to all depots. Families can live bet&#13;
i&#13;
any other flTBt-class hotel in the city&#13;
4~&#13;
MACKINAC.&#13;
The Xort BeUghtfel '&#13;
SUMMER TOUR&#13;
*elaeo StHMti. l e w BUN.&#13;
Your Trip* per Week B*twm&#13;
DETROIT AND MACKINAC&#13;
Ax^aTery Week Say Between&#13;
** DETROIT AND CLEVELAND&#13;
Write for enr&#13;
" Picturesque Mackinac," Illustrated.&#13;
Oon uins Pull PartleuUre, ItoaoAJrreo.&#13;
Detroit &amp; Cleveland Steam.Ntv. Co.&#13;
c.D. WM«TCOI«». at*. •«•». * „ . ,&#13;
DETROIT. MICH.&#13;
HERE WE ARE AGAIN !&#13;
-With a larger stock of-&#13;
DRUGS AND M E D I C I N E S&#13;
than any house in Livingston County.&#13;
We carry a full Ike of the latest FLUIDS, EXTRACTS and other preparations&#13;
known TO the Drug Trade; also as fine a line of&#13;
FANCY GOODS and TOILET ARTICLES as you&#13;
-will find anywhere in theJState.&#13;
In Stationery and Box Paper we have a complete stock. We have the boss&#13;
" Nickle Cigar " and don't you torget it." J&#13;
WALL PAPER, CEILING DECORATIONS A WINDOW SHADES&#13;
in ill the latest patterns. We give "Kindall's Treatese on the Horse'v to every&#13;
•bbrse-pwner who purchase goods of us. Arctic Soda Water constantly on&#13;
draught, Oranges, Lemons and confectionery of all kinds.&#13;
"Corner Drug Store." SIGLER BROS.&#13;
PURNITUREI pURNTTUREl&#13;
When in want of anything in the line of Furniture, such as&#13;
BEDROOM SUITS7 PALLOR SUITS&#13;
LOUNGES, BUREAUS, BOOKCASES, TABLES.&#13;
STANDS, CHAIRS, ETC. ETC. COME&#13;
IAND SEE ME.'&#13;
J\. SPBOIALT-?.&#13;
COFFINS, CASKETS, ROBES and FUNERAL SUPPLIES of all kinds&#13;
constantly on hand, Respectflluy,&#13;
L. H. BEEBE.&#13;
D O O R S A N D B L I N D S ,&#13;
GLASS, NAILS, PAINT,&#13;
BUILDING PAPER&#13;
AND ALL&#13;
KINDS OF BUILDING MATERIAL&#13;
T&#13;
AT F.L. BROWN'S.&#13;
PATENTS „..., &amp; CO., of the B r i m m n c A M E B I A N , ronjattOHtuBolloJtontfor&#13;
I'Htotils, diverts, Tntde&#13;
J i r L , OoprrUtbU. for\he Untied SUtw. &amp;»eduj&#13;
•oclandTlhnuioe, German jr. eta. Hand Book about&#13;
Patenta tent free. Thirty-seven yMrVeKper^no^&#13;
Patents obtained tlmiuah MUNPT A CO. are ngUoed&#13;
IntheSciiN-nric AMKIIICAN. the largest, beat,and&#13;
moat widely circulated scientific paper. «3.» afyear.&#13;
.Weekly. Bplendtd engravings and Interesting ln- {ormatlon. Specimen copy of theHclf uilflc Arner»&#13;
can »ent fm»T^ Address MUNN A CO., tiriFNirma&#13;
AMimCAW Offloe, *U Broadway, New York. ;&#13;
.ss£S5SSaaiH _ The mortV-^popniw.Weeklynewo*P«&#13;
O/ devoted to science, mechanics, engineering,.dl*»&#13;
boveries, inventions and patents ever published, aver?&#13;
number illustrated with splendid engravings. This&#13;
pnblioation, furnishes a moat valuable enojolopeQlsoi&#13;
information wbieh no person should be without. The&#13;
popularity of the ScxnmFio AMKBIOAM J'jpoh th*|&#13;
its circulation&#13;
Its class&#13;
Clubs.&#13;
Ushers,&#13;
s s j s f i a | s j a | % Muna * Co. have euo ATENTSe w.fii,|g£as'rK M S M S M B S M fore the patent Ottos,&#13;
and have prepared more than O n * H u n -&#13;
dred T h o u s a n d applicationsi lor patw&#13;
U in ?be"n!ted mates and foreign&#13;
countries. Caveats, Trade-Marks, Oopyr&#13;
rights. Assignments, andI »U ether papera&#13;
for securing to inventors their rlehtaTn the&#13;
rnlted Btatee, Canada, England; ****?*j&#13;
Germany and other foreign countries, prepares&#13;
at short notioe and on reasonable terms.&#13;
Information as to obtaining patents cheerfully&#13;
riven without charge. Hand-books of informs-&#13;
Hon sent free. Patents obtained through Hun* f,&#13;
A Co. are noticed in the Bcientino Amenoan free. r&#13;
Che advantage of such notice is well understood by au&#13;
lersons who wish to dispose of their patents.&#13;
Address MUNN 4 COVOmoe BoramriO AmraiTUW.&#13;
Bl Broadway, New York.&#13;
X&amp;LOISIHE&#13;
Best Newspaper&#13;
QY ITrt CLAM&#13;
XSTBB nl Published every Thnrftday&#13;
at $3 per year; or, NiieHonllsforll.00 A faev«t XHaht-pagm ftefffteete, eeeeMat&#13;
nttempaper, f,V AM J. KKHPTKCTB KitMS&#13;
Ct.AMH; on* *rtth *hirh tHm VOWttMMtm&#13;
•eefl am thf&gt; OIVOJEJt m e m b e r s • / M s e / e m i l y&#13;
nrm 4mHffht«tt. MCitfH n m w H r eewfr*~ ~&#13;
/l/»f/-eto eelwmn« *&gt;*H*fll1«A settle tie*&#13;
eWfctVitfir ami e*r«fully ««le«(«4 1h~ ~'&#13;
in*vhifiH «»•« &lt;%rtU&gt;lem tm int*r—t*&#13;
iiuttruet and bmne/U every restates*.&#13;
Sunday-School Department*&#13;
INEXCELLED, ,&#13;
Oeadoeatd by R«v. J. M STIFLEB, D. jLm&#13;
Croser Theologioal Seminar/, Pens*.,&#13;
»Twrt,BH*» Jlfele jTetee&#13;
y e s s r i n n m etlaerjretper. 7 ^&#13;
tVSajnpleoopiea for eramrBattoB et een^eggtal&#13;
nnungnp nmm npon applketioo. Sead fog thaey&#13;
T &gt;&#13;
I 80UTH LYON"DOTS-&#13;
, the Picket&#13;
.Mr. and Mrs. David Havershaw&#13;
were made happy on Wednesday, July&#13;
15th, by the arrival of an 8 | pound hoy.&#13;
Daring the thunder storm of Tuesday&#13;
night, lightning Rtruck Wm. Kelley's&#13;
house, the fluid running down&#13;
the chimney, knocking out the stovepipe&#13;
bat doing no serious damage.&#13;
Kelley says its close enough, however.&#13;
A severe thunder storm accompanied&#13;
by hail passed over this place Monday&#13;
afternoon. Near Silver Lake coniMtttble&#13;
damage was done to corn&#13;
• • 4 wheat by the wind and hail, in&#13;
ti**»ca&amp;es the corn was completely&#13;
•4r%ped of leaves.&#13;
Wm. Jones, of Novi, shot a tramp&#13;
and now the community is over-run&#13;
with the pesky varmints, and N. IT.&#13;
Clark's building was burned with a&#13;
loss of $900, supposed to have been set&#13;
to burn Jones'' $1,200 thresher, standiag&#13;
B«ar i t&#13;
iy afternoon, during the ab-&#13;
Of the family, burglars entered&#13;
the house of W. A. Hill, two miles&#13;
south of this place/and secured about&#13;
$75 worth of plunder, consisting ot&#13;
jewelry, table-vvare, clothing, etc.&#13;
FOWL^fWILLE PARAGRAPHS.&#13;
F r o m the Review.&#13;
Mrs. J . L. Cooper presented her&#13;
husband witn $1,000 in a lump on Saturday—&#13;
that is to say Joe. says it is a&#13;
girl and is worth $1,000.&#13;
/ The D. L. &amp; N. railroad will give a&#13;
cheap excursion to Detroit on Wednesday,&#13;
July 29th, to those who wish to&#13;
attend the regetta at that place on&#13;
that date.&#13;
Mr. J . P. Spencer received word on&#13;
Wednesday that his sister, Mrs. Cornelia&#13;
Chase, of Chautauqua county, N.&#13;
Y., whose illness was chronicled in&#13;
these columns last week, died on the&#13;
8 th inat.&#13;
Class of 80 boys and girls will givje&#13;
a grand costume concert at the Opera&#13;
House on Thursday and Friday evenings,&#13;
July 23 ancT 24. The program&#13;
will consist of songs, choruafis, marches&#13;
tableaux, military drills, character&#13;
songs, etc., rendered by the juveniles&#13;
in costume, under the direction of&#13;
Miss Rose.&#13;
An item appeared in these columns&#13;
last «veek stating that Mr. Geo. Newman&#13;
had gone to Chicago to meet his&#13;
sister, Mrs. Frank Channon, on her&#13;
way home from Cal. By some jniscaL_|j&#13;
ctlation they failed to meet at that&#13;
place and Mrs. Channon arrived on&#13;
Monday e'vening without having seen&#13;
George, supposing he had been unable&#13;
to comply with her request to meet&#13;
her at that place.&#13;
STOCKBRIOGE NOTES.&#13;
From the Sim.&#13;
Hiram Haire had the second finger&#13;
ot his left hand cut otf yesterday with&#13;
a rip saw in Ellsworth's planing mill.&#13;
The tile and brick machines have&#13;
* been started and run like a charm.&#13;
Sammy, little son of S. E. Dewey,&#13;
was badly burned by powder the other&#13;
day.&#13;
Mr. Paige, of Chelsea, who had at-_&#13;
tamed the age of 86 dropped dead m&#13;
Dr. Armstrong's yard last Saturday.&#13;
No more Squire Johnson plays cro-&#13;
Vq*et, but now he rocks a wee bab(a.)&#13;
Born Wednesday night, a boy, weight&#13;
nine pounds.&#13;
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Frank Green,&#13;
a daughter, weight five pounds.&#13;
The Beebe heirs have relinquished&#13;
to the township of Stockbndge all&#13;
claim to the~square7 fully ratifying&#13;
the original intention arid act of the&#13;
dedicator. The township board are&#13;
mow in shape to improve it, and we&#13;
| | p e they will do so.&#13;
total disability claim on a policy she&#13;
held in tho Royal Templars of Temperance.&#13;
Last Saturday night Wm. Casterton,&#13;
of this township, struck Merrill D.&#13;
Hevrington, a Marion youth of 18 yrs.,&#13;
a hard blow in the face while on the&#13;
streets of Howell. It is said the assault&#13;
was vicious and entirely unprovoked.&#13;
Young Merrill caused Casterton's&#13;
arrest, but settled the' case by accepting&#13;
$3 for the rap he suffered and&#13;
Casterton's paying tjje cost-&#13;
Married, at the residence of the&#13;
bride's mother Wednesday* evening,&#13;
July 15, by Rev. M. H. Pettit, Mr.&#13;
Gerard Lignian and Mrs. Millie Lake,&#13;
all of Howell.&#13;
L. C. Miller, ex-editor of the Republican,&#13;
arrived home from, his Kansas&#13;
quarters Monday morning, for a short&#13;
stay. Mr. Miller has extensive real&#13;
estate interests at Pratt and runs a&#13;
hog ranch besides.&#13;
Frank Moore, a lad of 11 years, who&#13;
thinks it brave to be wicked, was sentenced&#13;
on Saturday last to 5 days confinement&#13;
in the county coop by Justice&#13;
Riddle. He had stolen from the vest&#13;
of Adam Hall, at work in the cemetery,&#13;
the sum of $5 on'the day betore.&#13;
Wherilfpprehended he had in his possession&#13;
$4.50 of the amount, which was&#13;
returned to Hall. Being the first otfense&#13;
legally charged against him he&#13;
was-let off-wkh a lk4it sentence.&#13;
sas?&#13;
B A R GAINS1 B A R G A I N S ! BAR GAINS!&#13;
We offer, this month, decided bargain* in every department U clean up stock.&#13;
PRINTS and GINGHAMS in STAPLES and DRESS GOODS.&#13;
And all light weight Worsteds marked down to prices that will close them out at once.&#13;
PARASOLS, FANS, ETC., "WMBWSStJM,1*"BUT-THey MU8T °°-WE 0ARRY N0THING 0VER&#13;
SHAWLS—SHETLAND, CASHMERE&#13;
And all S U M M E R S H A W L M we will C L O S E OTJT regardless of COSTTEAS,&#13;
TEAS, TEAS, TEAS. We have just opened up a very fine line of New Teas in&#13;
GREEN &amp; UNCOLORED JAPS, OOLONG DUSTS, ETC,&#13;
Try a pound of our 40 cent Tea, we guarantee it to draw with any 50 cent Tea in town.&#13;
All in search of Bargains should visit our store this month for we&#13;
intend to make things HUM if low prices and good&#13;
goods can do it. Come and see us when you have anything&#13;
to sell. Come and see us when in search&#13;
g£g*of goods.-'^J&#13;
"West End Store." LAKIN &amp; SYKES.&#13;
parsonage. It is hoped that all will&#13;
avail themselves of this chance. Go&#13;
and have a good time and help in a&#13;
good work.&#13;
* »&#13;
v&#13;
i&#13;
HOWELL COMMENTS. *&#13;
From tb« Republican.&#13;
Hon. 0. M. Wood, of Pinclme/, was&#13;
thrown in front of a moving machine&#13;
a few days ago and narrowly escaped&#13;
serious inJuTieBT ^&#13;
Mn. F . B. Sabin has just received&#13;
five hundred good 'oaira dollars, as a&#13;
He walketh our streets with exultant&#13;
mem a.\A declareth that he weigh -&#13;
eth 20 Die ounces to the pound and&#13;
ineasureth 15 inches to the foot; in&#13;
tact he is happy, happier, happiest; the&#13;
mother is happy; their triends are&#13;
happy, and the little lady herself is&#13;
happy, for she tips the beam at 9 lbs.&#13;
The toothless Miss arrived last Saturday&#13;
night, and in a language comprehensible&#13;
only to babies and doting&#13;
mothers, adopted Chas. U. Jewett as&#13;
her father and expressed her intention&#13;
of remaining permanently in&#13;
Howell and that home. She commented&#13;
with special pleasure upon her&#13;
pretty and proud papa, who for a time&#13;
had to wear a bandana bandage over&#13;
his mouth to keep him from screaming&#13;
for joy.&#13;
From the Democrat.&#13;
While unloading hay at W, S. Hardy's,&#13;
in Oeeola, Friday, a'hoisting hay&#13;
fork partially broke trom its fastening&#13;
and struck a hired man . on the forehead,&#13;
cutting a b&lt;td gash thereon.&#13;
T. B. Knapp, blacksmith, had a leg&#13;
badly jammed Tuesday, while shoeing&#13;
a horse. The animal leaned so heavily&#13;
against Knapp as to throw him on&#13;
the floor and then fell upon him.&#13;
Failing health has caused Rev. Wm.&#13;
Smith to abandon his European tour&#13;
which he had started to take. He has&#13;
arrived home, but is not able to occupy&#13;
his pulpit. Rev. Wolf, of Albion-*,&#13;
still fills his place.&#13;
H. W. Layton, of Cohoctah, died on&#13;
the 10th inst.. in the 46th vear of his&#13;
age. He was a pood citizen of that&#13;
township, and his death it mourned by&#13;
a large circle of friends. He was a&#13;
soldier in the late rebellion and a&#13;
member of the G. A. R., a number of&#13;
which order from this place attended&#13;
his funeral Sunday.&#13;
Cyrus Sweet, of Genoa, recently had&#13;
a span of colts run away with a cultivator,&#13;
badly demolishing it, and more&#13;
recently the animals ran away with a&#13;
mowing machine, which, while in gear&#13;
and motion, they^carried with them&#13;
over two ^fences. The machine was&#13;
nofr very badly broken, however, while&#13;
the horses escaped without injury.&#13;
FARMERS, READ THIS&#13;
The undersigned having, a large stock ^of all kinds of Lumber, Lath and&#13;
Shingles at their lumber vard in Pincknev, have decided to reduce their&#13;
stock and for the 3 S T E 2 C T S I 3 C T ^ 5 T X &gt; . A / ^ T S will sell -&#13;
AT&#13;
ROCK BOTTOM PRICES.&#13;
Parties about to build will find it to\heir interest to get our prices. We manufacture&#13;
our own lumber and shingles and will sell according to the times.&#13;
We keep on hand a full stock of Flooring, Siding and Barn Boards, also all&#13;
lengths of Bill Stuff and Timbers, and on all bills will give special prices.&#13;
You will find our Agent, A. L. HOYT, always on hand. Come and see us,&#13;
we will satisfy }'ou that we mean business.&#13;
T*s Oldest. Brightest, and b«tt of Western Weeklies&#13;
Sigbt mges, flftt-iix columns, fine p*p*r, new irpe,&#13;
clew print, tnd the mo«t entertaining piper offered&#13;
IHt/i**1 1 0 ?.^^1 0 - B u i u **«r •ubjecu with fslrnees, contains ya ltlo tchaleit yn,e wdal »ocfB tMh*er pweotritlodr aItntr agcetn!reerlayl perxecsetlole necde, aan*d a iafa mwilltyh oup apae rc. oImt-&#13;
QUAKER&#13;
TABLE SAUCE, Thousands of articles a renew mannfnctnred thit&#13;
in foruj'er years had to be imported, payiug high&#13;
import dutyaa it is now being done ou Lea &amp; Perrins&#13;
table sauce ; tho QUAKER 1 AKI.Y. SACCI takes&#13;
its place ; it h u been pronounced by competent&#13;
judges just aa good and even Uttrr. Tho QDAJUB&#13;
S^UCB b u Slowly but surely_g_aiup.l great importance&#13;
and iB replaciug the very txit imparted&#13;
iauce on the shelf of- the grocer, th* table*&#13;
of the restaurant and the tables of tbe rich and&#13;
poor men, greatly prized and relished by all on&#13;
account of its piquancy, aroma, ta*te, Mrgnjtli&#13;
and puranees. Tho lnveutor has by years of&#13;
study of the secret virtues contained in the aromatic&#13;
apices of the Indies and China, such as&#13;
mace, nutmeg,cinnamon, genuine Jamaica ginger&#13;
and peppers and buds of tree* unknown to moat&#13;
nsen, and by Ion? practice succeeded to combine&#13;
their extracts in. such a liquid form as we now&#13;
find it. of agreeable taste, and BO invigorating as&#13;
to be taken iu place of a torn sen bitters. By manufacturing&#13;
this sauce here. hea?y import duties&#13;
and freights are saved, and it is sold at a lower&#13;
figure to the dealer, who making a better profit on&#13;
Quaker Sauce Can sell it to the consumer cheaper&#13;
than he very beat imported article hardly equaling&#13;
ours. If your gTOcerdoee not keep It. write&#13;
us for prices, etc. SoltMn bottles or by the galloav&#13;
CHARM HANUFACTURINQ CO.,&#13;
Sole Proprittort and Manufmctrnm,&#13;
KWAIOSS. 2dST.,SLLs*i»-JU.&#13;
© » T » 3D © 3 - X , .A. R Jk. ? £ • » ,&#13;
sp*adid ,e vae croyp ys uobfs criber receives free of char*es , p*o~st"ec"* »&#13;
THE TIMES ILLUSTRATED HMD-BOOK.&#13;
alone worth the price of subscription. The Hand-book&#13;
Is a publication of one hundred pages of useful and entertaining&#13;
reading matter, especially prepared and&#13;
published for the subscribers of the "Weekly Times-"&#13;
All who take the paper are delighted with it. and the&#13;
Hand-book will be equally satisfactory. Send for sped*&#13;
men copy of the paper. Addresa, THE TIMES,&#13;
230 Walnut 6t., Ctscman, O.&#13;
THE CINCINNATI TIMES-STIR,&#13;
Is the best and cheapest dally paper published in the&#13;
dy.of!ll}a'.r. s aE l y*ebatr ,p aorg etsw—eflovret yc-eenigth*t a cwoleuemk,n e^and only six oent la It is independent&#13;
in politics, but aiasa to be iair fa everything, aanndd&#13;
Jjiet to all parties, individual*, sections, and nation alt&#13;
ties. If you want all the news attractively andbones*-&#13;
iyjpreeented, subscribe for it. THI LAMBS* CIBCTTLA-&#13;
» AJT »A*sa i s CIKCISHATI.&#13;
Address, THE TTME3-STAR,&#13;
23ftWalnut 6t., Curc&lt;mun,0.&#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 tbe ten-&#13;
The ladies of Christ Church, cf Herf- derest infant. It cures almost instanti&#13;
a t e , have planned an excursion ^ ^ J l ? l e a s * ^&#13;
Orchard Lake, to come off August 6, " " " " " °"e am&#13;
1886. The proceeds to help build a&#13;
^TTnervous system, causing a sudden&#13;
buoyancy ot the mind. In short, the&#13;
wonderful effects of this wonderful&#13;
remedy cannot be explained in written&#13;
language. A singie do§e 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;
KidnejiyDisease 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;
ttratifthml Affflp.t.innt Catarrh, and all&#13;
acnes and pains, external or internal.&#13;
Foil directions with each bottle.&#13;
For StltfiT Wivcirttt's r&gt;iw STOM.&#13;
p^-HOFF'S*^}&#13;
CLOSING OUT SALE i&#13;
-Continues until all goods are sold.-&#13;
Lad4s' Calf Shoes €1 25 and $1.50, reduced from.&#13;
u&#13;
((&#13;
u i t&#13;
1.75,&#13;
1.25,&#13;
1.50,&#13;
2.00,&#13;
2.50,&#13;
" 8.00,&#13;
Old Ladies1 Balmorals 1.25,&#13;
" " Cloth Shoes .75,&#13;
Childrens' Shoes (8 to 1 2 ) . . . . .85,&#13;
Boys Boots 1.50,&#13;
2.S0,&#13;
Gents* Calf Boots 3.75,&#13;
Kir Boota $2.00 to $4.00, reduced from*. $3, $4 &amp; $5&#13;
Calf Boots;.. $2^2.50 A $3, " " ......$2.75, $ S ^ $4&#13;
( 1&#13;
«4&#13;
I t&#13;
. . . . .&#13;
« .._L&#13;
.$200&#13;
.. 2.50&#13;
. 1.75&#13;
. 2.00&#13;
. 2.75&#13;
. 3.25&#13;
.4.00&#13;
. 2.00&#13;
.1.25&#13;
. 1.25&#13;
. 200&#13;
. 3.50&#13;
,5.00&#13;
No goods reserved, all to be sold at a proportionate reduction.&#13;
W. B. HOFF, - PINCKNEY.&#13;
Rose Leaf, Fine Gilt&#13;
Navy Clippings ^&#13;
and Snuffs&#13;
Having rented D. Richards'&#13;
BLACKSMITH SHOP&#13;
we are now prepared to do all&#13;
kinds of&#13;
Including Horse-Shoeing.&#13;
Machine and Steel Work done to ,&#13;
order.&#13;
PARKER &amp; SPEARS.&#13;
Our readers for 14 cents Jn postage stamps to&#13;
ay (or mailing and wrapping, anil names of two&#13;
k amenta, w i l l receive F R E E a STEH. FHISM PAAIOR&#13;
EMUAVINO f t a l l OUR PRESIDENTS, including;&#13;
CLEVELAND, size 22x28 inches, worth $4.00.&#13;
ADDRESS ELDER PUB, Co , CHICAGO, I I I 1&#13;
FARMERS' STORE,&#13;
, AT&#13;
ANDERSON STATION!'&#13;
Is now filled to overflowing with a,&#13;
fresh, new and complete stock of Dry&#13;
Goods, Groceries, Boots &amp; Shoes and'&#13;
Hardware, to which we invite public&#13;
inspection.&#13;
The ladies especially will fin&lt;&#13;
their interest to see -ournoveities in.&#13;
Dress Goods before bnying elsewhere,..&#13;
Every variety&gt;t?T country produce&#13;
taken in exctiange tor goods or money.f&#13;
JAMES T. EAMAN k CO.;&#13;
V&#13;
*r*=-&#13;
I&#13;
•we w&#13;
, * » * ? - • • • ' " « •&#13;
• V Wff&#13;
I&#13;
ft&#13;
k&#13;
.1&#13;
,1&#13;
rf&#13;
ffmchuu gisvatfi.&#13;
J . L. N K W K I K K . Publisher.&#13;
Batereu »» the t»o»t«aee M *a CMMM MWUI.&#13;
TDIELY TOPICS.&#13;
HEKKY M. STANLEY,&#13;
the African explorer, was born noar&#13;
Denbightin, Wales, in 1840,and at thrco&#13;
years of age was placed in the poorhouse&#13;
of St. A-aph where ho received&#13;
an education which enabled him to&#13;
teach in a school. Oct. lit lie sailed&#13;
as a cabin boy, in a vessel&#13;
bound for K e :&#13;
w&#13;
: Oilcans,&#13;
and was there adopted by a merchant&#13;
named Stanley, whose name he took instead&#13;
of his owe of John Rowlands.&#13;
After the death of his patron he enlisted&#13;
jn the Confederate (service, but afterwards&#13;
entered the Federal army. In&#13;
1867 he was sent as a correspondent of&#13;
the ..".-New York Herald1 ' to Abyssinia,&#13;
and subsequently to Spain and other&#13;
countries. His services as a correspondent&#13;
were so excellent that&#13;
he was chosen by Mr. Born |&#13;
nett to find Livingstone, and after '&#13;
.innumerable hardships accompli died&#13;
his purpose on the 28th of October 1871.&#13;
B i s success caused him to bo sent by '••&#13;
the " H e r a l d " and "London Telegraph1 '&#13;
on a mission of his own. He explored&#13;
Lakes Albert and Victoria&#13;
N'Yanza and traced" the Congo&#13;
river from its source^to its mouth. Ho&#13;
has written several works descriptive&#13;
of his travels and exploration. His la«f&#13;
work, "The Congo and its Free State11 i&#13;
describes the resources and character |&#13;
of the natives of that region, and ho&#13;
predicts that an enormous trade will&#13;
be developed. . . •&#13;
TEE COUXTBY AT LAKGl.&#13;
MUX AND HOK8KS Bl'RXBD.&#13;
A flrft broke out in Belfast, Maine, Sunday&#13;
July 13, resulting in the death of two men.&#13;
Twenty valuable horses also perished, iu th«&#13;
flames. The fire broke out in a livery stable,&#13;
and was undoubtedly eaused by drunken hackmen&#13;
who had been smoking in the barn.&#13;
8BBVKD 'KM KIGHT.&#13;
Between 1,000 and 1,300 strikers In Cleveland&#13;
attempted to make an attaek on the plat*&#13;
mill at Newburg, anned with clubs and stonea&#13;
At the entrance to the mill thev were met bj&#13;
about 80 policemen, who used their clubs aud&#13;
revolvers with telling etleet, scatteriujr the&#13;
strikers in everv direction, about 40 • / whom&#13;
were seriously Injured, two fatally.&#13;
POMEHOY'S PLAN*.&#13;
Brick Pomeroy, who is now iu Washington,&#13;
has announced that he will receive subscriptions&#13;
for a monument to Mrs, Sui-ratt, who, fie&#13;
sayis was Innocent aud was murdered. He asserts&#13;
that a majority of her military judges&#13;
have committed Mifcide, and that all are dead&#13;
except Juohje llolt^who is almost crazy, a&#13;
proof, he adds, that they saw the Injustice of&#13;
their act.&#13;
A COTTON ENEMY.&#13;
The dreaded weh worm has made its appearance&#13;
in several cotton ticlds south of D.illas,&#13;
along the river. Thus far their ravages havt&#13;
been confined to a district only a fex- miles&#13;
square. Planters dread this worm more thau&#13;
any other ami considerable anxlctv exists&#13;
among cotton dealer* of north Texas-over the&#13;
sudden appearance of this scourge iu the very&#13;
hoai t of the cotton belt.&#13;
OVEIl THK PAT.l.S.&#13;
Mrs. Melntyre of Welland. Oat., was swept&#13;
over Niagara Vails on rl»-» day of the celebration&#13;
of the transfer of Niagara park to the&#13;
public. Mrs. Mclntyre was a young woman of&#13;
a particularly daring nature, an 1 attempted to&#13;
go up a tluiu'e bridge leading from thr main&#13;
walk, when she K r u n o ilUzy. lo&gt;L her II.IUIIICL'&#13;
and fell into the waLor. She was swept under&#13;
the main bridge and dashed t j death just&#13;
below.&#13;
VIRGINIA KKIHT.UOANS SRLEl'T CANDIDATES&#13;
The H«ptthlieaus of Ylrgima ut -t inr-invcn*&#13;
lion in Richmond July hi. After the adopt Toil of&#13;
a platform, and re-v'lutumsoi' the sympathy for&#13;
(Jen. Grant, th.1 nomination of eaiidiilates was&#13;
then proceeded \wih and an hoiiranda hali" was&#13;
occupied in nominating .luhu S. Wise lor govoni-&#13;
vr; H: rltntVTn \\\«od of Scon eountv i'or&#13;
Lieutenatit-(Jovenioi', and (..'apt. Frank S. Uiair&#13;
of Wvthe, for Att v.'iuyl lenera!. \VITO Mii-ini&#13;
nateil by acclamation. aYt'/r wh it'll at 3 :\i0 s_ m&#13;
the convention adjourned.&#13;
A DAKOTA t V C l i O N B .&#13;
A severe storm passed over portions of r&gt;»&#13;
kota the other night. At Highmore and Hula-&#13;
'bird there was a regular 'cyclone, the lattei&#13;
town being; almost torn to pieces, but ho live&#13;
lost in town: A. J'. Heed, grain dealer oi&#13;
Miller, was killed, presumably by lightning.&#13;
there being no mark whatever i'ouud on ilit&#13;
body. E. 11. Thompson, living two miles from&#13;
Highmore, was carried 4 J rods and Ids neck&#13;
broken. Fifteen houses were blown to pieces&#13;
at Highmore and others badly damaged.&#13;
*• DROWNED PLEA.SIKK SEKKEKS.&#13;
Shortly after 5 o'clock Sunday afternoon,&#13;
July 13, a heavy wind an'd rain storm passed&#13;
over Lake Mianetonka, near •Minneapolis, A&#13;
small steam yacht, the Minnie'Cook, with eight&#13;
persons on hoard, was cap*4aed and the entire&#13;
party drowned. The entire party were all from&#13;
Mihoeapolls. Ten persons were on board, all&#13;
of whom perished. The party consisted of&#13;
Mayor Rand, aged 55; his wifej 50; his daughter,"&#13;
Mary, Hi; his sou. Harvey, 13; and hit&#13;
nephew,"Frank. 17; J. R. Covkendall, 85; his&#13;
wire, 27. and daughter, Katie, 4; Engineer&#13;
George McDonald 37, u n ( i &amp; hoy 13 years old&#13;
naimd Robert IIus*sy.&#13;
f&#13;
T H E R E is a paper in Texas called the-&#13;
Vanguard Its n&gt;6tto isr~"Radicai in&#13;
Holiness," and its professed object is&#13;
the "promotion of holiness. Speaking&#13;
of a minister who has said something it&#13;
does not like, and of a p a t e r that c o n ^&#13;
tained an article it does not approve of, t&#13;
it calls them -'rationalistic, holiness- \&#13;
hating, heresy-hunting prelates,'1 their&#13;
words having " t h e hiss of the serpent?;' j&#13;
charges one of them with having " a&#13;
morbid and wolfish spirit;'1 calls a&#13;
minister " a brazen bigot," a "Pharisee,"&#13;
"flourishing ignorance and conceit;"&#13;
and says in one of the articles&#13;
that physicians are a "mercenary7 class&#13;
of men, most of whom are blasphemous&#13;
foes of Christ, who will for pay prolong&#13;
the needless afflictions of their fellow ;&#13;
m e n , " and closes tbe article by profess'&#13;
ing entire sanctiiication.&#13;
T I I E B E is a bee' keeper in Michigan&#13;
. who has as keen notions of economy as&#13;
the man who tried to make his horse i&#13;
believe shaving were grass by forcing |&#13;
him to wear green goggles; but while !&#13;
in the latter case the horse died, the&#13;
Michigan m a n has demonstrated s&#13;
the practicability of his economical&#13;
scheme. Concluding t h a t there was&#13;
too much risk atrcT waste of time by&#13;
permitting-his bees to graze on clover&#13;
pastures, he bethought him to feed&#13;
''them, glucose. By gradually increasing&#13;
the amount of clear glucose fed to&#13;
them each day, he finally reached the&#13;
point where they required noting else&#13;
The product is sold as pure hone y. I&#13;
C A R O L T N B - H E A L Y D A L L , a veteran&#13;
advocate of woman's suffrage, declares&#13;
that she has seen for a lousr time "that,&#13;
the feeling of more_Jiighly educated&#13;
people is less favorable to an extension&#13;
of suffrage than it was twenty years&#13;
a g o , " : and ,that the consummation&#13;
which she desires and anticipatesHtas&#13;
been set back at least another generation&#13;
. by the indiscretions and short&#13;
sightedness which have&gt;ccompanied&#13;
this agitation." T h e " obstacle to&#13;
woman's suffraga la not man's solfishne88Tsfie~&#13;
Qiinlcs,~ but woman7* reluctance.&#13;
)&#13;
HE FLED TC CUBA.&#13;
W. A. Jackson, the wealthy cattleman of&#13;
Hillsboro, Texas, who recently tied the country&#13;
leaving debts to the amount" of $300,(X)J is ifi&#13;
Cuba. After selling his train load of cattle iu&#13;
Chicago he rocketed the proceeds amounting&#13;
to nearly ¢60,000 and went to New York where&#13;
he took the steamer for Cuba. Fearing the&#13;
effect of his ignoble..,, flight upon the mind of&#13;
We seiiRtative wife he sent her, through a&#13;
friend in St Louis, a long cable message from&#13;
Havana, defcading his course and begging his&#13;
wife's forgiveness. By this means his hiding&#13;
place was revealed. JI s many creditors have&#13;
as yet taken no steps toward his extradition.&#13;
A SPECIAL OUDER.&#13;
The presidential'made the following special&#13;
civil-service rule: Appointmeuts to the loO&#13;
places In the pension office provided to be filled&#13;
by the act of March 8, 1835, except f-o far aa&#13;
they may be filled by promotions or tr«mfer*fmust&#13;
be separately appointed by the appointing&#13;
power in as near conformity to the second&#13;
Bectfon of the act of January 16, 1S88, as the&#13;
need of filling them promptly and the resldenee-&#13;
and quallSeations-of the applicants will&#13;
permit The section above referred to provides&#13;
'that appointments shall be apportioned among&#13;
the states and territories and the District of&#13;
Columbia upon the basis of population ascertained&#13;
at the last preceding census.&#13;
THE TRArFIC IX BABIES.&#13;
Another white girl baby has been found in&#13;
possession of Chinee foster parents in a lonthsome&#13;
den in thu Chinese quarters of San Francisco.&#13;
Tke Mongolians having the baby in&#13;
charge said that the child was two years old&#13;
and had been namen Chucu Ho. It cost them&#13;
originally $100, and as It was sickly they had&#13;
paid to p'hyslclans over three times the purchase&#13;
price. The babe was given in charge of&#13;
the secretary of the soeittv for the prevention&#13;
of cruelty to children. This makes 15 white&#13;
girls taken from Chinese, to whom they have&#13;
been sold by inhuman parents or mercenary&#13;
mid-wives within the last year. The purpose&#13;
of their purchase is no* secret among the&#13;
wealthy merchants of the Chinese quarter.&#13;
NEWSPAPER OFFICES UUUXEU.&#13;
The building at Tenth and 1). streets,&#13;
Washington, occupied by the Critic, Daily&#13;
Post, Sunday Gazette," National Repu!&gt;&#13;
jlican and several other tenants,&#13;
caught fire and was completely gutted by the&#13;
na*mes, the presses and storks on the 'lower&#13;
being badly injured by water. The firemen&#13;
worked hard, and one. Michael W. Conway, a&#13;
Chicago fireman, volunteered his services" to&#13;
Chief Cronan, was ;nit iu command o[ several&#13;
companies and did effective, s.'i'vle.e. The&#13;
t;re broke out iu thee'ectric li^lit engine room.&#13;
The losses on the building are $s&lt;)(000. Stilson&#13;
Uutehina being the owner, 'Hutchins also&#13;
losses the plates and 5.C0 ) copies of a new hook,&#13;
"Washington Past and'PreM-nt." The presses&#13;
destroyed were worth jSy.W.ouO. These losses&#13;
will make atotarof SlSO^i.'O.&#13;
MOKE I.AXbS. /&#13;
Land Commissioner Sparks has rendered/*&#13;
decision on the inquiry of the receiver &lt;&gt;f/the'&#13;
land olllce at Walla Walla W. T.. as to wtieth-,&#13;
i r t h e Northern Pacific railroad company is&#13;
entitled to land regularly settled upo/f by one&#13;
Pettier, but which was, by a change Hi the line&#13;
of the road, bymghCwithin its/indemnity&#13;
limits. He holds that a withdrawal of the laud&#13;
by the commissioner wh"n withdrawals from&#13;
settlement, entry, or other appropriation are&#13;
not required •by law, is effective only as information&#13;
in defining the limits within" which indemnity&#13;
selections may/ be made In a proper&#13;
time and manner, but it is not operative as a&#13;
prohibition of settlements and entries within&#13;
such limits under the public land laws prior to&#13;
t}c time when a lawful selection by the railroad&#13;
company ha/been made. If the secretary&#13;
of _the interior sustains this decision it will restore&#13;
to t h e / n t r y under the homestead and&#13;
othor lnwiymnny millions of cores of publio&#13;
NIAGARA FREE.&#13;
Showmen and Hackmon Can&#13;
Bleed Us.&#13;
No Longer&#13;
Niagara Falls and park arc at last secured to&#13;
the public, and the hackmeti, guides and others&#13;
of their ilk who havt1-all these years been making&#13;
money out of unsuspecting, verdant, and&#13;
helpless humanity, eau now retire upon what&#13;
they have made. ' The exercise* attending the&#13;
transfer were held ut Niagara, aud were witnessed&#13;
by about 50,000 people.&#13;
The exercises of the day were begun with&#13;
the tiring of a hundred guns at sunrise. All the&#13;
business houses of the city were gaily d«t)ratcd&#13;
and the streets presented" a gorgous spectacle.&#13;
At an informal meeting of thu commi&amp;sionert&#13;
held at the Cataract house the following despatch&#13;
was received:&#13;
Loxnox, Eug., July 14, 18¾.&#13;
To the Representatives of the State of New&#13;
York at Niagara Falls.&#13;
The commissioners' reservat'oi society congratulate&#13;
the state of New \ ork on securing&#13;
Niagara Falls to tbe public.&#13;
Ex Gov. Tllden tent a telegram to the committee&#13;
expressing his regret atnot being able&#13;
to attend. Notwithstanding the rain of the&#13;
raorninsrthe rmumittce of arrangement* deemed&#13;
that the ceremonies should not be&#13;
postponed, and accordingly fie spi-ak TS and&#13;
as many as possible of t h / visitors assembled&#13;
under the pavilion and at the appointed time&#13;
Bishop Coxe commenced the proceedings with&#13;
prayer. Lett-rs wer.' read from the governorgeneral&#13;
of Canada and Pi e-ddent Cleveland,&#13;
expressing their regret at their inability to attend&#13;
the ceremonies'&#13;
Kx-l.ieiit.(iov. Dorjiheijiie-, president of the&#13;
commission, then made the presentation addresses,&#13;
alter which (inv. 11 ill accented the reservation&#13;
on In h.ilf of the people ui the State&#13;
of New York. There were about '-'S.OtHi people&#13;
in the park in which the pavilion had been&#13;
erected.&#13;
Addresses were made by Erastus Brooks,&#13;
James C. Carter, orator of the day. Lieut.-(low&#13;
llohinson of Canada, aud Attorney-General&#13;
Mowat.|&#13;
Mr.•»). C. Carter IVeiran his address with an&#13;
allusion to the diseovcry of the falls by La&#13;
Salle and his associates' about *2tX) years ago.&#13;
IteTOVteWed t!reT:ausc'whicli:iodu('e'd the~eoTTvertius&#13;
of the fills into a stat • rcservath n.&#13;
a'.d recit"d the progse s of the legislation that&#13;
limilly feeured the property from the hands of&#13;
private parties. .Concluding he said:&#13;
Our work to-day is to restore a neglected&#13;
brade—to manifest our s&gt;nsc of the pre-'cifilnent&#13;
imp Ttanee of tins miracle of nature as a&#13;
tea her—a source of eve y ;ofteuing and elevating&#13;
influence —to lcaVe its own creative&#13;
powers to reproduce ii &gt; original majesty and to&#13;
throw wide open its beautiful gates that all, of&#13;
whatever race or clime, may enter.&#13;
But though the task &lt;u &gt;'ew York is accomplished,&#13;
the wlio'e work is not yet linjshed. The&#13;
great and friendly nation which occupies the&#13;
opposite bank holds in her hands a matchless&#13;
part of the trlorie- o/.--Niagara. We have no&#13;
doubt that she is-fully sensible of the duty&#13;
which her dominion imjK&gt;ses, nor that that&#13;
duty will be fully discharged. Our own endeavor&#13;
had its origin in part in a suggestion&#13;
proceeding from lu-r chief ma.istrate. Our&#13;
example cannot but stimulate her to decisive&#13;
action. And what better pledge of everlasting&#13;
amrty could be given than a mutual and peaceful&#13;
guardianship over these beautiful banks?&#13;
The tumult of contesting armies engaged in&#13;
fraternal strife was once drowned bv the thunder&#13;
of the cataract. Does it not forever sav&#13;
''Peace: be still I" to, the passions by Which&#13;
FACT A.ND FANCY.&#13;
such strife&#13;
•'Oh!&#13;
is engendered i&#13;
may the wavta which madden iu thy&#13;
deep, &lt;r .&#13;
There spend their rage, nor climb the encircling&#13;
steep.&#13;
And till the conflict of thv surges cease&#13;
The natioison thy banks repose in peace.''&#13;
After the singfng of the hymn '•America''&#13;
and the doxology, the cxi rcist a wore closed&#13;
with the bencdlctiou by Bishop Coxe.&#13;
In the afternoon there was a parade and review&#13;
of troops and in the evening a grand display&#13;
of fire works, witnessed by an immense&#13;
gathering of p "ople. It Is estimated that 50,-&#13;
000 visitors witnessed the ceremonies.&#13;
CONDENSED NEWS.&#13;
land which have" been. kepLout otlbc market&#13;
for yeara^because claimed by railroad" corjw ration*.&#13;
(Public drinking fountains arc to be placed&#13;
at different joints in Washington.&#13;
There is a strong probability that Kiel may&#13;
escape through the medium of a flaw in the indictment.&#13;
fifteen Mexicans were killed in an engage&#13;
ment, with the Indians at Eagle Pass on the&#13;
Rio Grande river.&#13;
Prof. Charles Kendall Adams of the Michigan&#13;
university, has been elected president of&#13;
Cornell unive'rsity.&#13;
All the striking conductors and car drivers&#13;
of Chicago -w-ao were discharged have been reengaged&#13;
and the strikers arc jubilant.&#13;
The Cleveland. Ohio, chrifitfan temperance&#13;
union has fevered its connection with the state&#13;
and national associations, believing in nonpartisan&#13;
action.&#13;
The postmaster general has issued an order&#13;
directing that all time lost by clerks by sickness&#13;
or otherwise, be deducted from their 30&#13;
days leave of absence. " ,&#13;
The agricultural convention held in Washington&#13;
requested the commissioner to try to&#13;
secure a weather signal sationed at every natr&#13;
ional agricultural college.&#13;
The Caradian government have withdrawn&#13;
their bill giving ah annual subsidy of $l'^i.U0.)&#13;
for live years to the Allen steamship company&#13;
for carrying English-Canadian mails.&#13;
Lieut. Webb, connected with the Alert of&#13;
arctic expedition, has been court-martialed&#13;
and found guilty of drunkenness/ lie will be&#13;
suspended from" service for two years.&#13;
Six editions of Miss Cleveland's book have&#13;
already been sold, live in America and one&#13;
abroad. A seventh edition is in press. The&#13;
author still refuses to let /h?r portrait appear&#13;
n the book. /&#13;
The world's exposition plant buildings aud&#13;
machinery at New Orleans have been sold at&#13;
auction 'for $lTo/I)00, They were bid&#13;
in by Mr. Ne'wmaij/'but were prooably purchased&#13;
for the new exposition company.'&#13;
A motion is l/efore the Dominion commons&#13;
that the government recognize the services of&#13;
the militia (drees engaged in suppressing the&#13;
outbreak iri the northwest by giving each man&#13;
a grant of' script redeemable in land.&#13;
Two/5'oung rufTYinsof Erie. Pa.s, put a bunch&#13;
of tire'efackers under the dress of Miss Lizzie&#13;
Waggoner, which ignited her clothing and&#13;
ca/hsed her to be burned To death. About the&#13;
/ame time a bull gored ?.lrs. 11. Lewis and ran&#13;
its horns through her lungs inllicting .fatal injuries.&#13;
. While the center roof of the new gasometer&#13;
in Albany, N. Y., was being hoi-ted into position&#13;
a gaiT gave way precipitating live men&#13;
from the piaiform. 'Three tell t &gt; 'the bottom&#13;
of the shaft, l(l5fcet, and w. re Instantly killed.&#13;
Two others saved themselves by-rate lung hold&#13;
of ropes.&#13;
The governor of Kansas lias addressed a letter&#13;
to the secretary of the Interior, protesting&#13;
against the proposed transfer of Apache Indians&#13;
from Arizona to "Xomansland." The&#13;
governor says it is an invasion, and .violation&#13;
of the clear purpose of the spirit of the law of&#13;
February 17. 1S7!&gt;.&#13;
The paint and blacksmith shop of T. B.&#13;
Pratt it Co.'s buggy manufactory iu Elkhart,&#13;
Jnd., were burned the other night witli their&#13;
contents. The loss is about $:i"&gt;,(KX), covered&#13;
by insurance distributed between the Queen,&#13;
oi Liverpool, Pennsylvania, Home Mutual,&#13;
German,-ofFreeport, "N. H., and Westchester&#13;
companies. Over 100 men are throwjiout of employment.&#13;
The company will rebuild.&#13;
Texas claimes a population of 2,*&#13;
500,000. '&#13;
The best oranges aro those- which&#13;
foel the heaviest iu the hauil.&#13;
It seems to be "iti the a i r " that&#13;
skating-rinks are losing favor throughout&#13;
the country.&#13;
There is a large ilemand at Portland,&#13;
Oregon, for good servant-girls&#13;
to take the places now occupied by&#13;
Chinamen.&#13;
Fifteen thousand shad have been&#13;
taken in the Susquehanna this season,&#13;
and snad-bakes are the fashionable&#13;
amusement.&#13;
No time is lost at elections in British&#13;
Columbia. Th« recent elections&#13;
wero hold two days after the nominations&#13;
were made. *&#13;
The i m p o r t a n t discovery has been&#13;
m a d e in Paris that the crocodile can&#13;
bring its j a w s together with a force oi&#13;
over three hundred pounds.&#13;
The abstract of th« Newfoundland&#13;
census for 1884, just published, shows&#13;
t h a t the total population of Newfoundland&#13;
aud Labrador is a t present 1UG,-&#13;
411.&#13;
Au observer of small distinctions in&#13;
speech says that when you hear a m a n&#13;
say to another, " 1 certainly am glad&#13;
to see you; 1 certainly am,1 ' you m a y&#13;
be sure he is from Virginia.&#13;
"Salt should be enten with nuts to&#13;
aid digestion." Water can be-drunk&#13;
to take away the ell'ects of the salt,&#13;
and then more nuts can be eaten to&#13;
t a k e a w a y the taste-of the water.&#13;
A Vermont, husband is 'Reported to&#13;
havo frustrated the intended elopement&#13;
of his wife by taking possession&#13;
ot—her silk dress. He knew she&#13;
wouldn't run awav in a calico gowu.&#13;
All the shoe-dealers of - P i t t s b u r g h&#13;
abbreviate the names "of their goods,&#13;
and so many cartoons are labeled&#13;
" C u r K i d " "that the citizens of the&#13;
"Smoky City" fully believe, it is said,'&#13;
-that they are wearing dog skin shoes.&#13;
T h e problem of whether an elevator&#13;
is a vehicle or au a p a r t m e n t remains&#13;
unsolved, and the average m a n , imprisoned&#13;
iu the thing with a lady,&#13;
iiesitates about taking oil his hat in&#13;
the draft.&#13;
T h e brevet seaside hotel now p u t s&#13;
in a new pane of glass and adds a&#13;
picket to the frout fence, and advertises&#13;
that costly improvements have&#13;
been made in preparation for the coming&#13;
season.&#13;
A farmer near Soquel, Cal., has p u t&#13;
up a scare-crow in his orchard t h a t is&#13;
said to be so lifelike in its a p p e a r a n c e&#13;
that his neighbors often address it and&#13;
depart in a rage at not receiving a reply.&#13;
They must havo curious-looking&#13;
peoplo in that section.&#13;
In the year 1777 considerable interest&#13;
was manifested in an announcement&#13;
that six stoves had been completed&#13;
in Philadelphia. T h e annual&#13;
product of the stove foundries in that&#13;
city is now valued at $4,000,000, and&#13;
the industry supports about twelve&#13;
thousand people. •&#13;
Mr. S. S. Stratton has j u s t compiled&#13;
a "bill of m o r t a l i t y " of the musical&#13;
profession d u r i n g 1884. The death&#13;
roll corn tains 210 nanie*. The average&#13;
age is 61 years aud 2 mouths, against&#13;
o(J years and 6 months in 1883. The&#13;
three years combined give an average&#13;
of 60 years and a few days.&#13;
Buried treasiiro-seekers are at work&#13;
in Georgia. N e a r Covington, according&#13;
to The Star of that place, a colored&#13;
man a n d several assistants have&#13;
been making excavations for several&#13;
months in hope of finding $100,000,&#13;
which the principal in the scheme&#13;
avers wltas buried there three years&#13;
ago. /&#13;
In gome giddy regions even feealin&#13;
wax4s-niade to convey tender senL&#13;
mohts. The ordinary red wax signilies&#13;
business, a n d black is used only&#13;
for mourning a n d condoleiree. But&#13;
blue means love, a n d the different&#13;
tints portray each stage of the tender&#13;
passion. Pink means congratulation&#13;
and white is userhfor wedding invitations.&#13;
Variegated colors show conflicting&#13;
emotions.&#13;
A clergyman desiring contributions&#13;
for a special object, fitted up au ox&#13;
horn at the church door. Upon this&#13;
he inscribed- his aspirations to thieffect:&#13;
"This ' o r n was once on the&#13;
'end of a, hox, and now hit his a missionary&#13;
b o x . " I t might have been the&#13;
odd jingle, and it might have been the&#13;
old Englishman's zeal, or a combination&#13;
of the two, but certain it is tliat&#13;
thjispejiJal missionary box attracted&#13;
contributions iu an extraordinary&#13;
manner.&#13;
Some people are never stistied. The&#13;
water works of the city of Troy are&#13;
full of eels, and by simply tapping the&#13;
pipes lish two feet and a half long can&#13;
be secured for breakfast, a n d so delightfully&#13;
fresh! Such an abundance of&#13;
cheap food w,ould be considered a&#13;
boon in any community, yet the Trojans&#13;
are running to and fro a n d complaining&#13;
to the water board that their&#13;
supply of water is choked oft' by t h e&#13;
eels. The idea of complaining of a&#13;
.supply of fresh lish with their water!&#13;
A letter describing the m a r k e t of&#13;
New Orleans says that everything" frr&#13;
sold by the eye, and there is no standard&#13;
of measure. Nine-tenths of the&#13;
hundreds who sell in the noted French&#13;
u i a r k e t of the city do not know w n a t&#13;
:. bushel or a peek is. They buy theirvegutuhles&#13;
by the lot'tind placuu-them&#13;
in'liltlt! piles on table*. *£lrCso piles&#13;
aiv ot dili'erent sizes aiMpSju'ices. The&#13;
buyer looks at thy-piles and bu-v-s tlrat&#13;
•which im thmk-Tis hitrprnat. n,nd I " M ,&#13;
Sonu'Unietf buckets and boxes urn&#13;
:IMI&gt;HO measure, but they a r c of al!&#13;
l ^ i r . d s and shapes.&#13;
T U T T S X&#13;
PILLS&#13;
26 YEARS IN USE. -&#13;
AM flwatMt Mttical Trlm»fh rf tt&gt; Agjj&#13;
• Y M P T O M 8 O f A ^ TORPID LIVERS&#13;
thm k*«4* wltk • dall • • B M U U B to thm&#13;
h«ak Mrt. Pftla oo&lt;Ur U t • • • • M n *&#13;
M B 4 * FallBM* mtfr «aUa«, with ailia*&#13;
ta«lla*U«B f »«rcl«B •*. b«4r •» •«*•&lt;•&#13;
Irrliafcllltr mtt«w»er« Law ivlrlts. w l l k&#13;
a. fiMlUv•?•**!•* ••fleet** » • * • *•«/»&#13;
W«art»«Mt DIulBCM* FUtttrlBC a t th«&#13;
B«axt, Beta bafara th* « « , Ilaaaach*&#13;
*v*r Ik* right ay a, ftaatlaainaaa* wltk&#13;
ttfal 6raa«*. Hlthfy colortd Urla*. *n«&#13;
• CONSTIPATION. * ,&#13;
TVTT'B r i L L » are •specially a / - &gt; u a&#13;
to aaoh oata*. on* dot* affaata •bah ft&#13;
•BUff«nffe*iln#MtoAjaoni»hthesutrarer. iMTftaTiyt ioMTraakat ta* ati iFal *Aa plip7etttitut«e .attoa«d »e/a»uusim* t lha* t£a2a&amp; naahv%aa4tl.rftanOai byth~o •l»^-.a—B~^ie» »A«t«e*giofciij« »o»f*t lum _._ «Q*ur E A I B or W M I S X S M changed to ft&#13;
Quuux BLACK by a iiiiKla application of&#13;
thla D r s . It Imparts a natural color, acta&#13;
iaJtantanftounly. fiohi by Drugtfista, or&#13;
•ent by express on reoelpt of ¢1. • p&#13;
O m o c . 4 4 . M u r r a y S t . , N o w Y o r k .&#13;
Improved Western Washer&#13;
TCUCE* Ke.lforf«m!l]ror6 $S&#13;
JTo. 2 for large famtlj •&#13;
Ko. 3 for Hotel and L&amp;nndr/, .. »• 19&#13;
Over 20,000 in usd.&#13;
^ ^ 6 ¾ ^ ¾ ¾ ¾ ir TQBIO ^&amp;cuv«a i «&#13;
It*ciilar2»t*«U*r»&#13;
Ji&#13;
Thonuarts rf ladles &amp;r«&gt; aula^ it, and tbeynpeDr&#13;
of It in tho highest terms, eaylng tbtt tbey woulil&#13;
rather diipetme with any other household article.&#13;
than tbJa excellent Washer. No well-regulated&#13;
family will be without it. aa it saves the ck&gt;the#,&#13;
•area labor, saves timet save* fuel, saves soap,and&#13;
makes wathdiy no longer a dread, but rather a'&#13;
pilaw til istimaUuu, as much aa such is possible,&#13;
HORTOX M ' F G CO.,&#13;
i««nts Wanted. F t . Wayne, Ind*&#13;
%?&gt;^s &gt;&#13;
fffiiCHTs INDIAN VEGETABLE PILLS&#13;
FOB THE&#13;
And all BilIou«Complaint*&#13;
Sale to take,J»rrtffpur«ly regetable; nogrtos •lce» ct». An DrugRiMs&#13;
H5? ^ET^r •WMMMMH •SMI KM '..y\ - - a^.&#13;
PP&#13;
»&#13;
/ i &gt;;.&#13;
/&#13;
_ - - / M M QpUUet, JSmeth and PoUont.&#13;
A PROMPT, SAFE, SURE, CURE&#13;
*Cd__lEw»_Itla, ¢ ^ , ¾ ^ ¾ ¾ ¾ ^ _ _ _ • * QB—ay, Patae U &lt;7-eai, —« *—»&#13;
afl»«tio_ofti*Tk • * • » * » &lt; ! _ • • • - . _ _ , ,&#13;
*MMiOceatiabottle. Bold by D r w ^ i **"»»««;&#13;
til wtZtu* unabU to induce Uuir doaur to promtwv&#13;
' H f c W tending on* doUarto „ „ . . , _&#13;
IWtUaa—. Mania**, C.S.*.&#13;
BABTHOLOI'B BIO OIBX.&#13;
The Prejudice! Met by a Canvasser for the&#13;
\ Pedestal Pond.&#13;
-THE&#13;
BEST TONIC.&#13;
Thlunedicine, combining Iron with pure&#13;
vegetable ton tea, quickly and completely&#13;
Cure* Dyspeptlm, Indigestion* Weakness*&#13;
Impure Blood* 3ItUa\risi»C-ll_ and Fevers*&#13;
aad Neur&amp;Jjrtsu&#13;
It is an unnulinsr remedy for Diseases of the&#13;
Kidneys and lAvey. .&#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 medicine* do.&#13;
It enriches and purifies the blood, stimulates&#13;
the appetite, aids the assimilation of food, relieves&#13;
Heartburn and Belching, aud strength*&#13;
ens the muscles and nerves.&#13;
For Intermittent Fevers, Lassitude, Lack of&#13;
Energy, Ac, it haa no equal.&#13;
4¾- The genuine has above trade mark and&#13;
crossed red lines on wrapper. Take no other.&#13;
•al/by BROWS CHiaiCAt C0„ lUl.TlSORI. «•-&#13;
BITTERS.&#13;
I T X S ' i ' M tn&#13;
BLOOD PURIFIER § HEALTH RESTORER.&#13;
It never falls to do its work in cases of M a l a -&#13;
ria* B i l i o u s n e s s * C o n s t i p a t i o n , H e a d -&#13;
a c h e , loss of Appetite and Sleep, N e r v o u s&#13;
Debility, N e u r a l g i a , and aU F e m a l e&#13;
Complaints. Hops &amp; Malt Hitters is a Vegetable&#13;
Compound. It is a m e d i c i n e not a Barr&#13;
o o m B r i n k . It differs as w i d e l y as does&#13;
day and night from the t h o u s a n d - a n d - o n e&#13;
m i x t u r e s of Tile w h i s k y flavored with&#13;
aromatic*. Hops A Malt Bitters is r e c o m -&#13;
m e n d e d by P h y s i c i a n s , m i n i s t e r s and&#13;
Nurses as being the B e s t Family Medicine ev*r&#13;
compounded. Any w o m a n or c h i l d can take it&#13;
"From my knowledge of its ingredients, under&#13;
noclrcumatances can it injure any one using it.&#13;
It contains no mineral or other deleterious substance.&#13;
Possessing real merits, the remedy Is&#13;
deserving success.'"&#13;
C. E. DBPCT, Ph. G , Detroit, Mich.&#13;
Ttteonly G e n u i n e are manufactured by the&#13;
HQPS &amp; HALT BITTERS CO., Detroit, Mich,&#13;
H. HINCHMAV *SONS. Detroit. Mich., ' wl&gt;°'«-&#13;
LMES E. DAVIS &amp; CO, Detroit. Mli'li., ( . a ' «&#13;
• Agents&#13;
JAM&#13;
CATARRH HAY FEVER&#13;
I can rt commeHil- Klv'?&#13;
Cream Bulin to all Hay-&#13;
Eeyersuffere.rs it being,&#13;
m my opinion, founded&#13;
on experience and a sure'&#13;
cure. I was afflicted with&#13;
Hay-Fever for twentyrive&#13;
years, and never Irefore&#13;
found permanent&#13;
r e l i e f , — WKHSTEK H.&#13;
HASKINS, Marshfleld,Vt. Cream Balm haH gain?d an enviable reputation&#13;
wherever known,&#13;
'•displacing all other preparations.&#13;
A particle is applied&#13;
Into each nostril; no pain;&#13;
agreeable 'o uae. HAY-FEVER Price 50c. by mall or at druggist*, &gt;end for circular.&#13;
ELY BROTHERS, Druggists, Owego, X. Y. HALL'S&#13;
Qatarrh Pure&#13;
i t Recommended by Physicians!&#13;
a«a—a_———__——_——_—————_____•___—•&#13;
Wexnanufasture and teUitwitha positive&#13;
^&#13;
guarantee that I'. will euro an" fiaaOj and 6arhik in wej iwnigll lfeo rIfe nit s/tthaen acboev.e aaioui M 7 , It la u n l .O a£y ether Catarrh remedy, at&#13;
ftiMRen internally, acting ,uSpn&#13;
t h e DjOOd* If you arlHroubW^fo tbia&#13;
distressing disease, ask your Druggist for It, and&#13;
AOCXPT NO IKITATIOX OB SCMTITOTK. If h e has not got It, seed to u« and we will forward&#13;
Immediately. Price, 75 c*nts per 1&#13;
P. i r.HFNPv * no * M -&#13;
The Bartjioldi pedestal fund Is nearly&#13;
complete. Tbo statue has arrived and&#13;
3oon New York? harbor will be graced&#13;
by the most magnilicut colo.sal statue&#13;
the world hai ever seen.&#13;
"Liberty Enlightening the Wold!"&#13;
What a priceless bles.sing personal liberty&#13;
is. It is the shrine at which people,&#13;
ground under the heel of tyranny&#13;
in the older worlds, worship with a&#13;
fervency that Americans can scarcely&#13;
realize;it is a principle for which Nihilists&#13;
willingly die the death of dogs;and&#13;
fit and proper is it that at the every entrance&#13;
of the Bay of New York this emblematic&#13;
statue should flash a welcome&#13;
to the world.&#13;
The press is entitled to the credit of&#13;
this achievement. Mr. Phillip Beers,&#13;
who has been making a circuit of the&#13;
country on behalf of the pedestal fund,&#13;
says that the fund will certainly be&#13;
raised, as the World does not'know the&#13;
word fail.&#13;
Mr. Beers says that he has found the&#13;
most pronounced generosity among&#13;
those of foreign birth. They seem more&#13;
appreciative of liberty than do our native&#13;
born. Moreover, among some a&#13;
strange prejudice seems to exist.&#13;
"Prejudice? In what particular?"&#13;
" I have ever found that however&#13;
meritorious a thing may be, thousands&#13;
of people will inevitably be prejudiced&#13;
against it. I Have spent most of life on&#13;
the road and I know the American people'like&#13;
a book:.1 In 1879 a personal&#13;
misfortune illustrated, this prevailing&#13;
prejudice. I was very ill, had suffered'&#13;
for several years with headache, lickle&#13;
appetite; dreadful backadier cramps,&#13;
hot head, cold' hands and feet&#13;
and a general break-down of the&#13;
system. I dragged myself&#13;
back to New York seeking the best prgfessional&#13;
treatment. It so happens that&#13;
among my relatives la a distinguished&#13;
physician who upbraided me roundly&#13;
for preaching so much about my own&#13;
case. Finally, with some spirit, I remarked&#13;
to him:&#13;
*' 'Sir, you know that much of your&#13;
professional wisdom is pretense. You&#13;
are controlled by prejudice. You cannot&#13;
reach a case like mine and you know&#13;
it, can you?' "&#13;
"I had him; and he finally conceded&#13;
the point, for it was Hright's disease of&#13;
the kidneys which had prostrated me,&#13;
and the school-men admit they cannot&#13;
cure it. Having cured myself, however,&#13;
in 1879, and not having seen a sic,k day&#13;
since, my relative finally admitted*1 that&#13;
Warner's safe cure, which accomplished&#13;
this result, was really a wonderful preparation.&#13;
Had President Rutter of the&#13;
Central Hudson used it, I am certain he&#13;
would be alive to-day, for he could not&#13;
have been in a worse condition than I&#13;
wa°."&#13;
— " I h.ve found similar prejudices&#13;
among all classes concerning even so&#13;
laudable a scheme as this pedestal&#13;
fun&lt;V&#13;
Mr. Peer's experience and tho rooont&#13;
death of President Kutter, of the Central-&#13;
Hudson lailroa^, of an extreme&#13;
kidney disorder, proves that the physicians&#13;
have no real power over such diseases,&#13;
and indicates the only course one&#13;
should pursue if, as the. late Dr. Wil'ard&#13;
Parker say-% headache, Mckness of the&#13;
stomach,dropsical swelling', back ache,&#13;
r'ark and offensive fluids, prematurely&#13;
i nip a red eyesight, loss of strength and&#13;
energy occur, for they unmistakably&#13;
indicate, a fatal result, if not promptly&#13;
arrested.&#13;
"TesT sir-ec, every cent needed for&#13;
the pedestal will be raised. Of course&#13;
it will be a great triumph for the World,&#13;
but would it not have bj en an eternal&#13;
disgrace had our recnle failed to&#13;
vide for this.pedestal?"&#13;
There Is fully ¢2,(500,000 worth of '•Cologne&#13;
waters" sold annually in the United States;&#13;
and yet only $213.i:?4 worth of water was sent&#13;
herefrom Cologne last year. ' •-?#§&#13;
There Is a young ladles' Rem!nary near Bos.&#13;
ton kept by the two daughters of "John BelL&#13;
who ran for president on the ''constitutional&#13;
union" ticket iu 1*6J.&#13;
Scotland l&gt;oats the word tn the percentage of&#13;
its college, students as compared with its'population.&#13;
Our own New England is a guod&#13;
second.&#13;
Mas*achusetts men have served the United&#13;
States us ministers to the British court for&#13;
nearly half of the time in the last 45 years.&#13;
There is only one woman infidel lecturer in&#13;
the world and" her name, revised, la Sheoleu&#13;
Gardner.&#13;
The imperial revenues of China ere only&#13;
187,500 IKT year.&#13;
Tucson, A. T., claims to be the oldest town&#13;
in America.&#13;
New Mexico has had just 75 governors in 200&#13;
years. ________________________&#13;
Castor Oil*&#13;
One of the chief uses to which castor&#13;
oil is now put is that of dressing and&#13;
softening leather for boots. It was formerly&#13;
used for dosing children whose&#13;
stomachs were disordered. And an&#13;
awful dose it was. Now we give suffering&#13;
children Brown's iron Bitters,&#13;
which tones the stomach, regulates digestion,&#13;
and;imparts strength towhole&#13;
body. "\Brown's Iron Bitters is&#13;
incomparably better than castor oil, and&#13;
more pleasant to take.&#13;
The great monument to be erected as&#13;
the late Thomas Allen's monument at&#13;
Pittstield, Mass., has reached that place.&#13;
It is forty-two feet long, four feet six'&#13;
inches square at the base, and weighs&#13;
84,500 pounds. • It will conveyed from&#13;
St. Louis on two platform fi eight cars.&#13;
11 is firmly- encased in wood so protected&#13;
that none of ihe polished surface&#13;
oreoners is exposed^ it was brought&#13;
without accident, and now-the problem&#13;
is how to move it to the cemetery.&#13;
An expedition recently sent from San&#13;
FranHseo to obtain skins and skeletons&#13;
for trie National Museum of the almost&#13;
extinct sea elephant, once enormously&#13;
abundant on the Pacific coast, was&#13;
able, after a long cruise, to get only a&#13;
dozen or more specimens, though they&#13;
visited haunts which only two or three&#13;
years ago were the resorts of hundreds&#13;
of these unwieldy seals, whose valuable&#13;
oil has made them an object of exterminating&#13;
pursuit.&#13;
Geolgists are interestedin the discovery&#13;
of a large deposit of volcanic dust&#13;
and water-work grains of volcanic sand&#13;
containing glass and every sort of mineral&#13;
almost, save quartz, near Plattsmouth,&#13;
Neb , the only deposit of the&#13;
sort east of the Rocky Mountains.&#13;
As if by magic ones pains vanish if he&#13;
be a sufferer from rheumatism or neuralgia&#13;
and applies St. Jacob's Oil, the&#13;
p/iin banisher-.—&#13;
• - " - — • ii • _ — _ » a — — — — — — — — _ _ _ _ _ _&#13;
"Watermelons will not be as plenty as usual&#13;
in the South this year.&#13;
WILL PAY YOIT&#13;
TO GO T O&#13;
BETBOIT&#13;
AND HAYI. YOUR&#13;
EXAMINED AND FITTED WITH&#13;
SPECTACLES OR EYE GLASSES&#13;
R O E H M &amp; A W B I G H T S ,&#13;
IMPORTERS. JEWELERS AND OPTICIANS.&#13;
140 WOODWARD AVE.&#13;
THEY MAKE NO CHARGE FOR&#13;
TESTING EYES. AND SELDOM&#13;
FAIL TO GIVE RELIEF.&#13;
i&#13;
pro-/&#13;
heavy; so is&#13;
glitters&#13;
No one&#13;
FeuJTlmi^pricahui&#13;
AV-Z*&#13;
_ddrcss A. B . FAB&lt;&#13;
Mi h&#13;
lEiriirtiSi-Iillt&#13;
Kt for IHottratad&#13;
O-uloga*.&#13;
r o t * . P-*»&#13;
frit.&#13;
U. AWARE&#13;
THAT&#13;
l-oxilltfd'i Pumas Plug&#13;
b w t a f i -sdtta tag ; thst LortlUrdl TfoTTJP'tlUftrtgw- w»rxBaw 'f* *f*la L*o wcuntM; mOir LSoiTntan_i,T a&lt;. r\r Uvs «ua_Ujr ouaiideiw)&#13;
&gt; ,&#13;
r&#13;
Here is a sample of Chinese advertising,&#13;
the effort of an ink manufacturer&#13;
in Canton: 'SAt the shop Tae/ shi^g&#13;
(prosperous in the extreme), very good&#13;
ink; fine! fine! Au^ient—sliori, greatgrandfather,&#13;
gandfather, father, and&#13;
se'f mtde this ink; fine and" hard, very&#13;
hard; picked with care, ^elected with&#13;
attention. This ink&#13;
gold The eye of the/dragon&#13;
and daaalcs:-so-docs this ink.&#13;
makes like it."&#13;
When Mr. Phelps7, minister to Eng&#13;
land, was in New/Haven, it was among&#13;
his duties to instruct the academic seniors&#13;
in law. Aitudent was asked one&#13;
day to give th« essentials of a deed By&#13;
dint of much head-scratching he described&#13;
fairiy a will. Prof, Phe ps called&#13;
his attention to the. mistake, much to&#13;
his confusion, butrelieved him and the&#13;
situation by remarking at once, "Mr.&#13;
Blanle( I shall have to take the will for&#13;
the/&#13;
patriotic citizen of Vacaville, Cal.,&#13;
odetesfsthe Chinese recently refused&#13;
sell a native of the Ce'estial Empire a&#13;
ot for $1,000, but sold it to an esteemed&#13;
Yan^ei friend for &amp;}!XK With an&#13;
eve to business, the^Yankee sold it to&#13;
the heathen, a^d^pocketed a f.roSt of&#13;
$500, and i«J^original o*ner now has&#13;
a "ChieCse washee" sign floating next&#13;
r.&#13;
Around the base of the hills surrounding&#13;
('arson, New, says the Appeal,&#13;
there'" aiherm«il belt in. which all kinds&#13;
ot fruit and vczttables may be grown&#13;
withom danger of injur» *roni fro»t.&#13;
Higher up on the hil s and lower down&#13;
in the valey the ranchers and gardners&#13;
have hard *time* gardin^ their plants&#13;
and tree K&#13;
In vi6w of hh very f-lender means&#13;
and very large f mily, with no prospect,&#13;
of wealth, Sir Stafford Nnrthcotto's a -&#13;
ceptance ot an earldom has excited&#13;
much surprise. It is without precede nt&#13;
to confer upon any butA JEMmo_Mini&amp;_?&#13;
er higher rank tnan a Viscounty. Sir_&#13;
ITfteen years ago only 34 per cent, of the&#13;
people of'Wales spoke English alone, 45 per&#13;
cent spoke both Lnglishand W'ebh, and21 per&#13;
cent, spoke only Welsh. The number of this i&#13;
last class is now much smaller, and, though f&#13;
Welsh will be used for a long time yet, it is&#13;
believed that within twenty-five years English&#13;
will be generally spoken.&#13;
We Caution all Against Them.&#13;
The unprecedented success an(J merit of Ely's&#13;
!feam Balm—a real curt' io. catarrh, hay fever&#13;
and cold in the head—has induced many adventurers&#13;
to place catarrh medicines bearing&#13;
some resemblance in appearance, style or name&#13;
upon the market, in order to trade" upon the&#13;
reputation of Ely's Cream Balm. -Many in&#13;
your immediate locality will testify in highest&#13;
commendation of it. t)on't be deceived. Buy&#13;
only Ely's Cream Balm. A particle is applied&#13;
into each nostril; no pain; agreeable to use.&#13;
Price 50 cents; of druggist*.&#13;
Jeff. Davis' niece, Fanny H. Davis, recently&#13;
died at New Orleans, aged 70.&#13;
HAY FEVEB.—I have been a great sufferer&#13;
from Hay Fever for 15 years. I read of the&#13;
many wondrous cures by Ely's Cream Balm&#13;
and thought I would try once more. In 15&#13;
minutes after one application I was wonderfully&#13;
helped. Two weeks ago I commenced&#13;
using it and now I feel mtireiy cured. It is the&#13;
greatest discovery ever known or heard of.—&#13;
DCHAMIL CLARK, Fanner, Lee, Mass. Price&#13;
50 cents. •&#13;
Wooden spoons, plates ^ind Iwwls are used&#13;
by the vast majority of Russians^&#13;
We think we can cure %,bad case of Backache&#13;
quicker with one ot Carter's Smart Weed&#13;
and Belladonna Backache Plaster*, than by&#13;
any other application, and after the Backache&#13;
is cured, you can still wear the plaster without&#13;
discomfort for two or three weeks longer. This&#13;
combination of Smart Weed and Belladonna is&#13;
a great hit, and it is hard to tind any p.iin or&#13;
acne that will not yield to it. Price "25 cents.&#13;
Soli by druggists everywhere.&#13;
Toucan buy a polar bear for about ¢900.,&#13;
^ioTJOH OK CATAESH."&#13;
Correct'offen»lv« oUor* at imce. CoovgMm «_.f« of&#13;
worst o_BP8,-lso unequaled as tftirtfU'. {&lt;v Diphtheria.&#13;
Sore Throat. Foul Breath. 50c.&#13;
There are no&#13;
House.&#13;
white servants ut the White&#13;
Liaten te Year Wife.&#13;
The Manchester GCAKUIAX, June 8th, 1383,&#13;
save: At one of the&#13;
"Windows"&#13;
Looking on the woodland ways! With clumps&#13;
of rhododendrons and great masses of May&#13;
blossoms! ! ! "There was an interesting irroup.&#13;
^ It included one who had been a "Cotton&#13;
spinner," but was now so&#13;
Paralyzed! ! !&#13;
That he could only bear to lie in a reclining&#13;
position. ,&#13;
This refers to my case.&#13;
I was Hrst Attacked twelve years ago with&#13;
"Locomoter Ataxy"&#13;
(A parrlytlc disease of nerve fibre rarely ever&#13;
cured) aud was for several years barely able&#13;
to get about.&#13;
And for the last Five years not able to attend&#13;
to my business, although&#13;
Many things have been done for me.&#13;
The last experiment being Nerve stretching.&#13;
Two years ago I was voted into the . I&#13;
Home for Incurables'. Near Manchester, In&#13;
May, 1882. /&#13;
I am no "Advocate"; ''For anything in the •&#13;
shape of patent" Medicines*&#13;
And made many objections to my dear wife's&#13;
constant urging to try Hop Betters, but finally&#13;
to pacify her—&#13;
Consented 1 !&#13;
I had not quite finished the first bottle when&#13;
I felt a change come over me. This was Saturday,&#13;
November 3d. On Sunday morning I felt&#13;
so'strong I said to my room companions, I was&#13;
sure I could&#13;
"walk!&#13;
8o started across the floor and back.&#13;
I hardly knew how to contain myself. I was&#13;
all over the house. I am gaining strength each&#13;
dav, and can walk quite safe without any :'Stick!"&#13;
Or Support.&#13;
I am now at my own house, and hope soon&#13;
to be able to earn my own living again. I have&#13;
been a member of tfie Manchester&#13;
"Royal Exchange"&#13;
For nearly thirty years, and was most heartily&#13;
congratulated on going into the room on&#13;
Thursday last Very" gratefully yours, JOHH&#13;
BLACKBURX. MANCHESTER (Eng.) Dec.34,1883.&#13;
Two years later am pretty well.&#13;
Prosecute the SwinUlera!!t&#13;
If when you rail for Hop Bitter &lt;SP.K OKKXH CLT79TBB&#13;
or Hop* ox THK WHITE LABKLI the dniggriat handout&#13;
any stuff called C7TJ. Warner's German Hop Bitters&#13;
or with other "Hop" Dame refuae It and than&#13;
that druggist oa you would a viper, and if he haa taken&#13;
your money for the stuff Indict him for the fraud&#13;
and sue him for the damages for the swindle and Ww&#13;
will reward you liberally for the conviction.&#13;
•• - • . ' . • . — • _ »&#13;
. • LYDIA I . PlNKHAM't • •&#13;
VEGETABLE COMPOUND&#13;
• _ • _ APOSCTrVBCtTB-FO**^&#13;
AU thou pal_r_l CwfltlnW&#13;
• aad HMkafftaea a« coamea*&#13;
• • • • • * to oar beat • * • * • * _&#13;
# • FEMALE POPCLATIOK. • J&#13;
Pifa* «1 la UfaM, »U1 -r Uw-s* •*•h."&#13;
it •Uimt f do, tkOHMOHtUof lodUt «w» ff*«-U» tmti/jt.^&#13;
• It wlU cure entirely all 0*ax_-i troubla*, JaMuutm&#13;
tton and Ulceration, Fallln* aad I/^lnea-Mllti, nag&#13;
eotueqoaat Spinal Weakneas, and if B_rtmk_dK&#13;
•dnptedtothe &lt;__ageof Ufa, • « , * # • * &gt; • • • • * _ •&#13;
• Itr«moTe8Falatn««a,I^tuIency,de^rp«aflei»r_*&#13;
for-ttmul_nt_,__dreUere3 Weetnui- 8« «_*%_**_»)&#13;
It curaa Blo_in», He__chea, Jferroaa PrortraOoib&#13;
Genet— Debility, Sleepleaane*-, Depreadom and Imdjk&#13;
geatlon. Tna* feeling of bearing down, c u i t a l • _ • •&#13;
and backache, laalway* permanently c u r e d $ _ • _ * _&#13;
r&#13;
_• aS_enrdy actoanmfipd teon tL—ynlyn ,a HnAswMe.,r efodr. nFaomr phmleU*.t Mat *£r^*.Jgfftm_mg a- *e- •* - -* •- *- * -» -« - - - • • - - • • • • « • • •&#13;
There is nothing like J)r. Thomas'&#13;
Electric Oil to quickly cure a cold or&#13;
relieve hoarseness. Written by Mrs. M.&#13;
J. Fellows, Burr Oak, St. Joseph Co.,&#13;
•Mich. .&#13;
A fire originating .curiously o c c u r r e d ^ f ^ S ^ ! ^ « ^ i&#13;
other night in lra\yiordsvi!le. Ga. A clock "&#13;
cord broke, letting the weight full up.m and&#13;
ignite a box of matches Iving on the bottom of&#13;
the clock ease. The family were all asleep at&#13;
the time, and thchouae was u'carlv burucd.&#13;
A W E A K BACK, with a weary aching&#13;
lameness over the hips, is a sign of diseased&#13;
kidneys. Use the best kidney&#13;
curative known, which is Burdock&#13;
Blood Bitters.&#13;
Horned toads arc selling at .W ec nts apiece in&#13;
California, anil large numbers arc sent Kast as&#13;
curiosities. 1 hey" are harmless, and can be&#13;
handled with impunity. They are cheap to&#13;
keep, living six months on two house flies.&#13;
Cults F O R CROUP.—Use Dr. T h o m a s '&#13;
Eclectric Oil according to directions. It&#13;
is the best remedy for all sudden attacks&#13;
of colds, pain and inflammation, cmd&#13;
injuries. • 4&#13;
At Mr. Beckert Denison's recent sale the&#13;
Duke of Hamilton bought back some of his&#13;
own pictures for half the price he had given&#13;
for them. _&#13;
Clipped_irom Canada Presbyterian&#13;
under signature of C. Blackett Robin*&#13;
son, Prop.: I was cured of oft rebuffing&#13;
billious headaches by Burjdock Blood&#13;
Bitters. ,..-^&#13;
• i — — — i i . i — — _ . _ » ^ _ _ _ _ » _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ , , _ _&#13;
To keep m&lt; squito'es from hatching in standing&#13;
water, doctor-it with oil.&#13;
When you visit or leave New York citv, via&#13;
Central depot, save Baggage Expressage" and&#13;
¢3 Carriage Hire, and stop at the Grand Cnion&#13;
Hotel, opposite said depot. Six hundred elegant&#13;
rooms fitted up at a cost 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 depot. Families can live better for&#13;
less money at the Grand Cnion Hotel than at&#13;
any other first-class hotel in the citv.&#13;
THE HOPE OP THE NATI0H.&#13;
Children, slow In development, puny, scraway and&#13;
delicate, use "Wen's Health Hetiewer."&#13;
Parisian belles now carry pistols.&#13;
CATAEBH OF THE BLADDER.&#13;
fctlnKinsr, liTltatlou. lnflwnnuAtlou. all Kidney and&#13;
Urinary Oomplaltit*. cure\ •)£ •ffumui-Falba." «1.&#13;
"Hail Columbia" is N years old.&#13;
MKNS-MANS' PEPTONIZED HEKK TOXIC, the only&#13;
preparation of beef eontttlutiiK Its* KNTIRK x r m r n o n r&#13;
VROPEKTIKS. It eoutAlnsM'XHl-mtiklnK force generat-&#13;
Ingand llft'-austiiltiliig properties; invaluable for In&#13;
digestion, dyspepsia, nervous urontnitlon, and all&#13;
fornix of general debility; alsn. tn all Infeehled conditions,&#13;
whether tin- result of exhaustion, nervous&#13;
or acute disease, particularly&#13;
lonary ciuiiplnluts. Caswell,&#13;
Hazard &amp; Co.. Proprietors, New York. Sold by&#13;
druggists.&#13;
IF YOl' WANT A. DOG&#13;
Send 1*&gt; cents lur Don HUYKISS" G I H&gt;K, 100 engraTlng*.&#13;
colored plate. Associated fanciers, i&gt;7 South £lght&#13;
Street, Phlludelplila._; ~&#13;
P A T E N T S obtained by Louis Ba?ger&amp; Co., Attorneys,&#13;
Washington, D.C. Esi'J 1864. Advice free.&#13;
Ualfnrri S a n r ' a Expressly for family use, Only sold&#13;
naiiuru j a u u c ia f,oU]r;), n,.st Ullll ci,L.Upe»t.&#13;
KIDNEY-WORT&#13;
T H E SURE CURE&#13;
^ " " " " * FOR — — ^ _ _ _ ,&#13;
KIDNEY DISEASES,&#13;
LIVER COMPLAINTS.&#13;
CONSTIPATION. P|j-BS7&#13;
AND BLOOD DISEASES.&#13;
PHYSlClAfjSifflOnS- IT HEARTILY, {&#13;
'lidaay-Wort ia the moat racosaaful rwaadj&#13;
Xffvtt—«d." Dr. P.C.D_loa.SJo_rton,VU&#13;
-^ "Kldney-Wort la alxraya reli_ble."&#13;
Dr. K. 2f. Cl«rk, 8o. H««!PO, Vt.&#13;
"Xldney-Wort _ - cured my i» lto a:ftar two y—ura&#13;
• s A r l n c . " Dr. C. M. Sumn&lt;rli,n, Sun m i l . Q-,&#13;
IN THOUSANDS OP OASES&#13;
It haa cured wiero all &lt;sla*« bad feUed. i t is mild.&#13;
btttaft-tont, CEBTAIX Vi ITS ACTIOX, bat&#13;
harm.leas la. _Q oases.&#13;
_ r l t e l e _ i u e a the Bla«d aad Strcactkeiwawl&#13;
Cfvca New Lift to _U tho Import—it orgwu of&#13;
th« body. Th« z_tnral action of tha Kidney* la • i&#13;
pastored. The U T W _ oloapjod of all diaaaaa. i&#13;
aad the B o ^ a n ODAV* » - V »T»&lt; hi^nhfnllr,&#13;
In thla -m-T the w o n t dl—waa a n «rad_a_&gt;d&#13;
• from the aystflm. a&#13;
I m o , tlOO LIQUID OS CETTSOLO BT 08700818.&#13;
Dry can be aont by moil.&#13;
m e n ARDSOX &amp; CO.CarUactea T t .&#13;
At ttili* aeason of tlie venr. the hilarity&#13;
dren Is often stopped by dome iniTtsrretionon the part&#13;
of the parent or chllcl; ami, as a result, dysentery,&#13;
cholera Infantum, or other complaints of stomach OB&#13;
bowels ensues. In all such eases, lildge's Food la th6&#13;
best dietetic, It is perfectly safe, being neutral In IU&#13;
action tipon the bowel*, and In uo way Interferes WlU1&#13;
aciion of medii'lnes.&#13;
LIQUID GLUE Is mwd by thotiaasdi of fint elaaa rt—uuractuiaa&#13;
and Merhtnica on thrir beat work. JUcalrad&#13;
GOLD MEDAL.I&gt;itidon.-S3. ProDoaneed&#13;
ciiutnow*. 8endr«rd ol'dealerwhod&#13;
It, vitl) Are 2c lUmpt for 8AM PLE&#13;
R__Cement Co..Glone&#13;
If'&#13;
N E W ENGLAND&#13;
CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC B o f l t o n , M a s s . , O L D E S T In America: L a r g e s t&#13;
_ n d J _ a t _ a u i p p * d lii the WORLI&gt;—100 lnstnictors,&#13;
1971 Stuuddce nts last year. ThorouBh Instruction in&#13;
Vocal and Instrumental Music, 1'iano and Organ Tun-&#13;
IngrFlne Arts, on'i&gt;r.r, Literature, Krrneh, (.lerninn,&#13;
and Italian LAngna^i-s, English llranehes, llvmnastics,&#13;
etc. Tuition, $.1 to $20: board and roi)ra, $4.1 to $ 7 J&#13;
per term. F a l l T e r m begins September 10,1SS5. Kof&#13;
Illustrated Calendar, giving full Information, address,&#13;
... _ JOU1UEE. I)ir.,&gt;'ruiikliii8q.. UOSTON. Mas*&#13;
, Victoria's&#13;
ators.&#13;
children all like to attend tne-&#13;
I&#13;
3 VIKLLS, m m KIDNEY-WORT&#13;
Stafford has a^out 125,000 a year.&#13;
Hood's Sarsaparilla&#13;
U earefully prepared from Sarsaparilla, Mmndrake,&#13;
Doek, l'Ipslssewa, Juniper Rerries, and ^tlier wellknown&#13;
and valuable, vegetable remedies. The combination,&#13;
proportion, and preparation an1 peculiar to&#13;
Hood'* Sarsaparilla, frfvittg i; curative power not nosaeaaed&#13;
by other medicines. It effects, remarkable&#13;
cures where others fall.&#13;
Hood's Sarsaparilla&#13;
Cures Scrofula, Salt Hheum, Holla, Pimples, all H « -&#13;
raori, Dyspejrfia, Hl!iousnP8a,Sicfc Headache, Indigestion,&#13;
General debility, Catarrh, Ilheumatlaro, Kidney&#13;
and -Liver Complalata.' It overcomes that extreme&#13;
tired feeling, and builds up the whole system. Now&#13;
la the time to take It.&#13;
FARQUHAR VIBRATING SEPARATOR&#13;
S£ND FOR CATALOGUE.&#13;
WonJ-.Ttul&#13;
Capacity.&#13;
o s&lt;&#13;
^ m&#13;
[JOSEPH CI LL0TT5&#13;
STEEL PENS&#13;
Soto BY ALL DEALERSTWWUOHOWTTHC WOSLil&#13;
GOLD MEDAL PAR IS EXP0SITI0N-187B.&#13;
i-HI S i S T IS CHKAPfST." anre»n rnss«, TURPCUPR^ s i f nm, m i n n t o n L n o ciow ^ ^&#13;
ni_.Pa_ic&#13;
HirKhwen&#13;
f*U%_ taaJ}&#13;
aad&#13;
LADY AGENTS&#13;
em ploy men t and R&#13;
•eUins Q u e e n City&#13;
storklnKi&gt;U|tport«&#13;
outfit fre«. Addreai&#13;
can (wnre&#13;
peruidnent&#13;
employment and pooii salary&#13;
•eUins Q u e e n City Skli t i n j&#13;
-*.^ ..„ -&gt;ort«*r*.Sampla&#13;
otnat ire«. Addreaa CincimiaU&#13;
BuapenderCOn Oinrinnati. O&#13;
a Has met unparalleled success at home. Such haa become&#13;
1t« popularity m Lowell, Maas., where ft Is made,&#13;
that whole neighborhooda'are taking It at the same&#13;
time. The aame woaderful success It extending all&#13;
over the country. Ita positive merit make* new&#13;
friends daily. Try It.&#13;
-Sold&#13;
C. I. U&#13;
all&#13;
I) * co;&#13;
drujwlata. tl;tlxforsft. Mad«oal7^y&#13;
X)-Aarp~o't*h*e"ca—ri'e"s , *L owel"l, M"a"a"a."&#13;
KX&gt; Don— Ons&gt; Dollar.&#13;
$50 REWARD win ht p«i4 a&gt;r as; Oratu Ttm&#13;
•f &gt;an» sis* taat MA r—M aa4&#13;
Kaf a&lt; BMh Orai a »r %H&gt;4 ta ••«&#13;
l o u o i i P t t a k t M0MAKGH&#13;
firala s_d *J—4 MparaUv&#13;
a»« Ba_B*» i n w I t i a f s ^ H&#13;
\ T t r _ H M MUI *&gt;i* K««a_.&#13;
a*r ••(«« v* affar ahaap. Clrt*.&#13;
„ aa4 rriM Lias —alM f&gt;«_&#13;
lEWARK MACHINE CO .&#13;
C'*laml&gt;a_ &lt;M__&#13;
S QLbttHS ^EW r v w Ofllcsra* pay from&#13;
_ commia*l«ns; Desertersrei!«»"e4;&#13;
P e a a l o n s and Increase; experience m years;&#13;
success or no fee. Write for circulars aad laws,&#13;
X. W. Mo«;ORMlC_* SOX, Cincinnati, Ohio.&#13;
KIDDER 8 PAOTIIJJSrEli?!1 !^&#13;
D—3-&#13;
A l l l l l l l M o r p h i n e H » b l t C n r e d l u 10&#13;
| | K l l l a - i toatfd-jrl. N o v » y (HI Curetl.&#13;
%PI l « n Da. J. STM»uxas, bacon. Ohio.&#13;
RnVdoek Cuns DJZZMSS, Loss ofMppgtit§, Indigestion, Biliousness Dyspepsia,&#13;
Jaundice, Affections of the Liver and Kidneys, Pimples aad Face\&#13;
Grubs, Blotches, Boils, Humors, Salt Rheum, Scrofula4 erysipelas. mmmmmmm Ul! IL!U TOSTXVL, -TfiaTOSy * 0¾^ -XKiV&#13;
\&#13;
*-a**&#13;
J*- A —-' N&#13;
rrsEs-'i stMzn&#13;
I , W;'&#13;
i m&#13;
\&#13;
% s&#13;
V&#13;
j 1&#13;
i ;&#13;
» i'&#13;
(Continued from first pu;,'e.)&#13;
and her businessS^ind public buildings&#13;
are fine.&#13;
At8 o'clock \Yedn^{]av^-«w»¥nintf&#13;
Hannah, Lav &amp; Co's. three excellent&#13;
steamers, City of Traverse, City ot&#13;
Grand Rapids and T. 8, Faxton, had on&#13;
board the entire editorial reportee, and&#13;
side by side, with banners streaming&#13;
and bands playing they steamed up&#13;
the beautiful bay, bidding adeau to&#13;
the city that had entertained us so&#13;
charmingly and so freely. The ride&#13;
up the glassy water to Charlevoix was&#13;
lovely, at which place the excursioners&#13;
were met by a committee of citizens&#13;
and the band and escorted to the hall,&#13;
where A. D. Cruiekahank (ex-prosecuting&#13;
attorney of this couuty) delivered&#13;
an address of welcome to the fraternity.&#13;
At this stage of the game all&#13;
were very hungry (as was the case at&#13;
every meal time) and the excellent&#13;
trout and white fish, which are caught&#13;
in that region, and many other choice&#13;
delicacies which had been prepared&#13;
for the tickling of the editors' palates&#13;
"were devoured with avidity. A short,&#13;
time was then spent in doing the town.&#13;
I t is a charming little place situated&#13;
on Pine Lake, which is connected by a&#13;
channel to Lake Michigan, and is destined&#13;
to be one of the finest summer&#13;
resorts of that section.&#13;
About 4 o'clock the company again&#13;
embarked on board the steamers T. S.&#13;
Faxton and City of Grand Rapids and&#13;
storj' ami here still remains a large&#13;
vestige of the Indian race. Here, too,&#13;
is a Catholic Mission founded by&#13;
Marquette over 200 years ago, and&#13;
the church and cemetery which has&#13;
been in use for the past o0 years.&#13;
About 400, mostly Indians, now compose&#13;
the Mission. The village, which&#13;
is the county seat of Eiumett Co., has&#13;
a population of nearly 1,000, the business&#13;
portion of which and many residences&#13;
are upon the flat, near the&#13;
water. Upon the bluff is also found&#13;
many residences and a school house.&#13;
From this bluff can be seen one of&#13;
the finest views in Northern Michigan.&#13;
Looking down vou first see the&#13;
busy village, the quiet harbor, the&#13;
foaming bay, thou across the water&#13;
(4J miles) Petoskey shows her stately&#13;
form, and beyond and around are&#13;
hills and wooded lands in all their&#13;
wildness and beauty. To the left is&#13;
Bay View and We-Que-Ton-Sing and&#13;
to the right Harbor Point and the&#13;
blue waters of the Bay and Lake&#13;
stretching as far as the eye can see&#13;
bevorid. After the rain had somewhat&#13;
subsided, CrvsIer~S Son's trim&#13;
little craft, Gracie Barker, bore the&#13;
party across the harbor to Harbor&#13;
Point, where a banquet had been prepared&#13;
at the hotel that proved the&#13;
most satisfactory aud pleasant of any&#13;
on the entire trip, from the fact that&#13;
made their way to I'etoskey, which&#13;
place they reached about 6 p. M. Here&#13;
they were met by a brass band and&#13;
citizens' committee and were conducted&#13;
to the several hotels, where all regaled&#13;
themselves with refreshments—&#13;
and paid for it. In the evening the&#13;
final business meetings of the associations&#13;
were held at the Arlington Hotel,&#13;
after which a grand banquetaiwL&#13;
ball were tendered to the .members.&#13;
The State Asr octaticreelected the following&#13;
officers&gt;-Ffesident, A. J. Aldrich,&#13;
CoWwater Republican; Vice-&#13;
Presidents, Franklin Moore, St. Clair&#13;
"Republican; O. W. Rowlan, Paw Paw&#13;
True Northerner; Jessie Minchin, Evart&#13;
Review; Secretary, J. W. FiUgerald,&#13;
Ovid Union; Treasurer, Robert&#13;
Smith, Ithaca Journal. The Western&#13;
Association had previously elected the&#13;
_old officers, L^Mr. Settersr President;&#13;
C. S. Hampton,-Secretary. It was decided&#13;
to hold the next annual meeting&#13;
of the State Association at Coldwater,&#13;
with a probable excursion to Prt-in-&#13;
Bay.&#13;
Resolutions were also passed thanking,&#13;
the officials of the several railroads&#13;
and all who furnished transportation&#13;
or entertainment to the associations,&#13;
$150 Was raised to purchase badges for&#13;
Mr. Hannah, and the officials of both&#13;
the G. Rrtrt. and F. k P7M. railroads&#13;
• in appreciation of especial favors shown&#13;
the wandering band of pencil pushers.&#13;
Thursday morning was spent in viewing&#13;
the many attractions of this well&#13;
nearly all were seated in the spacious&#13;
dinning hall at the same time. Much&#13;
credit is due the manager, Mr. Dewev,&#13;
for the hurried and excellently&#13;
gotten up gratuitous repast. Mr. N.&#13;
B. Jones, in behalf of the Harbor&#13;
Point Association, welcomed the&#13;
nieinberS of the press to this, the most!&#13;
-delightful, pleasant and health-giving&#13;
summer resort in theTTnited States.&#13;
Here is found many handsome&#13;
cottages, the hotel, a dancing hall,&#13;
bawling . alley, and all the conveniences&#13;
of boating, fishing, bathing,&#13;
etc. "The Point -is owned and&#13;
operated by the Lansing Company,&#13;
and their chief object is pleasure and&#13;
recreation. A moonlight excursion*&#13;
on the steamer Van Kaalte' in the&#13;
evening wound up the festivities of&#13;
the occasion and most of the party&#13;
turned their faces homeward, many&#13;
accepting the liberal invitation ofthe&#13;
Detroit &amp; Cleveland Steam Navigation&#13;
Co. to return free on their elegant&#13;
steamers from Mackinac via.&#13;
Detroit.&#13;
Ye editor and family, after spending&#13;
a few days visiting his father and&#13;
other friends at Harbor Springs&#13;
and visiting at .other points on&#13;
our way homeward finally returned to&#13;
business cares on Mondav last, feeling&#13;
much refreshed and benefitted by&#13;
the delightful trip northward, rendered&#13;
so much more pleasant^, bv being&#13;
known resort, the Bay View camp j m loyally entertained and by formgrounds,&#13;
agate hunting on the beach&#13;
etc., and many of the party began to&#13;
return to their several homes in the&#13;
south, where - mosquitos bite, paper&#13;
bills are numerous and delinquents&#13;
death," when the young are taken.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Watson with&#13;
their two boys Bertie and Johnnie,&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Weston, Kitsie&#13;
Doty and Claud Watson, (the latter&#13;
from Bancroft) enjoyed themselves&#13;
immensely camping on the banks oi&#13;
Orchard Lake last week. They were&#13;
visited one day by Mr. Dunning and&#13;
Mary Gankrodger, of Unadilla.&#13;
-ot.~ PRICE LISTfr&#13;
-of-&#13;
GROCERIES • • :•&gt;&#13;
-atftrRIOHARDS'&#13;
l~m&#13;
Sugar, Granulated 7 he&#13;
Confectioners A 7c&#13;
Fvrra. C, Yellow ^ ... . . , ¾&#13;
4^_ Brown 5 i&#13;
Coffee, Arbuckles. i.l&amp;J&#13;
Dil worth. 18c&#13;
McLaughlin's-xxxx 18c&#13;
u&#13;
u&#13;
.1 Old Government Java and Mocho&#13;
mixed 3lV&#13;
" Green Rio 1.2k*&#13;
Teas._._.,„. 15, 25, 40, 50, 60c.&#13;
Pore Spires, per l b . . . . ^ ^ ^ AIM&#13;
Bird Seed,&#13;
Saleratus,&#13;
Corn Starch,&#13;
Gloss Starch,&#13;
Raisins,&#13;
Rice,&#13;
Prunes,&#13;
Oat Meal,&#13;
u&#13;
u&#13;
u&#13;
((&#13;
((&#13;
(&gt;&#13;
((&#13;
8e&#13;
7c&#13;
.i 8c&#13;
8c&#13;
10 to 12c&#13;
8c&#13;
7c&#13;
4c&#13;
( Galvanic&#13;
Soap, 3 bars for 25c - . Ivory&#13;
" ( Magnetic&#13;
4 , , or S Lenox&#13;
N&gt;ap, 4 bars for 2oc. j A n d w a s h b o ; n . d&#13;
Town Talk, 6 bars, 25c&#13;
Lard, per lb 10c&#13;
Herring, per box,. .' 20c&#13;
White Fish. 10 lb kits ,.$1.00&#13;
Mackerel, 15 lb kits, $1.25&#13;
Dried Beef, sliced, per lb.. 18c&#13;
Sugar-cured Hams '' l i e&#13;
Mason Fruit Cans, 1 q t , per doz. $1.25&#13;
'• 2 " " $1.50&#13;
T T&#13;
It takes but a short time for a persnn to see that the stock carried by&#13;
MANN BROTHERS&#13;
Is by far the most complete in town. A beautiful line of&#13;
NEW TINSEL WINDOW SHADES&#13;
-A. 3 L . I 3 S T 3 3 O F -&#13;
That beats anything in town. L A D I E S , examine the new&#13;
EMBOSSED AND TINSEL 42ELT^&#13;
We must call your attention to our elegant line of&#13;
J&#13;
[ LADIES' HANDKERCHIEFS,'"&#13;
Our store is full, and the goods are going to&#13;
go. Prices are what knock, and we&#13;
are always reMy to meet any&#13;
—competition.—&#13;
We have a full line of Tinsel: Rimming Braid. G E N T L E M E N , we must&#13;
—: call vour attention to our line of '&#13;
i E i l Q - H E S T&#13;
MARKET PRICE&#13;
-forslow&#13;
to pay. About 250, however,&#13;
took a special train at 2 o'clock on&#13;
the G. K, &amp; I. road around the bay&#13;
to Harbor Springs. Here President&#13;
Hampton was on his own "stamping&#13;
ground," and aided by Bro. Clark,&#13;
of the Republican, and the citizens,&#13;
arrangements for a splendidtime were&#13;
made, As the train neared the station&#13;
the Cornet Band stru:k up a&#13;
lively air and the gang were taken in&#13;
charge by the committees of Harbor&#13;
Springs and Harbor Point. Carriages&#13;
were in waiting to carry the&#13;
sight-seers upon the "bluffs," a natural&#13;
terrace about, 40 rods back from&#13;
the water, rising from 50 to 100&#13;
in some places nearly perpj^dicular.&#13;
Two trim sail boatg^wefe placed at&#13;
the disposal o i ^ f e party, and soon&#13;
put out nader a fine breeze, b u t a&#13;
**m*/ffi* suddenly appeared which&#13;
iainpended somewhat the enjoyment&#13;
o f t h e occasion and stopped for a&#13;
while further proceedings. But the&#13;
hasty glance wa9 enough to show that&#13;
Harbor Springs (formerly Little&#13;
jT-the-aeqTraintaceship of so many&#13;
of our gonial craftsmen, their wives,&#13;
sisters, and other people's sisters.&#13;
beautiful spots. Lying upon the north&#13;
fide of Little Traverse Bay, its harbor&#13;
u perhaps one of the finest on the&#13;
lakes. I t is famous in history a n d | that, "In the toidst of life we are in,&#13;
UNADILLA REMARKS.&#13;
From our Correspondent.&#13;
How is this for hot weather?&#13;
Arthur Green spent the Sabbath in&#13;
Leslie. '&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. D, Potter with their&#13;
daughter Coral, visited Unadilla&#13;
friends last Sunday.&#13;
MyraMayand her daughter Minnie,&#13;
have gone to Lansing to visit Mrs.&#13;
Mary Love, Mrs. "May's sister.&#13;
Charlie Hudson has r'-turnedjrom&#13;
White Oak where he has been attending&#13;
school. ^^^^&#13;
Katie BarnunaHfias gone to Hastings&#13;
with ''p^rrer-ma'1 Lowrey to have her&#13;
eyeMreated.&#13;
Mrs. Dr. DuBois and her daughter-&#13;
Edith, are visiting relatives in Ingham&#13;
county this week.&#13;
Rev. J. H. Kershaw has returned&#13;
from his travels in the east, and re-&#13;
Sports himself better than he was when&#13;
he started.&#13;
A company of young people from&#13;
Pinckney took tea at the Unadilfa&#13;
House last Sunday including '-His&#13;
Satanic Majesty," the (printer's) devil&#13;
Traverse) was one of nature's J n o » t . ~ D r 3 r : 7 6 8 l i n h a 8 j u s t . r e c e W e d t h e&#13;
sad news of the death—ufhis nieue,&#13;
Cora, youngest daughter of Theodore&#13;
Joslin. How forcibly it reminds us&#13;
BUTTER &amp;.EGGS&#13;
WANTED! AGENTS&#13;
TO SELL TUisriso]srjs&#13;
Xtnv and superior mibscription Atlasos, Maps find&#13;
Charts. As paving as anv agency in the world;&#13;
For cat*lo(rneb free, address y , C Tt'NISON.&#13;
C'hiaatio, 111.; New York City, N. V-; Oinrinnati,&#13;
O,; Atlanta, (ia.; London, Canada; St. Paul,&#13;
Minn., or Kansas City, Mo.&#13;
DANIEL F. EWEN,&#13;
GENERAL AGENT, - PINCKNEY, MICH.&#13;
• W \ A . : N - T E : D I&#13;
—at the—&#13;
PINCKNEY ELEVATOR&#13;
WHEAT,&#13;
BEANS, JWCKk, ETC.&#13;
rich the highest market price&#13;
te^will be pairf."®a&#13;
TH0S. READ, - Pinckney,&#13;
KeTIogg's Columbian Oil is composed&#13;
of vegetable products in a highly&#13;
concentrated form, and acts direatfly&#13;
on the kidneys. It cures rheumatism&#13;
and all other aches and pains.&#13;
Bucklen's Arnica Salve.&#13;
THE BEST SALVE in the world for&#13;
Cut* Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt&#13;
Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped&#13;
Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all skin&#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 - WIVCHELL'S DRUG STORE.&#13;
The kidneys cannot perforin th&#13;
proper office when diseased and&#13;
same time expel the impmaties that&#13;
S h o u l d p a s s Otf t h r o n f f r W h e i r p r n p o r&#13;
action; A few do$esro}&lt; KelloggVCol&#13;
umbian Oil^wiHconVince t h e most&#13;
skepticaUtoat it acJjKtfrreatly on the&#13;
kiclney^. ^7 ' J&#13;
SS0FT AMD STIFF HATS!&#13;
the very latest shapes.&#13;
MANN BROS/ PINCKNEY,&#13;
YOU WILL ALWAYS FIND&#13;
BEST GOODS AND LOW PRICES&#13;
AT WINCHELL'S DRUG STORE.&#13;
&lt;i.&#13;
mm mw&gt;w%»*9 *»&#13;
4GR0CERIESJ&#13;
E. A. MANN. PINCKNEY&#13;
*&lt;mxmm ym&lt;uvi3&#13;
v&#13;
- . M F T - V . ^ ^ , m ^±*m</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 July 23, 1885</text>
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                <text>July 23, 1885 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1885-07-23</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>VOL. I l l PINCKNEY, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JULY 30.1885. NO. 2$&#13;
sa&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH.&#13;
J. L. NEWKIRK, PUBLISHER.&#13;
IB8USD THUB8DAT8.&#13;
Sebacription Price, $1.00 per Year.&#13;
ADVERTISING RAT.BS .&#13;
f n s s i e n t advertisements, » cants per Inch for&#13;
trit insertion and ten cents per inch for each subseaaent&#13;
Insertion. Local notices, 5 cents per line for&#13;
Men insertion. Special rateB for regular advertiee-&#13;
Okeata by the year ox quarter.&#13;
i l l IDVERT1SIHG BILLS DUE QU&amp;RTERLY.&#13;
, paper may be found on file at Geo. P.&#13;
_»~.J1&amp; Co's. Newspaper Advertising Bureau&#13;
(10 Spruce tit.,) where advertising contracts may&#13;
be made for it in New York.&#13;
WBTWI'&#13;
RAILROAD CARD:&#13;
Grand Trunk Railway Time Table.&#13;
MICH. AIR LINE DIVISION.&#13;
GOING EAST. | STATIONS. J ^OINGJWEST.&#13;
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All trains run bv "Central standard" time.&#13;
All trainB run daily, Sundays excepted.&#13;
W. J. SPICER,- JOSEPH HICKSON,&#13;
Superintendent. General Manager.&#13;
BUSINESS 0AR0S.&#13;
T H HOAG, M. D.,&#13;
**' (HOMUiUPATHlUT&#13;
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.&#13;
OfHce at residence on East Main street.&#13;
T \ M. GREENE, M. D.,&#13;
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,&#13;
PLAINRELD, MICHIGAN.&#13;
Oflce at residence. Special attention given to&#13;
•urjrery and diseases of the throat and lungs.&#13;
-TAMES MAKKEY,&#13;
NOTARY PUBLIC&#13;
A«d Insurance Agent. Legal paperB made on&#13;
•hort notice and reasonable term*. Office on&#13;
llaln St., near Poetofflce Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
GRIMES &amp; JOHNSON,&#13;
Proprietors of&#13;
PINCKNEY FLOURING AND CUSTOM-&#13;
MILLS, / - '&#13;
Dealers in Flour and Feed. Caeh-^Tald for all&#13;
kinds of grain. Plncfthey, Ml^Wgln.&#13;
ITT p. V A N W I N K l ^&#13;
ATTORNEY k COUNSELOR at LAW&#13;
^•^' and SOLICITOR in CHANCERYOflkeoverSigler'sDrug&#13;
Store. PINCKNEY&#13;
..C&#13;
T \ D. BENNETT, ^ &gt; - ^&#13;
PAINTER AND PAPER-HANGER.&#13;
All work in this line executed with neatness&#13;
and dispatch. ^&#13;
T&gt;AKG8&gt;«fHtKLAMD, ,&#13;
/ ^ 1 ATTORNEYS,&#13;
8 3 0 OPERA H O U S E BLOCK, CHICAGO, attend carefully to business sent them from other placeB.&#13;
f&#13;
PINCKNEY EXCHANGE BANK&#13;
G. W. TEEPLE&#13;
-dBANKE&#13;
Does a GeneraP^cmkinz Business.&#13;
Monev Loaned on Approved Notes.&#13;
^J)eposits received.&#13;
^ ^ Certificates issued on time deposits,&#13;
And payable on demand.&#13;
U":\ COLLECTIONS A SPECIALTY..&#13;
HEW BARBER SHOP!&#13;
I have opened for the present a sho&#13;
in the Monitor House office, where&#13;
will be prepared to do&#13;
HAIR CUTTING, SHAVING,&#13;
CHAMP00ING, Etc.,&#13;
IN THE NEATEST STYLE.&#13;
Hoping for a share of your patronage,&#13;
I am YOURS TRULY,&#13;
IRA COOK.&#13;
INTERESTING TOPICS.&#13;
Any one desiring to run a Millinery&#13;
Store will do well to come to Pinckney.&#13;
I will sell my stock very cheap.&#13;
MiJs.'C. E. HICKS.&#13;
A few elegant Gondola Pattern&#13;
Lounges very cheap at L. H. Beebe's&#13;
furniture store.&#13;
- FOUND—In the road, near this place,&#13;
one day last week, some articles of&#13;
lady's wearing apparel. Enquire at&#13;
this office.&#13;
Plenty of Engine Coal at Anderson&#13;
Station. JAS. T. EAMAN•&amp; Co. 28w3&gt;&#13;
All persons owing me on account,&#13;
are respectfully notified that tne same&#13;
must be settled immediately.&#13;
W . B . HOFF.&#13;
THE-BEY.GEO, H. T H A Y E R ^&#13;
Bourbon, Ind., says: "Both myselt&#13;
and wife owe our lives to SHILOH'S&#13;
CONSUMPTION CURE."&#13;
For sale by H. F. Sigler &amp;, Bro.&#13;
C A R P E N T E R I N G A N D J O I N E R I N G . —&#13;
Those wishing anything done in this&#13;
line will do well to call on&#13;
26w4. "JOHN SMITH.&#13;
—.WAIT FOR CATHCART—Thephoto.-,&#13;
grapher. He will be in Pinckney&#13;
soon with his car, and make you pictures&#13;
satisfactory and reasonable.&#13;
TRESPASS NOTICE.&#13;
All persons are hereby forbid trespassing&#13;
in my huckleberry swamp and&#13;
picking berries therefrom after this&#13;
date. LEWIS LOVE.&#13;
Dated, Pinckney, July 2, 1885.&#13;
WHY WILL YOU cough when&#13;
Shiloh's Cure will give you immediate&#13;
relief. PriceJOc., 50c.&#13;
For sale by H. F. Sigler &amp; Bro.&#13;
vV ANTED.&#13;
Wheat, Beans and Clover Seed,&#13;
highest prfces paid.&#13;
Tompkins &amp; Ismon.&#13;
SHILOH'S CATARRH REMEDY—&#13;
a positive cure for catarrh, diptheria&#13;
cankered mouth.&#13;
For sale by H. F . Sigler &lt;fc Bro.&#13;
CATHCART, THE PHOTOGRAHHER—intends&#13;
coming here soon. If you want&#13;
some good pictures taken wait for&#13;
him and he will give you satisfaction.&#13;
"HACHMETACK" a lasting and&#13;
iragrant perfume. Price 55 and 50c.&#13;
6 For sale by H. F. Sigler &amp; Bro.&#13;
ABERDEEN ANGUS GRADES.—The Polled&#13;
Aberdeen bull, "The Don" at the&#13;
Scotch Stock Farm, will serve a limited&#13;
number of cows at not less than&#13;
$5 ppr mw, nasli. Apply early to&#13;
23tf. WM. COLLIE, Herdsmaj&#13;
PETTYSVILLE MILLS.—Haying repaired&#13;
my mills 1 am now ready to do first&#13;
class work. Yhy^f^s good as any&#13;
brand on hand&lt;vve also keep feed for&#13;
sale. ^ - - 2 ^ 5 - S. A. PETTYS.&#13;
ILOH'S CURE will immediately&#13;
relieve croup, whooping cough and&#13;
bronchitis.&#13;
For sale by H. F. Sigler &amp; Bro.&#13;
James Mar key, of this place, has~srecured&#13;
the agency of the Allan Line of&#13;
Steamers He is also agent for the&#13;
celebrated Jones Scales.&#13;
FOR DYSPEPSIA anxMlver comrHaint,&#13;
you have a printed guarantee&#13;
on every bottle^of^S hi lob's Vitalizer.&#13;
It never iaj.Lrto cure.&#13;
For^sale by H. F. Sigler &amp; Bro'.&#13;
he kidneys cannot perform tbeir&#13;
proper office when diseased and at the&#13;
same time expel the impurities that&#13;
should pass off through their proper&#13;
action. A few doses of Kellogg's Columbian&#13;
Oil will convince the .most&#13;
skeptical that^ it acts directly on 1he&#13;
kidneys.&#13;
Kellogg's Columbian Oil is composed&#13;
of vegetable products in a highly&#13;
concentrated form, and acts directly&#13;
on the kidneys. It cures rheumatism&#13;
and all other aches and pains.&#13;
ARE YOU MADE miserable by indigestion,&#13;
constipation, dizziness, loss of&#13;
appetite, yellow skin? Shiloh's Vitalizer&#13;
is a positive cure.&#13;
For sale bv H. F. Sigler &amp; Bro.&#13;
OUR PRODUCE MARKET.&#13;
A NASAL INJECTOR free with&#13;
each bottle of Shiloh's Catarrh Remedy.&#13;
Price 50 cents.&#13;
For sale by H. F. Sigler &amp; Bro.&#13;
CORRECTED W E E K L Y B Y&#13;
July 30,1885. TOMPKINS A ISMON&#13;
Wheat, No. 1 white,.&#13;
^i_ No. 2 white,.&#13;
No. 2 red,&#13;
No. 3 red&#13;
Oats.&#13;
Corn&#13;
Barley,&#13;
Beans.......&#13;
Dried Apples.&#13;
Potatoes,.&#13;
Batter :&#13;
Eggs&#13;
Dresaed Chickens .?.&#13;
Clover Seed ,. „ » ( (&#13;
DrMMedPork&#13;
.86&#13;
X%&#13;
.88&#13;
.85&#13;
. 50&#13;
I 00&#13;
.95&#13;
11&#13;
.10&#13;
1*&#13;
4.50&#13;
5,00&#13;
PUBLISHER'S NOTiCE.&#13;
|3"-Those receiving their papers with a red&#13;
X over this paragraph, will please notice that their&#13;
suhscription 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;
HOME NEWS.&#13;
Circus to-morrow.&#13;
Some rain last night.&#13;
Call on the new barber.&#13;
Darius Pangborn has been very low&#13;
since Sunday.&#13;
Ed. Parker and wife visited Howell&#13;
friends Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. C. E. Hicks offers to sell her&#13;
millinery business.&#13;
F. G. Rose is still slowly on the&#13;
gain and sits up some&#13;
MrTand Mrs. N. B. Mann are enjoying&#13;
themselves^R Whitmore.&#13;
Frank Fish, of Bancroft, received a&#13;
paralytic stroke the other day.&#13;
Donaldson &amp; Rich edvertise many&#13;
novelties at their circus to-morrow.&#13;
Mrs. A. W. Knapp, of Fo^wierville,&#13;
is the guest of her sister, Mrs. G. W.&#13;
Teeple.&#13;
The harvest excursion to Detroit&#13;
August 8th will no doubt be largely&#13;
attended.&#13;
J . Croulea, the tailor, has finally located&#13;
at St. Johns, and thinks he has a&#13;
fine show there.&#13;
James Markey was taken with a&#13;
bilious attack Friday and was quite&#13;
sick for a few days.&#13;
E. A. Allen is removing back from&#13;
Dexter to their house just south of the&#13;
hotel in this village.&#13;
Eugene Campbell took advantage of&#13;
the half-fare rates to Detroit yesterday&#13;
and took in the city.&#13;
F. L. Tompkins returned from Wilhamstom&#13;
Thursday, where he had been&#13;
for a weeks previous.&#13;
The Plainwell Penny Press, a vt-ry&#13;
neat little 3-col. folio .published&#13;
Geo. Scales is before us&#13;
A. E. Meigs, manager-or* the West&#13;
erh Newspaper Union, Detroit, made&#13;
us a business-call Tuesday.&#13;
We-arein receipt of a souvenir supplement&#13;
to the Detroit Post—a portrait&#13;
of the lamented Gen. Grant.&#13;
Mrs. W. B. Hoff and Miss Millie&#13;
Barnard returned yesterday lrom a&#13;
few davs visit to Whitmore Lake.&#13;
J . L . Newkirk was called to Dansv.&#13;
ille Saturday to attend the funeral of&#13;
his grand-father, Mr. Chancy Barns.&#13;
The first new wheat marketed here&#13;
was brought in by Alfred Monks Tuesday&#13;
and was bought by Thos. Read at&#13;
901 cents.&#13;
The Echo is a neat little paper recently&#13;
started at Chelsea^.bv A.Allison,&#13;
and we welcome itr-^o our exchange&#13;
list.&#13;
If you have any business to attend&#13;
to in the city you can never go cheaper&#13;
than on Saturday, Aug. 8. Take in&#13;
the excursion.&#13;
X&#13;
Earl Mann's under lip is in the way&#13;
of his mouth nowadays—it is swelled&#13;
to about three times its natural size&#13;
by a carbuncle.&#13;
A crusty exchange advises its readers&#13;
thusly: "If thy neighbor's hens&#13;
offend thee pluck them out. It is better&#13;
to have a chicken pie than a ruined&#13;
garden."&#13;
Wm. Furguson cut four acres of&#13;
wheat with a machine, bound it by&#13;
hand and shocked the same all in one&#13;
day recently. Where is the man that&#13;
can beat that record?&#13;
The Michigan State Democrat, a&#13;
weekly published at Detroit, has appeared.&#13;
It is a 7-column folio, quite&#13;
newsy and bright and aims to uphold&#13;
honest Democracy in all its torrns.&#13;
L. H. Beebe had a good thermometor&#13;
hanging in front of his store a few&#13;
wtwks since ahd it very mystenpnsly&#13;
disappeared. He has latefyTdiscovered&#13;
that a tramp "borrowed" i^ and sol&lt;i it&#13;
for 25 cents.&#13;
A picnic and bowery dance will be&#13;
given on the banks of Silver Lake&#13;
Saturday afternoon, August 1, 1885.&#13;
Refreshments are to be bad on the&#13;
grounds. Hoff Sc LaRue's band furnishes&#13;
the music&#13;
The first ice cream social ot the season&#13;
will be given by the ladies of the&#13;
M. E. church in the town building&#13;
to-morrow (Friday) afternoon and&#13;
evening. Let every one go and enjoy&#13;
themselves. COM.&#13;
Geo. Alchin, near Webberville, stood&#13;
in front ot his reaper with a sheep-skin&#13;
overhis head while it was raining Friday.&#13;
The horses got frightened and&#13;
ran away, knocking him down and cutting&#13;
off one leg and three fingers.&#13;
The Stockbndge Sun man exposed&#13;
his ignorance in the printing business&#13;
by last week telling his readers that&#13;
the unit of type measure was the letter&#13;
"M." There is sometimes a vast&#13;
difference between the "M" and the&#13;
liem."&#13;
Geo. Marvin and Harry Briggs, of&#13;
Howell, went boating on Thompson's&#13;
lake Sunday, when they had been&#13;
drinking. The result was that the&#13;
boat capsized and Marvin was drowned.&#13;
His body was not recovered until&#13;
Tuesday. Briggs clung to a stump&#13;
until rescued.&#13;
Mr. Ira Cook, a fine young man&#13;
from South Lyon, has opened a barber&#13;
shop tor the present in the office ot the&#13;
Monitor House, and will be found on&#13;
hand to do shaving, hair-cutting,&#13;
shampooing, etc., in a workmanlike&#13;
manner. He has a splendid new outfit&#13;
and will serve you both neatly and&#13;
quickly.&#13;
Geo. Reason's gasoline stove sprung&#13;
a leak Toursday noon,and^asi^ne three&#13;
burners were lit a^jthe time, a gasoline&#13;
blaze soonJHled the whole room&#13;
and some^pretty frightened people&#13;
wer&gt;-seen around those premises. It&#13;
•vas soon smothered with quilts, however,&#13;
and not any very serious damage&#13;
was done.&#13;
We suppose all towns have a few&#13;
so-called business men, who buy all&#13;
they use in their households in distant&#13;
cities instead of patronizing the local&#13;
dealers, and then kick because people&#13;
refuse to trade with him. These are&#13;
the chaps who will not assist any more&#13;
than is possible, in any public impro&#13;
ment, but live and act like leeches,&#13;
sucking up everthing that comes within&#13;
reach and giving back nothing in&#13;
return. When people findr-such specimens&#13;
they should refuse to support&#13;
them in their lecherous disposition to&#13;
imitate the hog.—Ogemaw Co. Herald,&#13;
Through the courtsey of the Detroit&#13;
&amp; Cleveland Steam Navagatron Co. we&#13;
have before us a handsome and useful&#13;
little book entitled "Lake Tours via.&#13;
Picturesque Macinac." It gives a sort&#13;
of biographical sketch of all the romantic,&#13;
health-giving and beautiful&#13;
places touched by theis company's&#13;
boats. It is also illustrated with fine&#13;
cuts and engravings, and contains&#13;
many other useful bits of information&#13;
to the tourist. Any one contemplating&#13;
a lake trip should write to C. D.&#13;
Whitcomb, gen'l. pass, a g ' t , foot of&#13;
VVaynfl St., Detroit, for ratos and particulars.&#13;
Tyrotoxican, or cheese poisoning, is&#13;
not a very common occurence in this&#13;
country, though cases of severe illness&#13;
do occasionally result from the eating&#13;
of cheese. Last Sunday morning&#13;
about two hours after breakfast five&#13;
children of Mark Davis, who lives near&#13;
the cemetery, were taken violently ill&#13;
at the stomach. Dr. Prafct was summoned&#13;
and by the use of emetics soon&#13;
had the unfortunate five in an easier&#13;
condition, though not entirely free&#13;
from griping pains. He pronounced&#13;
what is known to dairymen as "siok"&#13;
cheese as being the cause of the&#13;
trouble. Poisonous cheese can not be&#13;
diatingniahod from the healthful artiamount&#13;
of butyric acid is lormed^&#13;
which is capable of developing poison&#13;
in the cheese. The subject of cheese&#13;
poisoning is a comparatively new one;&#13;
but it is destined to occupy considerable&#13;
attention from medical men.—&#13;
Republican.&#13;
A grand harvest excursion will be&#13;
given via. M. A. L. R'y., from Stock'&#13;
bridge, South Lyon and intermediate!&#13;
points to Detroit, on Saturday, Aug.'&#13;
8,1885, under the auspices of the Anderson&#13;
Sunday School, at the following&#13;
low rates. A special train of twelve&#13;
coaches will leave&#13;
Stockbridge,&#13;
Gregory,&#13;
Anderson,&#13;
Pinekney,&#13;
Pettysville,&#13;
Hamburg,&#13;
Whitmore Lake,&#13;
South Lyon,&#13;
Round trip ratt^&#13;
u&#13;
a&#13;
$1.75&#13;
1.65'&#13;
1 6 0&#13;
1.55&#13;
1.50&#13;
1.45&#13;
1.35 fls&#13;
Recle,&#13;
as, it is the same in appearance and&#13;
taste. The poison in cheese-is^ca'used.&#13;
by a putrifaction or excessive ferment&#13;
tationof the curd, from which a jarge&#13;
•tf&#13;
6 : 3 0 A.M.&#13;
6:45 "&#13;
6:55&#13;
7:05&#13;
7:15&#13;
7:25 "&#13;
7:35 "&#13;
7:50 "&#13;
Arriving at Detroit at 10 A. M.&#13;
turning, train leaves Detroit at 5 p. M.,'&#13;
giving 7 hours in the city tor business&#13;
or pleasure. The Detroit River Ferry&#13;
Co!s. steamerwill lie at BrusH'SC,'"&#13;
wharf and will carry passengers to&#13;
Belle Isle, Windsor or Sandwich a t&#13;
10c. round trip. On and after Thursday,&#13;
August 6th tickets may be ob-'&#13;
tained of the company's agents- at/&#13;
Stockbridge, Pinckney and South Lyon,&#13;
Mr. H: Gregory, of Gregor; Mr. J .&#13;
T. Eaman at Anderson, S. G. Teeple,&#13;
Esq. at Pettysville, Mr. Burton Roy&#13;
at Hamburg, Mr. Fleet S m j t i r l a t&#13;
Whitmore Lake." Cnildren-between &amp;&#13;
and 12 half fare. Especial care will&#13;
be taken to makeiihe trip pleasant and&#13;
e n j o y a b l e ^ " ^&#13;
Thtf State Teachers' Institute for&#13;
ivingston County, will be held a t&#13;
Pinckney, commencing at 10o'clock A . •&#13;
M«, Monday, August 3, and closing 4&#13;
p. M., Friday, August 7. W,- A.&#13;
SPROUT, Pinckney, local committee. •&#13;
It is becoming a well established -&#13;
fact that an interchange of views, such&#13;
as is given in these Institutes, is of&#13;
good practical benefit to those who attend&#13;
them. The teachers that are&#13;
found in the front ranks of their pro- -&#13;
fession are generally those who take&#13;
interest enough in. their work to avail—&#13;
themselves of such means of improvement.&#13;
The Institute law allows teach'*&#13;
ers, whose school's are in session at the&gt;&#13;
time appointed tor the County Inatield&#13;
under the direction of the ^&#13;
State Superintendent, to close school.'.&#13;
during the continuance of^such Institute&#13;
without forfeiting their wages* for&#13;
as many halt-days as they are in-attendance&#13;
at the Institute, This removes&#13;
a cause that has prevented*&#13;
many teachers from attending these •&#13;
institutes tn the past; and in view of&#13;
the inducements "to self-improvement-.&#13;
thus furnished by the law, County Examiners&#13;
and School Boards will both&#13;
exercise wisdom and practice justice :&#13;
hy giving preference to those teachers, .&#13;
other things being equal, who seek all&#13;
such means to better prepare themselves&#13;
for the work of their profession.&#13;
It is designed to make the work in?&#13;
these Institutes as practical as possible,&#13;
and thus meet the wants of t h e&#13;
teachers of all grades in their everyday&#13;
work. At the same time it will&#13;
be the purpose of every worker to t&#13;
raise the standard ot the professipiM&gt;t!-&#13;
teachmg, and to gain tor. itj'. that dig-.&#13;
nity to which it i s . entitled^ Especial&#13;
attention will be given to such sub-,&#13;
jects as^aYQ_~been recently added to&#13;
the list of those in which teachers a r e .&#13;
required to pass examination before .&#13;
obtaining certificates* The exercises&#13;
will be conducted by persons, x of ex-.&#13;
tended experience, known ability, and&#13;
eminent success. The morning a n d&#13;
afternoon- sessions will be, devofce^Hothe&#13;
discussion of topics of particular.&#13;
interest to teachers, w^Ue^the evening.&#13;
lectures will be oi*ipopular character.&#13;
There w i U V n o , tuition,' or enroll*.&#13;
men t f e e ^ P u i l particulars, i n regard&#13;
rd, etc., mai[ be obtained uponj&#13;
ft&#13;
to&#13;
-pplication to the local committee.&#13;
Department ot Public Instruction*&#13;
Lansing, Mich., 1835. *&#13;
THEODORE NBLSON,&#13;
S u p t of Public Instruction.&#13;
&amp; s&#13;
^jj^afbcfe&#13;
'.^y^&#13;
.- -*. ^ i «••'«;&#13;
\&#13;
,&gt;-A.' "^^jri: N i »• -!—"-rrtfc «*-...»- -..&#13;
s&#13;
•*-. N ^•udvW- .mnmpsn&amp;sttrF&#13;
1&#13;
r&#13;
&gt;&#13;
GRANT IS DEAD I&#13;
n&#13;
i&#13;
I/&#13;
i &lt;-.+&#13;
si&#13;
'*-»,&#13;
:ii&#13;
.&#13;
T h e S a d d e s t A n n o u n c e m e n t S i n c e&#13;
T h a t o f L i n c o l n ' s F a E .&#13;
•A Hrlef Review of Soma of the Saltont&#13;
Point* in Hln Grand Career—HU Record&#13;
tM a Soldier, aa Politician And&#13;
President, and aa a Man.&#13;
General Grant is dead. His last words&#13;
h a r e been spoken. He has ga^edjipon the&#13;
lace of Nature for the last time. His greatcareer&#13;
is ended. We are, therefore, compelled&#13;
to speak of him who but a few hours&#13;
a g o was the most illustrious of living men&#13;
a s one who has obeyed the summons to&#13;
"join the innumerable caravan that moves&#13;
toward the realms where each must take&#13;
bis slumber in the silent balls of death."&#13;
In the closing of his life our grand triumvirate&#13;
of departed patriots—Washington,&#13;
Lincoln and Grant—grander than the&#13;
history of any other nation presents—is&#13;
completed. The Nation mourns its idol.&#13;
T h e world, which knew him by heart,&#13;
sympathizes with the people of the United&#13;
•States in their bereavement.&#13;
When Daniel Webster died Franklin&#13;
Pierce said: "The great heart of the Nation&#13;
throbs heavily at the portals of his&#13;
g r a v e " General Grant's death will touch i j ^ i&#13;
t h e Heart of universal humanity, fojik'*fh"e I a t t "&#13;
•events of his life spanned the widest range&#13;
of human experience—from almost-blank.&#13;
obscuritj' to the most dazzling fame the&#13;
world can give; from the impotency of a&#13;
poor and almost unknown man to such&#13;
power as human liaud has seldom grasped.&#13;
It is not easy to think or write of General&#13;
Grant in tht" past tense. So grandly&#13;
•solid was the man in his habits, his charactor,&#13;
his deeds; so genuine, so far removed&#13;
from all that was not substantial&#13;
a s the everlasting truth, that his passage&#13;
from the society of the living to "the&#13;
breathless darkness and the narrow&#13;
faoiiseTrseems like the sinking of a mount&#13;
a i n or the sudden prostration of a forest.&#13;
For years he was the "Silent Man"—&#13;
ment educated me for the army, and although&#13;
I have served through one war 1&#13;
am still a little indebted to the country&#13;
and willing to discharge the obligation."&#13;
Taking with him a company of volunteers&#13;
which he had enlisted, he went to Springfield&#13;
and tendered his services to Governor&#13;
Yutes as a volunteer. The troops were gath -&#13;
ered in chaotic mass, and the Governor&#13;
and his staff were nearly distracted.&#13;
General Urant presented himself to&#13;
the Governor with the remark that&#13;
he had been educated at West Point&#13;
and had served in Mexico, and asked for&#13;
something to do. He wa« told to&#13;
call again, as there were no vacancies.&#13;
G r a n t returned to his hotel, and calling&#13;
-again the next day received the same response,&#13;
He called again au4 again with&#13;
no better success. Finally, his funds running&#13;
low and his board bill being due,&#13;
Grant, as a last resort, asked for oflice&#13;
work. This was given him, and he began&#13;
work, very much elated over his success.&#13;
From this subordinate place ho was soon&#13;
transferred to the Adjutant-General's office,&#13;
and after making a tour of inspection&#13;
of the various military ramps in the State&#13;
was tendered the Colonelcy of the Twentyfirst&#13;
Regiment of Infantry, a fine body of&#13;
men, but so turbulent and unmanageable&#13;
that nobody cared for the command. He&#13;
drilled and marched some of the unnecessary&#13;
spirit-out of this regiment during the.&#13;
firsc four weeks it was in his charge, and&#13;
after marching it into Northern Missouri&#13;
he was, on the i&gt;th of August, 1SH1, through&#13;
the influence of his old-time friend, Mr. E.&#13;
B.AVushburue, of (Jalena, appointed Hiigadier&#13;
General ami put in command of a&#13;
district composed of Southeast Missouri&#13;
d Southern Illinois, with headquarters&#13;
airo. Here was l&gt;eguu a military career&#13;
which in less than four year* gave&#13;
him a world- wide fame.&#13;
It is not the purpose of this review of&#13;
the career of the dead General to recouut&#13;
the incidents tbat marked his rise from a&#13;
Brigadier-General toGeueral of the army.&#13;
The victories at Belmont, Fort Henry, Fort&#13;
Donelson, Shiloh, Vicksburg, Chattanooga,&#13;
Lookout Mountain aiid Mission Ridge in the&#13;
West, and the battles of -the- Wilderness,&#13;
the siege of Petersburg and the score of&#13;
encounters which distinguished his connection&#13;
with the Army of the Potomac, Jheloug&#13;
to a branch of history which it is for--&#13;
ei^n to the purpose of this paner, at present,&#13;
to consider. The surrender of Lee's&#13;
army and the subsequent aud consequent&#13;
collapse of the Confederacy were brilliant&#13;
episodes in his career.&#13;
s-pt¥orts"to escape his en-—so-rrnnry a rierrj battle and arrhiouamarch,&#13;
•*'the Sphynx"—so reticent that those who j was at Grant's&#13;
judged without knowledge spoke of him&#13;
a s one who gained a reputation for wisdom&#13;
by saying little. But he never failed&#13;
to speak when words were needed, and no&#13;
man over uttered weighter words than he.&#13;
His words are as imperishable as his&#13;
deeds; both will live in the memory of&#13;
men BO long as a record or tradition of our&#13;
•Republic shall endure. "Centuries"henee_|&#13;
t h e descendants of the men who fought ,&#13;
with Lee, and Johnston, and Stonewall&#13;
Jackson will ponder tenderly and loviiigjy j&#13;
on the words which Grant spoke to Lee'at !&#13;
Appomattox: "Let your men take home I&#13;
t h e i r horses; they will need them in plowi&#13;
n g and making their crops." And above j&#13;
t h e roar of political tempests for many a&#13;
decade to come will be heard tho ''Let as&#13;
have peace" with which Grant met the&#13;
furious storm that rent the political tirmairueat&#13;
seventeen years ago.&#13;
I t can not bo said that General Grant&#13;
•made no mistakes in his military career;&#13;
t o claim that would be to set him above all&#13;
t h e weaknesses of humanity, to endow him&#13;
with the attributes of tho Deity. But let&#13;
it be remembered that in almost every instance&#13;
of an alleged "blunder" his judgm&#13;
e n t was vindicated by results. "You&#13;
•were right and I was wrong" wrote Abrah&#13;
a m Lincoln to Grant on a memorable occasion.&#13;
It was a simple but magnltic^ttttribute.&#13;
The time has not yet come for an&#13;
•uuimpassioned analysis of Grant as a&#13;
commander, but the time will never come&#13;
•when the people of the United States will&#13;
rate him less or lower than they did in the&#13;
svenith of his military renown. Ho gave&#13;
our arnis_gnccess when others failed. He&#13;
w a s the one man of deeds, the one. man&#13;
'who asked for nothing, the most modest,&#13;
unassuming man that ever led an army to&#13;
victory. But he knew himself, ho trusted&#13;
mself, and that calm, unuttered trust&#13;
•won the confidence of the army and the&#13;
country.&#13;
Coming out of the war cro\y.ned aa he&#13;
-waa with laurels, it was inevitable that&#13;
G t a n t should bo ofrered_thfi_Rresidency,&#13;
with the certainty of election' if -he would&#13;
consent. It may be that, for his own happiness,&#13;
he made a mistake in leaving the&#13;
'Generalship for the Pi*esideucy. But he&#13;
obeyed the call of the country in civil as he&#13;
h a d obeyed it in military life. As he never&#13;
asked for promotion in the field, so ho was&#13;
carried into the White House by the popular&#13;
will, and not by his own procurement.&#13;
T h e eight years of his Administration&#13;
•wore a stormy period—the era of reconstruction,&#13;
an era of bitterness, of political&#13;
—malevolence. It was, too, a time when-t^se&#13;
demoralization wrought by the war manifested&#13;
itself in political corruption. But&#13;
n o man ever believed that Grant was not&#13;
absolutely incorruptible. H i s - greatest&#13;
fault was a good trait carried to an extreme.&#13;
H e trusted his friends sometimes when&#13;
t h e y had no right to Ids confidence.&#13;
Tne closing years of tlui great life now&#13;
•ended were not passed in repose, for Gene&#13;
r a l Grant could not be an idler. His long&#13;
t o u r in foreign lands, his various business&#13;
enterprises, and the awful disaster brought&#13;
to him and his family by the perfidy or a&#13;
f'-oung man on whoui" he" had built-ao-ahsoate&#13;
trust, make up a strangely varied&#13;
picture as his career passes in review. It&#13;
w a s well—it was so gooita thing that the&#13;
^country will not soon cease to bo grateful&#13;
for it—tl*at Congress performed an act of&#13;
justico to the dear "Old Man" before he&#13;
closed hi* eyes oa-the-sci'ues of earth. It&#13;
w a s well, too, that he had an opportunity,&#13;
a s a witness, to tell the simple story of his&#13;
b e t r a y a l by Ward. His last davs were&#13;
m a d e less painful by these two events.&#13;
Millions of hearts are aching, millions of&#13;
o y e s are blinded with tears to*day:&gt;fcre&#13;
peerless man goeth to his long hoHreand&#13;
t h o mourners go about the spegtsV The&#13;
•oldiers whom ne met in o a f g r e a t civil&#13;
w w , the fathers, moth**% brothers and&#13;
.•iators of the men wkojivore the blue; the&#13;
•oldiers who woye^the gray, and the peop&#13;
l e of the South who thank God for the&#13;
reatorati&amp;h of the Union—all these and s i t&#13;
their^-fellow* citizens bow their heads in&#13;
row, for ( our most honored and bestlovod&#13;
citizen has passed beyond the sag&#13;
of time.&#13;
The Hero's Can&#13;
I t Is narrated of General Grant, that his&#13;
-Qotprminatiou to ept^r the.service against&#13;
t h e robcUiou watfraken and announced as&#13;
bo drew OFT his cqat upon reading the&#13;
telegTawrwhich told of the surrender of&#13;
Fojflr'Bu.mtfrt He came into hi* lenthpr&#13;
AI t e r c&#13;
vironments, Lee at Inst realized that he&#13;
mercy, and -he offered to&#13;
suirender. General Grant as usual was&#13;
simple and composed, ami with none of the&#13;
grand air about him. No elation was visible&#13;
in his manner or appearance. His&#13;
voice was as calm as ever, and his eye betraved&#13;
no emotion. He spoke aud acted as&#13;
plainly as if he were transacting an ordin&#13;
a r y matter of business. No one would&#13;
h a v j suspected that ho was about to receive&#13;
the surrender of an army, or that one&#13;
ofLihemost terrible wars of modern times&#13;
j had been brought lo a triumphant close by&#13;
! the quiet man without a sword, who was&#13;
j conversing ealmlv, but rather grimly, with&#13;
the elaborate gentlemau in gray and gold.&#13;
The conversation at first related to the&#13;
I meeting of the two soldiers in earlier years&#13;
I iu Mexico, when Grant had been a subaltern&#13;
and Lee a staff officer of Scott. Tho&#13;
rebel' General, however, soon adverted to&#13;
the object of the interview. " I asked to&#13;
see voir", General Grant," he- said, "to ascertain&#13;
upon what terms you would receive&#13;
the surrender of my a r m y ? " Grant replied&#13;
that the (Hirers and men must 1*&gt;-&#13;
coine prisoners of war, giving up, of course,&#13;
all ammunition, weapons and supplies, but&#13;
that a parole would be accepted .binding&#13;
them to go to their homes and remain there&#13;
until exchanged or relieved by proper authority.&#13;
Lee said ho had expected some&#13;
such things as thes", and made sune other&#13;
remark not exactly relevant. Whereupon.&#13;
Grant inquired: "Do I understand, General&#13;
Lee, that you accept these terms!'"&#13;
" Y e s , " said Lee, "and if you will put"them&#13;
into writing I will si^n them."&#13;
Grant then sat down to the little table&#13;
and wrote the following letter:&#13;
APPOMATTOX COVKT-HOI'SF., April n, 186o—&#13;
Gc7\t:rai R. K. Lcs„ rommnvliitg C. S. / 1 . - Iu&#13;
accordance with the suhstitnce of my letter&#13;
to you of the St h inst.. I proposes to receive the&#13;
surrenderor the Annv of Northern Virginia,&#13;
on the following terms, to wit:&#13;
ltoll of all the officers and men to be made in&#13;
duplicate, one copv to be given to an officer&#13;
designated by me, the other to be retained by&#13;
such officers as you niuv designate.&#13;
Tho officers to give their iniHv dual paroles&#13;
not to take arms against the T'niied States&#13;
until properly exchanged, and each company&#13;
ojLrc.-''mental commander siprn a like parolo&#13;
for the men of their command-;.&#13;
The arms, artillery and public property to&#13;
lie packed and stacked, and turned over to&#13;
the officers appointed by me to receive them.&#13;
Thli will not embrace the aide:arms of the&#13;
officers, nor their private horses nor baggage.&#13;
Tlits done, each othcer and man will fie allowed&#13;
to return to tfieir homos, not to bo disturbed&#13;
by the United States authority so long&#13;
as they observe their parole and the laws in&#13;
force where they mav reside Very respectful&#13;
lv, U. S. GRANT, b'tnitonant-General.&#13;
While Grant was writing bechanced to&#13;
look up at Lee, who sat nearly opposite.&#13;
and at that moment noticed the glitter of&#13;
his sword. The sight suggested an alteration&#13;
in tho terms, and he inserted the provision&#13;
that officers should be allowed to&#13;
retain their side-arms, horses and personal&#13;
roperty. Lee had accepted Grant's conditions&#13;
without this stipulation, and doubt*&#13;
b'lw expected to surrender his sword. But&#13;
thiVhutniliatiou h j and his gallant officers&#13;
j v e r \ s p a r o d . When the terms were writt&#13;
Grant handed the papers to his&#13;
great antagonist, who put on his spectacles&#13;
to read them. He was evidently&#13;
touched bv their general clemency, and&#13;
especially by the interpolation which saved&#13;
so much to the feelings of a soldier. He&#13;
said at once that the conditions were magnanimous,&#13;
and Avould have a very good effect&#13;
upon his army.&#13;
He next attempted' to gain a little mo&#13;
The horses of his cavalrv, he said&#13;
the property of the soldiers. Cojrfff these&#13;
men be permitted to retain tbfur animals?&#13;
Grant said„tbe terms wou&gt;Tnot allow this?&#13;
Lee took the paper f^fairi, and glancing&#13;
over it again sajttr " N o , you are right.&#13;
The terms do^tfet allow it." Whereupon&#13;
Grant repl+ea: '• I believe the war is now&#13;
over.^arm the surrender of this army will&#13;
ollowed soon by that of all the&#13;
fthers. I know the men, and indee&#13;
the whole South, are impoverished. L&gt;m&#13;
not change the terms of snmmder^jSeneral&#13;
Lee, but will instruct my officer* who re-_&#13;
ceive the paroles to alio w t h s cavalry and&#13;
artillery men to retaia^Cheir horses and&#13;
take them home^-to work their little&#13;
farms." Lee again expressed his acknowledgment&#13;
a n d t j a i d this kindness would&#13;
inrve th^-fJest possible effect.&#13;
then wrote out his letter in these&#13;
ords-' -—,&#13;
HEADQUARTERS ARMY OF NORTHERN V I R .&#13;
GIRTA, April 9, l&amp;flfi,—LIEUTKSANT-GHSERAI.&#13;
IT. S. GRANT, Commanding U. S. A.: General:&#13;
I have received your letter of this date, containing&#13;
the terms of surrondorof tho Army of&#13;
Northern Virginia, as proposed by you , a*&#13;
they are substantially the same as those expressed&#13;
in your letter of tho 8th lust, they are&#13;
accepted. I will proceed to dosfgnate tho&#13;
proper officers to carrv tho stipulations Into&#13;
effect. Very respectfully, your ohodlent serv-&#13;
One, General Seth Williams, who had&#13;
served closely with him in the old army,&#13;
attempted to revive old memories, but Lt&gt;e&#13;
repelled the advance coldly. Ho waa in&#13;
no mood to remember ancient friendships,&#13;
or to recall pleasantly his service in the&#13;
army of which ho was now a prisoner,&#13;
or under that flag which he had&#13;
betrayed. He had, however, another request&#13;
to make. His men were starving;&#13;
they had lived, he said, ou two ears of&#13;
corn a day for several davs. Would Grant&#13;
supply them with food? There was a&#13;
traiu of cars at Lynchburg loaded with rations&#13;
which had "come from Danville for&#13;
his army. Would Grant allow them to be&#13;
distributed among the prisoners!* Grant,&#13;
however, told them that this train hufcl&#13;
been captured the day before by Sheridan.&#13;
Thus, at the moment of his surrender Leo&#13;
was absolutely dependent for supplies&#13;
upon his conqueror. Graut, of "ourse, acquiesced&#13;
in the request and asked how&#13;
many rations Lee required. But the rebel&#13;
General declared that he could not answer&#13;
the question. He had no idea of his own&#13;
strength. No return of the brigades had&#13;
been made for sineral days. Besides those&#13;
lost in the battle—killed, captured and&#13;
wounded, or those left on the roadside—the&#13;
men had !&gt;een deserting and straggling by&#13;
thousands. He could not tell what number&#13;
he had left. All his public aud private&#13;
papers had been destroyed to prevent&#13;
their falling into tho Federal hands. Grant&#13;
finally inquired if 'Jfi.OOO rations would suffice,&#13;
aud Leo replied he thought that number&#13;
would be enough. Twenty-five thousand,&#13;
therefore, was L J O ' S estimate at Appomattox&#13;
of the number he surrendered.&#13;
Grant turned to the officer of the commissariat&#13;
ou his staff ami directed, him to issue&#13;
"i.VMO rations that night to the Army&#13;
of Northern Virginia. The order was&#13;
obeyed, and before the rebels gave up their&#13;
arms they were fed by their enemies.&#13;
The formal papers were now signed, a few&#13;
more words were exchanged by the men&#13;
who had opposed each other so long, they&#13;
again shook hitnds, and -Lee went to the&#13;
porch. The Uuiou officers followed and&#13;
saluted him, and the military leader of the&#13;
rebelliou mounted his horse and rode off -to&#13;
his army, he and his soldiers prisoners of&#13;
war. As the great rebel entered his own&#13;
lines the men rushed up to their chief,&#13;
breaking ranks, and struggling to touch&#13;
his hand. Tears streamed down his cheeks&#13;
a s he said: "Men, we have fought through&#13;
the war together. I have done the best I&#13;
could for you;" They raised a few broken&#13;
cheers for t-he leader "they hud followed in&#13;
ley. Tho opposition to General Grant was&#13;
not prepared to accept Mx. Greeley, notwithstanding&#13;
the National Democratic&#13;
Convention nominated htm also, and Grant&#13;
was re-elected by aa overwhelming majority.&#13;
His second term was marked by&#13;
the passage of the supplementary Civilrights&#13;
bill, the veto of the Currency Inflation&#13;
bill, the passage of the bill for the resumption&#13;
of specie payments, the exposure&#13;
of the whisky ring, the downfall of Belknap,&#13;
a member of the Cabinet, the attempt*&#13;
to inaugurate Civil-service reform, and the&#13;
'ere&#13;
aud the career of the Army oC Northern&#13;
Virginia was ended. Grant also returned&#13;
at once to his headquarters, now pitched&#13;
almost at the front of Sheridan's command.&#13;
As he approached the Union lines the news&#13;
had passed before him and the tiring of&#13;
salutes began, but he sent at once to stop&#13;
them. "The war is over," he said, '*tho&#13;
rebels are our countrymen again, and the&#13;
best sign of rejoicing after the victory will&#13;
be to abstain from all demonstrations in&#13;
the field." But he-had not yet reported&#13;
the capitulation'to the (rove' n ment, and,&#13;
dismounting at the roadside, he sat on a&#13;
stone and called for paper and pencil. An&#13;
aid-de-camp offered his order-l&gt;ook, and at&#13;
4:.1¾) p. m. on Sunday, the 'Jth of April, he&#13;
announced tha end of the rebellion in these&#13;
words:&#13;
HON. K. M. STANTON, Secretary of War,&#13;
Watfiiiujtnn: General Leo surrendered the"&#13;
Armv of Northern Virginiuthis afteriiwoivon&#13;
terms proposed by myself. The accompanying&#13;
additional correspondence will &gt;lfow tho&#13;
conditions fully. I'. ^ - G U A N T .&#13;
Lieutenant -(Joncral.&#13;
The next day General Grant visited the&#13;
rebel lines and couver-tfed with General&#13;
Lee. Both were convinced, Lee as firmly&#13;
as G ant, that the" war was over, and Lee&#13;
expressed his- 'satisfaction at the result.&#13;
Slavery, he--said, was dead; the South was&#13;
prepared-fo acquiesce- iu this as one of the&#13;
consiliences of National victory. Tho&#13;
end ''had long been foreseen, The utter-oxl-&#13;
haustion of resources, the annihilation of&#13;
armies, which had been steadily going on&#13;
for a year, could have but one termination.&#13;
Johnston, ho said, would certainly follow&#13;
his example aud surrender to-''Sherman,&#13;
aud the sooner the rebel armies were all&#13;
surrendered the better, now. Nothing&#13;
could be accomplished by further resistance.&#13;
When (iraut discovered that Lee&#13;
entertained these opinions he urged him to&#13;
address the rebel Government and people,&#13;
and use his great influence to hasten&#13;
result which ho admitted was not only inevitable,&#13;
but, under tho circumstances", desirable.&#13;
But this step Lee was not inclined&#13;
to take. He said that he was now a prisoner&#13;
of war, and felt a delicacy about advising&#13;
others to put themselves in his position.&#13;
But he bad no doubt they would&#13;
speedily arrive at tho same conclusion&#13;
without his urging.&#13;
Then the other Union officers took their&#13;
turns, shaking hands cordially with tho&#13;
men whom they had met in many a battle,&#13;
or with whom they had early shared tent&#13;
orlrlanketon the Indian trail or on the&#13;
Mexican frontier, with classmates of West&#13;
Point and sworn friends o.f boyhood. Some&#13;
shed tears as they hugged each other after&#13;
years of separation and strife. Countrymen&#13;
all they felt themselves now, und not&#13;
a few of the rebels declared t h a t they were&#13;
glad Ihul the. war had ended in the triumph&#13;
of tho North. Theirhumility was marked;&#13;
they felt and said they had staked all and&#13;
lost. They inquired if they would be permitted&#13;
to leave the country, but none&#13;
dreamed they would ever regain their&#13;
property.&#13;
General Grant, confident that the war&#13;
was ended, as soon as tho rvec&#13;
rangwnents could be made, proceeded to&#13;
Washington and engaged iu tho-"work of&#13;
(Hsbanding the armies. Wh^uTthe work&#13;
was accomplished he estaKfislied his head&#13;
&gt;rft ami on July 25,&#13;
ant. It. K, I.KK, &lt;;&lt;&gt;uonO.&#13;
quarters at Was]&#13;
l.Sliti, he was conrfiussioned by_Congress&#13;
General of th-e-'fjnit /d States Army, an exalted&#13;
raule-created especially for him. When&#13;
President Johnson suspended Stanton from&#13;
post of Secretary of War on tho 12th of&#13;
"August, 18()7, he appointed. General Graj&#13;
ad interim Secretary of -Wtir, whic'&#13;
he filled until January 14 of the bellowing&#13;
year, when, tho Seuate h a v i n &lt; r o f u s e d to&#13;
sanction the removal of S*anton, the oflice&#13;
reverted to the lattgp^^urant's reticence&#13;
on political matter's was such that the&#13;
country was^entpletely in the dark as to&#13;
his opiniows^l)116 it was well known to some&#13;
of his^ntimate friends t h a t he was a Relcan&#13;
m principle. He was generally&#13;
"ooked upon, • however, as the coming&#13;
man, and oa May 21, 18(J8, he received&#13;
the nomination for President at&#13;
the hands of the Republican National Convention,&#13;
in session at Chicago. Ho defeated&#13;
his Democratic competitor, ex-Governor&#13;
Seymour, of New York, by a decided majority,&#13;
and was inaugurated on the 4th of&#13;
March, 1809. His first term was notable&#13;
for his efforts to procure the annexation of&#13;
San .Domiugo in 1870-1, the Cuban and&#13;
Fenian filibustering in 1870, the treaty of&#13;
Washington in 1871, the Geneva arbitration&#13;
in 1872, and the progress of the work of&#13;
reconstruction, including the passage of&#13;
the so-called Kuklnx law, followed by a&#13;
Presidential proclamation, and the suspension&#13;
of habeas corpus in the northern&#13;
.counties of South Carolina.&#13;
The Republican National Convention In&#13;
Philadelphia, in June, 1872, renominated&#13;
Grant for the Presidency, The Cincinnati&#13;
Convontion of the namo year, at which the&#13;
liberal Republicans met, failed to nominate&#13;
Charles Francis Adams, who was&#13;
187«-'&#13;
Ou retiring from the Presidency, March&#13;
4, 1877, General Grant was for the first tune&#13;
in sixteen years free from official responsibility.&#13;
He had long contemplated a tour&#13;
around the world, and in May, 1877, he&#13;
sailed from Philadelphia for Liverpool. In&#13;
Great Britain ho was received with distinguished&#13;
consideration. From England&#13;
he went to France aud Italy, and sailed&#13;
for Egypt from Nice on a United States&#13;
war ressel. Ho ascended the Nilo, visited&#13;
Jerusalem on his way North again, and was&#13;
at Constantinople when tho Russian army&#13;
was at San Stofauo. He again visited&#13;
Paris, and theu went to Berlin. From Berlin&#13;
he journeyed to Russia, Sweden and&#13;
Norway, and then to Spain and Portugal,&#13;
being received everywhere with almost&#13;
regal honors. Many decorations would&#13;
have been conferred upon him had he&#13;
been willing to receive them. J u s t before&#13;
starting for India he visited Ireland, where&#13;
he was well received in Cork. Going to&#13;
Marseilles, he was joined by several relatives&#13;
and friends, aud the entire p a r t y proceeded&#13;
iu the United States steamer Richmond&#13;
to Bombay. Iu India General Grant&#13;
received marked attention from the Viceroy,&#13;
and thence he went to Siam, where he&#13;
was dined by the King. In China and&#13;
Japan, whore fie spent considerable time,&#13;
he was treated with equal distinction, and&#13;
was consulted by the highest oflieiuls of&#13;
those countries regarding their, domestic&#13;
and foreign atTairs. He left J a p a n ou the&#13;
steamer City of Tokio ou the 2d of September,&#13;
187'&gt;, and arrived in San Francisco on&#13;
-the_ 20th.. His -journey.across the American&#13;
continent was one continuous ovation,&#13;
all the great cities apparently vying with&#13;
each other in their efforts to do houor to&#13;
the distinguished traveler&#13;
Soon after his return from his touraround&#13;
the world-it became evident that, while he&#13;
had renounced a third consecutive term as&#13;
President, he would not be adverse to a reelection&#13;
now that four years had iuter-&#13;
:vened. It was-thought by his friends that&#13;
this fact would also, iu a measure, dispel&#13;
the objections so generally entertained to&#13;
the violation of tho unwritten law of tho&#13;
Republic, which had been observed since&#13;
the days of Washington. Tho opposition&#13;
to Wrant personally was also very bitter,,&#13;
and it became evident that he could not&#13;
secure the nomination without a desperate&#13;
struggle. This his friends, headed-by Senators&#13;
Conkling, Cameron and Logan, were&#13;
prepared to make. After nrfiny intensely&#13;
exciting contests in the yarious State Couventiuns^-&#13;
it^-wai thought that nmra than a&#13;
majority of the delegates to the National&#13;
Convention wejr-e'' in favor of Grant, but&#13;
many of theurfefused to obey their instructions,&#13;
anuVdthers were led off by the blandishmj&amp;&#13;
rfts of other candidates. The result&#13;
wa&gt;&lt;hat neither Graut nor Blaine, his )&gt;o-&#13;
Ji-tical opponent, had quite enough strength&#13;
to secure the- nomination, and the delegates&#13;
holding tho. halajicj) of power were&#13;
not disposed to give their support to either.&#13;
After a long and exceedingly animated&#13;
"contest, the Blaine delegates went with"fRe&#13;
scattering ones and nominated James A.&#13;
Garfield, the ballot ou which this was&#13;
achieved having shown ;iOij for Graut. Iu&#13;
commemoration of the fidelity of the "Old&#13;
Guard," as tho third-termers loved tostyle&#13;
themselves, medals were struck and delivered&#13;
ouo year later to all who had supported&#13;
the General. Dm ing the campaign&#13;
that followed Grant took an active interest&#13;
iii politics, aud on two or threo occasions&#13;
presided over groarpxrlitical meetings held&#13;
m the interest of Garliold. After the assassination&#13;
of the latter, however, he took&#13;
uoxjart in politics.&#13;
Trie death of General Ulysses S. Grant&#13;
closes one of the most remarkable careers&#13;
recorded iu history. So intimately jiave'&#13;
tho name ami achievements of ^the-'great&#13;
soldier been identified with- tj'ur. national&#13;
life that to a large p a r t of the American&#13;
plo the news-brings a sense of personal j&#13;
jereavement, recalling the anguish which&#13;
rent the popular heart when Washington, I&#13;
that other grand commander, was called to&#13;
his reward just at tho close of tho last century.&#13;
GeneraFGrant hns been held in peculiar&#13;
esteem and affection by tho people of&#13;
tho whole Union of late years, and nothing&#13;
more touching or beautiful has ever been&#13;
witnessed than the universally mpathy and&#13;
tenderness with which they*watched over&#13;
his last hours of weariness, weakness and&#13;
suffering. The fatal end has been seeu approaching&#13;
stealthily but with cruel and relentless&#13;
steps, and the bravo old hero facing&#13;
death with imperturbable and undismayed&#13;
demeanor made an intensely pathetic&#13;
and impressive picture, but one exquisitely&#13;
in keeping with the dying man's&#13;
character. He showed no fear of death,&#13;
which he had seen in close proximity and&#13;
terrible form scores of times before, but&#13;
the battlefield never subjected him to a&#13;
more awful strain than the slow sapping, of&#13;
his vitality by the dread and insidious disease&#13;
which had-seized him in its remorseless&#13;
grasp. To this stricken man, caught&#13;
in a power before which even his&#13;
iron will was hopeless, the popular&#13;
heart went out, and it is not to&#13;
much to say... t h a t could others&#13;
have assumed the burden of his wpe^nuudredsof-&#13;
chivalric souls Would^fiavo been&#13;
ready to take upon *them-rewes the pain&#13;
and weakness aud dejrtn, even, to relieve&#13;
the illustrious sufferer and spare him to&#13;
the country. .IWt it could not be, and the&#13;
dauntless^Jelider on mauy bloody battlefields^&#13;
ras left perforce to meet the dark&#13;
a struggle that must have but ouo&#13;
ending.&#13;
It is not easy,within the narrow confines&#13;
of a newspaper article, to do full justico&#13;
to the extraordinary character of General&#13;
Grant. Doubtless the eminence he will&#13;
occupy in history will be due chiefly to his&#13;
military achievements, and this will be&#13;
natural and just. But to the generation&#13;
contemporaneous with him he has presented&#13;
in his personal attributes many&#13;
claims upon the popular regard dissociated&#13;
from his purely military career—or&#13;
rather, he was seen to combine&#13;
in t h a t career the qualities&#13;
which most strongly appeal to Americans&#13;
for recognition and approval. He&#13;
was grounded in simple principles of manliness&#13;
and probity which distinguished him&#13;
all through his marvelous coarse, and he&#13;
rose from obscurity to groatness and success&#13;
by sheer force of merit and innate&#13;
ability. It is folly to talk of such men&#13;
coming to the front by accident. A&#13;
theologian has said tbat when the Almighty&#13;
wants great men He makes them.&#13;
The life af.Gaa*ral Grant would se«m to&#13;
verify this. From infancy to the breaking&#13;
out of the war his training had been&#13;
of the kind to fit him for the place destiny&#13;
had prepared for him, and his appearance&#13;
upon the stage of war was but the natural,&#13;
and simple working out of events which'&#13;
made him a necessity and. brought his ca&#13;
great war President disowned Grant's unassuming&#13;
merit and placed him in undisputed&#13;
control of the operations against th»&#13;
Confederacy. How well Grant vindicated&#13;
the trust reposed in him, the triumph o t t h *&#13;
Union cause following plans mapped out&#13;
by him remains f testify for ail time. II&#13;
was not of his own seeking t h a t he became&#13;
President. It was in obedience to t h e&#13;
people's will, and there can not be th«&#13;
least doubt that his own preference would&#13;
have beeu to remain at the head of the&#13;
army in the high and congenial office&#13;
ever memorable Presidential campaign of'k created for hint by Congress. But&#13;
the same simple principle which always&#13;
dominated his life made deference to tne&#13;
popular wish a duty, and he cheerfully&#13;
accepted it. His Presidential term of&#13;
service felt upon the troublous reconstruction&#13;
period, and some of his acts awoke&#13;
bitter personal, factional and partisau hostility;&#13;
but through every executive step&#13;
taken by him can be traced the desire to&#13;
do strict and impartial justice and to serve&#13;
the best interests of all the people of every&#13;
section. This has become so apparent t h a t t&#13;
the most malevolent political criticism&#13;
long since spent its force, and the value of&#13;
Grant's services as President has been conceded&#13;
without question or reservation.&#13;
In his private lifo General Grant haa&#13;
been a mo'del of uprightness aud propriety,&#13;
bis devotion to his family being one of his&#13;
distinguishing character is ties. So, from&#13;
whatever point we view him, he stands&#13;
"four square to every wind that blows."&#13;
The errors he made and the misfortunes&#13;
t h a t overtook him were due not to weakness&#13;
or moral lapses on his own part, but&#13;
to too great confidence in meu who were&#13;
unworthy and abused the trust reposed in&#13;
them by one too honest and true himself to*&#13;
suspect duplicity in others. He was of the&#13;
type that the world loves and admires,&#13;
and all who aro capable of appreciating&#13;
real nobility of character will weep in common&#13;
with the American people as they&#13;
realize the loss of this truly great and good&#13;
man.&#13;
BRIDGE BUILDING.&#13;
Ta^e-JCxtra&amp;frdinary Structure IJeinj- Constructed&#13;
Across t h e Firth of Forth. .&#13;
T h e ' g r e a t railroad b r i d g e across tho&#13;
F i r t h of Forth in S c o t l a n d will be. w h e n&#13;
completed one of t h e most r e m a r k a b l e&#13;
feats of engineering in the world. T b o&#13;
bridge will be m o r e t h a n a mile a n d a&#13;
half long, so high t h a t the l a r g e s t w a r -&#13;
ship can pass safely b e n e a t h it in a n y&#13;
p a r t of the channel, a n d so s t r o n g t h a t&#13;
the. heaviest r a i l w a y train can I*) r u n&#13;
Upon it at the highest rate of speed.&#13;
T h e principle of the bridge is k n o w n&#13;
as the cantilever. A powerful s t r u c t u r e&#13;
of steel, in shape n o t unlike that of the&#13;
w a l k i n g - b e a m of a paddlo-steumboat,&#13;
rest upon a pier. T h e weight on o n e&#13;
side balances t h a t on the other, l i n t&#13;
the a r m s ol the t w o cantilevers do not&#13;
m e e t .&#13;
I m a g i n e a n e n g i n e ' s walking-bean*&#13;
thirteen h u n d r e d feet l o n g — a l m o s t a.&#13;
q u a r t e r of a mile l o n g — r e s t i n g upon its&#13;
center, so that it projects in either direction&#13;
six h u n d r e d _aoid seventy-live feeL&#13;
N e x t fancy two such cantilevers 9-&#13;
placed in tho same line t h a t their ends&#13;
leave an abyss of three h u n d r e d a n d&#13;
fifty feet between -'them. This space is •&#13;
tilled with an o n l i u a r y g i r d e r bridge,&#13;
the ends of the two cantilevers s e r v i n g&#13;
for piers.&#13;
The process of c o n s t r u c t i n g this b r i d g e&#13;
is extremely interesting. The s t r u c t m —&#13;
is largely m a d e of sice! cylinders frjwrr'&#13;
eight to twelve feet in dianji^tcf, a n d&#13;
some of them two or t h r e t r m i n d r e d feet&#13;
long. T h e r e \ v j l H ) « a length of six&#13;
miles of s u c h " c y l i n d e r s in the bridge.&#13;
S o m e - p a r t s of tho bridge will cost m o r e&#13;
t h a n twenty dollars an inch to build.&#13;
F o u r g r e a t railway c o m p a n i e s u n i t e&#13;
to construct it, anil its total cost will be&#13;
m o r e than ten million dollars. It will&#13;
not be finished before tho y e a r 1890,&#13;
even if all goes well.— YouUCs Companion.&#13;
JEWELRY.&#13;
paeity im&gt; -pray;&#13;
if onr&#13;
nty&#13;
-tfV I'ama to tne front aa&#13;
The Fancies Which Aro In Vogae In Fashin'able&#13;
Circled.&#13;
A m e t h y s t is m u c h seen in jewelry o$&#13;
English m a n u f a c t u r e this season, a n d&#13;
is sometimes very effectively set in silver&#13;
lilagree.&#13;
Rosette fans m a d e of i n n u m e r a b l e&#13;
loops of ribbon a n d o r n a m e n t e d by gold&#13;
w i r e - g a u g e Urtterflies are m u c h worn.&#13;
Gold-coil n e c k l a c e s are again w o r n&#13;
a b o u t the neck. T h e clasp of such coils&#13;
is often a ' s e r p e n t ' s h e a d set with eyes&#13;
of rubies or a la*ge e m e r a l d . Either a&#13;
l a r g e singlo^Soil or o n e which encircles&#13;
t h e nej&amp;k"two or t h r e e times is equally&#13;
fijjshionable. &gt;&#13;
A p r e t t y bauble is the p e n d a n t m a d e&#13;
in s h a p e of a i r n n t i q n e l o c k a n d c h a s e d&#13;
in Ancient Greek c h a r a c t e r s . T h e s e a r e&#13;
quite large, a n d are w o r n on a velvet *&#13;
collar or a gold chain of s u b s t a n t i a l&#13;
p a t t e r n .&#13;
J a p a n e s e o r n a m e n t s in gold a n d si)&#13;
ver are now i m p o r t e d a n d are fashionable&#13;
for those who like oddity in tbeir&#13;
decorations. T h e J a p a n e s e have a v e r y&#13;
ingenious way of utilizing ivory a n d&#13;
the precious m e t a l s in combination*&#13;
m a k i n g most artistic effects in their orn&#13;
a m e n t s . —Philadclp/i ia Call.&#13;
. i&#13;
•&gt;l&#13;
]&#13;
"I&#13;
u.&#13;
A Sarcastic Husband.&#13;
Mr. P a c t o l u s W i l k i n s h a d been more*&#13;
t h a n usually a g g r a v a t i n g id his satires&#13;
o n his wife's c u l i n a r y ability.&#13;
" Y o u m e a n t h i n g , " said Mrs. W i l -&#13;
kins, b u r s t i n g into tears, " I won'fc&#13;
s p e a k a n o t h e r w o r d to y o u as l o n g as I&#13;
l i v e . "&#13;
" G r e a t H e a v e n s ! " said Mr. W. " T o m .&#13;
r u n out as quick as y o u can, a n d telV&#13;
S l e n k e r to send u p t w o bazoos, a Jcefctle-&#13;
drum, four p a r r o t s a n d a s t e a m c»lliope&#13;
at once. H u r r y n o w . "&#13;
" A n d w h a t u n d e r the sun d o yot*&#13;
w a n t with all t h a t foolish stuff?" exc&#13;
l a i m e d (he v o l u n t a r y .mirte.&#13;
" T o g e t a c c u s t o m e d to tho c h a n g e ,&#13;
m y d e a r , " replied Mr. W. " D o c t o r ^&#13;
9ay t h a t sudden c h a n g e s are a l w a y s&#13;
0 U*~&#13;
we, r*»r' the telegram, and, as he&#13;
look up the coat, which he had laid&#13;
aside, put it on again and observed&#13;
i n his quiet w a y ; " T h e Goveru-&#13;
Whib.» the conditions were being copied&#13;
ti/huec vl aauriuouuas Uu nmiuojni uofifuictecrisi wwie.-ri ea jpuroeuaeunutuuud luniro k-iiauoo n a n u s nuaiMS, WUU w a&#13;
to Lee. He w a r collected and courteous, -tcrppoaed to represent all the ideas of de&#13;
bo winx to each, but offered none hit* hand. l*f-e&gt;c"t*ijo^nn-, bVumti -i.nt -.dHiwd nnroamniinn.aftie, Hu ^o.r.a.cAe&amp; /UJ .r.e^c.«&#13;
'*&#13;
the leader of armies becansn it was seen&#13;
he had tha ability to command, and&#13;
no higher proof of Lincoln's statesmanship&#13;
and sagacity was given t h a n when the&#13;
fruitful of di.'O.ise.&#13;
" I ' l l go right h o m o to m y m o t h e r , "&#13;
said Mrs. W., as she fell in a hysterical&#13;
jmroxyjra,—Mk„FmlMn'±UA .&#13;
"V= - . r - - V . --:--4, . &gt; ' I . » '^A&#13;
.«+ ..»*-*•&#13;
-&#13;
1 * * • * * ,-y , " ^&#13;
A&#13;
-*K\' ,y&#13;
*&#13;
P E R S O N A L A N D L I T E R A R Y .&#13;
—It is estimated that $'200,000 was&#13;
Bpent for flowers at the funeral of Victpr&#13;
llugo.&#13;
—It is stated that the As tors have&#13;
paid at the rate of $6,000,1)00 per acre&#13;
for land in Wall street, New York.—JV.&#13;
Y. Sun.&#13;
—Miss Caroline Whiting recently celebrated&#13;
the liftieth or golden anniversary&#13;
of her connection as principal of&#13;
Public School No. 14, New York City.—&#13;
N. Y. Tribune.&#13;
—The Atlanta Constitution has settled&#13;
the fact that General Robert E.&#13;
Lee's middle name was Edward. "Lippincott's&#13;
Biographical Dictionary" and&#13;
"Chamber's' Encyclopedia" have it&#13;
Edmund.&#13;
—Dr. Logan, United States Minister&#13;
to Chili, who has received the degree of&#13;
Doctor of Laws from the University of&#13;
Santiago, is the lirst foreigner to receive&#13;
the honor from that seat of learning.&#13;
— Chicago Inter Ocean.&#13;
—Mrs. Gladstone is said to be in appearance&#13;
and manners the incarnation&#13;
of himplicity, though really one of the&#13;
shrewdest of women, carrying out her&#13;
husband's ideas in her relations with&#13;
others and never committing a blunder.&#13;
—Couut Joseph Parise VonHoehkap-&#13;
\«T, a wealthy young nobleman of&#13;
Trieste, Austria, was married to Miss&#13;
Minna Althof, a poor young American&#13;
artist, at Galveston, Tex., recently.&#13;
He met the young lady while making a&#13;
tour of this couutry last fall, and fell in&#13;
love.&#13;
—The late Charles O'Conor, after a&#13;
visit to Ireland, began to sign his name&#13;
with a single n—because, as J u d g e&#13;
Uuty suggested when asked the reason,&#13;
_liis royal forefathers had done so.&#13;
•4Yos," said a bystander, '•the Irish&#13;
Kings had always been so p o o m s ' n e v e r&#13;
to be able to make both wn's meet-'' —&#13;
X. Y. Mail.&#13;
—Dr. William Perry, of Exeter, N.&#13;
H.. in bis ninety-seVenth year, and the&#13;
oldest living graduate of Harvard, accompanied&#13;
Robert Fulton on the trial&#13;
trip of the first steamboat, August 10.&#13;
1S07. The old doctor, who is portrayed&#13;
in his granddaughter's (Sarah Drue&#13;
J e w e t t ) story, "The Country Doctor,''&#13;
insists, that the name of the crafc was&#13;
Kfukeriue of Clermont—Boston JourniK&#13;
„ '&#13;
— A r i n g w a s m a d e b y a M r . G e n n e t ,&#13;
of R i c h m o n d , V : \ . , f o r M r , J a c o b E z e -&#13;
k i e l , o n t h e o c c a s i o n of h i s m a r r i a g e t o&#13;
M i s s C a t h e r i n e d e C a s t r o M y e r s , J u n e&#13;
10, 18H5. W h e n t h e t w a i n c e l e b r a t e d&#13;
t h e i r s i l v e r w e d d i n g , i n 1800, M r . G e n -&#13;
n e t a d d e d o r w e l d e d a n o t h e r r i n g o n&#13;
t h e lirst o n e , a n d l a t e l y t h e t w o wtjr-es&#13;
e n t t o R i c h m o n d f r o m C j i x e m l i a t i ,&#13;
w h e r e M r . K / e k i e l residesv-fgr M r . G e n -&#13;
n c t t o a t t a c i i t h e t h i n i r i u g t o t h e o t h e r s&#13;
f o r t h e g o l d e n W e d d i n g . — X . 0. Times'&#13;
- - T w o y e a r s HG;O G h a r l e s T . R a y m o n d .&#13;
- * " p o o r c l e r k i n N e w Y o r k , .secretly m a r -&#13;
r i e d a d a u g h t e r of e x - M a y o r E l y , a&#13;
m i l l i o n a i r e , of S o u t h N o r w a l k , N . J .&#13;
S i n c e t h e n t h e y h a v e l i v e d us u n m a r r i e d&#13;
p e o p l e , a n d t h e y o u n g l a d y h a s r e c e i v e d&#13;
m u c h a t t e n t i o n f r o m o t h e r g e n t l e m e n .&#13;
T h e s e c r e t I n - c a m e k i u v v n r e c e n t l y , a n d&#13;
t h e y o u n g Jady b e g a n a c t i o n f o r a d i -&#13;
v o r c e in t h e N e w Y o r k c o u r t s , b u t t h e&#13;
m i l l i o n a i r e h a s b e c a m e R e c o n c i l e d , t h e&#13;
s u i t is w i t h d r a w n , a n d M r . aTuT~~Mr-.&#13;
R a y m o n d w o n t o i v a w i e x t e n d e d w e d -&#13;
d i n g t o u r . — A'. V. st/n.&#13;
H U M O R O U S .&#13;
—No intention h s yet been manifested&#13;
by-people who u&gt;e.the telephone&#13;
to revise the customary exclamation&#13;
•'Hello!" into "Shcolol1' — Boston Gazette&#13;
— •'John, w h a t - i s "the best thing to&#13;
"feed a parrot"on') M asked an elderly&#13;
lady of her bachelor brother, who hated&#13;
parrots. ••Arsenic.1' grullly answered&#13;
John.—A". Y. lndcpenavnt.&#13;
— Frank showed the picture on his&#13;
slate. " I t ' s awful bat!,"' said teasing&#13;
Kate. " J u s t like -the small-pox."&#13;
" W h v ? " asked lie. "Because it's&#13;
sketching, don't yon see?'1—i'unJccrs&#13;
Gazette.&#13;
•—Teacher to little pupil:. "Where are&#13;
you going, NeilieH" " P a p a is going&#13;
to take us to Florida. a^ainJ-^ -"Can&#13;
yon tell what the Capital of Florida is?"&#13;
" Yes'm. It's the money they get&#13;
from boarders." — tiltsbargh Chronicle.&#13;
—Romantic young ladies who o p e n&#13;
their &lt;'^sements a t night-and gav;e pensively&#13;
upon the moon are very foolish.&#13;
The moon is "J40,000 miles distant, and&#13;
if there was a man in it, they couldn't&#13;
get him. What's the use o£ 'being unreasonable?—.&#13;
V. y. rout.&#13;
—In Cuba, when tlje Government&#13;
want-* to discipline an editor, it suspends&#13;
his p i p e r for torty days. This is great&#13;
fun fur the editor. He gets a rest, goes&#13;
fishing, has a good time generally, and&#13;
his subscribers can't recover a cent for&#13;
the papers they didn't get—Burlington&#13;
Free Press.&#13;
—A young mother,, traveling with her&#13;
-Infant child, wrote the following letter&#13;
to her husband at home: " W e are all&#13;
doing first rate and enjoying ourselves&#13;
very inuch. We are in excellent health.&#13;
The boy can crawl about on all fours.&#13;
Hoping that the snrne can be said of&#13;
you, 1 remain," etc.—N. Y. Times.&#13;
— " T h e r e , " said a woman to a trump,&#13;
"is n nice dinner; but I shall expect&#13;
you to saw a little wood for i t . " ' "Certainly,&#13;
m a d a m , " politely replied the&#13;
tramp, attacking the dinner with both&#13;
hands, " b u t you will pardon me. I&#13;
trust, if I venture to, correct your Enflish."&#13;
"My w h a t ? " "Your English,&#13;
ome modern authorities claim that&#13;
f ' a m m a r is plaved out. I know better.&#13;
, he word 'saw is a verb; in this case,&#13;
singular number and imperfect tonse.&#13;
You can not say: 'J shall expect you to&#13;
saw w o o d / — ' I shall oxpeot vou to BOO&#13;
wood' is correct. If you will indicate&#13;
the pile t o me I will now look_at it as 1&#13;
jpasa out.11—Boston Transcript.&#13;
H O M E , F A R M A N D G A R D E N .&#13;
—Coffee without sugar, after rising&#13;
in the moruing, is regarded a.s an effectual&#13;
remedy for chills, fever and disorders&#13;
incident to malaria. — Detroit,&#13;
Post.&#13;
—A simple test for the detection of&#13;
lead in drinking water is provided by&#13;
tincture of cochineal, a few drops of&#13;
which will color the water blue, if there&#13;
is the remotest trace of lead present.—&#13;
Philadelphia Press.&#13;
•—It is noticeable .that only red, scarlet,&#13;
white and brown threads are the&#13;
favorite dishes of carpet-bugs. They&#13;
roll insect puwder, as a swent morsel,&#13;
under their tongues, and bathe in carbolic&#13;
acid with impunity.—Boston&#13;
Utobc. v&#13;
—Corn and potatoes may often be&#13;
top-dressed to advantage after planting,&#13;
providing line manure is used. The&#13;
cultivation of these crops (luring th&lt;*&#13;
season will mix the manure with the&#13;
soil much more perfectly than it c mid&#13;
be if plowed under.—„V. Y. Herald.&#13;
---The Gardener's Monthly says that&#13;
tho-ic who have set out trees the past&#13;
spring should take the lirst chance of a&#13;
dry spell to loosen the soil deeply about&#13;
them wi h a .fork, and immediately&#13;
after beat it down hard again with the&#13;
heel or with some tool suitable for that&#13;
purpose.&#13;
—Good crops of beets may be grown&#13;
on anv land rich enoujfh and in suitable&#13;
tilth for corn. Drilled in rows two feet&#13;
and eight or ten inches apart, much of&#13;
the work may be done by Hox-e hoes.&#13;
But the thinning must be done by the&#13;
hand hoe, and unless properly attended&#13;
to in time the beet crop will not amount&#13;
•to much.—Ar. )'. Tribune.&#13;
—To protect squash vines against the&#13;
root-borer, dissolve an ounce of saltpeter&#13;
in a gallon of water. Pour this&#13;
freely on the young plants u n t i l ' t h e&#13;
earth is thoroughly w e t I n four or&#13;
five days repeat the application. T'rob-.&#13;
ably about three times will be often&#13;
enough. This will make the vinos grow&#13;
very rapidly, — Chicago Times.&#13;
—The reason for a rotation of crops&#13;
is that no two plants of different kinds&#13;
require the same sub-tances in the same&#13;
proportion for.their nourishment. The&#13;
grains aad grasses may soon exhaust&#13;
the supply ' of silica, Thes : ; should,&#13;
therefore, not immediately succeed eacli&#13;
other in rotat':on. They ought to be&#13;
followed by a crop which needs less of&#13;
silica but more of potash.m' some other&#13;
mineral .salts. Ajie-lcTwhich would not&#13;
yield a good.*eeond crop of wheat may,&#13;
even without manure, give a gtJoTerop&#13;
_jof"clover, of turnips or of carrots.—&#13;
Chicago Tribune.&#13;
T R E A T M E N T O F S H E E P .&#13;
W h y t h e If'.ihlt o f \ V u s h i n ( r S h e o p H e f u r e&#13;
S h e a r i n g ; S h o u l d l i e A b a n d o n e d .&#13;
T h e r e a r c m i m v r e a s o n s w h v t h e f e w&#13;
g r o w e r s YVHVU still p e r s i s t s h o u l d a b a n d o n&#13;
t h e h a b i t of w a s h i n g t h e ' r s h e e p b e f o r e&#13;
s h e a r i n g , a n d w e k n o w of n o t a s i n g l y&#13;
a r g u m e n t in "its f a v o r . T h e p r a c ' i e j&#13;
w a s i n a u g u r a t e d a t a n e a r l y d a y , a n d it&#13;
is a r e l i c of o l d t i m e s , w h e n t*»e w o o l&#13;
s h o r n f r o m t h e s m a l l flocks in t h e&#13;
E a s t e r n S t a t e s w a s l a r g e l y u s e d u p a t&#13;
h o m e . T h e n it w a s - n v e e s s a r y t o w a s h&#13;
it e i t h e r b e f o r e o r a f t e r s h e a r i n g , to&#13;
p r e p a r e it f o r c a r d i n g ' a n d s p i n n i n g .&#13;
T h o s e d a y s a r e p a s s e d , a n d b o t h t h e&#13;
s h e . ' [ K i n d t h e i r o w n e r s o u g h t t o b e g l a d&#13;
U f i r : - *&#13;
' T h e y o l k in a h e a l t h y fleece is n a -&#13;
tim^-s p r e s e r v a t i o n of t h e liber. It. is a&#13;
s o a p y m a t t e r , w i t h a s t r o n g p o t a s h&#13;
b a s e , r e s e m b l i n g n o o t h e r a n i m a l s e c r e -&#13;
t i o n ; it is, in f a c t , a s o a p , w i t h m o r e o r&#13;
less fro.' oil. It p r e s e r v e s t h e e l a s t i c i t y&#13;
of t h e fiber a n d s h o u l d b e left in t h e&#13;
w o o l u n t i l it is w a n t e d f o r m a n u f a c t u r -&#13;
i n g US'\ M a n u f a c t u r e r - s w e l l k n o w t h a t&#13;
s c o u r e d w o o l , in t i m e , b e c o m e s b r i t t l e&#13;
a n d l o s e s its e l a s t i c i t y , while, u n w a s h e d&#13;
r e t a i n s a l l its g o o I q u a l i t i e s i n d e t i u i l e l y .&#13;
It is d o u b t f u l if a n y b o d y e v e r s a w a&#13;
mo'.K in u n w a s h e d w o o l . I t is, a s a&#13;
r u l e , f r e e f r o m a l l v e r m i n . T h e p e r -&#13;
c e n t a g e of y o l k in h e a l t h y i l o c k s of&#13;
e v e n g r a d e is q u i t e u n i f o r m , b u t v a r y -&#13;
i n g in d i f f e r e n t b r e e d s f r o m t w e n t y - l i v e&#13;
p e r c e n t , i u t h e L e i c e s t e r a n d o t h e r&#13;
c o a r s e b r e e d s t o fifty t o s e v e n t y - l i v e p e r&#13;
c e n t , in t h e v e r y finest S a x o n . • he4HK4tsa&#13;
h v a y s c a r r y i n g m o r e t h a n t h e e w e s ,&#13;
T h r s y s t e m of w a s h i n g in c o l d w a t e r o n&#13;
t h e s h e e p ' s b a c k n e v e r r e s u l t s in a&#13;
w a s h e d tlecc-e tit for t h e m a n u f a c t u r e r ,&#13;
b u t o n l y t h e e r a d i c a t i o n of a n u n k n o w n&#13;
a n d u n c e r t a i n p a r t of t h e y o l k , c o n -&#13;
t a i n e d i n t h e fleece, w h i c h is t h u s&#13;
c h a n g e d i n t o a n u n m e r c h a n t a b l e c o m -&#13;
m o d i t y t o b e sA&gt;ld o n i t s u n c e r t a i n m e r -&#13;
i t s a s t o s h T i n t r r r g e : — T h c ~ n a m e o r d r s ^ -&#13;
i g n a t i o n of washed w o o l h a s c e a s e d t o&#13;
h a v e a n y c h a r m , a n d t h e s o o n e r t h e&#13;
p r a c t i c e of w a s h i n g is e n t i r e l y a b a n -&#13;
d o n e d t h e b e t t e r it w i l l b e f o r T f u T s h e e p ,&#13;
t h e i r o w n e r s a n d t h e t r a d e g e n e r a l l y .&#13;
— Wool Journal.&#13;
^ - • »&#13;
Study of Things.&#13;
Parents and teachers will do well to&#13;
turn the thoughts of the voting to the&#13;
careful observation and study of particular&#13;
things round about them. Bv&#13;
calling attention to the robin that hops&#13;
from limb to limb, one may lead a child&#13;
to observe its plumage, its habits, its&#13;
nest, its eggs, its winter habits, etc., till,&#13;
interest being aroused and powers of&#13;
observation stimulated, the child become^&#13;
not only an ornithologist, but&#13;
able to observe and reflect upon a'him-'&#13;
dred other things. So a flower, a stone,&#13;
the sight of a star, may open the gate&#13;
to vast and wonderfully entertaining&#13;
realms of t h o u g h t Begin soon, that&#13;
observation and rollcction'mav be early&#13;
O H I O L A D I E S ' D O G S .&#13;
T h e CHrciimittaiicea of tint I&gt;eattv of t h e&#13;
Pftta of J u d g e T b u r m a u ' K D a u g h t e r a n d&#13;
Mr*. D o n n PJutt.&#13;
[Philadelphia Tirar« Loiter.]&#13;
T h e g t o r y l a t e l y told i u a L o n d o n l e t t e r&#13;
to t h e Times of b o w t h e u n a l a d i e s of t h a t&#13;
t o w n Jeuvo t h e i r d o g g i e s ' c u r d s for t h e i r&#13;
fr'ieudH w h u u m a k i n g ealls c a n be m a t c h e d&#13;
Jn tbtu c o u n t r y . E x - S « n a t o r T h u r m a n ' s&#13;
d a u g h t e r , w h o lives iu N e w Y o r k , a s t h e&#13;
w r i t e r w a s told iu t h e s p r i n g , w a s w e a r i n g&#13;
d e e p m o u r n i n g for h e r d o g , w h o d i e d i n&#13;
N e w Y o r k t w o o r t h r e e m o n t h s a g o , a n d&#13;
s h e us'ed b l a c k - e d g e d c a r d s a n d s t a t i o n e r y&#13;
Bolely ou h i s - a c c o u u t . A f t e r h i s d e a t h s u e&#13;
h a d a b l a c k b r o a d c l o t h s u i t m a d e for h i m ,&#13;
a n d w e a r i n g t h i s a u d a n e c k t i e h e w a s&#13;
p l a c e d i n a h a u d s o m e coffin a n d s e n t t o&#13;
h e r f a t h e r in Ohio t o be i n t e r r e d iu t h e&#13;
f a m i l y b u r y i n g - g r o u n d , b u t t h i s J u d g e&#13;
T h u r m a n t h o u g h t w a s t o o m u c h , so h e&#13;
h u d t h e d o g b u r i e d e l s e w h e r e . B u t&#13;
w h e n M r s . D o n n P i u t t ' s b l a c k - a n d - t a u&#13;
d o g F r a n k , w h o m s h e h a d h a d a b o u t&#13;
t w e l v e y e a r s , d i e d a b o u t a y e a r a g o , a t&#13;
h e r c o u n t r y p l a c e in Ohio, s h e h a d h i m&#13;
p e r m a u e n t l y p l a c e d in a h a n d s o m e u e w&#13;
s t o n e v u u l t w h i c h Colonel P i a t t h a d&#13;
a m u s e d himself w i t h b u i l d i n g n o t l o n g b e -&#13;
fore.&#13;
This d o g F r a n k w a s v e r y i n t e l l i g e n t ,&#13;
a n d w a s s p e c i a l l y r e m a r k a b l e for h i s m e m -&#13;
o r y of t h e f e w p e r s o n s to w h o m h e w a s&#13;
r e a l l y a t t a c h e d , for, w h i l e n o t cross, h e&#13;
d i d n o t t a k e a f a n c y t o m a n y p e r s o n s . A&#13;
l a d y w h o m h e h a d k n o w n a n d loved i n&#13;
W a s h i n g t o n , w h e u Colonel a n d M r s . P i a t t&#13;
lived t h e r e , v i s i t e d t h e i r h o u s e i n Ohio in&#13;
lfcW:2 for t h e first t i m e iu s i x y e a r s , a n d t h e&#13;
dog, w h o s c a r c e l y n o t i c e d w h o h a d b e e n&#13;
s p e n d i n g t h e s u m m e r in t h e h o u s e , o r t h e&#13;
n e i g h b o r s , p r o m p t l y r e c o g n i z e d a m i&#13;
w a r m l y w e l c o m e d his old friend on h e r a r -&#13;
rival-, a n d w a s h e r i n s e p a r a b l e c£onpuni_oa_&#13;
d u r i n g h e r s t a y , in s p i t e of a g e a n d infirmities,&#13;
l e a p i n g to m e e t h e r w h e n e v e r .she a p -&#13;
p e a r e d .&#13;
«« • i —&#13;
T H E R E a r e 103 d i f f e r e n t s p e c i e s of&#13;
l h a r k i . T a k e y o u r choice.—Detroit Free&#13;
Frets.&#13;
" I F e e l So W e l l . "&#13;
" I w a n t t o t h a n k y o u f o r tolling m e of&#13;
Dr. P i e r r e ' s ' F a v o r i t e P r e s c r i p t i o n , ' "&#13;
write** a l a d y t o h e r friend. " F o r a long&#13;
t i m e I w a s unlit t o a t t e n d t o t h e w o r k of&#13;
m y h o u s e h o l d . I k e p t a b o u t , b u t I felt&#13;
t h o r o u g h l y miserable. I l i a d t e r r i b l e b a r k -&#13;
acheH, a n d b c a r i n g - d o w n HensatioriK a m m s&#13;
m e a n d w a s q u i t e weak a n d d i s c o u r a g e d . I&#13;
bent a n d g o t s o m e of t h e m e d i c i n e a f t e r receiving&#13;
y o u r letter, a n d it b a n cured m e . I&#13;
h a r d l y k n o w myself. I feel s o well."&#13;
P H Y S I C I A N S a p p e a r t o be v e r y b a r d to&#13;
s a t i s f y . If t h e i r p a t i e n t s g e t well t h e y&#13;
lose t h e m , a n d if t h e y d i e t h e y a l s o lose&#13;
t h e m .&#13;
T H S rrfan In t h e moon mtret feel all&#13;
up wheu he is reduced to the l u t q u a r t * .&#13;
— — «. — -. —&#13;
D O N ' T diKgust e v e r y b o d y by httwltxM^&#13;
blowing a n d s p i t t i n g , b u t use D r . Ba^TO&#13;
C a t a r r h H e m e d y u u d be cured.&#13;
BA!fA!f4H a r e mors easily recocnixed t »&#13;
t h e fall t h a n a t a;:y other u i a e of t k e T«af»&#13;
—Fretzel's Weekl'j.&#13;
PiKK'sTooTMACnr. Dnofrt ci : s in I rain*&#13;
Olemi'tSulj/iiur Snap hi'Ais uud bcamiue^. 2Qc,.&#13;
G E R M A N COK.N HKMOVKK ktlis Coras t D u D t o a a ,&#13;
C A N a p l a c e t o teach n w i m r j i n g b e cm!fr4-&#13;
dire-in-ity school?—AtUebtro 4diccaU, .&#13;
" O , Ix»r» n i t ' I m A g a i n ! "&#13;
I n t h e e a r l y d a y s of M e t h o d i s m in Scotl&#13;
a n d , a c e r t a i n c o n g r e g a t i o n , w h e r e t h e r e&#13;
w a s b u t o n e rich m a n , desired t o build a&#13;
new c h a p e l . A c h u r c h m e e t i n g w a s held.&#13;
T h e old rich S c o t c h m a n r o s e a n d s a i d :&#13;
" B r e t h r e n , we d i n n a need" a new chapel:&#13;
I'll give £ 5 for r e p a i r s . "&#13;
J u s t t h e n a b i t of p l a s t e r falling from t h e&#13;
ceiling h i t h i m on t h e h e a d .&#13;
L o o k i n g u p a n d seeing h o w b a d it w a s .&#13;
he s a i d : " B r e t h r e n , i t ' s w o r s e t h e m I&#13;
t h o u c h t ; I'll m a k e it 5 0 p u n ' . "&#13;
" O h , L o r d , " e x c l a i m e d a d e v o t e d b r o t h e r&#13;
o n a b a c k s e a t , " h i t 'im a g a i n ! "&#13;
T h e r e a r e m a n y h u m a n tal&gt;oriijicle!»&#13;
-which a r e in s o r e need of r a d i c a l building&#13;
over, b u t we p u t t e r a n d fuss a m i r e p a i r in&#13;
s p o t s w i t h o u t s a t i s f a c t o r y r e s u l t s . I t is&#13;
only when we a r e p e r s o n a l l y a l a r m e d a t&#13;
t h e real d a n g e r t h a t we a c t i n d e p e n d e n t l y ,&#13;
a n d d o t h e right thing. T h e n it is t h a t we&#13;
m o s t keenly regret. b e c a u s e we did n o t&#13;
s o o n e r u s e o u r j u d g m e n t , follow t h e a d \ ice&#13;
b o r n of t h e experience of o t h e r * a n d j u m p&#13;
a w a y front o u r jKrils.&#13;
T h o u s a n d s of p e r s o n s w h o will read t h i s&#13;
p a r a g r a p h a r e in abject misery t*&gt;-day&#13;
when t h e y might 1&gt;c in a s a t i s f a c t o r y cond&#13;
i t i o n . T h e y a r e weak, lifeless, \\\\\ of o d d&#13;
aches a n d p a i n s , a n d every y e a r t h e y k n o w&#13;
. t h e y a r e getting worse-, even t h o u g h t h e&#13;
bext d o c t o r s a r e p a t c h i n g tliem in s p o t s .&#13;
T h e origin of t h e s e a c h e s a n d p a i n s .is t h e&#13;
k i d n e y s a n d liver, a n d if they would build&#13;
t h e s e a l l o v e r new w i t h W a r n e r ' s safe cure&#13;
a s millions h a v e d o n e , a n d cease investing&#13;
t h e i r m o n e y in m i s e r a b l y 'unsuccessful&#13;
p a t c h w o r k , t h e y would b e well a n d h a p p y&#13;
a n d would bless t h e d a y when t h e L o r d&#13;
" h i t ' e m " a n d i n d i c a t e d t h e c o i m n n n - s e u s e&#13;
course for t h e m t o p u r s u e . — L o n d o n Press.&#13;
all dbxtrdurAQLthcItlQod, use.-&#13;
Don't Discharge your Doctor&#13;
But tell him frankly you are&#13;
getting desperate. Perhaps h e&#13;
will review his treatment, ai»d&#13;
advise a trial of&#13;
Ayer's Sarsaparilla. In this case, as in many others,&#13;
the change worked wonders : —&#13;
T h r e e years ago I suffered greatly f r o m&#13;
Liver Complaint, General Debility, Lo&amp;a&#13;
of Appetite, and Headache; m y fitomacb&#13;
wan disordered, a n d . although I a t e&#13;
sparingly, of carefully selected food, I wasiu&#13;
constant distress from indigestion. I&#13;
w a i troubled w i t h sleeplessness, and b e -&#13;
came so emaciated a n d feeble that I waaunuble&#13;
t o leave my room. After remaining&#13;
in thi«&gt; reduced condition over a&#13;
month, a n d receiving no benefit from t h e&#13;
medicines prescribed for m e . I obtained&#13;
my doctor's consent to a trial of Ayer'BSarsaparilla.&#13;
Before I hud finished t h e&#13;
first bottle of tliis medicine I began to i m -&#13;
prove. By it's continued use t h e troHblea&#13;
with my liver and stomach gradually disappeared,&#13;
and my appetite a n d s t r e n g t h&#13;
r e t u r n e d . After takihir eight b o t t l e s m y&#13;
health w a s fully restored, and I a m againable&#13;
to attend t o my business. — Isaac D .&#13;
Y a r r i n g t o n , B u n k e r Hill St., C h u r i e s t o w a&#13;
-District, Boston, Mass.&#13;
A P A I N T I N G is called a' r a r e w o r k s o m e -&#13;
t i m e s b e c a u s e it i s n ' t well done.—Bosto&gt;i&#13;
Transcript.&#13;
AM " P l a y e d O u t . "&#13;
" D o n ' t k n o w w h a t ails me l a t e l y . C a n ' t&#13;
e a t w^'ll,—can't sleep well. C a n ' t w o r k ,&#13;
a n d d o n ' t enjoy doing anythiiii;. A i n ' t really&#13;
sick, a n d I really a i n ' t well. Feel nfl&#13;
kind o' p l a y e d o u t , s o m e w a y . " T h a t is&#13;
w h a t scores of men s a y every d a y . If they&#13;
wonld. t a k e D r . P i e r r e ' s " G o l d e n Medical&#13;
D i s c o v e r y " t h e y would-soort h a v e n o occ&#13;
a s i o n t o s a y i t . It purities t h e b l o o d .&#13;
t o n e s u p t h e s y s t e m a n d fortifies ifcafjainst&#13;
d i s e a s e . I t is a g r e a t a n t i - b i l i o u s r e m e d y&#13;
&amp;d well.&#13;
Ayer's Sarsaparilla.&#13;
Prepared by D r . J . C. A y c r &amp; Co., Lowell, Maaa. Sold b y Druggists. Price $1 , six bottle*, $&amp;.&#13;
PARSONS'/ PURGATIVE PIUS P o » i t l T e l y cure S I C K - H E A D A C H E , BiliousneBB, a n d all I/TVEH » n d B O W E L C o m p l a i n t s , M A i A f l l A .&#13;
B L O O D POISON*, and 6 k m D i a c a a c a (ONE P I L L A DOSEl. P a r F e m a l e C o m p l a i n t s t h e a e PiUaj&#13;
h a v e n o equal. " I And t h e m a v a l u a b l e Cathartic a i d I.iv»-r Pill.—Dr.-T. M. P a l m e r , M o n t i c « U o , T\a."&#13;
" I n m y p r a c t i c e I u s e n o o t h e r . — J . D e n n i s o n , M.J}., D e W i t t , I o w a . " Sold e v e r y w h e r p , o r »'«»t b y&#13;
m a i l for 2 6 o t a . i n atampa. V a l u a b l e iniormmUoa F &amp; E E . I . S. J O H N S O N &amp; CO., B O S T O N , M ^ * * * ,&#13;
H A Y - F E V E R .&#13;
I Uavc been a great sufferer&#13;
from Hay-Fever for&#13;
15 years. I read of t h e&#13;
wondrous cures by Ely'B&#13;
Crcum Dulni and thought I&#13;
would try once more. After&#13;
one application I was&#13;
wonderfully helped. Two&#13;
weeks ago I commenced&#13;
uMnjj It and now 1 feel entirely&#13;
cured. It i s t h e n e a t -&#13;
est discovery known —&#13;
HvnjkwrL CLARK, Farmer.&#13;
Lee, Mats.&#13;
CREAM BALM&#13;
!,»Be:»tned anenvlaMerer*-&#13;
uutTon wherever known,&#13;
displacing all other preparation*.&#13;
A particle JH ap-&#13;
CATABEH T H E B O S S&#13;
COLLAR P f l B&#13;
O F X.IXC A N D L C A T B E H .&#13;
N O M O R E S O R E 2 S T E C 2 C S .&#13;
Jt will rioslovi'ly prevent ^tinflne and cure aore •&#13;
W i t h e r * . Horsy can !&gt;•• wi/rked while e n r e Is perfeclcd.&#13;
Harness maker* X'111 refund mnnfj it not.&#13;
«:i;1x!ierl afrer :':) d»v&lt; trial. I'e n i p ' to ft e l P » d l a r g e&#13;
• H I ' X T R R &lt; j t R T I K . H a d t i o D , W U .&#13;
R. U. AWARE&#13;
plle&lt;&#13;
Prlc&#13;
HAY-FEVER&#13;
pal&#13;
1st*&#13;
lied Into eacli nostril," n o p a i n ; atrrreahle to-us*1,&#13;
c. by IIIMII o r a l druKgist-. '-...! . . '&#13;
E L V M i O T H E U s . I m i g K i s t a , Owe^o. N. V.&#13;
T H A T&#13;
V C W S i y b«*rlnx a red tin tag; t h a t Lortllard*&#13;
^ • • ^ / R o w L e n t ' f i n e c u t ; t h a t L o r l l l a x d *&#13;
N a v y C l i p p i n f t , a n d that Lord lard's S n a f f s , a r *&#13;
the best antf c h e a p e n , quality c o n s i d e r e d ?&#13;
Lorilhrd's Climax Plug&#13;
ts. fcenU t o r circular.&#13;
T H E M A R K E T S .&#13;
N t:\v&#13;
I.IVK s'nk'K-outic&#13;
S l u - e p&#13;
HI&gt;K-&lt;&#13;
F J . o r U — C o o d t o Cl&gt;o;ct&gt;&#13;
OI(!\. .&#13;
^1 411&#13;
4 ( h i&#13;
4 7") &lt;.&lt;&gt;• 4 r-o&#13;
,-? ' i; - .us&#13;
••-. 0 .VI&#13;
.) iiO&#13;
developed. It is a rare privilege to&#13;
open fields of thought td the eager miud&#13;
of childhood.—Golden Jiule.&#13;
WHKAT—So. 2 Hcd&#13;
•• -No. - Sprtnjr: :v. ::r::;:-;&#13;
CORN&#13;
OATS—Mixed W e s t e r n . . . .&#13;
KYK&#13;
P O R K - M e s s&#13;
LARD—Stettin&#13;
CHKESE&#13;
WOOL—Domestic&#13;
CHICAGO.&#13;
BEEVES—Extra..-&#13;
Chokx1&#13;
Meiiium ,.&#13;
Hutehers' Stock&#13;
ltifcrior Cuttle •'...&#13;
HOGS— Live—liood to Choice.&#13;
S H E E P&#13;
1JUTTKK—Creamery . . . . . . . . .&#13;
Good t o Choice Dairy&#13;
EGGS— Fre:*h ,_._&#13;
F L O U R - W i n t e r . . . . . ;&#13;
S p r i n j f /.'.•&#13;
Patent.s /.'&#13;
G H A I N - W h o u t , No. 3&#13;
HfcCorn&#13;
Oats&#13;
Kye. No. -'.&#13;
B;irloy. No. 4 . . . ,&#13;
BROOM CORN—&#13;
Sclf-Wprkinir&#13;
Curjwt and Viurl&#13;
Crooked&#13;
POTATOKS-U&gt;u.&gt;&#13;
POlUv^-Meas.&#13;
LArVD— Seam&#13;
L U M R K R -&#13;
/ C o r a m o n Dressed Siding...&#13;
/ Flooring.&#13;
C o m m o n B o a r d s . . .&#13;
Fencing-&#13;
L a t h . . .&#13;
Shingles&#13;
EAST LIBERTY&#13;
CATTLE—Rest&#13;
Fair t o Good&#13;
HOGS—Yorkers ,&#13;
Philadelphias&#13;
8 H E K P - R e &gt; t . . .&#13;
Common&#13;
B A L T I M O R E&#13;
— r r - M H — f r f . i «:&gt;&#13;
1 W (;.'. 1 111&#13;
- - - ^ 1 - - - ^ - f ) « ^ -&#13;
tiT) (•'. M'&#13;
11 2.'&gt; Gill t,2'-J&#13;
ti TT'i^. ti SI&#13;
4 © / t»4&#13;
S7 ty 36&#13;
S T A N D A R D S C H O O L O F&#13;
Sh^ft-Hand and Type-Writing,.&#13;
8./4. BEKTON, Principal, »4S-State St., CWra«e.&#13;
lOU&amp;OXm T A 1 6 H T B Y H A I L . Bead tor&#13;
Circular and Particular*.&#13;
F R A Z E R&#13;
AXLE GREASE. B e a t I n t h e w o r l d . O e t t h e f e n n l a * . * r -&#13;
e r y p a c k a g e h i t a o u r T r a d « ' - m » r l i i»itd ta&#13;
m a r k e d F r t t x e r ' a . S O L D E V t K Y W H l l i&#13;
f « 00&#13;
;'» t&gt;0&#13;
\ 40&#13;
'Z 75&#13;
'2 00&#13;
4 15&#13;
1 75&#13;
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4 50&#13;
it.&#13;
&amp;.&#13;
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(&lt;i&#13;
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7 5 - ftjfc&#13;
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40 &amp;&#13;
« lft&#13;
5 JO&#13;
50&#13;
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50&#13;
50&#13;
80&#13;
10&#13;
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15&#13;
as&#13;
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75&#13;
5714&#13;
4*14&#13;
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4 3 '&#13;
34^¾ la^i&#13;
2 (iA 3&#13;
30 dt 45&#13;
10 00 i&lt;(.10 -11&#13;
« &amp;.M»W (i 55&#13;
18 00 ®20 SO&#13;
11 50 %\2 00&#13;
10 00 &amp;l\ 00&#13;
1 35 @ 1 75&#13;
1 «5 *t 3 45&#13;
A phvsiciati of lat'Ke iinictkv *»y^-6f KiUfti''* FO&lt;H1:&#13;
"1 canV:iT of thin preparation of food that It ha^ nrr* r&#13;
fa led inJ. or tailed to atjr.ce \vh&lt;-u nivon*trK-;l&gt; arcurding&#13;
t o niv directions, W i t h scrupulous cat&gt;\&#13;
tbcre n e e d bo v e r y little troriMe from bowel coinplaints;&#13;
and to t h i s I ancrih^ tlio fart that I tu»\e&#13;
never yet lost a child witli, any form uf iliarrtitta ur&#13;
cholera i n f a n t u m . " ECZEMA!&#13;
My w i f e rirva.been sorely afflicted with E c z e m a or&#13;
S*H-R&amp;*um from infancy. W e tried e v e r y k n o w n&#13;
remedy. hnfXo no avail. S i n ' w a s also afflicted with&#13;
a periodical'ncrvous lieadiuhi*. f.itnetlrtu'S followed&#13;
hy an i n t e r m i t t e n t fever, so tli:u tier life riocante a&#13;
burden to li-r. Finally I d e t e : m i n e U to try S. S. S.&#13;
Shu c o m m e t n i d s.'ven weefcs'Sjro. After t h e third&#13;
bottle t h e lnr':un:matlon disappeared, and sore spots&#13;
dried up a;ul turned white and s c a l y , and finally she&#13;
brushed t h n n 01T i u a n impnlpaMe wiiitc powder resijrablinK&#13;
i&gt;ure s;vlt. S h e U n o w - t a k i n g t h e s i x t h bc&gt;T-&#13;
•4ie-!-everv a-ppe^+ance of Ute ii«*uv«eia g o n e And her&#13;
•rle'ph fa soft-and white as a r n i l d ' s . Iter headaches&#13;
havedlBapjH'ared and she e n j o v s t h e only good health&#13;
s h e h H S k n u w n lti 40 year*. N'o wonder s h e d e e m s&#13;
everv bottle of S. S.'S. is worth a thousand Uines Ha&#13;
w e i g h t in K«ld. J O H N F. U U A P L K Y ,&#13;
• Hetroit. Mich., May 1S, 1 1 ^ . 44 lirluwold St.&#13;
For sale by all dru&gt;;£i4ts.&#13;
THE S W I F T S P E C I F I C CO..&#13;
N . T . , 157 W. 23d St. D r a w e r 3, Atlanta, C.a.&#13;
E D U C A T I O N AI*^&#13;
^ H O R T H A M ) &lt; F.( LEC T I ( C K &gt; T R A L C 0 L L B 6 a t&#13;
d 10:(stale m., Chinttro. 111. &lt;'' ur«e thoroughandpoattions&#13;
jjuti ran teed. Author arid I'tes.,.). tleo. Croaa,M.A.&#13;
1855. T H E N A T I O N A L N O f f M A L 1 8 8 5 .&#13;
K in ire ex pens*' »2.50 to $3.09&#13;
a « e e l v . OverirjOOenrolTed.&#13;
O v e r * D^TTBTtmentamaJntairieJ.&#13;
All profeanionBprovfded&#13;
for. I . e s c a l D l t » l o « n « a conferred. Orer S.0M&#13;
T e a c h c m a m i l i o o k . k e e p e r * , trained here, h»T«&#13;
been helped to G o o d M l t u n t l o n * . A n y Y o u n g M a s&#13;
or \ V o m n n can pumtie any study w i t h I^eaa&#13;
i i e n a e o f T i m e uud M o n e y&#13;
than at any other Institution&#13;
in t h e V. S. Cartiloguo and full&#13;
information free. Address,&#13;
. P r e s i d e n t A L r ' U E U Le'oaUou. WarrenC«x, O.&#13;
UNIVERSITY!&#13;
H0LBR00K&#13;
i-E P A C E ' S&#13;
LIQUID GLUE. I U N E Q U A L L E D FOR CEMENTINO&#13;
WOOD. Gt-ASS, CHINA, PAPER, LEATHER.**&#13;
AWARDED C O L O M E D A L , LONDON, ISO.&#13;
Vieii by Maaon t Hamlin Orftan &amp; riano Co.,Pulhnan&#13;
Palace Car Co , Jtc. Mf*d by the J) U SSI A&#13;
£ M £ N T 1 C O . M A 3 i SOLI&#13;
VERYWHEF&#13;
only _&#13;
GLOUCESTER. MAS!&#13;
SaiitateT.u Caniaeat br Mall.!&#13;
WILHOFT'S FEVER AND AGUE TONIC&#13;
A warranted cure for all dlaeuei&#13;
caused by malarial poisoning ol&#13;
the blood, anch as ChilU and Ferer.&#13;
Fever and Ague, Sun Paint, Dumb&#13;
Chills, Intermittent, Remittent,&#13;
Bilious and all other Fevars caused&#13;
by malaria. It U also the safest&#13;
and best cure for enlarged Spleen&#13;
(Fever Cake), Qeticrtl Debility&#13;
aad Periodic Neuralgia. r*"For Sale of all Druggiita.&#13;
C H A 8 . F . K E I L E R , P r o p . , C h i c a g o , III.&#13;
I * 00&#13;
4 1X1&#13;
4 «0&#13;
4 6()&#13;
4 00&#13;
3 25&#13;
e 5 .¾&#13;
at "1 no&#13;
4 75&#13;
4 75&#13;
© 4 25&#13;
© 3 75&#13;
C A T T L E - f l e s t . . . .&#13;
Medium&#13;
HOGS '.. I SHEEP—Poor to Choice&#13;
¢1 00 &lt;&amp; ft 80&#13;
2 SO W 3 75&#13;
5 25 &lt;&amp; ti 75&#13;
—8-00 © 4 00&#13;
Devoe's House Paint (frgiaCIF.P RE-AwID"V- F O R t J S E . )&#13;
F. W. DKVOK ft CO.. New York.&#13;
Guaranteed pure 1 free frosa w*t«r, alkali* or&#13;
brmtnf, made only with pare Linseed Oil aad Torpeatine.&#13;
Sample Card* of SO desirable shades sent&#13;
•n application. HNK VABMSHKS In snail cans&#13;
fcr FuniUare and CarHaarea, AKT1ST8' M\TK.&#13;
RIALS. Color* in Oil and Japan, Brian**, Ac.&#13;
COFFH, DKVOE &amp; 10., ^ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ^&#13;
16EHJS WANTED FOR LIFE AND DEEDS OF UN'L ftRANT&#13;
By C O L O N E L V ^ F . A . B U R R .&#13;
It con tains a f till history of h i s noble and eventful&#13;
ItTe. T h e best chance for Amenta to m a k e money ever&#13;
offered, lieware of catchpenny imitation*. CoL&#13;
Hurr's w o r t 1» endorsed by G r a n t ' s most tuttmata&#13;
friends. I t contains chapters on his inner life and&#13;
private character bv his nastor. Kev. J . P . Newman.&#13;
Fully illustrated. fc&gt;end for e x t r a , terms to Agent*.&#13;
A d d f c s a S A T l O r A L r U B L l S m i f a tJO.,Cillumu,llU Life of Grant. Fastest selling book published,&#13;
Agenta w a n t e d . A. K. DAYIS A&#13;
Co^i63 Waahloftoa-st, Chicago&#13;
MOTHERS! free, applicant payinR&#13;
S n y d e r , 1J1S LaSalicSt&#13;
(Snyder's Kidney Balsaas enreav&#13;
B e d w e t t l i t s , H.IUn«y and&#13;
VrUiary diseases. Trial bottl*&#13;
&gt;ayinR the eipress. D r . O. W . F -&#13;
Chlta«o, IU. All druggist*. Sni nicDC^E^LA^'^-0***"*p*yf&gt;o« U L U I C I l O c o m m l s H l o n a : DeaerCervreUeT^&#13;
cd; P &lt; P « * I O « * and Increase; experience I9yeara:&#13;
success or no fee. Write for circular* and law*.&#13;
A. W. MoCORMlCK. 4 S ^ O N , Cincinnati. ObJa A B I O O r C P D Ti) intnx)no» them, « •&#13;
S'lf Operating Washing MaeUinea. If you w a a t&#13;
one Rfn«i ns y o u r n a n i r J i O . a n d etprf*s o n V * s # .&#13;
T h e N a t i o n a l C o . , a5D«y St-.H.T.&#13;
F C B S O X A L 1&gt;I F E of&#13;
AjrenU W w n t e d .&#13;
For Terms and Territory&#13;
address C B . Beach &amp; Co., 173 Kandolph St., Chicago, DL&#13;
U.S.GRANT&#13;
ORGANS The mo* t beautiful and finest t o t o d&#13;
in the world. I. no pt (res, ta*v B«rmmi.&#13;
Send for catalof?ue. Aadrc**)&#13;
Weaver Oi ifnu &amp; r!anoCo.,VorkJ».&#13;
HAIR •Wlsra, Banjraand Waves sent C O . U. any.&#13;
where. Wholesale and retail price-lIst/r*a&#13;
B, C. Strehl it, Co..ITS Wab;u»h-*v,ChJcagOL&#13;
PEOPLE 'H S f u s l c a l N u p p l y H o a * « , Chfeacav.&#13;
Wholesale prices. • Write for anything&#13;
wonted. E. T. K^K&gt;T J: SONU.'JS6 Siai« *U&#13;
CANCER&#13;
CAICER&#13;
Tumors and Ulcers cured wttho»*&#13;
a'ln or knife. Write forpanipbtet.&#13;
r. F. B. lioUey, \lilwaukct&gt;,Wls).&#13;
Treated and cured wlloowt the knffa.&#13;
Book on treatment srnt frea. Addrea*&#13;
F.L, POND. M.D^Aurosa, Kane Co, TO.&#13;
A. N. K . - A 1 0 4 1&#13;
WMBX WHITtSO TO AttVM*C U*&lt;T*;^9 SKU^&#13;
J»I««M« s a y poH «a*c the Adi+rUmtmi**.&#13;
inthifpuper.&#13;
'.i:4&#13;
f'.-'&#13;
^ : ; Js^_ •*t7Tf* •-**""' C ' j '~ "VlfT1^ ' T* ' ^ j •9*»;vjsg^-.»wf'«v». t^-f^*&#13;
^W^v.**&#13;
r-£4iSff*-#;."&#13;
; « ; : --*- V-JLJ.V.-&#13;
++• w++t*m&amp;t.w* **&amp;}»$*&#13;
^&#13;
M i&#13;
ffl&#13;
I j&#13;
i&#13;
s^e&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH.&#13;
J. L. NEWARK, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER&#13;
Pinckney, Michigan, Thursday, July 30, 18hT&gt;&#13;
The paralysis of iron ship building&#13;
is not a disaster to John Roach merely.&#13;
A great industry lies prostrate.&#13;
There is no luck of illustrations&#13;
nowadays of ups and downs of political&#13;
fortunes. They come to light&#13;
where least expected. Many an ex-&#13;
CongTesaman would eagerly volunteer&#13;
to cut bait for the President, on his&#13;
next fishing excursion, for the promise&#13;
of a 81,000 clerkship, or even a&#13;
fourth-class postoffice.&#13;
of the Indians, of every tribe, have.&#13;
sense, and they are able to impart&#13;
knowledge to others. It would dawn&#13;
upon them, doubtless, that the Government,&#13;
in depriving them of their&#13;
arms, must asume the responsibility&#13;
of defending with resolute vigilance&#13;
the personal and property rights of&#13;
Indians, against border ruffians and&#13;
adventurers.&#13;
The^ cholera-stricken provinces of&#13;
Spain reek with filth, and the burial&#13;
of the 20,000 or 30,000 victims of the&#13;
plague still further befouls the land,&#13;
and plants seeds of future epidemics.&#13;
Spain is a country where cremation&#13;
should be adopted, especially in the&#13;
districts subject to inundation. Prudence&#13;
in this matter has no. choice;&#13;
Vint, t.hp fipHniard* go on blindly in&#13;
It might be easy to show logically&#13;
that the danger of an Anglo-Russian&#13;
war, resulting from a deliberate hostile&#13;
step by Russia, is remote. In the&#13;
first place, friendly assurances have&#13;
passed between St. Petersburg and&#13;
London. The course of recent negotiations&#13;
seems to justify the assumption&#13;
that both Powers are sincere&#13;
in the expressed desire to avohf a&#13;
crisis, at least to postpone a.collision.&#13;
Secondly, if the Czar and his advisers&#13;
were tempted never so powerfully to&#13;
pursue their high design of pushing&#13;
on to suit water, common sagacity&#13;
would teach them not to be in haste&#13;
just now. "Advantage is a better&#13;
soldier than rashness;" so too is&#13;
'A&#13;
\&#13;
the old rut, and the old plague will&#13;
periodically reappear_to. punish them.&#13;
The heats of the summer solstice&#13;
have their peculiar hardships. While&#13;
we "liave""tfie" tooflTsome,refreshing&#13;
watermelon and generally snake stories&#13;
from Georgia and sea serpents&#13;
from the watering place hotels, we&#13;
lose the diverse and sparkling witticism&#13;
about the skating rink and the&#13;
periodic but sure elopement of the&#13;
professor with the gushing young&#13;
lady whom he teaches the art. It was,&#13;
we believe, Imlac, the philosopher, who&#13;
said to Rasselas, "you can not at the&#13;
"game time fill your cup at the mouth&#13;
and from the sources of the Nile." It&#13;
the rinks are closed the varandas of&#13;
the hotels at the springs and seaside&#13;
are especially built to promote flirtations&#13;
and—life may not therefore be&#13;
altogether a barren waste to such as&#13;
seek to "shoot folly as it flies."&#13;
HERE WE ARE AGAIN !&#13;
With a larger stock of&#13;
DRUGS AND M E D I C I N E S&#13;
than any house in Livingston County.&#13;
We carry a fufUne of the latest FLUIDS, EXTRACTS and other preparations&#13;
known to the Drug Trade; also as fine a line of&#13;
FANCY GOODS and TOILET ARTICLES as you&#13;
will find anywhere in the State.&#13;
,In Stationery and Box Paper we have a complete stock. • We have the boss&#13;
Nickle Cigar "and don't you torget it."&#13;
WALL PAPER, CEILING DECORATIONS &amp; WINDOW SHADES&#13;
in ill the latest patterns. We #ive "KindiilTs Treatese on the Horse" to every&#13;
/horse-owner who purchase goods of us. Arctic Soda Water constantly on&#13;
draught, Oranges, Lemons and confectionery of all kinds.&#13;
"Corner Drug Store." SIGLER BROS.&#13;
The Detroit base ball club is again&#13;
demonstrating the scientific problem&#13;
that nothing defeats so overwhelming&#13;
ly as defeat. The great trouble with&#13;
the club seems to consist in the fact&#13;
that it has never been properly weaned,&#13;
and when away from home misses&#13;
its mamma. A base ball club that has&#13;
to depend altogether upon the suction&#13;
end of a bottle while pilgrimaging in&#13;
a strange land where they don't raise&#13;
Jersey cows is apt to wabble at tho&#13;
"joints and rattle in the gearing. The&#13;
Detroits wabbled bass yesterday.&#13;
They were defeated by the Philadelphias&#13;
on a score that showed up a little&#13;
discrepancy of 19 to 2. As the&#13;
Philadelphias have heretofore been regarded&#13;
as about" the most dyspeptic&#13;
club belonging to the entire league, it&#13;
is clear that something is wrong with&#13;
the Detroits. The resident parents of&#13;
the club should send down a couple of&#13;
cows and give the boys the freedom of&#13;
the city in the matter of nourishment.&#13;
—Evening Journal.&#13;
caution. They will be likely to wait&#13;
till the autuni elecuojis make known...&#13;
the temper of the English people.&#13;
Doubtless it is true that war, sooner&#13;
or later, is inevitable. Destiny points&#13;
the way of Russia to the sea; and the&#13;
spirit of eternal eggression seaward is&#13;
a heritage of the Russians from Peter&#13;
the Great. It is a living and blazing&#13;
fire-in/ithe national heart, which can&#13;
not be extinguished. And possibly&#13;
this potent popular influence will not&#13;
hold itself within bounds of reason&#13;
and practical enterprise. If not, so&#13;
much the worse for Russia. 13ut the&#13;
danger of this at present is reduced,&#13;
it would seem, by financial considerations&#13;
and by the attitude of Germany,&#13;
The one great appareut peril&#13;
in the existing situation is a probably&#13;
bloody clash, unforseen and unauthorized&#13;
by the Czar, between Russian&#13;
and Afghan soldiery on the&#13;
frontier. The 'new British Cabinet&#13;
not being quite as amiable and submissive&#13;
as its predecessor, such an event&#13;
might bring far more serious consequences&#13;
than did the Penjdeh incident.&#13;
pURNITURE! pURNTTUREl&#13;
When in want of anything in the line of Furniture, such as&#13;
BEDROOM SUITS, PARLOR SUITS&#13;
LOUNGES, BUREAUS, BOOKCASES, TABLES&#13;
STANDS, CHAIRS, ETC. ETC. COME&#13;
GENERAL ULYSSES S. GRAXT.&#13;
DISPOSITION OF T H E REMAINS.&#13;
Disarmament of the Indians is a&#13;
necessary police regulation, if nothing&#13;
more. I t is no infringement of&#13;
their rights, even as these rights are&#13;
viewed by the sentimentalists. It involves&#13;
no interference with the free&#13;
exercise of any legitimate means of&#13;
making a living. For the sort of&#13;
game now to be found t'ie shot-gun is&#13;
sufficient. Except as a weapon of&#13;
murder and warfare, the improved&#13;
rifle of 1.000-yards range can not, be&#13;
needed by any tribe of red in the&#13;
Territories. To an Indian the possession&#13;
of such arms is a temptation&#13;
to us^ them to satisfy the savage&#13;
thirst for blood. I t exalts his pretensions&#13;
of prowess, and when liquor&#13;
burns in his veins, he becomes a defiant&#13;
and hideous devil. Of course&#13;
the whole Inclian problem is one of&#13;
civilization. As a civilizing agent,&#13;
the Springfield rifle and the scalping&#13;
knife are on a par with each other,&#13;
except that the latter may be made&#13;
altogether useful by the Indians&#13;
in peaceful pursuits. Disarmament&#13;
of all the tribes would be an inestimable&#13;
benefit to them in the lon£ run.&#13;
It would enforce self-discipline. Some&#13;
WASHINGTON, July 25.—Gen. Drum&#13;
yesterday telegraphed the secretary&#13;
of war ' as follows . relative to&#13;
the obsequies of Gen. Grant: "Immediate1}'&#13;
on arrival here this afternoon&#13;
I called upon Mrs. Grant, by her&#13;
request, and presented the president's&#13;
letter. The family have decided upon&#13;
a military funeral, and with it to be&#13;
under the authority and control ot the&#13;
national government. New York City&#13;
has been agreed upon as the place of&#13;
interment, and the mayor has been so&#13;
notified. The funeral services here&#13;
will take place August 1 and the remains&#13;
will then be taken to Albany,&#13;
where they will lie in state for one&#13;
day. They will then be taken to New&#13;
•York-City and be laid in 'state in the&#13;
city hall until Saturday, August 8, the&#13;
day fixed Xpr the funeral. The family&#13;
have expressed a wish that the U. S.&#13;
Grant post of the. grand army o! the&#13;
republic, of Brooklyn, should act as the&#13;
guard of honor. I will tejegraph Gen.&#13;
Hancock this evening, saying that you&#13;
have designated him to take charge of&#13;
thebody here, that being the wish of&#13;
the family, and to see that it is "properly&#13;
conducted to New York and to take&#13;
charge of the ceremonies connected&#13;
with the funeral and to command th&#13;
escort thereof with such minor instruc&#13;
tions as to detail as the case requires.1'&#13;
Bucklen's Arnica Salve.&#13;
THE BEST SALVE in the world for&#13;
Cut* Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt&#13;
Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped&#13;
Jiands, Chilblains, Corns, and all skin&#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 DRUG STORE.&#13;
The kidneys cannot perform their&#13;
proper office when diseased and at the&#13;
same-ifme expel the impurities that&#13;
should pass off-through their proper&#13;
««»&gt; I A W A f * action.—A feww Jdows.e«s. »o,»l —KIf e••.l! l1u •^••'•g'.'.s' •C /1o..l1-—&#13;
umbian Oil will convince the most&#13;
skeptical that it acts directly on 1he&#13;
kidneys.-&#13;
~=AND SEE ME.=&#13;
J± SPEOIALT-Y,&#13;
COFFINS, CASKETS, ROBESand FUNERALSOPPLfEfofahr kinds&#13;
constantly on hand. Respectflluy, —&#13;
L H. BEEBE.&#13;
D O O R S A N D B L I N D S ,&#13;
GLASS, NAILS, PAINT,&#13;
BUILDING PAPER&#13;
AND ALL&#13;
KINDS OF BUILDING MATERIAL&#13;
, _ . „ popular W«X)k ly newapapar&#13;
Q/daroted to Bcianos, mechanic, " f JpW0**.'***-&#13;
Covariea, invention* anil patent* ever puoll*naa. * J W&#13;
number illustrated with »plendld ensTaTinga. This&#13;
publication, furniiihea a most valuable •noyoiop*)««or&#13;
information which no person ihould be wjtaouu -ins&#13;
popularity of the BcHNTmo AMJUUCAN ia each thai&#13;
It* circulation nearly equals that of all other paper* pi&#13;
it* class combined. Price. t420 a, year. Discount'&#13;
Clnba. 8old by all newsdealers. MUNN « CO., Pat-&#13;
, 361 Broadway. N. Y. . „ . _ .&#13;
* M •*)»••••:.% Monn A Co. hare aJeo ATENTS. jMrsage wm—mm^mm**** fore the Patent Offloa,&#13;
and hare prepared more than O n e H u n -&#13;
dred ThOUeiend «PPUcationiI lor patent*&#13;
in "&amp; "nit ed TStatea and foreign&#13;
countries Caveats, Trade-Marks, Copyriphts,&#13;
Assignments, Bad »11 other' papere&#13;
for securing to inventors their njrhtala tho&#13;
United tstutea, Canada, England, Franoe,&#13;
Germany and other foreign countries, prepared&#13;
at short notice and on " « ° n » b l ° te™?»Y„_*,,i_&#13;
Information as to obtaining patents cheerfttllf&#13;
riven without charge. Hand-books of inform*-&#13;
iioasent free. Patents obtained through Munn &lt;&#13;
— A Co. are noticed in tho bcientiflo American free.&#13;
rho advantage of such notice Is well understood bar all&#13;
leraona who wish to dijpOMe of their patent*&#13;
Address MUNN A CO., Offlea BOUUCHMO AWffiWiW,&#13;
aU Broadway, Naw Vork. TUTTS.&#13;
PILLS&#13;
25 YEARS IN U8E» v&#13;
Ih« Greatest Modical Triumph of tfe* AftK&#13;
S Y M P T O M S OF A TORPID LIVER. Lose of appetite, Bowela costive, Fata ! •&#13;
xh*&gt; head, with a d u l l sensation la tk»&#13;
back part, Pnin under the a ho alderblade,&#13;
Fullneaa after eating, with a disinclination&#13;
to exertion of body or mind*&#13;
IrritaW lity of temperri^w^opirl t»._at4ta»&#13;
a feeling of having neglected eome datr»&#13;
Weariness, Dizziness, Flattering at la a&#13;
Heart, Dots before the ores, Headache&#13;
over tho right eye, Restlessness, with&#13;
fitful dreams, Highly colored I r i a e , and&#13;
* CONSTIPATION. «&#13;
TTJTT'S P i t i e s are especially tU • tea&#13;
to such cases, ono doso effects enen a&gt;&#13;
ahangitoffeclliiRm to iistunislitiie sufferer.&#13;
They Increase t h e Appetlte.and cause the&#13;
body to T a k e o n Flesh, Mm the nyctern U&#13;
nonriaheO, nt 1 byih.'ir Tonie Action oa&#13;
the IMgestiveOrtrans.lleiriilar Stools era?&#13;
prortunil. Price iaTie. 4» Mnrrar M..ar.T. TUTTS HAIR DYE. &gt;GRAT HAIR or WHISKBUS changed to a&#13;
GLQ88T liLACK by a single application of&#13;
this DTK. It imparts a uatural color, »cts&#13;
instantanpously. Sold by Druggists, or&#13;
sent bv express on receipt of t l . • f&#13;
Office, 4 4 Murray St-i-Now York.&#13;
WIGHT'S INDIAN VEGETABLE PlUJ&#13;
FOB THE LWER And ail Bilious Complaints&#13;
Rale k&gt; takejjelns nnwlyvegefable; nogrtp&gt;&#13;
atag. Prica&amp;cts. All Urturjclata.&#13;
AT F. L.BROWN'S.&#13;
J O B TXTO-RJEL&#13;
fiXHCtfYED TO OHBX*&#13;
^DISPATCH OFFICE*&#13;
_ ^ an aaaaai&#13;
«PP"P n: MIMMIMNMrtHMMMMVI &gt; — — &lt; — i i * m n i i •&#13;
SOUTH LYON DOTSFrom&#13;
the Picket.&#13;
H. A. Whipple was the recipient of&#13;
a very fine and costly present last&#13;
week in the shape of a pair of blue&#13;
blood, English setter pupa, from Mr.&#13;
Barbour, of Detroit. They are valued&#13;
at $100.&#13;
Mrs. 0 . M. Bentley, in stepping out&#13;
of her buggy on Saturday eve. slipped&#13;
and fell backwards, breaking her wrist&#13;
just back of the joint. Dr. Holmes&#13;
was on the spot in a few minutes and&#13;
set the fracture and she is now doing&#13;
well.&#13;
A Mr. Holly, of Leslie, and a member&#13;
of the great lumber firm of Walker,&#13;
Rumsey &amp; Co., has been here and&#13;
entered into a verbal agreement to enter&#13;
into partnership with Wm. Greig&#13;
in the lumber and planing mill and&#13;
general manufacturing. This will&#13;
make a large business. Mr. Holly&#13;
will be here to enter into business next&#13;
4 From the Excelsior,&#13;
Willie Crane, while doing hi* funny&#13;
work on a gymnasium pole fell, breakhis&#13;
arm, this morning.&#13;
Mr. D. Richardron white gettin*&#13;
over the fence yesterday with a cradle&#13;
fell on the scythe, cutting a severe&#13;
gash in his leg.&#13;
BRIGHTON SAYINGS.&#13;
-From the Argus. —&#13;
Everett Maltby barely escaped&#13;
drowning in Mud Lake, Sunday last,&#13;
while gathering lilies and catching&#13;
frogs. The boat capsized.&#13;
James Tobin lost a $100 steed one&#13;
day last week from sunstroke, it is&#13;
supposed. It dropped dead in the&#13;
road while drawing a buggy.&#13;
N. Kennedy was aopointed postmaster&#13;
at this place last week, vice B.&#13;
T. 0 . Clark, resigned. **4Ie will commence&#13;
handling stamps just as soon^as&#13;
the necessary papers arrive.&#13;
One day last week as Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Henry Bergen were returning home&#13;
from the village, the horse suddenly&#13;
shied, and dumped the buggy and its&#13;
occupants off the steep embaakment&#13;
near Christopher Smith's. It was&#13;
thought at first that Mrs. Bergen was&#13;
seriously injured, but it turned out to&#13;
be nothirvgmore than a few painful&#13;
bruises.&#13;
FOWLERVILLE P A R A G R A P H S&#13;
From the Review.&#13;
On Saturday last Mr. Seth Judd's&#13;
team became frightened while hitcno'l&#13;
to the reaper and did some damage to&#13;
the machine before they coulJ be&#13;
quieted.&#13;
About two weeks since Cole Marsh&#13;
painted his house. Two calves got&#13;
into the yard during the night and&#13;
proceeded to lick the paint off the&#13;
front side of the house. Cole now has&#13;
two dead calves charged in his paint&#13;
bill.&#13;
The special election held on Saturday&#13;
to electa Trustee to fill vacancy&#13;
was sort of go-as-you-please affair^&#13;
There were no caucuses calledjind^no_&#13;
regular nomination made&lt;-^Some one&#13;
suggested the name~-oTJ. C. Ellsworth&#13;
and othersjtibeiiame of 0. H. Corbett.&#13;
156 vote§^ were cast, of which J . C.&#13;
"sworth received 130 and 0 . H.&#13;
Corbett 26.&#13;
' Mr. W. H. Spencer, who removed&#13;
from this place to Detroit a few&#13;
months since, died on Monday afternoon,&#13;
of softening ot the brain.&#13;
Congressman E. B. Wmans was in&#13;
town on Wednesday looking at claims&#13;
of the different applicants for the postoffice&#13;
here. He finally decided that E.&#13;
W. Burkhart should be the man who&#13;
should hold ,the tort for the next 4 years,&#13;
taace that satisfied smile which illa-&#13;
' ftkiates Eugene's face may be easily&#13;
i S o u n t e d for. We think the appointment&#13;
will give general satisfaction&#13;
among the patrons of the office and in&#13;
fact all the applicants were exception-&#13;
- ally good men.&#13;
/ , HOWELL COMMENTS.&#13;
Prom the Republican.&#13;
The festive green apple is here and&#13;
got in its first work of the season on a&#13;
11-year-old Howell boy Tuesday. Dr.&#13;
Bell attended the young suffeTeTTtncl&#13;
he lives to tool around the busi&#13;
end of green apples another season.&#13;
B.L. Petty, recently discharged from&#13;
the clerkship at the National Hotel by&#13;
i U d l o r d McKinstry, is now serving a&#13;
•/ three month's term »*4onia. He con-&#13;
9 -&#13;
fidenced an Owo.sso man out of $30 and&#13;
passed a bo^us $5 gold piece on another&#13;
citizen, Tuesday, and was very&#13;
promptly dealt with.&#13;
Mrs. W. K. iSexton, secretary, announces&#13;
that the annual harvest festival&#13;
of Patrons of Husbandry will be&#13;
held in Hcwell g/ange hall Tuesday,&#13;
August 4, 1885. The harvest feast&#13;
will take place at noon and the afternoon&#13;
will be filled up with music, se-'&#13;
lect readings, essays, discussions, etc.&#13;
P. W. Munson will read a paper entitled,&#13;
uFarmers and Fairs;" Mrs. J.&#13;
S! liriggs, of West Handy, will discuss&#13;
the question, "Why was Wamen admitted&#13;
into the order of Patrons of&#13;
Husbandry?" Mrs. D. Gaston, of Conway,&#13;
will read a paper entitled, "True&#13;
Friendship." Papers will also be read&#13;
by Mrs. Bid well, of Brighton, and A.&#13;
M. Davis. The laiter's subject is "Influence&#13;
of farm life." Select readings&#13;
by Mrs. J. B. Brown, of Oak Grove.&#13;
A pleasant day of recreation and social&#13;
intercourse is anticipated.&#13;
From the Democrat.&#13;
The temperance people are talking&#13;
of securing the services of Dr. Reynolds&#13;
to hold a series-of meetings here.&#13;
While carrying a scythe over his&#13;
shoulder, Bernard Cummiskey, of&#13;
Green Oak, cut his neck quite badly.&#13;
He encountered a bees' nest, and in&#13;
fighting them hit the scythe so as AQ_&#13;
knotxc it against his neck.&#13;
John W. Clark, Sr., of Marion, aged&#13;
83 years, has hoed over eleven acres of&#13;
corn twice this season. Thert^ is not a&#13;
weed to be seen in the patch, and under&#13;
the old gentleman's vigilance the&#13;
corn looks remark?bly well.&#13;
To the Afflicted.&#13;
Since the introduction of Kellogg's&#13;
Columbian Oil it has made more permanent&#13;
cures and given better satis*&#13;
faction 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 tol employ&#13;
against all aches and pains, which are&#13;
the forerunners of more serious dis"&#13;
orders. It acts speedily and surely,&#13;
always relieving suttering and often&#13;
saving life. The protection it affords&#13;
by its timely use un rheumatism, kidney&#13;
atfection, and all aches and pains,&#13;
wounds, cramping pains, cholera morbus,'&#13;
diarrhoea.-eeughs, 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 wto have once used it never will.&#13;
It is absolutoby en tain in its remedial&#13;
effects, and will always cure when&#13;
cures are possible.&#13;
Call ai WINCHKLLV DRUG STORE and&#13;
get a memorandum bujk giving more&#13;
full details of the curative properties&#13;
of this wonder ul IV. ;dicine.&#13;
An Important Discovery.&#13;
The most important discovery is that&#13;
which brings the most good to the&#13;
greatest number. Dr. King's j ^ w&#13;
Discovery for Consumption, Coughs&#13;
and colds, will pi'eservrej4re"health and&#13;
save life, and is a p.v4ce!ess boon to the&#13;
afflicted. No&gt;ofily does it positively&#13;
•cure consumption, but coughs, colds&#13;
brojvdntis, asthma, hoarseness, and a&#13;
-tlie affections of the throat, chest arid&#13;
lungs, yield at once to its wonderful&#13;
curate powers. If you doubt this&lt; get&#13;
a trial bottle free at Wincheirs/Dru-g-&#13;
Store.&#13;
An End to Bone Scraping-.&#13;
Edward- Shepber-d,- of Rarrisburg,&#13;
III., says: "Having received so much&#13;
benefit from Electric Bitters, I teel it&#13;
my duty to let suffering humanity&#13;
know it. Have had a running sore on&#13;
my leg for eight years; my doctors told&#13;
me 1 would have to have the bone&#13;
scraped or leg amputated. 1 used, instead,&#13;
three bottles of Electric Hitters&#13;
and seven boxes Bucklen's Arnica&#13;
Salve, and my leer is now sound and&#13;
well." Electric Bitters are sold at 50&#13;
cents a bottle, and Bucklen's Arnica&#13;
Salve 25 cts. per box, at Winchell's&#13;
Drug Store.&#13;
The Greatest Medicine of the.Age.&#13;
Kellogtf's Columbian Oil is a powerful&#13;
remedy, which can be taken internally&#13;
as well as externally by the tendered&#13;
t 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 in writ&#13;
ten language. A single dose in&#13;
and taken according to direction's will&#13;
convince anyone that iti^aTl that isclaimed&#13;
for it. Warranted to cure the&#13;
following dj^frffSes:. Rheumatism or&#13;
dtiey I&gt;i$ease inany form, Headache,&#13;
rTopthftche, Earache, Neunalgiar&#13;
rain.s, Bmises. Flesh Wounds,,, Bunions,&#13;
Burns, Corns, Spinal Affections,&#13;
Colic, Cramnppii ng Pains, Cholera Mor-&#13;
UUS, MUX, 4LrM HH'llUBa, Congns,&#13;
Bronchial Affection, Catarrh, and all&#13;
aches and pains, external or internal.&#13;
Full directions with each bottle.&#13;
For Sale at WIKCHKLL'S DRUG STOBI.&#13;
B A R G A I N S ! B A R G A I N S ! B A R G A I N S !&#13;
We offer, this month, decided bargain* in every d e p a r t m e n t ^ clean up stock.&#13;
PRINTS and GINGHAMS in STAPLES and DRESS GOODS.&#13;
And all light weight Worsteds marked down to prices that will close them out at once.&#13;
P A R A S O L S , F A N S , E T C . , V^|yg^1rUa8^UFTBOTTHEVMU8TQ01WECAIIRVNOTHINOOVCI.-&#13;
SHAWLS—SHETLAND, CASHMERE&#13;
An 1 all STTMMHIR S H A W L S we will O L O S E O U T regardless of OOST-&#13;
_ / . "TEAS, TEAS, TEAS, TEAS.&#13;
We have just opened up a V/ery'jfine line of New Teaa in&#13;
GREEN &amp; UNCOLORED JAPS, OOLONG DUSTS, ETC.&#13;
Try a pound of our 40 cent Tea, we guarantee it to draw with any 50 cent Tea in town.&#13;
All in search of Bargains should visit our store this month for we&#13;
intend to make things /HUM if low prices and good&#13;
* goods can do it. Command see us when you have anything&#13;
to selL Con^ and see us when in search&#13;
JSShof goods.*1g5$&#13;
"We8riEhd^tore7fV" I LAK1N &amp; SYKES.&#13;
TH&#13;
-€A9 PINCKNEY DISPATCH!•«*•&#13;
Is the paper you should have-&#13;
IN YOUR/ HOUSEHOLD.&#13;
IT GIVES -A.X-.L T H E&#13;
QUAKER Zs th.o B e s t&#13;
TABLE SAUCE. Thousands of article• are BOW nanaftctnr ad th*f&#13;
fn former years had to be imported, paying htg&amp;&#13;
import duty M it ia now being done on Lea &amp; Parrina&#13;
table aaQce ; the QUAXZB TABLE SACCI take*&#13;
lta place; it haa been pronotiDcrd by competes!&#13;
Judges just as pood and even better. TheQuAJcia&#13;
SXUCE- Jjkft. 81owly but surely gained great importance&#13;
and is replacing the very beit imported&#13;
aauce on the shelf of the grocer, the table*&#13;
of the restaurant aud the tables of the rich and&#13;
poor men, preatly prized and relished by all on&#13;
account of its piquancy, aroma, taste,- strength&#13;
and pureneas. The inventor b i s by years of&#13;
study of the secret Tirtues contained in the aromatic&#13;
apices of the Indies and China, such a*&#13;
mace, nutmeg, cinnamon, genuine Jamaica ginger.&#13;
and peppers and buds of trees unknown to moat&#13;
men, and by long practice succeeded to combine'&#13;
their extracts in auch a liquid form aa wa now&#13;
fl^d it of agreeable taste, and so invigorating a*&#13;
-to be taken in place of stomach bitters. By manufjctufiDg&#13;
this sauce here, heavy import duties&#13;
and freights are saved, and it is sold at at lower&#13;
figure to the dealer,1 who making a better prontoo&#13;
Quaker Sauce can sell it to the consumer cheaper&#13;
than he very best imported article hardly equaling&#13;
ours. II your grocer doea not keep it. writs&#13;
as for prices, etc. Sold In bottles or by the galloa.&#13;
CHARM MANUFACTURING CO.,&#13;
SoU Proprietor* ewd Mamq/kctmwt,&#13;
1W 4 1 0 6 » , J J ST., Si.&#13;
OR SIX MONTHS&#13;
"gr^OIEi&lt;=^&#13;
CENTS FOR THREE MONTHS&#13;
S^-IN ADVANCE.-^ _&#13;
It is also a good&#13;
ADVERTISING MEDIUM!&#13;
A&amp;0 REASONABLE HATES ARE &lt;*£?£&amp;&#13;
\Ye make a specialty, and guarantee good work,&#13;
GOOD STjOCK &gt; LIVING PRICESIf&#13;
you want anything in the&#13;
W~P R XN T I 1ST O- L I N 33&#13;
IMPORTANT.&#13;
When you visit or leave New York City, save&#13;
baggage expreasage and carriage hire ana stop at&#13;
toe Grand Union Hotel, opposite Grand Central&#13;
Depot.&#13;
Elegant rooms fitted up at a cost of one million&#13;
dollars, reduced to $1.00 and upwards per&#13;
day. European plan, Elevator. Kestaurant supplied&#13;
with the best. Horse cars, stages and elevated&#13;
railroad to all depots. Families can live better&#13;
for less money at the Grand L'nion Hotel than&#13;
any other first-class hotel ia the city&#13;
Having rented D, Richards'&#13;
BLACKSMITH SHOP !&#13;
we are now prepared to do all&#13;
kinds of&#13;
REPAIRINQ.&#13;
Including Horse*Shoetag.&#13;
Machine and. Steel Work done to ,&#13;
order.&#13;
PARKER &amp; SPEARS.&#13;
-aft. F^DESEXsTT 1&#13;
Our readers for 13 cents in postage stamps tol&#13;
pay for mailing and wrapping, and names of_twc|&#13;
book agents, will receive FREE a STEH F^SH P.,&#13;
OWENOKAVHIO of til OUR PRESIDENTS, includin&#13;
CLEVELAND, 8'*e "£?** inches, worth $4.00.&#13;
ADDRESS ELDER PUB, CO., C-HICAGO, I I I 3&#13;
AJACJUNAO.&#13;
SUMMER TOUR&#13;
-: t&#13;
, !&#13;
*&#13;
&lt;m&#13;
# pi&amp;sjs&amp;idf.&#13;
i&#13;
»&#13;
i&#13;
•i&#13;
J&#13;
')l&gt;&#13;
r i N C K N K Y ,&#13;
M : W K I U K , PublUkt-r.&#13;
: : : MICHIGAN,.&#13;
NEWS O F J P WEEK.&#13;
BY TELEGRAPH AND MAIL.&#13;
-i"&#13;
! i tf&#13;
DOMESTIC.&#13;
A M O N G t h e s t r i k e r s in Cleveland, 0 . , a n d&#13;
B a y City, Mich.', e v e r y t h i n g w a s q u i e t on&#13;
t h e 21st, a n d it W M h o p e d t h a t a c o m p l e t e&#13;
s e t t l e m e n t of t h e difficulties would Boon b e&#13;
effected. T h e t r o o p s h a d been w i t h d r a w n .&#13;
T H E h e a t a t v a r i o u s p o i n t s still r e m a i n e d&#13;
i n t e n s e on t h e 21st. A t New Y o r k t h e&#13;
t h e r m o m e t e r m a r k e d 97 degrees, w i t h&#13;
t w e u t y - t h r o e c a s e s of s u n s t r o k e ; a t P h i l -&#13;
a d e l p h i a 101, w i t h t w e n t y - t w o s u n -&#13;
s t r o k e s ; a t P i t t s b u r g h 97; a t C i n c i n n a t i&#13;
95, with- ^twelve s u n s t r o k e s ; at Louisville&#13;
96, a t St. Louis 96, w i t h t w e l v e s u n s t r o k e s .&#13;
I n C h i c a g o t h e t e m p e r a t u r e fell to 72.&#13;
O W I N G to t h e a c t i o n s of the C o u n t y A t -&#13;
t o r n e y t e n Iraen w h o w e r e c h a r g e d w i t h a&#13;
dozen or m o r e m u r d e r s a t L e x i n g t o n , K y . ,&#13;
w h i c h e v e r y b o d y k n e w t h e y h a d c o m -&#13;
m i t t e d , w e r e a c q u i t t e d on t h e 21st.&#13;
A s A N o u t c o m e of t h e recent Polish r i o t s&#13;
in Toledo, 0 . , t h e G r a n d J u r y on the 21st&#13;
found n e a r l y one h u n d r e d i n d i c t m e n t s&#13;
a g a i n s t t h e r i o t e r s , eleven being for m u r -&#13;
d e r in t h e first degree.&#13;
T w o C O L O R E D w o m e n w e r e a r r e s t e d a t&#13;
P h i l a d e l p h i a t h e o t h e r n i g h t t f o r a t t e m p t -&#13;
i n g t o k i d n a p a w h i t e child.&#13;
A N e x p l o s i o n o n t h e 21st n e a r H u n t i n g -&#13;
d o n , P a . , killed t h r e e w o r k m e n a n d f a t a l l y&#13;
i n j u r e d t w o o t h e r s .&#13;
REPonTS g a t h e r e d by a n E a s c e t n a g r i - -&#13;
c u l t u r a l j o u r n a l r e p r e s e n t e d on t h e 21st&#13;
t h e w i n t e r - w h e a t s i t u a t i o n in t h e N o r t h -&#13;
w e s t a s f a v o r a b l e , a l t h o u g h t h e crop&#13;
w o u l d n o t be e q u a l t o t h a t of 1881 i n a n y&#13;
S t a t e s a v e M i c h i g a n . S p r i n g w h e a t p r o m -&#13;
ised a n a v e r a g e crop. O a t s a n d c o r n&#13;
looked well.&#13;
T H E old W a s h i n g t o n A r t i l l e r y A r m o r y&#13;
a t New O r l e a n s w a s set on fire b y b u r g l a r s&#13;
t h e o t h e r m o r n i n g and e n t i r e l y d e s t r o y e d .&#13;
T H E r e m a i n s of E d w a r d Gillau, w i f e -&#13;
m u r d e r e r a n d suicide,, w e r e i n t e r r e d on t h e&#13;
21st in t h e p o t t e r ' s field a t C l e v e l a n d , 0 .&#13;
Deceased leaves a n e s t a t e v a l u e d , a t $T&gt;0,-&#13;
000, a n d w a s refused b u r i a l in t h e C a t h o l i c&#13;
c e m e t e r y .&#13;
A B O U T t h i r t y M e x i c a n s w e r e on t h e 21st&#13;
r e p o r t e d t o - b a v e been killed by b a n d s of&#13;
hostile I n d i a n s on the T e x a s frontier.&#13;
R E P O R T S of e x c i t e m e n t a m o n g t h e&#13;
N o r t h e r n C h e y e n n e s in M o n t a n a w e r e&#13;
confirmed on t h e ,21st. The s e t t l e r s w e r e&#13;
p r e p a r i n g for d e f e n s e .&#13;
TTIE t o w n of S k i d m o r e , Mo., vrm a l m o s t&#13;
*ntirely d e s t r o y e d by a recent, fire.&#13;
A T P h i l a d e l p h i a on t h e 22d E d w a r d Metz,&#13;
w h o h a d a t t a c k e d William. B a t t e r s b y , a&#13;
w e a l t h y m e r c h a n t , for p u r p o s e s of r o b -&#13;
b e r y , w a s shot a n d i n s t a n t l y killed b y his&#13;
i n t e n d e d vietitn.&#13;
C H A H I . E S J A C K S O N , who lives in t h e&#13;
m o u n t a i n s of W e s t A u g u s t a , Va., t n a&#13;
frenzy of t e m p e r on t h e 22d d r a g g e d his&#13;
ohild from its c r a d l e a n d s t r u c k it v i o l e n t -&#13;
l y a g a i n s t t h e bed, killing it i n s t a n t l y .&#13;
A N explosion of p o w d e r in a mill n t&#13;
Y o r k , Pa., t h e o t h e r m o r n i n g b l e w t w o&#13;
m e n four h u n d r e d feet, h o r r i b l y m a n g l i n g&#13;
them. _&#13;
T H E first e n c a m p m e n t of S t a t e t r o o p s&#13;
h e l d in t h e S o u t h since t h e w a r b e g a n a t&#13;
Asheville, N. C , on t h e 22d.&#13;
T H E count of the'. C h e y e n n e s a n d A r a -&#13;
p a h c r s w a s successfully c o n c l u d e d a t&#13;
F o r t ?ieuo, I. T., on t h e 22d, u n d e r t h e direction&#13;
of I n s p e c t o r A r m s t r o n g . The&#13;
c e n s u s shows 1,300 A r a p a h o e s a n d 2*109&#13;
C h e y e n n e s .&#13;
A T E R R I F I C r a i n - s t o r m , w i t h h i g h wind,&#13;
p a s s e d over t h e C a t a w i s s u V a l l e y , n e a r&#13;
tShenandoah, P a . , on t h e 22d, u p r o o t i n g&#13;
t r e e s a n d b l o w i n g d o w n fences a n d b a r n s .&#13;
T h e d a m a g e to crops alone w a s e s t i m a t e d&#13;
a t $50,000,&#13;
S i x f a t a l cases of s u n s t r o k e o c c u r r e d a t&#13;
Louisville, K y . , on t h e 22d.&#13;
A N e x a m i n a t i o n on t h e 22d of^ttre" books&#13;
of t h e S e d a l i a (Mo.) Savijigs^Bank, from&#13;
w h i c h 11. E. K i n g - ^ t h e b o o k k e e p e r, a b -&#13;
s c o n d e d r e c e n t l y ^ T t h $10,000, s h o w e d t h a t&#13;
$48,000 o p &amp; e ^ O . O O U c a p i t a l of t h e b a n k&#13;
ha&lt;L-keeu stolen.&#13;
A'HEAVY t t r a n d e r - s t o r m at- C o l u m b u s ,&#13;
0.,'oit t h e 22d cooled t h e s c o r c h i n g a t m o s -&#13;
p h e r e , b u t b l e w d o w n trees a n d m o v e d a&#13;
few houses from t h e i r foundations.&#13;
T H E C a p t a i n of a schooner which a r r i v e d&#13;
a t P o r t l a n d , Me., on t h e 22d r e p o r t e d t h e&#13;
c a p t u r e alive of a v e r i t a b l e s e a - s e r p e n t&#13;
w h i c h w e i g h s a b o u t 1,200 p c u u d s a n d looks&#13;
s o m e t h i n g like a t u r t l e . *&#13;
T H E P r e s i d e n t a n d C a b i n e t d e c i d e d ou&#13;
t h e 22d t h a t t h e leases of l a n d in Indian"&#13;
T e r r i t o r y to c a t t l e m e n w e r e i n v a l i d , a n d&#13;
w o u l d t a k e m e a s u r e s t o ^ a r e t h e m set&#13;
.aside, t h e e x a c t metbod-olf p r o c e d u r e n o t&#13;
h a v i n g a s y e t bejjjktletermined.&#13;
- T H E R E were"^fourteen d e a t h s from s u n -&#13;
stroke^-hf' N e w Y o r k City ou t h e 22d a n d&#13;
j * i g h t a t P h i l a d e l p h i a .&#13;
A MOB of 150 men broke into t h e j a i l a t&#13;
M i n d e n , La., t h e o t h e r n i g h t a n d s h o t d e a d&#13;
t w o colored m e n held for m u r d e r .&#13;
P A T R I C K B R A N D O N m u r d e r o u s l y a s s a u l t -&#13;
ed a n d t h e n r o b b e d h i s aged m o t h e r of&#13;
$150 a t W o o s t e r , 0 . , on t h e 22d. H e d e -&#13;
c a m p e d , b u t w a s a r r e s t e d a n d i m p r i s o n e d&#13;
t o a w a i t t h e r e s u l t of his m o t h e r ' s i n j u r i e s .&#13;
J O H N N O V A K , r e s i d i n g n e a r Y a n k t o n ,&#13;
D . T., killed his wife on t h e 23d a n d t h e n&#13;
s h o t himself d e a d . T h e couple h a d been&#13;
m a r r i e d b u t t w o m o n t h s . J e a l o u s y a n d&#13;
w h i s k y c a u s e d t h e t r a g e d y .&#13;
A G G E R &amp; B A N N I N G , m a n u f a c t u r e r s of&#13;
b e d s t e a d s a t C i n c i n n a t i , failed o n t h e 23d&#13;
for $125,000.&#13;
A P R O C L A M A T I O N w a s i s s u e d b y t h e&#13;
P r e s i d e n t o n t h e 23d d i r e c t i n g s t o c k m e n&#13;
o n t h e A r a p a h o e a n d C h e y e n n e r e s e r v a -&#13;
t i o n to r e m o v e ttreir c a t t l e w i t h i n f o r t y&#13;
d a y s . C a p t a i n J , M. Lee, N i n t h I n f a n t r y ,&#13;
A N u n k n o w n p e r s o n p l a c e d d y n a m i t e In&#13;
a " s h o c k " of g r a i n ou Mr. J o h n Deardorff's&#13;
f a r m , n e a r W a b a s h , I n d , , on t h e 23d, a n d&#13;
a n d w h e n r u n t h r o u g h a t h r a s h i n g m a -&#13;
chine a n e x p l o s i o n o c c u r r e d , w h i c h futally&#13;
injured Mr. Deardorff a n d w o u n d e d&#13;
s e v e r a l o t h e r persona.&#13;
J A M E S M C M I L L A N , a m i n e r w h o w a s out&#13;
of work, r e t u r n e d to h i s h o m e a t A u s t i u -&#13;
t o w n , O., a few e v e n i n g s a g o , s a t d o w n&#13;
a n d wept, n e x t kissed his wife a u d child&#13;
r e n , a n d d r a w i n g a r e v o l v e r blew o u t his&#13;
b r a i n s .&#13;
T H E h e a t w a s still i n t e n s e in N e w Y o r k&#13;
C i t y on t h e 23d, t w e l v e d e a t h s from s u n -&#13;
s t r o k e being r e p o r t e d . *~~&#13;
D A V I D S C R U G G S (colored), r e s i d i n g n e a r&#13;
Redfleld, Ark., w h o w a s c h a r g e d w i t h a s -&#13;
s a u l t i n g his o w n d a u g h t e r , w a s seized on&#13;
t h e 24th by a colored m o b a n d c u t to pieces&#13;
w i t h knives a n d r a z o r s .&#13;
B A B C O C K &amp; A N D R E W S , p r o p r i e t o r s of t h e&#13;
big b u c k e t - s h o p a t S y r a c u s e , N. Y., failed&#13;
ou the 24th for $T)00,0O0.&#13;
R E V . W . H . H I C K M A N , a M e t h o d i s t&#13;
p r e a c h e r , c r e a t e d a s e n s a t i o n ou t h e 24th&#13;
a t t h e B a t t l e G r o u n d c a m p - m e e t i n g , n e a r&#13;
L a f a y e t t e , Ind., b y a d v o c a t i n g m a r r i a g e&#13;
t e t w e e n blacks a n d w h i t e s .&#13;
"'FOREST fires w e r e r a g i n g fiercely on t h e&#13;
24th in t h e v i c i n i t y of C a m d e n , N. J., a u d&#13;
it w a s feared a n u m b e r of t o w n s w o u l d be&#13;
d e s t r o y e d .&#13;
IT w a s a n n o u n c e d o n t h e 24th t h a t t h e&#13;
A p a c h e s h a d s u r r o u n d e d t h e . _ m i n i n g&#13;
c a m p s in t h e m o u n t a i n s of A r i z o n a . T h e&#13;
m i n e r s w e r e s t a n d i n g g u a r d n i g h t a n d d a y .&#13;
A L L t h e mills a t F a l l R i v e r , Mass., on t h o&#13;
24,th a g r e e d t o s t o p t h e p r o d u c t i o n of p r i n t&#13;
cloths for four weeks, o w i n g to a n overstorked&#13;
marlcet.&#13;
A D V I C E S of t h e 24th t o Bradstvcet's r e -&#13;
p o r t a n i m p r o v e m e n t i n business i n t h e&#13;
p r i n c i p a l cities t h r o u g h o u t t h e c o u n t r y ,&#13;
-especially i n t h e d r y - g o o d s t r a d e .&#13;
N I N E m e n w e r e s e r i o u s l y injured in New-&#13;
Y o r k on t h e 24th by t h e b u r n i n g of Lillient&#13;
h a l ' s tobacco f a c t o r y .&#13;
T H E S i g n a l - S e r v i c e p u b l i s h e s r e p o r t s&#13;
of 180 t o r n a d o e s iu t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s d u r -&#13;
i n g 18&amp;£~ More t h a n o n e t h o u s a u d build.-&#13;
i n g s w e r e d e s t r o y e d b y t h e s e s t o r m s . T h e&#13;
S t a t e * in w h i c h t o r n a d o e s w e r a m o s t f r e -&#13;
q u e n t w e r e G e o r g i a , S o u t h C a r o l i n a a u d&#13;
Alabama..&#13;
M I L T O N A. S M I T H , w h o killed his wife t o&#13;
w h o m he h a d been m a r r i e d t w e u t y - o n e&#13;
y e a r s , a n d w h o h a d b o r n e h i m t h i r t e e n&#13;
children, w a s h a n g e d on t h e 24th a t Osceola,&#13;
Neb., in t h e p r e s e n e e o f five t h o u s a n d&#13;
people.&#13;
IN t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s a n d C a n a d a t h e r e&#13;
were 215 business failures d u r i n g t h e seven&#13;
d a y s ended on the 24th, "against IsO&#13;
t h e previous - seven d a y s . T h e distribution'&#13;
w a s as follows: Middle States, 45;&#13;
New E n g l a n d S t a t e s , 30; W e s t e r n , 07;&#13;
Southern, 42; Pacitic S t a t e s and T e r r i t o -&#13;
ries, 31; C a n a d a , 20.&#13;
w a s s t a t e d on t h e 24th t h a t ttta c o t t a g e in&#13;
w h i c h G e n e r a l G r a u t died would n e v e r&#13;
a g a i n be o c c u p i e d by a n y f a m i l y or p e r -&#13;
sons. T h e house and its a p p u r t e n a n c e s&#13;
would be p r e s e n t e d t o t h e S t a t e or N a t i o n .&#13;
T H E d r a p i n g of t h e public buildings in&#13;
W a s h i n g t o n in honor of G e n e r a l G r a n t&#13;
w a s c o m p l e t e d o n t h e 25th. S e r g e a n t - a t -&#13;
A r m s C a n a d a y , of t h e S e n a t e , h a d r e -&#13;
ceived t h e following d i s p a t c h :&#13;
" O A K L A N D HorsK. ST. C L A I R S P R I N G S ,&#13;
Mich.. July 24.—It Is proper that the Souat* of&#13;
tlie V li I ted State* shall participate with tun&#13;
bther d e p a r t m e n t s of the Cover anient and&#13;
with the people In doing honor to the memory&#13;
of C e n t r a l Grant. 1 therefore designate the&#13;
following Senators to represent that body in&#13;
connection with t h e funeral ceremonies: J u s -&#13;
tin Morrill, J o h n Sherman, John A. Logan. J.&#13;
Donald Cameron, Wade Hampton, \V. M. Hansom,&#13;
Joseph K. Hrown, J. G. Harris and J o h n&#13;
K. Milku-, of California. You will notify t h e m&#13;
immediately, and you a r c requested to olh-&#13;
I'ially accompany them.&#13;
'•THOMAS A. H E N D R I C K S ,&#13;
"Vive-President."&#13;
HE WAS READY TO GO.&#13;
PERSONAL AND POLITICAL.&#13;
TnK t r u s t e e s of V a s s a r College,' n t&#13;
Poughkeepeie, N. Y . , on t h e 21st elected&#13;
Dr. G a l u s h a A n d e r s o n , of Chicago, a s&#13;
P r e s i d e n t .&#13;
T H E special c o m m i s s i o n s i t t i n g a t P h i l a -&#13;
d e l p h i a r e t u r n e d a v e r d i c t on t h e 22d t h a t&#13;
J o h n McCullough, t h e t r a g e d i a n , h a d been,&#13;
a l u n a t i c for six m o n t h s , b a t e n j o y e d some&#13;
lucid i n t e r v a l s . T h e v a l u e of his e s t a t e&#13;
w a s placed a t H4,")04.&#13;
J v i x i E T. L Y L E D I C K E Y , of t h e Illinois&#13;
S u p r e m e Court, died a t A t l a n t i c City, N.&#13;
J., ou t h e n i g h t of t h e 22d, a g e d s e v e n t y -&#13;
four y e a r s . H e h a d been a r e s i d e n t of&#13;
Chicago since 1854.&#13;
G E N E R A L G R A N T ' S d e a t h , w h i c h o c -&#13;
c u r r e d a t M o u n t M a c G r e g o r a t 8:08 on t h e&#13;
m o r n i n g of t h e 2:icr, w a s p a i n l e s s a n d t r a n -&#13;
quil. W i t h i n t w e n t y m i n u t e s after he e x -&#13;
pired a p l a s t e r cast of t h e face w a s t a k e n .&#13;
The u e w s of ther-sad-event w a s r e c e i v e d iu&#13;
all p a r t s of t h e c o u n t r y with p r o f o u n d s&#13;
row, bells b e i n g tolled, flags hungja4rnalfm&#13;
a s t a n d t h e e m b l e m s o f m o u r n i n g d i s -&#13;
p l a y e d from public ancV-prTvate b u i l d i n g s .&#13;
P r e s i d e n t C l e v e l a n d issued a p r o c l a m a -&#13;
tion t e s t i f y i n g to t h e m a g n i t u d e of t h e&#13;
^ a t i p n a T l o s s , a n d o r d e r i n g t h e p a y m e n t&#13;
a p p r o p r i a t e h o n o r s to tho m e m o r y of&#13;
the deceased by t h e several d e p a r t m e n t s&#13;
of t h e G o v e r n m e n t .&#13;
T H E Ohio D e m o c r a t i c S t a t e C e n t r a l C o m -&#13;
mittee m e t on the 23d a t Columbus a n d d e -&#13;
cided to h o l d t h e S t a t a Convention in t h a t&#13;
city A u g u s t 111 a n d 20.&#13;
W A L T W H I T M A N , t h e poet, w a s p r o s -&#13;
-trated by t i n - h e a t . o n . t h e .evening of thef&#13;
22d while s i t t i n g on t h e steps of his residence&#13;
in C a m d e n , N . J. He w a s consul-"&#13;
ered out of d a n g e r o n t h e 2"d.&#13;
P E T E R H . W A T S O N , o x - P r e s i d e n t of t h e&#13;
E r i e R a i l w a y a n d A s s i s t a n t S e c r e t a r y of&#13;
W a r d u r i n g Stanieai^s t e r m , d i e d in N e w&#13;
Y o r k on thjJML • . • _&#13;
SVPRVSTK J U D G E S C R A I G a n d S h o p e&#13;
g r a n t e d a s u p e r s e d e a s on the 23J iu t h e&#13;
case of J o s e p h C. M a c k i n , of Chicago, convicted&#13;
of p e r j u r y , - b u t refused bail to t h e&#13;
prisoner.&#13;
T H K G r a n t M o n u m e n t A s s o c i a t i o n filed&#13;
articles of i n c o r p o r a t i o n on t h o 2.'kl a t&#13;
Springfield, 111., t h e object b e i n g to cons&#13;
t r u c t a n d m a i n t a i n a m o n u m e n t to General&#13;
G r a n t . A m o n g t h e Board of Directors&#13;
are S e n a t o r C u l l o m a u d e x - G o v e r n o r&#13;
P a l m e r .&#13;
T H E f a m i l y of G e n e r a l G r a n t on t h e 24th&#13;
f o r m a l l y a c c e p t e d t h e offer of t h e c i t y of&#13;
N e w Y o r k to g i v e t h e g r e a t soldier a&#13;
b u r i a l - p l a c e in C e n t r a l P a r k . I t w a s&#13;
p r o m i s e d , also, t h a t w h e n Mrs. G r a n t d i e d&#13;
Bhe w o u l d be a l l o w e d burial beside h e r&#13;
h u s b a n d . The b o d y of G e n e r a l G r a n t&#13;
will be t a k e n f r o m M o u n t M a c G r e g o r&#13;
A u g n s t 4, t h e n c e t o S a r a t o g a a n d A l b a n y ;&#13;
a t w h i c h l a t t e r p l a c e it will 11¾ in s t a t e&#13;
in t h e c a p i t o l u n t i l noon of A u g u s t 5,&#13;
w h e n it will be t a k e n t o N e w Y o r k , a n d&#13;
will lie t n s t a t e a t t h e c i t y - h a l l until t h e&#13;
8th, w h e n t h e p u b l i c obsequies will t a k e&#13;
place.&#13;
M E M B E R S of Z. H . S c o t t Post, 279, w e n t&#13;
on t h e 24th, to t h e house n e a r P o i n t P l e a s -&#13;
a n t , 0 . , w h e r e G e n e r a l G r a n t w a s tiorn,&#13;
d r a p e d t h e doors a n d w i n d o w s , a n d p l a c e d&#13;
waY a p p o i n t e d IndtaTT A g e n t a t t h e - O h e y * 1 a t half »4uaat-0-ver„ t h e west g a b l e t h e j &gt; o s t&#13;
e n n e r e s e r v a t i o n .&#13;
A S E V E R E s t o r m p a s s e d t h r o u g h t h e&#13;
s o u t h e r n p a r t of H a n c o c k C o u n t y , 0 . , o n&#13;
t h e 23d. f e n c e * w e r e b l o w n d o w n , p a r t s&#13;
of h o u s e s a n d b w n i t o r n a w a y a n d c o r a&#13;
l e v e l e d . ,&#13;
F O R E I G N .&#13;
A D V I C E S of t h e 21st r e p o r t t w e l v e shocks&#13;
ot e a r t h q u a k e in C a s h m e r e , I n d i a .&#13;
I T is said t h a t the R u s s i a n G o v e r n m e n t&#13;
c o n t e m p l a t e s l e v y i n g a poll t a x u p o n e v e r y&#13;
foreigner w h o r e m a i n s more t h a n a fortn&#13;
i g h t in t h e E m p i r e .&#13;
IT w a s a u n o u u e e d on tho 22d t h a t t h e&#13;
R u s s i a n G o v e r n m e n t had m a d e fresh p r o -&#13;
posals t o E n g l a u d f r e s p e c t i n g t h e A f g h a n&#13;
frontier. M e a n w h i l e it h a d been d e c i d e d&#13;
to a d d fifty t o r p e d o - b o a t s to t h e R u s s i a n&#13;
tleet in t h e B l a c k Sea.&#13;
A L I K E - B O A T which s t a r t e d ou t h e 22d&#13;
from Yarmou'.li, E u g . , to t h e relief of a&#13;
brig in d i s t r e s s , s a n k before r e a c h i n g its&#13;
d e s t i n a t i o n , a n d e i g h t of its c r e w w e r e&#13;
d r o w n e d .&#13;
A D V I C E S of t h e 22d from A s s o u a n s a y&#13;
t h a t El Mehdi died of s m a l l - p o x J u n e 20&#13;
last.&#13;
A S M I E K a r r i v e d a t Cairo on t h e 23d w h o&#13;
d e c l a r e d t h a t h e w i t n e s s e d the- f u n e r a l of&#13;
El Mehdi. H o said tiia F a l s e P r o p h e t&#13;
died from s m a l l - p o x J u n e 29.&#13;
&gt; T H I R T E E N p e r s o n s w e r e killed a n d t w e n -&#13;
t y - t w o i n j u r e d by l i g h t n i a g d u r i n g a&#13;
s t o r m n e a r C a j e t a u a , I t a l y , ou the 23d.&#13;
T H E m a r r i a g e of P r i n c e s s "Beatrice, t h e&#13;
y o u n g e s t d a u g h t e r of Queen V i c t o r i a , a n d&#13;
P r i n c e H e n r y of B a t t e n b u r g , took p l a c e&#13;
.at Osborne on t h e 23d.&#13;
• I T - - w a s a n n o u n c e d on t h e 23d t h a t&#13;
Michael D a v i t t refused to s t a n d for P a r l i a -&#13;
m e n t b e c a u s e iu e n t e r i n g t h a t b o d y h e&#13;
w o u l d be c e m p e l l e d to s w e a r a l l e g i a n c e to&#13;
t h e Que?u.&#13;
A V I R E r e c e n t l y a t C l a r a f o r d , n e a r A i x ,&#13;
P r a n c e , d e s t r o y e d s i x t e e n b u i l d i n g s , several&#13;
p e r s o n s p e r i s h i n g iu t h e flames.&#13;
A R O W of t e u e m e n t d w e l l i n g s a t C o l o g n e ,&#13;
F r a n c e , collapsed ou t h e 24th, killing fortyfive&#13;
p e r s o n s a n d i n j u r i n g t w e n t y - f i v e&#13;
o t h e r s .&#13;
A N u n k n o w n m a n w a s a r r e s t e d on t h e&#13;
24th a t L o u d o n for t h r e a t e n i n g t h e life of&#13;
Princess Beatrice, w h o was r e c e n t l y m a r -&#13;
ried.&#13;
M i s s M O O R E , a n A m e r i c a n , h a s t a k e n&#13;
t h e first prize for s i n g i n g a t t h o P a r i s Cons&#13;
e r v a t o i r e .&#13;
T H I R T E E N p e r s o n s w e r e killed a u d t w e n -&#13;
t y - t w o i n j u r e d b y l i g h t n i n g d u r i n g a&#13;
s t o r m a few d a y s a g o a t Torre C a j o t a n i ,&#13;
I t a l y .&#13;
C A B L E a d v i c e s of t h e 24th a n n o u n c e t h e&#13;
d e s t r u c t i o n b y tiro of t h e e n t i r e b u s i n e s s&#13;
portiou of t h o city of C a r d e n a s , C u b a , iin$&#13;
losses being e s t i m a t e d a t $2,000,000.&#13;
flag.&#13;
M R S . C R A M C R , s i s t e r of G e n e r a l G r a n t ,&#13;
a n d h e r h u s b a n d , e x - M i n i s t e r t o S w i t z e r -&#13;
l a n d , a r r i v e d a t N e w Y o r k 7 o n t h e 24th&#13;
from H a m b u r g .&#13;
B T a u t h o r i t y ofj.Mr. J o s e p h D r e z e l i t&#13;
LATER NEWS.&#13;
G E N E R A ' L G R A N T ' S family d e c i d e d on the,&#13;
26th upon a m i l i t a r y funeral, whicli^svouTd&#13;
be u n d e r t h e a u t h o r i t y a n d control of t h e&#13;
N a t i o n a l G o v e r n m e u t . ^ G e ' n e r n l H a n c o c k&#13;
h a d been d e s i g n a t m r ^ o t a k e c h a r g e of t h e&#13;
body a t MoutCt M a c G r e g o r , a n d w o u l d&#13;
h a v e t h e ^ a i r e c t i o u of its r e m o v a l to N e w&#13;
a n d of t h e c e r e m o n i e s a t t h a t city.&#13;
P r e s i d e n t C l e v e l a n d w o u l d n a m e t h e p a l l -&#13;
b e a r e r s to a c t a t t h e final obsequies.&#13;
A B A N D of r e t u r n i n g A p a c h e I n d i a n s&#13;
w e r e i n t e r r u p t e d n e a r Bisbee, A. T., t h e&#13;
o t h e r d a y , a n d seven of t h e i r n u m b e r w e r e&#13;
killed.&#13;
B Y a c l o u d - b u r s t on t h e 26th in " L u c k -&#13;
less V a l l e y , " Col., a few miles n o r t h of&#13;
D e n v e r , a l a r g e a m o u n t of p r o p e r t y w a s&#13;
d e s t r o y e d , a n d m a n y lives w e r e s u p p o s e d&#13;
t o h a v e been lost. ^,^-^&#13;
A F T E R a,jiiilitary p a r a d e &gt; t ^ B o s t o u - o n&#13;
t h e 2«"&gt;th a b o u t oue^Jwrnared m e n succ&#13;
u m b e d to t h e JxeafT A n u m b e r of t h e m&#13;
w e r e d a n g o r o u s l y ill.&#13;
AjjvrCES of t h e 2«th s a y t h a t a fearful&#13;
•treat-wave w a s e x t e n d i n g o v e r G r e a t&#13;
B r i t a i n , . C h i l d r e n w e r e d y i n g b y h u n -&#13;
d r e d s , a u d scores of s u n s t r o k e s of both&#13;
m e n a u d b e a s t s w e r e r e p o r t e d d a i l y .&#13;
M E M O R I A L services in honor of G e n e r a l&#13;
^ J r a n t w e r o held in m a n y cities a n d t o w n s&#13;
on the -Jfith.&#13;
T W E N T Y - O N E cases of p r o s t r a t i o n , i n -&#13;
c l u d i n g four d e a t h s , were' r e p o r t e d in N e w&#13;
Y o r k on t h e 2(ith from t h e o p p r e s s i v e h e a t .&#13;
T H E t o t a l n u m b e r of d e a t h s from c h o l e r a&#13;
in S p a i n u p to t h e 20th is placed a t 20,000.&#13;
O n l y f o u r t e e n of t h e p r o v i n c e s of S p a i n&#13;
w e r e free from the. scourge.&#13;
A D V I C E S of t h e 2oth from P a n a m a r e -&#13;
p o r t t h a t d u r i n g a d i s t u r b a n c e on a d r e d g e&#13;
o w n e d b y t h e A m e r i c a n D r e d g e C o m p a n y&#13;
t h e wife a n d child of t h e C a p t a i n , P. F .&#13;
H a y e s , fell o v e r b o a r d a n d w e r e d r o w n e d ,&#13;
C a p t a i n H a y e s t h e n c o m m i t t e d suicide.&#13;
T H E f r i g a t e T e n n e s s e e , flying t h e flag of&#13;
R e a r - A d m i r a l J o u e t t , a r r i v e d iu H a m p t o n&#13;
R o a d s ou tho 20th, after a s i x m o n t h s '&#13;
cruise in t h e gulf.&#13;
W I L L I A M H. E H K R T w a s a r r e s t e d on t h e&#13;
25th a t R o c h e s t e r , N. Y., for m a k i n g&#13;
c o u n t e r f e i t flve-csnt pieces.&#13;
D I S P A T C H E S of t h e 20th from p o i n t s i u&#13;
T e x a s s t a t e d t h a t c o m p l i c a t i o n s w e r e&#13;
! likely to follow t h e P r e s i d e n t ' s p r o c l a m a -&#13;
t i o n in r e y a r d t o c a t t l e m e n , a s m a n y of t h e&#13;
r a n g e s w e r o s u b - l e a s e d to T e x a s firms for&#13;
g r a z i n g , a n d t h e i r c a t t l e m u s t also be r e -&#13;
m o v e d .&#13;
P K T H R . S T A M P S (colored) w a s l y n c h e d a t&#13;
D o u g l a s v i l l e , Ga., on t h e 2 o t h f o r c r i m i u a l -&#13;
l y a j s a a u l t i n g - a g i r l t h i r t e e n y e a r s old. *&#13;
T H K e x c h a n g e s a t t w e n t y - s i x l e a d i n g&#13;
c l e a r i n g - h o u s e s hi t h e ' U n i t * 1 S t a t e s d u r -&#13;
i n g t h e week ended on t h e ^ o t h a g g r e -&#13;
g a t e d $7Gf,205,r)7(lt a g a i u s t $w 13,1180,476 t h e&#13;
p r e v i o u s week. As c o m p a r e d w i t h the&#13;
c o r r e s p o n d i n g period of. 18S1, t h e falling&#13;
off a m o u n t s to 15.4 per cent.&#13;
PROPOSED GRANT MONUMENT.&#13;
Suggestion for a Dlinu Cont r ibut ion f / o i n&#13;
(irnnd A r m y Men.&#13;
W A S H I N G T O N , J u l y • 27.— General Burdotte&#13;
h a s addressed the following letter to&#13;
ex-President i t a y e s . relative to the lattor's&#13;
proposition regarding a National m o n u m e n t&#13;
to the late General G r a n t :&#13;
IlttUK}l'ARTKR,S OUANll AltMV OK Tilt RE*.&#13;
pvai.ic, W A S H I N G T O N , 1), (.'., J u l y ;,*'&gt;, IfSo.--'&#13;
Jimi. R. li. Ihiyvx, Frcmunt, O. — Dear Sir ;md&#13;
Comrade: 1 have UiPt r/'ad your letU-r to&#13;
General R. B. Buoklnml and o't iters&#13;
recommending' that the Oram! Army of&#13;
the Republic lead In raising a fund by&#13;
general subscription tor the erection of a&#13;
National m o n u m e n t to (lener-ul (Jrani. I beg&#13;
to sugKcst that the National m o n u m e n t t&#13;
be erected to the memory of our departed&#13;
comrade will be of such proportlojja-nnd cost&#13;
as to be beyond the proper lhie&gt;*fprivate contribution.&#13;
His I'ollow-oitiZOttS'wllldemand t h a t&#13;
it lie paid out Of th*&gt;ff—the National—treasury.&#13;
For, the cwtfTit of the Nation the lesson&#13;
of thcvAVasuiiigton m o n u m e n t - I n t h a t&#13;
rejjranL-^ought not to K&lt;&gt; lenheeded.&#13;
Th*r"Grand Army of the R&lt;*pubile m a y&#13;
'of right claim the honor of erect.injf Its own&#13;
monument to its leader and comrade; 1 believe&#13;
it will do so. It should tie the work of&#13;
the individual comrades, posts, d e p a r t m e n t s&#13;
and National hetidijuurters, aeting as ageneios&#13;
only for gathering and caring for the contributions.&#13;
Following out the Grund Army&#13;
principle of " e q u a l i t y in iraterrilt.v," the&#13;
sum to be given might be Restricted to au&#13;
eipial a m o u n t for ea':h. 'l\m cents per capita&#13;
from o u r three h u n d r y l thousand comrades&#13;
would produce WtMXWT Why not provide&#13;
for the erection of a statu*, to tie chiseled by&#13;
the most skillful hand wtainable, that shalltoll&#13;
the story ot the la*t tfcroic conflict as well&#13;
as of his greatest daffs/ "fIrani, composing&#13;
his memoirs, fltly^ocuted^&lt;5T&gt;rmnittcd to&#13;
the care of the Nation to lie sheltered forever&#13;
under the dome of thu.-4-*apit&lt;&gt;l, would seem a&#13;
uuist tit m e m o r i a l ^ T o u r comrade and worthy&#13;
the Grand A^jnyT 1 hope to meet you at t h e&#13;
&lt;^hio sonvKannuiil encampment next month,&#13;
whe-veit seems the matter is to have f u r t h e r&#13;
^eonsideratioik&#13;
S. S. liuiuiETTE, Commander-in-Chief.&#13;
THE FATE OF A MURDERER.&#13;
d r a g g e d from Pr i son wi t h a Rope, F a -&#13;
tally Shot a n d H a n g e d to a T r e e .&#13;
•&#13;
C A I R O , III,, J u l y 27,— T h e - m a n Mruipin,&#13;
w h o killed his son-in-law, Daniels, a t&#13;
Mounds Junction, Wednesday, w a s lynched&#13;
by a m o b at Mound City at one o'clock yesterday&#13;
morning. A t m i d n i g h t a j&gt;osse o,f m a s k e d&#13;
m e n on horseback approached the city from&#13;
the direction of V i l l a ftidge a n d M o u n d s&#13;
Junction, and, hitching their horses to trees,&#13;
proceeded to&gt;the jail. Sheriff Crime w a s in&#13;
charge, assisted by four deputies. A d e -&#13;
m a n d for keys being refused, the doors,&#13;
t h r e e in number, w e r e broken d o w n w i t h&#13;
sledge-hammers, until t h e cage w a s reached.&#13;
T h e m u r d e r e r was found u p o n his c o t A&#13;
h a n g m a n ' s knot w a s t h r o w n around his&#13;
neck, t h e e n d of t h e r o p e w a s&#13;
seized by many hands, a n d t h e m a n&#13;
w a s dragged o u t over the r o u g h roads&#13;
beyond tlie levee, until t h e first t r e e&#13;
w a s reached. Several s h o t s were t h e n&#13;
fired into the m u r d e r e r ' s body, all t a k i n g&#13;
effect, nnd either being frttal. H e w a s then&#13;
d r a w n up, but w a s probably d e a d hefore he&#13;
was raised from tho ground. T h e victim&#13;
m a i n t a i n e d perfect silence from t h e first.&#13;
T h e deed wiw d o n e so quietly t h a t t h e&#13;
citizens w e r e not aroused until t h e affair&#13;
w a s over.&#13;
A R e m a r k a b l e D n o u m a i i t W r l t t e u by&#13;
G e n e r a l Orwut » F e w l)ay» HeSur* Hi*&#13;
D e a t h .&#13;
M T . M A C G K E U O U , N. Y., J u l y 36.—&#13;
W h i l e In conversation with t h e correspondent&#13;
of t h e Associate^ l*rtws, Dr.&#13;
Douglas read- t h e following r e m a r k a b l e&#13;
document, which was w r i t t e n by (leneral&#13;
( i r a n t in Dr. D o u g l a s ' presence on T h u r s -&#13;
day, J u l y 2:&#13;
• l ask you not to show this to any one, unless&#13;
the physicians you consult with, until tho&#13;
end. Particularly, 1 want it kept from iny&#13;
family. If known to one-man the papers will&#13;
get it, aud they [my fumilyl will got It. t t ~&#13;
would only distress them almost uoyond end&#13;
u r a n c e to know It, aud by retlex would distress&#13;
mo. I have not changed my mind materially&#13;
since I wrote you before in the&#13;
Bame strain. Now, however, 1 know that I&#13;
gain strength some days, b u t when 1 do go&#13;
back it Is beyond where 1 started to improve.&#13;
1 think the chances are \ cry decidedly In favor&#13;
or your being able to Keep me alive until&#13;
tho change of weather, tow an! winter. Of&#13;
course there are contingencies that might&#13;
arise at any tiire thut might carry me oft&#13;
verv suddenly. The moat probable of theso&#13;
is ohOklug. Under the circumstances life is&#13;
not worth the living 1 am very thankful&#13;
Ighul was written, but scratched out and&#13;
thankful substituted] t o have been spared&#13;
this long, because it has enabled me t o&#13;
practically complete tho work in which 1&#13;
take so much Interest, I can not stir u p&#13;
strength enough to review it and make additions&#13;
and subtractions that would suggest&#13;
themselves to me, and are not likiJy to suggest&#13;
themselves to any one else. I'mler tho&#13;
above circumstances, I will bo the happiest&#13;
the most pain 1 can avoid. If there Is to t o&#13;
auv extraordinary cure, such as some people&#13;
believe there is to be, it will develop itseit. I&#13;
would say, therefore, to you and y o u r colleagues,&#13;
to make me as comfortable as you&#13;
can. If it Is within God's providence t h a t&#13;
1 should go now, I am ready to&#13;
obey His call without m u r m u r . 1&#13;
should prefer to go now to e n d u r i n g&#13;
mv present suffering for a single day,&#13;
without hope of recovery. As 1 have&#13;
stated. I am thankful for the Providential&#13;
extension ot my time to enable mo to continue,&#13;
iny work. I am further thankful, and&#13;
in a much greater degree thankful, because&#13;
it has enabled me to see for myself tlie happy&#13;
harmony which so suddtmly sprung u p between&#13;
those engaged, b u t a few short years&#13;
ago, in deadly conflict, it has been an inestimable'&#13;
blessing to me-to hear the kind expressions&#13;
toward me in person from all parts,&#13;
of--our counti-iV from pop&gt;!e of ail nationalities,&#13;
of all religions, and of no religious; of&#13;
Confederates and of-National troops alike; of&#13;
soldiers' organizations; of mechanical, scientific,&#13;
religious, and other societies, embracing&#13;
almost every citizen in the land. They&#13;
have brought joy to my heart if they have&#13;
not effected a cure. So! to you and your colleagues&#13;
1 acknowledge'my indebtedness for&#13;
having brought uic through the valley o.f tho&#13;
Shadow of death to enable me to witness theso&#13;
things. V. S. G U A M . "&#13;
"m. MacGregor, N. Y., J u l y ^ . "&#13;
A "GIG T A L K . "&#13;
I.iout*Miaut-«;«Mieral Slioridaii H o l d s nn I n -&#13;
tf rviww w i t h I,railing (.:im.y««niie Chief*—&#13;
11« 1» AxsnrtHl t h a t They llavit No M e *&#13;
of War, If i ' r u t e e t e d In T h e i r ItlghU—&#13;
H e Will, H o w e v e r , lie l'r»'par*Hl for&#13;
Kiiiergeiidea, a n d 1'roc t e d to J n » p e c t&#13;
t h e C o u n t r y .&#13;
L A W K K N O K , Kan., J u l y 21.—There is a&#13;
great d i l l e i e n c e in the reports which come&gt;&#13;
from various p a r t s of tho I n d i a n T e r r i t o r y .&#13;
Some convey t h e impression t h a t t h e r e i »&#13;
no likelihood of any trouble, w h i l e o t h e r *&#13;
are of a most alarming nature. A correspondent,&#13;
ou a trip through tho border counties&#13;
of K a n s a s , found tho lieopie a n y t h i n g&#13;
b u t confident t h a t the Indians will remain&#13;
tntctable after the w i t h d r a w a l of t h e&#13;
troops. T h o rumors that they w e r e to&#13;
be disarmed reached t h e I n d i a n a in t i m e&#13;
for t h e m to conceal uioat of theit&#13;
weapons. T h e y have been considerably&#13;
imposed upon by border soldiers, agents&#13;
a n d c a t t l e m e n , and are u n q u e s t i o n a -&#13;
bly restless. R e p o r t s come from v a r i o u s&#13;
points iu t h e Territory t h a t they a r e a w a i t -&#13;
ing the full moon, the time for t h e i r g r a n d&#13;
war-dauoo, before s t a r t i n g on a n y raid.&#13;
K u n n e r s k e e p the ditfeient tribes well advised&#13;
of w h a t is going on. T h o u g h t h e d i s -&#13;
position of the tribes g e n e r a l l y is for&#13;
peace, t h e r e Is"? still a portentous activity&#13;
and uneasiness among them.&#13;
(Jeneral S h e r i d a n ' s conference w i t h t h o&#13;
chiefs a t F o r t Keno yesterday w a s productive&#13;
of a declaration from the latter t h a t&#13;
they had n o idwiuii war if they w e r e a s s u r e d&#13;
protection in their rights. I t Is e x p e c t e d&#13;
that General S h e r i d a n will g o from K e n o&#13;
to F o r t Supply, and theuce across t h e&#13;
country to DoiUie City, 'passing&#13;
t h r o u g h m o s t of the country of t h e&#13;
disatl'eeted tribes. T h e military all a l o n g&#13;
t h e border a p p e a r s to be ready for m a r c h i n g&#13;
a n d lighting orders on a m o m e n t ' s notice.&#13;
T h e expected trouble at Salt L a k e Cityr U .&#13;
T., Friday, tlie'24th i n s t , is exciting q u i t e&#13;
as m u c h interest in military circles as t h e&#13;
t h r e a t e n e d I n d i a n raids.&#13;
S T . L O U I S , M O . , J u l y 21,—A special&#13;
from F o r t 'ITeno-siiys: T h e dissatisfied I n -&#13;
dians talked with General S h e r i d a n yesterday.&#13;
T h e e l e m e n t s represented w e r e t h e&#13;
Stone Calf and Little Kob outlits that h a v e&#13;
b e e n creating so much trouble o u t iu t h e&#13;
western p a r t of the reservation. Since Cautonenient&#13;
w a s abandoned as a military&#13;
post, •these two bands have been&#13;
m a k i n g their headquarters at F o r t&#13;
Supply, i n s t e a d ' of at the agency.&#13;
T h e y assured General Sheridan t h a t they&#13;
were glad to see so illustrious a visitor&#13;
from W a s h i n g t o n , ami t h a t the t a l k a b o u t&#13;
the C h e y e n n e s w a n t i n g to fight'was all a&#13;
lie. On the contrary, tliey were pow, a n d&#13;
always had been, entirely peaceable. T h e y&#13;
said they did not like their agent, and t h e y&#13;
were opposed to grass leases. On this acc&#13;
o u n t they w o u ' d like a portion of t h e reservation&#13;
set oft' separately for their use, so&#13;
t h a t t h e y could l&gt;ave their o w n a g e n t s and""&#13;
lease g r a s s to their own friends. ^ - - - ^&#13;
P o w d e r Face, 'the Arapalioe'^chiof, w a s&#13;
present, a n d m a d e a speeeli, in which h e&#13;
told G e n e r a l Slu&gt;uArn t h a t for i n a n v y e a r s&#13;
his people ^ J i a t t o e e n strongly in favor of&#13;
t h a t tho money h a d b e e n&#13;
Tfptly jiaid t h e m for the use of t h a t ,&#13;
which w o u l d o t h e r w i s e have simply r o t t e d&#13;
or been b u r n e d ; that - t h e l e a s e m e n&#13;
had a l w a y s acted honorably and k e p t&#13;
their promises, and that h e ( P o w d e r&#13;
Face) w a n t e d t h e G o v e r n m e n t to distinctly&#13;
u n d e r s t a n d that, with t h e e x c e p t i o n&#13;
of a few w h o had talked, all t h e I n d i a n a&#13;
wished t h e grass leases to run for t h e full&#13;
term of ten y e a r s / f o r which they had b e e n&#13;
made. T h e dispatch closes by s a y i n g t h a t&#13;
S h e r i d a n is very willing to allow t h e Indians&#13;
to a m u s e ' themselves by talkiiig until&#13;
such time as he can m a k e s u i t a b l e disposition&#13;
of his troops, w h e n . h e \vill talk.&#13;
W A S H I N G T O N , J u l y "til.—- T h e following&#13;
is a copy of ..-a telegram in relation to t h e '&#13;
opening of " t h e cattle t r a i l , in the I n d i a n&#13;
Territory, which has been s e n t to Lieutena&#13;
n t - G e n e r a l Sheridan from t h e W a r Dep&#13;
a r t m e n t :&#13;
'.'You aro instructed by the Secretary of&#13;
War to take such measures and use such&#13;
m e a n s as will carry o u t the decision of tho&#13;
Secretary of ihe Interior to open and keep&#13;
open the cattle trails and highways leading&#13;
into the Indian Territory and therefrom, to&#13;
and upon the publje lands, for the purpose&#13;
of the unobstructed passage of cattle and&#13;
other purposed of inter-State c o m m e r c e , "&#13;
, &lt;&#13;
A NOVEL EXECUTION.&#13;
C a t t l e t)i»ea»o In L o u i s i a n a .&#13;
N E W O R L E A N S , . L a . , J u l y 28.—A special&#13;
to the Times-Democrat, from N e w Iberia,&#13;
says: u C h a r b o h is still prevailing to an&#13;
a l a r m i n g e x t e n t a m o n g t h e stock a n d cattle&#13;
.in this parish. On tlus broad prairie w e s t of&#13;
this place, the decomposing carcasses a r e so&#13;
n u m e r o u s as to vitiate t h e a t m o s p h e r e .&#13;
Steps arc being t a k e n to h a v e t h e carcasses&#13;
disposed of by bumim*. F o r t h i s purpose&#13;
a large q u a n t i t y of oil a n d t a t has been sent&#13;
to t h e infectediUsJiicl5J _jnie^jua]a&lt;ly lias&#13;
carried off h u n d r e d s of hordes, m u l e s and&#13;
cows. I t Is reported t h a t several persons&#13;
have been a t t a c k e d with the disease, which&#13;
in one case resuiUed fatally. Slmihtr advices&#13;
h a v e been received from Cypre, Bayou,&#13;
Techo a n d on t h e pi-airies.&#13;
&gt;&#13;
Barnuin'fl H u g e E l e p h a n t , A l b e r t , S h o t&#13;
for H a v i n g Killed HU K e e p e r .&#13;
K K K N K , N . II., J u l y 21.—The h u g e elep&#13;
h a n t A l b e r t , belonging to t h e B a r m a n&#13;
Show, killed his keeper, J a m e s McCormick,&#13;
on J u l y 18. D u r i n g t h e afternoon&#13;
p e r f o r m a n c e of the circus yesterday J a m e s&#13;
S. H u t c h i n s o n , one of tlie managers, announced&#13;
t h a t as the e l e p h a n t h a d t a k e n&#13;
h u m a n life ho would be vShot immediately&#13;
after the performance, and requested&#13;
any members of t h e Keene. L i g h t&#13;
G u a r d s w h o m i g h t be a m o n g t h e s p e c t a t o r s&#13;
to r e p o r t t o their Captain at t h e e n t r a n c e to.&#13;
the m u s e u m canvas. A t 4:30 p . m . t h e&#13;
g i a n t Albeit, loaded with c h a i n s a n d preceded&#13;
by. the head trainers, A r s t i n g s t a l l .&#13;
a n d N e w m a n , m a r c h e d forth from t h e&#13;
m e n a g e r i e followed by t h i r t y - t h r e e riflemen&#13;
and nearly all tho m e m b e r s of t h e -&#13;
show. T h e procession passed d o w n into a&#13;
long ravine near t h e river. H e r e t h e elep&#13;
h a n t w a s securely chained t o t h e t r u n k s of s'l "*"&#13;
some large trees, ami t h e riflemen w e r e t 1 '&#13;
d r a w n u p in line, fifteen paces from t h e h e a d&#13;
a n d side. A t t h i s stage of t h e proceedings&#13;
t h e g r e a t a n i m a l seemed to instinctively •&#13;
feet t h a t something unusual w a s a b o u t tooccur,&#13;
for he began to t r u m p e t i n a&#13;
p i t e o u s manner. George Arstin^stall, t h e&#13;
trainer, d r e w a chalk Hue a r o u n d t h e animal's,&#13;
h e a r t a n d one a r o u n d t h e b r a i n a s&#13;
t a r g e t s for t h e s h a r p s h o o t e r s . T h «&#13;
c o m m a n d s "Ready!"' " A i m ! " w e r e given.&#13;
A r s t i u g s t a l l cried " A l b e r t ! " T h e monster&#13;
slowly raised Ids head in obedience to&gt;&#13;
the l a s t c o m m a n d of Ills keeper, and&#13;
a s t h e w o r d " F i r e ! " accompanied by&#13;
t h e r e p o r t of t h i r t y - t h r e e military&#13;
rities, rang out, he fell dead in his chain*&#13;
w i t h o u t a struggle or a cry. T h o execution&#13;
w a s w i t n e s s e d by fully t w o t h o u s a n d ,&#13;
people, who gave a g r e a t shout as the man-&#13;
-sfayw-Tuii.. ite was mm in mm t6 jumbo.—&#13;
A l b e r t had been with tlie l l a n u i m s h o w&#13;
since its consolidation with t h e - ' L o n d o n ,&#13;
show, and-hud made a t o u r of t h e world&#13;
with thi-s hitter instit'.uion.. H e w a s valued1&#13;
*:$«.i&gt;i&gt;o. y&#13;
YT • r — - ' • + - - — - - • -••&#13;
\ MANY MILLIONS MOURN.&#13;
•General G r a n t , t h e V i o t o r in M a n y&#13;
B a t t l e s , V a n q u i s h e d a t L a s t ,&#13;
b y t h e K i n g of T e r r o r s .&#13;
The Clotting- Scene iti the Great Struggle&#13;
Takes Phiee Early on&#13;
Thursday Morning.&#13;
Surrounded by His Relatives, He Passes&#13;
Peacefully and Fainlossly Away—&#13;
Messages of Sympathy.&#13;
Proclamations by the President and&#13;
Governor of New York—The&#13;
Nation in Mourning.&#13;
DKATH OK (iEXKUAI. (GIANT.&#13;
The respiration was very rapid,&#13;
and was a succession ot shallow, panting&#13;
inhalations, but happily the approaching&#13;
end was becoming clear of the rattling fullness&#13;
of the throat and lungs, and, as the&#13;
respirations grew quicker and more rapid&#13;
at the close, they also became less labored&#13;
and almost noiseless. This fact was In its&#13;
results a comfort to the watchers by the&#13;
bed-side, to whom was sjmred tlve scene of&#13;
an agonizing or other than a peaceful&#13;
death. The wife almost const uitly stroked&#13;
the lace, forehead and hands of the dying&#13;
General, and, at times, as the .passionate&#13;
longing to prevent the event so near would&#13;
rise within her, Mrs. Grant pressed both&#13;
his hands, and, leaning forward, tenderly&#13;
kissed the face of the sinking man.&#13;
Colonel Fred Grant sat silently, but with&#13;
evident feeling, though his bearing was&#13;
that of a soldierlj sou at the death-bed&#13;
of a hero father. IL S. Grant, Jr., was&#13;
deeply moved, but Jesse bore the scene&#13;
steadily, and the ladies, while watching&#13;
with wet cheeks, were silent, as betittedthe&#13;
dignity of a life such as was closing before&#13;
them. The morning had passed live minutes&#13;
beyond eight o'clock, and there was&#13;
not one of the strained and waiting watchers&#13;
but whocoitfd mark the nearness of the&#13;
life title to its final ebbing. Dr. Douglas&#13;
noted the nearness of the supreme&#13;
moiient, and quietly approached the&#13;
bedside and bent about it, and, while he&#13;
did so, the sorrow of the gray-haired physician&#13;
seemed closely allied with that of&#13;
the family. Dr. Shrady also drew_near. i t&#13;
was seven minutes after eight o'clock, and&#13;
the eyes of the General were closed. His&#13;
breathing grew more hushed as the last&#13;
functions of the heart a n d - l u n g s were&#13;
hastened to the closing of the ex-President's&#13;
life. A peaceful expression seemed to be&#13;
-deepening in the linn and stiong-lineti face,&#13;
and it was retlected as a . closing comfort&#13;
in the sad hearts that beat quickly under&#13;
the stress of loving sus|&gt;ense. A minute&#13;
i'nore passed and was closing as the General&#13;
drew a deeper breath. There was an exhalation&#13;
liko that . of one relieved&#13;
-Oi Imqr nnd anxious tension. T]ie_&#13;
I&#13;
Mot-XT M A C G R E O O K , X. Y.&lt; July 23.—&#13;
•General Grant died-shortly after eight&#13;
o'clock this morning.&#13;
MOUNT M A C G K E G O U , N. Y., July 24.—&#13;
'The following is a detailed account of the&#13;
-closing scenes in the life of General Ulysses&#13;
S. Grant:&#13;
A few minutes before eight o'clock Drs.&#13;
Douglas, Shrady and Sands stood on ...the"&#13;
•cottage veranda conversing of the condition&#13;
of General Grant, and . discussing the&#13;
probabilities of his death, and the limit of&#13;
life left the sick m a n ; Mrs. Sartoris and&#13;
Stenographer Dawson were conversing a&#13;
little"distance .away, when Ilenry, the&#13;
nurse, stepped hastily upon the piazza and&#13;
spoke quietly to the physicians. He told&#13;
thera he thought the General was very near&#13;
to death. The medical men hastily entered&#13;
tiie room where the sick man was lying,&#13;
and approached his side. Instantly upon&#13;
scanning the patient's face, Dr. Douglas&#13;
ordered the family to be summoned to&#13;
the bedside. Haste was made, and&#13;
Mrs. Grant, Mr. Jesse Grant anfl wife,&#13;
U. S. Grant, Jr., and wife, and Mrs. Fred&#13;
&lt;irant were quickly beside the doctors at&#13;
the sick man's cot Mrs. Sartoris and Mr.&#13;
Dawson had followed the doctors in&#13;
from the piazza, and the entire family&#13;
•was present except Colonel Fred Grant.&#13;
,A hasty summons was sent for him, but&#13;
he entered the sick-room whilo the messenger&#13;
was searching for him. The Colonel&#13;
seated himself at the'head of the bed, with&#13;
his left arm resting upon the pillow above&#13;
the head of the (General, who was breathing&#13;
rapidly and with slightly gasping respirations.&#13;
Mrs. Grant, calm, but with intense&#13;
agitation bravely suppressed, took a&#13;
seat close by the bedsjde. She leaned lightly&#13;
upon the cot, resting upon her right elbow,&#13;
and gazed with tear-blinded eyes into&#13;
the General';; face. She found there, however,&#13;
no token_of recognition, for the sick&#13;
man was peacefully and painlessly passing&#13;
into another life, Mrs. Sartoris&#13;
•came behind her mother, and, leaning over&#13;
her shoulder, so witnessed the close of a&#13;
life in which she had constituted a strong&#13;
•element of pride. Directly behind Mrs.&#13;
&lt;3rant and Mrs. Sartoris, and at a little&#13;
^distance removed, stood Drs.— Douglas,&#13;
Shrady and Sands, spectators&#13;
-of a closing life their efforts and&#13;
counsel had so prolonged. On the&#13;
•opposite of the bed from his mother,&#13;
And directly before her, stood Jesse Grant,&#13;
*»d by Ids side U. S. Grant, Jr., and near&#13;
the corner of the cot, on the same side as&#13;
Jesse and near to each, was Mr. N. E. Dawson,&#13;
the General's stenographer and contrdential&#13;
Secretary. At the foot of the bed,&#13;
and gazing directly down into the&#13;
General's face, was Mrs. Colonel Fred&#13;
&lt;trant, Mrs. U. S. Grant, Jr., and&#13;
jjfrs. Jesse Grant, while somewhat&#13;
removed from the family circle Henry, the&#13;
nurse, and Harrison Tyrrell, the General's&#13;
.body servant, were respectively watching&#13;
the closing life of the patient, their inciter.&#13;
Dr. Newman had repaired to the hotel to&#13;
breakfast, and was not present. The General's&#13;
Irttle grandchildren, U. S. Gjant, J r . ,&#13;
and Nellie, were sleeping the sleep of&#13;
childhood in the nursery-room above.&#13;
-Otherwise the entire family and household&#13;
were gathered at the bedside of the&#13;
•dying man. The members of the group had&#13;
been summoned not &amp; moment sooner than&#13;
it was nrndent T h e doctors noted, on entering&#13;
the room and proceeding to the bedside,&#13;
that already the purplish tinge, which&#13;
is one of nature's signals of tlnar dissolution,&#13;
had settled beneath tin/finger&#13;
nails. The hand that Dr. Domrfas lifted&#13;
•was fast growing colder than J r h a d been&#13;
through the night. T h e / pulse had&#13;
fluttered beyond the point where the physician&#13;
could distinguish it from 'the&#13;
Wise • beats in his i w u finger- ;ips.&#13;
members of the group were impelled&#13;
each a step nearer the bed, and&#13;
each waited to note the next respiration,&#13;
but it did not come; then—it never came.&#13;
There was absolute stillness in . the room,&#13;
and a_h_ush of expectancy, so that no sound&#13;
broketho silence s a v e t h e sin"gii!g~77f birds&#13;
in the i&gt;incs. TiiiLsule the cottage ami the&#13;
lneastujcdthrobbing of the.engine that all&#13;
night '"had waited by the little mountain&#13;
depot down the slope.&#13;
" i t is all over," quietly spoke Dr. Douglas,&#13;
and there came then heavily to each&#13;
witness the realization that General Grant&#13;
was dead.&#13;
Then the doctors withdrew, ttie nurse&#13;
closed the eyelids and composed the dead&#13;
General's head, after which each of the family&#13;
group pressed to the bedside, one after&#13;
the other, and touched their lips upon the&#13;
quiet face so lately stilled.&#13;
Soon after Drs. Douglas and Shrady left&#13;
the death-bed, . t h e y conversed- feelingly of&#13;
the latter hours of General- Grants's- life.&#13;
The pulse first had indicated failure, and&#13;
the intellect was'lust to succumb its clearness&#13;
aiid'c'onscisus tenacity, and that alter&#13;
midnight last night, though a circumstance&#13;
at four o'clock indicated cognizance.&#13;
"Do you want anything, father'.''' questioned&#13;
Colonel Fred Grant at tlmt hour.&#13;
"Water," whispered the General huskily.&#13;
But when offered water and milk they&#13;
gurgled in his throat ami-were ejected, and&#13;
that one word of response was tne last utterance&#13;
of General Grant.&#13;
Dr. Douglas remarked that the peculiarity&#13;
of General Grant's death was explained&#13;
by the remarkable vitality that seemed to&#13;
present an obstacle to the approach of death.&#13;
It was a gradual passing away of the vital&#13;
forces, and a reflex consciousness, the doctor&#13;
thought, was retained to the last. T h e&#13;
General died from sheer exhaustion and a&#13;
perfectly painless sinking away.&#13;
Within twenty minutes after the death&#13;
of General Grant Karl Gerhanlt, a Hartford&#13;
sculptor, who has been making a study&#13;
here of the General, was summoned to tho&#13;
cottage, at tlie suggestion of Dr. Newman,&#13;
to make a plaster-mask of the dead man's&#13;
face. He was highly success.u'.&#13;
D.i. Shrady remained here yesterday in&#13;
order that,Dr. Douglas and'himself might,&#13;
after quiet had been restored in the house,&#13;
hold at the cottage converse with Colonel&#13;
Fred Grunt on the subject of a postmortem&#13;
examination of the remains of&#13;
tiis father. The physicians, therefore,&#13;
last evening repaired to the cottage,&#13;
and there met the Colonel with the&#13;
formal preference ot a re*[Hearthat an autopsy&#13;
might be held. They stated that&#13;
their purpose was not in the leastfto confirm&#13;
their opinion of the disease, for they had at&#13;
all times been united in diagnosticating&#13;
the case as one of cancer, but the time had&#13;
come when the medical staff might step&#13;
aside from the patient and invite&#13;
any other medical or surgical authority&#13;
ti» conduct t h e examination&#13;
which should speak for itself. This&#13;
both Drs. Douglas and Shrady urged as far&#13;
as professional and personal dignity, could&#13;
permit, but Colonel Grant replied that the&#13;
en-tire family were so thoroughly united in&#13;
their confidence in the diagnosis and treatment&#13;
of the physicians that tiiey could not&#13;
conceive a necessity for an autopsy,&#13;
MK.SSAGl'.S OF SYMPATHY.&#13;
W A S H I N G T O N , July 24.—President Cleveland&#13;
sent the following dispatch to Mrs,&#13;
Grant at Mount-MacGregor:&#13;
"Accept this expression of my heartfelt sympathy&#13;
Jn this hour of your g r e a t affliction.&#13;
The people of the^^Tnt on m o u r n with you,&#13;
and wmild reapbr'if they could, with kindly&#13;
comfor"Trtfre~"'uppths of t h e sorrow which is&#13;
y o u r s alone, and which only t h o pity of God&#13;
can heal."&#13;
W A S H I N G T O N , J u l y 2 4 . — U p o n receipt of&#13;
t h e n e w s of t h e d e a t h of General G r a n t&#13;
t h e following t e l e g r a m w a s s e n t to Colonel&#13;
F r e d Grant by General S. S. b u r d e t t , Commander-&#13;
in-Chief of t h e G r a n d A r m y of t h e&#13;
R e p u b l i c :&#13;
'•Kxprcsslng t h e profound grief of t h e&#13;
f?rand Army of t h e Republic upon tho death&#13;
of t h e geatost of o u r comrades, on behalf of&#13;
its three hundred thousand members, I t e n -&#13;
d c r t b y o u r honored mother a n d to all the afflicted&#13;
family their heartfelt sympathy. I&#13;
p r a y you have- mo advised as sooting arramjeme-&#13;
nts for tho last sad t t t t s a r e determined&#13;
u p o n . "&#13;
" W A S H I N G T O N , J u l y 24.—To Colnnel F. D.&#13;
Grant: The painful news t o m e of y o u r lat&#13;
h e r ' s death has j u s t been received. The symp&#13;
a t h y of myself a n d family goos out from t h e&#13;
d e p t h of o u r hearts to y o u r m o t h e r utid all of&#13;
you In your great bereavoro*nt. Tho c o u n t r y&#13;
is filled w th sympathy and grlof at thh» now*,&#13;
b u t the greatness of it* loss m u s t (trow npou&#13;
It a s the future unfolds t h e coming years.&#13;
(Signed* J O H N A. L O O A N . "&#13;
M O U N T M A C G H E O O R , N. Y., J u l y 514.—&#13;
The following are among the telegram* rere&#13;
I ved by the family:&#13;
P H I L A D E L P H I A , Pa:, J u l y 23.—..Vr*. General&#13;
Grant: 1 Imvo heard with great Borrow of&#13;
General (Jrant's death. 1 offer full m e a s u r e&#13;
of sympathy.&#13;
SAMUKI. J. R A N D A L L , Berwyn, Pa.&#13;
. Aitoi'HTA, Mis., J u l y JSJ.—Mr*. l\ S. Grant:&#13;
Pleiwe accept my profuund.pst sympathy In&#13;
j o u r great bereavement. The entire Nation&#13;
m o u r n s the loss of its first soldier uud its first&#13;
citizen.&#13;
JAMKS G. IJLAIXK.&#13;
Among the many others who sent dispatches&#13;
were Colonel Thomas P. Ochiltree,&#13;
Hon. William M. Kvarts, 11. Kuhe, Japanese&#13;
Minister at Washington; Potter Palmer, of&#13;
Chicago; Mr. and Mrs. James it. Tyner, of&#13;
Washington; George W. Childs, of Philadelphia;&#13;
Mayor Grace, of New York; Hon.&#13;
William K. Gladstone, ex-lTemier of Great&#13;
Britain, and W. C. Endieott, Secretary of&#13;
War.&#13;
, PROCLAMATIONS.&#13;
W A S H I N G T O N , July 24.—The following&#13;
proclamation was issued by the President:&#13;
"The President of tho United States has j u s t&#13;
reeeivod tho sad tidings of the death of that&#13;
illustrious citizen a n d ex-President of t h e&#13;
United States, General Ulysses S. Grant, a t&#13;
Mount MacGregor, in the Stat* oi Now York,&#13;
to which place he had lately been removed in&#13;
the endeavor to prolong his life. In making&#13;
this a n n o u n c e m e n t to t h e people of t h e&#13;
United States tho President is impressed&#13;
with the m a g n i t u d e of the public joss of a&#13;
great military leader, who was in the hour of&#13;
victory m a g n a n i m o u s ; amid disaster serene&#13;
and self-sustained; who in every .station,&#13;
whether as a soldier or as a Chief Magistrate&#13;
twice called t o power b y ' h i s fellowcountrymen,&#13;
trod unswervingly the pathway&#13;
of duty, undeterred bv doubts, single-minded&#13;
and straightforward. The entire country&#13;
has witnessed with deep emotion his prolonged&#13;
and patient struggle with painful&#13;
disease, and has watched by his couch of suffering&#13;
with tearful sympathy. The destined&#13;
pnil hns etiMie ut, lust, and his s p i r t has relate&#13;
war. Subsequent to the meeting an&#13;
association called the "Grant Monumental&#13;
Association" was formed for the purpose of&#13;
obtaining the necessary means fur the con&#13;
utruction of a suitable .monument to \terpet&#13;
irate the memory of General Ir . S. Grant,&#13;
the monument to be erected at or near&#13;
Springlield. The association tiled articles&#13;
of incorporation with the Secretary of State.&#13;
I'HH'.ADKI.PHIA, July 34,—Regarding the&#13;
funeral arrangements and final burial-place,&#13;
it is learned that Mr. (ieorge W. Childs&#13;
will have sole charge of all matters connected&#13;
therewith, and he will probably be&#13;
called upon to select tlie spot lor the last&#13;
resting-place of the dead hero.&#13;
The Mayor having called a special meeting&#13;
of the Council for to-day,, there will be&#13;
introduced and undoubtedly passed a resolution&#13;
asking that the body be allowed to&#13;
lie in state in Independence Hall for one&#13;
day.&#13;
HOW THK XKWS WAS RKCKIVED.&#13;
W A S H I N G T O N , July 24.—Shortly after&#13;
eight o'clock yesterday morning the President&#13;
was informed of the death of General&#13;
Grant. He immediately directed that&#13;
the flag on the White House should l&gt;c&#13;
placed at half-niasL "\The lowering of the&#13;
llag was the first intimation that the citizens&#13;
of Washington had of the death&#13;
of the distinguished man, although they&#13;
Lad been anticipating it throughout the&#13;
night. A few minutes after the White&#13;
House flag was placed at half-mast, the&#13;
Hags on all the public buildings and on&#13;
many private ones were placed in a like&#13;
position. The bells of the city were tolled,&#13;
and citizens who heard them readily recognized&#13;
their meaning. Business men immediately&#13;
began draping their houses with&#13;
mourning, and residences in a similar manner&#13;
showed esteem lor the deceased.&#13;
coin was ties brain and heart and Graaflj&#13;
tlir arm aua weapon.' Tho Americas*&#13;
exchanges, the American Club and other,1&#13;
resorts for Americans are draped in monrning&#13;
and have tku;s at half-mast A large'&#13;
number of Americans gathered at the residence&#13;
of Minister Phelps to-day to consider&#13;
what action shall be, taken to express&#13;
their condolence ami show respect for tho&#13;
memory of General Grant.&#13;
LONDON, July 24.—The news of the&#13;
death of General Grant has created a profound&#13;
impression in this city. The flags a t&#13;
the American Exchange and at fho Ainerl-&#13;
! lean Consulate were placed a', half-mast&#13;
the moment the news reached tho&#13;
city. Large portraits of tho dead hero,&#13;
draped in mourning, - wcr^ placed over&#13;
the balconies and doors of until buildings.&#13;
The whole front of the American K:;cliango&#13;
was also l*eavily draped. Mr. Gladstone&#13;
and Mr. John Bright were both much affected&#13;
on receiving a copy of the Associated.&#13;
Press dupateh announcing the death of&#13;
General Grant.&#13;
turned to t h e Creator who sent it forth. The&#13;
great heart of the Nation, that followed him&#13;
when living with love and pride, bows now&#13;
in sorrow above him dead, tenderly mindful&#13;
of his virtues, his great patriotic services,&#13;
and of tho loss occasioned.-by his death.&#13;
" i n testimony of respect to the memory of&#13;
General Grant, itia ordered that the Executive&#13;
Mansionand t h e several departments a t&#13;
Washington be draped f»\'mourning for a p e -&#13;
riod of thirty days, a n d that all public business&#13;
shull on the d a y of t h e funeral be suspended,&#13;
a n d tho Secretaries ot War and of t h e&#13;
STav.v will cause orders to be issued for appropriate&#13;
military a n d n i v a l honors t o be rendered&#13;
on that day.&#13;
"In witness whereof I have hereunto set&#13;
my hand afldnoaused""The seat o r t h e United&#13;
States to be atlixed.&#13;
"Done a t the city of Washington. thi* Ski&#13;
dav of Julv, A. D., lHHo, and the iudependeuco&#13;
of the United States the Ihnh.&#13;
[Signedl GitovKii CLEVELAND,&#13;
"Bv the President,&#13;
T. F. BAYAHIJ. Secretary of State."&#13;
A I . H A N Y , N. Y., July 24.— The following&#13;
proclamation has been issued by the Governor:&#13;
" S T A T K OK N E W Y O R K , KXKCUTIVK CHAMBER.—&#13;
Ulysses S. Grant, twice President of the&#13;
United States, the defender of ihe Union, t h e&#13;
victorious leader of o u r soldiers and General&#13;
on the retired list of the army, is dead. To t h e&#13;
last ho was a t r u e soldier, strong in&#13;
spirit, patient In suffering,"brave in death.&#13;
His warfare is ended. After the close of his official&#13;
life, and following that journey around&#13;
the world, when tributes of esteem from all nations&#13;
were paid him, he chose his home&#13;
ainong~"the citizens of o u r State. He died&#13;
YIpun oiir soil, in t h e county of Saratoga,&#13;
overlooking scenes inade glorious by Revolutionary&#13;
memories.. It is fitting that the State&#13;
which lie chose us his home should especially&#13;
honor his memory. Tho words of grief&#13;
and the tokens of sorrow by which we m a r k&#13;
h.s.death shull honor, too, tlie offices which he&#13;
held, and proclaim that oraise which shall&#13;
ever be accorded JJto those" who serve the Republic.&#13;
"Therefore, it is hereby directed that tlags&#13;
ou the public buildings of tho Stato be placed&#13;
at halt-mast until his funeral; and on that&#13;
day, yet to be appointed, all ordinary business&#13;
in the Executive Chamber and tho departments&#13;
of the Sjato Government will be suspended.&#13;
The people of the Stato arc called&#13;
upon to display, until the funeral, emblems&#13;
of mourning, and it is requested that at t h a t&#13;
. hour they ceasc-from their business and pay&#13;
"respect to the distinguished dead.&#13;
"Given u n d e r my hand and the privy seal of&#13;
the State of Nqjfr' York, at the Capitol, in t h e&#13;
city of Albany, the Sid day of July, 18S5.&#13;
D A V I D B. H I L L .&#13;
"By the Governor,&#13;
W I L L I A M G. RICK, Private Secretary."&#13;
W A S H I N G T O N , July 24.—Adjutant-General&#13;
Drum', by command of JLietrtenant-&#13;
General Sheridan, issued the following&#13;
order:&#13;
"In compliance with tho instructions of t h e&#13;
Pros.dent, on the day of r the funeral, at each&#13;
military post, the troops and cadets w,ll be&#13;
paraded and the ordur read to them, after&#13;
which all t h e labors-of the day will cease.&#13;
The National flag-will be displayed at halfstair.&#13;
At dawn of d a y thirteen g u n s&#13;
will be fired at intervals of twenty&#13;
m i n u t e s ; between t h e rising and setting&#13;
of the sun a single gun, and at the close&#13;
of the day a National salute of thirty-eight&#13;
guns. The officers of the army will wear&#13;
crape on t h e leit a r m . on t h t i r swords, a n d&#13;
the colors of t h e battalion of engineers, of&#13;
the several regiments, and of the United&#13;
States corps of cadets will be put in mourning&#13;
for six months. The date-und hour of t h e&#13;
funeral will be communicated to d e p a r t m e n t&#13;
commanders by telegraph, and by them to&#13;
their subordinate commanders."&#13;
G'At.K.NA, 111., July 24.—The announcement&#13;
of the death of General Grant is received&#13;
in Galena, his old hone, from&#13;
whence he went to the war, with the most&#13;
profound sorrow^ AIT party lines are^forgotten,&#13;
and the expressions of sorrow are&#13;
universal aud sincere. On receipt of the&#13;
news the lire and church oe-Hs wero tolled.&#13;
On the custom-house and all the public&#13;
buildings flags are flying at half-mast, and&#13;
public buildings, churches, business houses&#13;
and private residences are draped in the&#13;
emblems of mourning.&#13;
CHICAGO, July 24.—The news of General&#13;
Grant's death was received in the whole&#13;
city with a feeling of deep but subdued sorrow.&#13;
As his demise had not come unex&#13;
]&gt;ected, and as the sufferings of the,&#13;
ceased hero had been long and4&gt;otgnant,&#13;
the grief evinced by everyb^Kfy was tempered&#13;
with a feeling of^gfatitude that the&#13;
sufferings of the old-&lt;ominander were over.&#13;
Flags werebe-fsled at half-mast on liundreds&#13;
of^rurvate and all the public building.&#13;
s^^Slan'v buildinga are being draped. m&#13;
T H E PI.ACK OF nrniAi..&#13;
N. Y„ July&#13;
M O U N T M A C G K K G O U , i s . V., jupy 2 4 , —&#13;
Tito following dispatch was received yesterday:&#13;
'&#13;
"FKKVONT. (V. July 2:1. —Please assure Mrs.&#13;
Grant and the sorrowing family that thev have&#13;
tho deepest sympathy of Mrs. Hayes and mys&gt;&#13;
elf. l L J i . HAYKS."&#13;
M O U N T MACGHKGOR, N. Y., July 24.—&#13;
The time and-place of _Uie burial have not&#13;
been fixed, and it may be several days before&#13;
a decision is reached. Mayor Grace's&#13;
offer of a public park for n tomb is looked&#13;
on with favor by Mrs. Grant and Colonel&#13;
Fred. Tho General is said to have intimated&#13;
a week ago in case he died at&#13;
Mount. McGregor during the hot weather&#13;
he would prefer that his remains&#13;
should be kept there until cooler weather,&#13;
his purpose being to spare the family a sad&#13;
and fatiguing journey in sultry .weather.&#13;
The General specially requested spine time&#13;
ago that his body be interred where that of&#13;
Mi's. Grant might in time be placed beside&#13;
his. Stephen Merritt, a New York undertaker,&#13;
started for Mount MacGregor soon&#13;
after the news of the General's death was&#13;
received. He embalmed the body upon his&#13;
arrival. A cloth-covered casket with copper&#13;
metallic case inside has beou ordered.&#13;
N KW Y O U K , July 24.—Mayor Grace, by&#13;
direction of the Board of Aldermen, sent a&#13;
dispatch yesterday morning offering on behalf&#13;
of the city of New York a restingplace&#13;
for tlie remauis of the dead soldier in&#13;
any of the parks of the city which the family&#13;
might select&#13;
W A S H I N G T O N , July 24.—K. McFeely,&#13;
President pro tern, of the Board of Commissioners&#13;
of the United States Soldiers'&#13;
Home, telegraphed Colonel Fred Grant that&#13;
the board was unanimous in the desire that&#13;
the remains of General Grant should bo&#13;
buried within the grounds of that institution.&#13;
T h e commissioners have selected,&#13;
subject to the approval of the family, an&#13;
appropriate and commanding eminence&#13;
overlooking the chy and surrounding country&#13;
as a fitting place of sepulture.&#13;
Si'KiXGFiKi.n, 111., July 24.—At a meeting&#13;
of leading citizens of Springfield the&#13;
Mayor wa* instructed to send a telegram to&#13;
'Mrs. Grant offering her,- in behalf of the&#13;
citizens of Springfield^ a resting-place&#13;
J for General Grant v where he began&#13;
1 his career as a soldier In the&#13;
mourning. The Board of Trade adjourned&#13;
at noon after adopting resolutions 6f sorrow&#13;
at the death of General Grant. ~~&#13;
.The City Council] met in special session&#13;
in the afternoon to take action respecting&#13;
the death ot General Grant. Kesolutions&#13;
of regret at his death were adopted, and a&#13;
message of sympathy was telegraphed the&#13;
fa mily on behalf of the City Council, by&#13;
Mayor Harrison. Members of the bar held&#13;
a meeting at which Judge Greshain presided.&#13;
Appropriate action was taken.&#13;
Ni:w YOUK, July 24.—The death of General&#13;
Grant caused a profound sensation in&#13;
this city yesterday. The news came just as&#13;
the down-town streets were swarming with&#13;
people hurrying to business. Great crowds&#13;
hurried to the newspaper offices where bulletins&#13;
were displayed. At 8:130 o'clock there&#13;
were more'than one hundred thousand people&#13;
packed into Park Row, surging to and from&#13;
the bulletins. Flags.began appearing on&#13;
the public and private buildings. The bells&#13;
on old S t Paul's Church began a deeptoned&#13;
dirge, and a moment later the chimes&#13;
of Trinity rang out. Then the death-alarm&#13;
was sounded on the fire and police signals,&#13;
and flags were quickly run up to half-mast&#13;
in response. At noon many of the prominent&#13;
business houses were draped, and&#13;
the work was kept up until dark in the retail&#13;
commercial streets. To-day the public&#13;
buildings, exchanges, clubs, theaters and&#13;
hotels will be draped. Never did New&#13;
York seem so affected since the day when&#13;
Lincoln died. The future of the Grant&#13;
family was v e r y generally discussed&#13;
in the clubs and hotels last night,&#13;
and the feeling is that the Government&#13;
should place Mrs. Grant beyond the possibility&#13;
of want. Oh this point Cahrles ' L.&#13;
Webster, publisher of General Grant's book,&#13;
said that Mrs. Grant would receive eightyfive&#13;
per cent, of the profits on -the book,&#13;
which would foot up about $5:)0,000. and&#13;
that her income from the edition will be&#13;
from S 150,000 to §200,000, so that she&#13;
would be in no danger of poverty while she&#13;
lived.&#13;
Dispatches to the Associated Press from&#13;
cities all over the South and fron&gt; numerous&#13;
jM)ints in tlie Atlantic coast ami Middle&#13;
States^ show General Grant's death&#13;
was received with, universal sorrow.&#13;
This is strongly marked in the&#13;
South, and all the leading papers in that&#13;
portion of tiie country comment on it&#13;
editorinlly in warm terms of praise of the&#13;
heto of Appomattox: Comparisons and&#13;
contrasts are drawn between the two great&#13;
bodies who met there;.pne as victor and&#13;
the other as vanquished. Nearly all the&#13;
leading commercial exchanges adjourned at&#13;
once or passed resolutions of respect and&#13;
decided to adjourn on the day of the funeral.&#13;
C I T Y OK MK.xico.via Galveston, July 24.&#13;
—The news of General Grant's death w a s&#13;
received here by the press in advance of the&#13;
official notification to the American Legation.&#13;
On all sides much'sympathy is expressed&#13;
for the American people in their&#13;
great loss. Mexicans feel that the illustrious&#13;
soldier and statesman was their&#13;
greatest friend in the United States, and&#13;
they mourn his death as that of a distinguished&#13;
friend and patriot who could&#13;
look beyond the boundaries of his country&#13;
and sympathize with a neighboring people.&#13;
The Government will take appropriate a o&#13;
tion to show its sympathy for the American&#13;
people,&#13;
TITE NKWS AUHOAT).&#13;
LONDON, July 24.—The newspapers contain&#13;
long obituary notices of General Grant,&#13;
many Of them taking up most of their available&#13;
space'in accounts ef scenes and Incidents&#13;
in the life of the illustrious patriot&#13;
The Daily Telegraph devote* two columns&#13;
to a review of General Grant's military&#13;
career, and editorially says&#13;
he was the greatest leader&#13;
whom the United States has produced.&#13;
The ,1JQ, ly Acies says: " T h e r e&#13;
have been few braver men than Grant England&#13;
will sincerely regret his death. I t is&#13;
as a soldier that he will be remembered.&#13;
His name will ever be associated with tlie&#13;
great and righteous struggle of which Lin-&#13;
ULYSS£S SIMPSON GRANT.&#13;
P l o g r a p h l c a l S k e t c h or t h e Mo»t N o t e d&#13;
C h a r a c t e r of tlie Cen»ury.&#13;
Ulysses Bimpmm Grant was born at Point&#13;
Pleasant, &lt;&gt;., April -i, 1-*-.'. if is aiui-Mors&#13;
were Scotch. Hm parents, in lsvtt, removed t o&#13;
the village of Georgetown, O., wlKtw 1» a boyhood&#13;
was passed.&#13;
At t h e age of seventeen General Grunt entered&#13;
the Military Academv at We&gt;l I'oint. Ho&#13;
had been christened Hiram U lyases* b u t . t h o&#13;
Congressman who procured his appointment,&#13;
by mistake, wrote him down as t'lvsses&#13;
S. Grant. T h e a u i h o r i u o s a t West&#13;
Point and t h e Secretary of W a r w e r e petitioned&#13;
by t h e y o u n g cudet t o c o r r e c t t h e&#13;
blunder, but no notice was t a k e n of t h e re«&#13;
quest. Ulysses S. Grant had boeo recorded.&#13;
and Ulysses S G r a n t he remained. The s t u d y&#13;
In which lie showed the moi-t [»rofUaoncy w a s&#13;
mathematics. Ho graduated in 1SCV t w e n t y -&#13;
first in a class of thirty nine, aiwl v a s commissioned&#13;
Brevet Second L e u t e t u u i t , mid assigned&#13;
to the F o u i t h Infautrv.&#13;
In the siirnmer of 3H+5 the reg'-ment w a s&#13;
ordered to'Texas to join t h e a r m / of General&#13;
Taylor. l i e \Vus commissioned I.ieureivjint&#13;
September -&gt;0. His first battle w a s a t Palo&#13;
Alt/., Mny S, lK4ti, rniii he s»hap^nent ly took&#13;
part also in the battles of Itesata de la U^lim.&#13;
and Monterey, and tiie siesre of Vera (VujK'Tn&#13;
April, Pvt7, he was made Qnflm-rjj&gt;tfster of.&#13;
h'is'Tegiment, and after the barji^rtd' Molino&#13;
del Rey, S e p t e m b e r s , fs^T^bx'was apooiiited&#13;
on t h e field First Lieutenant for.h-s gnllantfy;&#13;
He! was especially m*-tuorM-d in Colonel Garland's&#13;
rotJOPt-pJ^fhe ban it c&gt;{ ('hapuitepec,,&#13;
and was br-eVetted Captain, his commission&#13;
d a t i i i g j r o m that buttle. Afterthfc capture of&#13;
tbe-^Tty of Mexico, Grant re*j?n:»d with his&#13;
egimeut and was (stationed first ut Detroit&#13;
and afte-wurd at Saekctt s Harjjrr,&#13;
fu IS4S he married Miss Julia T. Dent,&#13;
d a u g h t e r of a merchant in &amp;&amp; Louis and&#13;
Bister of one of his class-mal;**- I n ls&amp;&gt; ho&#13;
accompanied his regiment lo California and&#13;
Oregon, and in IHVJ was commissioned &lt;'aj&gt;-&#13;
tain. In 1S54 he resigned his coramiss";on in&#13;
the army and. removed to GI-SVOTS. near St.&#13;
Louis, where fie operated a farra. Thoi-e his&#13;
d a u g h t e r Nr.lie, now Mrs Sartoris. was born.&#13;
In lNr&gt;!) he removed to Gitlena, III., and e n -&#13;
gaged in the leather trade witu his father and&#13;
his brother. Urville.&#13;
On the I'tth of April, isfilTTcrt Sumter fell.&#13;
On the 15th President Lincoln mndo his call&#13;
for troops, and on the l'Uh (irani wa.^ drilling&#13;
a company of volunteer* i n Galena.&#13;
F o u r days lat/T he took it to Spr ngfteld.&#13;
From tlie re he w i w » to the Adjutant-&#13;
General of tho v jirmr. offering his&#13;
services to tiie Government i n a r t r capue.ty in&#13;
which It cared to make u s e of h IT\. Grunt remained&#13;
at Springfield and ho!r&gt;»&lt;l lo oriranizo&#13;
the v o m n t e e r troops of the Stare. After five&#13;
weeks of this work, whicn his uiilftary education&#13;
hiul specially fitted him t o r . Governor&#13;
Yates offered him the Twenty-first Kegiment&#13;
of Illinois Infantrv&#13;
He tooK command of his regiment early ID&#13;
J u n e and marched to Missouri. Kpporting t o&#13;
Brjgad.er-General Pope, he- was stationed at"&#13;
Mexico, about fltty miles north of t h e Mis&gt;oun&#13;
itiver. On August ^-'i he was corxim3.$«M)cv&lt;l&#13;
lirigadier-General oT Volunteers, hfs c o »&#13;
missiou being dat^d back to May 17.&#13;
His first military achievement v a s&#13;
the seizure of Paducah. Ky., which eoinru*.nd&#13;
ed t h e navigation of t&gt;oth the Tennessee andthe&#13;
Ohio. At the battle of Belmont, N o r t o -&#13;
ber Tr-IStil, Grant commanded in person a n d&#13;
had a horse shot under him. F e b r u a r y&#13;
»5, he captured Fort Henry, and t e a&#13;
days later Fort Donolson s u r r e n d e r e d&#13;
toliiin. His reply to t he _Coii fed era t o - G e n -&#13;
eral Huckuer. in command of Fort Douetson,&#13;
who sent t o him asking terms of capitulation,&#13;
was eminently, characteristic of thegreat&#13;
soldier: "No terms except unconditional&#13;
and immediate surrender can be ac*&#13;
eepto&lt;l. I propose to move immediately u p o a&#13;
your works." The tortus were complied wittu.&#13;
and the Stars and Stripes soon fluttered o v e r&#13;
Fort Donelson.&#13;
General. Grant was at once promoted t o b e&#13;
Major General arid appointed Commander of&#13;
the D.str.ctof West Tennesseo. Immediately&#13;
after tlie c a p t u r e of Fort Donelson, Grant fell —&#13;
under General Halleek's displeasure, and was&#13;
removed, b u t in about a week was ordered toi&#13;
r e s u m e his command. 'ITio great battleof&#13;
Shiloh was fought on Sunday&#13;
and Monday, the tith ami ,7th o t&#13;
April, isci, m , a re-s'ulted in u victory for the&#13;
Union sohtiors. It was In this engagement thut&#13;
the Confederate General Albert Sidney Johnston&#13;
wsus killed. At the siege of Corinth Grant&#13;
was second in command to General,&#13;
Halleek, and when tho latter was&#13;
called to Washinirton. Grant was auoolutedl&#13;
to tlie command of tho Army of t h d&#13;
Tennessee. He c a p t u r e d - Vicksburg-&#13;
J u l y 4, 1NVJ, and defeated Bragg at Chattanooga&#13;
in November following. In March,.&#13;
isftt. President Lincoln appointed Grant&#13;
Commander-in-Chief of the armies in trio*&#13;
field, with t h e m a k of Lieutcnant-Geuera]&#13;
Ou the 17th of that month G r a n t&#13;
issued his first general order assumingcommand&#13;
of t h e arm es of the United&#13;
States, and announced that headquarters&#13;
wouid be " in tiie field, and, until&#13;
furtner orders, with t h e A n u r of the Potomac.&#13;
" At u u d n g h t . May J, Grant began tho&gt;&#13;
movement against K chmond, which, after a&#13;
series of hard-fought battles, resulted in tho&#13;
c a p t u r e of tlie Confederate Capital, April 3.&#13;
1N&gt;5. On t h e Uth of the ^ u m e month General&#13;
I&lt;ce and hit* entire command surrendered to&#13;
G r a m at Appomattox Court-House. Vs.&#13;
In July, ISW&gt;. General Grant was commissioned&#13;
General of tho Array, a grade especially&#13;
provided for him by" i*ct ot Congress.&#13;
August 12, 1SV7, Tresideut Johnson suspended.&#13;
Secretary Stanton from office, und appointed&#13;
General Grant Secretary of War ad tnterim.&#13;
This office Grant held until .TanuHry 14, lsds,&#13;
when he returned it to Mr. Stanton, whose removal&#13;
the United States Senate had refused.&#13;
to sanction.&#13;
At the Republican National Convention!&#13;
held in Chicago, Stay 21. 1*8. General G rant&#13;
was nominated on t h o first ballofc for&#13;
President. He was elected in tho fall,&#13;
with the late Hon. SchvyK»r Colfax as Vice-&#13;
President. In t h e Republican National&#13;
Convention held In Philadelphia, Jutie 5,&#13;
1S72. Grant was renominated by acclamation,&#13;
H e n r y Wilson, of Massachusetts, being nominated&#13;
for Vice-President. Ho received a&#13;
popular majority of ot«arly SOO.iiOO votes..over&#13;
Horace Greeley, t h e Democratic nominee.&#13;
Shortly attor t h e exoiration of uis t e r m in&#13;
P»77. the General a n d Mrs Grant made a tour&#13;
around t h e world, landing at San Francisco, in&#13;
September of t h a t year. Ho was received&#13;
everywhere with t h e highest consideration,&#13;
the G o v e r n m e n t s and people* of tho Old&#13;
World vying with each other in doing h o u o r t o&#13;
the American «oldfor and patriot.&#13;
General G r a n t was a very prominent candidate&#13;
before the'Chicago National Republican&#13;
Convention- 1n 18tW, for t h e nomination'&#13;
t o r Piosideut for a third term, b u t did not&#13;
succeed in getting tho nomination&#13;
SirtP© then h e h m lived, in N*w York.&#13;
His tinnnciul trouble* a r e too recent events to&#13;
mention in this eonneotton.&#13;
— I n t h e &gt;»at hr^ura »? t h e .recent Conff»o*is a&#13;
bill wns passed plaolng tho old hero on t h e ro&#13;
tired list of tho army, with tho runk and pay&#13;
of General.&#13;
The details of his Illness hl» restoratkm t o&#13;
comparative health, his removal to Mount&#13;
MacGregor, o t c , a r e of too recent occurrence&#13;
to require notice in this sketch&#13;
**!.&#13;
i&#13;
if~ i&#13;
'H&#13;
t&#13;
*.&#13;
UNADILLA REMARKS.&#13;
From our Correspondent.&#13;
F r a u k Worden came over from&#13;
Anderson last Sunday to see the&#13;
folks.&#13;
Ryal Barnum had several nice&#13;
hams taken out of his oat bin a few&#13;
nights ago.&#13;
Jim Little, Tim Crowley and Ally&#13;
Pyper are all under the doctor's&#13;
care this week.&#13;
Old "Sol." gave W. S. Livermore&#13;
and Griffin Palmer each a gentle tap&#13;
a few days ago.&#13;
L. Babcock and J . Gilbert, of&#13;
Chelsea, were in town last Tuesday&#13;
looking for wool.&#13;
Rev. Calkins, of South Lyon, visited&#13;
at Rev. B, F . Pritehurd's last&#13;
•week; also at Toinmie Marker's.,&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. .John Sarg.ison have&#13;
just returned from a week's visit to&#13;
their nephew, Will Sargisou,'in Iosco.&#13;
Bert Watson will go back to Bancroft&#13;
this week or next to'resume his&#13;
duties in the store of Watson &amp;&#13;
Obert.&#13;
O. H . Obert and his son Charlie,&#13;
of Bancroft, came to town last Sunday,&#13;
to remain a few days on business.&#13;
Everybody says "where is Ella?"&#13;
and we say, gone to Pi.u:kney to&#13;
work in the hotel, then they say " 0 !&#13;
horrid."&#13;
Mr. and _Mrs. Win. Livermore&#13;
went to White Oak a few davs ago&#13;
to see their daughter Mollie, who is&#13;
quite sick.&#13;
Clara Taylor and Ida Daniels, of&#13;
Stockbridge, Ida Griffith and Miss&#13;
Bodie, of Howell, and Will Sargison,&#13;
of Iosco, all visited in town this week.&#13;
Kitsie Doty started last week for&#13;
her home near Wellsburg. X. Y.&#13;
Bert and Flora Watson went as far&#13;
as Detroit with her. She will be sadly&#13;
missed by her many Unadilla&#13;
friends, also by the other fellow.&#13;
There, he went away and never&#13;
told us a word about_it, when he&#13;
knew all the time he he ought to.&#13;
Rev. J . A. Lowry, I mean, went to&#13;
Belvidere, New Jersey, aud was married&#13;
last Tuesday, the 28th, to Rose&#13;
Fro me.&#13;
Rev. J . C. Wortley, of Wayne,&#13;
came last Tuesday with some beautiful&#13;
flowers to decorate the grave of&#13;
his wife, I t was just two years last&#13;
Monday since the terrible accident&#13;
in which she was killed. H e was accompanied&#13;
by Rev. A. B.' Wood, of&#13;
Dexter.&#13;
P LAt N FIELD "SPtASHES&#13;
From our Correspondent.&#13;
Awful hot weather.&#13;
Wheat is almost allv harvested and&#13;
most of it drawn.&#13;
Dr. John N . Green has registered&#13;
and is in practice with hrs brother&#13;
and preceptor, Dr. D. M. Greene.&#13;
The first job of threshing wheat of&#13;
the season was done last Monday by&#13;
Albert Ward for M. Topping,..."The&#13;
yield is said to be extra.&#13;
I see Mr. Bray ley has notices posted&#13;
along the huckleberry swamp&#13;
"No one allowed in this swamp" so&#13;
• we are obliged to go elsewhere for&#13;
berries.&#13;
Levi Jacobs is having his saloon&#13;
building torn down and will move&#13;
it to Gregory, where he intends to&#13;
put it up and raise it above, making&#13;
it two stories.&#13;
The corn and oat crop promised to&#13;
be an extra one until the hot, dry&#13;
•weather put them back and if we&#13;
-don't get rain in a few days we will&#13;
not have half a crop.&#13;
Mr. H . Day, of the Topping&#13;
House, will give an opening and harvest&#13;
party a t the hotel hall August&#13;
7th. Mr. Day has the house thoroughly&#13;
renovated and a respectable&#13;
and enjoyable party is expected.&#13;
STATI- ( LUTINGS.&#13;
Bishop Uiehter, of Clrand Rapids is&#13;
undergoing treatment for his eyes in&#13;
Berlin.&#13;
Frank Rowley, of St. Louis, dropped&#13;
dead of internal rheumatism in the&#13;
harvest field Saturday. A&#13;
Hon. Joseph Sterling, of Monroe,&#13;
fell from a barrel Monday at Point&#13;
aux Beaux, breaking bis hip.&#13;
Lapeer's salvation army is no more.&#13;
It dwindled down to two women and&#13;
one boy and then surrendered.&#13;
Henry Russell, of Royal Oak, fell&#13;
from a load of hav Pridav, break ins,'&#13;
his neck. Mr. Russell was 71 years of&#13;
age.&#13;
John Cay, ot -Muskegon—15 years&#13;
old bathing Sunday afternoon—dived&#13;
from a raft--dived once too often—&#13;
body recovered after several hours'&#13;
search.&#13;
I'riday night Jacob Stockdale's barn,&#13;
two miles west o( Otisville, was struck&#13;
by lightening and destroyed, with its&#13;
contents, including 40 tons of hay.&#13;
Insured.&#13;
A, tramp was arrested, examined,&#13;
tried, convicted, sentenced and enroute&#13;
tjpr Ionia, all with in 10 minutes&#13;
last Thursday. That is a sample of&#13;
Coldwater justice.. •'&#13;
Willie Buck, a 14 year-old boy, the&#13;
son of a widow—woman—residing—in_&#13;
Marquette, was drowned Monday&#13;
while bathing in Carp river. The&#13;
.body was recovered afterwards.&#13;
VY. C. Bennett, aged 00, while temporarih'&#13;
insane, shot himself through&#13;
the head at Lansing Monday morning.&#13;
He-had until within a month been employed&#13;
in the olliee of the auditor general,&#13;
having been appointed by Whitney&#13;
Jones thirty years ago.&#13;
• Tliomas Burton, of South Haven,&#13;
who"is of exemplary habits, n«d greatly&#13;
interested in Sabbath school work,&#13;
disappeared from his home July 14th&#13;
and has not been heard of since. The&#13;
cause of the young man's disappearance&#13;
remains a mystery.&#13;
In a spirit of playfulness Mrs.&#13;
Barnhart, of Kalamazoo, accused John&#13;
Humor of having appropriated her&#13;
husband's socks. Hamer (lew oil'the&#13;
track, knocked Mrs. Barnhart over the&#13;
stove and pounded her body, inflicting&#13;
injuries which, owing".to the woman's&#13;
delieate condition, will probably&#13;
result fatally.&#13;
Owosso, July 27.—Oil", (TUS. White,&#13;
of Nashville, Barry county, was hired&#13;
last November by,. Mr. Thorpe of the&#13;
same- place, to chop wood. After a&#13;
few days Mr. Thorpe procured Uus a&#13;
suit of clothes on the-strength of a&#13;
liking felt for h-im. Shortly after&#13;
Mr. White's advent into Mr. Thorp's&#13;
family, quarrels were indulged into&#13;
such an extent that Thorp left his&#13;
home. On July fourth Thorpe was&#13;
informed that his household goods had&#13;
been shipped to Owosso under the&#13;
name of 0 . White. From July 13 to&#13;
July 17 Or. White and Mrs. Thoxpe&#13;
occupied-roDm 1G at the Exchange hotel&#13;
in this city, after which they, with&#13;
their goods, began to keep, house in&#13;
South Owosso. From July 17 until&#13;
July-25'Sheriff Long of Marry county,&#13;
"and Deputy ' Sheriff-Wicking of- th-iy&#13;
county, were m communication, and&#13;
on the evening of the latter date tiie&#13;
the two officers, accompanied by Mr.&#13;
Thorpe, entered upon the scene and&#13;
after the identification of Mrs. Th-orpe&#13;
Sheriff W.icking removed the twain to&#13;
Corunna'Jail. Mr, Thorpe immediately&#13;
shipped his goods to Nashville&#13;
and this morning Sheriff Long took ..&#13;
(L White to Barry county to await&#13;
trial,&#13;
Cheapest First-class Music in the United&#13;
States.&#13;
Look at this list of noun* of the most pujuilur&#13;
musk1 jJuMitilit'd. Printed on tho beet lit'avy&#13;
musk paper, good cU'ar print; full Bheet music&#13;
size, ami the same ae generally retailed alt over&#13;
th»» United States at thirty t«» seveutytlve i-eiita&#13;
per copy. Our price is tivtu-enta per copy, or by&#13;
mail one cent added for postage. We t»ive the&#13;
retail price, hut remember our price is but FIVE&#13;
cents^ We « ill send catalogue nf 1 ,CXKJ best selltun&#13;
pieces published, free. Uoift pay hi^h exorbitant&#13;
prices when von can ^et the same music&#13;
for ubout oue-eiyhth the price; see the following:&#13;
SONUS.&#13;
Alice, W'her* art Thou J Ascher 30c&#13;
Angles Kver Hri^ht and Fair Handel ttc&#13;
Answers Itlumentual .'&gt;Oc&#13;
nine Alsation Mountains Adams :0c&#13;
Hridne T a n w ?We&#13;
Hridj;e 4 ..Lindsay S6c&#13;
Brook.., .Dolores Soc&#13;
i:lierry Kipe Horn :i.V&#13;
i'lam: of the Wooden Shoou Molloy 40e&#13;
Dream Fines Hutchinson Sfto&#13;
Ksmerald Levy 35c&#13;
INSTKl .MENTAL.&#13;
Chop Sticks, Walt/. Do Lulu "i.V&#13;
Hluck Hawk, waltz Wnlsh 50c&#13;
Cunt Flower, waltz (.'nuke !S(V&#13;
Oueen's Lace Handkerchief Strauss 10c&#13;
Kao.iiet, ualop.. Richards JOc&#13;
Home, fcweet Home Slack Mlc&#13;
Shepherd Hoy Wilson -40c&#13;
Warbling at'h've Richards 40o&#13;
And 1,000 other sonus and instrumental pieces&#13;
equally as u-ood as the above only'six cents per&#13;
enpy, post tree. Send for a copy of our Musical&#13;
Journal. Jl.'.T) per year, sample copy twelve cts.&#13;
In sending orders always send cash, post otllee&#13;
order or postal note, us we yet so many stamps&#13;
we cannot use them, also in all cases mention&#13;
the paper you saw our advertisement in, so we&#13;
do justice'to those papers that furnish us business.&#13;
Address,&#13;
J. H. THOMAS, Publisher,&#13;
Albany, N. Y.&#13;
M PRICE LIST&#13;
-of-&#13;
GROCERIES p&#13;
if&#13;
-at-&#13;
^ R I O H A R D ' S 1~©8&#13;
: m&#13;
Sugar, Granulated 7£c&#13;
" Confectioners A . . . , , , , , , , ,^ ,7c&#13;
-" Extra C. Yellow. 6k&#13;
" Bro^vn 5.V&#13;
Coffee, Arbiidtles. . . ; . 18c&#13;
" Dilworth.. . . . , 18c&#13;
u McLaughlin's x x x x . . . . : . . . .1-Sc&#13;
" •- Old Uovernment Java and Mocho&#13;
mixed. ...- 3f&gt;&#13;
Ureen'-Rio 1 2 k&#13;
T e a s . . . . . . . 15, 25r 40, 50,60c&#13;
Pure Spices, per lb 40c&#13;
Bird Seed,&#13;
Saleratus,&#13;
Corn Starch,&#13;
IIlo&gt;s Starch,&#13;
Raisins,&#13;
Kice,&#13;
Prunes,&#13;
Oat Meal,&#13;
o&#13;
(I&#13;
(1&#13;
((&#13;
8c&#13;
7c&#13;
8c&#13;
8c&#13;
.10 to 12c&#13;
8c&#13;
.7c&#13;
4c&#13;
.Galvanic&#13;
Soap, 3 bars for 25c \ Ivory&#13;
Magnetic&#13;
Soap, 4 bars for 25c. \ V \ v ' ' * ;T ,'e n o : . ( Anti washboard?&#13;
Town Talk, 6 bars ..25c&#13;
Lard, per lb 10c&#13;
Herring, per box, 20c&#13;
White Fish, 101b kits '....$1.00&#13;
Mackerel, 15 lb kits,. ..". $1.25&#13;
Dried Beef, slicedrper lb 18c&#13;
Sugar-cured Hams " "_. .'71 Ic&#13;
Mason Fruit Cans, 1 qt., per doz. §1.25&#13;
2 " $1.50&#13;
HIGHEST&#13;
MARKET PRICE&#13;
-for-&#13;
BUTTEBJ^GGk&#13;
"The I. O. 0 . F . . Plainfield lodge,&#13;
No. 40, assisted by the ladies, will&#13;
serve-at their lodge room icevcream,&#13;
toasts, music, etoM on next Saturday&#13;
evening. A general - and most cor-_&#13;
-dial invitation is given to a l l .&#13;
By order of Committee&#13;
BucklonN Arnica Salve.&#13;
THE BKST SALVK in the world for&#13;
Cut" Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt&#13;
Rheum, Fever Sores. Tetter, Chapped&#13;
Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all skin&#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 WIXCHKLL'S 1)RI;O STORE.&#13;
Rose Leaf, Fine Cut&#13;
Navy Clippings&#13;
and Snuffs&#13;
S&gt;MS&#13;
WAHTED! AGENTS&#13;
~- TO 8KLL _&#13;
TTJ1ST i g ' O N ' S&#13;
New and superior subscription Atlases, Maps and&#13;
Charts. A* paying as any agency in the world.&#13;
For catalogue, frw, address"II, (!. TUNISON.&#13;
("hiaaL'o. 111.; New York City, N. Y.; Cincinnati,&#13;
(),; Atlanta, (ia.; London, Caaada; St. Paul,&#13;
Minn., or Kansas City, Mo.&#13;
DANIEL F. EWEN,&#13;
GENERAL AGENT, - PINCKNEY, MICH.&#13;
•W\A.lKrT7E:D 1&#13;
—at the—&#13;
PINCKNEY ELEVATOR&#13;
W H E A T , .&#13;
BEANS, WOOL, ETC.&#13;
J ^ H O F F S ^&#13;
CLOSING OUT SALE!&#13;
/&#13;
-Continues until all goods are sold,-&#13;
I&#13;
Ladies' Calf Shoes,. ,&#13;
•! Goat&#13;
LJr.&#13;
u Kid&#13;
u&#13;
a&#13;
it&#13;
a&#13;
(t&#13;
u&#13;
u&#13;
(&lt;&#13;
it&#13;
u&#13;
.01 25 and 81.50, reduced from&#13;
. 1.75,&#13;
. 1.25,&#13;
. 1.50,&#13;
. 2.00,&#13;
. 2.50,&#13;
3.00,&#13;
1.25,&#13;
« . . . » . . . « • « • «&#13;
it&#13;
tt&#13;
ti&#13;
&lt;(&#13;
it&#13;
11&#13;
ti&#13;
&lt;(&#13;
82.00&#13;
.. 2.50&#13;
. 1.75&#13;
. 2.00&#13;
. 2.75&#13;
. 8.25&#13;
.4.00&#13;
. 2.00&#13;
. 1.25&#13;
. 1.25&#13;
. 2.00&#13;
. 3.50&#13;
5.00&#13;
Old Ladies1 Balmorals. .&#13;
"' Cloth Shoes.Trr.. .75,&#13;
ChiloVens' Shoes (8 to 12) 85,&#13;
Boys Boot,s 1.50,&#13;
3.: .-2.50,&#13;
Gents' Calf Boots 3.75,&#13;
Kip Boots,... «2.00 to $4.00, reduced from.. $3, $4 &amp; $5&#13;
Calf Boots $2, $2.50 &lt;fc *3, " " 12.75, $3 &lt;fc $ 4&#13;
No goods reserved, all to be sold at a proportionate reduction.&#13;
W.B.H0FF, - PINCKNEY.&#13;
FARMERS, READ THIS&#13;
The undersigned having a large stock of all kinds of Lumber, Lath and&#13;
Shingles at their lumber yard in Pineknev, have decided to reduce their&#13;
stock and for the N E X T S I X T ' S T 2 D - A - " S T S will sell&#13;
- ROCK BOTTOM PRICES. -&#13;
Parties about to huild will find it to their interest to get our prices. We manufacture&#13;
our o\vn lumber and shingles and will sell according to the times.&#13;
We keep on hand a full stock of Flooring, Siding and Barn Boards, also all&#13;
lengths of Bill Stuff and Timbers, and on all bills will give special prices.&#13;
You will find our Agent, A. L. HOYT, always on hand. Come and see us,&#13;
we will satisfy you that we mean business. ' w \&#13;
BIRKETT, € O W m &amp; &lt;1&lt;3., PIIfCKStaTr&#13;
YOU WILL ALWAYS FIND&#13;
BEST GOODS AMD LOW PRICES&#13;
For which the highest market price&#13;
will be paid.&#13;
THOS. READ. - Pinckney,&#13;
AT WINCHELL'S DRUG STORE.&#13;
wtimmm wwmmm *&#13;
4GROCERIES3*&#13;
i?&#13;
BOOTS &amp; SHOES&#13;
*CHEAP&lt;^&#13;
E. A. MANN, PINCKNEY&#13;
*t #^^ j&gt;m &amp; ^^mWW^&#13;
(&#13;
. \</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 July 30, 1885</text>
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                <text>July 30, 1885 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1885-07-30</text>
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                <text>J.L. Newkirk</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>VOL. Ill PINCKNEY, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, AUGUST G. 18¾.&#13;
t&#13;
NO. 30&#13;
P I N C K N E Y DISPATCH.&#13;
J.~L. NEWkIRK, PUBLISHER.&#13;
r&#13;
K -•*'&#13;
ISSUED THURSDAYS.&#13;
Subscription Price, $1.00 per Year.&#13;
A D V E R T I S I N G R A T E S .&#13;
Transient a d v e r t i s e m e n t s , 2S r&gt;nts per inch for&#13;
first i n s e r t i o n and ten cunts p e r i n r h fur each sub**-&#13;
q u e n t insertion. Local notices, ft cents per line for&#13;
each insertion. Special rates for regular advertisem&#13;
e a t s by t h e year or q u a r t e r .&#13;
A l l ADVERTISING BILLS DUE QUARTERLY.&#13;
Bo&#13;
Phis l&#13;
well «fc (.'O'B. New&#13;
T h i s p a p e r may be found on Hie at Geo&#13;
iper A&#13;
( l O S p r u o e St.,) w h e r e advertising contracts may&#13;
s p a u e r Advertising. liurfau&#13;
b e made tor it in New York.&#13;
RAILROAD CARD.&#13;
Grand Trunk Railway Time Table.&#13;
MICH. AIR LIVE DIVISION'. —&#13;
GOING EAST.&#13;
r . M . | A . M . ' A . Jt.&#13;
4:50&#13;
4:20&#13;
7 : 0 5&#13;
«:35&#13;
S:50&#13;
2:40&#13;
-*$*&#13;
8:05&#13;
7:30&#13;
¢:40&#13;
¢:11)&#13;
5:20&#13;
4:4*&#13;
4:25&#13;
S:40&#13;
3:00&#13;
:35&#13;
7:20&#13;
* + » 10:20&#13;
9:40&#13;
j 9:15&#13;
i&#13;
1-8:55&#13;
8:40&#13;
8:125&#13;
8:10&#13;
7:30&#13;
| STATION'S. | GOIXUCWEST.&#13;
A. M. P . M. P . M.&#13;
RlDQEWAY : !|:;tf_ : •)-&gt;}&#13;
A r m a d a ,10:00* l 6 : l i&#13;
K o m e o 10:30 | f&gt;::S0&#13;
R o c h e s t e r ,11::«)! I 7:05&#13;
: P . M. !&#13;
dp I p „ , n „ 1 ar lvi!:ltL : 7:1¾}&#13;
ajr f r o m i a c - J c i p r,:00 S:2M&#13;
W i x o m i «:or&gt; 3:001&#13;
d. 1 . . ( a.I «:40. I&#13;
"" &gt; So. Lyon-; A. M. 3:20&#13;
a. I d . 7:¾) !&#13;
lUmtwuw,—|.^4Qo-aua;&#13;
PUBLISHER'S NOTICE. ' |&#13;
F i y T h o s e reo-iviriL? their pap.TH with a red&#13;
X ovnr tliis p a r a g r a p h , will please notice thut t li»-ir&#13;
u o r d u m e with our ruled, tlie piip.-r will be diacuntinned&#13;
iiixLi 1 riubscriptiun id renewed.&#13;
HOME MEWS.&#13;
INTERESTING TOPICS. ._ __&#13;
icul notice that she will give lessons&#13;
Mrs. J. V. P a r k e r will receive a lim-1 , ¾ ¾ ° ¾ in music at this p l a c e - p i a n o , organ&#13;
and voice. Mrs. P a r k e r is from Petorsilea's&#13;
Academy of Music, Boston, and&#13;
teaches the Petorsilea system exclusively&#13;
for piano and organ. This system&#13;
is said to be superior to any other&#13;
used.&#13;
Ira Cook, of this place, departed for&#13;
Pinckney Monday, where he will hang&#13;
out his sign as barber. Ira is a steady&#13;
y o u n g man and should receive the&#13;
public patronage of the Pinckneyites.&#13;
He has gained many friends d u r i n g&#13;
Mrs. J. V, Parker announces in a ' A committee of gentlemen from this&#13;
c o u n t y — S . G. 'leeple, of P u t n a m ; Jos,-&#13;
PINCKNEY&#13;
Mount F e r r i e r&#13;
Stockbridge&#13;
H e n r i e t t a ,&#13;
JACKSON&#13;
^:-10 3:55:&#13;
'r.15 4:10&#13;
9:3.-:. -1:25&#13;
10:05&#13;
10:45 5:05&#13;
All t r a i n s r u n by '-'Central srtamlattl"-trme.&#13;
A l l t r a i n s r u n daily, Sundays excepted.&#13;
W . J . S P I C E R , J O S E P H H U ' K S O N ,&#13;
S u p e r i n t e n d e n t . G e n e r a l .Manager.&#13;
ite'd number of pupils in music at the&#13;
residence of Mrs. J. J). Bennett—&#13;
piano, organ, voice. Harmony and&#13;
thorough bass lessons given as pupil&#13;
desires. Petorsilea method t a u g h t&#13;
and used exclusively for piano and&#13;
organ.&#13;
A few elegant Gondola P a t t e r n&#13;
Lounges very cheap at L. H. Beebe's&#13;
furniture store.&#13;
POI'ND—In t.he road, near this place,&#13;
one day last week, some articles of&#13;
lady's wearing apparel. Enquire at&#13;
this office.&#13;
Plenty of Engine Coal at Anderson&#13;
.Station. J AS. T. EAMAN k Co. 28 w3.&#13;
All persons owing me on account&#13;
are respectfully notified that tng same&#13;
must be settled immediately.&#13;
\V.*B. H O F F .&#13;
S H I L O H ' S V I T A L I Z E D is what&#13;
you need for constipation, loss of appetite,&#13;
dizziness, and all symptoms of&#13;
dy-'pepsia. Price 10 and 75 cents per&#13;
bottle.&#13;
For sale bv H. F . Sigler k Bro.&#13;
Thid week we're blest with schoolma'ains dear.&#13;
Who to the ln-tittiti' have conn? to hear&#13;
Tlie way to teach which is most clear.&#13;
We hope tliiet object they will attain.&#13;
A n d y o u t h l u l mind* learn how to train;&#13;
A n d to our fair village we invite yuu aijain&#13;
Overcoatish weather this.&#13;
Excursion to Detroit Saturday.&#13;
Ditto to VYhitrnore Lake .Sunday.&#13;
Bert Campbell Sabbathed in town.&#13;
Additional home news on last page.&#13;
Thos. Dolan visited in Detroit last&#13;
week., •&#13;
NOTICE.—All Hi use indebted LOHhe&#13;
firm of'McGuiness k Tourney are requested&#13;
to call and settle without delay.&#13;
(30tf.) J. H. TOUMEY.&#13;
BUSINESS CARPS,&#13;
J. H HO AG, M. D., \.&#13;
' (ITOMCEOPATHICO&#13;
P H Y S I C I A N A N D SURGEON.&#13;
Office at resilience on E a s t Main s t r e e t .&#13;
T \ M. G R E E N E , M. D.,&#13;
P H Y S I C I A N A N D SURGEON,&#13;
PLAINFIELO, MICHIGAN.&#13;
Office at residence. Special a t t e n t i o n irlven to&#13;
s u r g e r y and diseases of the t h r o a t and.liuujs.&#13;
W A I T FOI; CATHCAUT—The photographer.&#13;
He will be in Pinckney&#13;
soon with his car, and make you picturessatisfactory&#13;
and reasonable.&#13;
TRESPASS NOTICE.&#13;
All persons are hereby forbid trespassing&#13;
in my huckleberry swamp and&#13;
picking berries therefrom after this&#13;
date. LF.WIS LOVE.&#13;
Dated, Pinckney, Jul, J, 188.r&gt;. •&#13;
S H I L O H ' S COUGH and Consumption&#13;
Cure is sol"' by us on a guarantee,&#13;
it cures loii.sumption .&#13;
For sale by H. F. Sigler k Brp.&#13;
WANTED.&#13;
Wheat, Beans and Clover Seed,&#13;
highest prices paid.&#13;
Tompkins k Ismon.&#13;
C R O U P , WHOOPING-COUGH and&#13;
broncnitis immediately relieved by&#13;
Shiloh's Cure.&#13;
For sale by 11. F . Sigler &amp; Bro.&#13;
And I n s u r a n c e Auent: I.eC al p a p e r s made on C.VTHi'AKT, THE P m v r o o K A H H E U — 1 1 1 -&#13;
Bhort notice and reasonable term*. Otthe on ' t e n d s c o i n i n g h e r e 'soon . I t YOU w a n t&#13;
Main St., near Post&lt;,rtk-e Hnckney, Micu. some good pictures taken "wait folium&#13;
and he will give you satisfaction.&#13;
CATARRH CURED, health and&#13;
sweet breath secured, by Shiloh's Catarrh&#13;
Remedy. Price 50,-cents. Nasal&#13;
Injector free.&#13;
For sale by H. F. Sigler k Bro.&#13;
ABERDEEN Axors GRADES.—The Polled&#13;
Aberdeen bull, " T h e . Don" at The&#13;
Scutch Stock Farm, will serve a limited&#13;
number of rows at not less than&#13;
$5 per cow, cash. Apply early to&#13;
W M . COLLIK, Herdsman.&#13;
T . G Beebe and wife returned home&#13;
Monday.&#13;
Dance at the Topping House, Plainfield,&#13;
to-morrow night.&#13;
.Harvest H m i e Festival of Brighton&#13;
Sunday schools to-day.&#13;
Howell and Brighton are working&#13;
hard for the T . &amp; A. A. R.TL&#13;
T-A-MES MARKKA*,&#13;
NOTARY P U B L I C&#13;
GR 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;
P I N C K N E Y F L O U R I N G A N D CUSTOM&#13;
M I L L S ,&#13;
Haulers in F l o u r and Feed. Cash paid for all&#13;
k i n d s of ^ r a i n . Pinckney, Michigan.&#13;
i • - - • — - • . 1 — ' •' • " ' ' - • • • • • • • • • ' • i y&#13;
V y P . VAN W I N K L E ,&#13;
A T T O R N E Y &amp; COUNSELOR at L A W&#13;
and S O L I C I T O R in C H A N C K U Y -&#13;
Offlce over S i y l e r ' s Drug; Store. P I N C K N E Y&#13;
\V. B. Hoft, the boot and shoe m a n .&#13;
says his stock must be closed Sept. 1st.&#13;
We had p l e n t y o f rain, t h a n l r y o u T&#13;
between Saturday morning and Tuesday.&#13;
The picnic and bowery dance at&#13;
Silver Lake Saturday was well attended.&#13;
Isaac Conley and wife, ot Muskegon,&#13;
visited at her grandfather's. Mr. J. J.&#13;
Hause, last week.&#13;
Do not forget the excursion to Detroit&#13;
Saturday. Only £1.55 for round&#13;
trip ticket from this place.&#13;
In .1. Tourney's saloon Thursday&#13;
night James Greer and Milton Pierson&#13;
engaged in a hand to hand conflict.&#13;
No serious damage to either party.&#13;
The Eaman school house was found&#13;
Monday morning reduced to ashes. It&#13;
is supposed that it was struck by light-&#13;
Rider, of Genoa; liiles Lee, ot Green&#13;
Oak, and J n o . P . Titus, of Howell—&#13;
accompanied by the company's gentlemanly&#13;
solicitor, Mr. C. M . Claflin,&#13;
went last week to Adrain, the headquarters&#13;
ot the Michigan Division of&#13;
the Dayton Hedge Co., to view their&#13;
work and to investigate the practicability&#13;
of the hedge as a farm/ence.&#13;
To find out how satisfactory everything&#13;
appeared to them you have but&#13;
to refer to their testimonial in another&#13;
eolumn, Mr. Teeple intorms us that&#13;
his stay in South Lvon who wish him .1 t h e - v l i a d a v e T T pleasant time. H e&#13;
a b u n d a n t success.—South Lvon Excelsior.&#13;
Donaldson k Rich's show was advertised&#13;
for this place Friday, hut \\ hen&#13;
thinks this to be the 'coming fence for&#13;
the farmers and feel.-, like recommending&#13;
it to all.&#13;
The di ug firm of H. F. Sigler ic liro.&#13;
they arrived here Donaldson had ! has dissolved, and the business will&#13;
switched off-some said to show at ; hereafter be conducted by Mr. F . A.&#13;
some other place. All we know is j Sioler, who we have no doubt will&#13;
that only about half the attractions j keep up the excellent reputation that&#13;
advertised appeared. The riding was ; the old firm has so long enjoyed. The&#13;
quite tame, but the tumbling, j u g g l i n g ; Doctor intends to give his entire atand&#13;
trapeze performances were good. , tention .-to—his prnfp^irmal duties.&#13;
We have a luck-up, marshal, justices j w h i ( ; h a r e very large. Both these genand&#13;
all the other supernunienes for : Hemen are so well known here that&#13;
dealing with btw breakers- as they de-1 n o U a u i i a i b a ^ p ^ ^&#13;
serve, yet three fight&gt; occurred in our j ^u j n 'ee it to say that they ware*&#13;
village last week inside of 24 hours, j*&gt;rought up in this community, have&#13;
-and a-gambler took "£75 or l-ifen in business here a number of&#13;
the people with no value received, and 'years, and have always had a good&#13;
no arrests whatever were made. This j patronage—the final result of which&#13;
showsvery plainly that a-crew is loose ^- t l i a t t n e . v h a v e prospered.. Our&#13;
s o m e w h e r e - - a n d it don't require a u ' o r &gt; t w i s l j ^ t h a t they may continue&#13;
very intelligent person to tell where t 0 ^° ^ -&#13;
it is, either. .&#13;
Frank Fish is dangeriously ill from&#13;
paralysis and heart disease. Dr. Weelock&#13;
'&#13;
n . n g and burned d u r i n g the night., M , . ,, , A, - ,&#13;
I able to economize. But there is such&#13;
-Silas Hause threshed his wheat on | a thing as too much economy. That&#13;
the Affleck farm Tuesdav of last week&#13;
Pioneer Meeting.&#13;
The annual meeting of the Living-"&#13;
. ston i'o. Pioneer Association will be&#13;
c. who is attending him, gave us this j h e M n n t b e f a i r g r o u n ( ^ at Howell, •&#13;
short account of [-'rank's s i c k n o s : H e j Thursday, A u g . 17,188-5. The follias&#13;
sutfered • trom time to time for Mowing is the programme. Time of'&#13;
about 10 years with heart disease. ! meeting, 10:o0 A. M.; dinner at 12:30 ;&#13;
About a \ve"ek ago he -sustained a severe ; I v M- Lnniediately after dinner we '&#13;
attack and came near dvmg. but he re - j w ! | | J * * ' " b l e *\ the hall, where ^eatS ;&#13;
, , ," r- 1 ' W 1 ^ l ) e prepared by the committee to&#13;
c&lt;)vered and was out lor a day or1 - . . - . .&#13;
two, when on Sunday night at one&#13;
o'clock he was striken with paralysis of&#13;
one side from which he has not recovered.—&#13;
Bander oft Advertiser.&#13;
In close times it is always eommendaceonnnodate&#13;
all, to listen to the address&#13;
to be delivered by J . W. T u r -&#13;
and sold the same at Anderson [the&#13;
first marketed there) fur 89 cents per&#13;
bushel.&#13;
D. D . B E N N E T T .&#13;
P A I N T E R AND P A P E R H A N G E R .&#13;
All w o r k in t h i s line executed w i t h n e a t n e s s&#13;
a n d d i s p a t c h .&#13;
" O A N U S &amp; K 1 H K L A M ) ,&#13;
A T T O R N E Y S ,&#13;
•J:Jtl&#13;
. L i g h t n i n g shattered several telephone&#13;
poles near Chubb's Corners Saturday.&#13;
r\i\d hail stones were said to be&#13;
so thick you could scrape them up by&#13;
Having repair-| the pans-full. i&#13;
830 OPERA HOUSE BLOCK,, CHICAGO, attend ] Cure is the remedy i'ov vou.&#13;
carefully to b u s i n e s s sent t h e m from other places.&#13;
PETTYSVILLE MILLS.&#13;
ed my mills I am now ready to do first&#13;
class" work. Flour, as good as a n y ! Mr. A. E. Brown, of Tecumseh, will&#13;
brand on hand, we also keep feed for canvass P u t n a m and H a m b u r g towns&#13;
a l e - - ~ 4 w 5 S. A . P E T T Y S . J ships with "Grant's Memoirs." com-&#13;
S L E E P L E S S N IGHTS.-made miser-1 m e n c m " the latter part of this week&#13;
able by that terrible cough. Shiloh's or the first of next.&#13;
nor. of Owosso, and other old pioneers&#13;
of Livingston county. P r a y e r by -&#13;
Rev. (Geo F . W a t e r s ; music; introductory&#13;
remarks by President Jos.&#13;
Rider; election of officers; annual address&#13;
by J . W. Turner: paper by Dr.&#13;
(.'. W. Haze, of Piiiekne}'; music; pais&#13;
very poor management which saves : pt .r by J : l y Corson, of Howell; paper&#13;
a dollar, where by expending it a did- : by_J)avid Bush, of H a n d y ; short adlar&#13;
and a half would be made. And / I r e s s by B. H. LawsonTof B r i g h t o n ; ;&#13;
vet that verv kind of economv. some ' ' ' u ^ i ( ' : I*10111- "?h* P 1 ° " ' and ' the&#13;
I • ' f • i *t ' i P r i n t i n g Press,' bv L. Reed.&#13;
husincss men M-em to made themselves t , ~. ?, • ^.,&#13;
upon, v., or i. nstance a * do' ,: ar &gt;]&gt;ent in p ,( . io m,„m ,i,t tei o,,o-,t . a r r angement s—Cha s : : ' i b a r b e r and wife , TlTio wV..e JlJI ; A* .TD»a v i s ,&#13;
advertising will bring trade from ( ; , , m i . l ; j ; t m o s B a r n a r d ' and wife,&#13;
which a profit oi two dollars may be , C^lAen'.o aT; oJoa Ls .E YH, a r g e r and wife, Ma r i o n . .&#13;
~ ' .Secretary.&#13;
Jos. R I D E R ,&#13;
President.&#13;
made. Times are close and the m e r&#13;
chant economizes by saving the dojlai\&#13;
A s a natural consequence sorfiebody ,&#13;
else get.s thee two dollars" profit. Is Testimonial of a Livingston Comity&#13;
\ -&#13;
PINCKNEY EXCHANGE BANK&#13;
G; w. TEEPLE,::&#13;
^BANKER,^&#13;
Does a General-Banking ^Business.&#13;
Money Loaned on Approved &gt;Totes.&#13;
Deposits received.&#13;
Certificates issued on time deposits,&#13;
And payable on demand.&#13;
•COLLECTIONS A SPECIALTY.&#13;
NEW BARBER SHOP&#13;
» • • •&#13;
I have opened f o r &gt; h e present a s h o p / k i d n e y s&#13;
in the Monitor-^House office, where/&#13;
w i i r t e prepared to do /&#13;
M K CUTTIHG, SHYING&#13;
CHAMPOOING, Efc.t&#13;
IN THE NEATEST/STYLE.&#13;
For sale by H. F. Sigler k Bro.&#13;
J a m e s Markey, of this place, ha.y'sec.&#13;
inv'd.the agency.of the Allan Lire of&#13;
Steamers He is also agent for the&#13;
celebrated Jones S e a k ^ . yA "&#13;
For lame back, side o r / c h e s t , use&#13;
Shiloh's Porous Blaster. Price 25 cts.&#13;
For sale by H. F. SigleV k Bro.&#13;
T H A T HACIvIXG COUGH caiid5e so&#13;
quickly cured bv/^hiloh's^Ctfre. We&#13;
guarantee it. '/ ^&#13;
For sale by &gt;U F.'Sigier A Bro.&#13;
The kbl^rtn-s cannot perform their&#13;
propej^'oTrfrce-when diseased and at the&#13;
s&gt;nfe time expel the impurities that&#13;
^ t shoulu/'i^ass off through their proper&#13;
I actiofi. A few doses ot Kellogg's Colnivibian&#13;
Oil null convince, the most&#13;
sceptical that it acts directly on t h e !&#13;
not that poor economy';—-Ex.&#13;
A spoc-iab-^excursion to Whitmore&#13;
Lako^-Will be given on the Michigan&#13;
The Switzer l?ros. barn, in M a r i o n J ^ , . \Am, Sunday. August i»th. The&#13;
was struck by lightning Satui'djiv^Mfcf] t r ; u n y,\\\ i e a v e pinckney at 8:40 \. M.&#13;
burned to the g r o u n d . It, &gt;*t&lt;i'ull of a n j returning it leaves the Lake at&#13;
w luva t' a r th e'trm e/^^^^&#13;
bably prettv heay-y;"&#13;
• The nii&gt;&lt;hell and rubber ball trick&#13;
fouiuJ-lnany victims here Fridav and&#13;
Committee from Observation.&#13;
A D R A I N , M I C H . , J u l y 30, 1885.N ^&#13;
H a v i n g visited A d r a i n , M i c h i g a j ^ ' '&#13;
the beadnuarters of the Michigan D i - '&#13;
vision Of the D a y t o n H e d g e Company,;&#13;
to investigate their business,&#13;
we would suv t h a t wc are satisfied ~&#13;
O Y . T L "The cbaeliesv" wiirstaud on the ! that nOThmg'but honest a n d skillfal&#13;
track at The Lake during the day to I work can produce the results which&#13;
accommodate excursionists in case of a&#13;
sho&#13;
we witnessed on the farms, and estabwer.&#13;
.A verv low rate of 30 cents "liMshl t«h^e' rJep" utar tiuo n tnh»ec «cuo mupapn y 8sUuBs.- .&#13;
^ - - , . , i *• • i .&gt; .i i tains. Ot their responsibility t h e r e&#13;
-^Te chaps who worked Hie game were I tor the round trip is made tor the oc- i s n o t a ^oubt, a n d their &gt;vork is firstprobably&#13;
richer by about £75 in coming&#13;
here. Comments are unnecessary.&#13;
A row occurred in Martin Welch's&#13;
saloon Friday afternoon, in which&#13;
Herb. Davis and .lames Greer were&#13;
chief participants. Not being invited&#13;
to the contest, we cannot name the&#13;
victor."&#13;
casion, and will enable the citizens of: ^ , ^ \ y 0 v i s i t e j hedges over tweu-&#13;
Pineknev to spend a cool, comfortable j t v years old which h a v e been treated&#13;
aud pleasant day at Whitmore Lake. - by the company, and e x a m i n e d a&#13;
From stations on the line where there ; large amount of* their one.Tand two&#13;
are no agents corresponding rates w i l l ' y™r old work. Mr. A y l w o r t h , man-.&#13;
be made, and conductors will be sup-! " P ? o t " t h o Michigan Division, W m -&#13;
plitfd with tickets to sell on train.&#13;
H o p i n g for a share of/your patronage,&#13;
I a m YOTJRS T R U L Y ,&#13;
IRA COOK.&#13;
WTLL YCm S U F F E R with Dvs-&#13;
*M pepsia&#13;
Vitalize&#13;
For&#13;
/&#13;
iver Complaintj? ShiloVs&#13;
guaranteed tor eure you.&#13;
bv H. F . Sfeler &amp; Bro.&#13;
OUR PRODUCE MARKET.&#13;
C.OUKKCTKD WEEKLY BY&#13;
July 30,1SS5. TOMPKINS&amp;ISMOIS&#13;
.Sti&#13;
X ,&#13;
.:^0&#13;
W h e a t , No, 1 white ^&#13;
" No, -1 white, „ .&#13;
N o . '2 red&#13;
No. :l red&#13;
Oata&#13;
C o r n -.-^,&#13;
Harlev 1 (XXTM Ml&#13;
lleana ' 7X&lt;?.l W&#13;
Dried A p p l e s 0%) .(H&gt;&#13;
P o t a t o e e -a&#13;
B u t t e r ^ 11&#13;
E R R * . , , .10&#13;
Uresaed C h i c k e n s V2&#13;
Clover Seed..-...« •«*.&lt;£&amp; 4.W DresftsedPork , s.... !&gt;.(»&#13;
It seems that " P e t e " Coste and Win,&#13;
"i Chambers had some trouble at the&#13;
dance which occurred at Mr. Chambers'&#13;
new barn a few weeks since.&#13;
So when they met in the village Friday&#13;
they came to blows. Outsiders interfered&#13;
and quitted them after e*eh had&#13;
received a slightly peeled nose.&#13;
We are editor, compositor ami devil&#13;
The Teachers' Institute being held&#13;
mod, in our presence, - 5 rods of completed&#13;
hedge in 17 minutes. W e call&#13;
| cheerfully mid our testimony to that&#13;
at this place this week has drawn ' of the many who h a v e investigated&#13;
hither nearly 100 teachers, besides their work and s t a n d i n g , a n d recornniiinv&#13;
others interested in educational- mend them to the tarniitig^coinmunit&#13;
. i . • ,•„, K,:,, , tv as hedge growers, a n d ' c a n say t h a t&#13;
matters, and tne sessions are being l . . ^ «. » . , &lt;* : , , ... , • , . i , their system-, m o u r judgemeut, is a&#13;
well attended, with much m.erest be-1 m { ^ ] J n k k m g u^lcd%x l h e c o n .&#13;
ing ma.nitested by all.^ ^ ith such . s h . m , t j o n 0 f hedges a n d necessary to&#13;
sound men as PrM'. I. X. Demnion, of 11 |1 0 completion of a perfect fence, and&#13;
A n n Arbor; Prof. E. P. Church, ot we find t h a t the statements «f their.&#13;
Greenville; P r o t . W. H. Payne, of'the agent, M r . Clarlin, are fully borne&#13;
University, and Prof. Geo. Barns, of | V*tn » &gt; ' t h e factsthis&#13;
week — o u r handsome, steady | Howell, as lecturers and conductors ^ 7T ^ . E r L E m i»&#13;
and, l,a.i.t,h,t.u,l compositt or, .M, r , A. . .I.,) , i th. ere is no wo.n,d er at. t.,h e •i nsft i;t„uft eJ PinckneyJ P . 0 . ,' H-,a mb«u r g® „T„ ownshipr ,- « r J o s . rvlDER,&#13;
Howell P . 0 . , Genoa Township,&#13;
g e x c u r s i o n to Silver Lake. P r o ! . Church gi&#13;
*&#13;
G l L K S L E K .&#13;
He is accompanied by "Mr. and Mrs. J . Sandwich Islands, which all should | Brighton P . Q.f Cireen Oak Township.^&#13;
H, Barton, Miss J u l i a Barnard, Miss [.hear. The institute closes at 4 r. M. J N O . P . T I T U S ,&#13;
Lola Baker and Mr. F r a n k LaRue. to-morrow. - ^Livm^stoii D e m o c r a t , " HowelK&#13;
m^^m. mm tmm&#13;
~:D&#13;
T 1&#13;
IN&#13;
• t&#13;
Li&#13;
f. i i&#13;
:(*•&#13;
TO C0RKESPUNDENT8.&#13;
AllonnimunlcBtloni for tliig napersTiould be »ccom&#13;
p»nled by thf name of tlio million not DP IT Mary foi&#13;
puMlcatJon, but «• an i;.vl»h'iice of good f»1tti on tho&#13;
pin of tlie wrttrr. Write muv on onn Hide of the&#13;
pHpcr. Be particularly, careful about glvlnr name*&#13;
end duten, toliuve the Irticri and figure* plain and&#13;
diatlnct. Proper nuniea are often difficult to decipher&#13;
oecauie of the atreleM maimer la which they are&#13;
written.&#13;
AROUND A OKEAT STATE.&#13;
Hrv.lnr Improvements-&#13;
From. tl;e annual ivjxirt of Capt. D. W.&#13;
Loekwood, corps of engineers concerning the&#13;
iinprovcineut 01 the harbors on the hikes, we&#13;
make the following extracts with reference to&#13;
Lake Michigan:&#13;
During the p-ist fiscal year S31,217 has been&#13;
expended on tne improvement of the Michigan&#13;
City harbor, Indiana. leaving $.3,71s available.&#13;
The work to lie done comprises the completion&#13;
of the new east breakwater pier and the construction&#13;
of the west exterior breakwater. It&#13;
is estimated that *4'&gt;0,0 .() will be re piired to&#13;
complete the improv nient, nnd that $25:),00.)&#13;
of this amount can be profitably expended&#13;
during the next liseil year.&#13;
The sum of $0,22-( h:'ts been expended on the&#13;
Improvement of Charlevoix harbor and entrance&#13;
to Tine lake, Mich., leaving $4,S02&#13;
available. It is est mated that $"&gt;i),0,k)" can be&#13;
profitably expended during the next fiscal vear&#13;
in extending the south pier 30.) feet and in&#13;
completing work alrcadv in progress. Capt.&#13;
Lockwood estimates that $11.),000 will__bc iv- ,&#13;
quired to complete the work. " ]&#13;
An appropriation of $5O,00D is asked for&#13;
Frankfort harbor, Mich., during the coming&#13;
fiscal year, and $80,001) is estimated as necessary&#13;
to complete the improvement. Two&#13;
thousand nine hundred and ninety-three dollars&#13;
were expended during the year, leaving&#13;
*4JH4 available.&#13;
Far the improvement of Portage Lake liar- ;&#13;
bor, Mich., $9,074 were expended during the&#13;
year and $,).008 remain available. T h e improvement&#13;
contemplates a channel entrance to&#13;
Portage lake 307 feet wide with a depth of IS&#13;
feet. It is estimated $197,503 will be required&#13;
t o complete this work and that $150,000 can be&#13;
expended during the next fiscal year. j&#13;
Only $93j was expended on Manistee harbor, '&#13;
Mich., during the past fiscal vear, leaving $11,&#13;
740 available. The improvement of this harbor&#13;
consists in extending piers, and having a&#13;
dredged channel connect lower Manistee- river&#13;
with Lake Michigan. An appropriation of&#13;
$50,000 is asked for, and $132,:00 is estimated&#13;
"will complete the work.&#13;
' On t h e improvement of Ludington harbor,&#13;
Mich., $13,478 was expended during the year,&#13;
leaving $4,346 available. . It is estimated'$55,-&#13;
000 will complete the work, and $40,000 can be&#13;
profltahly expended during the n e i t f b c a l vear.&#13;
T h e expenditure during the vear on White&#13;
river harbor, Mich, was *6,3'.6;and $6,373 remains&#13;
available. The improvement contemplaters&#13;
a dredged channel 20 &gt; feet wide- * T h e&#13;
report says $*J4',225 wtflrotnplotc the improvement,&#13;
and an appropriation of $5l\0C0 is re-&#13;
•quested. On Muskegon harbor. Mich., last&#13;
year's expenditure was $7,208, and $17,559 remained&#13;
available, The improvement of the&#13;
channel has for its object an Increase of width&#13;
from 185 to 30') feet, and will cost #113,025, of&#13;
which $10Q,000 can be profitably expended during&#13;
the next year.&#13;
The sum o f $41,700 remains available after ]&#13;
this year's expenditure of $9,5dS on the harbor '&#13;
•of Grand Haven, M.eh. The permanent completion&#13;
of this harbor depend* upon the e x t e n -&#13;
s i o n of the present piers so that vessels can en- i&#13;
ter during anv weather. It is estimated to :&#13;
cost $210,000, of which sum $150 00 ) could be J&#13;
profitably expended d u r i n ; the next l^cal vear.&#13;
Eleven thousand nu;e hundred and forty- j&#13;
one dollars was expended on Black lake harbor,&#13;
Mich., during the past liseal year. An ap- ;&#13;
propria'ion of $2J,0J0 is a&gt;ked for, which it is&#13;
expected will complete t the projected iruprove-&#13;
The amount available for the haroor of&#13;
aVter an expenditure durar&#13;
of .&lt;l,t 27 is $8.714.. To&#13;
• c miplete the impnivement the piers should be&#13;
extended and those alieady in place made sand&#13;
tight, This will reiiiiire $8 2.5'.;0, of which $40,-&#13;
-000 is asked for the next fiscal year,&#13;
On St. Joseph harbor, Mich., only $858 was&#13;
expended, leaving an available balance ol&#13;
$20,015. The estimate i»avs $51,015 will be required&#13;
to complete the work aud recommend!&#13;
an appropriation.&#13;
Deeper W a t e r Ways.&#13;
Lleut.-Gol. Poe, having in charge the im- firovcments of r h e r s aud harbors in Michigan,&#13;
las made his annual report to the Chief of&#13;
Engineers, l i e recommends that the channel&#13;
at the Lime-Kiln Crossing be made 40) feet&#13;
wide instead oi ;&lt;00 as at first contemplated.&#13;
In the Saginaw river it is propo-ed to secure&#13;
a channel 5T2O0 feet in width with a depth of&#13;
fourteen feet from Saginaw Bay to Bay Citv&#13;
and twelve feet thenceto the head of the'river,&#13;
a distance of about twenty-three miles.&#13;
Hay Lake channel, in the Sault Ste. Marie&#13;
river,"Col. 1'oe says, slo.ild be deepened to&#13;
twenty feet.&#13;
He thinks fully seven years will be occupied&#13;
in accomp.ish.ing these "results and it will b -&#13;
.jy_e.ll to remember that the improvements will&#13;
not become available until the whole is completed.&#13;
A large appropriation is recommended for&#13;
the improvement of St. Mary's Kails Canal and&#13;
the river between Lakes Superior ami Huron.&#13;
The increase J n tonage urges in the strongest&#13;
way that the work of preparing to take care of&#13;
a commerce greater than the present canal&#13;
and lockage system could accommodate shall&#13;
be entered upon without/delay.&#13;
The St. I iair Fiats ship canal is used by&#13;
nearly 40,000 vessels a year, carrying nearly&#13;
20,000,00) tins. It is proposed... to" widen and&#13;
deepen the channel. .&#13;
Appended is a tabula t e d s t p t e m e n t showing&#13;
the amount of money available and the amount&#13;
asked for the next fiscal ye ir and the amount&#13;
required to complete the'work:&#13;
Rivers and Ava 1-&#13;
ILarboxs,.. ...able.,&#13;
Detroit River §149,385&#13;
St. Clair Flats&#13;
None. 153,206 $153,295&#13;
None. . 32,92« 32,926&#13;
sawyers and fllci.s. skilled labor that cannot b«&#13;
easily replaced. If it should succeed the strike&#13;
may be prolonged. Many of the men say they&#13;
are" ready to go to work, but are afraid to.&#13;
Others demand, c o n c i s i o n s which ' t h e mill&#13;
owners are unwilling to g r a n t It cannot be&#13;
denied th.it the men have have some grievances,&#13;
but their mistake was in going out a time of&#13;
great depression, and the labor market is overstocked.&#13;
The salt block of Warner A: Eastman, which&#13;
WHSvshut down by force aud two of the men&#13;
nearly killed by the strikers, has started again,&#13;
also the mills of Blis^ Bros., and C. L. Grant&#13;
tfc Co. This will greatly weaken the c a m e of&#13;
the striker-*, and it is int.mated they will use&#13;
every effort to prevent any more mills from&#13;
starting.&#13;
All of the deputies have been discharged by&#13;
the shcrilT, and the strikers are well behaved&#13;
and quiet. It Is believed the turning point one&#13;
way or the other is m a r at hand,&#13;
Incinerated Horses.&#13;
A barn belonging to S, Behinlander of West&#13;
Bay City, binned with six horses which belonged&#13;
to Barker's herdlc . coach HUP, which&#13;
m i d e its headquarters at the barn. T h e building&#13;
was enveloped so suddenly by the Humes&#13;
that a man sleeping in the barn barely escaped,&#13;
ami was unable to rescue the&#13;
was undoubtedly incendiary.&#13;
horses. The lire&#13;
After Five Y e a n&#13;
Joseph Harris a prominent dealer in Honors&#13;
on West Madison street, Chicago, has been arrested&#13;
ou a warrant obtained bv a Detroit&#13;
detective charging him witii the larceny five&#13;
years ago, of $5,2()0 lroiu the banking house of&#13;
Fisher,Preston A: Co.. of Detroit. Kd Rice,&#13;
who was arrested in Syracuse, N. Y., for the&#13;
crime, is supposed to hive g.ven the Detroit&#13;
authorities information concerning the matter&#13;
and Harris' arrest folio.ved. The latter has&#13;
heretofore been regarded a- a highly respectable&#13;
citizen, and his apprehension is a source&#13;
of-great surprise.&#13;
We append a brief a vomit of the robbery*&#13;
The robbery of Fisher, P r o t o n A Co. 's bank&#13;
at No. bVs Woodward avenue occurred July 22,.&#13;
1880. The lirst account was that shortly after&#13;
1 o'clock p. in. Fred. 1). Gilford, clerk of - the&#13;
bank, happened to be alone in the otllee when&#13;
a well dressed man asked him to step outside&#13;
and see a gent in a carriage who wanted to buy&#13;
some bonds. While Gilford was doing so, oijie&#13;
of the robber's confederates, probably a boy,&#13;
slipped behind the counter and stole $5,120 in&#13;
cash. When Clifford discoverrd what had been&#13;
done he fainted away, and on recovering, in&#13;
the first moments of'his chagrin and mortification&#13;
invented a slung shot story which was&#13;
subsequently nioditied , l s above.&#13;
After long search bv the. .detectives it was&#13;
decided that the notorious Ed. Rice had a&#13;
hand in the robbbery, but Ed. always managed&#13;
to keep out of the way until his receut arrest&#13;
in Syracuse, N. Y.&#13;
Postponed.&#13;
Representative Barry was arraigned in East&#13;
Saginaw, on the 31st iilt., charged, with inciting&#13;
men to violence during the strike. Further&#13;
hearing was posti&gt;oued until Aug. 17th.&#13;
Michigan at the Obieqaiea&#13;
Gov. Alger and staff will attend t h e Grant&#13;
obsequies in New York, an order to that effect&#13;
having been Issued.&#13;
1 s t 32 sheep by&#13;
'lit will em-amp on&#13;
the&#13;
.me.nt.&#13;
South Haveu. .Mich&#13;
ing the past lis.-al vt&#13;
Militia in Mourning.&#13;
The following order has been issued t o&#13;
various military companies of the state:&#13;
M I U T A U Y DKI'AUTMENT, MICHTGAX, )&#13;
A n j e T . i N T - G i : \ K U A i , ' s O F F I C E , &gt;&#13;
•_...: __.... L A X A I X G , July 24T1S85. )&#13;
IGeneral order No. 15. j"&#13;
With profound sorrow the commander-inchief&#13;
makes otiicial announcement to the Michigan&#13;
state troops of the death of (Jen. Ulysses&#13;
A lTrant,iff4H^d-ied-trt-MtT-Mr&lt;.lrrgur, N. Y,,&#13;
July 23d in&gt;h&#13;
As a mark of respect to the illustrious dead&#13;
the officers of the Michigan state troops are&#13;
hereby ordered to wear tlu&gt; usual badge of&#13;
mourning upon the left arm and sword hilt&#13;
whenever in uniform, for the period of 30 days,&#13;
from and after the receipt of this order,&#13;
and to turl and drape all colors during that&#13;
period.&#13;
The quart-rmaster-gcneral will cause a g u n&#13;
to be tired i very half hour, at tne capital, from&#13;
sunrise to sunset on the 8th proximo, that being&#13;
the date fixed for the luueral ceremonies.&#13;
Bv order of the commander-in-chief.&#13;
W. C. HUMPHREY,&#13;
Captain and assistant adjutant-general.&#13;
.—;— c&#13;
TJsmgr.Violence.&#13;
The strike in the Saginaw Valley which a&#13;
dar-or two ago nmnifesuLvr- symptoms of an&#13;
early close ma&#13;
claimed that t&#13;
is to prevent the m:lls from runnimr through&#13;
the intimidation of skilled workmen, whose&#13;
pla-es cannot ea-ily be tilled.&#13;
The mill of Rust. Eaton &amp; Co. started on&#13;
Monday, July 28 wi.h a full force, under the&#13;
sameci'iitlitions existing previous to the strike.&#13;
The second morning the mill did not start.&#13;
Mr. Wheeler, representing the firm, gave&#13;
intimidation of some of the men as the reason.&#13;
He said about 1 o'clock in the morning two&#13;
men drove up to the bou^e of Edward Spain,&#13;
the hca i s.awyer, ami with clubs smashed in&#13;
the window- of the house. Spain was awakened&#13;
and when asked for an explanation of the&#13;
affair, was told that the damage done was but&#13;
a slight inkling of what would happen if he&#13;
did not stop running the saw at the mill. For&#13;
this reason the sawyer declined to go to work&#13;
this morning. A number of others were- also&#13;
frighteucd&gt; hence the mill did not start.'&#13;
MINOR STATE HAPPENINOS.&#13;
Charlevoix is to have a 100-harrull grist mill&#13;
at once.&#13;
The Oscoda village board has decided to erect&#13;
a jail at once.&#13;
E. Rtick'mait of S;iliue&#13;
lightning a few days ago.&#13;
The Ohio Eighth regime&#13;
Mackinac Island in August&#13;
The knights of labor have started a branch&#13;
at Howell with a large membership.&#13;
T h ' annual reunion of tlie llth Michigan&#13;
infantry will be held at White Pigeon, Aug. 24.&#13;
The Ninth Michigan infantry will hold its&#13;
third annual reunion at Fowiervllle, Aug. 12.&#13;
Wilson J. Coo ley, one of the wealthiest aud&#13;
most influential citizens of Branch comity, is&#13;
dead.&#13;
Samuel M. Conely, one of the oldest aud&#13;
widest known settlers in Liviugstone countv,&#13;
is dead.&#13;
A. A. Lewis' Lumber yard and planing mill&#13;
in Flint have been destroyed by tire,--loss&#13;
about $17,01.0. " ^ ^ -&#13;
The army worm has made ijs appearance in&#13;
various parts of the state and is making fearful&#13;
ravages with the o a t crop.&#13;
•_ George Fiek was run over by the cars in&#13;
Kalamazoo a few days since, and so badly injured&#13;
that he died in a few hours.&#13;
The Cadillac oc Northeastern narrow guage&#13;
railroad is being rapidly exten led aud will&#13;
reach Muskrat lake about Aug. 1.&#13;
The patrons of husbandry will hold a picnic&#13;
at Charlotte, August 25,'to be addressed&#13;
by Hon. . J J . Woodmau of Poutiac.&#13;
It looks as if the committee to secure the&#13;
additional #20.000 iii aid of the Toledo. Ann&#13;
Arbor »t Northern railroad will succeed.&#13;
Fred. Schermerhoru of Stronach. aged 35&#13;
years, was taken with cramps while bathing in&#13;
the Little Manistee river and was d r o w n e d /&#13;
Chicago A: Grand Trunk Railway a t Iinlay Citv&#13;
last fall report having ample 'proof and will&#13;
, commence suit against the comnanv, at once.&#13;
The damages arc llxed at $1.0.0)0. which they&#13;
j sav are small considering the circumstances&#13;
under which the boy lost his life.&#13;
Edgar Weeks of Detroit Is trying to prove&#13;
that a number of pimple In Michigan aud&#13;
Canada are heirs to au estate of $100,000,000 in&#13;
in Great Mritain, Among his clients ure Mrs.&#13;
Dr. V. Bell.Drs. F. 11. Scvuiourand Mrs, Phebe&#13;
Macassar of Detroit, Mrs. J. W. Squires oi&#13;
Grand K-iplds, Mrs. E Merritlcld of Lansing,&#13;
Mrs, Lyd.a M. Wright of Memphis, and Mrs.&#13;
Almira'M. Zimmerman of North Branch.&#13;
Benjamin Van Auken of North Lansing has&#13;
a rare liotailieal sp: eimeii, sent him from Central&#13;
America, called the resnrrcctloii-plant. It&#13;
Is a nort of i.eben and has the pecularlty of&#13;
reviving every liber lo a beautiful green after&#13;
having been lip noted and dried In'the sun for&#13;
mouths. The plant was nearly 00 days in coining&#13;
from its o.d home, but on bejug' placed fii&#13;
water at once betrayed-a lively state of cxist-&#13;
(ilivv.—f.tinsiin/ liSjmhlu'in&#13;
A specimen of rock taken from the Ropes&#13;
mine, shows free gold in innumerable places.&#13;
The piece weighs about three pounds and&#13;
there is at least #70of gohl in it. The average&#13;
of the rock from which it was taken is $10,000&#13;
a ton and from a small quantity of rock six&#13;
ounces of free gold was washed. It was taken&#13;
from a small pocket but h i s caused wonderful&#13;
enthusiasm among the gold men and all others&#13;
who have seen it. The long delayed gold boom&#13;
promi.-c-* to set in at Oiice.&#13;
THE C0UNT3Y AT LARGE.&#13;
,N_T &lt;j • i*i.i • .i &lt; - . ' c ^ k * i-_i i l l i i \ n u o V/ i. « u&#13;
ty possible be prolonged, it being-&#13;
;he settled (oticyof'the strikers&#13;
Askeu&#13;
r._.&#13;
$107,988&#13;
lor. _ S l » e l u i r e t l -&#13;
None-&#13;
Canal..&#13;
River.,&#13;
H&#13;
Ship&#13;
•Clinton&#13;
Lake Huron Harbor&#13;
of Refuge..&#13;
Saginaw'River...&#13;
An Sable Harbor&#13;
T h u n d e r B a y&#13;
Harbor&#13;
Hay Lake Channel&#13;
St. Mary's Falls&#13;
Canal .^.._. ..-1..,^&#13;
Dry Dock, /St.&#13;
Mary's F a l l s&#13;
Canal&#13;
24,5:2&#13;
8,509&#13;
4.900&#13;
4535&#13;
124,207&#13;
_JSmuj.&#13;
100,04¾)&#13;
1GJ,SOO&#13;
None.&#13;
10,000&#13;
100,000&#13;
371,0(0&#13;
None.&#13;
10,000&#13;
-500,000&#13;
250X0)&#13;
2,334,1V)&#13;
1,750,000&#13;
None. 170,000 3,233,872&#13;
w W i l l Soon be Determined.&#13;
The week ending July 2fi was the third week&#13;
•since the strike was inaugurated in the Saffinaw&#13;
Valley and Mxtecn days since the mills&#13;
s h u t d o w n . Three shingle'mills and uv &gt; sawmills&#13;
at East Saginaw are in operation a m H t r e&#13;
mills are runnimr at the.other end. This leaves&#13;
seventy-eight mills and nearly as many suit&#13;
blocks idle. A low estim-it^ places the daily&#13;
pay roll of these mi lis at $12,00», from which&#13;
the money taken out of circulation in the last&#13;
three weeks may rea lily be computed. It is&#13;
not alone this loss which the working e,lement&#13;
- h a s to sustain, but the stoppage means 125,-&#13;
000,030 feet of lumber less in the production of&#13;
the season aud a corresponding decrease in&#13;
the output of logs next winter. ' Nearly every&#13;
branch of mercantile trade is suffering from&#13;
the idleness of these 'giant Industries." How&#13;
* long it wlJI last is a problem not easy of s o ^&#13;
lution. While there are ear marks o f a&#13;
j l i g h t weakening of the- atrikers, they Eossesa confidence in their ability t o ,&#13;
oldoutindctinltcly, and an effort ls^o be'&#13;
Like the Dog in the Manger.&#13;
A special from Bay City to a Detroit paper&#13;
savs:&#13;
The strike seems to have settled down to a&#13;
test of e n d u r a n c \ The strikers say they can&#13;
hold out as long as necessary and the Knights&#13;
of Labor will keep them in supplies, which are&#13;
now coming in by the carload fr.im various&#13;
paits of the state. The mid-men have, planted&#13;
themselves on the proposition to run their mills&#13;
without dictation from outs ders and are willing&#13;
to await the result. They say they will&#13;
make as much money v\ ith the' mills lying idle&#13;
as if they were running. Business of "all Wnds&#13;
is paralyzed, Tile question is, will supplies&#13;
continue to pour in to support the thousands&#13;
of idle men and their families. It is well&#13;
enough now.Jbut what will be the result when&#13;
winter come.-*.&#13;
— 1&#13;
A New Railroad.&#13;
The first survey of the St. Clair River &amp;&#13;
Detroit railroad bus been completed. The&#13;
survey was under the management (if Assistant&#13;
Engineer Tor,, of 111 • Michigan Central.&#13;
The surveyor w a s l L F. Beau of Jackson. The&#13;
lin" start- at St. Cl.ur ami-runs down the river&#13;
to-"Marine City, thence to Fair Haven, Anchorville.&#13;
New Baltimore. Mt. Clemens. Eraser and&#13;
("enter Line, wiiere it intersects the Detroit&#13;
Cv Bay City branch of the Michigan Central.&#13;
This is only a i reliminary surrey to get&#13;
a map of the surrounding io:ratrv. Tlie leveling&#13;
was done and the typographical features&#13;
taken bv Mr Casey of Detroit. The country&#13;
Eassed through-is the easiest to grade anil&#13;
ridge of any in thr- state.&#13;
Bergeron'a Murderers.&#13;
The two men who had the altercation with&#13;
Dolphlee Bergeron in refilling in the killing of&#13;
the latter, have be m arretted at their homes in&#13;
Saginaw Citv. They are William Pearson,&#13;
aged 2i. and William Breckling, aged 28. They&#13;
did not know Bergeron was dead. Pearson&#13;
says they were in Bergeron's saloon pulling&#13;
matches*for drinks: that Bergeron lost, but refused&#13;
to furnish the liq-ior, claiming that Pearson&#13;
had lost; that a 'gry,words followed, whin&#13;
Bergenm threw a gla-s at Pearson, which&#13;
missed him, and Pearson then took up the&#13;
pitcher and struck Bergeron onThe head; then&#13;
ran away, followed&#13;
home.&#13;
by Bergeron, and went&#13;
union&#13;
A B r u t a l Murder^--""&#13;
Dolphlee Bergeron, proprietor of the Montreal&#13;
house on Water, street, East Saginaw,&#13;
was talking with two men in his bar-nxim with&#13;
whom j e had been throwing dice, when one of&#13;
them seized an earthenware pitcher and struck&#13;
Bergeron on the forehead over the right eye.&#13;
Both men then ran out, and were followed by&#13;
Bergeron, who fell dead on the-walk a few fee"t&#13;
in front of his house. The men ran u p "&#13;
street and escaped. I t was found thaj&#13;
blow ruptured the blood vessels of&#13;
Bergeron was about 35 years old^atfd a peaceabl&#13;
V disposed man. He l e a y e r f a wldnyr »t»4&#13;
arain.&#13;
engineers, three small children.&#13;
Frank Rowley of ,St. Louis, aged 45 years&#13;
fell d&lt;"ud in the harvest field Irom interna&#13;
rheumatism. He leaves a*~*wife aiuL two chll&#13;
dren.&#13;
The Lansing district association camp&#13;
grounds are to be located in Eaton Rapids, the&#13;
necessary $1,000 to secure them having been&#13;
raised.&#13;
. John Williams, a Negro 85 years old, who&#13;
upon his emancipation in Yirg'nia joined the&#13;
Se-ond Michigan cavalry, is dead at Paris,&#13;
Kent county.&#13;
Richard Fletcher of Bay C.ty, &gt;5 years old.&#13;
was found dead half-way batw'eeu "the residenc.&#13;
1 of his two sous. It is supposed he died&#13;
of heart disease.&#13;
Louis Reaume, who caused such a reign of&#13;
terror in Chicago recently, and killed an officer&#13;
in that city, ha.s been "declined insane, and&#13;
sent to his' relatives in Micigan.&#13;
The Lenawee county soldiers' and sailors'&#13;
association, which merged int &gt; the Southeastern&#13;
Michigan association some years ago, has&#13;
.been reorganized on an independent basis.&#13;
C. H. Booth of Kalamazoo, who not long&#13;
ago was arrested charged wit 'i embezzlement,&#13;
has been bound over to the circuit court for&#13;
trial, bail being given to the amount of $2.01)0.&#13;
It is stated that 10 girls from Olivet college&#13;
are table waiters at the Harbor Point hotel,&#13;
while several from Kalamazoo college perform&#13;
the same services at the Belvidere house,&#13;
Charlevoix.&#13;
John Gordon, inventor &lt; f the patent binder,&#13;
and a former resident of — Kalamazoo, has&#13;
brought suit against the m a n u f a c t u r e r s ^ The&#13;
binder under his patents for royalty. The&#13;
case indirectly involves $1,000,00,.).&#13;
One of Piukerton's detectives was emploved&#13;
by Sheriil Rice of Allegan county, on the Sage&#13;
murder case for three weeks. "Nothing new&#13;
was developed, aud the detective was dismissed.&#13;
The case is apparently t o - r e m a i n a&#13;
mystery.&#13;
W. C. Bennett of Lansing, aged 60, while&#13;
temporarily insane, shot himself through the&#13;
head. He "bail until within a month been employed&#13;
in the office of the auditor general,&#13;
having been appointed by Whitney J o n e s&#13;
thirty years ago.&#13;
Agnes, a 3-year old daughter of Jerome&#13;
BIssonett, Lake Shore A: Michigan Southern&#13;
night switchman of Monroe, was'misaed by her&#13;
mother, and half an hour later her bodv" was&#13;
found in the riTer that runs at the back "of the&#13;
house. The water was about two feet deep.&#13;
The gold seekers of the upper peninsula will&#13;
devote a large part of their attention to the&#13;
Holyoke silver lead range this summer. Some&#13;
remarkable discoveries are reported from that&#13;
region. A chemist in Ishpeming assayed a specimen&#13;
last week which rau over $0,000 to the&#13;
ton.&#13;
" Samuel M. Conely, one of the verv oldest&#13;
and best known pio'neers of Brighton,"is dead.&#13;
He was a settler from away back in the thirties.&#13;
He was originally from New York citv, He is&#13;
the father of W. B. Cons*ly, the Detroit artist,&#13;
arrl upcle of J o h n D. Conely and Edwin F.&#13;
Conely.&#13;
Louis F. Noe, ear inspector on the Michigan&#13;
Ci ntral, was struck by a switcirenginc in Kalamazo&#13;
i the other morning and dragged 15&#13;
feet. He was badly marrgled, six ribs being&#13;
broken ami three lingers- c-::t off. There is also&#13;
a bad hole In his '"bead, and one arm badly&#13;
jammed, and his recovery is doubtful.&#13;
I.KK I ' U O S K X .&#13;
Gen. Fitzhugh Lee has been nominated for&#13;
governor by the Democrats of Virginia.&#13;
KOVAI. SV.MI'ATHV.&#13;
Queen-.Victoria, through Mr. West, British&#13;
Minister, and the Prince aud Princess of Wales&#13;
sent dispatches of condolence to Mrs. Graut.&#13;
l ' K l C l l T K N E I ) J-'KANTK.&#13;
Cholera has broken out on the French frontier.&#13;
Panic seems to have seized tke people,&#13;
hundreds of whom are leaving t h e couutrydaily.&#13;
I'KISOXKUS (.'HEMATEO.&#13;
Five prisoners were cremated in the Batter&#13;
City. Ore., county jail, the half-witted murderer&#13;
who is supposed so have tired the building&#13;
being rescued.&#13;
$74,000 SHOUT.&#13;
Investigation reveals the fact that the Manufacturers'&#13;
and Traders' bank of Buffalo, N. Y.,&#13;
is short j-74,000 in its funds. The bank, however,&#13;
is unaffected, it.i capital of $'.00,000&#13;
being unimpaired.&#13;
Illl.I.ks. PKOt'LAMATIOX.&#13;
Gov. Hill of New York has issued a proclamation&#13;
setting apart August 8 for appropriate&#13;
religious obiirvancc* throughout the state Tn~&#13;
connection with the funeral of Gen. Giant&#13;
aud declaring it a legal holiday.&#13;
X F T E U H I ' D D E X S I K K V aTYI.K.&#13;
A portion of the old ferry rolling mill at&#13;
South Wilmington, Del., operated by the Diamond&#13;
state iron company fell and Geo. Ely,&#13;
carpenter, a n d Wither .Tones, draughtsman,&#13;
were killed and several others wounded.&#13;
ire now, however, pronounced out of danger.&#13;
Two or three others were also less severely&#13;
Hurt. The mountain t e b g r a p h wires were all&#13;
prostrated, aud dispatches had to be sent to&#13;
Saratoga for transmission,&#13;
T O ( A l t H Y I'llK H O D Y .&#13;
At the request of Mrs, Grant, - TVnstdent^&#13;
Cleveland has named the follow,ng ]&gt;ersons a*&#13;
pall-bearers for the Grant obsequies :&#13;
(Jen. William T. Sherman, I'. S. A.&#13;
Lieut. Gen. Philip 11. Sheridan, U. S. A.&#13;
•Admiral David 1). Porter, I'. S. N.&#13;
Vice-Admiral Stephen C, Rowan, LI. S. N.&#13;
Joseph E. Johnston of Virginia.&#13;
Gen. Simon B. B u c k m r of Kentucky.&#13;
Hamilton Fish of New Y&lt;;rk.&#13;
Geo. S. Bout well of Massachusetta.&#13;
Geo. W. Childs of Pennsylvania.&#13;
J o h n A. Logan of Illinois.&#13;
Geo. J o n •« of New York.&#13;
Oliver P . o y t o f New York.&#13;
NIK MONKS MOXTKKIOKE D K i l l ,&#13;
Sir MOSCF Monteiore, tlie well-known H e -&#13;
brew philanthropist, who in October last celebrated&#13;
the lOOiU anniversary of his birthday,&#13;
.lied at Ramsgate, near Loudon, July 2S.&#13;
Sir Moses Monteliore was bonr'October 24,&#13;
\7&lt;i. His fa*her was an English merchant, w h o&#13;
c mid trace his ancestry back to Spain, whence&#13;
they were driven into ltel,- by persecutors.&#13;
Moses passed his early \cars in s u a n y Italy,&#13;
where he began his busim'ss career. In 1812 he&#13;
married asister-in law of Nathan Meyer Rothschild,&#13;
the London banker. In IS37, after having&#13;
resided in England ior several years, he was&#13;
knighted by Queen Victoria, because of his efforts&#13;
in behalf of his raciv-and In 18-iri he w a s&#13;
made a baronet. His immense wealth, amassed&#13;
hi an honorable business career, has excited&#13;
I'll A I U M A X .&#13;
r has been m a d e chairman&#13;
formed in New York to&#13;
erection of the—National&#13;
Organization*! will be&#13;
New Vork state .for the&#13;
M i l ,&#13;
Chester A. Arthu&#13;
of an organization&#13;
raise funds for the&#13;
Grant Monument,&#13;
formed throughout&#13;
same purpose.&#13;
' 'I'llK c o w 111 r&gt; IT&#13;
' An Su.'c.mee, Ga.. on the Rieimio&#13;
villi* Radniad. a ditch train&#13;
thowing on • ear from the trac&#13;
were lilteen Negri-* train ham&#13;
of iron. The car turned on I&#13;
iron fell upon the NegrmiS^kdlmg&#13;
wounding three more.&#13;
A W A T K K VAMIVIJJ.&#13;
Eight thousand people living at Gilberton,&#13;
comment, but his philanthrop/ a n d Christian&#13;
benevolence—-the word is used in its fullest&#13;
sense—have given him a hold upon all humanitarians&#13;
the world over. Sir Moses Monteliore&#13;
made a number of journeys to Palestine to learn&#13;
the cause of the destitution among the Jews in&#13;
that country. Through his kindly offices a n d&#13;
unostentatious charity" be relieved much of tfie&#13;
suffering, and instituted measures that resulted&#13;
in permanent benefits to the u u f o r t u u a t e people.&#13;
On the occasion tu* the baronet's 100th annl-&#13;
'yersary last October, the whole Jewish world&#13;
united* to do him honor, His life has been sustained&#13;
for a long time only by the most thoughtful&#13;
care and attendance on the part of thoueioviag&#13;
the patriarch for his godly qualities.&#13;
Niri'ATIOX OF W1IKA.T.&#13;
Henry Clews«fc CO. say: T h e wheat problem,&#13;
and the reduced crop yield which makes&#13;
it doubly oue, promises to be solved In tha&#13;
near future by the movement of the product&#13;
that shall foLow harvest operations. Until&#13;
now, this import.int element in m a k i n g prices&#13;
has been obscured by thejntiuene.es of J h e foreign&#13;
sttuatio'uXud t h e acciiinulation In domestic&#13;
warehouses. Whether this movement shall&#13;
be large or small, depends upon t h e financial&#13;
resources of t h e fanners. They are well aware&#13;
of the ejcteaioX thedamag-^--ti» t h e plant i n -&#13;
both the winter and spring wheat&#13;
and should they be In a p isition to&#13;
irom market,a quantity that might&#13;
cessive, a n d sell only sufficient lor&#13;
md Ai-l&gt;au'&#13;
ran over a&#13;
k In the&#13;
Is and Mix&#13;
ts side and&#13;
seven&#13;
cow&#13;
cat&#13;
•ars&#13;
the&#13;
and&#13;
Nil h o b Marzevillc" and MahanoyC.ty, Pa,,&#13;
threatened with an i m p r cedentcd" water&#13;
ne, owing to a prolonged drought. Every&#13;
up. Water N brought&#13;
eve-nil mile- away and&#13;
Mrs. Nathan Ganson, a lady .of about 75&#13;
years of age, while attempUtig t*&gt; drive acro-s&#13;
the tracks of the Flint A: iVre Marquette Railroad&#13;
Company, in t h e south part of Flint, was&#13;
struck by the engine of the Detroit express,&#13;
and almost, instantly killed. The horse was&#13;
killed and the buggy completely demolished.&#13;
Mr. Henry Ray, a contractor of Coldwatcr,&#13;
who was laying stone walks around the court&#13;
house iu Cnarlotte. was taken suddenly ill the&#13;
other morning and died the nt xt morning at&#13;
1 o'clock. The doctors think-his sickness was&#13;
caused by extreme heat and to &gt; frequent indulgence&#13;
in ice waftr. The remains were&#13;
taken to his tiome in Coldwatcr.&#13;
Brighton taxpayers almost to a man signed&#13;
abonffs l&gt;ond for$l(),00) in favor of the Toledo&#13;
t s A n n Arbor road after thev had been ad.&#13;
dressed in favor of a railroad bv Hon. I. WCase,&#13;
Hon. David Thompson'.and Father&#13;
Doherty, the"Catholic, pastor there. Th.&#13;
will now come to Brighton. Howell *#ikiiave&#13;
its $20,000 bonus ready In a few&#13;
At an adjourned m e e t i n f f ^ j f t h c board of&#13;
t u s t e e s of Kalamazooeatfepe heldTn Jackson&#13;
a few days a*o, itw^rftounoTthat $70,000 had&#13;
been raised fcy^paying off the indebtedness of&#13;
M8,000!aadT50,OOJ a lded to the permaneat&#13;
funcL^-Cr. Kendall Brooks tendered his resiff-&#13;
Ton as president of t h e colleee, b u t It was&#13;
not accepted. The colleee will continue in&#13;
operation.&#13;
E. J . Landers of Imlay City "and C. "P.&#13;
Thomas of Lapeer, fitt/irnnya fr&gt;r Wm BO«T&#13;
man, whose son was killed by a train on the&#13;
s t&#13;
arc&#13;
tain&#13;
stream and well is d, icd&#13;
in barn Is from points :&#13;
co.-Is .50 cents per barrel.&#13;
1.1 E f f . XV K's HEATH.&#13;
The secretary of suite has received from&#13;
Lima, a t •legram anuo.incuuf the death of&#13;
Lieut. Nye, naval attaciie to the .American legation&#13;
at that place. The lieutenant was instructed&#13;
to a company the rem iins of cx-Minjstcr&#13;
Phelps to the United States, but before&#13;
the date of departure he became ill and died.&#13;
A F A L I . t N t ; 1'IEU.&#13;
While an excursion steamer was loading&#13;
with passengers at a p i e r a t Chatham, the pier&#13;
collapsed, throwing into the Mater M) persons,&#13;
priiicijfcilly women and children. Many persons&#13;
were re.-eiieii half-drowned and unconscious&#13;
and were taken to a neighboring hosjvi-&#13;
' till. It is believed several persons were&#13;
drowned after being stunned by falling tin the&#13;
piles. * .&#13;
XO PLACE Fill! A KEVOLVEK.&#13;
Miss Martha Brown, a beautiful voting ladv,&#13;
was instantly killed at a ball at Rogersvilfe,&#13;
Tenn., the other night. While the ball was in&#13;
.progress a revolver fell from the pocket of a&#13;
young man and was discharged. The ball&#13;
struck Mi&gt;s Brown in the breast and passed&#13;
through her heart. The young man who dropped&#13;
the pistol was almost crazed with grief&#13;
and tied.&#13;
EXI'OKTS AXI) IM POUTS.&#13;
The chief of the Bureau of Statistics reports&#13;
that the total values of the imports of merchandise&#13;
during the twelve months ended J u n e&#13;
3.). 1&gt;8"&gt;, were $,' 77.-17 '&lt;.^50, nn 1 during the&#13;
previous twelV'e'months $0»i7-i+Ub".09d, a decrease&#13;
of $90,220,8+1 The valu s of the e \ p Tts of&#13;
merchandise for the twelve months m o e d J u n e&#13;
30, 18&gt;5, were ..^7-11.^0 _\M1, and for ..the.... twelve •&#13;
months ended June, :!0, 1SS1, were $740,513,009,&#13;
an increa&gt;e of £1,::89,074.&#13;
SHOHTEMNO SICK I.EAVF. —&#13;
The following order has been issued by t h e&#13;
secretary of the interior: Leave of absence&#13;
with pay will UOL be "granted for a -longer&#13;
period than t l r r t y (lavs in any calendar vear.&#13;
The necessity for sucn sick leaves must be fully&#13;
established by rm dical evidence a n d to the&#13;
satisfaction oT the oilieers of the department.&#13;
This order does not affect the annual leave for&#13;
thirty days. The practice heretofore has been&#13;
to allow-sixty days' sick leave in one year.&#13;
x o Man!-,&#13;
of the cabinet, t h e&#13;
following&#13;
FOUTV IVWN&#13;
After a recent mee:in^&#13;
secretary of the*.-interior sent the&#13;
telegram declining to extend the time within&#13;
which cattle must be removed irom the Chey&#13;
euue aud Arapahoe Indian reservation:&#13;
D E P A R T M E N T at' T H E I N T E &lt;&#13;
W A S H I N G T O N , July 2S^r^&gt;&gt;5,&#13;
To Geo. R. Blanchard, No. 1 Jirrtadway,&#13;
New York :&#13;
After further cfmiu+tation with Gen. Sheridan&#13;
and full •CQiWfTli'ratiiin in cabinet meeting*&#13;
on the sujj^jtaof your application for extension&#13;
of-tfine until"April next for t h e remov&#13;
cattle from the. reservation, t h e presf&#13;
•nt declines to modify his late proclamation.&#13;
I send you this to avoid misapprehension or&#13;
delay.&#13;
L. Q. C. LAMAR, Secretary.&#13;
ST1UCK BY U U H T X I X O .&#13;
Lightning struck the (irant cottage a few&#13;
days ago. The eleerie lluid entered the cottage,&#13;
tearing off some of the plastering and extinguishrttf&#13;
the electric light above t h e casket,&#13;
Col. W. W. Beck, commanding battery A,&#13;
artillery, from Governor's island, a n d Gen&#13;
H. Jackson, commander of Fort Columbus,&#13;
Governor's island, were rendered Insensible by&#13;
a shook from a4x&gt;U, and it was f e a r e / for a „„,-.„,&#13;
time that the l a U e n r o u l d n o t survive. B o ^ ^ , , ^&#13;
sections,&#13;
withhold&#13;
prove extheir&#13;
iniT&#13;
mediate requirements, no considerable decline&#13;
frOlil present prices is likely to occur. On t h e&#13;
other baud, however, a free", large movement&#13;
would prove too much, in the event of continued&#13;
accumulations, for a market already&#13;
abundantly supplied.&#13;
The statistical foundation to t h e present&#13;
market has improved somewhat during t h e&#13;
past three mouttis, and the result of the export&#13;
movement for the year has, in the main,&#13;
been satisfactory. T h e visible supply appears&#13;
to be larger in comparison with t h e corres-&#13;
)onding period In former years. A fact may&#13;
&gt;e stated in this connection that seems t o&#13;
have escaped the notice of many. Daring t h e&#13;
last year iour new' warehousing points were&#13;
milled to the list, thus increasing the a m o u n t&#13;
of the aggregate we-kly report. T h e burden&#13;
of this visdde supply is locged in Chicago.&#13;
Throughout the year the over-zealous operators&#13;
for a decline have been predicting disasters&#13;
from excessive accumulations aud a consequent&#13;
surplus, Beginu.ng July 1, 1SS4, and&#13;
ended July 2, 18&gt;5. the exports which have&#13;
prevailed throughout the year have stimulated&#13;
au increased demnndcand" new uses have been&#13;
found for the orodiict: in fact the consumption&#13;
throughout the world has greatly increased&#13;
from the same cause.&#13;
The Europ &gt;an situat'ou, especially in London,&#13;
may be briefly summed up as an Indifferent,&#13;
one,'for t h e time being, so far as supplies&#13;
from American sources are c o n c r u e d , since&#13;
Indian and Au.-tralia are so bountiful. In the&#13;
United Kingdom and on the Continent their&#13;
own harvests are likely to be equal to the immediate'&#13;
requirements, as the Indian harvest&#13;
has been before them, and as ours must be&#13;
after them. Briefly, then, provided our producers&#13;
are in an independent position-, present&#13;
prices may be regarded as representative of&#13;
the value of the new crop of ISSJ^-&#13;
Rcgarding tlie condition of the winter wheat,&#13;
we can but repeat that-the damage has been&#13;
severe, and, unt'l the aetuiil output is determined,&#13;
the le.ist said the better. T h e spring&#13;
crop Is progressing only fairly, a n d some ' d e -&#13;
struction front insects ' is reported, a n d a decrease&#13;
in the yield ''s not unlikely.&#13;
A GENERA?, OKAXT'S TOMU.&#13;
Jin. Grant's tomb lias been finally located&#13;
in Riverside'Park, on the banks of the H u d s o n&#13;
river, in obedience to the decision of Mrs.&#13;
Grant. Mayor Grace of New York received a&#13;
dispatch from Col. Grant sayiug that his mother&#13;
had decided on Riverside Park and asking&#13;
that a temporary tomb be at once constructed&#13;
at that place, and an hour later the Board of&#13;
Alderman met and formally deeded to Mrs.&#13;
Grant the right of sepulture'in the park for the&#13;
remains of the general and her own remains.&#13;
The Commissioners of Parks were instructed t o&#13;
proceed at once to build the temporary tomb,&#13;
and in less than three hours after receipt of&#13;
-CeJ-. G r a n t ' s dispatch, work had been commenced.&#13;
The site chosen for Gen. Grant's tomb is on&#13;
a sort of promontory on the Hudson River a n d&#13;
is .the highest, point, i n Maphattanville. T h e&#13;
outward swell of the promontory begins at O n e&#13;
H u n d r e d and Twenty-second street a n d t h e&#13;
river bank returns to" its regular line a t O n e&#13;
Hundred a n d Twenty-ninth strFct—Tne summit&#13;
of this elevation'isan almost level p l a t e a u /&#13;
of something more than twenty acres. On the&#13;
river side t h e descent is abrupt. A t its foot,&#13;
200 feet tielow. are the tracks of the branch of&#13;
the Hudson River Railroad that runs info t h e&#13;
Thirtieth street depot. On the northv/est, is&#13;
the ferry to Fort Lee. and on the north a n d&#13;
northeast red brick stores. l,ou-e&gt; a n d m a n u -&#13;
factui-ies of Manhattanville cluster a r o u u d t h e&#13;
ba&gt;e of the hill. . /&#13;
If the obMTver looks to the south lie .has&#13;
opened before him the iong vista of Riverside&#13;
Park, of driveways, hewnst/me Malls aud&#13;
ancient oaks ami maples on the steep j-iopesof&#13;
Hudson. The spot suggest? revolutionary war&#13;
Temories. Fort Lee Is opposite, the old fort in&#13;
Central Park is on t h e / o u t h e a s t , Forr Washington&#13;
is on t h e north. Ami the highlands near&#13;
West Point shut in t)m horizon' bevund t h e&#13;
T a p p a n Z i e . No st/ueturcs can be erected to&#13;
break the uniformity of th« view as the wnter&#13;
front and t h e / p a r k belong to tlie citv.&#13;
The vault will fare the Hudson r.vor a n d will&#13;
be situated abunt forty feet west of the eastern&#13;
or main drive. It. wiil.l e built of 1'hLaddphla&#13;
pressed bric£, in red ami black, nud faced&#13;
ith bhic atone trimmings. I t s estimated cost&#13;
is $2,0i)0/&#13;
At the request of Col. G r a n t there will be.&#13;
two marble benches provided in t h e interior,&#13;
upoK one .of which will rest the casket containi&#13;
n g the body of the general. Several h u n d i&#13;
R laborers are at work grading t h c ^ j r o u n d&#13;
n the vicinity of the temponypy'vault and&#13;
constructing a "broad f(K)tpatU^and a carriage&#13;
drive from the roadway,.yWch will circle t h e&#13;
hill and accommodate The many t h o u s a n d s of&#13;
persons who^aTe expected t o attend t h e&#13;
funeral. ^TTfe burial ground will be enclosed&#13;
b y ^ / e n c e . making it secure from ail Intrusion&#13;
during fhe construction of t h e periuauet&#13;
f\&#13;
S^BFT-W* - . . ^ ) , ^ ¾ ^ . ½ ^*^±J&amp;*m*m.~-y&#13;
• *i. J vi'iW-a.viL..&#13;
' * * • * " * • • • ' * , * * - A&#13;
Mwiwa&#13;
-*&#13;
!t&#13;
THK ODIOUS KNUU-iH t*UU.&#13;
Tliey UKIJ^H A me into I hi* cl&gt; uwiiiic-rooiri,&#13;
A::il 'In iv, in nn &lt;-;i'\ tii;t;i,&#13;
fc\ 1 H. l&gt;t:&gt;&gt;v-u ^K't'ii brute Unit ^nzcU at.me&#13;
With an limolcnl Britinli t-tuii';&#13;
Ami u Icuik of pr«lc mid folly bom&#13;
llluiiK-d liiB tiiily inu^;&#13;
A'd li&lt;i lU'ii&lt;'&lt;i hlt&gt; hack with lofty scorn—&#13;
Dili Unit OIIIOUB Eugl KL pug.&#13;
A In; ut»'i,xis ma ilcn came gliding In,&#13;
Stately, anil tall, ami ullm,&#13;
An&lt;l K&lt;'att'iJ herself by the &gt;igly pug,&#13;
In tin; n'if Name chair with him.&#13;
Ami tie W'klly be wugnlcd, ami slavered, and&#13;
fawui'd,&#13;
And she held him In Iovlnm hug,&#13;
Over le&gt; (-boulder he grinned at me—&#13;
Did that ugly puirliah pug.&#13;
But »1 e eavly talked as she fondled him,&#13;
And Baid, "Which do you thiuk&#13;
In r,t)boii ties becomes him beat,&#13;
Yellow or blue or pink'"&#13;
Atid ''Marion Meira ha* a horrid cat—&#13;
I hate eat'1'—with a shrug. „&#13;
And she kissed-yes, kissed—the smoky phiz&#13;
Of that odious English pug.&#13;
Oh, gentle dudes, where are ye nowl&#13;
W-ith supercilious i-corn&#13;
The exalted pug from his mistress1 breast&#13;
Looks down on you forlorn.&#13;
Ye tread the dirty Urccts; white arms&#13;
His pursv carcass Jug;&#13;
And he's loledhen', and he's toted there—&#13;
The odious English pug.&#13;
He takes 1m drives and h!s bouillon warm,&#13;
And inakos his suclai calls,&#13;
And leaves IJIH neatly graven card&#13;
With h s owner's iu the hulls.&#13;
l'v&gt;' seen th&lt;m—B jous by ihe scoro,&#13;
Heunie, and Punch, and SJug;&#13;
And every one WHS the silly name&#13;
Of an o'dioua English pug.&#13;
Oh, feline pets of the upper ten,&#13;
1 call on you, ar se!&#13;
Move onithe pug with your rippisg claWB,&#13;
Hook put his goggle"eyes!&#13;
'His wealth shall be yours, oa the spoils of war,&#13;
JUs comforts and quarters snug;&#13;
And the dude on ihe fence will cheer your&#13;
fight&#13;
"With the odious English pug.&#13;
—Xeio York Swt.&#13;
FIFTY FOUNDS REWARD.&#13;
When a young married clerk suddenly&#13;
loses" his situation in a provincial&#13;
bank where employers are reducing&#13;
their hands, it does not follow that&#13;
work can ~ b e J i &amp; d f o r the asking in&#13;
London; and so Mr. Tom Craven&#13;
found himseTI still seeking employm&#13;
e n t many months after his savings&#13;
had dwindled down to a few pounds.&#13;
The lest resources of the young couplo&#13;
was the sale of every available article&#13;
of furniture they possessed, and when&#13;
my story opens young Mrs. Craven&#13;
TVHS on~the point df-starttng to"selitho&#13;
last remaining article of value, namely,&#13;
her husband's boots.&#13;
" " T h e children must live,1 ' said the&#13;
young man, looking at two tiny figures&#13;
in the bed, " a n d all my other&#13;
clothes are done for, so the boots are&#13;
of no use to me. *Tne only trouble is&#13;
that you should have -to take them,&#13;
Clara.&#13;
" B u t , Tom, you c a n ' t go without&#13;
boots!"&#13;
" I ' v e got slippers," replied Tom.&#13;
"Make haste, dear—no one will see&#13;
you in the d a r k . "&#13;
Resolved to keep up, Clara stooped&#13;
for the boots. "Something must turn&#13;
up soon—perhaps you'll hear from&#13;
Brown &amp; Co. to-morrow." she said.&#13;
"Very likely," responded Tom in a&#13;
desponding tone. Brown &amp; Co. were&#13;
his late employers, and ho hud written&#13;
to them asking if they could possibly&#13;
take him back—with faint hopes&#13;
of success.&#13;
Quickly the boots were p u t into an&#13;
old leather bag, and Mrs. Craven&#13;
dressed herself in a shabby waterproof&#13;
and bonnet, and covered her face with&#13;
a thick veil. Then she crept down&#13;
the creaking old stairs and out into&#13;
the narrow street, with a heavy heart&#13;
and eyes into which tears would come.&#13;
Gusts of wind made the steet lamp*&#13;
flicker and cast strange shadows as&#13;
Clara Craven sped on toward the shop&#13;
where "left-oil'" clothing was purchased.&#13;
She paused a few doors otf&#13;
to let some persons go on their way&#13;
for she was sorely ashamed of he&#13;
rand; and as she stood? thus hef^eyes&#13;
tell on a placard that was fixed uuder&#13;
the light of a lamp on the wall of a&#13;
police station.&#13;
"Fifty pounds sterling r e w a r d . "&#13;
"Fifty pounds! How nice to get&#13;
it!" thought Mrs. Craven; and then&#13;
she took another look to see if the&#13;
eoast was clear for the business she&#13;
had in hand. Two more people&#13;
were coming. Back went her&#13;
eyes to the placard, and she read that&#13;
this reward was one red to any person&#13;
who would,give such information as&#13;
would lead to the conviction of a dariug-.&#13;
jewei.ry. robber^v-&#13;
"Wish I could catch the thief," said&#13;
Clara to herself, half laughing, half&#13;
sadly, and when she looked again toward&#13;
the wardrobe shop she saw she&#13;
might verrure in. After hearing her&#13;
nusband's boots depreciated in every&#13;
possible manner, she timidly accepted&#13;
( : lie pitiful price offered, and then stole&#13;
i.ack into t h e . street, where she purc&#13;
h a s e d a few absolute necessaries of&#13;
i;ie, and ordered some coal whic*h a&#13;
- *\ ^'een-gp^er's boy wheeled in a bar-&#13;
,••1 behind her until they reached the&#13;
'.oor of the lodging-house.&#13;
"Would you mind carrying them u p&#13;
-&gt; my room in two basketsful if 1 give&#13;
An hour later a snug glow of tiro&#13;
w a n n e d the you:ig couple and their&#13;
children, and the latter, having been&#13;
satislicd with a meal, went sound&#13;
asleep. Tom watched his wife's busy&#13;
lingers mending shabby clothes for a&#13;
while, and then he, too, went to bed,&#13;
sharing her fervent hope that "Homething&#13;
would turn up tp-morrow."&#13;
And so it came about that when all&#13;
were asleep Clara sat on by the lire&#13;
that still burned cheerily, and after&#13;
eleven strokes had fallen slowly from&#13;
the big clock, and the restless roar of&#13;
tralic was somewhat less in the ever&#13;
busy street, her hands lay idle in her&#13;
lap, and she blew out the candle to&#13;
save its light for another time, and&#13;
t u r n e d such a sad young^ face, such&#13;
troubled blue c y e s / o n the nickering&#13;
tire that it seemed hard, hard that so&#13;
young a life should be so old in sorrow.&#13;
A sound of voices in the nextjroom&#13;
roused Iher. There was a door •communicating&#13;
with the next room, which,&#13;
of course, was locked, but which made&#13;
Rounds easily heard. Clara knew that&#13;
her companion was an elderly lady—&#13;
she-had met her on the stairs sometimes—&#13;
and she wondered who hervisitor&#13;
could be at such an hour. Then&#13;
the sound of frightened sobbing and&#13;
expostulation made her listen attentively,&#13;
for she feared her neighbor was&#13;
in trouble, and she determined to rouse&#13;
h e r husband if necessary.&#13;
" N o t yet, Joe! Oh, don't say you&#13;
must go yet!"&#13;
"Mother, I've stayed too long already.&#13;
They'll be after me sharp,&#13;
now the reward's out. Think of fifty&#13;
pounds sterling, mother! The men who&#13;
tempted me, and got the jewels,&#13;
w o u l d turn on me now and get the&#13;
re w a r d / 1&#13;
This was it, then! But one slight&#13;
wooden door stood between Clara and&#13;
the thief she wished she could find.&#13;
Only to step round the corner. There&#13;
she knew was the police station, and&#13;
for the news she brought them she&#13;
would get fifty pounds sterling. She&#13;
clasped her hands tight and sat perfectly&#13;
still, all the while knowing that&#13;
every second lessened her chance of&#13;
securing the living piece of property&#13;
valued at fifty pounds sterling. In&#13;
h e r present straits liftypound* sterlmfi ] in and see what would happen nex t.&#13;
seemed a fortune to her. As she&#13;
When partial .calmness had returned,&#13;
Tom spoke joyously :&#13;
"Now, wife", sell something of your&#13;
small store and send a telegram from&#13;
me to the dear old girl!"&#13;
" T o m , " cried Clara, laughing&#13;
through her tears, "how disrespectful!"&#13;
~&#13;
But the telegram was sent and&#13;
brought in solemn wonderment to Miss&#13;
d r e y brook before ten o'clock by the&#13;
postmaster himself. When once she&#13;
had the opened paper before her eyes,&#13;
and devoured the information that her&#13;
godson was in London and desirous of&#13;
seeing her immediately, she gave&#13;
orders for a fly to bo in readiness to&#13;
catch the next up train, and that her&#13;
fur traveling cloak and boots be p u t&#13;
near the tire immediately.&#13;
In the anxiety that all the domestics&#13;
fell to take a share in the general excitement,&#13;
Miss Greybrook's cloak&#13;
threatened to be torn in pieces, and,&#13;
when wanted, one fur boot was found&#13;
warming in front of the kitchen fire,&#13;
the other reposing on the sheepskin&#13;
rug beside the drawing-room fender.&#13;
However, vouchsafing never a word of&#13;
explanation, but, happilv for the sanity&#13;
of those she left behind her, dropping&#13;
the telegram in the hall as&#13;
she walked out to the ily, Miss Greybrook&#13;
started alone on her travels.&#13;
The dull, foggy shades of a London&#13;
Winter evening had gathered, and two&#13;
big and two little faces were pressed&#13;
tightly against the grimy top window&#13;
of a house iu a Westminister street, as&#13;
a cab drove up.&#13;
... "Go and bring her upstairs, Clara,"&#13;
said Tom. " I c a n ' t go in my slippers.&#13;
''&#13;
»«Yes—but I'm so afraid of her!"&#13;
All fears were obliged to disappear,&#13;
however, fur the o b j « e t o f them fea&lt;4&#13;
not waited to be brought up. She had&#13;
intimidated the landlady by the commanding&#13;
voiee in which she had desired&#13;
to be shown to the apartments of&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Greybrook&#13;
Craven; and that fat and lazy person&#13;
had preceded the strange lady rapidly&#13;
u p so many flights that on reaching&#13;
the top landing Miss Greybroofc stood&#13;
silent and stately, for she could not&#13;
speak. She waved the landlady d o x n&#13;
again, just as the latter wanted to look&#13;
sat,&#13;
her strained ears caught the mother's&#13;
voice again.&#13;
" r i l not keep you, though my heart&#13;
is breaking. My bonny boy come to&#13;
this! Oh, God, most merciful, save&#13;
him from a felon's doom!"&#13;
"Mother, pray for me. If I escape I&#13;
vow to lead an honest life arid make a&#13;
home for you. I t has not been my&#13;
fault. Fray God to forgive and help&#13;
m e . "&#13;
Clara's f rasp of her hands relaxed.&#13;
Then, with white face and tearful&#13;
eyes, she stood up and looked at her „&#13;
two-tray-ricepin^r-bovflr- - T d i w - i m m i - - - w « l t u r e d l 0 s P e a k :&#13;
Then Tom advanced, and his godmother&#13;
kissed him first, then his wife.&#13;
Then observing Robby and Bertie, she&#13;
grimly smiled, and remarked aloud,&#13;
but to herself, evidently:&#13;
"Children, of course—being as poor&#13;
as church mice."&#13;
Looking around tho wretched room,&#13;
and shaking the three chairs, she&#13;
chose the least rickety and sat down.&#13;
"Pack up—haven't got much to&#13;
I You must all&#13;
HOUSEHOLD HINTS.&#13;
POP OVKH*.&#13;
F j u r eggs, four caps of Hour, four&#13;
cups of milk, small piece of butter,&#13;
piueh of salt. Bake in gem pans and&#13;
serve with sauce.&#13;
CHIPOLATA.&#13;
Slice an o n i o n a n d fry ife brown in a&#13;
tablespoonful of butter; pour in two&#13;
cupfuls of cold beef soup, add a sprig&#13;
of parsley, salt and pepper. When it&#13;
boils thicken with a little flour and&#13;
water,;-when ready to serve pour over&#13;
buttered toast.&#13;
CUSTARD PUDDING.&#13;
One and one-half pints milk, four&#13;
eggs, one cupful sugar, two teaspoonfuls&#13;
vanilla. Beat eggs and sugar together,&#13;
dilute with milk and extract,&#13;
pour into buttered pudding dish, set&#13;
in oven in dripping pan two-thirds full&#13;
of water, and bake until firm, about&#13;
forty minutes in moderate oven.&#13;
STEWfiD LA5IB.&#13;
Take the neck or brest, cut into&#13;
small pieces, and put in a stew pan&#13;
with some thinly sliced salt pork, and&#13;
enough water to cover it; cover closely&#13;
and stew nntil tender, skim off all&#13;
the scum, and add a quart of green&#13;
pees, adding more water if necessary;&#13;
when the peas are tender, season with&#13;
pepper and butter rolled with flour.&#13;
ROLLS.&#13;
Two quarts of Hour, one pint of cold&#13;
boiled milk, one-half cup of yeast,&#13;
one-half cup of sugar, one tablespoonfnl&#13;
of melted butter. Make a well in&#13;
the middle of the flour, pour in- all&#13;
the above, and let rise over n i g h t ;&#13;
knead and let rise uutil the middle of&#13;
the afternoon; roll out, cut them about&#13;
the edges, lap over, let rise again and&#13;
bake in a hot oven twenty minutes.&#13;
_._ O'RF.KX PEA JaOLIL__&#13;
Put two quarts green peas with four&#13;
quarts water, boil two hours, keeping&#13;
steam waste supplied by fresh boiling&#13;
water; strain them from liquor, return&#13;
that to pot, rub the peas through sieve&#13;
chop an onion tine, and small pigment,&#13;
let boil ten minutes, stir a tablespoonful&#13;
flour into two-of butter, add pepper&#13;
and salt to taste, stir smoothly&#13;
into boiling soup. Serve with well buttered&#13;
sippets of toasted bread.&#13;
MERINGUE RICE PUDDING.&#13;
Take a teacupful of rice to one pint&#13;
of water; when the rice is boiled dry&#13;
add one pint of milk, a piece of butter&#13;
the size of an egg and rive eggs. Beat&#13;
tke yolks and grated rind of a lomon&#13;
a n d m i x with the rice. Butter the&#13;
dish, pour in the mixture and bake&#13;
lightly. Beat the whites to a stiff froth;&#13;
add a cup of sugar aud the juice of a&#13;
lemon. When the pudding is nearly&#13;
done spread on the frosting and bake&#13;
in a slow oven till the top is a light&#13;
brown.&#13;
MEAL PUDDING.&#13;
How the Old Whigs Did&#13;
Uncle Ruhf Claiborne, of Upatoie,&#13;
wao in town Saturday. He is a jolly&#13;
old bachelor, and always has his body&#13;
full of fun when he comes to this town,&#13;
Where he was brought up. In a street&#13;
conversation Saturday the talk turned&#13;
upon the administration of Cleveland,&#13;
and something was said about the&#13;
delay in turning out lepublican otliceholders.&#13;
Uncle Rube said:&#13;
"Well, they ought to do like we&#13;
whigs did when we beat the democrats.&#13;
There was no waiting. When&#13;
the whigs got in, it wasn't live days&#13;
before every democrat went out. And&#13;
as to the postoffices, why, we just took&#13;
'em. No waiting for a commission,&#13;
we walked in and took possession."&#13;
Capt. James McNeill smiled and&#13;
said: "Yes. You remember how&#13;
Uncle "Billy Walker did Uncle Dick&#13;
Rolfe about the Talbotton postoftice in&#13;
1840. U n c i v i l l y Walker was a great&#13;
whig, and quite a popular old gentleman&#13;
here, as well as a good joker.&#13;
Uncle Dick Rolfe then held the postotlice&#13;
as a democrat. Uncle Billy h a d&#13;
an old negro servant, Neddy, by name,&#13;
whom everybody knew and who in&#13;
physique was said to h^ve resembled&#13;
Henry Clay. The night after theelection&#13;
of Harrison, in 1*40, Uncle-&#13;
Billy was sitting in front of his hotel&#13;
in Talbotton, for he was the keeper of&#13;
the hotel, and he called'Neddy and&#13;
said:&#13;
"Neddy, take that large hamper&#13;
basket of mine and go over yonder&#13;
and tell your Mars Dicky Rolfe to send&#13;
me the postoflice."&#13;
"Neddy presently appeared at tho&#13;
postofnee". Uncle "Dick was sitting&#13;
-quietly4a- front witha-p«&#13;
feeling sore over their defeat and discussing&#13;
the incidents and result of&#13;
the hot contest through which the&#13;
country had just passed, and he was&#13;
really in the midst of a very fiery denunciation&#13;
of the whig party ^vhen&#13;
Neddy apperaed with a^large hamper&#13;
basket on his head. The democratib&#13;
suddenly stopped and&#13;
— pack that 1 can see.&#13;
come back with me to-night.&#13;
—Tom Craven and his w if e~excfriragcd-|- - Take-three tablespoonf u 1 s of- Indian&#13;
glances, and at last Tom deferentially&#13;
mi two-vence?" asked Clara, gently.&#13;
The boy-nodded b y w a y of answer,&#13;
rml the young wife opened the door&#13;
with her latch-Key, and ran up for an&#13;
old basket. While she was* getting&#13;
this out of her room a man had swiftly&#13;
entered the house and passed&#13;
TtTe stairs. The coal boy ne)u*i&lt;no&#13;
liecd him, for he was ea^erfy watch&#13;
i i g the signs of an&#13;
!•jaw-ecu two tow-fats&#13;
caching light&#13;
on an opposite&#13;
.^ L airway.&#13;
T h p ^ T a i r e a s e was very dark, so&#13;
ten Clara came down the man had&#13;
squeezed himself into a corner unobserved;&#13;
and when she went on her&#13;
way the stranger passed on to the top&#13;
of the house, aud enterctf-lhe-voom&#13;
behind that occupied by the Cravens.&#13;
her knees she fell and stayed in earnest&#13;
prayer until she heard the stealthy&#13;
footsteps creep down the stairs; then&#13;
she stole to the window of her darkened&#13;
room, and, looking out into the&#13;
lamp-lit street, watched a quick walking&#13;
figure in an old countrywoman's&#13;
cloak, with a deep cape and largo poke&#13;
bonnet, such as her neighbors always&#13;
wore, and she knew that the young&#13;
man had escaped in his mother's&#13;
clothes.&lt;&#13;
One of the most old-fashioned houses&#13;
in an old country town was Miss&#13;
Greybrook's. A steep flight of immaculately&#13;
clean steps led from the&#13;
pavement of High street to her hall&#13;
door, with its shining brass knocker&#13;
and bell handle. ^ - ^&#13;
Now, this old lady w.as Tom^Craven's&#13;
godmother, and on tho^vj&amp;ry- cold, dull&#13;
winter morning cd^whTch I have now&#13;
to speak, s h e j i a d r i s e n from her highbaekeilciKrir,&#13;
in front of the bright&#13;
stei^Hender, at the sound of the postan's&#13;
knock, and advanced to meet&#13;
the elderly servant who brought in the&#13;
letters on a silver salver.&#13;
"None from h i m , " said the old lady,&#13;
when she was alone again, turning&#13;
over four letters eagerly in search of&#13;
a hand writing that was not there.&#13;
"Poor and proud, like his father!&#13;
-Well, I've seen much folly in my time,&#13;
but if he refuses my oiler I question if&#13;
there is a companion idiot for such a&#13;
m a n . "&#13;
It was three weeks since she had&#13;
written to Tom Craven, addressing&#13;
her ietter to the ofliTrerof Brown &amp; Co.,&#13;
by whom she thought he was employed,&#13;
and ofl'ering to overlook the hideous&#13;
mistake he had made in m a r r y i n g&#13;
a penniless orphan girl, and to devote&#13;
a substantial s.im to fupther his prospects&#13;
in life.&#13;
On the very morning that she was&#13;
bewailing openly-her godson's pride,&#13;
and secretly her own, our friend Tom&#13;
received a reply to tho letter he had&#13;
sent to Brown "it Co,, regretting that&#13;
thev could do nothing to help him,&#13;
and inclosing Miss Greybrook's letter,&#13;
which "had been lying nearly three&#13;
weeks at their ofliee.&#13;
Clara, with the sadness of the night's&#13;
struggle still upon her, ran down the&#13;
rickety old stairs at the sound' of the.&#13;
postman's knoek and received tlm-Wtter&#13;
for her husband. W h e j j ^ i e a r r i v -&#13;
cd breathless at the toi&gt;4Wor again she&#13;
watched his faeejfcHTe opened it. Tho&#13;
few polite lyK&lt;Trom the business men&#13;
fell unjanrtfto the ground, while the&#13;
ope th«* euclosed was torn eage&#13;
r l y open. "Clara looked over his&#13;
shoulder and read, too^-nnd then with&#13;
one gbyice at the r«Qjevved vigor in his&#13;
worn, anxious face, she relinquished&#13;
her role of bravery, and cried out the&#13;
misery.of months in his arms. Robbie&#13;
waliied and Bertie crawled to the&#13;
scene of action*, and, seeing their mother-&#13;
in tears,.lent ivshrill to the chorus,&#13;
upot{whieh they were-kjssed, blessed&#13;
ami cried over* till they thought the&#13;
M'orld (represented to them by their&#13;
father *ml mother) had gone mad.&#13;
You see, dear godmother, we—we&#13;
need a few things to make us present&#13;
able at your house."&#13;
"EL! what? My house is my own.&#13;
Come as y o u , a r e . "&#13;
"The worst! must be said, then. But&#13;
—please excuse such a state of matters,&#13;
but—I've got no boots.&#13;
"Boots! my godson without boots!&#13;
Here, Clara—that's your name \ believe,&#13;
run out and "buy all you need&#13;
for everybody, and let us get qutr&lt;ot&#13;
this place, for I c a n ' t breathiv"^&#13;
Away ran poor Clani,"holding the&#13;
fat purse Miss Greyd3rook pushed into&#13;
Tier h a n d ^ a d r a l l unconscious what&#13;
she .carried!in it. It felt so full, how-&#13;
_ejzer;\that she took a cab and dr.ovo&#13;
first to a boot shop, where she purchased&#13;
for her children, her husband&#13;
aud herself.&#13;
I h e n came a big overcoat for Tom,&#13;
and wraps for tho little ones, aud she&#13;
told the cabman to drive home f a s t&#13;
She had paid for her purchases w i t h&#13;
gold,.aud bank notes crackled as she&#13;
closed trie purse.&#13;
Miss Greybrook carried out her intention&#13;
and bustled them all to the&#13;
station. The children slept all the&#13;
way in the comfortable first class carriage.&#13;
It was eleven o'clock when&#13;
they drove up to the door of the old&#13;
meal and one tablespoonful of wheat&#13;
flour and mix evenly in two thirds of&#13;
a cupful of cold milk, add this with&#13;
salt aud two well-beaten eggs to oue&#13;
quart of boiling milk, cook twenty&#13;
minutes briskly, then pour it into,&#13;
well-buttered baking dish anjl^-ftake&#13;
one hour. Invariably keep"'a baked&#13;
pudding covered, un-ttT about fifteen&#13;
minutes beforejt-i^ready to come out&#13;
of the oy&amp;nrT^then remove cover and&#13;
brqwjrtfsliirhtly.&#13;
POOR MAN'S PUDDING.&#13;
One-half cupful of chopped suet, onehalf&#13;
cupful of seeded raisins, one-half&#13;
cupful of currants washed and picked,&#13;
one and a half cupfuls of g r a t e d bread,&#13;
one cupful of flour, one teaspoonfnl of&#13;
b a k i n g / p o w d e r , one-half cupful of&#13;
brown sugar and one pint of milk.&#13;
Mix all well together, put into a wellgreased&#13;
mold, set in a saucepan with&#13;
boiling water to reach half up the aides&#13;
of the mold; steam for two hours: turn&#13;
out on the dish carefully; serve with&#13;
butter and sugar.&#13;
ROAST BEEF.&#13;
Put beef in a dripping pan; pour&#13;
cup of boiling water over it. Rub a&#13;
J postmaster&#13;
asked:&#13;
" W h a t do you want, s i r ? "&#13;
"Mars Billy Walker sent me ober&#13;
here a n ' s a y fer yer ter sen' 'im d a t&#13;
'arposofflsin dis 'ere baskit, and 'e&#13;
wants y e r t e r sen' it ter 'ini rite away.'&#13;
"You black whig rascal, if you don't&#13;
get away from here I'll smash you to&#13;
the earth,' said Uncle j Dick full of&#13;
spirit.&#13;
" 'Well, boss, Mars Billy son't mo&#13;
fer de pos offis in dis basket, and 'o&#13;
tole me not ter ciini back dar dout it&#13;
neeaer. A n ' b o s s I'se g o t t e r h a b it,&#13;
shore. Now den, boss, doan do de ole&#13;
nigger datter way. Doan fool longer'&#13;
de ole darky datter way. _Dj|s-^THip&#13;
dar and go "fetch it ter uuev"ivon t y e r ?&#13;
boss?' ^J-""''&#13;
•Uncle Dick-afbse in silent wrath.&#13;
44 'Yoju^old scoundrel, if you stay&#13;
he«r"another instant I will "kill you&#13;
with this chair.'&#13;
" 'Well, boss. Mars Billy sont *&#13;
" 'Git out! Git out!' shouted Uncle&#13;
Dick, at the same time starting&#13;
for Neddy with his chair. Ned droppeil&#13;
his whig basket •and left his h a t&#13;
and skedaddled in double-quick time&#13;
back to 'Mars Billy' and a large crowd&#13;
of exultant and happy whigs who hud&#13;
been witnessing the fun at a safe dis»&#13;
tance.^—Talbotton (Ga.) Neiv Era.&#13;
little salt into fat parts; roast ten minutes&#13;
for every pound. Bake soon as&#13;
juice begins "to flow. If mea't has&#13;
much fat on top cover fatty portion&#13;
with paste made of flour and water.&#13;
When nearly done remove this, dredge&#13;
lady's= houso", and she grimly counted [ beef with rlour, baste well with gravy.&#13;
Ave heads in night-caps thrust out in- Sprinkle salt over top and serve. Pour&#13;
to the night air from her neighbors'&#13;
windows, among-TTTem the rector's&#13;
with a flannel rolled round as an extra&#13;
proection.&#13;
Inside the'house all was done in the&#13;
right way as soon as the word was&#13;
given.&#13;
"**M'y godson and his "wIfo and chiI-~&#13;
dren have"come to live with me. Light&#13;
large tires in the two best rooms, and&#13;
get s u p p e r . "&#13;
Three years had passed. Tom was&#13;
flourishing in a large firm in a seaport&#13;
town where his godmother's&#13;
money had bought him a partnership,&#13;
It was only a short daily railw.&#13;
journey td his work,, and heaffO his&#13;
family were still happy&gt;-hfmates of&#13;
Miss Greybrook'$^]*mlse. One day-&#13;
Clara accotmj^rteu , her husband to&#13;
this seapupftown, and, before taking&#13;
leay&gt;&lt;f5 him at his ofliee door, and&#13;
oeeeding to make the purchase which&#13;
was her ostensible reason Tor bringing&#13;
her bonnie face and frejh winter costume&#13;
through the grimy streets,- she&#13;
waited while he v e n t in for a book he&#13;
wanted her to change.&#13;
Whilo she Was standing outside,&#13;
great crowds of poor, respectable looking&#13;
people came in and. passed on to a&#13;
large room beyond. She was told they&#13;
were e m i g r a n t , just about to start for&#13;
New Zealand.' She watched their&#13;
faces with kindly interest as young&#13;
and old passed by, anil presently a&#13;
woman who seemed'too old.to-be-making&#13;
the journey, dropped her purse&#13;
just in front of Clara, who stooped to&#13;
pick it up. In returning it she saw&#13;
what made her stop the woman and&#13;
eagerly question her. Yes, it was her&#13;
fellow lodger in the old Westminster&#13;
Sr.&#13;
fat from &lt;rravv, return to tire, thicken&#13;
with browned gravy, season and boil&#13;
up once. Roast most ail other meats&#13;
in same way.&#13;
FRIED SCALLOPS.&#13;
Drain two dozen scallops carefully,&#13;
and after seasoning ..them with salt&#13;
and pepper, roll them lightly in ti&#13;
bread crumbs. Beat two eggs^in a&#13;
soup plate, with a spoonjw^fork, and&#13;
after dipping the sj-iikfps in the egg,&#13;
roll them iu a oiwrhnty of crumbs a n d&#13;
lay t l i e m o n ^ r i a r g e platter. Be careful&#13;
tJjAt^fhey do not touch each other.&#13;
ten all have been breaded, place in&#13;
the frying basket as many as can be&#13;
accommodated on the bottom and&#13;
plunge into boiling fat. Care should&#13;
be taken that the tish are thoroughly&#13;
seasoned with salt previous to the&#13;
breading, and that the fat is so hot&#13;
that blue smoke rises from the center.&#13;
BUNS.&#13;
One quart of bread sponge, three&#13;
pounds of rlour, three-quarters of a&#13;
pound of butter, one pound of sugar&#13;
and milk as required. Iuto a pint of&#13;
water stir enough ilour to make a&#13;
smooth batter, add nearly a pint of&#13;
yeast, cover, set in a warm place and&#13;
let rise. Cream the butter and sugar&#13;
together, rub the tlour in by handfuls,&#13;
work smooth, add the sponge and&#13;
milk enough to make a soft dough,&#13;
knead well and set to rise over nignt.&#13;
In the morning knead it lightly and&#13;
roll into sheets half an inch thick, cut&#13;
into small round cakes and put in a&#13;
buttered tin to rise. Wheu light bake&#13;
in a ' q u i c k oven. When done wash&#13;
over with the yolk of au egg and dust&#13;
with powdered sugar.&#13;
Flirting With a Seuorita.&#13;
Though the laws of propriety are scr&#13;
rigorouslv strict that a gentleman may&#13;
not ride in the same carriage with the&#13;
lady to whom he is betrothed, yet most&#13;
desperate flirtations are openly indulged&#13;
in m Mexico to an extent that&#13;
would put to blush New York, Chicago,&#13;
or San Francisco. Following a&#13;
senorita up and down the promenade&#13;
and staring intently in her face is an&#13;
accepted mode of compliment—doubtless&#13;
gratifying to the recipient, but&#13;
fraught with danger to the adorer if&#13;
she happens to have other devoted&#13;
swains—and it not infrequently happens&#13;
that duels are the result, she&#13;
being pre-eminently the belle who can&#13;
boast the greatest number of such en.»&#13;
counters. The canal was completely&#13;
hidden by boats, big and little, the&#13;
majority being ioug.elumsy raft-like&#13;
barges-, each with-it -covered space io&#13;
the* middle^-ahd a deck at each end,&#13;
propelled? by three or four Indians,&#13;
.w-hrtT'push their_lpng poles against the&#13;
river bottom, singing as they go.&#13;
Others were inclosed iu an airy latticework&#13;
of woven r u s i e s intertwined&#13;
with flowers, thus shading the happy&#13;
occupants; many, gay with flags and&#13;
awnings,were exact imitations of Venetian&#13;
gondolas, and thousands were&#13;
simply dug-outs—the same primitive&#13;
chat upas which Cortez found the natives&#13;
using nearly four-centuries ago.&#13;
Most of the canoes carried guitarplayers:&#13;
a f e w ' w e r e seen with harps,&#13;
or violins, or reed instruments, which&#13;
may have been patterned from that of&#13;
"the great god P a n " among the river&#13;
rushes. Hero everybody sings, for&#13;
these happy-go-lucky children of nature&#13;
are full of music, and the air was&#13;
vocal with their meaningless folksongs&#13;
rendered in soft Castilian, or&#13;
high pitched patriotic hymns, which?&#13;
just- now" incorporate a great deal&#13;
about tho transcendent virtues of&#13;
"Portirio Di i-az!" Which rank of so-,&#13;
ciety shows the best taste in its mode&#13;
of enjoyment—those simple people/6r&#13;
the proud patriciaus shut up in closed&#13;
carriages, in full dress and solemn&#13;
silence on shore-1-1 leave for of hers todctefinine,&#13;
but Betsy and I / n v a r i a h l y&#13;
join thepleboian crowd, preferring to&#13;
float lazily along the yellow water and&#13;
enjoy the sweet air, s^ft freezes, and&#13;
golden sunshine rat.h/r than the gilded&#13;
uiscomforts of" fashion.—Cur. 6c&#13;
Francisco Cui'oniuic.&#13;
.-^&#13;
X&#13;
}&#13;
: ; • « . '&#13;
o&#13;
V&#13;
***&#13;
I&#13;
\&#13;
i * '&#13;
I&#13;
, "&#13;
&lt;&#13;
.1? -&#13;
*&#13;
!,&#13;
htf&#13;
• V&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH.&#13;
J. L. NEWKIRK, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER.&#13;
Piuckncy, Michigan, Thursday, August 6, 1NS5&#13;
The poets have written voluminously&#13;
of the Nation's loss, but with poor&#13;
results, from a literary point of view.&#13;
The tribute from ex-Confederate&#13;
soldiers of Texas to "General U. S&#13;
Grant, whose name and fame in arms&#13;
has shed luster at home and abroad&#13;
upon his countrymen," not only&#13;
shows the respect inspired by military&#13;
genius even among those who&#13;
have felt its conquering power, but&#13;
it is also notably significant as evidence&#13;
that the asperities of war times&#13;
and the naturally resulting sectional&#13;
animosities have been buried in the&#13;
dead past.&#13;
Recent efforts of Socialists in Cleveland&#13;
and Chicago to incite honest&#13;
workingrnen to defy the law and engage&#13;
in open warfare against property&#13;
were not largely successful.&#13;
These ignorant and vicious malcontents&#13;
can not have their own way in&#13;
this country. If they are too stupid&#13;
or toojdepraved to understand or to accept&#13;
the situation, their place is the&#13;
asylum for idiots "or the State's prison.—&#13;
Times Star.&#13;
too mu?h, not to expect to accomplish&#13;
in a day what other men and women&#13;
have taken a life-time to do,&#13;
Hope and self-confidence are both&#13;
good and necessary, but they must&#13;
be tempered by reason. Teach them,&#13;
next not to despise the d a f of little&#13;
things. If your youthful John cannot&#13;
at once become a bank president,&#13;
teach him to content himself with any&#13;
honest occupation, until he can do&#13;
bttaer, and to be thankful he can&#13;
earn a living at it, however humble.&#13;
Teach your cUldren there is no royal&#13;
road to solid success any more than&#13;
there is to learning; the only way is&#13;
to begin at the foot of the ladder and&#13;
work slowly upward with toilsome&#13;
steps. If your boy Charlie is skeptical&#13;
about this, and points to Mr&#13;
Thomas Millions who made a fortune&#13;
in a day by a lucky deal in pork—&#13;
sjiow him how surely this spirit of&#13;
gaining- speculation will sooner or&#13;
later hurl down the pigmy whom to&#13;
day it may have elevated to the throne&#13;
of apparent prosperity. What is&#13;
lightly won is more lightly lost; and&#13;
it is well. We have a ricrbt, in the&#13;
AUGUST 1,1885.&#13;
The firm of H. F. Sigler &amp; Bro. have this&#13;
day dissolved by mutual consent. The&#13;
books of above firm will be open for settlement&#13;
at our office for the next 30 days. We&#13;
trust our friends will consider this sufficient&#13;
notice to call, as we much prefer to settle&#13;
our own books. H. F. SIGLER &amp; BRO.&#13;
To T H E PUBLIC:&#13;
Wishing to give my whole attention to&#13;
my professional duties, I have this day relinquished&#13;
all interest in the drug stock of&#13;
H. F. Sigler &amp; Bro. F. A. Sigler will continue&#13;
the business, and I trust the same&#13;
liberal patronage bestowed upon the old&#13;
I firm may be extended to him.&#13;
Respectfully, H. F. SIGLER.&#13;
It is a little amusing to a newspaper&#13;
man sometimes to witness the&#13;
•squirming induced by the publication&#13;
of a plain, unvarnished statement&#13;
necessary in a mere local news item.&#13;
The party imagining himself aggrieved&#13;
rushes at the man of pen, shears&#13;
and past pot, with blood in his eyes&#13;
and thunder between his teeth, notwithstanding&#13;
the well known fact that&#13;
the editor has no bias either way, and&#13;
"merely acted in his capacity as a vender&#13;
of news. And it may not be out&#13;
of place here to stfEe that those who do&#13;
the least for a paper, and who uffect to&#13;
-ignore or despise its influence, are the&#13;
firt ones to set up a howl if the paper&#13;
inadvertantly mentions them in a&#13;
manner they consider derogatory to&#13;
their well being or interest.—Jackson&#13;
Courier.&#13;
Escorse is a little/Village located&#13;
on the hither side of the river a fe&#13;
miles below Detroit, I t is anvbitious&#13;
and would be nestledjHtfong umbrageous&#13;
hills, a n d ^ H u i a t sort of thing,&#13;
if thereJjiJKrnappened to be. any hills&#13;
present to take charge of the nestling.&#13;
J u s t at present it is making for itself&#13;
a name and fame that bid fair to&#13;
(#use a good many other reputable&#13;
/citizens to hear it mentioned for the&#13;
first time. Ecorse is in peaceable&#13;
possession of the most industrious&#13;
system of constables and justices of&#13;
the peace known to current history.&#13;
Their leading specialty,- are tramps.&#13;
They have found a way in which&#13;
tramps can be used to advantage.&#13;
E v e r y stranger who happens to set&#13;
foot in the village is asked to draw&#13;
up a chart of the circumstances which&#13;
induced him to become a tramp.&#13;
Where the stranger happena-to. be&#13;
•wealthy and eminently respectable&#13;
the situation perplexes him. The&#13;
constables and justices, however are&#13;
never perplexed. They are men of&#13;
marked financial ability and cat-"&#13;
""tect their fees right along through&#13;
- good- and evil - repost. — The more&#13;
trampsthey find lurking along the&#13;
public highway in elegant carriages&#13;
the more fees they c o l l e c t - ' T h e&#13;
county officials are grp^vrng alarmed.&#13;
Many estimable-'men have* been&#13;
•wrecked on-the sunken rocks of ambitiorrin&#13;
the past, and they fear that&#13;
the Ecorse representatives of the&#13;
majesty of the law may over heat&#13;
themselves and get the cramp.—&#13;
Journal.&#13;
How Success is &gt;VOB.&#13;
Our sons and daughters are going&#13;
out from our homes to take up their&#13;
part in the world's work, to take their&#13;
share in its conquests and d&#13;
Whether life is to be a success or a&#13;
f'a i! 11 »• with then&gt;-depends - largely&#13;
Niji-M 'he ideaywlth which they start&#13;
long run, only to that which we have&#13;
the desire and abiltty to use judiciously&#13;
and well. Success is not measured&#13;
by dollars and cents alone, but by the&#13;
length and breadth of 'character as&#13;
well. One young lad/ boarded herself,&#13;
made over her old clothes, and&#13;
worked her way through college. A&#13;
friend said to her, "I should like an&#13;
education too if I could have plenty of&#13;
money to dress well and pay my board&#13;
in a nice place;" she never got it.&#13;
The boy who says, "Tom^ Smith gets&#13;
ten dollars a week in Mr. Gumption's&#13;
store. I won't work unless Ian get&#13;
as much as he," is foreordained to&#13;
make a failure of life. One who&#13;
would su co-ed must, do his very best&#13;
work for what he can get until he can&#13;
do better. He need not fear. Work&#13;
well done will recommend him. (Jenius&#13;
cannot long be hid under a bushel&#13;
in this day. -The truth is, success&#13;
largely consists in the beginning of&#13;
one's career, in doi ng five dollar work&#13;
for one dollar pay. People are ali&#13;
to real merit; such a faitbfuj^vorker&#13;
is to be soon called upjugtier.&#13;
The car of prc^pefTty is much like a&#13;
crowded c a ^ r Y o u try to get on, and&#13;
the^erowd savs there is no more room.&#13;
on't believe it if you can get a place&#13;
for one foot and a hand to cling with.&#13;
After a little you'll get .both feet on&#13;
the step, and get hold with both hands.&#13;
After a time you're on the platform,&#13;
though outside still. As the car&#13;
moves farther out of the business centre&#13;
people begin to get off, and finally&#13;
you have standing -room inside. You&#13;
are all right now. At the next stop&#13;
some one gets out and you have a comfortable1&#13;
seat at last. That is success,&#13;
and the way that it is won.—The&#13;
Housekeeper.&#13;
pURNITUREI pURNJTUREl&#13;
When in want of anything iii the line of Furniture, such as&#13;
BEDROOM SUITS, PAKLURBUITS&#13;
LOUNGES, BUEEAUS, BOOKCASES, TABLES C&#13;
STANDS, CHAIRS, ETC. ETC. COME&#13;
===AND SEE ME. ~~&#13;
Bucklen's Arnica Salve.&#13;
THE BEST SALVE in the world for&#13;
Cut-1 Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt&#13;
Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped&#13;
Hapds, Chilblains, Corns, and all skin&#13;
EriVptions, and positively cures Piles,&#13;
or nopay-required. It is guaranteed&#13;
to give perfect satisfaction, or money&#13;
refunded. Price 25 cents per boi.&#13;
For Sale, at WIN-CHELL'S DRUG STORE.&#13;
A Great Discovery, „&#13;
Mr. Wim Thomas, of ..JNejscton,Ja,r&#13;
'says: ""Hy wife has been seriously affected&#13;
with a cough for 25 years, and&#13;
this spring more severely than ever&#13;
before. She had used many remedies&#13;
without relief,'and by being urged to&#13;
try Dr. King's New Discover/, did so,&#13;
with most gratifying ,,Fe§iiits." The&#13;
first bottle relieveji-her very much,&#13;
and the.second-bottle has absolutely&#13;
cured h e j ^ S h e has not had so good&#13;
health'tor thirty years." Trial bottle&#13;
tree at WincnelTs Drug Store.&#13;
Large size $1.&#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 tendered&#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 wonderfu-h&#13;
remedy cannot be explained m^-Written&#13;
language. A singlejiose inhaled&#13;
and taken accordingjto^airections will&#13;
convince anyone^hat it is all that is&#13;
claimed foprt; Warranted to cure the&#13;
following^diseases: Rheumatism or&#13;
ney 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;
Diuiichial Affection, Catarrh, and aff&#13;
which they imbibe from the aches and pains, external or internal.&#13;
losphere of the home circle. Full directions with efich bottle.&#13;
Teach them first of all not to expect] For Sale at WINCHKLL'S DRUG STORE.&#13;
3&gt;EOIALTT,&#13;
COFFINS^GA&amp;KETS, ROBES and FUNERAL SUPPLIES vt-attWnk&#13;
consmffy on hand. Respectflluy,&#13;
L H. BEEBE.&#13;
D O O R S A N D B L I N D S ,&#13;
GLASS, NAILS, PAINT,&#13;
i as a&#13;
BUILDING&#13;
KINDS OF BUILDING MATERIAL&#13;
AT F. L. BROWN'S. ^&#13;
popular Week rynow»P"Prr&#13;
G^ ii»vo»pii to science, mechanics, anciueerjag. ai*-&#13;
r ivrrit-s, inventions and patent* ever published. **erf&#13;
M)"il)&gt;i- illustrated with splendid eBSfrariBM. }a\s&#13;
i.'.i'-JiLMtion, furni.shes a moat valuable encyblopoaleor&#13;
...luruifttion which no person should be without. 1M&#13;
i .ulurify of the SCIEMTIKO AMERICAN is inch thai&#13;
. &lt; .-&gt; circulation nearly nquals that of all other papers oV&#13;
s i:lau6 (Dinbinad. Price, 13.20 a year. Oiwount •&#13;
; "'ihs. Sold l»y all newsdealers. MUNff &amp; CO., Pu&#13;
i-hnrH, No. X&gt;1 Broadway. N. Y._&#13;
ATENTS. Munh * Co. have sis,&#13;
had Thlrty-Peven&#13;
Vear»* praeitireibe-&#13;
»lbre the Patent Office,&#13;
and havo prepared more than One Hundred&#13;
ThOue&amp;nd&gt;PPhcationii7or pat-&#13;
'tnt* in the Upitod Btate* and forelRti&#13;
countries. Caveat*. Trade-Marks, Copyrights,&#13;
/ssiejntuenta, and all other papu*&#13;
ir securing to inventors their n«hta in tuo&#13;
„jito.l StatwM, Canada, England, France.&#13;
Cieriuany and other foreijrn countries, prepared&#13;
at short notico and on reasonable tortus.&#13;
Information 68 to obtaining patent* cheerfully&#13;
irlven without charge. H»nd-b&lt; oka of lnformaliun&#13;
sent free. Patents obtained through Munn&#13;
&amp; Co. are nntioed in- the Scientific American freo.&#13;
f he advantage of suoh notice is well understood by all&#13;
lersons who wish to dispone of their patents.&#13;
Addren* MUNN A CO., OfflOO UCUMTUUO JUktX&amp;XOaa,&#13;
CI Broadway, New York.&#13;
TUTT'S "&#13;
PILLS&#13;
25 YEARS IWL U S E -&#13;
Xhe Greatest MjdiralJTrinprjh of the Ag%.&#13;
SYMPTOMS OF A TORPID LIVER. XoasufiippcUtc, lioTvclacostive,fuiniu&#13;
the bead, with n dull acnsrttiou in tho&#13;
bacU parr, Pniu under tho shoulderblade,&#13;
Fullncua after cuilnc, with adleinclination&#13;
to excrtiouo'" body or mind,&#13;
IrritHbilityof temper, Low spirits, with,&#13;
a tceliagof haTinjr iH'ffloctcd some duty,&#13;
Weariness* Dizziness, Fluttering at tuo&#13;
Heart, Dots before tho eye*, llendacho&#13;
over tho right eye, Itestlcsonesi, with&#13;
titful drenms, ilishly colored l i i n e , aud&#13;
CONSTIPATION.&#13;
T U T T ' S P i 1.,1..8 uro especially a' &gt;ted&#13;
to such rase", or.ft II"HO effects such a&#13;
vlMing'* of !«(• i'l^it. to :iM on is htl io sufferer.&#13;
Viii-v lurreat-etlie Appetite,and iuu»e tho&#13;
t'dv tn TnUc o u lMc-.li, t &gt;ii i jhu c&lt;-temj»-&#13;
&gt;ioi*riflh*il. !t"-t l'/'ti .I'Tonic'AetjjHi on&#13;
stin: »»iKe»tive*&gt;runns,llcicuiar&gt;*ooU;iro&#13;
r-rr&gt;.tin-. 1. ivu-e i*5c. •! * M u r r a y "it.-'V.Y. TUTTMliRlJYl GJUTJITJCTR or WHI*KKK8 changr&lt;l t o a&#13;
GLtPStff'liLACK Uv :v single application of&#13;
,^+ffi* DTK. It imparts a natural coior, act &lt;&#13;
instuntaneonsly. t*oM by ,J)ruK;;iat.s, '»?&#13;
pent bv ex ores-* on n-i'vipi of 8 1 . : Office 4A Murrn" .S* N o w Y i r k .&#13;
iMIGHT S INDIAN VEGETABLE PlLLS&#13;
FOB THE L:VER&#13;
And all Bilious Complaints Kafe to take, be)ng purely vegetable; no griping.&#13;
Price W eta. All Druggists.&#13;
JOB WOirtJi.&#13;
&amp;XSCVT&amp;&amp; TO OE&amp;fiJL&#13;
IDISPATCH 0FFICE.fi*&#13;
o,rts(&#13;
8 0 U T H LYON DOTSFrom&#13;
the Picket.&#13;
The masons have begun the erection&#13;
of G. T. GreadVs cellar wall.&#13;
*&#13;
John Jacobus returned yesterday&#13;
from Sioux City, Iowa, where he has&#13;
been engaged in the fruit tree business&#13;
with the Johns brothers, formerly of&#13;
this vicinity. John is looking rugged&#13;
and hearty, and says he enjoyed his&#13;
western trip. He does not know how&#13;
long he will remain with us.&#13;
A. B. Mackey has sued A. *E; Pollock&#13;
for pay for several thousand brick&#13;
which Bullock claims he never received&#13;
and the case is to be tried Aug. 4.&#13;
Kinney, of Ann Arbor, is Mr. Bullock's&#13;
attorney, and Shields, ot Howell, and&#13;
our genial young attorney, 8. J. Watts&#13;
will plead the case for Mr. Mackev.&#13;
A very lively time is looked tor.&#13;
Mr. J . M. Sprague, an old pioneer&#13;
of this vicinity and a man universally&#13;
Respected, quietly passed away on Sunday&#13;
morning. He lived to rear a family&#13;
of several children, all of whom&#13;
have become men and women. He&#13;
has ever been a man of broad liberal&#13;
mind and has in a public way aided&#13;
largely in the securing of railroads,&#13;
etc., for the building up cgt the village.&#13;
He leaves a beautiful farrri 3 miles east.&#13;
He has for a number of years been a&#13;
devoted member of the Presbyterian&#13;
..church of this place. His luneral wjis&#13;
held at his residence Monday^ p. M.&#13;
Rev. S. Ualkms officiating. \&#13;
BRIGHTON SAYINGS. \&#13;
From the Citizen.&#13;
The Juniors and the Hamburg clu&#13;
played a game- of ball on the fair\&#13;
grounds Tuesday afternoon. The&#13;
score stood Hamburg 2; Juniors 11.&#13;
Rev. S. A. Dean will ieave this conference&#13;
year, and will go to Meadville,&#13;
Pa., where he will take a course in the&#13;
Methodist College at that place, and&#13;
preach in a church in the place at the&#13;
same time.&#13;
Mrs. LeGrande Beach, of Green Oak,&#13;
died Monday morning, the 27th. At&#13;
11 o'clock Sunday evening she seemed&#13;
quite as cumfoi'table as she had been&#13;
for several days previous, though her&#13;
health has been precarious for several&#13;
years, on account of asthmatic affection&#13;
and heart disease. Soon after the&#13;
hour named above, her son Alanson&#13;
heard a sound in her room as of one&#13;
tailing and went promptly to render&#13;
assistance, and found his mother&#13;
crouched by the side ot her bed, breathing,&#13;
but quite unconscious. Dr. Mc&#13;
Hench. was summoned at once, and&#13;
every appliance was used to restore&#13;
consciousness, but a little after hve&#13;
o'clock she expired.&#13;
/&#13;
HOWELL COMMENTS,&#13;
from the Uermblican.&#13;
The new residence of Calvin Wilcox,&#13;
in the northwest part of towja-; is&#13;
receiving the finishing toiicMsT The&#13;
furnace arrived Monday and is being&#13;
placed this weekr "Cal." will have a&#13;
neat houstTwhen completed.&#13;
Our village, with a population (bypothetically)&#13;
of 3,000, can probably&#13;
boast of more places of business than&#13;
any other town of its size in the state-,&#13;
and yeftrade is far from being sub-&#13;
1 atancially overdone. Below wo e&#13;
umerate only a few of the general&#13;
business places in town: TherXari&#13;
eleven general grocery store's and&#13;
places where Groceries are sold; five&#13;
dry goods stores; four clothing houses;&#13;
two merchant tailoring establishments;&#13;
• two hard wares; th re&amp;/] e wel ry stores!&#13;
several millinery siores: one ladies'&#13;
fancy goods storei tour drug stores;&#13;
iomv hotels; two bakeries; two banks:&#13;
..Awe livery establishments; two- grist&#13;
mills; one,planing mill; one&#13;
two cooper shops; three furniture&#13;
stores; four meat markets; four barber&#13;
shops; one marble shop; three book&#13;
stores; two bazaar stores; three harness&#13;
shops; thre dental parlors; nine&#13;
boot and shoe dealers; two crockery&#13;
stores; besides shoe coblers, coal dealers,&#13;
wheat buyers, organ and machine&#13;
agents, blacksmith shops, saloons, wagon&#13;
shops, paint shops, etc., etc. To&#13;
keep the break applied, to'all t&#13;
insure honest measures an€K"down&#13;
weights, requires the^aefvices of five&#13;
churches. A largepublic school takes&#13;
educational—interests.&#13;
are going to have a second railroad&#13;
and new manufacturing institutions—&#13;
at least that is what we expect and&#13;
shall work to secure.&#13;
From the Democrat.&#13;
Parson Brothers have fought since&#13;
January 1st, nine thousand, five hundred&#13;
and twents-five bushels of beans.&#13;
S. R. Markham, of Hartland, was&#13;
severely kicked in tho abdomen by a&#13;
horse last week. He is All right now,&#13;
ulthougu the attending f'.iysician says&#13;
he had a "close shave," and thought&#13;
at one time he would surely join' the&#13;
numberless thi^ig.&#13;
Dr. Spencer, while returning from a&#13;
visit in the buuia part of Handy last&#13;
Thursday afternoon, was thrown from&#13;
his buggy and seveiely bruised. His&#13;
horse stumbled and fell, which tipped*&#13;
the buggy .over, throwing the Dr. into&#13;
a deep ditch. He will not be able&#13;
to resume his practice in several days.&#13;
Sarah Ethridge, of Hartland, died&#13;
last week. The deceased was an old&#13;
resident of this place, and leaves a fine&#13;
property, which it is said she has distributed&#13;
almost entirely among her&#13;
friends in that vicinity, most of whom&#13;
are poor and needy. She had a husband&#13;
living, but they separated some&#13;
three years since, at which time a division&#13;
of the property was made between&#13;
them. Since then the old lady&#13;
had addfjfl about $3^000 to ber4nterest.&#13;
STOCKBRIDGE NOTES.&#13;
Prom the bun.&#13;
' G. H.Ewing post 203, Stockbridge,&#13;
have arranged with Rev. 0. N. Hunt&#13;
to hold a memorial service, Sunday,&#13;
Aug. 9th, at the brick church, for our&#13;
lamented .comrade and soldier U. S.&#13;
Yxrant.&#13;
\ Rev. Father Duhig of the Catholic&#13;
crjiirch ot Chelsea, has resigned his&#13;
pastorate duties, li will be remembered&#13;
serious charges had been preferred&#13;
against him by several of his parishioners.&#13;
Our^ honored barber, J. T. Forchue,&#13;
says he, has seen and talked with Gen.&#13;
Grant, \,vas on his staft. He is like the&#13;
other udlored person, who had never&#13;
seen Geo. Washington but was weli&#13;
acquainted with Gouge's fadah and&#13;
mndah. \john will be trumping up&#13;
cousinshin to Victoria or the~~Czar"a&#13;
Rus.sia yet\.&#13;
BARGAINS! B A R G A I N S ! BARGAINS ! r&#13;
We offer, this month, decided bargains in every department ttf clean up stock.&#13;
PRINTS and GINGHAMS in STAPLES and DRESS GOODS.&#13;
And all light weight Worsteds marked down to prices that will close them out at once.&#13;
PARASOLS, FANS, ETC., "fo"£®m%m^*»TrHt™»3JG0'"EC"*yNarHm?°™&#13;
SHAWLS—SHETLAND, CASHMERE&#13;
And all SXJ^aribffBR B « A / W X » t t wc will C L O S E OXJT regardless of C O S T -&#13;
TEAS, TEAS, TEAS, TEAS. We have just opened up a very fine line of New Teaa iu&#13;
GREEN &amp; UNCOLORED JAPS, OOLONG DUSTS, ETti&#13;
Try a pound of our 40 cent Tea, we guarantee it to draw with any 50 cent Tea in town.&#13;
_ f All in search of Bargains should visit our store this month for we&#13;
intend to make things HUM if low prices and good&#13;
goods can do it. Come and see us when you have anything&#13;
to sell. Come and see us when in search&#13;
S£g*of goods.&lt;^2tf&#13;
"West End Store." LAKIN &amp; SYKES.&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH!^&#13;
•Is the pape/you should haveowro&#13;
oi&#13;
3tors provide us with physic,&#13;
"J»4tix lawyers carefully watch the&#13;
fatk* of justice to see that, they weigh&#13;
' evenly and alike to all. BeJ^a* we&#13;
When Elmer Aldrich was arrested&#13;
Monday mint but 61 cents could be&#13;
found on life person but when he appeared&#13;
in t\\\ police court for his drunk&#13;
he produced! §5 from a secret recep&#13;
tacle and paid his $3 fine. Peter Loos,&#13;
who had beep with Elmer in the early&#13;
evening, was also found later i&#13;
nijjht, but Justice Howard suspended&#13;
sentence oivhim and he caused the arrest&#13;
of lien. Bronson for robbing him&#13;
of §20 while (lie was intoxicated.,, hie&#13;
\\^a&lt;partiall\j examined^ and the case&#13;
continued tiljl to-day/his father furnishing&#13;
bonjls in/the sums of $500.&#13;
The testimony o/Loos and I Newton&#13;
(a colored barber) was taken. Loos is&#13;
sure Bronsoji is. the man who robbed&#13;
him,.and NeVton swore positively to&#13;
the two/coming from Mill street up&#13;
Main/to Mechanic street bridge, when&#13;
he turned pack and Xewton thought&#13;
there was no use of his goinp* on alone.&#13;
Loos who l/as been working on a farm&#13;
for a farmer named Welch near&#13;
Pinckney/ was somewhat mixed as to&#13;
the locality, being pretty drunk, but&#13;
remembered being cboked and searched.&#13;
The' examination was concluded&#13;
this/morning. Several witnesses&#13;
•testifying to Bronson's whereabouts&#13;
up to 10 o'clock. Among which was&#13;
several girls trom the- Hurd House,&#13;
one of whom Bronson was keeping&#13;
company with. She swore that&#13;
"Duck" did not leave her room in the&#13;
hotel till after ten, and Ed. Rother,-&#13;
rick testified that Bronson slept with&#13;
him at the Davis Exchange, and that&#13;
they retired between 10 and 11 to the&#13;
best of his observation. Justice&#13;
mer held the case under adywement&#13;
till to-morrow.—Jackson^CTtizen.&#13;
IN YOUR HOUSEHOLD.&#13;
' / • • IT 0 I V E S .A.3L.L THE&#13;
TANT NEWS!&#13;
-Both at home and abroad.— —&#13;
O^LTtLOO PER YEAR,&#13;
IMPORTANT.&#13;
When you visit or leave New York City, save&#13;
baggage expressage and carriage hire and stop at&#13;
trie Grand Union Hotel, opposite Grand Central&#13;
Depot,&#13;
Elegant rooms fitted np at a cost of one million&#13;
dollars, reduced to $100 and upwards per&#13;
dav. European plan, Elevator. Restaurant supplied&#13;
with the best. Horse cars, stages and elevated&#13;
railroad to all-depots. Families can live better&#13;
for less money at th* Grand Union Hotelthan&#13;
any other first-class hotel in the city&#13;
1&#13;
Our readers for V2 cents in postage stamps to&#13;
pay for mailing and wrapping, and names of^wo&#13;
book agents, will receive FREE a Sun f ,«,tx PA«-&#13;
LO« ExonAvmo of all OUR PRESIDENTS, including&#13;
CLEVELAND, size 22r&amp; inches, worth/$4.DO.&#13;
ADDRESS ELDER PUB. C o , CHICAGO, I I I&#13;
Rose Leaf, Fine Cot&#13;
Navy Clippings&#13;
and Snuffs&#13;
CENTS FOR SIX MONTHS&#13;
&lt;r*; oOB*&#13;
The youjyf-rtien who are disposed to&#13;
passoa"tne other side of the street and&#13;
other unfeeling ways dodge ice&#13;
cream saloons when out walking with&#13;
their girls, should remember that all&#13;
during the long, cold winter these&#13;
same girls cheerfully and uncomplainingly&#13;
furnish light .tnd fuel tor their&#13;
comfort, and the little cream, straw&#13;
berries and similar necessities they a^e&#13;
willing to accept are but an^iaadequate&#13;
return at the best for4ast winter's&#13;
favors.—Ex. _ ^&#13;
25 CENTS FOR THREE MONTHS&#13;
It is also a good&#13;
ADVERTISING MEDIUM&#13;
A3S© KSASOJtABSJ$ SATES ARE &lt;*I¥Etf&#13;
JOBiWORtK&#13;
We make a specialty, and guarantee good work,&#13;
GOOD STOCK * LIVING PRICES.&#13;
If you want anything in the&#13;
, ^ -come to-&#13;
QUAKER&#13;
TABLE SAUCE. , Thousands of articles are now manufactured thst&#13;
in former years had to be imported, paying high&#13;
import duty as it is now being done on Lea &amp; Perlini&#13;
table sauce ; the QcasftS TABLK SACC* takes&#13;
its place; it has been pronounced by competent&#13;
judges just aapeorf ana not bttttr. The QCAKIK&#13;
SACCX has Slowly bat sorely gained great importance&#13;
and ia replacing the very btti imported&#13;
sauce on the shelf of the grocer, the table*&#13;
of the restaurant and the tables of the rich and&#13;
poor men. greatly prised and relished by all on&#13;
account of iu piquancy, aroma, taste, stre&#13;
and purenees. The inTeutor has bjryeifs of&#13;
study of the secret virtues contained in the aromatic&#13;
apices of the Indies and^Cbina, such as&#13;
mace, nutmeg, cinnamon, genuine Jamaica ginger&#13;
and peppers and buds^of trees unknown to most&#13;
men, and by long,.pr*ctiee succeeded to combine&#13;
their extracjs-fn such a liquid form aa we now&#13;
find it. ofagreeable taste, and so invigorating as&#13;
'- *" Miken in place of stomach bitter*. By man-&#13;
1ring this sauce here, heavy import duties&#13;
and freights are aaved, and It is sold at a lower&#13;
figure to the dealer, who making a better profit on&#13;
Quaker Sauce canaeU it to the consumer cheaper&#13;
than t hfr very heet imported article hardly equal*&#13;
ing ours.- If your grocer does not keep It. write&#13;
us for pricee. etc. Bold in bottles or by the gallon,&#13;
CHARM MANUFACTURING CO.,&#13;
8oU Prtpvittmt a*4 Ifowq/tocsarert,&#13;
1W A106 8, M ST., St. !*•«** Mo.&#13;
MACKINAC.&#13;
SUMMER TOUR&#13;
few&#13;
DETROIT AND MACKINAC&#13;
PETROtT AND CLEVELAND&#13;
TH DISPATCH OFFIC&#13;
"PrctamqiM Mackin.o," fllu»trat«d.&#13;
Detroit A Ctroland Stttm Nay. Co.&#13;
' C. 0 . WMITCOUB, am.rf*&#13;
DETROIT. MICH.&#13;
•f&#13;
P P T&#13;
??**?.•:• &amp;"/• .-,.-.-3½&#13;
•~tjf&#13;
\&#13;
gitichnci) $i!spatd(.&#13;
J . L. N L U K ; I ; K PuMishcr&#13;
•tciewi »t &amp;« t'tMtuftci) a# «1 CIUM liuiiw.&#13;
Timber Shipments.&#13;
T h e s h i p m e n t of forest p r o d u c t s from&#13;
the 8aginaw river during the month 'ending&#13;
July 31 shows a marked decrease over, former&#13;
year. This was occasioned by the unsettled&#13;
state of business brought about through the&#13;
strike, which has occupied the time of the&#13;
greater portion of the mouth. The shipraetits&#13;
taken from the books at the custom houses at&#13;
Bay City and East Saginaw, are as follows:&#13;
I'OHT OK EAST SAOIXA.W.&#13;
Port of destination. Iyimber, ft.&#13;
Tonawanda 1«, 191,000&#13;
Buffalo 5.485,000&#13;
Toledo. 5 0.15,000&#13;
Cleveland ' 3,1*8,000&#13;
Oswego 1,52-J.O O&#13;
Dunkirk 5.=)4,(X)J&#13;
Black River ' 116,000&#13;
Total 25).500,000&#13;
Shingles.&#13;
Cleveland 1,5 '0,000&#13;
Buffalo U&gt;r&gt;,000&#13;
Tonawanda :'0).(X-0&#13;
Black River .mOUU&#13;
Oswego 15u,lXX)&#13;
Total 3.275.000&#13;
Lath. pieces-&#13;
Cleveland. UX),U04)&#13;
Baffalo M;0,0&gt;u&#13;
Toledo fi.0,Wi&#13;
Detroit 100,000&#13;
Black River rtO.POO&#13;
Total 1.7J0,00j&#13;
COMPARATIVE VOH JL'l-V.&#13;
Pa t Saginaw.&#13;
18¾ li&gt;4. 1885.&#13;
Lumber, ft. ..32,0&gt;3,000 -:5.00,000 29,506,003&#13;
Shingles, ft .. 7,721,000 12.0ty.0J0 3;2r5,00O&#13;
Lath, pieces.. 1,140,00J 4.550,000 1.700,000&#13;
POUT OF HAY CITY.&#13;
Port uf destination. — Lumber, ft.&#13;
Tonawanda 29,2 «0,10J&#13;
Buffalo 13,451M)00&#13;
Toledo : 6,210.00)&#13;
Chicago 1.650,000&#13;
Cleveland 1.U41.0 H)&#13;
Sandusky l,(tt"&gt;,()00&#13;
Dunkirk UXUXX)&#13;
Wyandotte -.8).00)&#13;
Detroit 250,001)&#13;
Total 50.20-),000&#13;
Shingles.&#13;
Tonawanda 6,.-53,000&#13;
Buffalo - . . . 1,877,0(.)0&#13;
Sandusky tiOO.noo&#13;
Cleveland. 400,0 li&#13;
Total ". ». .9.7-9.00)&#13;
Lath pes.&#13;
Buffalo ^. 1. 50.00)&#13;
Toledo ::r&gt;'.ooo&#13;
Cleveland.* 150 0J0&#13;
THOUGHT OK THE HOUR,&#13;
Victor Hnjo.&#13;
Praise.Isl'.ovo me:i lie tlioq&#13;
Whose liiurel-ladeii.brow,&#13;
Made for the morning, droops not in the night;&#13;
rrasbt'il and beloved, thut nuue&#13;
Of all thy great tbinns dun*&#13;
Files higher than tliv most equitl spirit's flight;&#13;
Praised, that nor dout&gt;t uor hope could bend&#13;
Earth's loftiest Lead,found upright to the end.&#13;
—Swinburne.&#13;
I t c o m e s to e v e r y n a t i o n once, a n d&#13;
s e l d o m m o r e t h a n o n c e , t o h a v e itself&#13;
s u m m e d u p in t h e g e n i u s of a s i n g l e&#13;
raau. V i c t o r H u g o w a s t h e e p i t o m e&#13;
of t h e best t r a i t s in tho Gallic c h a r a c -&#13;
ter. T o w a r d s t h e F r e n c h he h o l d s a&#13;
position s i m i l a r to t h a t h e l d by D a n t e&#13;
in I t a l y , by C a m o e n s in P o r t u g a l , by&#13;
C e r v a n t e s i n S p a i n , by G o e t h e in Germ&#13;
a n y , a n d by S h a k e s p e a r e in t h e g r e a t&#13;
g l o b e itself.—Philadelphia Bulletin.&#13;
H e f o u n d e d a school of fiction w h i c h&#13;
w a s his o w n . H e c r e a t e d a form of&#13;
poetic e x p r e s s i o n u n h e a r d of before&#13;
his d a y . H e w a s a tierce, political&#13;
t h i n k e r a n d a w r i t e r of g r e a t force a n d&#13;
s t r e n g t h . I t would bo u n f a r e t o c o m -&#13;
p a r e h i m t o a n y o n e m a n living o r&#13;
d e a d . H e w a s himself tfee g r e a t o r i £ -&#13;
inal. — Quebec Morning Chronicle.&#13;
V i c t o r H u g o w a s a p i o n e e r r e a l i s t .&#13;
His m e n a n d w o m e n were of ilesu a m i&#13;
blood. W h o h a s n o t b e e n d r a w n t e n -&#13;
d e r l y to Cosette a s a s w e e t y o u n g girl&#13;
from veal life; w h o h a s n o t a d m i r e d&#13;
t h a t a c t u a l p e r s o n a l i t y of b r a w n a n d&#13;
m u s c l e , J e a n Valjean — Cleveland Voice.&#13;
H i s like will n e v e r be seen a g a i n in&#13;
t h e p r e s e n t a g e . F r a n c o a n d t h o&#13;
w o r l d may well m o u r n the loss of so&#13;
g r e a t a m a n . — St. Joseph, Mo., Gazette.&#13;
His e a r l y p o e m s a n d b a l l a d s , s o n o r -&#13;
ous o r sweet, full of color a n d v i v a c i t y ,&#13;
a n d his later Songs of t h e W o o d s a n d&#13;
Streets, will a l w a y s be r e a d for t h e i r&#13;
g r a c e a n d g e n u i n e n e s s — t h e y a r e feasts&#13;
w h e t e a t t h e c h a m p a g n e of the c e n t u r y&#13;
is p o u r e d , a n d t h e honey of H y m e t t u s&#13;
is served.—Philadelphia Record.&#13;
Total. 1.051),000&#13;
COMPARATIVE KOU Jl'LY.&#13;
MAY CITY.&#13;
Lumber, ft.. .70,011,421 91.54:1,(XX) '&lt;&gt; 215 0)0&#13;
.15U/7.10J 15,G\);,WX) 9,7J!i.O*.0&#13;
es. 2,:,07.000 4,4112 0,0 1,050.0( Shingl&#13;
Lath, pes.&#13;
COMPARATIVE FOR THE SKASOJ&#13;
wriver from&#13;
ro Aug. 1, in the&#13;
(•ears named,&#13;
IBS'*. U8t. 1SS5:&#13;
.umbejv*tT.865.54-,(G7 3.)0,7.»;&lt;.970 330,01^,000&#13;
pes... l9rS24.OO0 .21,354 0J0 11.: W O )&#13;
Shingles 05,4^4,000 73,343 000 45,540,000&#13;
MISCEl.LANEOl'S KOlt Jl LY, 1,883.&#13;
Staves to Buffalo, 150,000; salt to Toledo,&#13;
2,000 barrels; timber to Kingston, 31,000 cubic&#13;
feet of oak, 3,200 cubic feet of pine, 1.:300 cubic&#13;
feet of aee; to Collins" bay, 13,000 cubic feet of&#13;
oak.&#13;
• • m&#13;
F0EEIGN NEW!.&#13;
TO SUCCEED EI. MA!&#13;
lat so Prophet 'will&#13;
alifa Abdalla.&#13;
Followers ol&#13;
hereafter be le&#13;
-SfTHICKEN SPAIN.&#13;
i(f close of the week ending July 26,&#13;
per 25,000 deaths from cholera had occurred&#13;
in Spain. Only eight provinces were free&#13;
from the scourge. ^,..--&#13;
A SATISFIED CZAR.&#13;
An article has b en published In Moscow to&#13;
the effect that Kussla has reached the fartherest&#13;
limit to which she desires to go in Central&#13;
Asia, and that her ventures there are at an&#13;
end&#13;
•A PAUIB CONFLAGRATION. /&#13;
./&#13;
An extensive conflagration occurred in Pa/fa&#13;
a few days ago which destroyed tlvebloel^of&#13;
building's. The loss will probably reac^l $1,-&#13;
300,000. Several firemen were injured/by falling&#13;
walls.&#13;
FRIGHTENED LIBERALS&#13;
Owing to the failure of Mr. Gladstone's voice,&#13;
his throat has been examined: by Andrew&#13;
Clarke and Felix Seman, t h n a t specialists,&#13;
who pronounce the affection/obstinate catarrh&#13;
of the larynx and enjoin entire rest. Thereport&#13;
alarms the Liberals, as Mr. Gladstone will&#13;
be unable to take part in/he election campaign.&#13;
Reassuring statements are -circulating, however,&#13;
to ttie effect that improvement is certain&#13;
and will perhaps hf rapid.&#13;
A REV-ENGEFCL SOLDIER.&#13;
A native soldier at Bombay was reported for&#13;
misconduct. / I n revenge he shot and killed&#13;
two siT-jean/a belonging to a native regiment.&#13;
He then barricaded himself within his (juaxtcrs&#13;
and ahorhiB wife dead. After keeping up'for&#13;
a time/an effective fire acainst those who att&#13;
e m p t 1 to assail his retreat, he lay down behis&#13;
wife's corpse and with his*last bullet&#13;
fded his own life.&#13;
FIGHTING FOR FRSEDOM.&#13;
Sixty criminals who had beeji^sentencpd t»&#13;
exile in Liberia recently, whffeen route, rose&#13;
against their guards*-atru7 although unarmed,&#13;
began a di speniwrl5ght for liberty. The battle&#13;
lasted a l£tf»frorne and the soldiers were ubunable&#13;
to conquer their manacled asants.&#13;
Twenty of them were Bhot dead, and&#13;
of the other forty thirty succeeded in making&#13;
good their escape. Two uf the soldiers were&#13;
wounded during the fight.&#13;
• •&#13;
San Francisco "pigtails" gave $100 to the&#13;
fund for a memorial to '.'Chinese'' Gordon.&#13;
The papulation of the city of London proper&#13;
Is only a little over 50,000, and the area of the&#13;
place only 668 acres.&#13;
Women are numerous in the British civil service.&#13;
In a competition for ltiu places in tho&#13;
postofT.ees 2,534 women entered.&#13;
The mujoritv of a special committee of experts&#13;
have decided that iron iixics are safer&#13;
than steal ones for railroad car.*.&#13;
New Hampshire authorities pay a bounty&#13;
for.crows' heads, and yet the crow pest seerna&#13;
to be on the increase in that state.&#13;
Minister Phelps is 6aid to be the best bird&#13;
eho: in \ crmonl. ana wuon it lofnes lo drtvlug&#13;
Xcur in hand nobody can beat him.&#13;
W h a t e v e r p l a c e critics m a y g i v e&#13;
h i m all will u n i t e in s a y i n g t h a t h e&#13;
w a s a m a n w h o h a d t a l e n t s t h a t c a m o&#13;
n e a r e r to g e n i u s t h a n a n y m a n n o w&#13;
living.—Boston Olobe.&#13;
T h e r e a r e n o g r e a t m e n . Massillon,&#13;
o v e r t h e body of Louis X I V . , c r i e d&#13;
out: " G o d only ]s g r e a t I'1 A c r e a -&#13;
t u r e is only p r o x i m a t e l y g r e a t , a n d&#13;
H u g o , w h o w a s poet, novelist, e d i t o r ,&#13;
essayist, p a t r i o t in the t r u e sense a n d&#13;
politician in t h e high sense, w a s a s&#13;
n e a r g r e a t n e s s as is possible for h u -&#13;
m a n i t y in t h e o r d i n a r y world-detini-&#13;
TtuTJT^xYeu? rurk-Mtrettry-.&#13;
T h e g i a n t s a r e d e p a r t i n g , c n o by&#13;
one, from e a r t h , a n d with V i c t o r&#13;
H u g o ' s d e a t h , possibly t h e m o s t&#13;
t u r e s q u e figure of this cen&#13;
vanished. — The Jewish M~ct&amp;cfiger,&#13;
e foremost 1 ittime,&#13;
a n d t h e graafian&#13;
in the world of l e t t e r s&#13;
oltaire.—Milwaukee Sentinel.&#13;
In his d e a t h t h e world loses incomp&#13;
a r a b l y tho g r e a t e s t l i t e r a r y m i n d of&#13;
the c e n t u r y anil 'one of t h e g i a n t s of/&#13;
the l i t e r a r y g r o u p of history.—Louisville&#13;
Commercial. • -A&#13;
Victor H u g o s t e r n l y r e m i n d e d h i s&#13;
c o u n t r y t h a t v i r t u e w a s not&#13;
s e n t i m e n t a l w h i m , that, moraj^ty w a s&#13;
not m e r e prudery.—PhitjuPffphia Bulletin.&#13;
I n p o l i t i e s - t i e was l a r g e l y i n s t r u -&#13;
meiitaj^in^ereating in F r a n c e t h e ,seht&#13;
i j t k i r u i p o n which the liepuUlie'abidos.&#13;
— Cincinnati Times-Sttiir-' ,- .&#13;
F o r sixty years-diis r e p u i a t i o h w a s&#13;
b o u n d e d o n l y b y t h e civilized world.—&#13;
Terr^-Haule, lnu., Saturday ~Kventffg&#13;
MaiK /&#13;
F r a n c e h a / s o m e e x t r e m e l y clever&#13;
novelists,some m e n of gonitis—Daudet,&#13;
Zola, O c t a v e Feuillet—left, b u t t h e y&#13;
are t h e / s a t e l l i t e s . T h e s u n h a s g o n e&#13;
out.—Louisville Times.&#13;
" W e l l , t h e n ! Before this m a s t e r ,&#13;
Ihijs t r i u m p h o r , this c o n q u e r o r , t h i s&#13;
drctator, this e m p e r o r , this a l l - p o w e r -&#13;
/ftil, t h e r e rises a solitary m a n , a w a n -&#13;
d e r e r , despoiled, r u i n e d , p r o s t r a t e ,&#13;
proscribed, a n d a t t a c k s h i m . L o u i s&#13;
N a p o l e o n h a s t e n t h o u s a n d c a n n o n s&#13;
and live h u n d r e d t h o u s a n d s o l d i e r s ;&#13;
tho w r i t e r h a s h e s pen anil his i n k s t a n d .&#13;
T h e ' w r i t e r is n o t h i n g ; he is a g r a i n&#13;
of dust, he is a s h a d o w , h e is a n exile&#13;
w i t h o u t a refuge, he is a v a g r a n t w i t h -&#13;
out a p a s s p o r t ; b u t he h a s by hia side&#13;
and l i g h t i n g with him t w o p o w e r s —&#13;
Right, w h i c h is invincible, a n d T r u t h ,&#13;
which is immortal."-—Victor Hugo, in&#13;
1852.&#13;
H e stood a t t h e h e a d of m o d e r n&#13;
F r e n c h l i t e r a t u r e , a n d as a p a t r i o t a n d&#13;
friend of h u m a n i t y t h e r e has b e e n n o&#13;
more e l o q u e n t d e f e n d e r a n d a d v o c a t e .&#13;
—New Orleans CUi/ Item&#13;
F e a r l e s s a n d s t r a n g m i n d e d to t h e&#13;
a s V ^ h ^ o l d ^ o ^ t ^ i ^ i w o ^ ^ t h + l y r - S l o w -&#13;
ly a n d q w f e t f v he sank until t h e feeble&#13;
b r ^ o t h c o u l d k e e p t h e s t r u g g l i n g s p i r i t&#13;
no longer. A r o u n d him. w e r e t h e&#13;
g r e a t e s t n a m e s of F r a n c e . A t his&#13;
door w e r e a c a d e m i c i a n s , n o b l e m e n ,&#13;
a u t h o r s . — K a n s a s City Times.&#13;
Of the t h r e e g r e a t r e p r e s e n t a t i v e&#13;
men of t h e t h r e e g r e a t E u r o p e a n n a -&#13;
tions, n e i t h e r B i s m a r c k in G e r m a n y&#13;
n o r G l a d s t o n e i n E n g l a n d h a s enjoyed&#13;
the u n d i s p u t e d p r e - e m i n e n c e a c c o r d e d&#13;
by u n i v e r s a l suffrage t o V i c t o r H u g o&#13;
in France.—Philadelphia Times.&#13;
T o find a m a n a s c o m p l e t e l y g r e a t&#13;
in F r a n c e we m u s t g o back t o V o l t a i r e ,&#13;
whose g e n i u s t h a t of H u g o p e r h a p s&#13;
least r e s e m b l e s . I n d e e d , t h e m e r o&#13;
j u x t a p o s i t i o n of t h e t w o n a m e s is full&#13;
of s u g g e s t i o n , for to V o l t a i r e t h e d e a d&#13;
poet would hav&lt;? been a s o u r c e of inexh&#13;
a u s t i b l e m e r r i m e n t , a f o u n t a i n of&#13;
e p i g r a m s , a n e w v o r l d to c o n q u e r a n d&#13;
explore.—Brooklyn Eagle.&#13;
F e w m e n w h o h a v e e v e r lived a r e s o&#13;
secure ^in fame a s V i c t o r&#13;
Richmond, Va., Slate.&#13;
F o r a score&#13;
fame blazed in&#13;
s p r e a d t h r o u g h o u t t h e world.— H a r t -&#13;
ford, Conn., Keening Post.&#13;
He w a s t h e g r e a t e s t w r i t e r of t h o&#13;
c e n t u r y m F r a n c e , if n o t tho w o r l d . —&#13;
Philadelphia Call.&#13;
Victor Hutro w a s o n e of t h e few&#13;
w r i t e r s whose w o r k s c a n be j u d g e d&#13;
in t h e t r a n s l a t i o n s . H i s F r e n c h is&#13;
idiomatic, i n t r i c a t e a n d r u g g e d , b u t&#13;
its p e c u l i a r force lies in t h e a n t i t h e s i s&#13;
and a b r u p t n e s s ot t h e t h o u g h t , a n d&#13;
this p e c u l i a r i t y is m a i n t a i n e d in t h e&#13;
best of the E n g l i s h t r a n s l a t i o n s . —&#13;
Denver Time*.&#13;
T h a t his w o r k s h a v e been so a c c e p t -&#13;
a b l e a m o n g m a n y n a t i o n s whose r h e t -&#13;
oricians smile a t his stylo is t h e final&#13;
a n d c o m p e t e v i n d i c a t i o n of h i s g e n u i s .&#13;
—New Haven Morning News.&#13;
F o n d of o s t e n t a t i o n , fond of h u m a n -&#13;
ity, fond of c h i l d r e n , fond of liberty,&#13;
fond of h i s o w n g e n i u s , which h e&#13;
t r e a t e d as a t h e m e of p a r a m o u n t imp&#13;
o r t a n c e , lie passes a w a y , w h i l e F r a n c e&#13;
m o u r n s with t h e a t r i c a l grandeur,, a n d&#13;
few, even of tho ignoble, fail t o s p e a k&#13;
a smiling adieu t o o n e whose w e a k -&#13;
ness justifies a smile a n d whose achievem&#13;
e n t s will e n d u r e to t h e e n d of t i m e .&#13;
— Chicago Herald.&#13;
He w a s o n e of t h e m o s t u n i q u e a n d&#13;
s t r i k i n g c h a r a c t e r s of an a g e m a r k e d&#13;
by political vicissitudes u n p a r a l l e l e d&#13;
a n y w h e r e in the h i s t o r y of a m b i t i o n&#13;
a n d intrigue, a c h i e v e m e n t a n d failure.&#13;
— Portland, Me., Advertiser.&#13;
T h e r e a r e t h r e e p o e t s in m o d e r n&#13;
times w h o t o w e r a b o v e their fellows&#13;
like m o u n t a i n p e a k s c r o w n e d w i t h&#13;
e v e r l a s t i n g lire. T h e y a r e S h a k e s p e a r e ,&#13;
Goetlie, a n d H u g o . N o d e a t h s h a d e&#13;
c a n e v e r eclipse t h e i r splendor.—&#13;
Brooklyn Eagle.&#13;
F r o m A m e r i c a p e c u l i a r l y t h e t r i b u t e&#13;
is d u o to this m a n w h o hefieved in t h e&#13;
Diviuo R i g h t of t h e p e o p l e . H e d i d&#13;
not m e r e l y s i n g t h e b r o t h e r h o o d of&#13;
m a n , he p r e a c h e d it; he w a s n o t m e r e -&#13;
ly its poet, b u t its a p o s t l e . — I n d i a n u p -&#13;
olts News.&#13;
He h a d all t h e v i g o r a n d p o w e r t h a t&#13;
m a r k e d C a r l y l e in E n g l a n d , b u t w a s&#13;
a l a r g e r , b r o a d e r m a n . H e possessed&#13;
a_atr:ong will, w a s egotistic, a n d y e t&#13;
he g a v e e x p r e s s i o n to t h o u g h t s w h i c h&#13;
p r o v e d t h a t a d e e p religious u n d e r t o n e&#13;
c o n t r o l l e d h i m . — Philiuielphia Call.&#13;
He fed t h e b i r d s in t h o p a r k s beoause&#13;
they were a t h i s meroy. H e&#13;
w o r s h i p e d t h e t r u t h b e c a u s e it w a s&#13;
so s c a r c e a n d so v e r y friendle,&#13;
Washington Critic&#13;
H e w a s " n e a r t o ^ N a t u r o ' s h e a r t , "&#13;
b u t w a s even—nearer to t h e affectiona&#13;
t e e s t e e m ^ e f u i e F r e n c h m i d d l e a n d&#13;
lowjjr-^class p e o p l e . - r M i l w a u k e e Wisnsin.&#13;
E. dc Aniicis t h e I t a l i a n poet, w r o t e&#13;
in. 1871 t h e s e glowing" w o r d s of H u g o :&#13;
" T h e r e ts a w r i t e r in -France who lias&#13;
a t t a i n e d s u c h a d e g r e e of glory a n d&#13;
p o w e r t h a t no l i t e r a r y ambition c a n&#13;
e v e r d r e a m of s u r p a s s i n g h i m . " H e&#13;
was c e l e b r a t e d with e q u a l eontKje-ftCtf&#13;
/ n d w a r m t h lifty y e a r s b^U^xe^oy t h e&#13;
g r e a t D u m a s . - - I ' l i e a&#13;
His mind tooJp-kT'e very t h i n g of interest&#13;
to hiuwamty in w h a t e v e r q u a r -&#13;
ter Of^-the w o r l d it o c c u r r e d , a n d in&#13;
ison with his g r e a t m i n d p u l s a t e d a&#13;
h e a r t whose w a r m s y m p a t h y k n e w n o&#13;
b o u n d s except., t h o s e limited by t h e&#13;
wide d o m a i n of h u m a n n a t u r e . —&#13;
Cleveland Herald and Leader.&#13;
Ho won t h e a t first uivwrtling a p -&#13;
p l a u s e of m e n by t r a n s c e n d e n t g e n i u s&#13;
a n d h a r d w o r k . W e m a y look t h o&#13;
p l a n e t over, b u t w e shall find few w h o&#13;
can s t a n d by his side as his e q u a l s . —&#13;
New York Herald.&#13;
H e outlived four g e n e r a t i o n s of w o r -&#13;
s h i p e r s — a d m i r e r s is too t a m e a w o r d .&#13;
—New Orleans Picayune.&#13;
s t r e e t , a n d w i t h a face of q u i e t happ!&gt;&#13;
ness she told t h e lady t h a t a y o u n g&#13;
sou, w h o h a d g o n e t o - N e w Zealand&#13;
t h r e e year.i before, h a d scut h e r money&#13;
to join him. " H o is iiiy o n l y o n e ,&#13;
m a ' a m , a n d w'its a trouble to mo o n c e ;&#13;
but,, praise God, ho is ( d o i n g well&#13;
n o w : "&#13;
T h e n Clara, in g e n t l e t o p e s , wished&#13;
h e r well, a n d , when h e r h u s b a n d c a m e&#13;
b a c k to h e r , she r e m i n d e d h i m . of t h e&#13;
e v e n t of t h a t m i s e r a b l e n i g h t which&#13;
s e e m e d so far, so very far, from t h e&#13;
p r o s p e r o u s to-day, a n d in a h u s h e d a n d&#13;
r e v e r e n t t o n e s h e said:&#13;
" T h a n k God, T o m , w e n e v e r h a d&#13;
t h a t lilty p o u n d s s t e r l i n g r e w a r d ! " —&#13;
'I'he Argosy.&#13;
G r e a t G a t h e r i n g of D i m k a n l a ,&#13;
T h o n a t i o n a l a s s e m b l a g e of t h a t&#13;
p o p u l a r sect k n o w n a s Duukardei,&#13;
w h i c h o p e n s on t h e L'2d inst., on t h e&#13;
f a r m of M. It. U e a s h o r , four miles e a s t&#13;
of this place, a m i which, says a Mittiut&#13;
o w n , P a . , t e l e g r a m to The Philadelphia&#13;
Mail, c o n t i n u e s o n e week, will be t h e&#13;
l a r g e s t ecclesiastical m e e t i n g e v e r&#13;
held in this s t a t e . E x t e n s i v e p r e p a r a -&#13;
tions a r e m a k i n g for this m e e t i n g , a n d&#13;
s h e d s , hotels, t e n t s , a n d m e e t i n g -&#13;
h o u s e s a r e being erected c a p a b l e of&#13;
a c c o m m o d a t i n g -1(1,000 p e r s o n s . T h e&#13;
t a b e r n a c l e or p r e a c h i n g - h o u s e will be&#13;
190 feet long, i&gt;;"&gt; feet wide, a n d have a&#13;
c a p a e i t v of s e a l i n g o,UU0 p e r s o n s . T h e&#13;
dininn-liall will be 200 feet lonjr a n d&#13;
70 feet wide. A r e s t a u r a n t b u i l d i n g&#13;
100 feet long and 20 feet wide h a s also&#13;
been c o m m e n c e d . There-1 is to be a&#13;
b a g g a g e - r o o m , a c o m m i s s a r y d e p a r t -&#13;
m e n t , anil a hospital.&#13;
R e p r e s e n t a t i v e s will be p r e s e n t from&#13;
all o v e r t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s , b u t m o r e&#13;
especially from Ohio, P e n n s y l v a n i a ,&#13;
a n d Illinois. A t a like g a t h e r i n g l a s t&#13;
y e a r in Ohio over 35,000 p e r s o n s w e r e&#13;
in a t t e n d a n c e . All t h e m e a n s a n d d e -&#13;
tails for t h e erection of t h e b u i l d i n g s&#13;
H u g o . —&#13;
"of y e a r s his l i t e r a r y .&#13;
Paris circles, befojarit&#13;
A City Built on Gold.&#13;
&gt;Had n o t this p a r t i c u l a r p a r t of t h e&#13;
c o u n t y been seized u p o n as t h e site for&#13;
N e v a d a City, t h e w h o l e section w o u l d&#13;
have been t u r n e d u p s i d e d o w n before&#13;
now by t h e h a r d y m i n e r s ' i n their h u n t&#13;
for gold. U n d e r l a y i n g s »me of o u r&#13;
l a r g e s t business houses a n d tinest r e s i -&#13;
d e n c e s a r e big a n d rich deposits of&#13;
auriferous g r a v e l a n d q u a r t ^ T h e&#13;
N e v a d a C o u n t y ( F l e m i n g ) ledge, for&#13;
i n s t a n c e , which h a s been proiitably&#13;
w o r k e d for s o m e t i m e u n d e r the' N a -&#13;
tional H o t e l a n d t h r o u g h to C o m n j e r -&#13;
cial street, while t h e Stiles l e d g e is ben&#13;
e a t h n u m e r o u s p r i v a t e d w e l l i n g&#13;
p l a c e on u p p e r B r o a d s t r e e t . M o n d a y&#13;
m o r n i n g a.hole was. beings d u g in t h e&#13;
g r o u n d on B r o a d s t r e e t , n e a r l y o p p o -&#13;
site t h e M e t h o d i s t C h u r c h , to" t a p t h e&#13;
main w a t e r pipe, w h e n a tine l o o k i n g&#13;
s t r i n g e r of q u a r t z w a s e n c o u n t e r e d&#13;
a b o u t a foot f r o m t h o surface. I t h a d&#13;
the a p p e a r a n c e of l e a d i n g to a v a l u a -&#13;
ble deposit, b u t it will p r o b a b l y n o t&#13;
be followed u p , b e c a u s e n o o n e w a n t s&#13;
To-dTs"figiiTe_ttro'ireart of t h e city, crveir&#13;
for t h e s a k e of finding a g o l d&#13;
mine. It h a s been r e m a r k e d t h a t&#13;
N e v a d a C i t y ~ s h o n t d r — h a v e b e e n&#13;
p l a n t e d on s o m e g r o u n d t h a t h a d&#13;
no g o l d in it, b u t t h e fact is t h a t n o&#13;
such place c a n be found w i t h i n m a n y&#13;
miles of h e r e . — N t v a d i City Trailscript,&#13;
A Modern Miracle.&#13;
" D i d y e z b e a f t h e r h e a r i n ' a b o u t&#13;
G r a n t , J o h n ? "&#13;
" P h w a t G r a n t , J i m ? "&#13;
" G i n e r a l G r a n t . "&#13;
" G i n e r a l G r a n t t h e t p u t d o w n t h e&#13;
r a y b e l l i o n ? " /&#13;
" T h e s a m e , J o h n . " /&#13;
" O i t h o u g h t h e w u r d e a d , J i m f w i d&#13;
t h e c a n c e r . " / •&#13;
" S o it w u r s u p p h o s e d , J o h n , b u t instead&#13;
a v t h e g i n e r a l b a v i n ' t h e c a n c e r ,&#13;
one a v his d o e t h o r s lied i t . "&#13;
" O i t h o u g h t / f r o m t h e furrost, J i m ,&#13;
t h e y w u r s o n j e ' t h i n ' r a y m a r k able a b o u t&#13;
tho oaso,\Jim. Oi c u d n ' t u n d e r s t h a u '&#13;
i t ^ a f a l l , a t a l l , Jim.., i t ' s a m o d e r n&#13;
itviraycLe, a s s h u r o as y o ' r e a l o i v t y&#13;
o a t h s n o r tight. ^&gt; to&#13;
l a w , until l a t e l y the t a k i n g of i n t e r e s t&#13;
m o n e y w a s n o t a l l o w e d a m o n g t h e m .&#13;
T h e y c e l e b r a t e tho L o r d ' s s u p p e r w i t h&#13;
a c c o m p a n i n g u s a g e s of love-feast a n d&#13;
t h e w a s h i n g of feet, t h e kiss of c h a r i t y ,&#13;
a n d t h e r i g h t h a n d of f e l l o w s h i p .&#13;
T h e y a n o i n t t h e sick w i t h o i l for r e -&#13;
covery a n d baptize c o n v e r t s by l a y i n g&#13;
on of h a n d s a n d p r a y e r , e v e n while&#13;
the person b a p t i s e d is in t h e w a t e r .&#13;
T h e y also believe in g e n e r a ! r e d e m p -&#13;
tion, t h o u g h it is n o t w i t h t h e m a n&#13;
a r t i c l e of faith. .&#13;
Yim*"—&#13;
Weekly Maiwrick.&#13;
A r a b Oddities.&#13;
A n A r a b oh e n t e r i n g a h o u s e r e m o v e s&#13;
his shoes, b u t n o t his h a t . H e m o u n t s&#13;
his horse u p o n t h e r i g h t side. In w r i t -&#13;
i n g a l e t t e r h^ p u t s n e a r l y a l l his c o m -&#13;
p l i m e n t s o n . t h e outside*. W i t h h i m&#13;
t h e p o i n t of a p i n is its h e a d , w h i l e its&#13;
h e a d is m a d e its heel. H i s h e a d ' m u s&#13;
be w r a p p e d u p w a r m , eveLvitmunjarer*&#13;
w h i l e his feet m a y well e n o u g h g o&#13;
n a k e d in w i n t e r . E v e r y a r t i c l e of&#13;
m e r c h a n t d i s e w h i c h is liquid h e weighs,&#13;
but he measures~"WtfeIit, b a r l e y , a n d ^ a '&#13;
few o t h e r articles. H e e a t s s c a p ^ l y&#13;
a n y t h i n g for breakfast, a b o u t a s ^ u u c h&#13;
TorlfmherTb"ufT"after'Thc ~w"o£K of^th"C~&#13;
d a y is d o n e he sits d o w n tp^a hot m e a l&#13;
s w i m m i n g in oil, o r b e t t e r y e t , boiled&#13;
b u t t e r . /&#13;
His s o n s e a t w i t X h i m , b u t t h e ,fem&#13;
a l e s of his h o u s e w a i t till his l o r d -&#13;
s h i p is d o n e . Mo r i d e s a d o n k e y w h e n&#13;
t r a v e l i n g , Iris wife w a l k i n g b e h i n d .&#13;
H e l a u g h a a t t h e idea pf v a c a t i n g his&#13;
seat fcur'a w o m a n . H e k n o w s n o u s e&#13;
f o r x - t a b l e s , c h a i r s , k n i v e s , i o r k s , o r&#13;
cvdn spoons, u n l e s s t h e y a r e w o o d e n&#13;
/ o n e s . B e d s t e a d s , b u r e a u s , a n d lire-"&#13;
p l a c e s m a y be p l a c o i l in t h o s a m e&#13;
c a t e g o r y . If ho be a h a r t ; # a n ho does&#13;
w o r k sitting, p e r h a p s u s i n g his feet to&#13;
hold w h a t hia h a n d s a r e e n g a g e d&#13;
u p o n . . Ho d r i n k s cold w a t e r w i t h a&#13;
spoon, b u t - n e v e r b a t h e s in it u n l e s s&#13;
his h o m e is o n the s e a s h o r e . H e is&#13;
r a r e l y seen, d r u n k , is delicicnt in affection&#13;
for his k i n d r e d , has lit lie&#13;
c u r i o s i t y ' a n d n o imitation, n o wish to&#13;
i m p r o v e his m i n d , n o d e s i r e - t o ' s u r -&#13;
r o u n d himself wiTTi t h e c o m f o r t s o r&#13;
Hie.&#13;
T U T T S&#13;
PILLS&#13;
25 YEARS IN USE» ,&#13;
BL» firtfttart Modical Triumph of the AftJ&#13;
S Y M P T O M S O f A&#13;
TORPID LIVER.'&#13;
teak »»rt, P » U und«r tk« •fcaaMM*&#13;
ftl*4«, F f l l a t i a after •»»«»«. w»*» " f H *&#13;
tMllaattia f axertloa af b«dr «r aiU*p&#13;
XrrttaallUy af teataar* 5uaw o l r l t a , with&#13;
• faallagaf havla* neglected loma datr*&#13;
W««rta«a«i D l a z i a e u , Flaitarla* a t tka&#13;
• a a r t , Data b a t a r e l h a cyaa, U a a d a e a *&#13;
• v a r t h e r l i a t aye, Bcatlauaeaa, will;&#13;
•tfai draaiaa, Hl«hlr ealared Urine, s a d&#13;
O CONSTIPATION. . •&#13;
T o m FtL.L.9 ara eapeelally a' • Ma&#13;
to tueh •*—*, ona dn«e effect* such a&#13;
•aan*a«ffa«linsa9 toii»tonl«U the sufferer.&#13;
Ttwy Increase ttao A ppctttciind caute the&#13;
B«wrUh*4,*n&lt;l by thoirTonie^Aetlon oa&#13;
Ua l&gt;lc««tivaOr«»»,n*«tilar StooU»ro&#13;
xlae?^ TTWJB ilBa. 4 1 M u r r a y Ht.'.*.y. iRTDYE. •Gear Jlxnt or WKISKEU* ohanged to a&#13;
QixiMT ULACX by a »i»Klo application of&#13;
thl*I&gt;TH. It Imparts a natural color, acta&#13;
in»t»nt*neou«ly. Sold by Drutftfiats, or&#13;
•est bT express on receiptor 8 1 . • r ,&#13;
O f f i c e , 4 4 M u r r a y S t . , N o w Y o r k . Improved Western Wastte^ riUCJB. Ho.lrbrfimUroffl $8&#13;
Ho. 2 for large family &amp;&#13;
Ko. 8 for Hotel mid Laundry, . . . . 10-&#13;
Over 20,000 in tae.&#13;
a n d for t h e b o a r d i n g of t h e m u l t i t u d e&#13;
h a v e been p r o v i d e d for by t h e b r e t h r e n&#13;
of t h e c o n f e r e n c e of. tho M i d d l e dist&#13;
r i c t of P e n n s y l v a n i a . T h e m e e t i n g&#13;
will be a n a t i o n a l o n e , a n d 1,500 d e l -&#13;
e g a t e s will a t t e n d t o r e p r e s e n t t h e&#13;
B r e t h r e n c h u r c h of t h e - U n i t e d S t a t e s&#13;
of America. T w e n t y - l i v e steers,&#13;
w e i g h i n g a b o u t twelve h u n d r e d&#13;
p o u n d a - e 3 c h , h a v e been s e c u r e d , a n d&#13;
a r e h o w in t h e c o u r s e of f a t t e n i n g . I n&#13;
a d d i t i o n t o t h e beef t h e bill'of fare f o r&#13;
t h e m e e t i n g c o m p r e h e n d s 500 w e i g h t&#13;
of h a m , 1,000 p o u n d s of coffee, 70&#13;
p o u n d s of tea, 8,000 p o u n d s of s u g a r ,&#13;
600 p o u n d s of b o l o g n a s a u s a g e , '350&#13;
p o u n d s of d r i e d beef, 150 p o u n d s of&#13;
cheese, oX) b a r r e l s of c r a c k e r s , 3i&#13;
d o z e n e g g s , 10 b a r r e l s of piekjehClOO&#13;
g a l l o n s of milk per d a ^ &lt; C u d m a n y&#13;
o t h e r articles of'fooji.&#13;
A c c o r d i n g j ^ r e c e n t s t a t i s t i c s , t h i s&#13;
sect hjU-over GOO c h u r c h e s , w i t h . m o r e&#13;
tjw-n 50,000 c o m m u n i c a n t s . T h e i r&#13;
c h u r c h g o v e r n m e n t is n e a r l y t h e s a m e&#13;
as o t h e r B a p t i s t s , e x c e p t t h a t every&#13;
b r o t h e r is a l l o w e d to e x h o r t . W h e n&#13;
t h e y lind a m a n w h o is a p t t o te;i.oh,'&#13;
t h e y choose h i m to bo then" j i i i n i s t e r ,&#13;
n n d o r d a i n him by t h e j f l y f n g on of&#13;
h a n d s , a t t e n d e d , . w i t h t a s t i n g a n d&#13;
p r a y e r . a n d ^ g t t i h g the. right hainl of&#13;
fellowship'."" T h e y h a v e also d e a c o n s&#13;
a^tt"lteaconesses. F r o m a m o n g t h e&#13;
t e a c h e r s w h o h a v e been tried they app&#13;
o i n t bishops. T h e i r u s u a l m e e t i n g&#13;
in M a y is a t t e n d e d by the b i s h o p s '&#13;
t e a c h e r s , a n d o t h e r r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s&#13;
c h o s e n oy the c o n g r e g a t i o n s . I m p o r -&#13;
t a n t cases b r o u g h t before t h e s e m e e t -&#13;
i n g s a r e , in jieeeral, d e c i d e d by a&#13;
c o m m i t t e e of live of t h e o l d e s t bishops.&#13;
They use g r e a t p l a i n n e s s of d r e s s ,&#13;
l a n g u a g e , a n d m a n n e r s , a n d , like&#13;
t h e Society of Frietis, they n e i t h e r t a k e&#13;
T h e y will n o t&#13;
Thou&amp;nAi of ladiee are nting It, and tb*r*pe*k.&#13;
of It ia the highest terms, »ayirig ttuttlaey would&#13;
rather dispense with any ether &amp;6uMU&lt;&gt;ld article^ .&#13;
t h u this excellent Wi#b«r. &gt;o well-regulated"&#13;
fatally will be wltboatik, M it uvea the dothee,&#13;
aarea labor, •*.!** time, tare* fuel, Baroe »o*j&gt;, and&#13;
•aiea wa»ircliy no longer a dread, but rather aplaaaastreoraaUon,&#13;
aa much as sach Is passible*&#13;
H 0 R T 0 X M ' F ' G CO.,&#13;
Iganta Wanted. Ft, Wayne, I n d .&#13;
rf BIGHT s INDIAN VEGETABLE PILLS&#13;
yon xnn LIVER&#13;
And ail Bilious Complaints&#13;
Sate to take, iming pnrqiy vegpfawg; no artiv&#13;
Uyj. t r l c o w c u . All DniiWist*.&#13;
\&#13;
m&#13;
"Croueet Xaa in Alabama.&#13;
"De crossest man in Alabama lives&#13;
dar,1' said the driver as we approached&#13;
away-side home, near 8elmat Ala., to&#13;
ask accommodations for the night. At&#13;
supper, and after it "mine host scowled&#13;
at every one, found fault with every&#13;
thing earthly, and I was wondering if&#13;
he would not growl if the heavenly halo&#13;
didn't tit him, when incidental mention&#13;
being made of the comet oi 1882, he&#13;
said:"I didn't like its form,its tail should&#13;
have been fan shaped!1'&#13;
But, next morning, he appeared halfnffended&#13;
at our offering pay for hU hospitality!&#13;
My companion, however,&#13;
made nim accept as a present a sample&#13;
from his case of goods.&#13;
Six weeks later I drew up at the same&#13;
house. The planter stepped lithelv&#13;
from the porch, and greeted me cordially.&#13;
1 could scarcely believe that&#13;
this clear complexioned, bright-eyed,&#13;
animated fel ow, and the morose being&#13;
of a few weeks back, were the same.&#13;
He inquired after my companion of the&#13;
former visit and regretted he was not&#13;
with me. «'YeV said his wife, "we&#13;
are both much indebted to him."&#13;
"How?" I asked, in surprise.&#13;
"For this wonderful change in my&#13;
husband. Your friend when leaving,&#13;
handed him a Lottie of Warner's safe&#13;
our*. He took it, and two other bot- r, and now—" "And now," he broke&#13;
"from an ill-feeling, growling old&#13;
bear, I am healthy and so cheerful my&#13;
wife declares she has fallen in love with&#13;
me again!"&#13;
Jt has made over a thousand love&#13;
matches, and keeps sweet the tempers&#13;
of the family circles everywhere.—&#13;
Copyrighted, ' Used by permission of&#13;
American Rural Home,&#13;
Admirers o f t h e . G. 0 . M. will b e glad t o&#13;
hear that h e Is In n o i m m e d i a t e danger o f coming&#13;
to want. I t is said that b e h a s a n annual&#13;
i n c o m e of 135,030 from his H u w a r d e u e s t a t e&#13;
and is the patron of four church livings, o n e&#13;
of which, worth $12,000, is held b y &gt; i » i o u .&#13;
— ' • ^-j"&#13;
Henry Sehoenhals^ foreman Henry&#13;
Krug Packing jCo:. St. Joseph, Mo.,&#13;
u8esDr. TJiotnas1 EclectricOil with his&#13;
menJor'sprains, cuts, bruise?, chapped&#13;
Jtwrt5ds.ec. It is the best.&#13;
Blindness has come upon the poet Philip&#13;
Bourke Marston.&#13;
T H E SECRET AI?T OF BEAUTY lies not&#13;
in cosmetics, but is only in pure blood,&#13;
and a healthy performance of the vital&#13;
functions, to be obtained by using Bur&#13;
dock Blood fitters. ,&#13;
Prairie chickens are nearly as thick as flies in&#13;
Iowa'.&#13;
FOR RHEUMATISM, LUMBAGO, NEURALGIA,&#13;
CRAMP and Colio there is no&#13;
remedy superior to the genuine Dr.&#13;
Thomas1 Eclectric Oil.&#13;
K«ep the Soul on Top.&#13;
Little Bertie Blynn had just finished&#13;
his dinner. He was in the cozy library,&#13;
keeping still for a few minutes&#13;
after oatiug, according to his mother's&#13;
rule. She got it from the family&#13;
doctor, and a good rule it is. Bertie&#13;
.was sitting in his own rockipg-chair&#13;
before the pleasant grate lire. He had&#13;
in his hand two fine apples—a rich red&#13;
and a green. His fattier sat at a window&#13;
reading a newspaper.' Presently&#13;
he heard the child say: "Thank you,&#13;
little master."&#13;
Dropping his paper, he said: " I&#13;
thought you were alone, Bertie. Who&#13;
was here just now?"&#13;
"Nobody, papa, only you and I.'"&#13;
"Didn't you say just now, 'Thank&#13;
you, little master?1 "&#13;
The cnild did not answer at first,&#13;
but laughed a shy laugh. Soou ho&#13;
said: "I'm afraid you'll laugh at mo&#13;
if I tell you, pupa."&#13;
"Weill! you have just laughed, and&#13;
why mayn't ] ? "&#13;
"But I mean you'll make fun of&#13;
me."&#13;
"No, I won't make fun of you; but&#13;
perhaps I'll have fun with you.' That&#13;
will help us digest our roust beef."&#13;
"I'll tell you about it, papa. I had&#13;
eaten my red apple, and wanted to eat&#13;
the green 'one, too. Just then I remembered&#13;
something I learned in&#13;
school about.eating, and I thought one&#13;
big apple w,ould be enough. My&#13;
stomach will bo glad if I don't give it&#13;
the green one to grind. It seemed for&#13;
a moment just as if it said to me,&#13;
'Thank you, little muster;' but I know&#13;
I said it myself."&#13;
"Bertie.'what is it Miss McLaren&#13;
has been teaching about eating?"&#13;
"She told lis to be careful not to&#13;
give our stomachs too much food to&#13;
grind. If we do, she says, it will&#13;
make bad blood, that will run into our&#13;
brains and make them duli-and stupid,&#13;
an t h a t wft c a n ' t g e t OUP-le*flOB3 w o U r&#13;
W o m e n are&#13;
Germany.&#13;
a great success -as dentists iD&#13;
Erysipelas and Salt Rheum was&#13;
drivi-n entirelv away from Mrs. J. C.&#13;
Apder-on, Pe-htigo, Wis by Burdock&#13;
Blood Bitters. No equal as a Blood&#13;
pin ifier.&#13;
"Cornell university o w n s 240 acres of&#13;
ground.&#13;
H A Y F E V E U is a tvpe of catnrrh h a v i n g peculiar&#13;
s y m p t o m s . I t Is attended by a n iniliimed&#13;
condition of t h e l i n i n g m e m b r a n e of t h e&#13;
nostrils, tear-ducts a n d throat, affecting the&#13;
lungs. A u acrid m u c u s is secreted, the discharge&#13;
is accompanied with a burning stu^ation.&#13;
There a r e severe s p a s m s o f s n e e z h i g ,&#13;
frequent attacks of headache, watery and inflamed&#13;
eyes. Ely's Cream Bulra i s a remedy&#13;
f o u n d e c f o n a correct diagnosis of this disease&#13;
and c a n be d&lt; p e n d e d upon. 50 cts. at d r u g g i s t s&#13;
or by mail. S e n d for- circular. E l y Bros.,&#13;
D r u g g i s t s , O w e g o , X. Y.&#13;
Card swindlers infest eastern w a t e r i n g&#13;
places. . i&#13;
F O R S E V E R A L Y E A R S I have suffered g r e a t l y&#13;
from periodical returns of H a y Fever. A t the&#13;
s u g g e s t i o n of C O V K B T &amp; C H E E V E H , D r u g g i s t s ,&#13;
I obtained E l y ' s Cream B a l m a n d u s e d a ixir-&#13;
U&lt;ln of it during a severe attack. I c a n cheerfully&#13;
testify a s to t h e i m m e d i a t e and c o n t i n u e d&#13;
relief obtained*by its use. I heartily recomm&#13;
e n d it t o those "suffering from this or kindred&#13;
c o m p l a i n t s . .&#13;
(Rev.) II. A. S M I T H , Clinton, W i s .&#13;
T h e pope h a s the dyspepsia.&#13;
P A T E W T S o b t a i n e d by Louis Bagger &amp; Co., At«&#13;
torueyo, Washington,D.C.Est'd 1864. Advice free.&#13;
A Boston m a n the other day f o u n d a small&#13;
s n a k e in a hunch of bananas. H e promptly&#13;
g a v e the bananas t o a small boy.&#13;
Every nervous person should try Carter's&#13;
Little N E R V E Pills. ^Thcy are made specially&#13;
for nervous a n d dyspeptic m e n and worrun,&#13;
anil are Ju-t t h e medicine needed by all persons&#13;
who, from any cause, d o n o t sleep well, or w h o&#13;
fail t o g e t proper s t r e n g t h from their food.&#13;
Ca^es of weak s t o m a c h , indigestion, dyspepsia,&#13;
nervous and sick headache, ifcc, readily yield&#13;
to the use of the Little N e r v e Pills, particularly&#13;
if combined with Carter's L i t t l e Liver Pills.&#13;
I n vials a t 25 c e n t s .&#13;
The purest, sweetest and best Cod Liver Oil in the&#13;
world, manufactured from fresh, healthy livers, up&#13;
on the sea-chore. It Is absolutely pure and sweet.&#13;
Patients who have once taken It prefer it to all others.&#13;
Physicians have decided It superior to any'of the&#13;
other olli In market. Made by CASWELL XAZAIU&gt;. &amp;&#13;
Co., New York.&#13;
Chapped Xund*. Face, Pimples, and Rough Skin,&#13;
cured by using.)unlper Tar Sinfli, made. i)y CASWELL,&#13;
XAZAKD &amp; Co., New York.&#13;
and perhaps give us headaches, too.&#13;
If we give our stomachs just enough&#13;
work to do they will give us pure lively&#13;
blood, that, will mske us feel&#13;
bright and cheerful in school. Miss&#13;
McLaren says that sometime when&#13;
she eats too much of something that&#13;
she likes very much it seems almost as&#13;
if her stomach moaned and complained;&#13;
but when she denies herself,&#13;
and doesn't eat too much, it seems as&#13;
if it were thankful and glad."&#13;
"That's as good preaching as the&#13;
minister's Bertie. What more did&#13;
Miss McLaren tell you about this matter?"&#13;
"She taught us a verse one day&#13;
about keeping the soul on top. That&#13;
wasn't just the words, but it's what it&#13;
meant."&#13;
At this papa's paper went suddenly&#13;
right up belore his-face. When in a&#13;
minute it dropped down, there wasn't&#13;
any laugh on his face, as he said,&#13;
"VVeren t these the words, 'I keep my&#13;
body under?' "&#13;
"O yes! that was it; but it means&#13;
just the same. If I keep my body under&#13;
of course mysohi is on top."&#13;
"Of course it K my boy. Kyep&#13;
your soul on top, and you'll bei-ohg to&#13;
the grandest style of miuitTiat walks&#13;
the earth."—bavranicido Hero/d-Union.&#13;
" , -•"""&#13;
Eobbiei of HyfrieAti.&#13;
There were several dozen of the&#13;
hygienists in council, earh with his individual&#13;
hobby. Each thought all the&#13;
others were wrong. Koch was sure&#13;
that his own hobby was the only correct&#13;
one. A gentleman present sa;d he&#13;
had taken Brown's lion Bitters lor debility&#13;
and dyspepsia, and, though he&#13;
didn't' want to make a fuss about it, he&#13;
knew the use of this great tonic to be&#13;
better than all the notions he had heard&#13;
advanced in the council. One pra tioal&#13;
cure is worth thousands of guesses and&#13;
notions. Thousands of happy convalescents&#13;
speak gratefully oi Brown's&#13;
Iron Bitter**&#13;
A n alligator strayed u p into L o n g Island&#13;
S o u n d a n d w a s c a u g h t recently.&#13;
T o m a t o e s are now grown iii Turkish gardens&#13;
under the n a m e of red eggs.&#13;
San A n t o n i o has a newly organized cremation&#13;
society with Hii stockholders.&#13;
E x - P r e s i d e n t Arthur is m a k i n g a big record&#13;
this season as a tishennan.&#13;
Charleston, W. Va., rejoices in the discovery,&#13;
near the city, o f a vein oi quicksilver.&#13;
One blast of g i a n t powder in Salt river,&#13;
Arizona, k n o c k e d o u t three w a g o n loads of&#13;
fish.&#13;
Eighty d e g r e e s is about t h # right tempera&#13;
ture, when y o u w a n t to make vour horse trot&#13;
.fast.&#13;
Memphis doesn't consider a n y t h i n g 'under&#13;
1/X) degrees in t h e shade uncomfortably&#13;
warm.&#13;
T h e Sunday c l o s i n g law i s m a d e t o apply t o&#13;
barbers i n Philadelphia a n d it i s said to work&#13;
well.&#13;
. A doctor d o w n e a s t says It's risky, a s well a&#13;
undignified, for a n y man over 40 years af a g e&#13;
to run.&#13;
A n Iowa girl tried t o c h a n g e t h e color of her&#13;
evea, and, a s a result, made herself hopelessly&#13;
blind.&#13;
T h e question of t h e hour is—what k n o c k e d&#13;
o u t t h e roller rinks i W a s it public opinion or&#13;
the weather? ;&#13;
More t h a n a M i l l i o n .&#13;
N E W O R L E A N S , L a . — A r e p o r t e r o f&#13;
t h e 'rimes-Democrat, w h o r e c e n t l y c o m -&#13;
p l e t e d a t o u r o f t h i s a n d n e i g h b o r i n g&#13;
S t a l e s , v i i t l n g e v e r y c i t y , t o w n a n d&#13;
h a m l e t , s t a t e s t h a t h e i n t e r v i e w e d a l l&#13;
t h e w h o l e s a l e a n d r e t a i l d r u g g i s t s a n d&#13;
s t o r e k e e p e r s , a s w e l l a s t r a n s p o r t a t i o n&#13;
c o m p a n i e s , w i t h a v i e w o f l e a r n i n g t h e&#13;
v o l u m e o r t r a d e i n c e r t a i n a r t i c l e s . T h e&#13;
s t a t i s t i c s t h u s g a t h e r e d s h o w t h a t d u r&#13;
i n g t h e p a s t t w o y e a r s o v e r &lt; n e m i l l i o n&#13;
t w o h u n d r e d t h o u s a n d b o t t l e 3 o f S t .&#13;
J a c o b s O i l w e r e s o l d i n this section alone&#13;
a n d t h a t t h i s q u a n t i t y l a r g e l y e x c e e d s&#13;
t h e t o t a l c o m b i n e d s a l e s o f a l l o t h e r&#13;
s i m i l a r r e m e d i e s d u r i n g t h a t p e r i o d .&#13;
H e a d d s t h a t d e a l e r s , &gt;^s w e l l a s t h e&#13;
p u b l i c , c o n t n u e u n a n i m o u s i n t h e i r&#13;
p r a i s e o f t h e w o n d e r f u l p a i n - c u r i n g&#13;
p o w e r s o f t h i s u n a p p o a c h e d r e m e d i a l&#13;
agent.&#13;
T h e d u k e o f Cumberland Is c o n s p i c u o u s for&#13;
his hatred of (jermaus. .&#13;
'•R0T70H ON C A T A E R H . "&#13;
Correct offensive odors at oiiee. Complete cure of&#13;
worst runca.also ui)'.' jualed m xargle tor Diphtheria.&#13;
Sore Throat, t'uui Uruatli. :*x:.&#13;
There ure n o&#13;
House.&#13;
U a l f n n f Qfliina n a i lOn i S a u c e Zxpreuly for family UM. Only told l n fettle*. Be»t sud cheapest.&#13;
white servants a t the W h i t e&#13;
THE HOPE W THE NATION. Children, slow Irj.ileveiupm •;&gt;', pu;r.-, scrawny and&#13;
delieate. use'tAVt'll's Health Ui-n.'Wi'.'."&#13;
Parisitfn belles n o w carry pistol.-.&#13;
CATARRH OF THE BLADDER.&#13;
StlriRtuK, irrlUtMii. ln(Jaai:uailun. all Kidney and&#13;
frlnary Complaints, cured hy ••iJueliu-I'alba." »1,&#13;
Proof ufthe&#13;
lain the eating; and proof of the excellence of r.&#13;
medicine is its acceptance by the public. Ask your&#13;
druggist, or almost any one, and they will tell you&#13;
that the merit of Hood's SarHupnrllla, where It ha*&#13;
1/een 'introduced, has caused It to ride&#13;
KOCGH-8HOP&#13;
over all competitors Into the very heart of public con.&#13;
fldenoe, and to-day It has a record oi success and of&#13;
cure* unequalled by any otWr medicine.&#13;
"I Waa generally run down, had no appetite, and&#13;
felt the need of a good tonic. 1 havo taken other&#13;
medicines, hut never used any that did me ao much&#13;
good as Hood's Sarsaparllla. I now h w o a good ap.&#13;
petite and feel renewed atl over, amhetter than I&#13;
have hecn for years." E. H. Rind, 41 West tun Srreet&#13;
Oswego, N. Y.&#13;
"I had catarrh nine years, and suffered terribly&#13;
with It. Soon after I began to take Hood's Sarsaparilla&#13;
the catarrh troubled me less, and after taking&#13;
three bottles I was entirely cured." JANK H I N B Y&#13;
Lumberton, Clinton County, Ohio,&#13;
Sold by «ti druggist*. It; six fpr »5. Made only by&#13;
C. I. HOOD * CO, Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass.&#13;
IOO Doa*» On* Dollar.&#13;
A Prayer-Book of Queen Elizabeth.&#13;
There is now in view on Bond street&#13;
a very curious and, it would seem,&#13;
genuine relic of Queen Elizabeth.&#13;
This is a small prayer-book, three&#13;
inches by two inches, in which the&#13;
queen has written in a very neat hand&#13;
on sixty-live leaves of /eilum prayers&#13;
in Englisk, Greek, Latin, French, and&#13;
Italian. The inside of the shagreen&#13;
case, which is adorned with ruby&#13;
clasps, contains a pair of miniatures&#13;
of the queen and the Due d1 Alencon,&#13;
painted by Nicholas Hilliard, and the&#13;
book is evidently a gage d'amour prepared&#13;
by the queen for her suitor probably&#13;
about Idyl, wheu, as readers of&#13;
Mr. Frtrmie will remember, she announced&#13;
to her court that she had accepted&#13;
him for her husband. The&#13;
prayers are very autobigraphical; the&#13;
writer speaks of herself as "drawing&#13;
my blood from kings," and thanks&#13;
God for "passing me from a prison to&#13;
a pallace and placing me a souverraigne&#13;
prince over the people of England."&#13;
The history of the book can be&#13;
traged from James II., who gave it to&#13;
the duke of Berwick, whence it passed&#13;
to Horace Walpole and afierwardtothe&#13;
duchess of Portland. At her sale, in&#13;
1786, it was bought for Queen Charlotte&#13;
for 101 guineas. She left it to&#13;
one of her ladies-in-waiting, from&#13;
whom it was acquired by the late&#13;
duches of Leeds; thence it passed into&#13;
the late owner's hands. It is described&#13;
in Walpolo's "Anecdotes of Painting,"&#13;
in his account of the famous miniaturist,&#13;
Nicholas Hilliarji.—London&#13;
mci* _ _ - : ^ \ -&#13;
Pinnts Used by Jlan.&#13;
It is stated that the numberof plants&#13;
used by man at the present time does&#13;
not exceed three thousand. Of these&#13;
about 2,500 are cultivated: in America.&#13;
The varieties used for food do not&#13;
exceed GOO. Uf edible fruits and seeds&#13;
there are 100 classed as vegetables,,&#13;
100 its roots and bulbs, 60-varieties of&#13;
grain, about 20 of which produce&#13;
sugar aud syrup. In a d d i t i o n ^ this&#13;
perhaps 30 kinds will yield oil^and 6&#13;
kinds wine. The number of niedicinesupply&#13;
plants is nearly double that of*&#13;
fruit-yielding, amounting to 1,140,&#13;
about 360 of which afe employed in&#13;
the various branchea/of industry. Of&#13;
the latter 76 furnih*idye-stutr, 8 wax,&#13;
16 salt, and more^than 40 supply food&#13;
for cattle. There are no fewer than&#13;
260 kinds of poisonous plants cultivated,&#13;
among which are only 66 of a n a r y&#13;
colic son. the remAinuer ueing ciassea&#13;
»k deadly poisons. / |&#13;
— THC&#13;
BEST TONIC.&#13;
This medicine, combining Iron with pure&#13;
vegetable tonics, qtiiekly and completely&#13;
C u r e s I&gt;yftpepsln, Inrifeention, W r a k n c u ,&#13;
I in pur • B l o o d , M a i a r i a , C i n i U a u d F e v e r s ,&#13;
a n d N e u r a l g i a .&#13;
It is an unfailine remedy for Diseases of the&#13;
K i d n e y s a n d L i v e r .&#13;
It i s invaluable for Diseases peculiar t o&#13;
W o m e n , a:id ftll w h o lead sedentary lives.&#13;
It does not injure the teeth, cause headache.or&#13;
produce constipation—othn Iron medicines do.&#13;
It enriches and purifies the blood, stimulates&#13;
the appetite, aids t h e assimilation of food, relieves&#13;
Heartburn a n d Brlohing, aud strengthens&#13;
the muscles and nerves.&#13;
"For Intermittent Fevers, Lassitude, Lack of&#13;
Energy, Ac., it has no equal.&#13;
4 » - The genuine hfis above trade mark and&#13;
crossed red lines on wrapper. Take no other.&#13;
SUi»»»lT&gt;T BROWX CHKBKiL CO.. BAl.TTUnK* " "&#13;
H A Y FstVER&#13;
My brother Mvron and&#13;
mysi'lf Wi.Te both cured,&#13;
t V all appearances',-of&#13;
Catarrh a m i Huy-Fever&#13;
hist July a n d Auirust.&#13;
U p tii this date, De? i i \&#13;
neither have bad anv return&#13;
o f these troubles.&#13;
vly-H*-4Hvtvm--HalHiwA s&#13;
he medi ine used.&#13;
f\r.uiKi. PKKKTS, St&gt;enver,&#13;
T H ^ J L C O - , ^ ; jr1&#13;
Cream B4lm&#13;
nds cnilmvl s i rnyiahle repntH'loii&#13;
wherever known,&#13;
dUplaetna all otfier prer&gt;;inv&#13;
I J A V rrifirnti'™*' * ?&gt;^\A" U :»ppi&gt;&lt;i&#13;
HATl l fr VrKtn,°i,!,oh n"»:r||i ^ P»'^&#13;
l u l l I I n f • • I l ^ j n v e a M o to/u.-wv&#13;
Price -VV. bv mnfl or at drucs!*'*. send f.&gt;r elrrular.&#13;
fARQUKHLAVlRUJ OVTIHBKRHAST. IDNrGuK ^SstEs.P OAwRo„A'oT. ONR. Y .&#13;
. SENS FOR CATALOGUE.&#13;
Wonderful&#13;
C»p*clty.&#13;
A M N S , A. • . r j x q c i u B , * • * , r*.&#13;
Tfc&#13;
The Oldest Medicine in the World is&#13;
probably Dr. ISAAC THOMPSON'S elebrated Eye Wate R l» artleJs la a eartfallr pr*parsd Physician's&#13;
prssicriptloa, and has b««a in oonstantuss for ns*r-&#13;
ITK oratory, an&lt;1 notwithstanding; tbs many othsr&#13;
prspsraUons that taavs been introduced Into th«&#13;
tfiarkst. ths sal* of this artlols Is oonstanUy tnorsas&#13;
5 * . llVk* directions *r« foltowsd it will nsvsr f»U.&#13;
^ s A T g c n U r t y U t y l u hVattsntten ef physlst— n o&#13;
/ 3 O M i U T h o t n o a , B o n a , * 0 © » , T r o y , N T&#13;
- ^ B B ^ B S ^ - Absolutely -&#13;
F r e e from OfUtUs, Emetic* and Foiton*.&#13;
A PROMPT, SAFE, SURE CURE&#13;
Asthsia, QalnTr, P»»n* ta C h e ^ Maouair&#13;
»ffection« of tb« Threat »nd LuaB*- . _ .&#13;
Price BO cent* a bottle. Bold by Drnettltts " « » « 5 | *&#13;
J7i. /v " %?un*bU to induce *%&amp;%?££%£&amp;&#13;
aetnror them willree.eirm tico boUU^b*pr&amp;4iClMfaf&#13;
vald, 0i/tending one dollar to&#13;
TH2CHA!ai*A.VeCj:i.tKC0*PASt,&#13;
eUflOwimr**:!* M'.nm*ctur«r»,&#13;
WILL PAY YOTJ&#13;
TO GO TO&#13;
DETROIT&#13;
AXD HAVE YOUB&#13;
MALT&#13;
EXAMINED AND PITTED WITH&#13;
SPECTACLES OR EYE GLASSES&#13;
AT&#13;
R O E H M &lt;&amp; VSrRTGYVr*&amp;,&#13;
IMPORTERS, JEWELERS AND OPTICIANS..&#13;
140 WOODWARD AVE.&#13;
THEY MAKE NO CHARGE FOR I&#13;
TESTING EYES. AND SELDOM I&#13;
FAIL TO GIYE RELIEF.&#13;
» • LYOIA E. PINKHANT8 • •&#13;
VEGETABLE COMPOUND&#13;
• , • i s A FOSITIVE C U R B TOK* « •&#13;
All tlioss palaral ComplaiaU&#13;
• t a d Heakaesses • » c s m u o a '&#13;
• t * 0 • 0 to o u b u t * • * * • *&#13;
i # * FLMALK POPULATION. &lt; .&#13;
TrU* 91 ia Uiald, sill ar U t u p term.&#13;
• rt» P*rptm i s toielv for t\4 ItgiHmat* Mealing *i&#13;
dlMO— and tAe rtlUf of pain, and that ^ dcea nil&#13;
it claim* to*o, tkotuaneUo/ladlet tan gladlv ttttifj. *&#13;
• It will curt entirely all Orari&amp;a trooble*, laflaajurK&#13;
tloa and Clctiration, Fallinff and t&gt;l*pU&gt;e«c&gt;euts, sa4&#13;
eousaqaest Spiaal VTeakasss, and k» narttctUarl)&#13;
adapted to ths caoo^sof life. • • * • • « " • • »v* • '&#13;
• It removes Faintue«,I^tul»acy,d««troT«aUeravl»J|&#13;
for rtimuiantw, and rell«ves Wt*^a»ii of the.SWuiix-K&#13;
It cures Bloating, Headaches, Jurrou* JhrolraXloa,&#13;
Qsrwral Debility, Sleepl««uk«M, Depression aad lnd&gt;&#13;
geodon. Tast faelluir of oearing down, canslaf pain.&#13;
an&lt; backache, is sJw»y* permaueDtly cured or its asst&#13;
• Send stamp to Lyan, Masn., for pamphlet. ^ Letters 01&#13;
(Oqiary sonndentialiy smswered. For t*Umtdr^;fu'**&#13;
BITTERS,&#13;
If y o u w i s h a c e r t a i n c u r e f o r a l l B l o o d&#13;
disease*. Nothing w a s erer invented that will&#13;
cleanse the Blood and purify t h e System equal&#13;
t o H o p s a n d M A L T B i t t e r * . I t t o n e s&#13;
up t h e S y s t e m , puts n e w B l o o d in your&#13;
v e i n s , r e s t o r e r your l o s t a p p s i m a n a&#13;
s l e e p , a n d brings y o u p e r f e c t n e a l t h . It&#13;
never fails t o give relief In all cases of K i d n e y&#13;
or L i v e r T r o u b l e s , B l l l o n s n e s s , I n d i -&#13;
g e s t i o n , Constipation, Sick Headaches, D y s -&#13;
p e p s i a , Nervous disorders, and all F e m a l e&#13;
C o m p l a i n t s ; when properly taken it is a sure&#13;
cure. - Thousands have been b e n e f i t e d b y it&#13;
in this and other Western 8tatea. I t is the b e a t&#13;
Combination of V e g e t a b l e - remedies a i y e t&#13;
discovered for t h e restoration t o health of t h e .&#13;
W e a k a n d D e b i l i t a t e d . Do n o t g e t H o p s&#13;
a n d M A L T B i t t e r s confounded with Inferior&#13;
preparations o f similar name. I prescribe&#13;
Hops &amp; Malt Bitters regularly i n m y practice.&#13;
Robert Turner, M. D . , Flat Rock, Mien. T o r sale&#13;
by ail druggists. ' ^&#13;
HOPS &amp; MALT BITTERS CO, DETBOIT, lie&amp;&#13;
T.H. H1XCHMAN* &amp;SO.VS. Detroit. Mich., &lt; &gt;V »Vle&#13;
JAMli^ E. DAVIS &amp; CO L stroll. MiuU-. $ Aguuts&#13;
HALL'S&#13;
flatarrli&#13;
Is ReoommenH^d by Physicians!&#13;
s t o o &amp;EWAR8 mtiw&amp; \&#13;
We manufacture and sell it w i t h * p o s i t i v e&#13;
g u a r a n t e e t h e t I', will cur© any&#13;
c a s e * a n i we will forfeit the above amount&#13;
ifnfaiisin a single Instance*&#13;
It is u n l i k e any ether Catarrh remedy, at&#13;
jtlng upon&#13;
'-led"with this&#13;
fist for it, and&#13;
a c c a r r N O miTATioa o * SC-BBTITUTK. I f h e&#13;
baa not got it, send to ui and we will forward&#13;
Immediately. Price, 75 cents ner bottle.&#13;
F. 1 CHENEY * CO •ntpdo.Ohla,&#13;
i t is u n l i k e any &lt;.tner catarrh r&#13;
'tis t a k e n internally, aetlni Sh e PlOOfJ* " 7 0 u »re troubled&#13;
istrssiing disease,ask yourDrujfi»t&#13;
KIDNEY-WORT&#13;
DOSS&#13;
WONDERFUL&#13;
CURES OP&#13;
tflDNEYPISEASES&#13;
AND&#13;
LIVER COMPLAINTS.&#13;
Bwanse i t acts e n t h s LITEK, BOW£LS s a d&#13;
KID5ETS a t the same t i m e .&#13;
Beoasse It cleanses the system of the poison*&#13;
one humors that develops In Kidney and Urinary&#13;
Diseases, Biliousness, Jaundice, Constipation,&#13;
Piles, or l a Baenmstisa, Neurala-ia, Mar.&#13;
vous Disorders and all Female Complaints,&#13;
ar SOLID PROOF or THIS*&#13;
XT WXLZi BTTBXLY CTJS9&#13;
O O N S T I P A T I O N , P I L E S ,&#13;
a n d R H E U M A T I S M .&#13;
By causing VSSB ACTION of all ths organs&#13;
and functions, thereby&#13;
CLEANSING the BLOOD&#13;
restoring the normal power to throw off disease.&#13;
T H 0 U S A N 0 8 O F C A 8 E 8&#13;
of the worst fcnai of these terrible diseases&#13;
havo been quiokly relievod, aad in a short time&#13;
P E R F E C T L Y C U R E D .&#13;
F U C K , 91. iiqriD OR DST, S O U ) BT n g r e c m a .&#13;
/' Dry-oan be sent b y mail. .&#13;
VTJOXB, RipHaJtDSON ft Co., BurUngioa, Vt.&#13;
3 S.»d juicp for Ihxij Alauait tor OH.&#13;
Invaluable in 8icknest.&#13;
In all raa?s of dyseritery or sny b6wel compla!n*s&#13;
Ridge's 1" ooa should he adopted «8 the dle'etic. It H&#13;
penertly safe, oeliji neutral tor Us at'tlen up«&gt;B ths&#13;
bowels, and In easily assimilated. Moreover, !t wll.&#13;
be retained where every thing else fulls.&#13;
- f l r X T T E A r r S T R O N G , e a s y t o a a p l y , d e e s&#13;
n o t m e t a r r a t t l e . Is also A S U B S T I T U T E&#13;
- F O R P L A S T E R , a t H a l f t h e C a s t ; o n t -&#13;
l a s t s t h e kmildios;. C A R P E T S A N D R L ( , S&#13;
of same, doable the wear of oil cloths. Catalogae and&#13;
s*mples./r«o. W . U . F A T s V C O . , C a j a i d e n , N . J . '&#13;
FflBUjlTui. Amlturil Works, York* h&#13;
irt,iku'i otindirs Eagiaes a &amp;av Si!!*&#13;
~ Bead for niuilratsi&#13;
$58 REWARD «W U pail Hr u ; O r s t a F e n&#13;
»r MB* *tlt «*»l mm eteau »ni&#13;
i»j u . v Passat B i a S A K c k&#13;
«BMea|i&gt;jt aaaad« sS&gt;w«*c4 B•eerTaSra^ssaosvf&#13;
saS •aaear tr »»r latprarasl&#13;
WanSTaM MlU *1U H u f r&#13;
Hf whUk v« I M *»»M- Cirs«&gt;&#13;
W *** rrlM LUt swi!«S fre*.&#13;
VelesBsae, Oalss&#13;
) (&#13;
LIQUID GLUE It used by thousands of first elass stsaafsrtwren&#13;
and M«ch»niei*va their best work. Aectivcd&#13;
GOLD MEDAl_TJondon.'83. Prononveti^Km^nt&#13;
flut inotm. 8endc&lt;rd of dealer vhodrwi not keep&#13;
it, wi th five 2c ttaoip* for SAMPLE CAN r r j r f&#13;
, BassiCtaectCo.,Gkcei»,«i3, u ! £ £&#13;
KIDNEY-WORT ]&#13;
Farming Land For Sale Cheap.&#13;
Tw&lt;,tvr1hou.4flnd aero* of farming land In Gladwin&#13;
County. Michigan. (.IIHHI soil, gooil watiT. and one of&#13;
tlie most healthy i-ountlos In the state. For particulars&#13;
Inquire of Kujcene Foster, ngeut at Gladwin, the&#13;
founty Seat of Gladwin Oountv, or of IH'TMAN &lt;k&#13;
r.l'Sr. Saginaw City, MU'IL, I'luts furnished on application.&#13;
N E W ENGLAND&#13;
CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC B o s t o n , M M S . , O L D E S T In America; L a r g e s t&#13;
a n d B e s t E q u i p p e d In tbe WORLD—100 Instructors,&#13;
1971 Students last year. Thorough Instruction in&#13;
Vocal and Instrumental 'Music, Piano nnd Organ Tuning,&#13;
Fine Arts, Oratory, Literature, French. German,&#13;
snd Italian Languages, English Branches. Gvmnasrics.&#13;
etc. Tuition, ^^ to $20; board and room, $4'&lt; to $7*&#13;
per term. F a l l T e r m hegins September 10,1£«. Fof&#13;
Illustrated Calendar. «ivirnr full Infnrwatloti, Hddress.&#13;
£ . TOUWKE.Dir., Fransliu Sq., IJOSi'O.N, i l u *&#13;
JOSEPH CI LLOTTS&#13;
ST£EL PENS&#13;
Soto BY ALL DEALERSTHFWuoKDurTHC W O R L D&#13;
COLD MEDAL PARIS E X P 0 S I T I O N - I 8 7 3 .&#13;
fvfiSS'JHft-/&#13;
R. U. AWARE&#13;
THAT&#13;
Lorilhrd's Climax Plug'&#13;
bearing a ~ed fin tag; that Lortllard's&#13;
U t t s o L e a f fine cut; that Lor lUard's&#13;
\ n T T - C t i « » t a s " * and t&amp;arxortTr«rdTa S n u f f a . a . 1&#13;
• he i&gt;fft a u i cheapt*'.. quality considered ?&#13;
UBYMEMTpSenPnin^cD^t&#13;
employTOent snd sjood saliry&#13;
.storklrvcSujiportir*. Sanuiij&#13;
sellina Q u e e n C i t y S k i r t and&#13;
rklncSui&gt;p«rt*r*.Sanu)ij&#13;
outfit tr»-e. Adfiresa Gincitidatt&#13;
Suspender Co., CincituiaU. O.&#13;
S t\\ f l l C B C &gt;*EW LAW; Officer** psy from&#13;
l&lt;L»IICriO coaimlssi(Ds. D e s e r t e r s r ^ l i e r e a ;&#13;
P r i i s l o n s a^d Increase; experle.iff* 19 vdars;&#13;
»LC;TS» &lt;&gt;r nnie« Write fr&gt;r clrouisra »nd.l»ws.&#13;
A. W. Mjt.OtOlICK. a SDK, Clncloaatl, OUiO.&#13;
KIPPERS PA8ffliE&amp;HlSSyi:&#13;
fa^MaMBMBiTgiaa^sssBBT'h^rirnwri! Masii&#13;
"W. H. XT. L—8---32"&#13;
OPIUM M o r p h i n e fTablt C u r e d In 1 0&#13;
t o 2 o U * y s . N o i , a r t! 1 C u r e d .&#13;
Da. J. 6Ti.i"us.\s, LulaLOa, Ohio.&#13;
KWm ECLECTRIC OIL bftgo, l*m« Back, Sprains sasl^af i B f c l P I H I V ^ k f i s a s l |&#13;
and Bruiaes, Asthma, Catarrh, Coughs,Colds, 8ora Throat. Diphtheria, Bums,|&#13;
[Frost Biles, Tooth, Ear, and Headache, and all pains and Aches.&#13;
W+8TXH, MILBVXX* COM PAST. PropHHor*, Bnful*, JOtr Tmrk, V.3.A.&#13;
\ ,&#13;
/&#13;
\\&#13;
#!&amp; i&#13;
.«&gt;""&#13;
Additional Home News.&#13;
Thos. Gordon and Frank Archer, of&#13;
Howell, we:e in town yesterday.&#13;
Read th,e ordinance for the abatement&#13;
of nuisances—a good tiling.&#13;
C. E. Brown and family returned to&#13;
their home in Iowa on Monday last.&#13;
Have a day ot recreation next Saturday—&#13;
go to the "City of the Straits."&#13;
$1.55 buys a round trip ticket from&#13;
this place. t&#13;
The ladies of this place are a r r a n g -&#13;
ing for a picnic at Whitmore Lake&#13;
next Wednesday, 'in which all the females&#13;
in the village and vicinity are&#13;
invited to participate.&#13;
Miss Lizzie Thompson returned from&#13;
a visit to Jackson Saturday and was&#13;
soon taken with a paralytic stroke,&#13;
from which she has not removed. She&#13;
is conscious, but can not speaks&#13;
For several reasons the musical entertainment&#13;
to be given by Prof. L. A.&#13;
and Miss Ida E. Tuttle was give up&#13;
and they departed on Thursday of last&#13;
"week for Stockbridge. Their teaching,&#13;
both instrumental and vocal, gave&#13;
good satisfaction, to which their&#13;
pupils will attest.&#13;
Jeromes Wincheli has the second&#13;
story to his store up and enclosed, and&#13;
it makes a good addition to the building.&#13;
He was unfortunate in having&#13;
it open to the weather Saturday, as&#13;
the rain beat in and leaked into the&#13;
room beneatb, doing considerable damage&#13;
to his drug stock.&#13;
The following shows the time train&#13;
leaves and round trip rates tor the excursion&#13;
to Detroit Saturday next':&#13;
Stockbridge, 6:30 A^rf&#13;
Gregory, _£:45 . "&#13;
Anderson, ^ ^ ' 6 : 5 5 "&#13;
Pinckney^- " 7:05 "&#13;
Petteysviile, 7:15 •"&#13;
&lt;ffamburg, 7.25 "&#13;
Whitmore Lake, 7:35 "&#13;
South Lyon, 7:50 "&#13;
$1.75&#13;
1.65&#13;
1.60&#13;
1..),)&#13;
1.50&#13;
1.45&#13;
1.35&#13;
1:25&#13;
1885.&#13;
Common Council Proceedings.&#13;
PIXCKNEY, MICH., Aug. 3,&#13;
Council convened and was called to&#13;
order by President Grimes.&#13;
Present, Trustees Mann, Carr, Mc-&#13;
Guiness, Wheeler, Mann 'and Henry.&#13;
Complaint that slaughter house&#13;
kept and maintained by J. &amp; F. Clark&#13;
was a nuisance.&#13;
After hearing .the evidence adduced&#13;
the Council find that the coinpMnt&#13;
has been sufficiently proveaVand that&#13;
the nuisance, sourceof^Elth, or cause&#13;
of sickness refjerfed to in said complaint&#13;
sh^uWbe abated, and further&#13;
declare that the Clerk cause to be&#13;
served on the defendant a written&#13;
notice requiring, said nuisance to be&#13;
removed inside of 24 hours.&#13;
Account presented by A. G. Leeland&#13;
amount $20, for making out assessment&#13;
roll. .On motion account was&#13;
tabled until next regular meeting.&#13;
Accounts presented: J Lenon $15.&#13;
C. Henry $2.38, A. Hicks 63c.7 D.&#13;
.Hicks 63c, T. Burch 63c, VV. Goodrich&#13;
63c, D. Carr §1.25, T. Grimes S3.&#13;
A. Monks $4.50, C. Teeple 75c, X.&#13;
Bullis 63c, J.'Smith 63c, C. Ellis 63c&#13;
On motion the accounts were allowed&#13;
and orders d rawn for the same.&#13;
Yeas—Mann, N . B., Carr, Wheeler,&#13;
McGuiness and Henry.&#13;
On motion an ordinance for' the&#13;
abatement of nuisances was passed.&#13;
Yeas- Mann, N. B., Henry, Wheeler.&#13;
Carr, McGuiness and the President.&#13;
On motion Council adjourned until&#13;
next regular meeting,&#13;
WTILL. B. HOFF, Clerk.&#13;
UNADILLA REMARKS.&#13;
Prom onr Correspondent.&#13;
Willie. Watts k J i o i m again.&#13;
C. K. Backus, cf "Williamstdn, visitedUnadllla&#13;
friends las-tr-Tuesdav.&#13;
Ida Tuttle. of Detroit, spent last&#13;
week with her auntie, \Mrs ^ XJ.&#13;
Noble. " .- '&#13;
The-Doty chil'dren^ofWhite Oak,&#13;
visited at Mi\JDtrnnings last Monday.&#13;
Geo.^K^izer, of Francisco, spent&#13;
the-Sabbath at J. Pickell's; and Lottie&#13;
Montague, of Gregory, was also&#13;
in town.&#13;
Tommie and Vie Harker have&#13;
gone to • Lansing to visit their brother,&#13;
SpeDce Pritchard.&#13;
Mr. a n d Mrs. R. Glenn, Lucy&#13;
Nutting and May Glenn, of Webberville,&#13;
visited friends here and&#13;
Chelsea last week.&#13;
A pleasant little party met at the&#13;
in&#13;
M. E . parsonage last Friday evening&#13;
to welcome the bride, Mrs. J. A.&#13;
Lowery, to her new home.&#13;
llolden DuBois has been slightly&#13;
"under the weather" for the past&#13;
week, but UH there is a doctor in the&#13;
family he is fast improving.&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Weston, of Webster,&#13;
spent the Sabbath at the Unadilla&#13;
House. She brought her daughter&#13;
Mellie to stay a few weeks with her&#13;
uncle Albert.&#13;
Next time, young man, when,you&#13;
would like to accompany a young&#13;
lady home from church in the evenin,*,&#13;
just ask her in season, then you&#13;
will not "get left."&#13;
An Ordinate for the Abatement of&#13;
Nuisances.&#13;
THE VILLAGK OF PINCKKKY OKDAINS:&#13;
Sec. 1. Whenever complaint shall&#13;
be made to the Health Officer of said&#13;
village of Pinckney, by one or more&#13;
citizens ot said village, that any nuisance,&#13;
source ot tilth, or cause of sickness&#13;
is kept, erected or maintained&#13;
within the corporate limiuof said v11-&#13;
lage by any person or persons, said&#13;
Health Officer shall immediately proceed&#13;
to examine and inspect the locality&#13;
and substance concerning which&#13;
said complaint is made.&#13;
Sec. 2. On said 'examination, if&#13;
said Health Officer shall believe said&#13;
complaint is true, and that the~nuisanee,&#13;
source of. filth, or cause of sickness&#13;
exists and sboulcl be abated he&#13;
shall thereupon issu£_aJiH&gt;liee, in writing,&#13;
to the parties keeping, erecting&#13;
or maintaining such nuisance, source&#13;
of filth, or cause of sickness, at his&#13;
or their own expense to remove the&#13;
same within twenty-four hours, or&#13;
such further time as said Health Officer&#13;
may direct: and ii the owner or&#13;
person keeping; erecting or maintaining&#13;
the same shall refuse or neglect to&#13;
do so he shall forfeit a sum not exceeding&#13;
fifty dollars, and in default thereof&#13;
imprisoned in the village iock-up or&#13;
county jail not exceeding thirty days,&#13;
or until said fine is paid.&#13;
Sec 3. If the persons so notified&#13;
shall not comply with the provisions&#13;
of said notice of said Health Officer to&#13;
remove and abate • such nuisance,&#13;
source of filth or cause of ^ickness.&#13;
such Health Officer may issura notice&#13;
directed to the Marshal of said village,&#13;
directing him to remove and abate&#13;
such nuisance, source of filth, or ca»se"&#13;
of sickness forthwith, and ajj^e-xpense&#13;
incurred thereby shall be^liaid by the&#13;
person or persons wiKJKept, erected or&#13;
maintained the-s?fme.&#13;
Sec. -k^u the Health Officer, on&#13;
theexitmination mentioned in Sec 1 of&#13;
-this act. shall find that no nuisance,&#13;
source of filth, or cause of sickness exists&#13;
which in.'his judgdmtmt should&#13;
be abated, the parties aggrieved&#13;
by such alleged nuisance, source of&#13;
filth, or cause; of sickness, may apply&#13;
to the Common Council of said village&#13;
under the provisions of an ordinance&#13;
tor the abatement of nuisances adopted&#13;
April 21st, A. D. 1883; and the&#13;
Council, acting under said ordinance,&#13;
shall hear, try and pass upon the same.&#13;
Sec. 5. That no per.-on shall apply&#13;
to the Common Council for the abatement&#13;
of a nuisance, source of filth, or&#13;
cause of sickness, under the ordinance&#13;
mentioned in section four of this act&#13;
until after an application has • been&#13;
made to the Health Officer, as provided&#13;
bv this act.&#13;
"'Adopted August, 3, A. D. 1885.&#13;
Sever Give Up.&#13;
If you are suffering with low and&#13;
depressed spirits, loss of appetite, general&#13;
debility, disordered blood, weak&#13;
constitution, headache, or any disease&#13;
of a bilious nature, by all means procure&#13;
a bottle of Electric Bitters. You&#13;
will be surprised to see the ta_pid improvement&#13;
that will follow ;(youwTll&#13;
be inspired with new lite;strejngtb and&#13;
activity will return; pain and misery&#13;
will cease, and henceforth you will rejoice&#13;
in the praise of. Electric Bitters.&#13;
Sold at at 50 cents a bottle at Winchell's&#13;
Drug Store. , •&#13;
To the Afflicted.&#13;
Since the introduction of Kellogg's&#13;
Columbian Oil it has made more per-&#13;
—ma-nent cures and given- better satisfaction&#13;
on Kidney Complaints and&#13;
Rheumatisin t"hafi anyTnovvn remecry.&#13;
Its continued series,ot wonderful cures&#13;
iifall climates has m\de it known as&#13;
a safe and reliable agent to employ&#13;
against all aches and pains, which" are&#13;
the forerunners of more serious disorders,&#13;
ff acts speedily and surely,&#13;
always relieving suffering and often&#13;
saving life. The protection it affords&#13;
by its timely use on rheumatism, kidney&#13;
affection, and all aches and pains,&#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 used it never will.&#13;
It is absolutely certain in its remedial&#13;
effects, and will always cure when&#13;
cures are possible. " ,&gt;&#13;
Call at WISCHELL'S DRUG STO^*-&#13;
get a memorandum book givtmyfnorc&#13;
full d*e tails of the curativ' jg ^&#13;
of this wonderful nw^eine,&#13;
ffoperties&#13;
i&#13;
Cheapest First-class Music in the United&#13;
States.&#13;
Look at tills lUt of sonn' of the mo«t popular&#13;
muxtc published. Printed on the best heavy&#13;
nuiaic paper, ROUC! clear print; full Hheet musir&#13;
size, and the same as jreiiorally retailed all over&#13;
th" United States at thirty t» seventy tlvn cents&#13;
per copy. Our price is live cents per copy, or by&#13;
mall one cent adttbti for postage. We itive the&#13;
retail price, hut remember our price is but FIVE&#13;
cents. We will send catalogue of i.tHKI best selling&#13;
pieces published, free. l)ori't pay htv;h exorbitant&#13;
prices W1H»H vou can net the same music&#13;
for about one-el^hth the price; see the following:&#13;
SONUS.&#13;
Alice, Where art Thou* Ascher 30c&#13;
Angle* Kver Wright and Fair Handel itfc&#13;
Answers liluinentlml &amp;Oc&#13;
niue Alsatiou Mountains Adams :Oc&#13;
liridtre Carew N)c&#13;
Hrid^e, Lindsay Hta&#13;
Brook Dolores She&#13;
i'herrv Ripe •..Horn H."&gt;c&#13;
Clanjr'of the Wooden Shoon MoHoy.4uc&#13;
Dream Fsces UirOhinsou 35c&#13;
Esiuerald „ J Levy 35c&#13;
INSTHl'MENTAL.&#13;
Chopsticks, Waltz Do Lulu '25c&#13;
Black Irawk. wait/ Wtlsh 50c&#13;
Corn Klower, waltz Cooke ft(&gt;c&#13;
Oueen's Lace Handkerchief Strauss +)c&#13;
Kaijuet, tialop..,.. Hichards 40c&#13;
Home, Sweet uome Mack ftOc&#13;
Shepherd Boy Wil«on 4t&gt;c&#13;
Warblinus at'Kve Hichards 4J&gt;c&#13;
And 1,000 other sonus and instrumental pieces&#13;
equally as pood at» the above onlv six cents per&#13;
copy, pose free. Send (or a copy of our Musical&#13;
Journal, $l.'A"&gt;per year, sample 'copy twelve eta.&#13;
In seudtnir orders always send cash, post office&#13;
order or postal note, as we ^et so many stamps&#13;
we cannot use them, also in all cases mention&#13;
the paper you saw our advertisement in, so we&#13;
do jnstice'to those papers that furnish us business.&#13;
Address,&#13;
J. H. THOMAS, Publisher,&#13;
Albany, N. Y.&#13;
M u s t GrO!&#13;
^PRICE LIS1&gt;&#13;
-of-&#13;
GROCERIES '1&#13;
-at-&#13;
Sugar, Granulated /&#13;
" Confectioners A ^-."T7c&#13;
" Extra C, Yellow...,.,-&lt;f.'... . 6i&#13;
" Brown.. . . . . . . . ,&lt;7 ..5}&#13;
Coffee, Arbuckles,.,'. 18c&#13;
Dilwjjrth.. 18c&#13;
"VLaughlin's xxxx.. 18c&#13;
Old Government Java and Mo-&#13;
IO mixed . ..BO&#13;
Green Rio • 12£c&#13;
Teas , 15,25,40, 50, 60c&#13;
Pure Spices, per lb 40c&#13;
Bird Seed, "&#13;
Saleratus, "&#13;
Corn Starch, "&#13;
Gloss Starch,. "&#13;
Raisins, " . . . . .&#13;
Rice, " . T . . .&#13;
Prune?, "&#13;
Oat Meal, "&#13;
10 U&#13;
.8c&#13;
,7c&#13;
.8c&#13;
.8c&#13;
o 12c&#13;
8c&#13;
tc&#13;
4c&#13;
Galvanic&#13;
Soap, 3 bars for 25c \ Ivory&#13;
( Magnetic&#13;
Soap1 ,' 4 bars for 25c. \\ AWnt"i w*a"s •h bl ioeanrod^&#13;
Town Talk, 6 bars, 25c&#13;
Lnrd, per lb. k 10c&#13;
Herring, per box,. 20c&#13;
White Fish. 101b kits. . . . . . . . . .$1.00&#13;
Mackerel, 15 lb kits,. $1.25&#13;
Dried Beef, sliced, per lb 18c&#13;
Sugar-cured Hams " l i e&#13;
Mason Fruit Cans, 1 qt., per doz. $1.25&#13;
" " " 2 u " $1.50&#13;
P f - T H I S MONTH&#13;
SWEEPING REDUCTIONS&#13;
In order to Close&#13;
COME EARLY,&#13;
BEFORE THE SIZES ARE BROKEN.&#13;
W. B. HOFF.&#13;
FARMERS, REA0 THIS&#13;
The undersigned having a large stock of .ill kinds of Lumber, Lath and&#13;
Shingles at their lumber v a r d ' i n Pincknev, have • decided to reduce their&#13;
stock and for the 3 S T E X T S I 3 C T ^ 5 T I D U J V S T S will sell&#13;
A.T&#13;
ROCK BOTTOM PRICES.&#13;
Parties about to build will find it to their interest to get our prices. We manufacture&#13;
our own lumber and shingles and will sell according to the times.&#13;
J ^ : E t I C O H C . A - 3 R I &gt; ' S . l ^ a - p ^ - t o P o n h a n ( * a t l l t l ^ock-oi-Jlooring^-Sidiag—And—Barn Boards, also all&#13;
lengths of Bill Stuff and Timbers, and on all bills will give special prices.&#13;
You will find our Agent, A. L. HOYT, always on hand. Come and see us,&#13;
we will satisfy you that we mean business.&#13;
BIBKET*, COWI3X &amp;GO., FmCKSTET.&#13;
YOU WILL ALWAYS FIND&#13;
MARKET PEICE&#13;
-for-&#13;
BUTTER &amp; EGGS&#13;
WANTEDI AGENTS&#13;
TO HELL&#13;
T XJIST IS-0 3^'S&#13;
New and superior subscription Atlases, Maps and&#13;
Charts. As paying as anv agency in the world.&#13;
For catalogue, free, address H. ('. 'TUNIMON.&#13;
Cfiiaaco, 111.; Kew York City, N. Y.; Cincinnati,.&#13;
O.; Atlanta, Ga.; London, Canada; St. Paul&#13;
Minn., or Kansas City, Mo.&#13;
DANIEL F. EWEN,&#13;
GENERAL AGENT, • PINCKNEY, MICH.&#13;
—at th(&#13;
PINCKNEY ELEVATj&#13;
WBE.&#13;
BEAJJSTlrVOOL, ETC.&#13;
or which the highest market price&#13;
~ 'will bo paid.*JB8 — ^ ^&#13;
THOS, READ, - Pinckney,&#13;
BEST GOODS AUD LOW PRICES&#13;
AT WINCUELL'S DRUG STORE.&#13;
(x3$*$*D4&#13;
v&#13;
BOOTS J8c" SHOES&#13;
»CHEAP*&#13;
E. A. MANN, PINCKNEY.&#13;
.?J #-;V v\*i W' !V t*&lt; U :V t - \</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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              <elementText elementTextId="2995">
                <text>Pinckney Dispatch August 06, 1885</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="2996">
                <text>August 06, 1885 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1885-08-06</text>
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                <text>J.L. Newkirk</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>VOL. Ill PINCKNEY, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, AUGUST 13,1885. NO. 31&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH.&#13;
J. L NEWKIRK, PUBU8HER.&#13;
IBBUBD THUB8DAT8.&#13;
Snbncription Price, $1.00 per Year.&#13;
ALL ADVERTISING BILLS DUE QUARTERLY.&#13;
This paper may be found on file at Geo. P.&#13;
RowellA Go's. NewBpaper Advertising Bureau&#13;
(10 8pruce Bt.,) where advertising contracts may&#13;
be nude for it in New York.&#13;
RAILROAD CARD.&#13;
Grand Trunk Railway Time Table.&#13;
MICH. AIR LINE DIVISION.&#13;
GOINQ EAST. | STATIONS. |&#13;
4:50&#13;
4:20&#13;
8:50&#13;
8:40&#13;
2:00&#13;
S:06&#13;
7:20&#13;
6:40&#13;
6:10&#13;
5:40&#13;
5:20&#13;
4:45&#13;
4:25&#13;
)1:40&#13;
8:00&#13;
A. X.&#13;
7:85&#13;
7:20&#13;
7:05&#13;
«:85&#13;
„.6:10&#13;
AU train&#13;
All train&#13;
W. J. SPK&#13;
Supe&#13;
A. M.&#13;
10:20&#13;
9:40&#13;
9:15&#13;
B;55&#13;
8:40&#13;
8:25&#13;
8:10&#13;
7:30&#13;
RlDQEWAY&#13;
Armada&#13;
Romeo&#13;
Rochester&#13;
ar^Hd" Wixom&#13;
d. 1 . l a .&#13;
&gt; So. Lyon-&lt; a. f ..id.&#13;
Hamburg,&#13;
PINCKNEY&#13;
Mount Ferrier&#13;
Stockbridge&#13;
Henrietta,&#13;
JACKSON&#13;
GOING WEST.&#13;
A. X.&#13;
9:35&#13;
10:00&#13;
19:30&#13;
11:80&#13;
P. X.&#13;
12:10&#13;
5:00&#13;
6:05&#13;
6:40&#13;
A. X.&#13;
7-.:¾)&#13;
8:00&#13;
h:40&#13;
M:15&#13;
9::½&#13;
10:05&#13;
10:45&#13;
P. X.&#13;
2:25&#13;
3:00&#13;
• 8:20&#13;
3:40&#13;
3:55&#13;
4:10&#13;
4:25&#13;
5:05&#13;
P. X,&#13;
5:55&#13;
6:15&#13;
«:30&#13;
7:16&#13;
7:30&#13;
8 run by '"central standard'" time.&#13;
s run daily, Sundays excepted.&#13;
2ER, JOSEPH HICKSON,&#13;
rintendent. General Manager.&#13;
* BUSMESS~CARDS.&#13;
T H HO AG, M. •©.,&#13;
(HOMCEOPATHTC.}&#13;
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.&#13;
Office at residence on East Main street.&#13;
T \ M. GREENE, M. D.,&#13;
. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,&#13;
PLAINRELD, MICHIGAN.&#13;
Omce at residence. Special attention given to&#13;
surgery and diseases of the throat and lungs.&#13;
- f A M E S MAHKRY,&#13;
NOTARY PUBLIC&#13;
And Insurance Agent. Legal papers m&#13;
short notice and reasonable term*. L&#13;
Main St., near Postoftice I'inckney, Mich.&#13;
RIMEti &amp; JOHNSON,&#13;
Proprietors of&#13;
PINCKNEY FLOURING AND CUSTOM&#13;
MILLS,&#13;
Dealers in Flour and Feed. Cash paid for all&#13;
Tkinds of grain. Pinckney, Michigan.&#13;
« T P. VAN WINKLE,&#13;
ATTORNEY &amp; COUNSELOR at LAW&#13;
and SOLICITOR in CHANCERYOfflce&#13;
over Sigler'-e Drug Store. PINCKN EY&#13;
D. D, BENNETT.&#13;
POINTER AND PAPER HANGER,&#13;
All work in this line executed with neatness&#13;
*nd dispatch.&#13;
PINCKNEY EXCHANGE BANK&#13;
G. W. TEEPLE,&#13;
-*tBANKER,ir&#13;
Does a General Banking Business.&#13;
Money Loaned on Approyed Notes.&#13;
Deposits received.&#13;
Certificates issued on time deposits,&#13;
And payable on demand.&#13;
COLLECTIONS A SPECIALTY.&#13;
ALL BARGAINS,&#13;
THE&#13;
HIGHEST&#13;
STANDARD&#13;
OF&#13;
EXCELLENCE&#13;
AT&#13;
^POPULAR PRICES!»&#13;
NEW BARBER SHOP !&#13;
I have opened for the present a shop&#13;
in second story of Mann Bros.1 brick&#13;
block where I will beprepared to do&#13;
10 lbs. Granulated&#13;
Sugar, - 70c&#13;
10 pounds Extra C&#13;
White, •/-.. 60c&#13;
Best Browned Coffee,&#13;
- - 14c&#13;
Rio Coffee, - 10c&#13;
Best Japan Tea, 42c&#13;
Choice J^anTTea^Bc&#13;
Excellent " 28c&#13;
Choice Chewing&#13;
Tobacco, - 30c&#13;
Water White Oil, 14c&#13;
BIG BARGAINS&#13;
-INHA1HCUIIIMG,&#13;
MMM*&#13;
CHAMP00ING, Etc.,&#13;
IN THE NEATESI^STf LE.&#13;
Hoping for a share of your patronage,&#13;
I am YOURS TRULY,&#13;
IRA COOK.&#13;
• W A J S T T ^ D 1&#13;
—at the—&#13;
PINCKNEY ELEVATOR&#13;
WHEAT,&#13;
BEANS, m&amp;ClJt&#13;
For whic&gt;^the highest market price&#13;
willJ&gt;e paid.*&#13;
J0S:mp, /Pincknay,&#13;
MEN, TV0MEN AND CHILDREN'S&#13;
SHOES.&#13;
We never fail to please m^pfice or&#13;
quality. Good good^at small&#13;
profit-pfoves it.&#13;
PUBLI8HER»8 NOTiCE.&#13;
I V T Q O M receiving their paper* with a red&#13;
X over this paragraph, will please notice that their&#13;
subscription expiree 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;
HOME NEWS.&#13;
Oat harvest is in full blast.&#13;
Green corn is on the market.&#13;
Have yon excursioned any the past&#13;
week?&#13;
Miss Lizzie Thompson is fast improving.&#13;
J. Winchell has a new walk in front&#13;
ot his store.&#13;
F. G. Hose is able to assist himself&#13;
quite a little.&#13;
Woodcock can now he shot without&#13;
legal interference.&#13;
Chas. Teeple is working tor Thomas&#13;
Read at the elevator.&#13;
Mrs. Gaghie.r and Mrs. Cone, of Detroit,&#13;
are visiting at S. K. Hause's.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. D. T). Bennett and&#13;
son Edgar are visiting at Fowlerville.&#13;
About 50 persons took the train at&#13;
this station Sunday for Whitraore&#13;
Lake.&#13;
Tompkins &amp; Ismon shipped the first&#13;
car-load of new wheat trom Hamburg&#13;
Tuesday.&#13;
Norman Mann, H. O. Barnard and&#13;
John Smith are camping on Silver&#13;
Lake this weef.&#13;
Mrs. F. A. Sigler and daughteTsjdied-April 20th, 1885, aged 22 years&#13;
Ada and Nora returned Monday from&#13;
a visit to Leslie.&#13;
F. L. Brown is the man to buy&#13;
pumps and pump repairs of. Read&#13;
his advertisement.&#13;
Martin and Eldah Kuhn, recently&#13;
DRY GOODS. and Wednesday, Aug. 11 and 12.&#13;
Chas:"F. Brown, formerly ot Wil-&#13;
An Extra Fine Stock to Select from^*™^ has Pu r c h a s e d t b e Sheridan&#13;
News. Mr. Brown is fine young&#13;
added to the^FTnckney base ball club,&#13;
make a strong battery.&#13;
A. Coste and family, of Mason, visited&#13;
their friends here last week. Chas.&#13;
accompanied them home.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Parkhurst, ot&#13;
Mason, are visiting their daughter,&#13;
Mrs. G, R. Ismon, this week.&#13;
The Pinckney base ball club outwinded&#13;
the Pleasant Lake, boys at&#13;
Stockbridge Saturday by a score of 12&#13;
to 10.&#13;
Mrs. E. G. Boughton, of Ypsilanti,&#13;
is the guest of her 'daughter, Mrs. E.&#13;
P. Campbell. She will stay about two&#13;
weeks.&#13;
Mr. G. D. Wood, of Caro, visited his&#13;
friends here last week. Mr. Wood is&#13;
well pleased with Caro and his business&#13;
there.&#13;
T. G. Beebe and John Meyers had a&#13;
dance in the Fowlerville Opera House&#13;
Wednesday. The Cobb band furnished&#13;
the music.&#13;
Bert Bullis got left at Detroit Saturday&#13;
night, but took a later train on the&#13;
D. G. H. &amp; M. and had to remain&#13;
Sunday at Pontiac.&#13;
There will be affiecf'cream social at&#13;
the residence^oTMr. Joseph Brown on&#13;
Thur§da^Aug. 20th, "for the benefit&#13;
ev. H. Marshall.&#13;
Ira Cook has rented the front rooms&#13;
in the second story of the Mann brick&#13;
and it makes him a very nice barber&#13;
shop. Call and see him in his new&#13;
quartern ,_ _&#13;
W. A. Carr and W. C. Pyper repro&#13;
sented Livingston tent, No. 2 8 5 ^ : 0 .&#13;
T. M. at the fifth annualj?efiew of the&#13;
Great Tent at Eas^Saginaw Tuesday&#13;
Mr. E. 0. Humphrey, president of&#13;
the Michigan State Agricultural Society,&#13;
has our thanks tor complimentary&#13;
ticket to the 37th annual fair of&#13;
that society to be held at Kalamazoo&#13;
Sept. 14 to 18 inclusive.&#13;
A traveling medicine vender extracted&#13;
warts and sold considerable of&#13;
his wares on our streets Friday evening.&#13;
He was also accompanied by a&#13;
dentist, who extracted teeth without&#13;
pain (?) and a banio soloist entertained&#13;
the people charmingly.&#13;
Geo. Stockeh and Mr'. Seabolt went&#13;
to Sault of St. Mane, where they have&#13;
been sort 'o rusticating since last Friday.&#13;
George took his overcoat and&#13;
it he brings it back it will be pretty&#13;
fair evidence that he didn't pawn anything.—&#13;
West Branch Herald.&#13;
Eighty-eight persons from this place&#13;
went to Orchard Lake yesterday to&#13;
witness the rowing macch between&#13;
Edward Hanlan and Geo. W. Lee,&#13;
which was won by Hanlan. All report&#13;
a 'good time, but were justly indignant&#13;
at Orchard Lake people tor&#13;
taking off their pump handles and&#13;
compelling all to buy their slop of&#13;
lemonade or lager.&#13;
Mr. P. B. Wines, of Howell, yesterday&#13;
placed a neat and substantial&#13;
memorial stone over the grave ot the&#13;
late Miss Addie McGee in the Sprout&#13;
burying ground, It is of Esperanza&#13;
marble and bears the inscription:&#13;
"To the memory of Addie McGee, who&#13;
way from the depot was utterly devoid&#13;
ot everything in the eating line, sand*&#13;
wiches, pies, cookies, cakes, etc., disappearing&#13;
with a rapidity wWertul&#13;
to behold; and Dave Chalker even had&#13;
to content himself with a ham bone.&#13;
Well, an hour of uncertainty and ex-r&#13;
pentency, filled with doubts and fears,&#13;
finally wore itself away, and then a&#13;
fresh engine (that didn't have a hot&#13;
box) came along and hauled U3 into&#13;
Detroit at two p. M. Most of the&#13;
Pinckney delegation then made quick&#13;
time in getting to Rice's temperance&#13;
hotel, where a good and substancial&#13;
meal was had. About 6:30 the train&#13;
started on the home trip, reaching&#13;
Pontiac at 8, when the eating manoeuvre&#13;
of a few hours previous was&#13;
repeated. Then we were switched off&#13;
out into the country a mile or two and&#13;
left for nearly two mortal h o e s to&#13;
amuse Ourselves as best we could. The&#13;
yonng folks seemed to enjoy it—especially&#13;
those in the unlighted car—&#13;
but some of the older ones did look&#13;
sour enough. We finally sighted&#13;
across a, stump and saw that we were&#13;
moving, and at 12 o'clock we landed&#13;
on familiar soil. As to whether it&#13;
will pay the railroad company to run&#13;
an excursion in this manner remains&#13;
to be seen; but we can say that it received&#13;
many cursings at the hands of&#13;
its patrons on that day, and apparently&#13;
they had a just cause lor grumbling.&#13;
and at&#13;
$T(fSUIT THETIMES&#13;
E. A. MANN.&#13;
ALL BARGAINS&#13;
IS a&#13;
man, and we wish him all kinds of&#13;
good luck in his new field.&#13;
Mrs. D. P. Markey and Mrs. George&#13;
Stocken, of West Branch, were both&#13;
called here last week on account of the&#13;
severe sickness of their sister, Miss&#13;
Lizzie Thompson.&#13;
F . A. Sigler bought a large stock ot&#13;
wall paper at Detroit Saturday, a part&#13;
of which has arrived and t&amp;ft balance&#13;
will be here soon. Look «ct for his&#13;
advertisement wtt week.&#13;
Erected by Tier school-mates and&#13;
friends as a token of their esteem."&#13;
S. G. Teeple and Henry Rolason got&#13;
back to the excursion train at Detroit&#13;
Saturday night just in time to be too&#13;
late. The gate was closed against&#13;
them-and-thb train .pulled out, leaving&#13;
them sad and dejected in the depot.&#13;
They, however, made for the Central&#13;
depot and took the train for Dexter,&#13;
where they secured a livery rig and&#13;
reached home before the excursion&#13;
tram did.&#13;
A young man claiming to be a Salvation&#13;
Armyist came to the village&#13;
Tuesday night and regestered at the&#13;
hotel as "C Smith, South Lvon." The&#13;
next morning he went into E. A.&#13;
Mann's store and purchased a $2.50&#13;
pair of shoes, and after putting them&#13;
on and lookirg in his pod*k^ts said he&#13;
had left his money in his coat pocket&#13;
at the hotel, and that he would go&#13;
and get it and bring it right over.&#13;
He went to the hotel and, picking up&#13;
his things, departed out the back door,&#13;
to he seen no more—he hoped—in&#13;
Pinckney forever, also forgetting t&#13;
settle his hotel bill. His abse&#13;
soon discovered and inquiries&#13;
sent in all directions^&#13;
learned ttjaHfe had been seen at Birkejjvj^&#13;
herp he has a brother working&#13;
and that his true name was Fred.&#13;
Ward. The papers for his arrest were&#13;
soon made out and E. A. Allen and&#13;
Eafl"~Mami started to overhaul him,&#13;
which they did just as he was about&#13;
to board a train at Dexter. He first&#13;
said that he paid the boy in the store&#13;
for the shoes and then finding out that&#13;
Earl was the one he got them of he&#13;
changed it to the boy in the hotel,&#13;
They broughtiiim back, however, and&#13;
he isJnfcustody here now awaiting&#13;
was&#13;
were&#13;
At noon it was&#13;
e arrival of PiosecutingAttorney&#13;
Warren. It isT said^that—Ward has&#13;
been twice in the Reform School.&#13;
We, in company with about 85&#13;
others, who were equally as foolish,&#13;
waited around tht» depot at this place&#13;
Saturday morning about two hours for&#13;
the excursion tiain to come along;&#13;
and where the most foolish part of it&#13;
eomes in is that when an old worn-out&#13;
engine and several emigrant cars finally&#13;
reached here we boarded them, taking&#13;
our chances of ever seeing home&#13;
and friends again. More than that,&#13;
we had prepared ourselves with no rations&#13;
whatever. You may not believe&#13;
it, but we actually reached Pontiac at&#13;
noon, and in less, than two minutes&#13;
after that train came to a stand still&#13;
the ktnch house that stood across the&#13;
FARMERS' BASKET PICNIC.&#13;
The 7th annual picnic of the farmers&#13;
of Washtenaw, Livingston, Oakland&#13;
and Wayne counties will be held at&#13;
Whitmore Lake, Saturday, August 22, •&#13;
1885. The following is the program:&#13;
MC9IC.&#13;
PHATKB Rev. 8. Calkins, Soith Lyon.&#13;
MUSIC.&#13;
ADDRESS or WELCOME,&#13;
— President, Win,. BalLHajnburg.&#13;
ADDRESS,—"The Farmer as a Citizen,&#13;
Prof. SamuelJohnson, Ltnairg.&#13;
ML"SIC .&#13;
EBSAY Mrs. W. H. Randall, Ypsilanti.&#13;
ADDREBS,—"Future of the American farmer," •&#13;
J. W. Wing, Sclo.&#13;
MUSIC.&#13;
i'AFSR,-"Patent Righta,"&#13;
H. D. Piatt, Plttsfleld,&#13;
MCSIC.&#13;
ADDRESS,—"Home Life on the Farm,"&#13;
Mra, Sunderland, Ann Arbor.&#13;
Come and have a good time. E.&#13;
E. Leland, Secretary; Wm. Ball,&#13;
President.&#13;
I&#13;
LOCAL NOTICES.&#13;
Plenty of Engine Coal at Anderson&#13;
Station. Cash tor Apples, Potatoes,&#13;
etc. JAS. T. EAMAN &amp; Co. (31tf^&#13;
LOST.—In the village last-week, &amp;&#13;
gold breast pin with^goidTdollar piece .&#13;
attached. Pleasa-"feturn to Dr. J. H.&#13;
Hoag.&#13;
1¾ Personal Memoirs of IT. S.&#13;
5rant is by common consent of the&#13;
reading public considered the most&#13;
desirable book ever issued by the&#13;
American press. Desirable because,&#13;
(1) it deals with, the most critical&#13;
period of our National existance; (2)&#13;
it is written by one personally family&#13;
iar with, and a chief participant in&#13;
the events of the period; (3) it is the:&#13;
only and final public confession of&#13;
great public character.&#13;
A. E. BROWN,&#13;
Agent for Hamburg and Putnam'&#13;
townships.&#13;
A few elegant Gondola Pattern&#13;
Lounges very cheap at L. H. BeebeV*&#13;
furnituce store.&#13;
WASTED. ^&#13;
Wheat, Beans and Clover Seed, •&#13;
highest prices paid.&#13;
__ Tompkins &amp; Ismon. &lt;»&#13;
CATHCAKT, THE PnoTCKiRAlmER—intendscoTrrrrrprhere&#13;
soon. Ifyouwailfr&#13;
some good pictures taken wait for&#13;
him and he will give you satisfaction*-&#13;
ABEUDLKN Axous GRADES.—The'Po!r&#13;
led Aberdeen bull, "The Don" atther&#13;
Scotch Stock Farm, will serve a limited&#13;
number of cows at not less thai*&#13;
$&gt; per cow, cash. Apply early to&#13;
2&amp;tf. WM'. COLUB, Herdsman.&#13;
All persons owing me on accountJare&#13;
respectfullv notified that tne same*&#13;
must be settled immediately.&#13;
W.B. Honr.&#13;
NOTICE.—All those indebted to the*&#13;
firm of McGumess &amp; Tourney are requested&#13;
to call and settle without delay.&#13;
(30tf.) • J. H, ToumT.&#13;
WrAiT yor. CATHCAKT—The photographer.&#13;
He will be in Pinckney&#13;
soon with his car, and make von p i c -&#13;
tures satisfactory and reasonable.&#13;
.M&#13;
TOCOftSXSFOlTDXtfTB.&#13;
Y'&#13;
%&#13;
%&#13;
•£»&#13;
••••••fry '. •&#13;
i$?-M' '••'&lt;•&#13;
1 AlleMntaDicatloni for this papenhonid be aecora- y u f a l by the name of the author, not aeceaaary tm&#13;
^Mbllcauoiu out M an rvtdence of good faith OQ th«&#13;
Wit of the writer. Write imp/ on one tide of th*&#13;
paaer. Be particularly carelul about flrltie c nuaaa&#13;
MMI date*, {o hare the letter* and tiirurei plain K M&#13;
4atliml rroper names are on«n dIScult to declDfetr&#13;
•Mcsoea of tbe careleM inanaer In welch tk»f if*&#13;
Written.&#13;
ABOUND A GREAT STATE.&#13;
ffew Department a t fee A g r i c u l t u r a l School.&#13;
The Legislature last winter made appropriation!&#13;
for the irection of a mechanical laboratory&#13;
and work-shop for the newly established&#13;
Department of 'Mechanic Arte In the State&#13;
Agricultural College. Tbe contract for t h e&#13;
juilding was let in .June and now the walls are&#13;
well up, and it is expected the building will be&#13;
t aonpleted and ready for use by November.&#13;
• rhere will be two shop-rooms, one for wood&#13;
and the other for metals, a mechanical laboratory,&#13;
a lecture room for classes in mechanics,&#13;
about forty feet square, a room tor drawing&#13;
and draughting and two offices. The shops&#13;
ire to be thoroughly furnished with tools aud&#13;
machinery, Tem]K&gt;rary shops are provided&#13;
for tbe us'e of students until this building is&#13;
.'ompleted and furnished for use. A course of&#13;
study two years in extent, called the apprentice's&#13;
course, has been provided for aud wilt be&#13;
a f f e r . d l t students at the o;&gt;euing of the next&#13;
college year* September 2 prox.&#13;
I t is intended to make this course ^specially&#13;
strong in natural philosophy,draughtiug,geoinstry,&#13;
book-keeping aud business forms aud&#13;
law. There will be one term of elementary&#13;
uhemlstrv, and careful attention will be paid&#13;
to English composition, while at least ten&#13;
hours per week, for two years, will be devoted&#13;
to a graded series of exercises :'n shop-practice&#13;
under the direction of skilied workmen. 1 Tuition is free. The necessary expenses of&#13;
a student per year, exclusive of travel and&#13;
clothing, will not exceed $125 to $ia&amp;—Bey*&#13;
¢16 years of age with a good common school&#13;
education eah enter. Those who have certificates&#13;
from the public schools are received&#13;
without examination. By addressing any of&#13;
ihe officers or professors at the agricultural&#13;
college all necessary Information can be obtained.&#13;
murder of Harvey Keith of Bloomfngdale,&#13;
Van Buren county", have b u m arrested. Great&#13;
excitement exists In Bloonilugdale and&#13;
vicinity,&#13;
MINOR STATE HAPPENINGS.&#13;
P 1&#13;
" a&#13;
The Detroit annual conference meets l n P o u -&#13;
Sept. 10-1;&#13;
DUST TO DUST.&#13;
The Last Sad Honors Paid&#13;
Our Heroic Dead.&#13;
to&#13;
Ground to Death,&#13;
. Sydney C. Root, a freight conductor on the&#13;
Michigan Central road, met his death near the&#13;
Springwells station a few nights ago. He h a d&#13;
just returned from Jackson,' and left his train,&#13;
settled his business at the office and jumped&#13;
on a yard train destined for the ferry ship which&#13;
leaves the junction and on which he intended&#13;
to ride to Eighteenth street, Detroit,&#13;
where he resideu. He jumped on after t h e&#13;
train had got under motion and was m a k i n g '&#13;
bis way to the rear in order to j u m p off when&#13;
the train reached Eighteenth street. The&#13;
train had gone but a short distance when Ed.&#13;
Chapman, the rear brakeman, «aw a lantern&#13;
fall. As sooiLjas possible he stopped the train&#13;
and with o t n t r s went back to investigate.&#13;
First the lantern, then a hat, and a few feet&#13;
further on a mangled body were found. Portions&#13;
of the body were found Btrewn along&#13;
the track for some distance. Coroner&#13;
Keefe, a Jury. -" and Undertaker Geist&#13;
•were taken to^tbe scene on a special car. T h e&#13;
remains had-been gathered up and taken into&#13;
the station^ They were found in a terribly&#13;
mutUated condition. The head had been entirely&#13;
severed from t h e body and ground&#13;
-to a pulp, both arms were torn out of the&#13;
sockets and one was cut into three pieces. The&#13;
right foot was cut off at the ankle. The chest&#13;
was literally crushed aud the larnvx and&#13;
bronchi were entirely drawn out of the "body.&#13;
T h e unfortunate man was about 35 years of ^ ^ • nhvdc&#13;
age. He was of large and powerful physique, &gt;-*^ A 1 • 1.&#13;
weighed 330 pounds, had been in the employed!&#13;
the company for several years and •tyas^a g e n&#13;
eral favorite.&#13;
Michigan dairy men will meet in convention&#13;
in Kalamazoo early in December.&#13;
Burglars relieve 1 Rob't King of Kalamazoo&#13;
of $300 worth of jewelry a lew nights ago.&#13;
A state baud t o u r n a m e n t will be held a t&#13;
Flint commencing S e p t e m b e r s ami continuing&#13;
two days.&#13;
The I). F. Comstoek lutnl&gt;cr company 118¾&#13;
been organized iu Big Rapids with a capital&#13;
stock ot $:U),00J.&#13;
Favetle .lonhson has1 been appointed tioatmaster&#13;
at L-udiugton, M cli., vice 11. F. Alexander,&#13;
not commissi med.&#13;
Chester McDonald,who is charged with pass&#13;
ing a fonred order for $20 at Shelbyville hafi"&#13;
I »;en captured and jailed at Allegan."&#13;
Mrs. Fannie J e n n i n g s sues the city of Kala"&#13;
ma/oo for £:20,000 d a m a g e s sustained by falliug&#13;
on one of the city's defective sidewalks.&#13;
A conflict between strikers and policemen&#13;
occurred in East Saginaw on the titu inst.,&#13;
iu which a number oi ihe former were seriously&#13;
injured.&#13;
Hon. Henry G. Reynolds of Old Mission,&#13;
Traverse county, has been chosen secretary of&#13;
the state board "of agriculture, vice A. G. Beard&#13;
deceased.&#13;
| The annual encampment of soldiers and&#13;
sailors of Central Micnlgan was held at Greenville&#13;
on the bth uud 7th inst. The next encampment&#13;
will be held in Owosso.&#13;
For ten years past Allegan's death rate has&#13;
been rive and one-half to seven per 1,CO) inhabitants,&#13;
as certified to bv Drs. F. M. Calkins,&#13;
W. H. Bills, E. Amsdeu and H. F. Thoas.&#13;
The reunion of the agricultural college&#13;
alumni occurs Thursday, August 20. A l a w&#13;
number are expected to be present. Reduced&#13;
rates may be obtained through the alumni&#13;
secretary.&#13;
While \V. P.Hess of Springport, was unload&#13;
ins hay an accidcut to tne harness caused I h e&#13;
whiffie'tree to fiy back suddenly, striking him&#13;
on the abdomen. He died from the etfects of&#13;
the blow.&#13;
/Thomas Kenuedv's 15-year-old deaf mute&#13;
daughter, at Mt. Morris, was walking ou ' t h e&#13;
railroad track when a special train 'approach&#13;
THE FUNERAL PAGEANT UNPRECEDENTED.&#13;
Detailed' Account of tha Ceremonies.&#13;
.y&#13;
H u r r a h tor&#13;
F o r the&#13;
of state&#13;
Michi gan!&#13;
LaDsing&#13;
Aiigutff crop- report the secretary&#13;
reived returns from 1,0£&gt; cor-&#13;
, representing 741 townships. The&#13;
harvest time was very favorable.&#13;
"total rainfaL during July&#13;
amounted to only two inches. The latter part&#13;
of the month the drought began to be quite&#13;
severe, but since August 1 rain has fallen&#13;
copiously. Wheat and hay have been secured&#13;
In good condition and are of superior quality.&#13;
Estimates of wheat made August 1, after&#13;
threshing had commenced in many parts of&#13;
the state, show an average per acre in the&#13;
southern four tiers of counties of 18,¼ bushels,&#13;
which is nearly a bushel above the July estimate.&#13;
The Aiujust estimate for the northern&#13;
counties is onc-ciuarter of a bushel below tbe&#13;
July estimate. These figures fndii ate a total&#13;
yield in the southern counties of ^2/.25,114&#13;
bushels, and in the state;-of 2(5.407,000 bushels.&#13;
This exceeds the July estimate by 1.033,318&#13;
bushels. The amount of wheat in farmers'&#13;
h a n d s was reduced about 2 per cent, iu July.&#13;
Corn promises in the southern four tiers of&#13;
counties &amp;S per cent, and in counties noith of&#13;
the southern four tiers, 02 per cent, the comparison&#13;
being with the vitality and growth of&#13;
average years.&#13;
Oat's are estimated to yield about 31 bushels,&#13;
and barley 25 bushels per acre&#13;
The yield of has per acre was perhaps a trifle&#13;
Jess iu quantity t h i n in 1884.&#13;
Clover sown this year is badly injured by&#13;
t h e drought.&#13;
Potatoes promise about nine-tenths of an&#13;
average crop on an acreage not quite equal .to&#13;
t h e average.&#13;
Apples promise about one-half an average&#13;
crop.&#13;
. m&#13;
A g r i c u l t u r a l College.&#13;
T h e following program-will be observe during&#13;
the week of the annual commencement exercises&#13;
of the Michigan agricultural college at&#13;
L;&gt;ming.&#13;
Sunday, Aug. 16—Baccalaureate sermon, 3&#13;
p . m.&#13;
Monday, Aug. 17—Society banquet, 8 p. m.&#13;
Tuesday, Aug. IS—Md'tary exercises, 0 p.&#13;
m . : class day exercises, 8 p. m.&#13;
Wednesday, Aug. 1U—Commencement exer-&#13;
&lt;is?8, 10 a.'m.; President Willits' inaugural&#13;
address, 3 p. m.; president's reception, s'to 10&#13;
p. m.&#13;
Thursday, Aug. 20—Alunvii day—Literar/&#13;
exercis'-s, 10:30 a. m . ; business meeting, 3 p.&#13;
m . ; banquet, 8 p. m.&#13;
m&#13;
Somewhat S1U7.&#13;
T h e salt inspection in the state&#13;
T n o n t h o f J u l y was~os forrows:&#13;
during the&#13;
- — - — - .- BarreV.&#13;
Saginaw County . . . .114,:13&#13;
Bay County * . . . 76,,si&#13;
H u r o n County 43,irie&gt;&#13;
Iosco County 33.!-ti4&#13;
Midland County r&gt;,7'. 9&#13;
Manistee County 4 t,4S7&#13;
fit Clair County. lo,2 0&#13;
*••• * fr*&#13;
' &lt; " * *&#13;
Tot»l i 325,317&#13;
T h e total inspection for the year up to d a t e&#13;
Is 1,82.&gt;.'&lt;&amp;» Larr&lt;*.s; ior the c^rrcspouding&#13;
j&gt;eriod of 1884, l,'i3 -.015 oarrels.&#13;
A H e a l oi Ke t o r t&#13;
During the week ending Aug. 1, diphtheria&#13;
was reported a t Detroit, Fl nt, itblca, Jackson,&#13;
Kalamazoo, Mackinaw, Muskegon, North Star&#13;
township, Mt. Clemen*, Morley, Oxford, Rubinaon&#13;
township, Hose Lake "township, Ea*t&#13;
T a w a s and H a r t ; scarlet fever at Charlevok,&#13;
Dundee, Detroit, Ithaca. Monroe, New Baltimore,&#13;
Sherwood township, Owos*o, Richmon I,&#13;
South Haven, Bay City and Romeo; measles&#13;
n t Houghton and Ka'amazoo, and typhoid&#13;
fevtr a t Humboldt, Houghton township, Jackton,&#13;
L'Anse township, Monroe, Reading, H a r t&#13;
a n d Ion &amp;.&#13;
Snsptcte Arrested.&#13;
H a r s h Barker and wife, suspected of the&#13;
_ . . *~--* *&#13;
ing from the north ruu tier down, kilnug her&#13;
instantly.&#13;
Isaac Bois?, a Frenchtown, Monroe county,&#13;
farmer, was standing In front of his house during&#13;
a heavy storm when he was struck by lightning&#13;
and iustautly killed. Mr. Boise leaves a&#13;
large family.&#13;
The coroner's jury iu the case of Ida Kennedy,&#13;
the deaf mute killed at Mt. Morris&#13;
lias rendered a ' v e r d i c t of accidental&#13;
death, exonerating the F. vt P. M. railroad&#13;
lomnany from, ull blame.&#13;
The committee in charge has decided to&#13;
abandon the state encampment of knights&#13;
templar at Grand Rapids this year, the sentiment&#13;
of knights throughout ti e s t a t j being&#13;
against the encampment.&#13;
The Ionia county court hou^e is nearly com-,&#13;
pleted and is oue'of the handsomest "in.,the&#13;
state. The building is of Ionia s a n d s t m e&#13;
and the work has been done in^.A^fhoro.ighly&#13;
lUbstautial inauuer. Tbe co.urt house cost $50,-&#13;
000. ---"&#13;
The case of ^Irs".'Esther Anderson of Gladwin,&#13;
chargettwitii the murder of her infant,&#13;
has huettpostponed until Aug. 17, Mrs. ftnderil&#13;
condition lieiug such as to prevent&#13;
her atteudauce at the preliminary exami-&#13;
• nation.&#13;
I The soldier-' home sfte committee met in&#13;
j Gov. AlgL-r's-Hiliee-lH-IVtroit, /Vug, 5, a44vh4c-h&#13;
I Col. Osi orn wa- prc.-o:it for the iirst time. It&#13;
was decided tnat tie go over ttie ground visited&#13;
\ by the comm'ttee aud he rcidy to consider the&#13;
j sftes with the u at the next meeting, August 17 1 at y a. in. iu Detroit.&#13;
The second annual reunion of Michigan Battalion&#13;
Regiment, Merritt's Horse, will be held&#13;
at Battle Creek, Sept. 1 and 2, Measures have&#13;
been taken to secure the attendance of Col.&#13;
Lewis Meiritt and to obtain the old regimental&#13;
co'or-t. J. ('. Lewis, secretary, West Leroy,&#13;
Mich., will furnish information.*&#13;
J. B. Russell, a young man 24 years old, was&#13;
seriously if not fatally injured in Towle's Mill,&#13;
one mile north of Sheridan, by a piece of board&#13;
Hying hack over the equalizers, connected with&#13;
the lath mill. The board struck him on the&#13;
left sid*&gt; below the stomach, tearing a hole&#13;
six inches long In his side, and when he was&#13;
picked up and taken to the. house his intestities&#13;
were protruding and found to be torn and&#13;
mangled in such a maniier that the physicians&#13;
have"doubts of his recovery.&#13;
DETROIT MA&amp;KET3.&#13;
Wheat—No. 1 white $&#13;
W h e a t ^ N o . 2 red&#13;
Four, roller process&#13;
Flour, stone process.&#13;
Corn Tic...&#13;
Oats&#13;
Barley 1&#13;
•Rve per-100 4&#13;
B h u i . . . ....It&#13;
Clover Seed ^ bu 5&#13;
Timothy Seed 1&#13;
Apples 'per bbl 2&#13;
B u t t e r ^ lb 11&#13;
Cheese&#13;
Eggs&#13;
Cii.ekens&#13;
T u r k e y s . . . . ' .&#13;
Potatoes, new, per b b l . . . . .&#13;
Turnips&#13;
Onions $ b u&#13;
Honey&#13;
Beans, picked.&#13;
Beans, unpicked&#13;
Hay&#13;
Straw&#13;
Pork,dressed ^ 100&#13;
Pork, mess new&#13;
Pork, family&#13;
Hams r- ,&#13;
Shoulders&#13;
L a r d . 7&#13;
Dried Beef 12&#13;
Tallow 5&#13;
Beeswax 30&#13;
Beef extra mes9 .10 25&#13;
Wood, Buech and Maple 5 75&#13;
Wood M a p l e . . . 6 25&#13;
Wood Hickory ^, u . . , , 6 75&#13;
Since that memorable d a j In July when t h e&#13;
ppint of the brave'old warrior took Its tlight to&#13;
'•the land t h a t lieth beyond," until thu* hour&#13;
when the remains were" committed to mother&#13;
earth, the whole nation has shown its reverence&#13;
lor the memory of the heroic dead, aud testified&#13;
to the sorrow which wt'iied up 111 every&#13;
heart. / F r o m the shores of oid Atlantic to the&#13;
GoliUm Gate, irom the nurth to the south, the&#13;
A»4ia1uiiim*iits of woe," have told all too&#13;
plainly of the anguish that was reuding the&#13;
great heart of the .nation.&#13;
From the time that thereinaias of him we&#13;
loved s» well were borne from the m o u n t a i n&#13;
,'ottage until the eotlin da was d o s e d forever&#13;
upon the lace o! one whom the Wuvlii /oVedand&#13;
honored iu life, and s.nce his c/e^rh have&#13;
:i]HitluH)si/.ed, sixty imllioiisof jico-.ie/i.i ve been&#13;
.•ugi.g'd iu nneg.'iind luinnon/oVs etjiogy of&#13;
the laden chicuain. I'sehs-* t" /i';&gt;e-"itYhese&#13;
iMi;ogi.'s now. All that could In- su/.j frus been&#13;
-aid Ij millions of those will i;civ/- (.ease to&#13;
hiiU r the ••J.VCKHI man gone. ' AJi th«t could&#13;
lie done t o ' show to the world how sincerely&#13;
.vein niru t h e loss of our iliustr-oiu dead, h a s&#13;
been done.&#13;
Not in a spirit of sorrow do we look up tills&#13;
event. We nave given to history a derm-god,&#13;
and our hearts are fu.l oi a holy pr.de that&#13;
such a son was l&gt;oni t o , " t h e nation,&#13;
and a thankfulness that having fulfilled&#13;
his day he bus goue to receive the reward of&#13;
Him who said'"Well done good and faithful&#13;
servant, e n t e r rliou luto the joy of thy Lord."&#13;
The remains lay in state iu *N'ew York from&#13;
the time of their arrival from Albany on Thursday&#13;
ihe 0th inst. until 1:20 o'eli&gt;ek on the&#13;
morning of theSth inst., and the count of the&#13;
guards shows that 257,000 people viewed the&#13;
face while t h e body lay in state iu the citv hall&#13;
iu New York. At" y :-i7 a. lu. the remaius of&#13;
MLI 00&#13;
@ 6 00&#13;
(§11 26&#13;
(#13 OK&#13;
&lt;&amp; 10 \&#13;
@ 7&#13;
| 7½&#13;
(¾ 13&#13;
@ 35&#13;
@10 50&#13;
@ 6 00&#13;
(¾ 6 50&#13;
@ 700&#13;
LIVE STOCK.&#13;
CATTLE—Market slow and barery-^stcadrr&#13;
shmp.tig _stserft. IAi:0((iJ5 00; stockers and&#13;
feeders$3^ 1 20; cows, bu Is and mixed. £1 75&#13;
(cc-i 25; tnrough Texas cattle slow, shade lower&#13;
at ¢-2 75^.4 3¾.&#13;
HJOS—Market weak and 10«:30c lower;&#13;
rough and mixed, £4 1 5 ^ 4 30; packing nnd&#13;
shipping, ¢4 : 0 ^ 4 75; l i g h t w e i g h t s , ¢4 6J(^&#13;
5 35; skips, f3 «4 20.&#13;
SIIKEP—Market ' s l o w : natives, $2^2)4 20;&#13;
Tcxans, $1 75(^3 7 5 ; lambs, per head, 1 1 ^ 3 50.&#13;
WOOIrt&#13;
Eastern advises say: Wool firm with a good&#13;
demand; Ohio and Pennsylvania fleeces, 30(¾&#13;
32c for X and XX, 8*g8Sc for XX and above;&#13;
Michigan X fleeces, 38(t£29c; fine Ohio delaine&#13;
and No 1 combing, 3 3 ^ 3 5 c ; Michigan delaine,&#13;
30@31c; pulled wools, 25@32c for good to&#13;
choice supers.&#13;
Chill gives a bounty&#13;
condors.&#13;
Beer isbbcomlng the&#13;
Paris.&#13;
Cornell&#13;
ground.&#13;
They build&#13;
Dahomey.&#13;
There only&#13;
California..&#13;
university&#13;
templesof&#13;
$5 a nead for dead&#13;
fashionable drink In&#13;
owns 240. acres of&#13;
of h u m a n skulls in&#13;
about 7,000 colored people l a&#13;
(.Jen. Grant were taken from the vestibule of&#13;
the city hall and placed on the funeral car&#13;
which immediately took its place in the funeral&#13;
cortege.&#13;
The temporary tomb at Riverside: park was&#13;
completed t h e " night be;oiv, and the steel&#13;
casket placed lu position within it to receive&#13;
the cohiu. T h e park, which was rouga and unsightly&#13;
a week before, has undergone a great&#13;
change. Hills have been leveled, roads perfected&#13;
and unfruitful soil neatly sodded. The&#13;
place is now one that befits the purpose to&#13;
which it is to be applied.&#13;
The closing day of the funeral services&#13;
dawned with a clear sky, a bright sun and a&#13;
cooling breeze. A more beautiful day for t h e&#13;
solemu services which was soon to mark t h e&#13;
commitment to the tomb of all that is mortal&#13;
of him whom the nation m mrh's could not be,,&#13;
wished for. From the tiring of the sunrise gun,&#13;
the boom of t h e minute gun tire at stated inter-&#13;
! vals by both the military and uavai detail se-&#13;
; le.'ted"to-pay tribute to the nation's dead, was&#13;
I heard proclaiming to the people t h a t the last&#13;
4 &lt; a d rites were under way. TlK' church bells&#13;
i began tolling, ringing in mournful cadence,&#13;
j aud their pealing adued to the general feeling&#13;
i of sorrow a n d gloom everywhere displayed.&#13;
•! Not in the history of thi; tmUropolis or of" the&#13;
nation has there been such universal mourning&#13;
as on this occasion, nor has there been exhibited&#13;
such widespread sympathy for the family&#13;
of which the nation's "hero was the late head.&#13;
Immediately after the close of the gates&#13;
leading to t h e vestibule of the citv half, the&#13;
plaza was cleared, and in a tew minutes the&#13;
p dice were iu full possession, guarding every&#13;
approach and allowing no one but the privfhax^&#13;
tx) cbiTuT within a stone's ThToTv of the&#13;
building in which the nation's dead lay.&#13;
The undertaker at once took charge, a n d&#13;
a f t u the police, guards and reporters had&#13;
taken a last look, the face of the dead was&#13;
--^os.'d irom view unless there shall In the future-&#13;
vcome a request to reriuve the lid, and&#13;
the dead was left 111 cure of the&#13;
guards uutil the dawn of the&#13;
last day for the dead upon earth before the&#13;
tomb should be opened to sheittr him.&#13;
At six o'clock thedillerenf commanderiesand&#13;
orders began to arrive. Mutlied drums aud&#13;
Jirgeful trumpets told 01' their arrival. At&#13;
last came the original guard of honr&gt;r ih^t. \y;1j&#13;
,-)11 duty at Mt. 'McGregor, and which alotie^&#13;
were to lift the lemains. Filing *inti) the corridors&#13;
of the citv hull, these took' their places&#13;
beside the remains and rested there, under&#13;
command of John II. Johnson, senior vice comaiauder&#13;
of Grant post, Brooklyn.&#13;
At 0:50 t h e i m j o s ' n g funeral car, drawn by&#13;
•4 jet black bosses in I lack trappings, baited&#13;
Dn the plaza directly in f i o n t o l t h e city hall&#13;
•teps. Inside the corridor Commander Johnion&#13;
was waiting. "Columns in position, right&#13;
ind left," was his command. • The veteran&#13;
ruard of honor was erect.&#13;
'•Lift the.remains," was the "next command,&#13;
.n clear but low lone*. The 12 n u n stooped&#13;
:o the silwr rails with gloved hands. •'March,"&#13;
.vas the word. The ho ly moved. Out upon&#13;
the porfco were bom.; the remains, Commandsr&#13;
Johnson immediately at the hea 1. Down the&#13;
steps with measured 'tread, across the open&#13;
spac'i to the steps of the black and waiting&#13;
funeral car. The steps were drawn away from&#13;
the funeral car. Commander Johnson took his&#13;
place in the centre ami immediately behind the&#13;
funeral car. At h's left and right on either&#13;
rear corner of the car were comrades Downing&#13;
and Ormsllc of Wheeler post, Saratoga. Next&#13;
and directly behind these were representatives&#13;
of the 1 &gt;yal legion, as follows: Gen. J. J.&#13;
Milhau, G. G. Carleton, Paymaster G-. D. Barton,&#13;
Lieut.-Col. Flovd Clarkson, Lieut.-Col. A.&#13;
M. Clark a n d Capt.'E. Blunt. The clergy and&#13;
physicians had paid respect to the remains by&#13;
alighting from their carr.age* and accompanying&#13;
them from the steps to the hearse. They then&#13;
entered carriages on either side of the" plaza&#13;
near Broadway, as follows: Rev. Dr. Newman,&#13;
Bishop Harris, Bishop Potter. Rev. Dr.&#13;
Chambers, Rev. Dr. F eld, Rev. Dr. Bridgeman,&#13;
Rev. Dr. West, R ' v . Father Deshbn,&#13;
Robt. Collyer, Rabbi Browne and Drs. Douglas,&#13;
Shrady a n d Sands.&#13;
Col. Beck, in comm&#13;
manded his companies to take positions,,jCeT&#13;
on the right and Co. E on the left"of the&#13;
hearse... _ _ ,-:^1 . : _&#13;
Colored m e n were at the brid'.es of t h e 24&#13;
black horses. Sixteen ~moir of Meade"'posf1"&#13;
Philadelphia, of which Gen, Grant was a memter,&#13;
Tvere abreast tmmedtaT#!v~ In front of the&#13;
team of black leaders, and the David's Island&#13;
band preceded them. A signal was&#13;
given and t h e line of coaches With clergy&#13;
moved off t h e plaza on to Broadway. The&#13;
band stood waiting at the hvad of the funeral&#13;
cortege. Col. Beck advanced to the head of&#13;
the line of black horses before the coach.&#13;
"Move o n " were his words of command with&#13;
uplifted sword. The leaders stepped forward&#13;
led by the colored men and in an instant the&#13;
black line of horses had straightened their&#13;
traces and the wheels beneath the remains&#13;
were moving. The hour was 9.47. The band&#13;
played a dirge, aud Geu. Grant's last journey&#13;
was begun.&#13;
The members of the Grant family, with t h e&#13;
exception of Mrs. Grant, decided to await the&#13;
arrival of t h e funeral procession a t the Fifth&#13;
Avenue hotel, where they were staying. A t&#13;
precisely 10 o'clock carriages dfove up to the&#13;
entrance a n d the members of the family took&#13;
seats in t h e m as follows: Col. Grant, accompanied&#13;
by Mrs. Sartorls a n d Mrs. Fred. Grant,&#13;
took seats i n the first carriage; the second&#13;
carriage was occupied by Mr. and Mrs. U. 8.&#13;
3 r a n t a n d £enor Romero; Jesse G r a n t and wife&#13;
tatered tbe third i 4 n - t h e - t e a r t h were Mf.-aad-&#13;
Mrs. Cramer. The next carriage carried Gen.&#13;
Dreswell a n d wife, and was followed by P o t t e r&#13;
Palmer and Mr. Honore. I n another a n d last&#13;
• • carriage were Mrs. Morton and Mr. Drexgl&#13;
At 10:30 a. in. President Cleveland appeared&#13;
at tbe entrance of the hotel aud immediately&#13;
entered his carriage. He was accompanied l&gt;y&#13;
Secretary Bttvard. Followiug the carriage of&#13;
Presldeut Cleveland aud those of the Grant&#13;
family were: carriages containing Vice President&#13;
Hendricks and the delegation of the&#13;
I'tiited States senate and house of representatives.&#13;
The carriages formed in Twenty-third&#13;
street three abreast, on a Hue extending toward&#13;
S i \ t h avenue, awaiting the arrival of the catafalque.&#13;
At precisely 11:05 Gen. Hancock reached the&#13;
headof the column, which was then at 23rd&#13;
street and Broadway. On arriviugat thei head&#13;
of the column the general issued the order to&#13;
inarch, and the mournful corteg • began to&#13;
move, wending Its way slowly up Broadway to&#13;
the solumn music of the bands, eu r o u t e to&#13;
Riverside park. Following wm&#13;
TUB OHDEK OK TUB lUtOCKSSIOX.&#13;
F&lt;rxt Dim'ttioti.&#13;
Major General Wlulield s'eott Hancock, staff&#13;
and a'des.&#13;
Light battery F, r t h I nit 'd Stat-s artillery,&#13;
Capt. Wallace F. Randolph.&#13;
Battalion of engineers and I and, Lieut. Col.&#13;
II. L. Abboit, C. S, engineers,&#13;
commanding.&#13;
A 1 attallon of four ba'tcri.-s of the Sib C. 8.&#13;
artlller.-, uml'T &lt;.oiiuu'ind of Maj. A. C&#13;
Wildrick, viz: Batt-rv 1, 5 t h V . S.&#13;
artillery; bstt -ry L," 5th L. S.&#13;
ur-tillerv; battery M, 5th U.&#13;
S. artillery; 1'atterv 11,&#13;
5th U. &amp; artillery.&#13;
Bandof the 5th I'. S. artilk-rv," from Ft. Hamilton.&#13;
""&#13;
Battalion, forming guard of honor, under&#13;
command of'Capt. Wm. A. Beck.&#13;
Co. E, 12rh I'.JS. infantry, d i p t . Brown.&#13;
David's Isl.md "baud.&#13;
Naval brigade.&#13;
First division N. (i. S. N'.'V., Maj.-Get*. Shaler&#13;
commanding.&#13;
Old Guard, of New York city, Maj. Geo. W.&#13;
McLean.&#13;
Governor's foot guards, of Hartford, Conn.,&#13;
Maj. J. C.-Kinney.&#13;
Veteran association, 15.5th N. Y. volunteers,&#13;
Col. H. D. Hall.&#13;
Veteran Zouave association, Capt. I. F.&#13;
Shcehan.&#13;
Thirteenth regiment N. Y. volunteer veterans,&#13;
Capt. Chamberlain.&#13;
Fifth regiment New York volunteer zouaves,&#13;
Capt. Finlev.&#13;
Second company Washington Centennial&#13;
guard, Capt. Norn an.&#13;
Columbo guards, Capt. Cavagnaro.&#13;
Italian rifle guard, Capt. Sohnabello.&#13;
Gaiihaldi legion, Capt. Spazarv.&#13;
Columbia guards, Capt. Kelly".&#13;
Veteran Guards (colored) three companies,&#13;
Capt. H. B. Williams.&#13;
iJtco7td Division.&#13;
N. 0 . S. New York, Maj. Gen. E L . Melineaux.&#13;
First regiment National Guard of Peunsylva-.&#13;
nia, Col. WiLlersheiui.&#13;
Gray Invineibles. Cap'. Kmriard.&#13;
Gate City "Guard of Atlanta, Ga./Lieut. Camp.&#13;
Second regiment Connecticut National Guard,&#13;
Col. Li Uveuworth.&#13;
First reginiLU1; Mussavhus.'tts volunteer mili-&#13;
• tia, Col. Wellington.&#13;
Four companies Virginia s'-uie troops, Lieut.&#13;
Col. Spotwood.&#13;
First Co. Union veteran corps District of&#13;
* Columbia; Cn'pt. Ireil.&#13;
Union veteran iorps. District of Columbia.&#13;
Capt. Thomason.&#13;
Capitol City Guards. Wishing,on, D. C , Capt.&#13;
Kelly. ^&#13;
Co. I), First Minnesota" guard, Capt. Bean.&#13;
First Division New Jersey National guard, 1&#13;
Maj.-(Jen. W. Plume and staff.&#13;
The cat ifaique.&#13;
Guard of honor from l/. S. Grant and Wheeler&#13;
p ists.&#13;
I'ali-beaiers.&#13;
EamiLvAnd ndrit.ivcs of GPTI. Grant,&#13;
Clergy.&#13;
Physicians.&#13;
Ex-cabinet olll-ers.&#13;
Gen. Giant's.o'd staff.&#13;
Messrs. A. J. ::nd (J. W. DrtyyjJ.&#13;
The president of the United States.&#13;
The vice president.&#13;
Members of thr cab.net.&#13;
Members of ttie supreme court.&#13;
United States Senate.&#13;
Senators aud members 0 f the House o( Representatives.&#13;
The governor of New York and staff.&#13;
Ex-presidents.&#13;
Fore'gn ministers.&#13;
Is- .--•' ma&#13;
aand of the regulars, corr&gt;- ''Military order of the&#13;
is positlonsJCo; A United&#13;
Diplomatic and consular officers under Gen.&#13;
Giant.&#13;
Governors of states according to date of ratineatiou&#13;
of the con.stitut on and date&#13;
of entiy into the Union,&#13;
Heads of bureaus of the war department.&#13;
Gen. S h e r i d a n s stall.&#13;
Gen. Schotield and staff.&#13;
Admiral Jouett. U. S. navy.&#13;
Commander Ch:iud\:r.&#13;
President of the soldiers' homo.&#13;
U.S. district altorue.-.i'.nd col h e toe.&#13;
Naval ©ttieer, Assistant, T m - s urn-, Board&#13;
of Indian Commissioners.&#13;
Mayors 0^ cities according to population,,&#13;
with committees of common&#13;
councils of Ncv York, Brooklyn,&#13;
Boston, St. Louis, Jers.'v Citv,&#13;
NcSvJiaven, Hart ford, l'.liza-"&#13;
betb, Hudson, Hoboken,&#13;
etc.&#13;
The committee of One Hundred.&#13;
Second division of veteran organizations,&#13;
Gen. Daniel E. Sickles, commander;&#13;
Aids—Maj.-Gen. Dan;el Butterfield, chief of&#13;
staff and senior Aide-de-camp; Brig.-Gen.&#13;
H. E. Tremain, Brig.'-Gen. O'Berne,&#13;
Brig.-Gen. J. S. Frnzer, Brig. -Gen.&#13;
S. R. Sehwenk, U. S. Army;&#13;
Brig.-Gen. Frank Splnola, Col. Thos. Raffertv,&#13;
Col. Joel Wilson, Col. H. L. Potter. Lieut.-"&#13;
Col. A. trOrville. Lieut.-Col. H. C.&#13;
Perley, Maj. J . J. Ci mstock, Brevet&#13;
C a p t E. Browne, Capt. M.&#13;
Stewart, Capt. J. M. semier,&#13;
Lieut. J. A. II. Nickels,&#13;
LV.S. S a v y ; -&#13;
Private J o h n Tregaskls; es.ort detailed from&#13;
Maj.&#13;
the Third tinny corps veterans.&#13;
Gen. J. C. Robinson, C. S. army, 'and tbe&#13;
the&#13;
retired officers of the U. S. army,&#13;
navy and marine corps.&#13;
loval icglon of&#13;
States.&#13;
Society of the army of the Potomac.&#13;
— Society of the army of the .Tenni'sspc&#13;
Society of the army of the Cumberland&#13;
-Grand army- -of-the Rrpttblir,rtJo&#13;
Burdett, commander in thief.&#13;
Escort staff—Seklon Con nor, of M aine, -s enlor&#13;
vice commander; Roth Stewart or'Ohio,&#13;
chaplain; J o h n Cameron of Washington,&#13;
adjutant general; J o h n&#13;
Taylor of Pennsylvania,&#13;
quartermaster general;&#13;
Fred Brackett of&#13;
Washington, assistant&#13;
adju- - /&#13;
tant gen- ,&#13;
cral.&#13;
Pennsylvania—Geo. G. Meade post No&#13;
gates from Ford post No. 335,&#13;
William Downing post No. 435. /&#13;
New York city posts in four large, divisions.&#13;
New T«rk state posts, outside 01 New ; r o r k&#13;
C W. Cowlen, commanding nine Brooklyn&#13;
posts.&#13;
O'Ronrke post Kb. 1, Rocnt*ter.&#13;
L. 0 . Morris post ' M , Albany.&#13;
Lawrence post'378. Port t e s t e r .&#13;
Richmond post 524, Mariner's harbor.&#13;
Hamilton post 20, Poughkeepsle.&#13;
Howland post 48rFIshkllf.&#13;
Rlngold post 288,/Long Island.&#13;
H u n t s m a n poaTM, Flushing.&#13;
Wirth post 4 « ; College Point.&#13;
D., B. M o t 0 o s t 527 Freeport.&#13;
B. J . Q l e c y s post tft), Newton.&#13;
B a l d ^ n y b o s t ^ C M f i i n p s t a a i .&#13;
Marell i&gt;ost 144, S i n g l i n g ,&#13;
Burnett i&gt;ost 41Ki, Tarrytowu.&#13;
Connecticut posts, Massachusetts posts, N e v&#13;
Jciesy p&lt;^sts,&#13;
Department of tlie Potomac.&#13;
Delegates ami ivpresentatlvcN from Illlnioi&#13;
Wisconsin, Iowa, Kunsas, Ohio, Malue,&#13;
New Hampshire, Indiaua, Vermont&#13;
California, Colorado, Delaware, •&#13;
• Missouri aud Texas.&#13;
Veterau regiment as&gt;oc atious lu three&#13;
brigades.&#13;
First blgade, Gen. Jl' R. O'Berne, comrnanillug:&#13;
Tilth regiment lllgh'unders, New York volunteers.&#13;
Second veteran lire /ouaves (fourth Excelsior.)&#13;
Anderson /.ouaves.&#13;
G2d New York volunteers.&#13;
tWih, vet. ran corps.&#13;
50th New York volunteer vet ran association.&#13;
1st New Vork volunteer vtt ran association.&#13;
10th New York volunteers.&#13;
(JarihiiMi guards.&#13;
39th New York volunteers.&#13;
Continentil guards of New York.&#13;
Chicago union veterans' club.&#13;
Second Brigade, Co!. Thos. Rafferly, commanding.&#13;
Hawkins Xouaves.&#13;
NInetitth New York Volunt ers.&#13;
United Association Fortieth New York Volunteers.&#13;
,&#13;
Thirty-sixth New York' Volunteers. .&#13;
Fortieth New York Volunteers. ,&#13;
Mozart Regiment.&#13;
Forty-second New York Volunteers.&#13;
Tammany Kogimeut.&#13;
Ninetieth, One Hundred and Thi.tv third. One&#13;
Hundred and Thirty-ninth and Kortj-uttfc&#13;
Volunteer Vet-ran A.-soriat ons.&#13;
Tbe several associations of Mcxieuu war veterans.&#13;
Sons of veterans, department of New York,&#13;
Third brigade, Gen. F. B. Si.lnola, commanding:&#13;
Union veteran association.&#13;
First New Jeresy volunteers. G . N . Tibbet,&#13;
commanding.&#13;
National Vetera 11 association of Chicago.&#13;
New Bedford veteran association.&#13;
Philadelphia veteran a^s udation.&#13;
Veterans of regular army.&#13;
Seventh regiment vete. aijs, Col. L. W. Win&#13;
cluster, conmiun ling.&#13;
Twenty-secoml regiment veterans, Col. G. W&#13;
.1 Laird, commanding.&#13;
F o u r t w n t h regiment veteran association.&#13;
Ninth regiment veterans uud soldiers, and&#13;
I 'sailors' union of Brooklyn.&#13;
Soldadenlun imit'oseu union or Brooklyn, E.&#13;
M. Croisant, commanding.&#13;
War veteran ussiKMation.&#13;
Fourteenth regiment of Brooklyn, Col. E. B.&#13;
Fowler, coinnianding.&#13;
Third division (civic.)&#13;
Maj.-Gen. M. T. McMahoo, couunander, and&#13;
aidt a.&#13;
First subdivision, Col. Dickinson, commander—&#13;
society of t h e Cincinnati, ehatnbe- o.'&#13;
commerce; N. Y. historical s o J t v ; Uni, n&#13;
league club;-committee of ex-eouietlerate vtterau's;&#13;
U. S. cbristiau commLssiou; ex-tlip'oniatle&#13;
and consular officers; Grant monument&#13;
association; citizens' law a n d order league, 01&#13;
Bo.-tou; chamber of commerce of New Haven.&#13;
Second subdivision, Col. J. W. Marshal,&#13;
commanding—New York sto-k e x c h a n g e ; consolidated&#13;
stock and petroleum exchange; consolidated&#13;
cotton exchange; consolidated produce&#13;
exchange; consolidated board of trade&#13;
aud transportation; consolidated mercantile exchange&#13;
;, niavintime association, port of New&#13;
York; New York metal i-xelmuge; N,ew Y'ork&#13;
real estate exchange; New York ttoard of tire&#13;
underwriters.&#13;
Third subdivision. Col. ("has. G. Otis, commanding—&#13;
Republican county committee;&#13;
young men's repuoiicau ciui&gt;"o:' New Y'ork;&#13;
youug men's republi an club of Klm.s couutv;&#13;
young men's republican club of Jer.-ev l i p ;&#13;
vouug^ fucn's repuhlieuu club of Baltimore;&#13;
Lincoln league; third ward L i m o ' n clut&gt;.&#13;
Fourth subdlyision. Col. J. W. Jne ibus,&#13;
eoiiuiiandiug—Assoehit'ou of exempt liremi-ii;&#13;
volunteers, firemen as-ociations; sons oi v^ferans:&#13;
Highiaml g u a n U ; .knights ot l ' \ t h a s ;&#13;
kuights of Sherwood Forvsls; Kxeelsiorco.mcd-&#13;
No. 14, O. U. A. M.: N'alley Forge c u u e i l No.&#13;
2, 0 . U. A. NL; So.-ict.i dei I-rateriio Amor:&#13;
Excelsior association of-Jeisvv C tv.&#13;
Ou the arrival of the head (if the procession&#13;
at Riv.-iside park the various divisions, except&#13;
companies detail d to take part In t:te lina!&#13;
ceremonies, drop;»c.l out o.' line, an I turning&#13;
into the by-streets slowly retraced their steps&#13;
to the place oi disbiindim&gt;. An iinn.en-t&#13;
throng hud gathered Imre, and it was with the&#13;
utmost difficulty that the police kept a space •&#13;
clear for the military uud e.vie organizations&#13;
which had dropped out of line. The regulars&#13;
took up positions on ea di side of the temporary&#13;
tomb and awaited tlie anivalof the funeral&#13;
car bearing th,- casket. All a p p r o a c h ^ of the&#13;
pork were narrowly guarded bv the \ oliee. and&#13;
lione but the participants iu the luuerai procession&#13;
were allowed to en ter.&#13;
As the cortege approached the men-of-war in&#13;
the river v o i u m e u c d liiing, mid the doJe'ul&#13;
-booming of the guns broke the death-like htiLnesswliieh&#13;
jirevtiile'd on all sides.&#13;
The b&lt;xly and, ed at the grave at 4.45, and the"&#13;
burial rites of the G.A R. were pcrloi m 'd. Dr.&#13;
Newman then followed with the re a, ting oi the&#13;
burial services of the Methodist Kpi.-cop.il&#13;
church, and the ceremonies at the grave concluded&#13;
with a salute of ^1 guns by the light artillery,&#13;
Fith artillery, and l,u.rle taps by' Iiu-d.!&#13;
Krouse, o f B a t t i r v H. Finn U.S. • tirtill.-rv.&#13;
Little Julia then laid on the coffin a" wreath" To&#13;
Grandpapa." Tlie g u i r d of honor bore tun&#13;
remains within the tomb, and at 5.30 o'clock&#13;
placed them within the steel case, the sealing oi'&#13;
both leaden lining and .-t-el case then beuig&#13;
performed tis indieatt d ah &gt;ve.&#13;
The family entered th • io:hb,'remaining only&#13;
a few moments. They th -n sought their carriages,&#13;
and when entering, t h e ' s e ^ n t h and '&#13;
twenty-second 1 egiments in l m e o n t h e b l u i ! /&#13;
llredthree volleys toward the r.ver, after wh'cJj&#13;
battery F, fifth artillery, fired three salvos fremi&#13;
the knoll toward the hotel. The famik^ta"?^—"&#13;
riages drove away. ^ ^ /&#13;
The naval vessels in the river opposite Ccn.&#13;
Grant's tomb had their ensigns, .flags/and pennants&#13;
atl^alf-mast. The fleet was coin|K)sed 0 '&#13;
the Dispatch, Powhattan, Omaha, S w ^ a r a and&#13;
Alliance, The first .mentioned Was Rear Admiral&#13;
J o u e t t ' s flagship The / r e s i d e n t ' s flag&#13;
was displayed at half ma t 01/the tia -ship until&#13;
sunset. All the \ \ ssels/had the.r varus&#13;
gaffs and lower /booms cock'-'bll ed. On the for ;&#13;
and mtzzen-masts of each/vessel the starboard&#13;
-yard arms were t o p p e d / u p , Tindo.i the mainmasts&#13;
the ry rt yard arm* were topped up, .Ti^t&#13;
as soon as It was Jt/riiett th:it Ihe pro -ession&#13;
had started the De/pateh tired SI m l n u t c g u n s ,&#13;
and ns"/'s&lt;x)n as ttre Despati-li ''h'aa"ccast-'aiiriu&lt;'&#13;
the P o w h a t t a i i / a n d othe.1 vessels of the fleet&#13;
llred 21 minute j;uns each in succession. At&#13;
subset the ships LauU.d down colors and square&#13;
yards. , / .&#13;
T h o u g h of course, not so Imposing or impressive'as&#13;
the funeral pro.-esdou 0.1 land, a&#13;
silent/but effective demonstration of lespeet&#13;
for Jne memory of Gen. Gtant was mad 3 by&#13;
shipping in the harbor. All c'asses of&#13;
. 1; delchnd&#13;
,&#13;
•i&#13;
crafts participated, and even i h j canal t oata&#13;
lind oyster scows,clisp'aved signs of mourning.&#13;
All the ferry houses, freight a n d railroad depots,&#13;
and octan steamers and ferryboats along&#13;
the river front had the.r flags at half-mast,and&#13;
the vessels a t tae Brooklyn and&#13;
Jersey City wharves showed the.&#13;
same marks of respect The coasting and&#13;
river s u u m e r s without exception obeveu the&#13;
" I 1 ? ? ' „ t h f d a j ; , T h e ^ t w - A t l a n t k fleet&#13;
which sailed for Luropc steamed down the b a y&#13;
with lowered ensigns, signal nags a n d ten*&#13;
nants—a mark of respect shown to the memory&#13;
of very few public men. /&#13;
Chinese are going In heavy as d e a l e r / i n pork&#13;
Franco is the greatest country f o r / u s p e n s b n&#13;
uriQges. j /&#13;
In^AjUguBta, M e . , a w a n o f 40 rfointly martleii&#13;
-a g . n of i t — — --—-—^-i*-&#13;
i&lt; *&#13;
%&#13;
V&#13;
f-1, •&#13;
-^:-^ v -&#13;
&gt; • • ' ' ^ - ' •&#13;
&amp;*.,.*&amp;***.&#13;
I t t&#13;
"p • "l" '»'i«,a^rr^*P""|"F^ipaiaiPi&#13;
• M k *«•&#13;
mmm m mwmrimn W fPHPP"&#13;
-- v&#13;
ii^l.i^ii,, 1.,1 iiy^wPwpwpwwjiVM; UP, J&#13;
^-^-.^.-- . . * w *a "T-aiWfr*iCS&#13;
^&#13;
• • * ; • •&#13;
a •&gt;&#13;
ft&#13;
LADIES OF LIMA.&#13;
I'Isr Dnvlt.'hins Manta Makes tire Th&#13;
est of Ladies Dazzling Ueauties.&#13;
in-&#13;
Empty Heads and Winning Ways.--&#13;
In Iho Drawln;'room and LB&#13;
tbo streets.&#13;
Wl'MMIEb ' EYEBALLS.&#13;
The la lies of L:ma are all eyes'&#13;
They have the reputat on of being as a&#13;
class the most beautiful in the world,&#13;
and, meeting them on the way to mass&#13;
in the morning, or shopping later in&#13;
the day, oue can eas'ly see how they&#13;
obtainit; but knowing them in their&#13;
homes, the opinion changes, and you&#13;
conclude, ..fur calm renection, that&#13;
they are not" so pretty as the women of&#13;
New York. It is the manta, which&#13;
they wear in such a coquettish way,&#13;
that gives them their reputation for&#13;
it conceals e ery feature except their&#13;
bf^yitelling eyes and lovely ol.vc complexion.&#13;
"i\o"~niatter how ugly her&#13;
mouth or her nose is; no matter how&#13;
high her cheek bones or large her cars;&#13;
no matter whether she is as scrawny'&#13;
as a scarecrow or as bald as a bat, a&#13;
•'manta'" will make any woman with&#13;
prelly ej.es look handsome, and, like&#13;
charity, it covers a multitude of sins.&#13;
This garment, which is peculiar to&#13;
Pern, and is worn by ladies of all ages,&#13;
and social pos't'ons, from the President's&#13;
wife to the laundress who comes&#13;
after your linen, is a sbrt of foster-sister&#13;
to the mantilla of Spain. It is&#13;
usually of crepe, from China, and costs&#13;
'•HI&#13;
A "MANTA7 ' WILL MAKE AN* WOMAN&#13;
' WITH T R E l T r EYES LOOK HANDSOME.&#13;
anywhere from $10 to $500, according&#13;
to the quality and the amount of embroidery&#13;
it bears. The manta is al&#13;
wavs bfack, and is not squate like the&#13;
ordinary shawl, but rect-augular.&#13;
Wealthy people wear them with a&#13;
deep si Ik-fringe, or an edge of rare&#13;
point lace, while the poorer classes are&#13;
satisfied with a little strip of lace,&#13;
however cheap, stitched on to one edge&#13;
of it, so as to fall over the forehead&#13;
when it is worn. /When the garment&#13;
is put on, this lace is adjusted nicely&#13;
so that it will just reach the eyelashes,&#13;
and then the.long end of the manta is&#13;
thrown over the left shoulder, and&#13;
fastened by a pin at the small of the&#13;
back. Thus it does for bonnet, wrap&#13;
and dress all in one. and it makes very&#13;
little xiitl'erence what she/has under it&#13;
for in a manta the homeliest woman&#13;
IOO'AS well. All she heeds in addit on&#13;
is a black skirt, which is seen from the&#13;
knees to the hem.&#13;
On the street the women look like a&#13;
• procession of nuns, hut in their homes,&#13;
when they are dressed, like the Queen&#13;
of Sheba.' In olden times, when the&#13;
galleons used to come to Callao "from&#13;
far Cathay.'" bringing silks and satins _&#13;
and jewels in exchange for the siher&#13;
of Cerro de Pasco and rotos'1, the fashion&#13;
of wearing fine clothes was set.&#13;
and the people have never abandoned&#13;
it. There is a legend that one of the&#13;
Viceroys rode from the palace to the&#13;
cathedral and back again, a distance&#13;
of about two bloiks, on a horse, every&#13;
hair.of whose mane and tail was&#13;
strung with pearls, whose hoofs wereshod&#13;
with shoes of ^solid gold, and&#13;
whesjsaddle and bridle were worth a&#13;
king's ransom. The road was paved&#13;
with ingots of silver, so that from the&#13;
door of the palace to the cathedral&#13;
steps the ground was not to be seen.&#13;
bright, vivacious and vanning. With&#13;
move passion than intellect, with very&#13;
littli; knowledge of the world ouNidc&#13;
of her own orbit, ahc never reads a&#13;
newspaper and never looks at a book,&#13;
plays the piano brilliantly and w.th&#13;
exfjirste taste, and talks* like a conversational&#13;
blizzard. She is affectionate,&#13;
impetuous and strong willed;&#13;
gushes over what she likes and shud-;&#13;
ders at what does not please her. Impulsive,&#13;
frank and generous, she is&#13;
easily betrayed, and the principal object&#13;
in life of her mamma is to watch&#13;
her like a hawk. At twenty-live she is&#13;
tho mother of three or four ch'ldren,&#13;
shrunken and wan, or else inordinately&#13;
fat. One does, not see any. handsome&#13;
old lad es in Spanish America; their&#13;
TI1EX MAKE THE FINEST OF LACE, EMBROIDERED&#13;
TOWELS, &amp;C.&#13;
good looks seem to go with youth, and&#13;
old maids are unknown. If a girl cannot&#13;
get the man she wants she will&#13;
take up with what she can get. To&#13;
die unmarried is worse than any matrimonial&#13;
misery.&#13;
The a r and light of Lima are very&#13;
favorable for photography, and tho&#13;
city has galleries as tine as any in New&#13;
York. The reception rooms, corridors,&#13;
show windows, and even the ceilings&#13;
are lined with portraits of the belles of&#13;
the town, which are on sale not only&#13;
here, but at the news stands and print&#13;
shops. In Havana and Venezuela to&#13;
have the photograph of a young lady&#13;
is equivalent to the announcement of&#13;
an engagement, but in Peru it signifies&#13;
nothing. You can buy the portrait&#13;
of your neighbor's daughter anywhere&#13;
in town, and their popularity is&#13;
estimated by the number sold. They&#13;
make tine subjects for a photographer.&#13;
those I ima girls With their great black&#13;
eyes and shapely ligures, and strangers&#13;
usually take homy collections of the&#13;
pictures of beauties. The photograph&#13;
dealers have their portraits put up in&#13;
covers ready for the market, like views&#13;
of Niagara Fa Is or Coney Island. •&#13;
Not long ago there was a row kicked&#13;
up by a Lima srirl's father because a&#13;
local photographer had not included&#13;
her portrait in a collection of belles&#13;
wh:ch he had made for display at an&#13;
expos tion. The old gentleman considered&#13;
his daughter as good-looking&#13;
as anv of them, and all her relatives&#13;
took it as an insult that her face was&#13;
oni t'.ed from the group.&#13;
m&amp;rch'ng and fighting is done and it is&#13;
part of the duty of the raliona to see&#13;
that her husband does not die of tlrrst.&#13;
Milk is peddled about Lima by&#13;
women, who sit astride of a horse or a&#13;
mule with a big can hanging on either&#13;
side of the saddle behind them. When&#13;
they ride up to a doorw ay they give a&#13;
peculiar .-brill screani, which the servants&#13;
within recognize.&#13;
Most of the embroidery and other&#13;
similar work in Lima is done by the&#13;
nuns, wfro are very expert at it. They&#13;
make tne finest sort of lace, embroidered&#13;
towels, napkins, handkerchiefs,&#13;
and sk rt fronts for dt esses, on silk&#13;
and Velvet. At some of the shops in&#13;
Lima you can buy dress patterns, that&#13;
is, skirt fronts, sleev. s, collar, cutis,&#13;
belir, etc., embro dered in the finest&#13;
possible style and ready to make up.&#13;
it is one of the ancient customs, handed&#13;
down from the days of the Viceroys.&#13;
The nuns make most of the&#13;
confectionery sold in the city, moulding&#13;
the unrefined sugar into art stic&#13;
shapes, coloring it to im'tate nature,&#13;
and flavoring it to suit the palate.&#13;
Some of their "dulces," as they call&#13;
them, are very nice.&#13;
The fashionable entertainment in&#13;
Peru it, bull-baiting. The bull is not&#13;
k lied, as in Spain and Mexico and&#13;
other countries, and no horses are&#13;
slaughtered in the ring. The animal&#13;
is simply teased and tortured to make&#13;
a Liman holiday. The young men of&#13;
the city do the baiting, and it is regarded&#13;
as a very high-toned sort of&#13;
athletic sporty like polo at Newport.&#13;
The young ladies take darts made of&#13;
tin. decorate them with ribbons, lace,&#13;
and rosettes, and give them to the r&#13;
lovers to stick into the hide of the bull.&#13;
The great thing is to cast these darts&#13;
so as to strike the bull in the foreshoulders&#13;
or in the face, and in order&#13;
to do it, he who throws them mnst&#13;
stand before the animal's horns.&#13;
Active young fellows do the trick very&#13;
dexterously, but it takes nerve and&#13;
One can bel eve this sort of thing by&#13;
looking into_the pawnshops of tj-daj.&#13;
where people impoverished by the war&#13;
have taken their plate and jewels to&#13;
r a s e money to buy meat and bread.&#13;
Here are toilet sets of solid silver,&#13;
beautifully chased, including the&#13;
meaner vessels of the bedroom, which&#13;
betoken the luxury and extravagance&#13;
of an ago when the mines of the Andes&#13;
were pouring out silver and the guano&#13;
THEY FOLLOW TIlEItt HUSBANDS WITH&#13;
BABIES SLl'NG OVER THEIR 8HOULDEKS1&#13;
The only disagreeable thing about a&#13;
Lima girl is her voice. The tropics&#13;
never did produce a sweet sonster, it is&#13;
said, and the tones of the women are&#13;
no more musical than those of the&#13;
birds. Their voices are loud, shrill&#13;
and metallic; painfully distinct, and&#13;
THE FASHIONABLE ENTERTAINMENT IS&#13;
BULL-BAITING.&#13;
agility, and at times fair senoritas have&#13;
seen their lovers ripped open.&#13;
Another form of entertainment is&#13;
what is called "Hucne Noch*','1 or&#13;
"good night." Then the band plays&#13;
In the principal plaza, fireworks are&#13;
exploded at the expense of the shop—&#13;
kee) ers and saloon "men, whose profits&#13;
are increased; hucksters surround the&#13;
place with tables, s. lling cakes, candies,&#13;
ice-cream, and peanuts, aud all&#13;
the populace, with their sisters and&#13;
cousins and aunts, come out to go-s'p&#13;
and flirt, l h se festivals furnish&#13;
about the only opportunity for Vilkins&#13;
to get a word-alone with his Dinah,&#13;
for social laws do not permit him to&#13;
see h"r except in the presence of her&#13;
mother or some 'duenna until aft &gt;r&#13;
marriage. On "Buenc Noche" he can&#13;
otler h s arm aud promenade up and&#13;
down the plaza, murmuring soft nothings&#13;
in her ear, as long as she will&#13;
hear them, or until the great bell of&#13;
San Pedro strikes midnight, when theie&#13;
is a hustle and a bustle, and'evcrybody&#13;
goes home.&#13;
Lots of money nvght be made by&#13;
enterprising Yankees who would ei me&#13;
down here and buy up old paintings&#13;
and antique silver plate, of which the&#13;
pawn-shops are full. The aristocracy&#13;
are compelled to have bread, even if&#13;
they go without meat or butter, and&#13;
as their incomes have been cut oil'by&#13;
tho war,and the revolution that has&#13;
been going on since, they trade on&#13;
sma'l margins with Mr. Isaacs and Mr.&#13;
Jacobs, who do not seem to have felt&#13;
the linancial distress. The rarest sort&#13;
of old plate can be had for its weight&#13;
French scientist in Lima, hap a collection&#13;
of Inca relics for which he was&#13;
etferod £'L;0&lt;&gt;.&lt;&gt;'"&gt; gold by the 1 ondon&#13;
Mu.-eum. He is writing a voluminous&#13;
work on the antiquities of Peru, under&#13;
the uatronage of the Government,&#13;
three* volumes of which have been&#13;
published, and five more are yet to&#13;
come. But any one can dig up all the&#13;
iclics he wants by hiring a couple of&#13;
men and go ng out into the ruins&#13;
which cover the whole country along&#13;
the coast. There are m lions oi&#13;
graves \ el untouched.&#13;
The most curious things are mumra'es'&#13;
eyes—petrified eyeballs—which&#13;
are usually to be found* in the graves&#13;
if one is careful in digging. The Incas&#13;
had a way of jjreserv^ng the eyes of&#13;
the dead from decay—some process&#13;
which modern science cannot comprehend;&#13;
and the eyeballs make very&#13;
pretty settings for pins. They are:&#13;
yellow, and hold light hke an opal. j&#13;
The First American Aeronaut.&#13;
Popular Science Monthly for .luly.&#13;
The news of Montgollier's experiment&#13;
on thn 5th of June reached ir'h.ladelphia&#13;
about the last of November,&#13;
and the local newspapers qf December&#13;
24 th contained the a counts just&#13;
received in regard to Charles' exper.-&#13;
ment of the 2rth of August. David&#13;
Kittenbouse, the friend of Franklin,&#13;
and the most distinguished Amer.can&#13;
astronomer of his time, was practicing&#13;
his profession as a maker of ph lo-;&#13;
sophu-ai instruments, and especially&#13;
of clocks. Une of his most intimate \&#13;
astoc:ates was Francis Hopkinton, an&#13;
eminent jur stj whose interest in&#13;
science was almost as great as in'law.&#13;
Both of these men we.e members of&#13;
tho American Philosophical Society •&#13;
which had been organized by Frank-1&#13;
lin. No sooner was the news from ;&#13;
France received, than they began to j&#13;
test the use of hydrogen for balloons. ;&#13;
On the 2Mh of December an ascent I&#13;
was made by the first American uro-j&#13;
naut, the account of which is perhaps&#13;
best given in the language of an eye- \&#13;
w.tness, Irani.o:s ij.moniii. whose let-j&#13;
ter to the '-Journal de 1 aris"' was&#13;
publshed May 13, 17*4» In the "Gentleman's&#13;
Magazine" of the following;&#13;
month a translation of Kt appeared, |&#13;
from which the folio.ving is an extract:&#13;
"Messieurs Kitnose [Kitten- j&#13;
house]..,and Opquisce [Hopkinson] j&#13;
began their expor.ments with bladders, \&#13;
and then w.th larger machines; they&#13;
jo ned several together and fastened;&#13;
them round a ca.ue, into wh'ch they&#13;
put animals. The whole ascended, |&#13;
and was drawn down again by a rope. ,&#13;
The next day, which was yesterday, j&#13;
a ma l ofiered to get into the cage, ;&#13;
provided the rope was not let go. He&#13;
rose at out iiiteen feet, and would not&#13;
suffer them to let him go higher.&#13;
James Wilcox, a carpenter, engaged&#13;
to go in it for a little money. He rose :&#13;
twenty feet or upward before he made&#13;
_a_s:glial to be drawn down. He then i&#13;
took instructions from Mess'eurs Kitnose&#13;
and Opqusue, and after several i&#13;
repetitions on the ground consented to&#13;
,have the rope cut for fifty dollars.&#13;
Dr. Jamie [Jones,] the principal medical&#13;
person in the city, attended incase&#13;
of accident. The crowd was incr'ed-,&#13;
ible, who shouted after the Engl sh&#13;
fashion when they saw Wilcox rise&#13;
crowded in the cage, surrounde I by&#13;
forty-seven balloons fastened to it,&#13;
with astonishing coolness, npdd_jig_,&#13;
his head to express his satisfaction and&#13;
composure. After all. he could not&#13;
rise above ninety-seven feet, accord- ;&#13;
ing to the measures taken b&gt; two oth- .&#13;
er gentlemen of the Philosophical&#13;
Academy. • He was at lea^t tive minutes&#13;
in the air, but, perceiving the&#13;
wind to blow from the east and drive&#13;
h'm toward the Scoulqu lie [Schuyl- \&#13;
kill], he was frightened, and, agreeably&#13;
to his in&gt;truct o:is, made several&#13;
incisions with a kn fe in three of the&#13;
balloons. This was not sufficient,&#13;
AJCCT.&#13;
Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sciatica,&#13;
Lumbago, Backache, Headache, Toethach*.&#13;
Sore•—• 1 1 - r - ' " T r flfirrtiliiB B r a l s f .&#13;
Barns, Scald*. Fr«*t Bile*,&#13;
**B ALL OTHER BODILY FUNS AND HUT*.&#13;
odljDrtcfl«4»adD«a!«raev«rrwkerc. W t j Caulsa fao6Ba*&#13;
Dlrectluui In 11 LaurutftW.&#13;
TUB CHARLES A. VOGELEB CO.&#13;
"»rwmi,i»j. •voo'-i.Bk * co.&gt; ««!ti».r». "ii. r. m. A. BRJBKS&#13;
-THE&#13;
BEST TONIC. ? Thla medicine, combining Iron with ptn»&#13;
vegetable tonics, quickly and completely&#13;
Core* Drapcpaia* IndlgentloB, Weakataa*&#13;
Impure Blood* JIaiariajChUU and Ferera*&#13;
ana Ncaralaia.&#13;
It U an unfailing remedy for Diseases ef th»&#13;
KMnera.aad Liver.&#13;
It is invaluable for Diseases peculiar Co&#13;
Women* and all who lead sedentary Uvea.&#13;
It does not injure the teeth, cause headache,or&#13;
produce constipation—other Iron medieina da.&#13;
It enriches and purifies the blood, stimulate*&#13;
the appetite, aids the assimilation of food, relieTes&#13;
Heartburn and Belching, and strength*&#13;
ens the muscles and nerves.&#13;
For Intermittent Fevers, Lassitude, Lack of&#13;
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m*U tmli br BROWS CHI»IC»L ¢0.. gALTIMOItg. «"* CHENEY'S&#13;
Stomach I Liver&#13;
I REGULATOR (&#13;
CURB* CONSTIPaTIO. .&#13;
lorpM Liver, Indigestion, Heartburn, Malaria*,&#13;
Rheumatism, Palpitation of the Heart when&#13;
arising from indigestion or deranged condlOoD&#13;
of the stomach, Sic* Headache or Uigrmia,&#13;
Piles and Female complaints. The only 2&amp;e&amp;&#13;
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P o s i t i v e l y C a r t a C^astipatftBa*&#13;
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often piercing, oven, in ordinary con&#13;
vnrsat.'on; but they, can .."spcak softly in silver coin, and genuine old paint-_&#13;
~ ' ings are as plenty as peas. Kelic&gt; of&#13;
the Incas are al.-o cheap, as collectors&#13;
have to sell them to live.&#13;
It is still fa-hionable to go on resurrection&#13;
expeditions to dig in the Inca&#13;
burying grounds for mummies and&#13;
AJialf-do/.en Spanish-American wo- things that w ere'placed in.their graves,&#13;
men in familiar conversation can ' The Incas had the same mode of premake&#13;
more nose than a threshing ma- serving the dead as the am-ient Kgvpchine.&#13;
If sewing societies wove the tians and in ea;'h grave were placed&#13;
_f;ush-iua--h.ere the tawjis__wouliL *e"m • articles of decoraton us wA\ as utenand&#13;
whi.-per low" if they like, and&#13;
when they doit is charming to hear&#13;
them. A t concerts and operas I *otic^&#13;
people always applaud the very&#13;
loud and high notes, and pas^ over the&#13;
sweet soft tones without comment.&#13;
MILK IS PEPDLEI&gt; AROt'T BY WOMEN.&#13;
b*ds of the sea ^rerc being turned into&#13;
gold. S'milar reminisceuces of ancient&#13;
glory can be seen to-day in the toilet3&#13;
of the ladies, in the heirlooms which&#13;
they wear on their wrists, on their&#13;
breasts, anifin their ears, as well as&#13;
the rich, old fashioned fabrics which&#13;
the r grandmothers wore before thpm,&#13;
mado in the days when when people&#13;
flid"nTt intend things to wear out.&#13;
In the drawing-room tho Linia lady&#13;
Is not so beautiful as in the street,&#13;
Where the manta conceals all isdpex^&#13;
feet ons.-'but -*i^_is -atixactiye still, j coast&#13;
like bedlams.&#13;
The wife of the- President of-Peru-iscallcd&#13;
La Preside.nta. She is a lady of&#13;
great refinement and good education^&#13;
Having come from Cajamarca, in the&#13;
northern part of Peru, the place where&#13;
Pizarro strangled Atahuallpa. the last&#13;
,of the Incas. Her husband,Uen.Miguel&#13;
Inglesias,,is a wealthy haciendado, or&#13;
plahtcr, and is universally regarded as&#13;
a man of strict probity and honor—a&#13;
rare"reputation in Spanish America.&#13;
He was formerly Secretary of war, and&#13;
commanded a division in the army in&#13;
the defense of Lima against the&#13;
Chilians.&#13;
A Peruvian solder is usually accom-,&#13;
panied by a woman called a rabona,&#13;
who sometimes is h:9- wife. They re-j&#13;
ceive rations like the soldiers, but no&#13;
pay. They are faithful and enduring,&#13;
but degraded crcatufes, who follow I&#13;
the army in its long, weary marches, i&#13;
assisting their husbands by carrying&#13;
part of their load, and abov\t one-half&#13;
of them havo babies slung over their&#13;
shoulders in blanket-. When camp is&#13;
reached they do the cooking; in battle&#13;
they nurse the wounded and rob the&#13;
dead. Water is verv* scarce along the&#13;
though we saw him descend a litile.&#13;
He pierced three more, and, seeing&#13;
the machine did not come, his fear in- i&#13;
creased. He cut tive more in the |&#13;
greatest haste, and, unfortunately, all&#13;
on the same side. He was then seen ;&#13;
to tack about (eharircr), and, as if he j&#13;
had slid down [roulc bat), he fell on&#13;
the edge of a ditch and a rinse [fence],&#13;
as they carl the inelosures. Dr. -Jaime&#13;
ran up: tlnrpoor imnrirad sprttrned-h-t*-+&#13;
wrist, but received nooiher accident."&#13;
Orange Culture in Florida. j&#13;
Rural rsroUntin. ,&#13;
Trees can be had at some wild&#13;
groves for the getting, At others, ten i&#13;
to twenty-five cents each is the price.&#13;
An ordinary sail-boat will carry thirty&#13;
to.sevent.-live tne&gt;. averaging two&#13;
' inches in diameter, and around trip of'j&#13;
|T\vcTrTy~To-foTty Ttrre-s rntr be—made -&#13;
j with a load in"three cr four davs. If ;&#13;
MALT BITTERS,&#13;
If you wish to be relieved of those terrible S t e k&#13;
H e a d a c h e a and that miserable S o u r StMM*&#13;
a c h . It will, when taken according to directions,&#13;
cur© a n y c a s e of Sick Hea\da«fce&#13;
or S o u r S t o m a c h . It cleans the lining-ol&#13;
s t o m a c h and b o w e l s , promotes healthy&#13;
action and s w e e t aerretions. It mak« p u r e&#13;
b l o o d and gives it ft&gt;e flow, thus sending&#13;
n u t r i m e n t to evrry part. It is the safe**,&#13;
speediest and s u r e s t Vegetable Remedy&#13;
ever invented for all diseases of tho stomaeJa&#13;
and l i v e r .&#13;
J. M. Moore, of Farmlnn'on. Mich., says: My&#13;
suffering: from S i c k H e a d a c h e and S o u r&#13;
S t o m a c h was terrible. Oue boiUe of Hops&#13;
and Malt Bitters cured me.&#13;
Do~ n o f f i t R-nprtmd Walt Bitters oath&#13;
founded with inferior prepaiatious of similar&#13;
name. For sale by all druggists.&#13;
) HOPS &amp; HALT BITTERS CO, DETROIT, K m&#13;
T.H. HINCHMAN *SONS. Detroit. MioU-. ( N v l *?, e&#13;
JAMES E. DAVIS &amp; CO Detroit. MU:iu $ gent&#13;
?6ttsylTiaii Aeridtai Wcr^Mf ft.&#13;
trqsbr's 8U&#13;
sils required by the spirit&gt; 10 ^ot up&#13;
lumse keeping in. til.e__happy hind. 4 . , . . , , , , * n i. • n »&#13;
Kin.rs and other o r u a n K ! n T ^ o ¾ ^ o ^ d \ i n : ^ ^ ^ w ^ a k ^ n ^ , T f , ^ hamlk&gt;d^&#13;
and properly planted, from Jam&#13;
until March, and the sweet tojd-^iit .n&#13;
in May or June, they wilj^gfow three&#13;
or four feet the .«ame&gt;y£ar, and sometimes&#13;
will bearth^Tnext. Nearly all&#13;
will boar thj&amp;^tlvrd year, with proper&#13;
attentiotCand the fifth will reimburse&#13;
ajl^xpeuses. From the present standpoint,&#13;
looking through the experienc*&#13;
of others, and taking success as my&#13;
gttkle, and error a* a warning, a&#13;
straighten and shorter path, (fast becoming&#13;
a pkwu, well-beaten highway.)&#13;
can be taken to success. Sweet soedlinos&#13;
from three to tire years old, eo-t&#13;
twenty-rive cents to one d^liar each,&#13;
according to age and size. Tfcey are&#13;
hardy, rapkt growers, and usually bear&#13;
the seventh year. The effects of t\idding&#13;
or grafting is the same on t icm .as"&#13;
the sour tree. Field crops arejustially&#13;
U - ^&#13;
Address A.&#13;
igiaci &amp; S*v Efr'&#13;
Send fcr niajU—r&#13;
C&amp;iaicigve.&#13;
;-^&gt;w^JS'^«aSE*,fei''&#13;
' A R Q U I U ^ Y o r k .&#13;
' Tr*aE2:.IJF*v2S-.:2.&#13;
WXJM mvt m ESTATES. K«xt at Kla tad H«lri wasted, wlw k»n b«a adva&#13;
tin* it la til farta of V. S. ted Yonigt tcvttrfc* ft&#13;
tk« patt 100 vtar*. to d»lm IMTJ* lumi -of n m j r M&#13;
MUM. Our' K«cord (ooUist tf,0O6 u m Yaw h a&#13;
ly u a « m»y bit tmoac Ihtm. Send for Book •/ M m v - »ail wHa 10 eta.&#13;
C. McCOftO A CO.. Do Motrin. IUM.&#13;
GKA&gt;X JjlGGINtt FOK PETRIFIED&#13;
BALLS.&#13;
silver, cups and platters of both metals&#13;
made in quaint design*, copper&#13;
of Peru, where mo*T~of the days. Prof. Roma&amp;di, a di-tinguish&#13;
articles, strings of bead9r'weav4«**n4--nAad-eihree or four y e a r ^ widening&#13;
cooking apparatus, water jugs, pots&#13;
and jars, and all sorts of things were&#13;
always placed in the graves, as well&#13;
as weapons of war and othertmriosk -&#13;
ties that interest antit|iiarians nowa&#13;
each year tha space^bjs^rfeen the rowa&#13;
and trees. ^ ^&#13;
The pastjuv&lt;rprasent?d no difficulty&#13;
ia-the-way^Tiolo range -.mil tu te, wJhi cL&#13;
energy and good judgment" will n«F&#13;
vercome.&#13;
.• ,-'-&lt;'&#13;
Men Tl&#13;
they know all about Mustang Liniment&#13;
Few do Not to know «-&#13;
not to haTC.&#13;
f&#13;
i&#13;
~ •*••&#13;
'i&#13;
!-T-.'&#13;
~r?*A&#13;
-"Tl&#13;
T"&#13;
\ i"&#13;
P fl-V&#13;
.]&#13;
M&#13;
fit&#13;
|i&#13;
•--3&#13;
^ . . 1 ^&#13;
i r . » - ^..&#13;
j f .&#13;
1 *&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH.&#13;
j . L. AEWKIRK, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER.&#13;
Hackney, Michigan, Thursday, August 18, 1885&#13;
Democratic Congressmen who&#13;
loudly profess a purpose to ''down&#13;
the President" or "whip him into&#13;
line" next winter are making conspicuous&#13;
fools of themselves. The&#13;
President was not elected to distribute&#13;
spoils at the dictation of a lot&#13;
of machine politicians, and they advertise&#13;
themselves as total strangers&#13;
to principle in threatening to take&#13;
revenge for alleged grievances by&#13;
antagonizing the measures of public&#13;
policy which Cleveland may propose.&#13;
But Republicans don't object to the&#13;
programme of Democratic whipper-&#13;
«nappers. They only hope that no&#13;
flaw will be found in Cleveland's&#13;
backbone.&#13;
Unless the reported death of the&#13;
Mahdi is a trick by which he hopes&#13;
to make a deeper impresson upon his&#13;
followers when he reappears among&#13;
them by declaring that he had miraculously&#13;
risen from the grave, the&#13;
late leader of the hosts of Islam in&#13;
the Soudan will be branded by his&#13;
own followers as a false prophet, for&#13;
the. new prophet was to lead them&#13;
not only to success in a few battles,&#13;
but to the overthrow of the entire infidel&#13;
world. If he were the true&#13;
prophet, ElMahdi would not die until&#13;
this work is accomplished. The&#13;
maimer of his death, too,—by smallpox—&#13;
was to the Moslem ignominious&#13;
in the extreme; and the former&#13;
false prophets, all of whom died&#13;
either in battle or by violence, were&#13;
more entitled to honor than he. But&#13;
should El Mahdi be playing a trick&#13;
and reappear among his followers,&#13;
he will be more powerful than ever,&#13;
and thousands who have heretofore&#13;
put no faith in~his~7ctahny TvifHiock I remove- and&#13;
to his standard.&#13;
No tribute paid to the memory of&#13;
General Grant by a loving people is&#13;
undeserved. He rose from the people,&#13;
and won his way by master&#13;
strokes, in war and in piece, to an&#13;
exalted pioce in the esteem of men.&#13;
The honors done hira while living&#13;
and the manifestations of affectionate&#13;
remembrance from the hour of his&#13;
death to the funeral day were expressive&#13;
of no mock sentiment. There&#13;
at the right time that nine women&#13;
out. of every ten grow bewildered and&#13;
lose the thread of the argument.&#13;
They want to accomplish too much&#13;
in too short a space of time. The&#13;
consequence naturally is that somebody&#13;
or something is pretty certain&#13;
to be overworked, The woman who&#13;
gets into a hammock all of a heap,&#13;
and is afraid to move for fear she&#13;
will break her neck, seldom becomes&#13;
a star in the professon. The world&#13;
admires composure--even in its&#13;
painted hammocks. The young woman&#13;
who makes the hammock a careful&#13;
study, and does her practicing out&#13;
in the back yard somewhere, will&#13;
eventually win the game. The only&#13;
question of importance hinges upon&#13;
whether the game is really worth the&#13;
winning.—Journal.&#13;
PUMPS,&#13;
hort. No. 831 Broadway. N. Y. ATENTS. bMYaeudan rnTsf*th Ciprort.u yhc-ei^Krea* v aaulai*.l -&#13;
foretliePateut Office,&#13;
countries. Caveat*,&#13;
ripliti, AMiftmnenti. i n d a I cU&gt;«* p*p*r»&#13;
for Mowing to inventors theti• rittbu. m tlio&#13;
United Ktiitoo, . Canada, _ knkrUtuI, ^ f j ^ f i&#13;
ho&lt;*rfu!Jr&#13;
v.&#13;
iton sent fro&#13;
A Co. are n«Hi&#13;
the advantage of sne - . - . , .&#13;
&gt;ersomwho wishto dispose of tiielrpatfnw.&#13;
AidMMi MUJW * Cfti Offi» JsciJUJiAiiu.iiUaucA*,&#13;
Bl Broadway, K«w Vork.&#13;
i&gt;e. Patents obtained ihrnuph W.ir.n&#13;
aiwtdin tlio Scimilino Anioriwjn ?iv&lt;;.&#13;
snehnotiue IswttH unilerslwid by :..1&#13;
was no element of insincerity in the&#13;
popular admiration of Grant. There&#13;
was no mere simulation of sorrow in&#13;
the spirit that prompted a universal&#13;
display of the emblems of mourning.&#13;
It was a genuine and profound grief&#13;
at the loss of a true heror the chieftain&#13;
of his time, whose fame was fairly&#13;
won. It will not be said that the&#13;
imposing spectacle of the funeral parade&#13;
was more than a proper and adequate&#13;
demonstration of popular feeling.&#13;
The solemn pomp and ceremony&#13;
testified to the reverence and love of&#13;
-theonillions—for the flrPHi CapiainjJ&#13;
whose body was borne to its last resting&#13;
place. This funeral-pag£ant-of&#13;
prodigious and unprecedented gra&#13;
eur could only have been possible, m&#13;
our day, to one man^tbeman of Ap&#13;
pomattox.&#13;
An Ordlnaaee for the Abatement of&#13;
Nuisances.&#13;
THE VILLAGE OF PINCKNEY ORDAINS:&#13;
, Sec 1. Whenever complaint shall&#13;
be ma3e to the Health Officer of said&#13;
village of Pinckney, by one or more&#13;
citizens ol said village, that any nuisance,&#13;
source ot filth, or cause of sickness&#13;
is kept, erected or maintained&#13;
within the corporate limits of said village&#13;
by any person or persons, said&#13;
Healtli Officer shall immediately proceed&#13;
to examine and inspect the locality&#13;
and substance concerning which&#13;
said complaint is made*&#13;
Sec. 2. On said examination, if&#13;
said Health Officer shall believe said&#13;
complaint is true, and that the nuisance,&#13;
source of filth, or cause of sickness&#13;
exists and should be abated he&#13;
shall thereupon issue a notice, ^n writing,&#13;
to the parties keeping, erecting&#13;
or,maintaining such nuisance, source&#13;
of filth, or cause of sickness, at "his&#13;
or their own expense to remove the&#13;
same within twenty-four hours, or&#13;
such further time as said Health Officer&#13;
may direct; and il the owner or&#13;
person keeping, erecting or maintaining&#13;
the same snail refuse or neglect to&#13;
do so he shall forfeit a sum.not exceeding&#13;
fifty dollars, and in default thereof&#13;
imprisoned in the yjllajjre iock-up or&#13;
county jail not exceeding thirty days,&#13;
or until said fine is paid. '&#13;
Sec. 3. If the persons so notified&#13;
shall not comply with the provisions&#13;
of said notice ot said Health Officerjioabate&#13;
such nuisance,&#13;
source of filth or canse^of sickness,&#13;
such Health Officer^may issue a notice&#13;
directed to the Marshal of said village,&#13;
directing him to remove and abate&#13;
such nuisance, source of filth, or cause&#13;
nf sickness forthwith, and all expense&#13;
incurred thereby shall be paid by the&#13;
person or persons who kept, erected or&#13;
maintained the same.&#13;
Sec. 4. If the Health Officer, on&#13;
the examination mentioned in Sec. 1 of&#13;
this act, shall find that no nuisance,&#13;
source of filth, or cause of sickness exists&#13;
which in his judgdmeiit should&#13;
be abated, the parties aggrieved&#13;
by such alleged nuisance, source of&#13;
filth, or cause of sickness, may apply&#13;
to the Common Council of said vmajre&#13;
•It vou are in need of-&#13;
WOODEN PUMPS ^ OPEN WELLS&#13;
or Wooden Heads for Drive Wells&#13;
-OR ANYREPAIRSFOR&#13;
WOODEN PUMPS,&#13;
lage&#13;
under the provisions of an ordinance&#13;
for the abateutent of nuisances adopted&#13;
April 21st, A. D. 1883; and the&#13;
Council, acting under said ordinance,&#13;
shall hear, try and pass upon the same.&#13;
Sec. 5. That no person shall apply&#13;
to the Common Council for the abatement&#13;
of a nuisance, source of filth, or&#13;
cause of sickness, under the ordinance&#13;
mentioned in section four of this act&#13;
until after an application has been&#13;
made to the Health Officer, as provided&#13;
by this act.&#13;
Adopted August 3, A. D. 1885.&#13;
En^^fUbe-prettigflf. studies in stil&#13;
life incidental to the summer months&#13;
is furnished by the fashionable woman&#13;
who wears a hammock. Where&#13;
the study doesn't happen to be pretty,&#13;
it is ridiculous enough to keep&#13;
up the interest. There are two classes&#13;
of women who depend upon hammocks&#13;
for a livelihood. To\ one of&#13;
these belongs the woman who swings&#13;
herself in the face of the public for&#13;
effect, and to the other the woman&#13;
who defies, criticism for the sake of&#13;
Ihe soTicT corafbTt she is able to get&#13;
out of the swing. The motive always&#13;
hangs "datai({e of the hammock.&#13;
Where a woman cltrnb^ into a hammock&#13;
for effect, there is more motive&#13;
visible than "where unadorned comfort&#13;
only is desired. Few women&#13;
?an master the whims of a hammock&#13;
gracefully. There are *&amp; many opportunities&#13;
for doing the wroog thing&#13;
~&lt;*s£&#13;
Bucklen's Arnica Salve*-^&#13;
THE BEST SALVE in the world for&#13;
Cat* Bruises, JSeres, Ulcers, Salt&#13;
he'um, Vever-i5ores, Tetter^Xhapped&#13;
Hands^Obifblains, Corns, and all SKID&#13;
««isrand-poAvtively cures .Piles,&#13;
or no pay required. It is guaranteed&#13;
to give perfect satisfaction, or money&#13;
refunded. Price 25 ce'nts per box.&#13;
For Sale, at WINCHELL'S DRUG STORE.&#13;
An Enterprising, Reliable Honse.&#13;
Winchell's Drug Store can always&#13;
MgiiecUinon,- not only_Ja,j&amp;rjy_iii_&#13;
stock the best of everything, but to&#13;
secure the Agency for such articles as&#13;
have well-known merit, and are popular&#13;
with the people, thereby sustaining&#13;
the reputation of being always enterprising,&#13;
and ever reliable. Having&#13;
secured the agency for the celebrated&#13;
Dr. King's New Discovery for Con-4 sumption, will- sell it on a positive&#13;
guarantee. It will surely cfire any&#13;
and 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;
An Answer Wanted.&#13;
Can any one bring ns a case of kidney&#13;
or liver complaint that Electric&#13;
Bitters wil)'not speadily cure? We&#13;
say they can not, as thousands ot cases&#13;
already permanently cured and who&#13;
are daily recommending Electric Bitters,&#13;
will prove. Bnght's-disease, diabetes,&#13;
weak back, or any urinaryeomplaint&#13;
quickly cured. They purify&#13;
the blood, regulate the bowels, and&#13;
act directly on the diseased parts.&#13;
Every bottle guaranteed. For sale at&#13;
50c. a bottle at Winchell's Drug Store.&#13;
S^CK AS——&#13;
VALVES, LEATHERS-PLUNGERS,&#13;
r^ Handles or Plunge Kod,&#13;
HING IN THE PUMP LINE.&#13;
CALL AND SEE ME.&#13;
I C A N R I G Y O U O U T ! !&#13;
F . L BROWN&#13;
TUTT'S&#13;
PILLS&#13;
25 YEARS—»JL U S E .&#13;
rho Greatest jjj^ft\j|ft*-?gh of &amp;' ~ 3*&#13;
SYMPTOMS OF A TORP2D LEVER. LoiBul'uvpctltcN Bowel* coal »**« Fain ia&#13;
the bead, wiili a dull nci'satioa U tbo&#13;
back part, Tuiu under tlio aboii'derblade,&#13;
Fullness nftcr catliiff, wiibndla-&#13;
Incllnatlon to oxcrtlouo'" body rrtnlud.&#13;
Irritability of temper, **orv spirit*, with&#13;
afeellnf oflmvinff uoslcctod dame ditty,&#13;
Wearineo, Dlzzluow, Fluttering at tho&#13;
Heart, Dot* before tUo cyca, llcndnc&gt;£&#13;
pver tho right eye, llpfitW'asrJus*, wlt?»&#13;
fitful drenms, Highly culnrvd ('Hue, «J. I&#13;
C O N S T I P A T J O N .&#13;
TCTT'S l'iLLS uro especially iv Ved&#13;
to such oases one tl&lt;**o ciFeefs sucii A&#13;
thftngu »if futt; J itJT :&gt;* t o list. m M l tt'O MUfrrer.&#13;
Th«y Increase-tb&gt;.\i»pctUe,an4».a-i*etlw&#13;
hndf tr&gt; T l t U e OU J'IO^.U.I •' Uu? f&gt;v;tflft 1» tnli&gt;o!n lirJI|tseh*t«ivde,O:"rtlM Jj viiU(»i. "vr,LT:o«u»llacr .A*Jcttoiuo»n; aormn ,&lt;&#13;
TUTTS KAI8 M%i&#13;
GJUT HAIR or AViu*Kttii8 chaiiyi-a to i\&#13;
GLOSST UUACK IJV II billon n^plicaf \on of&#13;
thin I&gt;YE. It imparts u uutmia color. »c1. &lt;&#13;
iusiautanor.u'-ly. &gt;n:&lt;l hv L&gt;nit{^ibtft. or&#13;
j»enr bv exnrt.'sv or. i&lt;-r«-ij&lt;i jf iJi. /• Office44. Murra'??- •'swy rU&#13;
S&#13;
(1 BIGHT'S INDIAN VEOnftBlfPlUS&#13;
rOB THE LiVE&#13;
RAalne tdo taalkle , Bhelinlj?i opuuresly C&gt; omplaints&#13;
ing. Price 25 ct*.&#13;
^fttrtotnofrtp*&#13;
&gt;ruKKltta.&#13;
&gt; P H-? a a^ 4&#13;
a.5 c o s- 3 =2 g&#13;
/&#13;
THtOldfst, Brighlent, and hpst of'Wontprn VTceklios.&#13;
Kigni psgcM, fifty.six columns, fine }ii\pcr, now ivr&lt;«,&#13;
rl«&gt;»r print, und the Dinst rnicrtaininp |&gt;r&gt;pi&gt;r ofierid&#13;
tho reading public. Hnits. tvrrv Im^litr, dwruuBca&#13;
• ubieeu with fairne9d, oontniu-t all tlio now* of the&#13;
world ntiraciivfly pronon od, and in wir don A competitor&#13;
ia general excellence as a family paper. It&#13;
co«t»but r r&#13;
*nd «Tery subscriber receives free of cbarce, posUc*&#13;
p»id, a copy of h ' ^ *"&#13;
THE TIMES ILLUSTRATED HAND-BOOK,&#13;
•lone worth the price of subscription. The Hand-book&#13;
i» a publication of one hundred pa^es of useful and entertaininR&#13;
reading matter, especially prepared and&#13;
published for the subscribers oft he "\Veekly Times'"&#13;
All who take the paper are delighted with it, and the&#13;
Hand-book will be equally satisfactory. Send for specimen&#13;
copy of the paper. Address, THE TIMES,&#13;
230 Walnut St., CIMCIHATI, 0 .&#13;
THE CINCINNATI TIMES-STAR,&#13;
Is the be*) and cheapest daily paper published In th&#13;
dwoellsatr. s aE iy«ehatr ,p narg etsw—elfvoert yc-eenigths ta cwoleuerka.n a—and only six It is independent&#13;
in politics, hut aims tobehir in pvery'hing, antd&#13;
just to all parties, individuals, section J, and natton»U&#13;
ties. Ii you want all the news aitractivelv andhenes*-&#13;
lypresented, mihscnbe for it. THE LARO'EST CIECCIATW*&#13;
or AJTT fAfgrryrisriyvATf, —&#13;
Address, THE TTME?-RTAR,&#13;
230 Waluut 8t., CIBCBXATI, Ok&#13;
z - r \&#13;
s pURNITURE! p U&#13;
-•7TWhen&#13;
in want of anything in the line of Furniture/^ such"as&#13;
BEDROOM SUITS, PARLOR SUITS&#13;
LOUNGES, BUREAUS, BOOKCASES, TABLES.&#13;
STANDS, CHAIRS,ETC.J^cTfJOME*&#13;
;AND SEE ME.;&#13;
COFFINS, CASKETS. ROBES find FUNERAL SUPPLIES of alt kinds&#13;
constantly on hand. Respectflluy,&#13;
.. - ~ -' V77n. BEEBE.&#13;
SXBGOTSd TO 0H98&amp;&#13;
rfeJTTMtsf-i&#13;
• : / •&#13;
; ™ * E S * . _ .&#13;
. &gt;. /&#13;
.^-&#13;
WWJ&#13;
* M ",•*• I|)l I " V »**•• *+,&#13;
*.* SOUTH LYON DOTS.&#13;
first* the BxeeUior,&#13;
Work has be^un on the walls of&#13;
Charley Borden's and G. T. Gready's&#13;
stores tnis week.&#13;
Justice Calkins sentenced William&#13;
. Vickery, a tramp, 90 days at Ionia today,&#13;
for stealing shirts from Jim Dun*&#13;
' can's hired man.&#13;
Lightning struck Orian Lamphere's&#13;
barn in the town of Webster, last&lt; from its eftect one hour later. He&#13;
Saturday, destroying it and contents,&#13;
wheat and hay crop. Loss valued at&#13;
H^OOor $1,300. Insured for $500.&#13;
fllfjfr I k * Picket.&#13;
I Judgement of $80.05 and $10 costs&#13;
IB livor of Mackey in Mackey vs. Bullock.&#13;
A new 1,200 pound bell has been&#13;
purchased for the Presbyterian church&#13;
and is expected will arrive this week.&#13;
Traveling men say that South Lyon&#13;
is the worst drummed town in the&#13;
' step* of Michigan.&#13;
Mua McCuen is preparing to build&#13;
ft ioote on his lot recently purchased&#13;
ot C. Helmuth, cor. Lake and Farrar&#13;
streets.&#13;
, Hooker and Phillips, with a steam&#13;
thresher last week threshed for Andy&#13;
Laird, near New Hudson, 2,382 bushels&#13;
of wlieat in just two days. Next.&#13;
DEXTER CUPPINGSFrom&#13;
the Leader.&#13;
Died, at his residence in Tlexter&#13;
. township, Ausrust 4th, 1885, Patrick&#13;
Lavey, aged 87 years and 4 months.&#13;
Mr. Lavey was born in the county&#13;
of Mead, Ireland, March 17,1798, and&#13;
^carne to this country in 1829, having&#13;
previously married Miss Rose Mc-&#13;
Guire, who accompanied him. In the&#13;
year 1834 he bought the farm on&#13;
which be died of Abram Brewer. His&#13;
wife died seven years ago last March.&#13;
He was a soldier in the Toledo war,&#13;
and beloged to Capt. Harris Leek's&#13;
company of fusileers. He was a good&#13;
citizen, and was respected by all his&#13;
neighbors andacquaintances. Five&#13;
sons and one daughter are left to&#13;
mourn his departure, he having previouslyburied&#13;
two sons and a daughter.&#13;
STOCKBRIDGE NOTES,&#13;
from the Sun.&#13;
Be it said to the credit of Stockbridge,&#13;
not a drunken man disgraced&#13;
her streets on the day of the cirj^as.&#13;
The white man is only, a little below&#13;
par with his colored brother, the&#13;
former paid full fare to attend Emancipation&#13;
celebration, while the latter&#13;
rode at reduced rates.&#13;
We shall change our publication&#13;
day to Thursday for we find some offices&#13;
do not get the packages until the&#13;
next week.&#13;
This beats our last story: A. Force&#13;
brought into our office August 1st,&#13;
some apples which he had kept in his&#13;
cellar since last fall; they were sound&#13;
and healthy.&#13;
ed to the home of his brother-in-law,&#13;
Mr. Ball, in Webster, Saturday night,&#13;
and Sunday morning they were united&#13;
in tne holy bonds of matrimony,&#13;
Rev. C. T. Allen, of Detroit, officiating.&#13;
The happy pair expect soon to&#13;
go to house-keeping.&#13;
Henry Mangle, a German, who was&#13;
at work for Chas. Swinesburg, received&#13;
a sunstroke last Thursday, and died&#13;
leaves a destitute family, and one can&#13;
do »ood missionary work at home, by&#13;
lending them a helping hand.&#13;
(from the Citizen.&#13;
H. P. Martin and Will Pentlin&#13;
started Tuesday for a trip to Tennessee&#13;
to look the country o'er.&#13;
Boy Logan, while playing about a&#13;
cutting box, Friday, had one of his&#13;
fingers run between two cog wheels.&#13;
He won't play with such machines&#13;
again right a «vay.&#13;
John Grouse takes charge of the&#13;
railroad boarding train again this&#13;
week, and goes to Mecosta, where the&#13;
company are building a new piece ot&#13;
road, eight miles in length, into the&#13;
pines.&#13;
The people of the village were called&#13;
out of their beds about 4 o'clock&#13;
Friday morning to witness a novel&#13;
sight, that of an ice bouse on fire.&#13;
Some one bad presumably set fire to&#13;
B. T. O. Clark's ice house, on the bank&#13;
ot the pond, and before the fire could&#13;
be stopped the roof and a portion of&#13;
the walls were burned.&#13;
to&#13;
of&#13;
FOWLERVI.LLE PARAGRAPHSFrom&#13;
the Review.&#13;
Albert Dodge has been confined&#13;
his bed this week from an attack&#13;
bilious fever.&#13;
Mr. E. W. Burkhart received his&#13;
appointment from the Postmaster&#13;
General on ..Monday. He will take&#13;
possession of the office as soon as his&#13;
bonds are accepted, probably about&#13;
the 15th.&#13;
Mr. G. D. Trowbridge and Miss G.&#13;
K. Burg were married at the residence&#13;
of the bride's mother, by Rev. P. C.&#13;
Cyphers on Monday evening. The&#13;
happy couple arc receiving the warm&#13;
congratulations of their many triends.&#13;
F. G. Rounsville purchased 7,000&#13;
bushels of new wheat last week mak&gt;&#13;
&gt; t e g over 21 carloads at prices ranging&#13;
from 87 to 90 cents. This is the larg*&#13;
— o t purchase made along the line 6f&#13;
the D. L. &amp; N. and at prices running&#13;
from one to two cents more per bushel&#13;
than any other point&#13;
HOWELL COMMENTS,&#13;
from the Republican.&#13;
S. B. Lockwood ran down to South&#13;
Lyon and bought 7,000 pounds of wool&#13;
last week. He is bound to buy where&#13;
there is railroad competition.&#13;
The Chairmen ot *he reveral bonds&#13;
of school inspectors in tne county met&#13;
at the office of Clerk Ryan Tuesday,&#13;
and re-elected Mr. H. E. Reed, of&#13;
Marion, county .examiner of schools for&#13;
a term of three years.&#13;
The annual harvest festival of the&#13;
Grangers of the county was held at&#13;
their society hall in this village Tuesday,&#13;
an&lt;i should be chronicled" as a&#13;
very fine success, socially, numerically,&#13;
intellectually and virtually. The&#13;
program of literary exercises was carried&#13;
out as published in the Republican&#13;
two weeks ago, some of the papers&#13;
being spoken of as exceedingly fine&#13;
and interesting.&#13;
In the fore part of Ju,ly F. R. Erwin,&#13;
of Wixom, Oakland county, had a&#13;
young horse stolen, and active efforts&#13;
to capture the thief were unsuccessful,&#13;
though the horse was thought to have&#13;
been seen driven through Howell the&#13;
next day. July 23 another young&#13;
horse was stolen from Mr. Erwin, and&#13;
again officers were put on search,&#13;
which prnvftd fntilp nnt.il last, fiatur.&#13;
day (circus day) when Mr. Erwin&#13;
came to Howell to keep a careful&#13;
watchout tor the possible appearance&#13;
ot the colt. In this he was successful.&#13;
As he was sitting on the porch in front&#13;
of the Rubert House, he saw Edgar&#13;
Beebe and a lady drive up to the&#13;
house, and the horse was put cut in&#13;
the hotel barn. He immediately se-&#13;
^ured-the arrest of Beebe, who lives&#13;
near Parshallville, and had him placed&#13;
in jail here until an Oakland county&#13;
officer could arrive and take him there.&#13;
Beebe claimed that he had traded for&#13;
the horse: but we learn that at his examination&#13;
in Pontiac he confessed&#13;
having stolen the horse, or both horses,&#13;
but also implicated another party&#13;
BRIGHTON SAYINGSFrom&#13;
the Argue.&#13;
Julius Gaddum was thrown from&#13;
his buggy Monday night, near P.&#13;
" \ Lock's residence, and pretty badly&#13;
bruised.&#13;
W.HTlSeger^ little daughter was&#13;
badly kicked bya viscious horse one&#13;
^^UylMtweek.&#13;
Mr. Stephen Jones and Miss Elvira&#13;
** tVlilijj il j ifj liji place, quietly repair- [cemetery for interment.&#13;
whose name we have not learned.&#13;
Beebe and his girl came down to&#13;
take in the circus, but did not even&#13;
get a chance to see the parade of the&#13;
band wagon and small boys. We&#13;
learn the young lady's people came after&#13;
her the next day. Beebe, we are&#13;
told, bears a hard reputation in his&#13;
neighborhood.&#13;
From the Democrat.&#13;
Although over 80 years of age,&#13;
Tbos. Fawcett, of Deerheld, followed&#13;
one side of a reaper half a day, "keeping&#13;
up his end"' in big wheat and during&#13;
the heated weather of the harvest.&#13;
Died, August 2d, in Wheatfield,&#13;
Ingham county, Mich., of brain fever,&#13;
Lewis B., aged 3 years and 8 months,&#13;
only child ot B. C. and Ada O. Rumsey,&#13;
formerly of this place. The remains&#13;
were brought to the Howell&#13;
To the Afflicted.&#13;
Since the introduction of Kellogg's&#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 aafe and reliable agent to employ&#13;
against all aches and pains, which are&#13;
the 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 use on rheumatism, kidney&#13;
affection, and all aches and pains,&#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 used it never will.&#13;
It is absolutely certain in its remedial&#13;
effects, and will always cure when&#13;
cures are possible.&#13;
Call at WINCH ELL'S DRUG STORE and&#13;
at a memorandum book giving more&#13;
details of the curative properties&#13;
of this wonderful medicine.&#13;
Kellogg's Columbian Oil is composed&#13;
of vegetable products in a highly&#13;
concentrated form, and acts directly&#13;
on the kidneys. It cures rheumatism&#13;
acd all other aches and pains.&#13;
if&#13;
AUGUST 1,1885.&#13;
The firm of H. F. Sigler &amp; Bro. have this&#13;
day dissolved by mutual consent The&#13;
books of above Ann will be open for settlement&#13;
at our office for the next 30 days. We&#13;
trust our friends will consider this sufficient&#13;
notice to call, as we much prefer to settle&#13;
our own books. H. F. SIGLER &amp; BRO.&#13;
get&#13;
full&#13;
Rose Leaf, Fine Cut&#13;
Navy Clippings&#13;
and Snuffs&#13;
*^SK^&gt; irTO MACKINAC.&#13;
SUMMER TOUR&#13;
DETROIT AND MACKINAC&#13;
MMA JNevy W n k Day Bseweeev&#13;
DETROIT AND CLEVELAND&#13;
Witt, tor »«t&#13;
"Mcturttqut Mackinac, Wuitrttt*.&#13;
Detroit * Cleveland Steam Nav. Ca.&#13;
C. O. WMITCOMB, OCN. M M , ACT..&#13;
OCTKOtT, M I C H .&#13;
QUAKER Za i3M Beet&#13;
TABLESAUOE. Thoueaade of articles are B.W raaanfteetared that&#13;
ra former yean had to b« imported, paying hifh&#13;
impo-—rt *d*u-t-y•* a•s it ii now *b ei*n g dons on L" ea kPer.&#13;
rlaa table aattca s the QCAKEB TABIK SAVC* take.&#13;
Its place; It ha* beea pronounced bv competent&#13;
Judge* Juit aa feed and earn btiter. The QriMm&#13;
SAUCE baa Slowly but surely gained great importance&#13;
and ia replacing the wry teat imported&#13;
aauca on the abelf of the grocer, tin table*&#13;
ofthereeteuraat and the tables of the rich and&#13;
poor men, greatly prised and reliahed by all oa&#13;
account of ita piquancy, aroma, taste, atrenglh&#13;
and pnreaees. The inrentor baa by yeara of&#13;
atudy of the secret virtues contained la the aromatic&#13;
apicea of the Indies and China, sueh aa&#13;
mace, nutmeg, cinnamon, genuine Jamaica ginger,&#13;
and peppers and buds of trees unknown to most&#13;
men, and by long practice succeeded to eoaabine&#13;
their extracts in auch a liquid form aa we now&#13;
find it of agreeable taste, and so invigorating aa&#13;
to betaken In pjaee of stomach bitter*, Sjy manufacturing&#13;
this sauce here, heavy import duties&#13;
and freights are saved, and it is sold st a lower&#13;
Ugure to she dealer, who making a better preit oa&#13;
Quaker 8*uc* can sell it to the consumer cheaper&#13;
than 'he very best imported article hardly equal.&#13;
ing ours. If your grocer doee not keep it. write&#13;
u*K&gt;TiltlH&gt;as*», IsaiaaawlUaaorbythei "&#13;
CHARM MANUFACTURING CO.,&#13;
JKsala&gt; jQaBSksnaaaT^I^asa ^aavef&#13;
l M A I M L t d ST., 84.&#13;
THE WEEKLY POST!&#13;
For 1 year and an elegant and&#13;
life-like&#13;
PORTRAIT OF GEN. GRANT&#13;
(Tn whose world-famous achievements&#13;
all have a warm interest) will&#13;
be sent for $1.00.&#13;
THE PICTURE OF GEN. GRANT&#13;
Is on fine board, SIZE 11x14, suitable&#13;
for framing,; and it ia said by&#13;
those who knew him best to be&#13;
0HE OF THE BEST PORTRAITS OF HIM&#13;
JVERUKEN.&#13;
It was taken just previous to the&#13;
wasting effect of his last illness, and&#13;
therefore constitutes the LATEST&#13;
and MOST SATISFACTORY pic&#13;
turo of the great *oi&lt;$%r% Address&#13;
To Tra PUBLIC:&#13;
Wishing to give my whole attention to&#13;
my professional dWties, I have this day relinquished&#13;
all interest in the drug stock of&#13;
H. F. Sigler &amp; Bro. F. A. Sigler will continue&#13;
the business, and I trust the same&#13;
liberal patronage bestowed upon the old&#13;
firm may be extended to him. _&#13;
Respectfully, H. F. SIGLER.&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH!&#13;
•Is the paper you should have-&#13;
IN YOUR HOUSEHOLD.&#13;
^IMPORTANT NEWS 13&#13;
-Both at home and abroad.—&#13;
ONLY $1.00 PER YEAR,&#13;
50 CENTS FOR SIX MONTHS&#13;
U^OSrlt^tr&#13;
25 CENTS FOR THREE MONTHS&#13;
J^-IN ADVANCE/^&#13;
•&gt; n&#13;
It is also a good /&#13;
ADVERTISING MEDIUM!:&#13;
AHB RBe.SOSe.SLB BAYBS «.»«• 6^X TSH.&#13;
JOB&gt;WOR*K!&#13;
We make a specialty, and guarantee good work,&#13;
GOOD STOCK '** LIVING PRIC&#13;
If yen want anything ia the&#13;
:X o. /&#13;
4--&#13;
• • &lt; $ • \tir.. Jjf/iWm*;&#13;
r^:&#13;
J . L. NKWKIHK, Publisher.&#13;
&gt; . . . . . .... :&#13;
Batareu *t the PoetoAe* an M OJM* aiau«&lt;v&#13;
TIMELY TOPICS.&#13;
GBNEKAL GRANT supported ent&amp;t.&#13;
siastically all efforts to secure intimate&#13;
commercial relations between the&#13;
United States and Mexico. He had&#13;
great faith in the material progress of&#13;
our sister Republic, and wished to see&#13;
American enterprise take full ad van •&#13;
tage otits opportunity to control the&#13;
Mexican markets. A year ago he said&#13;
in an interview: " I have no doubt that&#13;
the developement that will take place&#13;
in Mexio will be as rapid in the future&#13;
as it was on our own Pacitic O a s t when&#13;
we fivst acqu red it, and I want to sec&#13;
the relations between that country and&#13;
ours the most cordial of any nations in&#13;
the world. If they are not so it will be&#13;
our own fault. .We should do everything&#13;
to secure the confidence of the&#13;
people of Mexico, The more prosperous&#13;
the Mexican people are the better&#13;
pleased we shall bo, and the more it&#13;
will add to our individual interests."&#13;
To General Grant was largely due the&#13;
credit for the successful negotiation of&#13;
a reciprocity treaty with Mexico. That&#13;
treaty is a dead 1 tter, owing to the&#13;
failure of congress to' give, It life by&#13;
necessary legislation But there is little&#13;
reason to doubt that, on the whole, the&#13;
Grant treaty with Mexico would vastly&#13;
promote our trade in interests beyond-]&#13;
the Rio Grande. The matter will undoubtedly&#13;
be brought up for consideration&#13;
at the coming session of congress—&#13;
; n » i ^ — , — .&#13;
W H E R B lie the bones of Columbus—&#13;
in Cuba, or in San Domingo? Seven or&#13;
eight years ago it, was announced that&#13;
the people of San Domingo had discov&#13;
cred" that the bones supposed to be those&#13;
of Columbus, which had been conveyed&#13;
to Havana with great pomp, were spurious"&#13;
Bones and~that~~tb~e genuine bone3&#13;
still lay in Dominican soil. With the&#13;
view of settling this point in dispute,&#13;
the government of San Domingo has&#13;
invited a Jarge number of savants to attend&#13;
an international congress, which&#13;
will open in the capital of that republic&#13;
on the 10 h of September next. The&#13;
government will submit to the judgment&#13;
of this congress its proofs that'&#13;
San Domingo possesses the only bones&#13;
of Columbus in existence.&#13;
PURE PISE-TOP WEISKY.&#13;
Peculiar Beverage Made by ilio Natives&#13;
or Arkausis.&#13;
THE ruins of a deserted village may&#13;
be seen in southern New Jersey, some&#13;
live miles distant from the coast. The&#13;
place was the Utopian dream of James&#13;
D. Allaire, a wealthy visionary, who&#13;
built it about 1840, embodying various&#13;
reformatory and socialistic ideas. He&#13;
'ntended that it should be a manu-&#13;
A Veracious Railroad Man Traveled fc'ar to uet&#13;
It, but Found It Worth the Trouble— The&#13;
People In llalvera Were Excited.&#13;
"Did you ever circus around among&#13;
the suu-kissed hills of Arkansas!&#13;
asked a New York railroad man who&#13;
has circused around almost everywhere.&#13;
"Never did," replied the reporter.&#13;
"Then, of course, you never tampered&#13;
with that punzent and delusive&#13;
tipple so dear to tho native Arkansas&#13;
neart, and affectionately known as pinetop&#13;
whisky?" said the railroad man.&#13;
'"Never heard of it. Isitgflod?"&#13;
"Well, it's, made out of pine tops,&#13;
and when—but I don't want to pass&#13;
judgment on the native resources on&#13;
any part of my boloved country; so&#13;
I'll relate some little incidents that occurred&#13;
to me a fow years ago, fn whioh&#13;
pine-top whisky played an important&#13;
part, aud then you can draw your own&#13;
conclusion as to tho quality of the&#13;
beverage.&#13;
"When I was quartered in St. Louis,&#13;
two or three oi my friends got wind of&#13;
a silver mine, down in Arkansas,&#13;
which was able to pan out a fortune&#13;
two or three tinies a day, and they told&#13;
me that if I'd go along down with 'em&#13;
to look the bonanza over they would&#13;
let me in on the ground floor, and I&#13;
didn't have much spare time, but 1&#13;
concluded to go along and give them&#13;
the benefit of my experience, as I had&#13;
been let in on tho ground floor of several&#13;
bonanza silver mines, and knew&#13;
all about them. Well "&#13;
"Was there much money in those&#13;
mines of yours?" interrupted the reporter.&#13;
"Oh, yes!"-said the railroad man;&#13;
"plenty of it. I Dut the most of it in,&#13;
-and--it'-*there yet, if I remember right.&#13;
Well we went down into Arkansas.&#13;
There were three of us, and as we&#13;
didn't know what might happen, we&#13;
took alanga jug or tw-d-of the best-that&#13;
the Blue Grass country could produce.&#13;
We had to drive from Hot Springs&#13;
back into tho mountains, thirty miles&#13;
or so, to a place called Silver City.&#13;
I'd like to havo you take a ride over&#13;
that road once, just to satisfy you that&#13;
every word I'm telling you is gospel&#13;
truth. Tho mud was so deep that if&#13;
we at any time happened to see tho&#13;
hubs of our wagon come to;thesurface&#13;
we'd call out to the driver:&#13;
"Hi! Sim! Here's a daisy stretch of&#13;
road. Let em spin!"&#13;
"Once in a while the wheels on one&#13;
side or the other of our wagon would&#13;
run against some smashing old rock&#13;
somewhere down in the bowels of the&#13;
earth, and up, would go that side of&#13;
the wagon in tlje nir, and down would&#13;
go the other side so far that we'd ship&#13;
a hundred weight or so of mud at&#13;
every dip. Then we'd have to stop&#13;
and bail the wagon out before we could&#13;
go ahead. Ami hills! Great Scott!&#13;
Why sonio of those hills are' so steep&#13;
that passengers that travel over tho&#13;
road are tied to one another with&#13;
ropes, like those dufiers that clamber&#13;
around in the Alps. Then the rope is&#13;
tied to the driver, and from him to the&#13;
neck yoke at the end of the tongue. So&#13;
you see, unless the rope breaks or the&#13;
neck yoke slips oil', you can't well fall&#13;
out backward, but it/s very trying to&#13;
the eyes. Our driyer told us that once&#13;
a party of four bj£, heavy men were&#13;
factunng center, with stores where the j ^ ^ Carried over to Silver City linked&#13;
inhabitants could buy at low prices,&#13;
and with schools for the higher education&#13;
of all the children. The enterprise&#13;
was a quick and total failure. The&#13;
walls of the factories are tumbled down&#13;
and overgrown, and a cracked bell lies&#13;
at the foot of the steeple from "which it&#13;
fell years ago.&#13;
All words of Grant will now be treasured.&#13;
The following extract from a&#13;
letter fittingly illu-trates t'r.e broad&#13;
catholicity of the man: lLolm^fi\&#13;
labor to add all needful gu^witees for&#13;
the more perfect securj^effree thought,&#13;
free spee h and fjetTpress, pure moralsunfetteredjellgious&#13;
sentiments and o&#13;
equal^wgnts and privileges to all men*&#13;
esppctive pi nationality, color or&#13;
religion ISncourage free schools, and&#13;
resolve^ that not one dollar of money&#13;
appropriated to their support, no mat&#13;
ter how raised, vshall be appropriat d&#13;
to the support of any sectarian school "&#13;
REPORTS from Spain indicate tha;&#13;
thunder storms largely increase the&#13;
mortality from cho'era. This phenomenon&#13;
has been noticed many times during&#13;
previous visitations of cholera. The&#13;
cooling and purification of the air by&#13;
thunder storms no douht check the&#13;
spread of cholera, and are beneficial to&#13;
such patients as survive; but the concussion&#13;
of the air, or some' other unknown&#13;
cause, prostrates persons whose&#13;
bodies are already filled with the ge&#13;
of the plague, and causes manv^tcTdie&#13;
who are caught in the crjjieafstage of&#13;
the disease.&#13;
MoNTANA^objects to being passed by&#13;
withemt-'notice, inasmuch as she hag&#13;
92,000,000 acres within her boundaries,&#13;
of which 70,000,000 are fine&#13;
lands, suitable for agriculture or grazing.&#13;
Nearly 20,000,000 are mountainous,&#13;
but among these 20,000,000 acres&#13;
are *&#13;
cam pa&#13;
with tho safety guys, as they call&#13;
them, and in going up one of tho hills&#13;
their weight was too much for the&#13;
team, and they pulled tho whole business&#13;
right over backward, and there&#13;
was the team plumb on their backs&#13;
headed down hill and the four passengers&#13;
buried under the wagon body,&#13;
which was pointed, up hill, hind wheels&#13;
forward. They mined, the four men&#13;
out of the mud in rather bad shape,&#13;
but thejartfd was nice and soft and&#13;
porpAi&lt;and they weren't hurt much.&#13;
'Well, we got along with the hills&#13;
all right until we came to one that&#13;
was crowding so close on to the perpendicular&#13;
that even Sim, the driver,&#13;
shook his head. He stopped the team&#13;
at the foot of the hill and said:&#13;
" 'Ge'mens. I don' wanter skeer ye,&#13;
'fo'de Lawd, I don'! But dls h'yah&#13;
raise o1 g^oun' is a leetle stiff, an' I&#13;
don' wanter take de 'sponsibility o'&#13;
dera hosses teeterln' back inter dis&#13;
h'yah wagon, ge'mens. 'Deed I don'!&#13;
Ye'd best git out an' walk, ,fo' do&#13;
Lawd ye had!"&#13;
n "So we uncoupled ourselves from&#13;
the safety guys and got out. Sim tookjneirch"&#13;
horseby thehead ami bsc1ced~up&#13;
hill, keeping the team on their feet by&#13;
main force. He was a powerful darky,&#13;
Sim was. I'll bet you're wondering&#13;
how it was possible" with the mud&#13;
so deep, to lug a wagon up those hills.&#13;
Well, that apes seem queer before yo&#13;
understand' it. Tho lucky tiring&#13;
is that the hills are not miiddy; They&#13;
are so steep that thenMTu all runs&#13;
down off of them amtspreads along&#13;
tho road ttfc t^0H5ottom. That's one&#13;
reason wjjy-ifhe mud's so deep oa the&#13;
level pla'oes.&#13;
e were twelvo hours getting to&#13;
Silver City. There was no city there,&#13;
so we set out to find the silver. To&#13;
getrid of this part of my story, I'll&#13;
just say that the mine was there, but&#13;
for some reason or other the silver had&#13;
gone somewhere else. We monkeyed&#13;
around there for a day or two, and&#13;
then we found that onr commissary&#13;
department consisted of two or three&#13;
empty flasks. Then, of course, we&#13;
had to forage. I asked a native if we&#13;
could get any whisky in those parts.&#13;
" 'Wall, I recken if ye can't git none&#13;
'round h'yar,' said he, 'that tlT hain't&#13;
lo?ated some of-the richest mining ' n 0 dog-gone use o' yer.totin' your jug&#13;
&gt;ps in the world. i *"*"&amp;? olse;l ,, x&#13;
"'Good!' said the native. 'Good:&#13;
It's pine-top whisky, it is! Good! Why,&#13;
dog-gone it, it'll (ire ye up like burulu1&#13;
the hair off a dog. Two drinks o'&#13;
pine-top isbettor'u a gallon o1 yer no&#13;
count greasy rye or iTurbin. Is pinetop&#13;
whisky good? Wall, it's got more&#13;
tooth nor a cross-cut saw!'&#13;
"This nativo bv tho way, keot a saloon&#13;
at Silver City.- We told him wo&#13;
liked his diagnosis of pine-too whisky,&#13;
and would take a gallon. We did so,&#13;
and we drank it by degrees'. It left a&#13;
dark brown taste in our mouths that&#13;
vou could tee when we breathed.&#13;
When we got back to Hot Springs, 1&#13;
can't answer for the feelings of tho&#13;
others, but I was seized with a wild&#13;
desire to either get up a dog light or&#13;
set lire to a load of hay that stood in&#13;
the street. I wasn't drunk, but the&#13;
pine-top was working. When the&#13;
train that was to tako us to Malvern&#13;
Junction was ready, the steam escaping&#13;
from the locomotive suggested to&#13;
me that life would henceforth be a&#13;
burden unless I had-a hundred or so&#13;
of skyrockets to lire off there and theu.&#13;
Some one said I could get them at&#13;
Malvern, and I boarded the^ train with&#13;
my friends, and got off again three&#13;
times to lick tho conductor because he&#13;
wouldn't start the train until his time&#13;
was up. My desire for skyrockets had&#13;
awakened a similar desire for, skyrockets&#13;
in the others, and we asked&#13;
one another how we had ever managed&#13;
to get along thus far without&#13;
them. The train had hardly stopped&#13;
at Malvern before we were out of it.&#13;
A boy, innocent and unsuspecting,&#13;
stood with his mouth open, gazing at&#13;
the train. Something said to me that&#13;
this boy knew where there were skyrockets&#13;
galore. I grabbed him by the&#13;
arm and whirled him around and&#13;
yelled:&#13;
" 'Got me the skyrockets, or I'll&#13;
slice you up!'&#13;
The boy'was scared half to death.&#13;
The rest of the party got hold of him&#13;
and yelled for skyrockets. Pretty&#13;
soon he broke away and tore up tho&#13;
street like mad. Wo,tore after him.&#13;
He • ran i n to--a-st ore~and-we—fol lo wedhim.&#13;
Whether he led us there on purpose&#13;
or merely ran in to escape us I&#13;
don't know, but I do know that the&#13;
storekeeperkept a little of everything,&#13;
and had fifty skyrockets. We bought&#13;
them all, and proceeded at once to set&#13;
them off. There is one street in Malvern,&#13;
and it is built right up a hill.&#13;
Wp set our skyrockets going plumb up&#13;
that hill as fast as we could touch 'em&#13;
off. When we commenced there were&#13;
horses and wagons tied in front of&#13;
everv store in the street.&#13;
" 'K-s-.«-s-s-h-h-h! Whiz!, Bang!'&#13;
would go a rocket, and snap would go&#13;
jkiialter strap jir_iwo, and in loss than&#13;
three minutes there was nothing to be&#13;
seen in that town but runaway horses&#13;
and mules. It was equal to a stampede&#13;
of cattle on the plains. The more&#13;
they ran the more we bombarded, until&#13;
there was a stretch of lire going up&#13;
that hill without a break in it from&#13;
ons end to the other. People were&#13;
shouting and howling from windows.&#13;
Storekeepers came out and put up&#13;
their shutters, ami if ever there was a&#13;
red-hot town it was Malverrfabout that&#13;
time. The train we were to take was&#13;
a^bout due at'the junction then, and&#13;
the agent of the company, who knew&#13;
me well, managed to get within speak-&#13;
,ing distance of mo and made me&#13;
understand that they were organizing&#13;
a committee of citizens to take us in&#13;
and ride us out of town in a way we&#13;
didn't care to go, and we gathered up&#13;
our remaining rockets and made-for&#13;
the depot. The train didn't come a&#13;
minute too soon,for it had barely pulled&#13;
out when Ihecomniit'tee came sweep&#13;
ing down to the depot. Then we fired&#13;
rockets at them from windows and&#13;
platforms, and left the town in a blaze&#13;
of glorjT.&#13;
"After the rockets were gone I&#13;
thought if there was one thing that&#13;
would make me happy it would be to&#13;
kill centipedes, and' as there were&#13;
none on the train I fully intended to&#13;
get off at the next station and go back&#13;
south somewhere and kill centipedes.&#13;
I afterward changed my mind and&#13;
said 1 would return to SL Louis first,&#13;
get my two dogs, and then go to Texas&#13;
and spend a week or so at centipede&#13;
Minting. When lgot to St. Louis the&#13;
pine top was working off, for I hadn't&#13;
had a drop for two days. Still the&#13;
centipede idea was strong within me.&#13;
1 went to my room at the Lindell&#13;
House and went to beed. As I lay&#13;
there with the gas turned very low, 1&#13;
ment, but if you go down to Arkansas&#13;
I'd go light on pino-top whisky if I&#13;
were you." — Xcw York, bun.&#13;
• - ' • ' • • • ———» —•**»»- » - • • • i • —&#13;
The English Cabinet.&#13;
It is now said that tho Queen is endeavoring&#13;
to lind some way out of the&#13;
ministerial muddlo in England without&#13;
an actual revolution. Of course,&#13;
her natural instincts as a monarch incliuo&#13;
more to the Conservative than&#13;
tho Liberal element in politics, but, at&#13;
the same time, her family interests on&#13;
the continent of Europe make her fear&#13;
tho consequences that might ensue if&#13;
the "fiery successors of Seaconstield&#13;
were to achieve power. The one great,&#13;
loading man whom she probably detests&#13;
more than any other is Mr. Gladstone,&#13;
whose aggressive radicalism, in&#13;
spite of his profound outward respect&#13;
for the Crown as an institution, has&#13;
has been continually disturbing the&#13;
peace of her somewhat somnolent&#13;
Majesty for many years. Moreover,&#13;
Gladstone and his surroundings, bis&#13;
Dilkes and his Chamberlains, his Forsters&#13;
and his Brights, smell too much&#13;
of the shop and the factory to be entirely&#13;
acceptable to the heiress of all&#13;
the bluest blood of the Guelphs. And&#13;
hero it is reully curious to note, in&#13;
parentheses as it were, how few of the&#13;
ancient nobility of England havo been&#13;
represented in J:he Gladstone Cabinets.&#13;
The Earl of Granville and the Marquis&#13;
of Hartingtonare the most conspicuous&#13;
among these~.few, and in 1880, when&#13;
the Beaconstield Ministry resigned,&#13;
they were both solicited to undertake&#13;
the formation of a Ministry before her&#13;
Majesty could make up her mind to&#13;
call upon Gladstone.&#13;
Similarly, When a crisis seemed to&#13;
threaten the Gladstone Cabinet a couple&#13;
of months ago, it was common&#13;
rumor in London that he was to be&#13;
thrust forth and tho Marquis of Hartington&#13;
to become the recipient of tho&#13;
royal command to organize a new&#13;
Ministry. It is possible that a strong&#13;
effort will be made to carry out this&#13;
programme now, though Hartington&#13;
is hardlylikelylo look jontheproject&#13;
with very cheerful eyes. He is a&#13;
shrewd, earnest, long-headed politician,&#13;
and though the heir to one of&#13;
the greatest titles and revenues&#13;
in England, works harder thac.&#13;
a plow-boy in his chosen vocation.&#13;
He is born to all that titular dignity&#13;
and wealth can bestow, and has spent&#13;
his life, thus far, in pursuit of such&#13;
fame as statecraft can bring. He is&#13;
not likely, therefore, to be tempted by&#13;
the f i t t e r of a necessarily dangerous&#13;
and probably transitory distinction to&#13;
discount his splendid future prospects.&#13;
He can afford to wait. Should he,&#13;
however, accept, there is no man in&#13;
Britain who can command greater social&#13;
and political strength. The title&#13;
he holds is simply one of courtesy, it&#13;
being the first subsidiary title of his&#13;
father,-the Duke of Devonshire, one&#13;
of the richest and riiost powerful nobles&#13;
in England, and if*ho lives he&#13;
must, in his turn, become the head, of&#13;
the Cavendishes. What chance tho&#13;
Irish would have of consideration&#13;
should this able Whig succeed the radical&#13;
Liberals can bo imagined from the&#13;
fact that he is tho elder brother of that&#13;
Lord Frederick Cavendish who was so&#13;
brutally murdered in Phenix Park a&#13;
few years ago. It is not likely there&#13;
will be much relaxation of the crimes&#13;
and coercion legislation should Hartington&#13;
actually accept the chief place&#13;
in tho new Cabinet that is to be formed.—&#13;
St. Louis Globe-Democrat.&#13;
TUTTS&#13;
PILLS&#13;
20 YEARS IN USE.&#13;
Jfco feaitae* Medical Trinapa of &amp;a Af#&#13;
SYMPTOMS OP A TORPID LIVER. Z««Mefa»M(lt4» B«w»l«e©itlve,Pal»l» '&#13;
tkm ksfcrf, with a dnll u m l l o i U t h *&#13;
bmtk part. Pain usdar tha ahaaldar*&#13;
fclaaa, Falloaaa after eating, with arfte*&#13;
ta*tlaall*B to exertUa of hair er ariad*&#13;
Irritability of temper, iuow spirit*, wltk&#13;
afeellaf efhavlaa neglected earne daty,&#13;
Waariaeae, Dtazineaa, Fluttering at taa&gt;&#13;
Heart, Data beferetae eyen, Hoadacn*- &lt;&#13;
• • e r the right eye, Rcetleeeneee, with&#13;
fitful dream*, Highly eolered Urine, ajiift&#13;
CONSTIPATION. 9&#13;
TTJTT'S FILL.* art ••peoially at - / e f t&#13;
to inch C*M«, one doae effect* su«h a&gt;&#13;
taaaffeeffeellngastoastonislittiesufferer*&#13;
Th*y body to I MTiTkMe Ho nt hFe leAa pnp.tehtnitfle ,t»haad »M*U(eMtn t hU* tMa*M olleafc^aaatUlraenOd nbnyu tuhe.inr cTaounUlar ASetotioaln* aroea&gt;&#13;
S HAIR DYE. *Gtur RXTR or WHIRKEB* changed to a&#13;
GLOUT BLACK by a elngle application of&#13;
tbl* DTK. It lmparta a natural color, act*&#13;
instantaneously. Sold by DruggiaU, oft&#13;
aentbyazpreason receiptor I I . • *&gt; Office, 4 4 Murray St., Now Yorkt&#13;
Improved Western Washer rJUCB. No. 1 ft»r family of 0....&#13;
No. 8 ftr Urge ttmttj...&#13;
Ko. 8 for Hotel and Laindry,&#13;
Over 20,000 in WM»&#13;
Thousand* of ladles are using it, and th«y*peax&#13;
of it in the highest term*, etjiqg that they would&#13;
rsther dispense with any other household article,&#13;
tesa this excellent Washer. Ho well-reralstedfsmUy&#13;
will be without it, ss it eares the olotbea,&#13;
SSTM lsbor, SSYOS time, saves fuel., SSTS* soap, and&#13;
makes washday no longer s dread, bat rather a&#13;
plwiiptrecreation, as much ss such is possible*&#13;
HORTON M'FG CO.,&#13;
Agants Wanted. Ft. Wayne, Ind.&#13;
g a s 1 3&#13;
On the roof lay ^ centipede nearly two&#13;
feet long—about four tijues the usual&#13;
size. It was workhfg its hundred&#13;
hideous legs alpflg, when suddenly it&#13;
rolled frnia^tho roof and fell with a&#13;
soundjrlve a big sponge full of water&#13;
^n-flie Moor in my room. Instantly&#13;
my two dojfs, a black and tan and a&#13;
Skye terrier, buckled into the centipede.&#13;
The centipede struck the black&#13;
and tan one blow, and he keeled&#13;
over on the floor, and beean to swell&#13;
until he looked like a toadfish with a&#13;
dogs head. The centipede andSkye had&#13;
it hot and heavy around thafe room,&#13;
but the centipede was too much lor&#13;
the dog, and in a minute or so he waa&#13;
swelling up,, and he swelled up so&#13;
much that he floated up to tho ceiling,&#13;
and went bobbing aloag against it like&#13;
you've seen beetles on a summer&#13;
night. After the dogs had been settled&#13;
the centipede rose up on one end of&#13;
himself and made straight for me. I&#13;
didn't wait for him, but got out of&#13;
that bed like a flash, and cutout of the&#13;
room just as quick.&#13;
"It is probabiy needless to say that&#13;
there was no centipede there at all. It&#13;
was all pine-top whisky. I forgot how&#13;
many doses of bromide and Btuff they&#13;
Axed me up with, but it took a good&#13;
many* I ou can use your own judgpounds&#13;
of merchandise "backs&#13;
^over the mountains-285 miles. " There&#13;
isn't a wagon^irr the republic outside&#13;
of Guayaquil, and not a road over&#13;
which^a wagon could pass. The peoplerfcnow&#13;
nothing^but what the priests&#13;
saw one side of a sloping roof obtrudjEK tell theni; they have no amusements&#13;
itself through the window of my room, but cock-fight* and bull-fights.&#13;
Advantages of Priest Rule.&#13;
The priests, writes an Ecuadar correspondent&#13;
to The Boston Herald, control&#13;
the government in all its branches,&#13;
dictate its laws and govern their enforcement,&#13;
and rule the country as&#13;
absolutely as if the pope was its&#13;
As a result, 75 per cent, of the&#13;
tion can neither read noi&gt;wfite, over&#13;
50 per cent, of childreii born are illegitimate,&#13;
therejs^not a pennitentiary,&#13;
house o i correction, reformatory,&#13;
orbenevolent institution outside of&#13;
Quito and Guayaquil, . there is not a&#13;
railroad or stage cnach in the entire&#13;
country, and, until two years ago,&#13;
there was not a telegraph wire. Labo,&#13;
ers got from $2 to $10 a montl&gt;r'and&#13;
men are paid $2 25 for carrying 100&#13;
orftheir&#13;
literature, no mail routes except from&#13;
Guayaquil to the capital (Quito), and&#13;
nothing is common among the masses&#13;
that was not in use by them two hundred&#13;
years ago. If one-tenth of the&#13;
money that has been expended in&#13;
building monasteries had been devoted&#13;
to tho construction of cart-roads,&#13;
Ecuador, which is naturally rich,&#13;
would be one of the most wealthy&#13;
nations in proportion to its area on&#13;
the globe.&#13;
« m &gt;&#13;
How a Woraau Enters a Pew.&#13;
Speaking of tho freaks which characterize&#13;
some people, did you ever see&#13;
how a woman gets from the isle into&#13;
her pew in church? It is a most ridiculous&#13;
"performance. Go to church&#13;
early, and watch if you want to sec the&#13;
•'Ripple'' danced to a new and extraordinary&#13;
step. The moment she gets&#13;
just inside of tho pew she makes a&#13;
slight pause, and goes it hipty-hophop-&#13;
hop and a skip W o r e she decides&#13;
where to sit, lirst one way and then&#13;
the other. It always makes me think&#13;
she has glass heels on fi"er shoes and is&#13;
afraid t© put them on the floor. ^-Detroit&#13;
Every Saturday*-&#13;
^amsrek's income is &gt;fl an linnr, nr 1ft)&#13;
bear*,—.Chicago Hutu&#13;
ffBIGHTS INDIAN VEGETABLE PIUS&#13;
rOETHB LEVER&#13;
Ano all Bilious Complaint*&#13;
ing. tribe a'ou™* ,&#13;
\&#13;
, \&#13;
"Jup.-JHiKIP"1-" '*•' fw"""^w'!'T*V"&lt;P"^''":'!'JiP""«" ^*^wvmppnpp&gt;w«iPP«iMP«i H P&#13;
« &gt; '&#13;
w w p p * pppp •^WWPWP P*^"P iinpaij, uu i iLI... iu^.(juujmiiimjjp iw ji, j jy. p ii ^Jjiiiijuppppppppm&#13;
-»—-^.^-&#13;
&gt;»i&gt;&#13;
%&#13;
/:•&#13;
I •&#13;
Ji'.&#13;
sii&#13;
Spelling Match.&#13;
Can you spell? Well, yes; almost anybody&#13;
can spoil. Then spell this, and&#13;
make out what it means. If you can't&#13;
^¾ then pass it on to j'our next neighbor:&#13;
B-B-K-B-X-I-N-N-O.-O-K-H-R-S S-T-T-W.&#13;
Don't say it out loud, but just whis&#13;
per in your pretty neighbor's ear, that 11&#13;
«he will place these letters in proper&#13;
position she will have the world's great&#13;
tonic, which will enrl h her impoverished'&#13;
blood, put roses on her pal*&#13;
cheeks and make her strong and happy&#13;
Go to the nearest drug store with a dollar&#13;
in your hand, and ask for Brown'*&#13;
Iron Hitters&#13;
An Austrian lieutenant of urtillery ha* sho&#13;
himself deuJ with a lat-^e cannon.&#13;
A Falsehood Nailed.&#13;
An irresponsible penny-i-linor recent&#13;
ly act going in a New York Daily news Sr a malicious statement that the&#13;
» of the Louisiana State Lottery&#13;
pany are paid to persons in its empfaff,&#13;
tnd not honestly drawn and paid.&#13;
TWfl lie has been copied here and&#13;
&gt;• UbH» into Journals unfriendly to'the&#13;
Company, and readers not awaro of&#13;
the facts are likely to t&gt;o "affected t y&#13;
them.&#13;
An Ohio co-respondent clips it from&#13;
a local weekly and writes the Company&#13;
OB; the Cth iust. to ask if there is any&#13;
truih In it.&#13;
I * t ti«cerals Beauregard and Early,&#13;
wh# h*To the entire charge of all the&#13;
^Company's Drawings answer "not only&#13;
thk correspondent but all whose faith&#13;
in the Company has been disturbed by&#13;
this and similar calumnious paragraphs&#13;
Bead the exact language of Generals&#13;
Beauregard and Early in the following&#13;
Statement, to which their name3 are&#13;
s gned:&#13;
Tho charges, insinuations, and inuendoe3&#13;
contained in said publication&#13;
are false in every respect,, so far as they&#13;
affect the fairness of the drawings of&#13;
the Louisiana Lottery,or the integrity, of&#13;
the acts of the Lottery Company. When&#13;
the undersigned had charge only of the&#13;
se id-annual drawings they counted tho&#13;
tubes containing the numbers previous&#13;
to each of those drawings to be certain&#13;
that all were put in the wheel, binee&#13;
they have had charge of the monthly&#13;
_ itahtrings also, the wheel has been un-&#13;
^8»r their exclusive control, and after&#13;
" each drawing they have restored all the&#13;
drawn numbers to the wheel, locked it,&#13;
and sealed it in such manner as to render&#13;
it impossible for the numbers to be&#13;
reached or interfered with without their&#13;
knowledge. They have thus been al&#13;
ways certain that all the numbers were&#13;
in the whtel at each drawing, and they&#13;
a one are responsible for the integrity&#13;
of the drawings.&#13;
The intimation that, persons have&#13;
been paid to allow tceir "names to be&#13;
published as the winners of prizes in&#13;
this Lottery is also false and without&#13;
the slightest foundation in fact. Mil&#13;
lions of dollars have been paid out by&#13;
the Company in rri/.es through the&#13;
banks and express agencies, as can bo&#13;
ascertained from the bank officers in&#13;
New Orleans, and the express agents in&#13;
Now York, Washington City, and in&#13;
this city, as well as from the winners of&#13;
the prizes whose names have been &lt;ny«if&#13;
to the public. ^ ^&#13;
T. BEAUJtEtJARD,&#13;
A. IjAtfLY,&#13;
Commissioners,&#13;
fs, July 14th.&#13;
DOMESTIC HINTS.&#13;
lies.&#13;
Signed.&#13;
N E W ORLJ&#13;
lelphla is to have a crematory.&#13;
They make bottles out of paper in France.&#13;
You can hear a clap of thunder 20 miles.&#13;
Georgia is a better temperance state thct&#13;
Maine. ^&#13;
Quinsy troubled me for.twenty }rears.&#13;
Since 1 started using Dr. 1 hernias'&#13;
Eclectric Oil, hare^not had an attack.&#13;
The Oil cuFesrsore throat at once Mrs.&#13;
Letta ^Conrad, Standish, Mich,, Oct.,&#13;
English schools are sa;llv in need of new and&#13;
unproved geographical text hooks.&#13;
/ F I V E R NEGLECT a constipated con&#13;
i Jttfcn of the bowels, or serious results&#13;
•vMH»ly follow, such as piles, impure&#13;
blood and many chronic complaints.&#13;
turdock Blood Bitters is the remedy.&#13;
Colored men SLTVO as pall-hearers for th«&#13;
dead members of o.d at. Louis families.&#13;
FOR COLDS, CROUP, ASTHMA, BRON-&#13;
0*1TI3 and Sore I hroat use Dr. Thomas1&#13;
f\ Bokctric Oi , and get the genuine.&#13;
w . It costs about. ¢.^.000 ki fc:s to get one's self&#13;
£ji:orated with the order of the garter..&#13;
My physician said I could not live,&#13;
my liver out of order, frequently vomited&#13;
greenish mucous, skin yellow, small&#13;
dry humors on face, stomach would not&#13;
retain food. Burdock Blood Bitters&#13;
cured me. Mrs. Adelaide O'Brien, 372&#13;
Exchange St., Buffalo, N. Y.&#13;
The purchase of real estate In England an.l&#13;
Wales, to the value of 1750,000 is ordered by&#13;
Larl Calms' will.&#13;
"'ROUGH OK CATARRH."&#13;
offensive odors at once. Complete cure of&#13;
a, also uiH5aualcd.au ffargte for Diphtheria.&#13;
' Foul Ureath. 50c.&#13;
arc so white servants at the White&#13;
THE HOPE OF THE NATION. *d eClihcailtder,e nU,M a l"oWw einll 'ds eHveelaoltphm Kenctn, epwuenry.", acrawnv an!&#13;
Parisian belles now carry pistols.&#13;
CATARRH OF THE BLADDER. Stinging, Irritation, inflammation, all Kidney and&#13;
Urinary Complaint*, cured by "Bucnu-Paiba;" it.&#13;
• f - i . 1 • ' - - -i&#13;
Card swindlers infest eastern watering&#13;
pi«»s. _ ;&#13;
Every nervous person should try Carter's&#13;
Little NERVE Pilis. They are made specially&#13;
for nervous and dyspeptic men and worn in,&#13;
and are just the medicine needed by all persons&#13;
who, from any cause, do not sleep well, or wno&#13;
fall to get proper strength from their food.&#13;
Cases of weak stomach, Indigestion, dyspepsia,&#13;
nervous and sick headache, Ac, readily vield&#13;
to the use of the Little Nerve Pills, particularly&#13;
if combined with Carter's UtUe Liver Pills.&#13;
In rials at 25 cents.&#13;
Blue fish cheeks fried in hot butter&#13;
until a nice brown are dainty morsels.&#13;
Napkin rino;s are now made with attached&#13;
stands instead ol resting loosely&#13;
on tho tabie cloth, these stands consisting&#13;
of leaves and other simple devices&#13;
iu metallic colors and chased.&#13;
Try this recipe for a pie: The pulp&#13;
of one lomon chopped line with a halt'&#13;
&amp; cup of raisins; add two tablespoonfuls&#13;
of Hour, one cup of sugar and one&#13;
2up of water. Bake between two thin&#13;
trusts.&#13;
French women, says a close observer,&#13;
put on their "gloves in their&#13;
iressing rooms, before going out, as&#13;
scrupulously as the}' would their&#13;
iressos. Englishwomen put theirs on&#13;
3ii tho stairs, and Americans in the&#13;
street.&#13;
A beautiful table cover is made of&#13;
sld gold silk serge with a border&#13;
&gt;t conventionalized sour-sop (anona&#13;
nurieata) leaves, llowers and fruit,&#13;
;he creamy white of the star shaped&#13;
lowers and the russet crimson of the&#13;
"ruit being in harmony With tho rich&#13;
^rcen foliage.&#13;
Sulphuric acid will remove spots&#13;
:'rom brass that will not yield to oxtlie&#13;
acid. It may be applied with a&#13;
:trush; but great care must betaken&#13;
:hat no drop oL» the acid shall come&#13;
n contact, with clothes or skin, as it is&#13;
ruinous to garments and to cuticle.&#13;
Bath brick or rotten stone may be&#13;
ised for polishing, the latter being&#13;
preferable* for delicate work.&#13;
If the kitchen iloor is .not of hard&#13;
wood have it painted. Venetian red,&#13;
jchre or raw sienna, ground in oil,&#13;
ire the best colors. They must be of&#13;
standard make, and it is woll to give&#13;
;hree coats at tho lirst time of paintng.&#13;
Two coats are absolutely necjssary.&#13;
If the walls are painted, and&#13;
•ihey surely ought to be. let a coat of&#13;
lamar varnish be applied. There&#13;
•vill bo no difficulty then in keeping&#13;
;hem sweet and clean, as soap and&#13;
water may bo applied without showng&#13;
streaks.&#13;
A nice way of using odds and ends&#13;
&gt;f worsted is to knit them into a rug,&#13;
First cast thirteen stiches on to a&#13;
knitting needle, then knit a plain&#13;
strip until you have perhaps fifteen&#13;
ranis, then cut the strip lengthwise&#13;
:hrough the middle. Take a piece rtf&#13;
aed ticking the size you wish your&#13;
rug to be, then begin and sew the&#13;
selvedge of your worsted pieces on&#13;
;h"e stripe of your ticking, round and&#13;
round, until tho surface is entirely&#13;
jovered. As soon as the worsted is&#13;
jut it will unravel and be crinkled.&#13;
Every housekeeper can avoid the&#13;
ly nuisance in the kitchen and dinngroom&#13;
by providing against the&#13;
;ausos that attract those annoying insects.&#13;
Cleanliness and darkness&#13;
;he necessary weapons again&#13;
Mter each meal, the 'itftfmgrooni&#13;
should be swept thomugluy and much&#13;
3aro exercised thaV no crumbs or&#13;
jther lly bjy^iurk in corners or in&#13;
lishes^^Cut sugar is to be preferred&#13;
:ogranulated .sugar in summer for&#13;
:able use, as"it does not drop from the&#13;
ipoon unnoticed, to the subsequent&#13;
lelight of the ever vigilant lly.&#13;
This recipe makes a very rich cake:&#13;
fake one pound of. butter and one&#13;
jound of sugar and mix them to a&#13;
:ream. Beat the whites and yolks of&#13;
iight eggss^piirately, adding them to&#13;
;he buj^er and sugar; then add one&#13;
opuhd of raisins, stoned and linely&#13;
hopped, half a pound of blanched&#13;
ilinoiids and a quarter of a pound of&#13;
citron, both cut in thin strip?, a little&#13;
iiace, two wineglasses of sherry wine&#13;
md one pound of sifted Hour. Bake&#13;
n a steady, moderate oven for an&#13;
iour and a half. If preferred., one&#13;
.vincglass of brandy may be used initead&#13;
of the sherry.&#13;
A useful and pretty wall ppeket is&#13;
nado of a large circular piece of pasteaoard&#13;
and a crescent-shaped piece.&#13;
The round piece is covered with&#13;
1 peacock-green satin sheeting&#13;
)T serge^ and has a bunch of&#13;
joreopsis painted or embroidered&#13;
icross one side. The crescent is cov-&#13;
3red with gold-colored satin or serge,&#13;
ind is securely sewed to the circular&#13;
biece with over-aud-over stitches. All&#13;
;he edges ar^ covered with cord, thus&#13;
concealing tho joining. The crescent&#13;
should be made deep enough to hold&#13;
newspapers and pamphlets. Any&#13;
material, design or coloring may be&#13;
l s e d .&#13;
When washing glass slip it into the&#13;
tvater so that both the outside and&#13;
.nside touch the water at once. The&#13;
reason glasses break is that, If this&#13;
precaution is not taken, one side expands&#13;
more quickly than the other.&#13;
Wash glasses in hot soapy water and&#13;
wipe m once on a dry linen towel.&#13;
New silver, properly, should not be&#13;
washed in soapy water, as that removes&#13;
us brightness; still, old silver&#13;
that has always boon washed in soapsuds&#13;
mjty look better when taken out&#13;
of hot soapy water and rubbed with&#13;
iv dry «loth. Knife handles should&#13;
never be wet, nor should the blades&#13;
be put into hot water, as they will&#13;
expand, cracking the handles.&#13;
« » » . ^ » — « - ^ ^ ^ — • •&#13;
Dinlmrin Persia.&#13;
Persian dinners are always preceded&#13;
by pi pes (bubble-bubbles), while&#13;
tea and sweets are handed around.&#13;
Then servants bring a long leathern&#13;
sheet and place it on the ground; the&#13;
guests take their seats around it,&#13;
squatting on the ground. A flat loaf&#13;
of bread is plaoed before each man.&#13;
sMusio plays. The dinner is brought&#13;
in on trays and placed on the ground/&#13;
on the leathern sheet; the 06vers are&#13;
removed; the host says "BismiUih"&#13;
("in the name of God"), and in silence&#13;
all fall to with their ti lgers.&#13;
"I'so&#13;
sez.&#13;
and&#13;
dat&#13;
you&#13;
Everybody's Air-Brake&#13;
"Yes, sail," said Uncle Zacb,&#13;
watched it forty 3 ears an' its as I&#13;
De fust of May an1 Christmas day of de&#13;
same year allers comes on de same&#13;
week day," .&#13;
Further conversafon proved Uncle&#13;
Zacli a most mere ulous person.&#13;
Chancing to mention Dr Carver's feat&#13;
of breaking glass balls with a ride, he&#13;
said:&#13;
"I heerd 'bout dat shootin1&#13;
kno*ed right off it wasn't squar1;&#13;
was a i'ankce trick, boss' sho's&#13;
boro."&#13;
"What was the trick?"&#13;
"Dar wuz loadstone put into tho glass&#13;
balls, an1 likewise onto de bullets ; so&#13;
when de bullet fly outen de gun. it an1&#13;
de ball jes drawed tergedder, which, in&#13;
course, brokesdcgla s—dats de trick!"&#13;
Later, Uncle Zach observed a rope&#13;
\ running along the side of the car.&#13;
' Boss, what's dat line furr1"&#13;
"To apply the air-brake in case of&#13;
; accident." Then we had further to&#13;
J explain how the force of tin brake was&#13;
! obtained, to which Uncle Zach re-&#13;
'eponded:&#13;
! "Look a here boss, you sholy don't&#13;
'speet me to b'leeve dat foolishness?&#13;
; Wh}', de I iggest harricane whatever&#13;
blowed couldn't stop dis train, runnin'&#13;
forty mile a hour. An' you think 1&#13;
g*ine to b'leeve a little pipe full of&#13;
wind under do kya's can do it? No,&#13;
sah-ree!"&#13;
There are a great many Uncle Zachs ; who judge everything simply by apappearances.&#13;
The air-brake does not&#13;
seem to be a very powerful thing, but&#13;
1&gt;ower and eiliciency are not necessariy&#13;
equivalent to bigne?s and pretense.&#13;
Phillip Beers, Esq., who resides atthe&#13;
United States Hotel. New York&#13;
I city, and is engaged in raising subscripi&#13;
tions for the New York World Bartholdi&#13;
! pedestal fund, was once upbraided by a&#13;
! distinguished relative who was a physician,&#13;
for commending in such enthusastic&#13;
terms, a remedy that cured him&#13;
of bright's disease eight years ago.&#13;
j He said: "Sir, has the medical profession&#13;
with all its power and experience of&#13;
thousands of years, anything that cures&#13;
' this terrible disorder?" No, no, thatls J true, there is no mistake about it, but&#13;
Warner's safe cure is really a wonder-&#13;
! fully effective preparation. That remedy&#13;
is au ' air-brake" that every man&#13;
can apply and this fact explains why it&#13;
:.has saved so many hundreds of thousands&#13;
of lives.—Copyrighted. Used by&#13;
I permission of American Rural Home.&#13;
1 The trip taktJn"bf "the-'"Liberty b e ' P t q j h e '&#13;
New Orkaus exposition cost Phifadeluhia' $1,-&#13;
700. • '&#13;
j Over l?4.O0O,0J0 fish eg?s hjivr^cen put in the&#13;
; waters of thv eastero&gt;kdfe of Maryland this&#13;
j season.&#13;
A MassngiwtSptts sexton has just tiled, liarj&#13;
iag 'injHS"fife duir the graves of ov.r u,000&#13;
gi^rrle&#13;
Hod and 'vhite ro«es are the ornaments worn&#13;
Uv a ponv diiven bv a White Salphur ^prinjjs&#13;
belle. * •&#13;
(Jon. Pr'm'S murderer. Ansjelo, N now in&#13;
Spain. Kin IT Ali'onso's frie.id.&gt;are cousvejueutly&#13;
worried.&#13;
Chi', a^'o continues to prow fus-t *r, proportionately&#13;
to its own size, ttwu any other large&#13;
city in the world. . . "&#13;
Nearly a million new testaments have been&#13;
sold, at two cents a copy, in the past year iu&#13;
England,&#13;
President Line &gt;ln appo'ntcd five suprc;ne&#13;
court judges, (Jrant four, Hives two, Gaitleld&#13;
one and Artlmr two.&#13;
San Vraneisco people have at last come down&#13;
to usins rive-cent pieces, and a resort td pennies&#13;
is imminent. •&#13;
African elepln-.nts will be all killed oil within&#13;
another century if the slaughter now going on&#13;
is not stopped/&#13;
Health and Education.&#13;
The Sisters of the Academy of the&#13;
Visitation, Frederick, Md., are amongst&#13;
those in charge of educational institutions&#13;
who use Ped Star cough Cure&#13;
and give it to their pupils. They write&#13;
that they can heartily recommend it to&#13;
their friends.&#13;
In a short time a I\\rl« eoueern will be able to&#13;
cremate dead bodies for £:3 50 each.&#13;
MKXSMAVS' I'KPTOXUKII !:KKK To.vir;. tfio only&#13;
pri'T'iivatiici of ln'of e&lt;»iitniiitntf Its KNTIKK xfir.iTioi's,&#13;
J'WPKKTIKS, It t'oiitiiiii* l)!oi)(l-r)iHkl!i&gt;,' force ^I'IUTIUInn&#13;
unit life-siwtftlnlng properties; invulu.ilile for in&#13;
indention, dyspepslti, nervmjs pi\&gt;stv;itii&gt;!i, HIK! n!i&#13;
foiIIIH of gcaenvl (lolillltv; also, la all tutVebli-il conliltlotis,&#13;
whether the result uf exlmmtiun, nervous&#13;
prostration, overwork or aotire Uiseise, particularly&#13;
If resulting from pulmonary cumplalnis. Ciswel!.&#13;
Hazard 1¾ Co., Proprietors, New Vort. tkiid by&#13;
druggists. ^&#13;
Merited Praise.&#13;
The universal praise be-t.iw.-d upon Kidney&#13;
Wort as an Lnvahuble run.'dy tor all disorders of&#13;
the Kidne}?, Tdver and Ho.vcls, i* well merited.&#13;
Its virtues are universally kn &gt;\vi and its cur.-5 are&#13;
reported on all sidef, Minv obstitrite cases hav:&#13;
succumbed lo it after :hey h -.d been JJ ven up by the&#13;
doctors aad a thorough ^6.1101001. wi 1 cever fail to&#13;
curK Sold-bv all dru^ifists. o ' e a d v ' t .&#13;
{ ^ " F A S H I O N IS QI'ESN. F.tst, brilliant and&#13;
f.ishiouable are th; iJum)nd l&gt;ye. rolors. O.ie&#13;
puck.ijfe co'ors 1 to 4 lbs. of acyvH. r c. tor any&#13;
eo'o'. G a at druggists. We.Is, Richard«©n &amp; Co.,&#13;
nurlingtOA, V L&#13;
A branch of the salvation army, to be known&#13;
as the salvation navy, is to in; started in England."&#13;
". " " ^&#13;
nHanilifunrrHu ^jaavt li^t^HB Expnmly fur family use. Onlyaold ) n n o c n e j . BestaaJ cheapeML&#13;
Hot Weather&#13;
Causes the blood to heat and cvt Into a t^pUKed con&#13;
dltton, and weakens the whole system, thus xlvlnj?&#13;
opportunity for scrofula, salt rhoum, boIWand humors&#13;
to come to the surface. The blood should be purified&#13;
and vitalized by u k l n g Hood's Sifrsaparllla, which&#13;
will expel all Impurities and give touc and strength to&#13;
he whole body.&#13;
/&#13;
"I had four scrofulous/sorcs come on my feet,&#13;
which grew so bad that/Tcoutd not wear a shoo. Nothing&#13;
which I tool! dld^ne any good, till one day I m ~&#13;
Hood's Sarsaparl\% advertised In the paper, aft'"&#13;
elded to t r y l t . / f have taken two bottles ami •&#13;
sores are almost entirely heated." MRS. AIUMX 1' «&#13;
South Potadam, N% Y.&#13;
"I ha*c naed Hood's Sarsaparllla with auch bo&#13;
as to- astonish my friends. I have renewed&#13;
strength; my appetite is good; my cough Is gro\&#13;
tter; I feel like a different person." Mae. A.&#13;
PROCTOR, Marblehead, Mass.&#13;
IT WILL PAY YOU&#13;
TO GO TO :&#13;
DETROIll&#13;
AND HAVE YOUIi&#13;
•4: &gt;;&#13;
EXAMTNED AND PITTED WITH&#13;
SPECTACLES OR EYE GLASSES&#13;
U O E H M &amp;c W R I G H T ' S ,&#13;
IMPORTERS, JEWELERS AND OPTICIAN8.&#13;
140 WOODWARD AVE.&#13;
THEY MAKE NO CHARGE FOR&#13;
TESTING EYES. AND SELDOM&#13;
FAIL. TO GIVE RELIEF. •&#13;
We W a n t 8,000 More B00K A g e n t * t o Sell&#13;
T h e Personal History o f U. S. GRANT.&#13;
Th*--t—fc «M»n»ctfc«-a—wtl'i nth* vllttary, «M1 tm-r^m, UH&#13;
vrtttU a m i , m i it Uw * M | •cmpl** » &lt; r«UkkU hiMoc; at km «»&#13;
t u t A Urf* bw!!»•&gt;« M i i i »clum», guytTblj tlioMmtd&#13;
Wi n a t MM •(••!la t»«rr (imed Arnr Ten —A la«,rr« Mrathls, 5 M 4&#13;
(w fail kVltouton u 4 tsVKCIAL TCMS TO ACINH. er *t*un l i n t )&#13;
U ••«• kr arndtM »60«. for Milt. r»&lt;o'1«* *»'• H W T . I 11I1T11H,&#13;
A M E R I C A N P U B I . r S H T N n C O . , irWrtforJ&#13;
B o a f » C h l c n a o t Ciucinaatt» o r tit. .Lamia.&#13;
UmyBrsity of Noire Dame,&#13;
TlircaClT I"f#l1 Drlllsthewell and pump*out the&#13;
i n C a r t m | J 1 t cuttings of tlie ^ijil at each&#13;
# \ u i / \ KM . stroke.Drivef the casingot-drllU&#13;
U n i W ( T I all..1» under It to l e t l t follow.&#13;
WVC11 nDll I II R Test^thy well without rumoring&#13;
WtUUnlU, |J_|iJ. toolol KtmMeAaler than any other&#13;
and drops the tools&#13;
fa*Ur! w e alto make&#13;
m a c l i l n e a&#13;
a n d tools&#13;
vfor boring&#13;
LAROE&#13;
LOOMIS &amp; NYMAN,&#13;
TIFFIN, O H i C&#13;
C R The Oldest Medicine in the World is&#13;
probaoty Dr. ISAAC THOMPSON'S elebrated Eye Wate This article la a carefully prepared phrslclaa'1&#13;
prescription, and haa been In constant use for nearly&#13;
a century, and notwithstanding the many other&#13;
preparations that have been introduced Into the&#13;
market, the sale cT this article la constantly increasi&#13;
n g . I f T S e dire'eTOns ore followed tt will never faiL&#13;
We particularly 'nrlte h* attention of physicians to&#13;
John L., Thompson, Sons; A '. o,, Troy, N Y&#13;
fARQUHAR VIBRATIMQ SEPARATOR.&#13;
- * „ SEND FOR C.-.TALOCUE.&#13;
Wouderrul&#13;
Capacity.&#13;
?ERV0PS&#13;
1---t. t Mu n-Ah o o l l 7. ^ 1- *. -r.e-m- *^ - . • » - . , . , , U c a k n i Jrulim and nil forma of Itcbliltr In Mta from early&#13;
error, nfiioranr?e, vii-oorexcfHHiK Quickly and .Easily&#13;
Cur.'(I v*;t*.out nor'iue&gt;n' T-t l&gt;v t h o&#13;
^ C I V I A L E T R E A T M E N T -&#13;
F R E E to eurutmt lni|.&lt;lrors (not to lH&gt;y», orcurloawy-&#13;
weVtrn), lor^e illustrated work 011 IMamac* 41&#13;
the U«.ii1lo.Hrlmiry Onrana, Bruin an4 N o u n ,&#13;
ISealeil, r»r6u«iiuii!ist*mp*.) Oirt* t&gt;mtlnk.&gt;nIaU, boatneiwaiidinL-&#13;
dleal refcri-in •&gt;*, &amp;e. Cuu*iillatlon &gt; I M .&#13;
C1VIAKK AiiEM'W Ui Kulto M . New Y«rk~&#13;
Ki Ki Ki&#13;
RADWr s&#13;
READY&#13;
RELIEF.&#13;
A CLUE FOK ALL&#13;
SUMMER COMPLAINTS&#13;
A teaspoonful In half a tumbler of water TT: 1 In \&#13;
few moments cure CHAMPS, SPASMS. SOL'U s-1'oMACH.&#13;
XAUSKA. VOMITING. HKAliTUC'KX, N'KKVOUSN'KSS.&#13;
SLKKPI.KsiSNKSS, SICK HKADACUE,&#13;
DIAHUIKKA, DVSKNTKHV. CHDI.KUA MolUUS,&#13;
COLIC, FLATULENCY, AND ALL INTERNAL&#13;
1'AINS.&#13;
For CHOLEP.A and ROVPTP OHSO-I of the foregoing&#13;
Complaints, sec our printed direction*.&#13;
MALARIA IN IT I VARIOUS FORJI1&#13;
FEVER AND AGUE.&#13;
There Is not a remedial agent In this world that wilt&#13;
cure Fever and Aguti uud all other MulrtduUA, Hlllou-t,&#13;
and other fevers (aided by KAHWAV'S PILL*; at&#13;
quickly as KAplVAY'S HEADY HEL1EF.&#13;
RAD WAY'S HEADY RELIEF IS A CURE FOP.&#13;
EVERY PAIN, TOOTHACHE, HEADACHE. SCIATICA,&#13;
LUMBAGO, NEURALGIA. RHEUMATISM,&#13;
SWELLING OF THE JOINTS. SPRAIN'S, BHUISEs,&#13;
PAINS IN THE BACK. CHE'.ST OR L1MI1S.&#13;
The application of the READY RELIEF to rhe nart&#13;
or parts where the pain or difficulty exists will afford&#13;
instant ease and comfort.&#13;
It was the first and Is THE ONLY PAIN REMEDY&#13;
that Instantly stops the most excruciating pains, alUiys&#13;
Inflammation, and Cures Congestions, whether of tiits&#13;
Lungs, Stomach, Rowels, or other glands or orgaas L&gt;&#13;
one application.&#13;
PRICE, 50 CENTS per bottle. Sold by druggists.&#13;
DR. RADWAY's&#13;
SARSAPARILLIAN RESOLVENT,&#13;
The Great Blood Purifier*&#13;
FOR THE CURE OF CTIRONIC DISEASES.&#13;
Chronic Rheumatism. Scrofula,. Glandular Swell!ncr.&#13;
Hacking, Dry Counh, Caucerous Affection*. Syplrllitio&#13;
Complaints, Bleeding of the Lungs. Dyapepsiiv Water&#13;
Brash, White Swellings, Tumors, Pimples, Blotuhei,&#13;
Eruptions of the Face, Ulcent, Skin and Hip Diseases,&#13;
Mercurial Diseases. Female Complaints, Gout, Dropsy,&#13;
Rickets, Salt Rheum, Bronchitis, Cousumiitiou, Kid-&#13;
Ley, Bladder, Liver Complaints, etc.&#13;
Dr Railway*s Sarsapatillan Resolvent.&#13;
A remedy composed of ingredients of extraordinary&#13;
medical properties, essential to purify, heal. ir;nir&#13;
end Invigorate tho broken-down and wasted bo ly—&#13;
QVICK, PLKASAXT, SAKK and PKRMASEXT In Its ti-ea:-&#13;
inent and cure.&#13;
bOLD BY ALL DBUGGISTS. One Dollar a bottle.&#13;
XHK BOSS&#13;
COLLAR P A D&#13;
Of Zinc &amp; Leather.&#13;
5 0 M O R E W O I I B ^ T K C K S .&#13;
It will pofltiroly prevent chafing and cure sore&#13;
W i t h ^ r c . Horse ca:i be worhe 1 while cure Is perfects!.&#13;
ilar.ies.&lt; maker* will refuni moucy if uot&#13;
Eutlitai after ;«&gt; days tilal.&#13;
D K X T H I B C L K T I S , M a d i s o n , W i g .&#13;
SSO REWARD w'l S» paU f»r »B7 trr*4a TUM&#13;
•t »«m» •!&gt;• LtM t%a ckaaa M&gt;4&#13;
Wa&lt; a« Buck &lt;&gt;rtiB »r ***4 la —*&#13;
K I - U J U : P a i r it ( M O N A K V H&#13;
C r o l n aa«l'&gt;c«&gt;4 8*pmr*taw&#13;
an* B*XC*r «r nar I a * » r « V M&#13;
W a r e L o n ^ K i l l «tia i j u l i -&#13;
inr w»i. ft « • i H v etxaa. Clna-&#13;
U / tni Prir* l.lll nallml fVa«k&#13;
KEWAR^ M*CHI«&lt;£ CO,,&#13;
U l a a a a i , O u t *&#13;
CURED!&#13;
I G e r m a n A sth m a Carm naver/aiJj to (rive taul&#13;
IvMiiui «relit/JU ti»c worst cihe%lnsures comfort-1&#13;
lablealoep-, e l c c U c u r e s wheroa l^thcru fail. 41&#13;
Itrtai convince* thtmott skeptical. P r i c e o O c . a i d I&#13;
lai.OO^otDnurdS'iorrivinaiL S i m r t o F K E E l&#13;
Iforstfemi.. I&gt;n. KjSeHtfgMAN*, SC Pnul. Mlnn.|&#13;
DM. HAD WAY'S&#13;
REGULATING PILLS,&#13;
The Great Liver and Stomach Remedy.&#13;
Perfectly tasteless, elegantly eoai«»&lt;L purge, regulate,&#13;
purify, cleanse and strengthen.&#13;
Dr. Radway's Pills, for the cure of all disorders-&gt;f&#13;
the Stomach, Liver. Bowels, Kidneys, Bladder.&#13;
Nervous Diseases, Loss of Appetite, Headache. Constipation.&#13;
Costlveness, Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Blllou-tness.&#13;
Fever. Inflammation of the Bowels, Piles, ami all&#13;
dearanijements of the Internal Viscera. Pure,/&#13;
vegetable, containing no mercury, minerals, or dexterous&#13;
drugs.&#13;
Price a cents per box. Sold by all druggists.&#13;
RE I D "FALSE AND TRUE."&#13;
Send a letter stamp to DR. RADWAY &amp; CO., No. 3?&#13;
Warren Street, New York. »3r"lnlormatIon wortb&#13;
Uousaiid. will be sent to yon.&#13;
LF PAGES LIQUID GLUE&#13;
»Si«?i,Att?B,NJf9ftE)?5.,8SHJ«?&#13;
Awarded GOLD MEDAL, LONDON, 1SS&amp; fj*ei&#13;
bv MMOH * Hamlin Orztn sod Piano Co., Pu!h&gt;isa&#13;
Pialsce C»r Co . &amp;c Mfd on IT by th* RUSSIA&#13;
CEME&lt;NT CO. OLOliCE6TER. MASS. SOLO&#13;
EVERYWHERE. aa-S«iupie Tin Can by Mail, ^-&#13;
HUI&#13;
SUMP iaTO sJpt-.aitlv* remedy for thsaboro d isoai*; by-its&#13;
me Nj.iasknla of cases ol tho worst kind »n J of long&#13;
• taadra«TiaT8be*i\curod. Iiiile*'l.&gt;o»tr.)Ti«l»niyfalcfi&#13;
In its efficacy, tlm; I will send TWO BOTTt.ES FRBB,&#13;
together with a VAI.CADI.ETREVTISB on tliisdiSMM&#13;
toa&amp;y SttJTerer. Glvoetpreseinil P O. addr it.&#13;
DiX. T. A. SLOCUil, 131 PiarlSt, New Totk.&#13;
R. U. AWARE&#13;
/ THAT&#13;
Lorillard's Climax Fh bevrifle a *rd Un tag; that&gt;«JHILard*1&#13;
K « i « « l &lt; e n f fine cut;jLtecfLorlltardM&#13;
S I \ T T t ' H &gt; r i n g » and thit LorUkcfa't sjkDHlla.a.1&#13;
R U 1? T U - K E&#13;
EUAN'S IMPERIAL TRL'S-J&#13;
Tl^a new truss has a spiral spring arr&#13;
CBAUt'vrn. i-HK»st'Kis; yleiils to everyj*»"&#13;
Hon, retaining the hernia always, ififures.&#13;
iWorn DAY and MQUT with emiipWfrEnclosa&#13;
_ stamp for Circular. Usedln**OtIi Hosplta a.&#13;
Ask your druggist. EG A&gt;"S&gt; i M ^ f i l AI. TRUSS Ct-«&#13;
Box £48 Ann Arbor.Micii.&#13;
fSTILUEJ Pnc«35cta.&#13;
rmaU. StowellACo*&#13;
9WH, Hut,&#13;
r i n D i n i Description of Pleaaant Valley Country&#13;
r L U n l U A f r « « . Z . B I M L I T , Keuka, Fla&#13;
TAUGHT AST) 8ITUATIOSS&#13;
. . . . . — . . . . KCKN13HKD. Circular* frc%&#13;
I V A X K N X I N K B B Q 8 . , J a a a i v I U e . VTU..&#13;
TELEGRAPHY&#13;
I V A X K N T I N B&#13;
~T&#13;
H'-iiuOek&#13;
BITTERS&#13;
Cures Dizziness, Loss of Appetite, Indigestion, Biliousness* Dyspepsia,&#13;
Jaundice, Affections of the Liver and Kidneys, Pimples and Face&#13;
Grubs, Blotches, Boils, Humors, Salt Rheum, Scrofula A Erysipelas. THE BEST BLOOD - PBRIHER ON - URIH. 3T08TXK, MHJ3TTBX * C O , Proprietor*. Buffalo, V*w Terk.&#13;
• • • • • « « • • • « • • « • * • « •&#13;
, • LYDIA I . PINKHAM'S • .&#13;
VEGHABLE COMPOMUD&#13;
•-. • IS A POBltm CCM ?OR • «•&#13;
All tk«M pal»f«l CoMplslill&#13;
• M 4 \ W H k a H M I M •Oaaamftat*&#13;
• , • • • a to oir bMt » &lt; « • « •&#13;
• • rULLLI POPULATION.« .&#13;
lkraM«lteH«aM,»ait&gt;&gt;l&#13;
/ue&#13;
gold by all drugglita. »1; six for ift. Prep*r«d by&#13;
C. 1. HOOD A CO. Apothccarlea. UweiU Utm.&#13;
IOO Dotes Omi Dollar.&#13;
mUti / a r tU UftHmmtt tmU+o 4&#13;
r*Uf f p*i** *** thmt ft 4om •&amp;&#13;
if 4*,tke%m*i**fla&lt;Um pm *l«MUf tmttf*. •&#13;
II wtU tmn MatraaTaUOTMlM troahlea, laflaaaaaf&#13;
Uoft aad VlotraUoa, lUlinff and lUtpUxwiBKita, tab&#13;
Bpiaal Waadtaen, and if BMttevlaiiy&#13;
a d a p f d t o t t a a h a a f of U f a . * , * , * . * T * . * -&#13;
• It r « w t « ratetaMa, FVatajMey, di&#13;
aaaa^wau raahlltia na^flhkaaA^^av&#13;
v^a^^raa m^pmntj, H M p m a w a&#13;
0WBOaV, n i l fMbaK Ot frt^rlT*&#13;
•Mt BMljBBaMy M aiwavja Mnasai&#13;
tajutrya^fUntaaT^aaiwawd. li&gt;^mU»iir*\2$utk\&#13;
W. K. U. D—3—S3&#13;
Many a Lady&#13;
Is beautiful, all but her skin;&#13;
and nobody has ever told&#13;
her how easy it is to put&#13;
beauty on the skin. Beauty&#13;
ori the skin is Magnolia&#13;
Balm. ^&#13;
.r#f&#13;
&gt;t&#13;
• / M l&#13;
s&#13;
(:*•&#13;
i&#13;
te&amp;i •MtfalW..,.&#13;
I&#13;
h&#13;
Additional Home News.&#13;
The Pinckney boys play the Pleasant&#13;
Lake ball club at the home&#13;
grounds of the latter on Saturday&#13;
next&#13;
The ice cream social at the residence&#13;
of Mr. R. S. Elliott, Chubb's Corners,&#13;
Aug. 5th was a very pleasant one.&#13;
Rev. H. Marshall was benefited $16.&#13;
E. A. Mann offers some bargains in&#13;
dry goods, groceries and men, women&#13;
and children's shoes. Mr. Mann&#13;
will do just as he agrees to, and all&#13;
should avail themselves ot an opportunity&#13;
to buy goods cheap.&#13;
Will Moran was stoning up a cistern&#13;
for Alfred Monks Friday and ac*&#13;
oidently Monks threw in a stone&#13;
which hit Moran on bis head, cutting&#13;
quite a gash in his scalp. Dr. Sigler&#13;
dressed the wound, and it is doing&#13;
well.&#13;
UNAOILLA REMARKS.&#13;
From our Correspondent.&#13;
The union—memorial—-service—ot|_;&#13;
&lt;jren. Grant, at the Presbyterian&#13;
church" Monday evening, was very&#13;
impressive and solemn. The church&#13;
was tastefully draped with black; our&#13;
beautiful flag was arranged on the&#13;
wall behind the alter with a large&#13;
picture of our fallen hero among its&#13;
folds and vases of beautiful flowers&#13;
.adorned the table. The choir was&#13;
composed of six ladies (dressed in&#13;
white) and two gentlemen, who&#13;
marched up the center isle, at n call&#13;
from the organ and took their places&#13;
on the rostrum, with their books&#13;
ready for their opening anthem, entitled&#13;
"Not dead, but sleeping," after&#13;
which Rev. J . A. Lowery read the&#13;
X I I I chapter of 1st Corrinthiaus,&#13;
; and offered a prayer. Rev. O. N.&#13;
. H u r t preached without a text a very&#13;
: able sermon and the congregation all&#13;
:• fek well repaid for the effort they&#13;
i had made in going to the ehurch after&#13;
hard labor. The exereises closed&#13;
with an anthem, entitled "Gathering&#13;
Home," then the benediction was&#13;
pronounced by Rev. Hunt.&#13;
THIS, THAT A5D THE OTHER.&#13;
PLAINFIELD SPLASHES&#13;
From oar Correspondent.&#13;
Lots of rain.&#13;
Drawing oats, in order.&#13;
Miss Day, of NewJ^erft^'is visiting&#13;
her brother^Q^tWs place.&#13;
wheat is being hauled to&#13;
regory from this vicinity.&#13;
Mr*. VanSyskle, Mother of Edr,&#13;
John and David and Mrs. Chas.&#13;
Cool, died at her son Edgar's Aug.&#13;
6tk.. Aged 80 years,&#13;
The Free Methodist camp meeting&#13;
held in LeEoy township was quite&#13;
well attended Sunday, bttfr-&gt;did ~rrot\""~-£~~~~ „ r m T T „ „ r , .&#13;
i , n i . • „*„ ^ l . w T ^ S H I L O H S VITALIZED is what&#13;
last all day on account oi one "elder .&#13;
The opening and harvest party at&#13;
Plainfield was well attended and all&#13;
expressed themselves much pleased.&#13;
They think George is "one of the&#13;
tboyg."&#13;
I t is talked that Mr, E. T. Bush&#13;
will hire" Edson Col lard to run the&#13;
grist mill, and many express themselves&#13;
pleased. They say they never&#13;
;got a poor grist from him since the&#13;
pollers were put in;&#13;
"A few moments ago I saw the&#13;
strangest sight down on Madison-st.&#13;
A woman,was walking along on the&#13;
sunny side, and she never once made&#13;
an effort to knock other pedestrians'&#13;
eyes out with the ribs of her umbrella."&#13;
"Incredible! Never heard of such a&#13;
thing. How do you account for it?'1&#13;
"She had no parasol."&#13;
THAT HACKING COUGH can be so&#13;
quickly cured by Shiloh's Cure. We&#13;
guarantee it. Sold by F. A. Sigler. 1&#13;
Said one dry goods merchant to another&#13;
in our hearing: "I shall take&#13;
the 4:40 boat." "J will bet you $20&#13;
you don't," said the other. "Done,"&#13;
replied the first. They went together,&#13;
and, sure enough, the 4:40 boat took&#13;
them, but neither took the boat, findning&#13;
it utterly impossible. Twenty&#13;
dollars changed hands while they&#13;
were crossing the river.&#13;
WILL YOU SUFFER with Dysia_&#13;
and-Liver Complaint? Shilons&#13;
italizer is guaranteed to cure you.&#13;
Sold bv F. A. Sigler. 2&#13;
The fact that Washington never&#13;
told a lie has been satisfactorily accounted&#13;
for. He never went fishing.&#13;
—Chicago Ledger.&#13;
SLEEPLESS IS IGHTS, made miserable&#13;
by that terrible cough. Shiloh's&#13;
Cure is the remedy for you. Sold by&#13;
F. A. Sigler. ' 3&#13;
"Pa," paid a little boy, "what is an&#13;
absolute monarchy'?"&#13;
"I can't explain jt, my son, so that&#13;
you can comprehend it. Wait until&#13;
you get married, my son, and then&#13;
you'll know."&#13;
CATARRH CURED, health and&#13;
sweet breath secured, by Shiloh's Ca-1&#13;
tarrh Remedy. Price;-50 cents. Nasal&#13;
Injector free. Sold by F. A. Sigler. 4&#13;
If your neighbor's dog injures one&#13;
of your chickens,' you can collect damages.&#13;
If he injures one of your children,&#13;
you cannot. Moral. Raise chickens.—&#13;
Boston Post.&#13;
For lame back, side or chest, use&#13;
Shiloh's Porous blaster. Price 25 cts.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler. 5&#13;
A petrified baby- was recent!&#13;
covered in Texas, and ou&gt;4ately married&#13;
• editor is T^potfering "how the&#13;
blainedtJjittgKept quiet long enough&#13;
tp^etpetrified."—Lowell Citizen.&#13;
SHILOH'S COUGH and Consumption&#13;
Cure is sold by us on a guarantee.&#13;
It cures consumption. Sold by F. A.&#13;
Sigler. 6&#13;
When Mr. Cleveland wants a.man&#13;
ho-sends for him. Those persons w]&#13;
go out from the theaters to _^©e^Tman&#13;
should study Mr. Cleveland's.scheme.&#13;
Time is always represented carrying&#13;
a scythe, and we suppose he will&#13;
continue tD carry this primitive agricultural&#13;
implement until Time shall&#13;
be no mower. —Boston Courier,&#13;
I I II — • »n •• . 1 ^ — • * - - .mi*— • • • » • — I I — m^ • • • ^ i • i n . — &gt; I • *••• - - - . , - . 1 - 1 - — — •• - — •-— — •• ' — -—' BARGAINS! BARGAINS! BARGAINS !&#13;
We jsffer, this month, decided bargains in every department tv clean up stock.&#13;
PRINTS and GINGHAMS in STAPLES and DRESS GOODS.&#13;
\ And all light weight Worsteds marked down to prices that will close them,out at once.&#13;
PARASOLS, FANS. ETC., "WSmmm*"BUT THEY MUSTG0'WECARRYN0TH,NG0VER&#13;
SHAWLS—SHETLAND, CASHMERE&#13;
And all STXMMEiR, S H A / W : L » we will C L O S E O U T regardless of O O S T .&#13;
— H TEAS, TEAS, TEAS, TEAS. We have just opened up a very tine line oi New Teas in&#13;
GREEN &amp; UNCOLORED JAPS, OOLONG I?USTS, ETC. • , - . . . . - ' , - H • " Try a pound of our 40 cent Tea, we guarantee it to draw with any 50 cent Tea in town. v&#13;
All in search of Bargains shoujd visit our store this month for we&#13;
intend to make things HUM if low prices and good&#13;
goods can do it. Come and see us when you have anything&#13;
to sell. Come and see us when in search&#13;
pegg^of goods.&lt;*g5$&#13;
"West End Store." V LAKIN &amp; SYKES.&#13;
4PRICE LIST •&amp;* *&gt;-&#13;
-of-&#13;
GROCERIES&#13;
-at-&#13;
ETRIOHA: " s 1-¾¾&#13;
NORTH HAMBURG ITEMS-&#13;
.Prom our Correspondent.&#13;
Prot. L. C4 Hull, of Detroit,, "better&#13;
known in these parts as "Laidd," is&#13;
/ spending a few days at his old home&#13;
in Hamburg.&#13;
F. D. Roltsoa, of the Bancroft&#13;
school, is home tor a few days.&#13;
Mr. Isaac VanFleet and sister, from&#13;
Moristown,' K. J-, Aire *tke guests of&#13;
- MrrVsnFleet. -&#13;
C. G. Smith, of the law firm of&#13;
Chapman &amp; Smith,of Detroit, is spending&#13;
a few days, with his family, with&#13;
. friends in Hamburg,&#13;
There has been quite a iiffetle excitement&#13;
of late over the Unicoi church,&#13;
. as who should own it in years to come.&#13;
Some think it was built by the people&#13;
as a Union church, and should remain&#13;
.so: while others think it would be better&#13;
called a and some think it was&#13;
built by the devil,, and let the old fellow&#13;
have it. It does lotfk as though&#13;
. the old fellow was getting his work&#13;
in_8ome times^but we hope he will&#13;
,nnr it as union i^herdoes come in poss&#13;
e s s i o n of it,&#13;
you need for constipation, loss of appetite,&#13;
dizziness, and all symptoms of&#13;
dyspepsia. Price 10 and 75 cents per&#13;
bottle. Sold by F. A. Sigler. 7&#13;
Friends may desert an editor, rivals&#13;
may scorn him, and he may fail&#13;
to get a post office, but as long as his&#13;
scissors do not break and the cockroaches&#13;
do not eat up his paste, hope&#13;
turns its golden light upon him, and&#13;
his future. has a trade dollar silver&#13;
lining which sorrow Cannot corrode.&#13;
—Pall River Advance.&#13;
CROUF, WHOOPING COUGH and&#13;
bronchitis immediately relieved by&#13;
Shiloh's Cure. Sold by V. A. Sigler. 8&#13;
He was m the habit of coming home&#13;
night after night at 2 o'clock in the&#13;
morning. She grew weary of this and&#13;
rendered his latch-key useless by locking&#13;
the tront door. He was obliged&#13;
to ring, the bell, and was horrorstricken&#13;
when his wife appeared at&#13;
the window and murmured "Go away,&#13;
•George, I expect my husband home&#13;
every moment." He has become very&#13;
domesticated since.&#13;
The kidneys cannot perform their&#13;
proper office when diseased and at the&#13;
same time expel the impurities that&#13;
should pass off through their proper&#13;
action. A few doses ot Kellogg's Columbian&#13;
Oil will convince the most&#13;
skeptical that it acts directly on the&#13;
kidnevs.&#13;
Sugar, Granulated ^ ^ . . ^* *u_,_,.. ,7½&#13;
" Confectioners A.. - 7c&#13;
" ExtraC, Yellow...,^,,...;.... 6i&#13;
-Dro w^n* •*«•*«««* »••• •••• • • • ^¾&#13;
Coffee, Arbuckles , j ^ r 8 c&#13;
" Dilworth . ^ ^ ^ 7 . .18c&#13;
" McLaughlin&gt;~xtfxx\ .18c&#13;
" Old Gjav-eftiment Java and Mocho&#13;
mKedrTT 30P&#13;
Green Rio 12Jc&#13;
Teas 15,25,40, 50, *60c&#13;
Pure Spices, per lb 40c&#13;
YOU WILL ALWAYS FIND&#13;
BEST GOODS At*D LOW PRICES&#13;
AT WINCHELL'S DRUG STORE.&#13;
Bird Seed,&#13;
Saleratus,&#13;
Corn Starch,&#13;
Gloss Starch,&#13;
Raisins,&#13;
Rice,&#13;
Prunes,&#13;
Oat Meal,&#13;
8c&#13;
7c&#13;
. . . . . . 8 c&#13;
8c&#13;
10 to 12c. 1 ~-&#13;
8c&#13;
7c&#13;
. . . . . . 4 c&#13;
Galvanic&#13;
IMPORTANT.&#13;
Whep'yon v|sit or leave Few York City, save&#13;
lfaggage expressace and carriage hire and stop at&#13;
ttje Grand Union Hotel, opposite Grand Central&#13;
Depot.&#13;
Elegant rooms fitted np at a cost of one million&#13;
dollars, reduced to $1.00 and upwards per&#13;
day. European plan, Elevator. Restaurant sopplied&#13;
with the beat. Horse cars, stages and elevated&#13;
rail*o*d to all depots. Families can irve better&#13;
for less money at the Grand Union Hotel than&#13;
any other first-class hotel in the city&#13;
Soap, 3 bars for 25c \ Ivory&#13;
( Magnetic&#13;
Soap, 4 bars for 25c. j XntVwwnboard&#13;
Town Talk, 6. bars 25c&#13;
Lard, per lb. 10c&#13;
Herring, per box, 20c&#13;
White Fish, 101b kits $1.00&#13;
Mackerel, 15 lb kits, $1.25&#13;
Dried Beef, sliced, per lb.. 18c&#13;
Sugar-cured Hams " l i e&#13;
Mason Fruit Cans, 1 qt., per doz. $1.25&#13;
» ' " " 2 " " $1.50&#13;
WTHIS ?&lt;I50?ITH. - «&#13;
SWEEPING REDUCTIONS&#13;
In order to Close 4&#13;
MARKET PRICE&#13;
•for-&#13;
BUTTER &amp; EGGS&#13;
OUR PRODUCE MARKET.&#13;
CORKECTED WEEKLY BT&#13;
Ang. 18,1*85. TOMPKINS &amp;ISMON&#13;
Wheat, N6\l white,.&#13;
" No. 2 white,.&#13;
No. 2 red,&#13;
No. 8 red,....&#13;
Oata -r..,&#13;
Corn.&#13;
.84&#13;
.HO&#13;
.89&#13;
.86&#13;
.27&#13;
,2B&#13;
Barley, 1 00® 1 50&#13;
B M B * . 75® 1 00&#13;
Dried Appl* ~ 03® .00&#13;
Potatoes, 36® .40&#13;
BUZtST^ir** «•*•••&lt; «•»!• »«•••» &gt;*••»*( • »••!»• 1 *&#13;
Dreswd Chickens... 12" "We Will satisfy&#13;
Clover Seed — ~ •*.&lt;&amp; «.B0 . - - . ^ . , .DtMMWlPort — M» &amp; £ R 3&#13;
t&#13;
COME EARLY,&#13;
BEFORE THE SIZES ARE BROKEN.&#13;
W. B. HOFlPf&#13;
FARMERS, READ THIS&#13;
The undersigned naming a large stock of .ill kinds of Lumber, Lath and.]&#13;
Shingles a t t h ^ r l u m b e r yard in Pinckney, have decided to reduce their{&#13;
stock audior the 3 S T E 2 C T S I X T " ^ D A T T S will sell&#13;
--A.T&#13;
ROCK BOTTOM PR&#13;
Parties a;bout to build will find it to theirinteresj^*o\getoouurr pp rices. We mail*&#13;
ufacture our own lumber and shingles an^L-wTfl sell according to-the tim&#13;
We keep ori hand a full stock of FlojjwTTgTSiding and Barn Boards, also al&#13;
lengths of Bill Stuff and TimberCnnd on all bills will give special pri&#13;
You will find our Agen^ArrlT. HQYT, always on hand. Come and see tfo,&#13;
yo&gt;wat we mean business. ~~-f&#13;
COWIJS &amp; COM PHCCKH*Tj&#13;
t.'- Vi •"••. s&#13;
\&#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 August 13, 1885</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>VOL. Ill PINCKNEY, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, AUGUST 20.1885. NO. 32&#13;
MILROAD.CARD,&#13;
\ ,&#13;
Grand Trunk Hallway Time Table.&#13;
MICH. AIK LINE DIVI&#13;
GOING EAST. | STATIONS. J&#13;
P. M,&#13;
4:1»&#13;
4:80&#13;
A. M.&#13;
7:35&#13;
8:60 rr:.0-a5o&#13;
2:40&#13;
8:01'&#13;
H:05&#13;
7:30&#13;
6:40&#13;
fl:l(»&#13;
6:40&#13;
ft:*)&#13;
4:4«&#13;
4:%&#13;
8:40&#13;
3:00&#13;
All&#13;
rt:36&#13;
0:10&#13;
'&#13;
A. X.&#13;
10:20&#13;
SION&#13;
OOI&#13;
•&#13;
NO WEST.&#13;
A. U.'T. M.|P. K.&#13;
RlDQEWAY&#13;
Armada&#13;
HOMIBO&#13;
RocLa ater&#13;
9-r.&#13;
M.00&#13;
iu:ao&#13;
11:30&#13;
' r, :50&#13;
6:15&#13;
J? fp«ttae !,?;»£..»&#13;
»;40. W'ixom&#13;
d.) ( a.&#13;
9:15&#13;
8:55&#13;
8:40&#13;
8:35&#13;
8:10&#13;
7:30&#13;
trains run&#13;
V So.Lyona.&#13;
f Hamburg, Id.&#13;
6:05&#13;
8:40&#13;
3:00&#13;
A. * ' 3:¾)&#13;
7:a0|&#13;
8:00! »:40&#13;
PINCKNEY " :401^1¾&#13;
Mount Ferrier i ^:15 4:10&#13;
Stockbrld^e&#13;
Henrietta,&#13;
9:88 -1:35&#13;
10:05(&#13;
JACKSON 1Q:45 5:OS&#13;
B:80&#13;
7:(6&#13;
7:30&#13;
bv "Central standard" timtf.&#13;
All trains run daily, Sundays excepted.&#13;
W.J. SI'ICEK, JOSEPH HICKSON,&#13;
Superintendent. General Manager.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
ALL BARGAINS,&#13;
THE&#13;
T H HOAG, M. D.(&#13;
(HOMtEOPATHIC.)&#13;
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.&#13;
Office at residence on East Main street.&#13;
D M. GREENE, M. D.,&#13;
PHYSICIAN AND-SURGEON,&#13;
PLAINFIELP, MICHIGAN.&#13;
Office at residence. Special attention given to&#13;
surgery and diseases of the throat and lungs.&#13;
TAMES MAHKEY,&#13;
NOTARY P U B L I C U ^ " ^&#13;
And Insurance Afjont. I*utf£Ipapers made on&#13;
short notice ami reasonable term*. Oftlce on&#13;
Main St., nearPuwtortlce 1'inckney, Mich.&#13;
£3fKtM£S &amp; JOHNSON,&#13;
VJT 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;
HIGHEST&#13;
STANDARD&#13;
PUBLISHER'S NOTICE.&#13;
C y T h o e e receiving their papers with a red&#13;
X over this paragraph, will please notice that their&#13;
euhscriptlon expiree 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;
HOME NEWS.&#13;
OF&#13;
EXCELLENCE&#13;
AT&#13;
^POPULAR PRICES 1»&#13;
\\T P. VAN WINKLE,&#13;
ATTORNEY &amp; COUNSELOR at LAW&#13;
• and SOLICITOR in CHANCERY-'&#13;
OfflceoverSi^ler'sDrut: Store. PINCKNEY&#13;
"|-\ D, BENNETT,&#13;
PAINTER AND PAPER HANGER.&#13;
All work in this line executed with neatness&#13;
and dispatch.&#13;
PINCKNEY EXCHANGE BANK&#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;
COLLECTIONS A SPECIALTY.&#13;
NEW BARBER SHOP !&#13;
I have onened for the present a shop&#13;
in second story of Mann Hros 1 brick&#13;
block where I will beprepared to do&#13;
HAIR CUTTING, SHAVING,&#13;
CHAM POPING, Etc.,&#13;
IN THE NEATEST STYLE.&#13;
Hoping for a share of your patronage,&#13;
I am YOURS TRULI*,&#13;
IRA COOK.&#13;
lOits. Granulated&#13;
Sugar, - 70c&#13;
10 pounds Extra C&#13;
White, - 60c&#13;
Best Browned Coffee,&#13;
- - 14c&#13;
Kio Coffee^ - 10c&#13;
Bests Japan Tea, 42c&#13;
Choice Japan Tea,36c&#13;
Excellent " 28c&#13;
Choice Chewing&#13;
Tobacco, - 30c&#13;
Water White Oil, 14c&#13;
BIG BARGA NS&#13;
-INi&gt;&#13;
Three "combats" Saturday night.&#13;
Less daylight and more moonshine.&#13;
Mrs. J. A. Parker has a card in this&#13;
issue.&#13;
Camping out is nearly over for the&#13;
season.&#13;
No services at the M.&#13;
Sabbath.&#13;
E. church next&#13;
Eugene Markey will sell&#13;
Memoirs.11&#13;
'Grant's&#13;
3 W A N T E D fc&#13;
—at the—&#13;
PINCKNEY ELEVATOR&#13;
-WHEATSBEANS,&#13;
WOOL,&#13;
For which the highest&#13;
•will be-tfafd."&#13;
Plnckney,&#13;
•&#13;
\&#13;
MRS. J. A. PARKER,&#13;
—Teacher of—&#13;
Piano, Organ, Voice&#13;
-MID fyRMONY.-&#13;
TERMS:—$10 for a term or twelve&#13;
weeks, two lessons each week. 0n%&#13;
lesson a week, $12. Two pupils from&#13;
one family, $8 each. Harmony tessqns,&#13;
50 eta. each. Voice lessons, 25 cts.&#13;
MEN, WOMEN AXD CHILDRESS&#13;
SHOES.&#13;
We never fail to please in price or&#13;
quality. Good goods at small&#13;
profit proves it.&#13;
DR7 GOODS.&#13;
An Extra Fine Stock to Select from&#13;
and at&#13;
PRICES TO SUIT THE TIMES&#13;
E. A. MANN.&#13;
ALL. BARGAINS&#13;
Winchell's drug store has donned a&#13;
nice coat of paint.&#13;
Mr. C. G. Smith, ot Detroit, gave us&#13;
a pleasant call Friday.&#13;
Mis&gt; Nina Green, of Fowlerville, is&#13;
a guest at D. D. Bennett's.&#13;
The youngster without a kite attachment&#13;
is nowhere these davs.&#13;
F. L. Brown has been receiving a&#13;
fine invoice ot stoves the past week.&#13;
The. Pi nek ney-second nine vs. the&#13;
Howell Juniors at this place Saturday.&#13;
r&gt;av fireworks will be one of the attractions&#13;
of the coming eountv fair.&#13;
F. A. Sigler has something to say to&#13;
our readers this week. Don't rfliss it.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Commisky, of Springport,&#13;
vitited at C, Plimpton's this week&#13;
Rev. H. Cartledge and wife are in&#13;
attendance at the M. E. camp meeting&#13;
at Bellevue.&#13;
. The social at tne new M. E. parsonage&#13;
last Friday night was not very&#13;
largely attended.' •&#13;
Don't forget the farmers' picnic at&#13;
Whitmore next Saturday. A grand&#13;
time is locked for.&#13;
Chris. Brown was out Monday for&#13;
the first time in over a week. Dysentery&#13;
was the caure of his sickness.&#13;
Note the change in L. H. Beebe's advertisement.&#13;
It will pay you to come&#13;
to Pinckney to buy your furniture.&#13;
Last Sunday's excursion to Whitmore&#13;
Lake was pretty slimly patronized.&#13;
No tickets were sold at this&#13;
station.&#13;
By importing some good players the&#13;
Pleasant Lake club beat the Pinckney&#13;
base ball team Saturday, the «core&#13;
standing 11 to 7.&#13;
Mrs. E. A. Allen has our thanks for&#13;
a liberal supply of ice cream, the quality&#13;
of which was very fine. She has&#13;
it tor sale every day and evening.&#13;
Ira Cook is now running a barber&#13;
shop at Pinckney. Ira is a fine workman,&#13;
and we wish him success in that&#13;
growing town'.- South Lyon Picket.&#13;
_ Edwin G. Minkley^formerly, superintendent&#13;
of waterworks for the D&#13;
&amp; N. R. R., and for some hmea resident&#13;
of FowlerviJJe^-Tfied at Livona&#13;
Friday.&#13;
The-Western Michigan Agricultur&#13;
and -Industrial Society holds its&#13;
fall fai*at Grand Rapids Sept. 21, 22,&#13;
23, 24 and 25.' We acknowledge receipt&#13;
of complimentary.&#13;
P. Monroe picked up a novelty of a&#13;
stone the other day. It is about 3$&#13;
inches in diameter and its top side is&#13;
covered with gravel stones and -sand&#13;
that have •cemented themselves to the&#13;
stone. ^ - -"'"&#13;
The fall series of teachers5 examinations&#13;
for this nounty will be held as&#13;
follows, fiowell, August 28; Fowlerville^&#13;
October 23; Pinckney, October&#13;
36; Brighton, October 28; Howell,&#13;
October 30; Hartland, November 6.&#13;
Although the report, has been current&#13;
here of late that Tompkins &amp; Ismon&#13;
could have the freight house tor&#13;
their business no longer than Sept. 1st,&#13;
we are glad to be informed by Mr.&#13;
Tompkins that it is not the truth, and&#13;
that they will continue,&#13;
M. C. Wilson went up on the hay&#13;
mow in the barn Monday nron to put&#13;
down some hay, and starting to come&#13;
down missed his footing and fell to&#13;
the floor, breaking one of the bones in&#13;
his left arm and unjointing the wrist.&#13;
Dr. Sigler redaced the tracture.&#13;
The Wilbur school and home for&#13;
feeble minded children at Kalamazoo,&#13;
Michigan, was opened for the admission&#13;
of inmates on Monday, August 3,&#13;
1885. All who wish to enter the^&#13;
present school year should make application&#13;
to Dr. C. T. Wilbur, Kalamazoo,&#13;
Mich.&#13;
The skating rink at Benton Harbor&#13;
is to be ripped up, sponged carefully&#13;
and made over into machine shops for&#13;
eveiyday wear. If the argument was&#13;
carried far enough to make the professional&#13;
skaters over into brass foundries&#13;
the reformation would be complete.—&#13;
Evening Journal.&#13;
A reception and ice cream festival&#13;
will be giv.m by the ladies of the Congregational&#13;
society at the skating rink&#13;
to-morrow (Friday) evening, Aug. 21.&#13;
Admission free, aud all are cordially&#13;
invited. Icecream and cake, 10cts.;&#13;
or those who prefer, coffee and cake&#13;
will be served at the same price.&#13;
Mr. D. F . Ewen is meeting with&#13;
quite a sale of Tunison's maps 'of Ireland&#13;
in this vicinity. We think this&#13;
map gives more information concerint?&#13;
"Erm's Isle" than any we have heretofore&#13;
seen. On the corners are also&#13;
found the pictures of Dan. O'Connell,&#13;
Chas. S. Parneli, Michael Davett and&#13;
Robt. Emmett.&#13;
The Livingston Democrat thus compliments&#13;
our popular druggist: "The&#13;
firm of H. F. Sigler &amp; Bro., druggist&#13;
at Pinckney, has been dissolved, the&#13;
doctor retiring from the business, and&#13;
will hereafter pay his undivided attention&#13;
to the practice of medicine.&#13;
F, A. Sigler, who will continue the&#13;
busines?, is one of the best di nggists&#13;
in the county."&#13;
To THE SCHOOLMATES AND FRIENDS OF&#13;
ADDIE MCGEE:—We and our children&#13;
take this method of expressing our&#13;
thanks to you for the substantial manner&#13;
in which you have shown your&#13;
love and regard tor our dead. Your&#13;
erection of a headstone at the grave of&#13;
Addie McGee touches us tenderly, and&#13;
we thank you tor it.&#13;
MR. AND MRS. WM. MCGEE.&#13;
The Detroit Evening Journal is&#13;
now the best evening paper in Michigan.&#13;
The AssDciated Press despatches&#13;
enables it to present to its readers&#13;
fresher and more concise news than&#13;
its contemporaries, and its editorial&#13;
writers are of tue best. It has recently&#13;
added a new dress of type, and its&#13;
circulation is steadily marchirxg-' upward,&#13;
despite the hardjimes. Its futuresucce^&#13;
s^sTapBirga'r ;&#13;
When jiKjomes to peculiar names of&#13;
A few weeks since Wm. McGee, of&#13;
Unadilla,- was at work in his field&#13;
when his little boy called his attention&#13;
to what he thought was a dog fighting&#13;
with their hog. Upon turning around&#13;
Mr. McGee discovered that instead of&#13;
a dog it was a large red fox having a i&#13;
tussle with a sow that bad a litter of&#13;
pigs near by. The fox evidently was&#13;
after the pigs, but was thwarted in&#13;
his plans by the courageous mother&#13;
stepping in to shield her young. Seeing&#13;
Mr. McGee, the fox made a hasty&#13;
retreat for the woods, being hotly persued&#13;
by the sow until out of the field.&#13;
Our "better half" and our recently&#13;
added "third" went on the Orchard&#13;
Lake excursion last week. The&#13;
baby's cab also went along; but&#13;
instead ot stopping at the lake went&#13;
through to Pontiac. f where another&#13;
woman liked the looks of it and claimed&#13;
it as her own. We are sorry to&#13;
say that, not expecting anything of&#13;
this kind, the seat to the carriage was&#13;
left at home that morning; but if the&#13;
lady (?) who has so unceremoniously&#13;
appropriated our property to her own&#13;
use and the comfort ot her offspring&#13;
will send us her address we will immediately&#13;
send her the seat, or furnish&#13;
her with its equivalent—a place of'&#13;
rest.&#13;
Fred Ward, the young man arrested&#13;
last week Wednesday for feloniously&#13;
taking a pair of shoes from E. A.&#13;
Mann's store, Friday morning appeared&#13;
before Justice Teepiejpleaded guilty&#13;
to the charge and was sentenced to $10&#13;
fine or twenty days in the county jail.&#13;
He chose the latter, and is now boarding&#13;
with Sheriff Cook. Ward is probably&#13;
not more than 18 years of age,&#13;
but is apparently hardened in vice, as&#13;
he showed no emotion whatever in the&#13;
court room, and as calmly and uncernedly&#13;
bore the scrutinizing gaze ot tbe&gt;&#13;
bystanders and^hswered the questions&#13;
put to him as though it were an every&#13;
day occurrence. # . •&#13;
. A Jaw' passed at the last session of&#13;
the legislature, in reference to the&#13;
counting of votes at election, is of the&#13;
greatest importance, and the men who .&#13;
constitute our election boards should&#13;
familiarize themselves therewith. It&#13;
provides that in all precincts having&#13;
200 or more votes, two ballott boxes&#13;
shall be provided, one to be used from&#13;
the opening of the polls till 12 o'clock,&#13;
when it shall be closed. Two additional&#13;
inspectors and clerks are to&#13;
be appointed, and the inspectors divide&#13;
themselves into two classes^jukfc""&#13;
e, Saline seems to take_the palm&#13;
at present. Looking inward we run&#13;
Over-aker and tumble down Stair&#13;
seeking Wisdom, along the Beach of&#13;
the babbling Brooks the King seeks&#13;
Sweet repose and Stone-s Gaumar and&#13;
Bortle Nissly for Miles, and don't care&#13;
a Kuss or give a Nichol whose Shater&#13;
Lindenschmidt may Chase, and so on&#13;
to the end.—Ann Arbor Courier.&#13;
Peter Cooper, one of the rnost successful&#13;
business men our^country has&#13;
produced, is credited with the following:&#13;
"In att towns where a newspaper-&#13;
is published every man should advertise,&#13;
even if nothing more than a&#13;
card telling his name and the business&#13;
in which he is engaged. It not only&#13;
pays the advertiser but lets people at&#13;
a distance know the town you reside in&#13;
has a prosperous class of business men.&#13;
As the seed is sown so it recompenses.&#13;
Never pull down the sign while you&#13;
intend to do business, for it often indicates&#13;
that your grip, commercially,&#13;
is broken. The judicious advertiser&#13;
will receive in return ten dollars for&#13;
every one invested in the columns of a&#13;
local paper."&#13;
after 12 o'clock one class to^Jbe'cbunt&#13;
ing while the other ,is^-feceiving ballots:&#13;
DunngJ^bcliftemoon the boxes&#13;
are tojb&amp;^hanged every hour and the&#13;
j^uTi'ting proceed. This method will&#13;
greatly faciliate the counting, and insure&#13;
speedy returns, so that an act-&#13;
eurato k-nowledge-of-^the- votes-east inthe&#13;
entire state may be had very soon k&#13;
after the polls are closed.&#13;
LOCAL NOTICES.&#13;
Plenty of Engine Coal at Anderson&#13;
Station." Cash tor Apples, Potatoes,&#13;
etc. JAS. T. EAMAN &lt;fc Co. (31¾)&#13;
WANTED.&#13;
Wheat, Beans and Clover Seed,&#13;
highest prices paid.&#13;
Tompkins &amp; Israon.&#13;
CATHCART. THE PHOTOGRAHHER—intends&#13;
coming here soon. If you, want&#13;
some good piotures taken wait for&#13;
him and he will give you satisfaction.&#13;
ABERDEEN ANGUS GRADES.—The Poi^&#13;
led Aberdeen bull, "The Don" at the&#13;
Scotch Stock Farm, will serve a limit*&#13;
ed number of cows at not less than'&#13;
$5 per cow, cash. Apply early to&#13;
23tf. WM. COLLIE, Herdsman.&#13;
All persons owing me ofc account&#13;
are respectfully notified that tne same,&#13;
must be settled immediately.&#13;
W. B. How.&#13;
NOTICE.—All those indebted to the.&#13;
firm of McGmness.-f&amp;f Tourney are requested&#13;
to call and' settle without delay.&#13;
(30tf.); ^ J. H.TOUMXY.&#13;
WAIT ron CATHCART—The photo*,&#13;
grapher. He. will be in Pinckney&#13;
soon with his car, and.make vou pic*.,&#13;
tures satisfactory and reasonable.&#13;
* * .&#13;
•'•4" '1&#13;
/&#13;
&gt; /&#13;
-ih \ -,*ti*;-.v ^—£*.., • N T . - . ,.,,.&#13;
ii i ,&gt; MI » » ' 11.1 mini&#13;
^,^,-1 »•,,»——Wfcy,&#13;
V&#13;
/&#13;
J&#13;
* i *&#13;
TO COXEXSPONDEKT*&#13;
AneoaimuBfutfon* for tfiti paperihould be ax.com-&#13;
W W by ttie n»me of the author, nat a e a e w r ? f « ES ' ^ t h S rt of the* ±w%ri£te r. »nW er*itJed e&lt;nmciejr oofn g ooonde ftSidueT oonf thSe •adp erd.a teBae, ptoa rhtaicvue latrhley cleairterfru*l aanbao uftl gufrel ir lpi \ia' !uniainM4 d•taanUsnacet. ofP rtohpee rc naraem leeui arme aoimfteenr dlalf lweuhlitc hto tdae«cri oaaraar Wf1tt*a.&#13;
13-15&#13;
8-13&#13;
22-23&#13;
C-8&#13;
AROUND A GREAT STATE.&#13;
&gt;- Michigan County F a i n .&#13;
{ C e n t r a l Mich. Agr'l&#13;
/ S o c i e t y . . . . . . . . . L a n s i n g . . . .Sept38-Oct.2&#13;
; E a s t e r n Mich. Agr'l&#13;
&amp;&gt;ctety Y p s i l a u t l . . . .Sept. 23-25&#13;
Northeastern Mich.&#13;
. Agr'l Society.. .Flint Sept: 21-25&#13;
j W e s t e r n Mich. Agr'l&#13;
Society Gr'd Rapids.Sept. 22-.%&#13;
Northern Mich,&#13;
Agr'l Society... .Greenville. .Oct. 6-9&#13;
A r m a d a A grlcul t ural&#13;
Society Armada Sept.;50-Oct.2&#13;
Avon Agricultural&#13;
Society Koohcster Oct.&#13;
Brooklyn I'nlon&#13;
1 Agr'l Society Brooklyn...Sept.&#13;
' Central Fair Assoi&#13;
elation HubbardstonSept.&#13;
I Dowagiae Uniou&#13;
\ Fair Associntien Dowagiae Oct.&#13;
F e n t o n Union Agr'l&#13;
S o c i e t y . , . . F e n t o n . . . . ..Oct.&#13;
Hadley Dfst. A. and&#13;
H.' Society H a d I c v . . . . . . . . O c t .&#13;
Milford Union Agr'l " .V&#13;
Society .'. ..Milford Sept. 22-2/)&#13;
North Berrien Co. «fc&#13;
M.L.S. Agr'l Society.&#13;
...,' Beaton Harb'r Sep29.0ct2&#13;
Ottawa it West Kent&#13;
Agr'l Society.... Berlin Sep 20 Oe.2&#13;
P l y m o u t h Fair Association&#13;
, . . . .Plymouth Sep290ct.2&#13;
•Stockbridge Agricultural&#13;
Society.... Stockbridge.... Oct. , 6-9&#13;
Union Agricultural —&#13;
Society Farmiugton *&gt;..Oct. ^ 6 - 9&#13;
Union Agricultural&#13;
Society Litchfield . . . . .Oct. 6-9&#13;
•Union Agricultural&#13;
Society. Plaiuwell Sep;29,Oc.2 .&#13;
Allegan County Agr'l&#13;
Society .Allegan Oct 6-9&#13;
Bay County Agr'l Society&#13;
Bay City gep29,Oc.2&#13;
Barry County Agr'l&#13;
Society ! Hastings Sep|2.),Oc.2&#13;
Branch County Agr'l * *&#13;
Society..." Coldwater.. .Sept. 21-25&#13;
Berrien " Countv&#13;
Agr'l Society. .*. N i l e s . . . . ' . . ..Sept. 1 4&#13;
Calhoun Countv I&#13;
Agr'l 800161)-./Marshall... .Sept.' 22-21 |&#13;
Clinton County Agr'l J&#13;
••... Society : . .St. J o h n s . . . .Oct. i 6-0:&#13;
Eaton Countv Agr'l !&#13;
Society. .' C h a r l o t t e . . . .Sept. 22-25 j&#13;
Grand Traverse Co. !&#13;
Agr'l Society...TraverseCitv..Oct 1 0-9&#13;
Hillsdale County&#13;
Agr'l Society.. . . H i l l s d a l e . . . .Sept.2iMM2 '&#13;
I n g h a m County&#13;
Agr'l Society Mason Sept. 23-25 \&#13;
Lenawee ' Coiintv&#13;
Agr'l Society .V.Adrian Sept."7 [22-25&#13;
Livingston Countv&#13;
Agr'l Society.. *. Howell Sept. ' 22-2&#13;
Manistee Countv&#13;
Agr'l Society..".Bear L a k e . . . S e p t . 23-2&#13;
Mason County Agr'l&#13;
S o c i e t y . . . ' . . . ' . . . L u d i n g t o n . ..Sept. ' ^ 22 25&#13;
Macomb * County&#13;
Agr'l Society..'.Mt. Clemens Sept. 23-25 ;&#13;
Monroe County&#13;
Agr'l Society...Monroe Sept.29-Oet. 2&#13;
Marquette Coiintv ' '&#13;
Agr'l Society..'. Marquette...Sept. 23-25&#13;
• Oakland County&#13;
Agr'l Society..'. Pontiac Ser&gt;t.2'.)-Oct.2&#13;
Oceana County&#13;
Agr'l Society. .".Hart Sept. v 1*&gt;-1S&#13;
Osceola Countv&#13;
Agr'l Society. .'.Evart Sept.29-Oct. 2&#13;
Saginaw Coiintv ^&#13;
Agr'l Society...'Saginaw City Sopt^,--"5^1l&#13;
• 8hiawas&gt;ee County ^-^&#13;
Agr'l Society. .'.Owosso^v-rTTScpt. 22-25&#13;
Tuscola Countv , -&#13;
Agr'l Soc; ct\&gt;^Vatrousvillc ?cpt.'3-Oct. 2&#13;
Van B u r n Coiuity - • • ,&#13;
A g j ^ o c i e t y . . .Paw P a w . . ,.Sept.2fl-Oct. 2&#13;
'naw County&#13;
Agr'l Society...Ann Arbor..Sept.29-Oct. 2 |&#13;
Died Among Strangers.&#13;
About three wrcks ago a young woman came&#13;
to Jackson from Eaton Rapids, where she had |&#13;
been staying for some time. She engaged :&#13;
• board at the residence of Mrs. M. E. Sm.th,&#13;
Cortland street, where she gave her name as \&#13;
Hubbard. She was eue'ente,- and applied to ;&#13;
Dr. Gibson for mede.il treatment when her&#13;
•child should be born, which she stated would&#13;
.be in about two months. A few days ago the&#13;
woman gave birth to a healthy girl "baby, after&#13;
which she failed rapidly, and several days after&#13;
died. She informed* Mrs. Smith t h a t her •&#13;
father's name was Walker and that ho was a&#13;
prominent banker In Cleveland. She did not&#13;
clalffi t h a t sftrrwas -married- to Hubbard.—The&#13;
object of her visit here was evidently to keep&#13;
the child's birth from becoming known to her&#13;
friends. Telegrams were s e n t t o h e r f a t h T at&#13;
Cleveland, who appears to he a member of the&#13;
South Cleveland banking company and to reside&#13;
in Newburg, a suburb of Cleveland. He re-&#13;
Itlied to the telegram, stating that he would&#13;
eave for Jackson." Hubbard is supposed to be&#13;
a u e m p ' o y e in the b i n k of which Mr. Walker is&#13;
a member. The girl was 21 v e a r s o l d a n d was&#13;
fine looking and well educated.&#13;
T h e S ; r i k e r 3 ' Riot.&#13;
A terrible riot took place the other morn in g&#13;
tit Carrier, Heath it Co.'s mill". Ess. &gt;xville,near&#13;
Bay Citv. The strikers organized in the First&#13;
ward. Bay City, and marched to Carrier's mill&#13;
intending to "shut down all the salt blocks&#13;
along the river. Sheriff-litciinan_Jiias telegraphed&#13;
for, and, with a number of deputies,&#13;
hastened to the scene, arriving just ^as the&#13;
rioters had shut down the salt 'block of Carrier,&#13;
Heath &lt;t Co. The sheriff ordered the&#13;
crowd to dispense, and was hooted at by th.'&#13;
strikers. He undertook to arrest one oV the&#13;
leaders, when he was set on by the crowd and&#13;
the r.ot began.&#13;
Deputies rushcdhi t o t h ' sheriff's assistance&#13;
and revolvers wer • lively used. Tnc sherilf&#13;
was struck in the forehead by a glancing&#13;
pistol bali, receiving a s&lt;irl wound. Several of&#13;
t h e rioters were wounded. &lt;;ne man named&#13;
Burnett wns carried away by the crowd. Several&#13;
deputies were eiwbbe 1 by the strikers, but&#13;
captured nin • st:ikcr.i and lodged t'leih iu jail.&#13;
through the Canadian traitis and examtno the&#13;
passengers. The people, of Detroit and of tu,e&#13;
state should resort to vaccination as a precaution&#13;
against the disease.&#13;
« i ^ in&#13;
MINOR B T A T E H A P P E K I N 0 8 .&#13;
Remember the state band tournament at&#13;
Flint Sept. S aud 1».&#13;
i Over 10.0J0 people attended t h e soldiers' and&#13;
sailors' reunion the last day.&#13;
Decatur has got 4he celery fever and hopes&#13;
soon to out-rival Kalamazoo.&#13;
Vincent J. Scott, a Detroit banker, has mado&#13;
an a-signment. Liabilities $140,000.&#13;
Judge Joslvn's residence in Ypaihtntl wad&#13;
damaged $1,5.¼) by tire a few nights ago.&#13;
Andrew J. Brow, a prominent art dealer of&#13;
Detroit, has been forced to make an assignment.&#13;
Win. Rice, one of the most highly respected&#13;
business men of Ionia, died this morning of&#13;
typhoid fever.&#13;
Heavy rains have damaged the oat c r o p ' i n&#13;
some portions of the state, a n d wheat stacks&#13;
are also injured.&#13;
Canada's great industrial fair and agricultural&#13;
exposition is to be held at Toronto th: a&#13;
w a r from the Oth to the 10th o. Sept 'luber.—&#13;
SeeAdvt.&#13;
The Ninth Michigan cavalry held a reunion&#13;
n Coldwater, Aug. 12. The next m e c t n g will&#13;
be held in .Jackson' on the third Wednesday in&#13;
August, lSvi.&#13;
The quartermaster generalat Lansing has received&#13;
a requisition for (WO tents for use of the&#13;
army of tin' Cumberland at the meeting at&#13;
(Irand Hupids.&#13;
The Cleveland (iatling gun battery, togcthe1"&#13;
wit'i t) eir guests, numbering in all 2.0 persons.&#13;
wi;l picnic for a week a t . the St. Clair mineral&#13;
springs, beginning Sept. 5.&#13;
•Detroit capitalists have bought all the available&#13;
land in the southern portion of Royal Ouk,&#13;
the lowest price paid being $100 per acre.&#13;
Their object is uot.known.&#13;
Jerry McCarthy, a brakeman on the Salt&#13;
river grading, was fouud'dcad near.the track of&#13;
the Detroit, Lansing it Northern railroan near&#13;
Alma. He was Intoxicated when last seen&#13;
alive.&#13;
William Olds of Howard City was the victim&#13;
of a very painful accident recently. His foot,&#13;
was twis'ed from its socket and both aukle&#13;
bones broken by being caught in a mill carriage.&#13;
The ''gentlemanly burglar" who has been&#13;
working Detroit of" late, was arrested in t h a t ,&#13;
citv the other night in a house of ill-fame.&#13;
"Billy" Bums, a notorious crook, is the name&#13;
of the "geui lemaii."&#13;
Rev. B. W. Blanehard of Lansing, dropped&#13;
dead the other morning, presumably of heart&#13;
disease. Mr. Blanehard was 7(5 years old and&#13;
I ad been actively engaged in the ministry for&#13;
more than 40 years.&#13;
Three years ago Jacob Grennell.'of L'nioir&#13;
ville, sowed a tabJespoonful of Australian cap&#13;
oats. The result was saved and replanted,and&#13;
this year he harvests 140 bushels. The grain&#13;
weighs 40 pounds to t h e bushel.&#13;
A daughter of John Beals of Willmington,&#13;
while playing with a grain cradle on her lather's&#13;
farm, en. a gash nine inches long in the&#13;
calf of lu r leg,' Dr. Rogers was called aud&#13;
closed the wound with I 0 stitches.|&#13;
Alexander O'Neill, of Schoolcraft, has (Jislovercd&#13;
a lin: brown marble on his farm, four&#13;
miles cast of ManisCque, The stone is susee;&#13;
tible of a high i olisb, is handsomely&#13;
marked, a n d e a n he utilized as other marbles.&#13;
against&#13;
suspected of the&#13;
murder of_ Harvey Ke.th of Blooruingdale^-f'&#13;
They are merely held bv the sheriff oX^~V"au&#13;
Buren county to prevent the lyuchiirjf which&#13;
had been threatened. ^-~~^&#13;
Frank Dongay was sut-Tree from the Jackson&#13;
prison the otjieril.iy after serving the s-tate&#13;
two years foj&gt;-burglary. He ha I just got outladow&#13;
of the prison when he was re-&#13;
"tcd and taken to Cass county where he&#13;
will be tried for a burglary committed three&#13;
years since.&#13;
Luther Bnekwith, at one time prosecuting&#13;
attorney, of Bay county, aldutnan, and for&#13;
st veral'vciirs past C n i t i d States commissioner&#13;
d'ed at his residence ir Bay City the other&#13;
cYeniug, of peritonitis after an illness of live&#13;
days, lie was married and leaves a wife and&#13;
two children.&#13;
A little daughter of Wm. Eda of Plymouth,&#13;
while at a neighbor's found a piece of bread&#13;
which had been used to poison rats, aud which&#13;
hail been soaked iu '"Rout:h on Rats." The&#13;
child was discovered while eating it, and a&#13;
physician summoned but in a few hours after&#13;
the child died.&#13;
Robert (iilison of Bloomneld, Oakland&#13;
countv, who had been suffering from throat&#13;
1 rouble for several months, choked t o death a&#13;
few dav's since in the presence of his family,&#13;
who were helpless to relieve him. Mr. &lt;iib-on&#13;
was but 19 vears old. His illness had not been&#13;
deemed serious.&#13;
Israrl Smith, the Grandviile miser, who was&#13;
brutally outraged and robb -d by the thugs, j&#13;
Madden. Jennings and Sligh, and for which [&#13;
Madden and Sligh are now serving"""time in the (&#13;
Jackson penitentary, died recently from the ]&#13;
effects of the injuries received,' Mr Smith&#13;
" No formal complaint has been made&#13;
M. (J. Barker and his wife&#13;
dry goods store. The entire block was g u t t e d&#13;
and nearly all the contents mined. Carpeuter's&#13;
losses on the building Is $5.00J; Insurance&#13;
$2,0v)0. On the stock the loss will amount to&#13;
•f 15,000; insurance #10,000. The cause of the&#13;
conliagratiou is charged to incendiaries.&#13;
Albert Carpenter, ajed :ii years, of the&#13;
township of WooJstoek, Lenawee county, was&#13;
taken sick about 20 minutes after his usual&#13;
breakfast aud iu little over an hour he was a&#13;
corpse. From the history of the case as given&#13;
by those preaent before death as well from the&#13;
healthy condition of all vital organs as shown&#13;
by a careful examination after death, the physicians&#13;
present were of the unanimous opinion&#13;
that deceased came to his death from poisoning.&#13;
Mrs. Philo Fralichof Plymouth, died suddenly&#13;
a few days ago Her illness, w h e n was inrtanimation&#13;
of 'bowels, was of short duratiou.&#13;
she being attacked the day U'fore she died&#13;
while at her customary duties about the house.&#13;
Deceased was l)orn in.Maeedon, N. Y., in 1817,&#13;
came to Michigan nearly 11 fty years ago and&#13;
has resided in Plymouth forty-one years. Her&#13;
family connections are extensive aud rank&#13;
among the prominent clt'/.ens of the place.&#13;
She leaves one daughter, Mrs. H. II. Saftord&#13;
Collector Davis of the Grand Rapids district&#13;
has had a deputy investgatingwhether dealers&#13;
were cancelling revenue stamps as ordered by&#13;
law, and found that if all the cigar, liquor and&#13;
tobacco dealers, who neglected to do so were&#13;
prosecuted the penalties enforced would&#13;
amount to $.'£&gt;,5WI. Some of the firms hadn't&#13;
seen a revenue otlicer in 10 years, and were let'&#13;
off in consideration of their ignorance of the&#13;
provisions of thv law. The revenue collected&#13;
at the (irand Rapids olliee in July was $„\0UO&#13;
iu exeefl. oT the Mini received in July, 1SS4&#13;
It you would hive a live, healthy, local paper&#13;
you must give it prompt earnest support instead&#13;
of waiting until it' wood-bines and then&#13;
say, ' i did not suppose it made any difference&#13;
when 1 paid my dollar." Pay In advance&#13;
means the day you order vour paper, as your&#13;
first paper cost* labor ami money to produce&#13;
aud so on through the year. You can better&#13;
afford to trust your editor for one dollar than&#13;
he can several hundred of his subscribers.&#13;
Anything paid for is better and better enjoyed,&#13;
because you have an interest in it.—Mvtainora&#13;
Bte.&#13;
A woman who resides but three miles from&#13;
Lansing came to the city a day or two ago, it&#13;
is said/for the purpose of purchasing some&#13;
needed household articles, and seeing the store&#13;
windows draped with crape and filled with&#13;
jwrtraits of the dea 1 commander, asked, who&#13;
was dead. Her natural curiosity being gratilied,&#13;
she expressed sympathy for the dead&#13;
general's family iu a way that did equal credit&#13;
to her head and heart, and then a6ked who&#13;
Grant was, anyway. And yet people talk&#13;
about sending missionaries to the unclad but&#13;
yearuful heathen of Central Africa.—Lansing&#13;
Hanibican.&#13;
Thomas P. Savior, ex-postmaster at East&#13;
Saginaw, who is said to be about $4,000 short&#13;
with the government, d"nies the story in toto,&#13;
aud claims that his dealings with the department&#13;
were square in every particular. Mr.&#13;
Savior says that instead ot returning vouchers&#13;
to the government for a larger rental than he&#13;
actually paid, his rent cost $1,000 per year,&#13;
\\hile lie, weeived^ufr $.*X) credit, l i e also&#13;
says t h a t he did not urge people to confribut'&#13;
toward th" payment of the rent, and that such&#13;
a.s diil make contributions did so voluntarily,-&#13;
As to \\U sub-letting the postotrice room-^rtr.&#13;
Saylor alleges that he had Tinted tluv-^Tropcrty&#13;
in his individual capacity,. aud-Jtof as an agent&#13;
of th • govumincut. aniUj-hfff such being the&#13;
ease he has-the righ^t'tTstib-h't, so long as&#13;
business and^conveuieuce of the oilice wire&#13;
iute.'fercjd-wlth.&#13;
the&#13;
not&#13;
following is the&#13;
* Murdered in Cjld-Blooi&#13;
Thomas Goodrow shot and instantly killed&#13;
Fdward Pritc lard, a lumber jobber in Lake&#13;
Citv the other night. It see ns tuat Pritehard&#13;
and Goodrow hat1 had trouble last writer&#13;
about a matter of wages. On the nigh of the&#13;
murder they hippene'dto'meei a E l . r.lim&gt;on's&#13;
]^a c-a lit'le way out from La &lt;e C'ty, and h o :&#13;
wi.r^jB ensued. 'Goodrow stepped " in o the&#13;
house, came out with a gun, an 1 sdiot Pritehard,&#13;
blowing the top- of his h ad o;f. There.&#13;
we e others ivesent. Goodrow s a d ^&gt; would&#13;
go to Lake Citi' and give h'in&gt;eif up to the&#13;
sheriff, and wa&lt; allowed to go alone. He did&#13;
n o t s low np at Lake Citv, however, and now&#13;
t h e th.rlff is l o o k m / for him.&#13;
Taking P r e c a u t i o n . ^&#13;
Health oflicer Wight of Detroit has notified&#13;
t h e governor that we may be visited by the&#13;
Bmall-p .x. The ill sea-se is beyond control In&#13;
Montreal. Dr. W.gnt says it wfil be necessary&#13;
t o draw on the $1 ),000 appropriation made." by&#13;
t h e leg's ature to guard against contagious&#13;
diseases. A trained inspec'or should be statiou-&#13;
•*d at Port Huron and another in Detroit to go&#13;
was 7d years old.&#13;
While the Cuih'r house 'bus was beingdrivi&#13;
n up from tee Ch'cago it' West M chig'an dep&#13;
it, Grand Haven, ' c v i r a l buys got on the&#13;
nark stand on the h i - . The "crivtr orJered .&#13;
them off aud pulled the strap closing the door, j&#13;
While doing so John M.ihou's little boy. aged '&#13;
•(. got between the horses and was run over&#13;
and instantly killed.&#13;
The enginei rs have made the first survey of&#13;
the prooosed St. (J.air River cy Detroit nrlYoad !&#13;
and corrected tl!e-sntfTTer~TlTey are now-ait-work :&#13;
on a map of the section to be crossed by the&#13;
road, showing the way .the railroad will ap- j&#13;
proach the town. It is expected that every- i&#13;
thing will be in shape to secure the right of&#13;
way in the course of aTew^veelcs: • •' j&#13;
Ex-Gov. Franklin J. M o o s , of South Cam- )&#13;
Una, who served a term in the Detroit house of |&#13;
correc ion for obtaining money under fa'se I&#13;
pieU'ti-vs, a n l who was recently released from [&#13;
custody in Ma-sachu-etts for tlie same offen-e .1&#13;
has been again arrest 'd at Boston for obtaining&#13;
monev from Bostonians, representing himself&#13;
as a Col. Simms of Charleston.&#13;
The second annual reunion of the Michigan&#13;
battalion of M.-rrill horse, will be.held at Battle&#13;
Creek, Sept. 1 and 2. It is expected that&#13;
( o l . ' L ' w i s Merrill wiii be present. J. G.&#13;
Lewis of West Leroy, Calhoun county, is secretary&#13;
o;' the associa ion and he requests 'all&#13;
comrades who may know.qJ' thi* reunion to-invite&#13;
other comrades, as he has no way of knowi&#13;
ing the addresses of all.&#13;
The government will sue the bondsmen of&#13;
ev-Postiuast T .Saylor of East Saginaw, for&#13;
the nearly ¢7,()00 shortage. The government&#13;
lias also discovered that George J. Lockly, who&#13;
was postmaster in 1S75, was guilty of the same&#13;
o r t o f w o r k as is charged against &lt;rage and&#13;
Savior, ami as he is dead, the department is&#13;
considering the advisability of bringing suit&#13;
against the estate for the amount of the shortage.&#13;
.&#13;
The Traverse City- asylum commissioners&#13;
h..vj h t the fo lowing contracts: "Dumb waiter*,&#13;
A. S. King, Pontiuc, $s&gt;25; laundry work,&#13;
complete, In p ace, A. M. Dolph &lt;t Co,, Cini&#13;
cmnati, O., .«2.909; furniture and utensils&#13;
complete for kitchens, J o h n Van Range &amp; Co.,&#13;
Cincinnati, O., $2,:«&gt;7 10; woven wire mattresses,&#13;
Ames it Frost. Chicago—fOO single&#13;
mattresses at $2 10 and 60 double mattresses&#13;
at $: JO. $1.&#13;
A d s a s t r u n fire occurred at Farwell the&#13;
other morning, the largest business block be&#13;
ing destroyed, The building was owned by&#13;
I \V. A. Ca'penter, who occupied a portion as a&#13;
A Woman'* Words,&#13;
The British parliament was prorogued on&#13;
the 14tb inst.f The queen's speech was read by&#13;
the lord high chancellor. I'm.&#13;
text:&#13;
.MY Loitos ,\\t&gt; GP.XTI.EMEN'—I am glad to&#13;
be able to relieve you from the labors ot a session&#13;
which has been piotracted and eventful.&#13;
When you assembled in October I informed&#13;
you that an expedition was a Ivaneing tip the&#13;
valley of the Nile to the relief of Khartoum.&#13;
Three mouths later, with. d&gt; ep sorrow, which&#13;
was shared bv all my p opie, 1 learn that the&#13;
expedition arrive i to late. The heroic Gordon'&#13;
and his companions had fallen. An endeavor,&#13;
which was iiielleetnal, was made to reach&#13;
Khartoum bv constructing a railway from&#13;
Snakim to Berber. M.v troops were ultimately&#13;
withdrawn from ttic whole of eastern Soudan,&#13;
except Suakiut, and from westirn Soudan&#13;
down to Ala-hvert. Although the: objects of&#13;
the expedition were utiattaincd, I have great&#13;
reason to be proud of the bravery and endurance&#13;
displayed by my soldiers and sailors, and&#13;
of the skill" wherewith t h e y have been commanded.&#13;
1 receive with great pleasure the&#13;
loyal offers of military assistance for this&#13;
campaign from my colonies, from the native&#13;
princes"of Ind a, and a contingent from the&#13;
colony of New South Wales served with distinction&#13;
in the action- on the coast of the Red&#13;
sea.&#13;
The death of El Mahdi will probably enable&#13;
me to perform with less difficulty the duties&#13;
toward tee ruler and people of Egypt which&#13;
events have imposed upon me. I shall not relax&#13;
my efforts to place government and good order&#13;
in that country upon a tirm foundation.&#13;
My relations with other p overs are of a&#13;
friendly nature. Difficulties which at one&#13;
time were of an anxious character arose between&#13;
my government aud Russia, concerning&#13;
the limit's of the tcrntory o ' my ally, the ameer&#13;
of Afghanistan. Negotiations "for their adjustment&#13;
still continue and will, I trust, lead at an&#13;
early period to a satisfactory settlement.&#13;
The progress of events in south Africa has&#13;
compelled me, in the interest of the native&#13;
races, to take u n d ' r my prob ctiou Bechuanalaud&#13;
and certain adjacent territories.&#13;
TamTakingThenecessarysrrpvtfr^p'hTC'eiihe'&#13;
northwest frootierpf my Indian empire in a&#13;
conditon to adequate defense in the absence&#13;
of which the prosperity and tranquillity of my&#13;
Indian s'objects_arc liable from time to time to&#13;
be interrupted orHTsfilTtjed.&#13;
•Gentlemen of the house of commons, I t h a n k&#13;
you for the liberality wherewith during the&#13;
past year you have provided for the services of&#13;
the country.&#13;
My L o i d s a n d Gentlemen—I have had the&#13;
pleasure of giving my assent to a measure enabling&#13;
fedetal acuon"in certain matters to be&#13;
taken by my colonics in Au-.tralasia1 to a much&#13;
I neede 1 amejidment to the criminal law and to&#13;
i a bill establishing a new djipinTi'nent in the&#13;
j government for the mami'gem nt of Scottish&#13;
j affair;. 1 have also, been glad to concur in t h e&#13;
I measure iuc ca-iifg the number of occupying&#13;
; -freeholders in Ireland. I notice with sincere&#13;
i satisfaction and gratification that an effort&#13;
lias been made by a bill, whereto I assented, to&#13;
diminish the evils of over-crowded and un- 1 healthful dwellings, which hinder so seriously&#13;
' the moral and material well-being of the hibor-&#13;
) iug classes.&#13;
: T regret the depression, which has so prrv&#13;
I vailed in many of the important trades&#13;
and agricultural an 1 manufacturing industries&#13;
of the country, and which still continues.&#13;
J have d'irccted the issue of rt&#13;
commission to inquire Into the causes&#13;
of this depression, and to ascertain whether it&#13;
can be alleviated by legislation. During the&#13;
past session your tinuThas been principaTy occupied&#13;
by the enlargement of the electorate&#13;
and the extensive cnanges which you has'c in&#13;
consequence made in the constitution of the&#13;
house of commons. I .earnestly trust t h a t&#13;
these comprehensive measures may increase&#13;
the efnetch •&gt;• of parliament and may add con-&#13;
'tentment alhong my people. It is my purpose&#13;
before long to seek'their counsel by a dissolution&#13;
of parliament. I pray the blessingof God&#13;
may rest upon their extmded liberties, and&#13;
that the members who arc called upon to exercise&#13;
new powers will use them withthc sobriety&#13;
and discernment which have for so long a&#13;
period marked the history of this nation,&#13;
.DEATH BT FIRX.&#13;
A. D i i c i t r o a j F i r s in Mancheiter, N. H.&#13;
T h e Webster block In Manchester, N. H., a&#13;
handsome brick building eostiug $500,000, was&#13;
discovered to be oa tire about 10 o'clock the&#13;
other night.&#13;
The block is used for stores on the first floor,&#13;
and above this is divided into boarding-houses,&#13;
with small rooms,&#13;
The number of inmates at the time of tho&#13;
tire is estimated at 500. At least 10) made&#13;
good their escape in tbeir night clothing by&#13;
means of a ladder placed against the building&#13;
by the firemen. The nrst person taken&#13;
out supposed to be dead was Lizzie B a m s .&#13;
She wa-4 convey (si to tho policy station, where&#13;
restoratives were applied aud she may recover.&#13;
Soon afterwards Mary O'Brien aud her child,&#13;
eighteen mouths old, were found iu a dying&#13;
condition on the first Moor. The child died&#13;
within a few minutes. In the meantime the&#13;
firemen were having a tierce tight with the&#13;
flames, which swept the entire front of the&#13;
building and mounted a stairway in the rear of&#13;
the block. A second alarm was sent out and&#13;
twelve streams were playing upon the building&#13;
before the flames could fie controlled. A hasty&#13;
examination was made of the&#13;
bodies wire found.&#13;
Shortly, after it was asserted by some of those&#13;
rescued that members of two families were&#13;
missing. Their place of abode was in the tifth&#13;
story. ' On removing a closet door which -hail&#13;
fallen inwards a woman's head was disclosed.&#13;
In a few moments another body was found. It&#13;
was that of a woman, clasping in her arms an&#13;
infant. Beyond them were found the bodies&#13;
of three children, one a girl IS years old, and&#13;
the others a bov of 'J years and a girl of Vi.&#13;
The family were French.&#13;
There was an insurance of $10,000 on the&#13;
property, which will about coyer the damage&#13;
done. The loss on the furniture will amount&#13;
to thousands of dollars.&#13;
THE COUNTRY AT LARGE.&#13;
rooms, but no&#13;
the Dominion&#13;
no intention of hanging&#13;
1» IT TRUE?&#13;
A high official states t h a t&#13;
Government, has&#13;
,iel. .&#13;
THB CTCLCVXE.&#13;
Several person? were instantly killed and&#13;
great damage done a t Norwood, St. Lawrence&#13;
county, N. Y., by a cycloue.&#13;
ENOL'I.FEl) V1U.AOES.&#13;
A distrous Hood in tho province of Canton,&#13;
China, resulted in the death of 10,000 persons,&#13;
and great destruction of property.&#13;
PAHDONED,&#13;
President Cleveland has pardoned Michael&#13;
Mullen, of CincinnatY who was sentenced to&#13;
one year's imprisonment for imprisoning 100&#13;
voters to prevent them from voting.&#13;
COLUIMNU (,'IKlX'S TWAINS,&#13;
Two sections of Forepaugh's circus train&#13;
collide I near Eddy ville, Iowa, a few days ago.&#13;
SeVeral cars wire thrown from the track. Anumber&#13;
of attaches of the circus were seriously&#13;
injured. * ^-&#13;
UAV STATE I'KOHIIIWTONTSTS.&#13;
The Prohibition jmjl-y-of .Massachusetts will&#13;
place a state tieke-r-Tu the field at the coming&#13;
election, aualVvTll hold its stat • couventfon at&#13;
WorcjfcHter. September 10. Gov. St. John of&#13;
,K-a"iTsas will be present a n d - a d d r e s s the convention.&#13;
IS 1'KKl.I.KU AT.IVE?&#13;
Maxwell, the alleged murderer of C. Arthur&#13;
Prelhr, in St. Louis, says t h a t ;tt the proper&#13;
time he will produce' Prellcr alive and well.&#13;
According to Maxwell's story, the body was&#13;
placed in the trunk iu aceonlanuewith u plan&#13;
to get the insurance on 'Prellcr's liftf.&#13;
TUE LA:&lt;OUEKS' STEAK.&#13;
The various trade organizations throughout&#13;
the cimntry have signed a petition asking&#13;
President Cleveland to call an extra session of&#13;
congress for the consideration of means of relief&#13;
lor the industrial (lasses throughout the&#13;
country, and the,revival of business. The petition&#13;
ask that the extra'session e uivene on ur&#13;
before the" last Monday.in September.&#13;
FATAL I ^ ' O J U ^ I O J L _&#13;
A gang of four laborers on the- Cayuga it&#13;
Lake Shore branch of the Lehigh railroad near&#13;
Ithaca, N. Y., during a heavy rain sought&#13;
shelter under an overhanging bluff when a&#13;
land slide fell upon "them and buried Michael&#13;
McManus, Patrick Mal.ou and Michael Kahey,&#13;
all of whom were killed. The fourih man escaped.&#13;
McManus was unmarried, but the&#13;
otuers leave large families.&#13;
MANGLED lU'INS,.&#13;
A terrible explosion of gas took place in the&#13;
West End coal companvniines ihe other morning&#13;
at Mocanaqua, 15 miles from Wilkesbarre,&#13;
Pa. As far as can be learned 12 miners were&#13;
instantly killed andscveral others dangerously&#13;
injured. The "report of t h e explosion was&#13;
heard five miles away and shook the earth foe&#13;
hundreds of yards around Tim gas had been&#13;
accumulating"a long time. T h e m . c n were recovered&#13;
horribly mangled.&#13;
A .lEALOl'S IH'SUANIfc&#13;
Da~id Marhles ami his divorced wife attended&#13;
the Presbyterian church at Coloma, Mb.,&#13;
the other night. At the close of the service,&#13;
as Mrs. Marhles was mounting her horse, the&#13;
jealous ex-husband blew out her brains. He&#13;
then went home and his hou.-c was immediateel&#13;
y surrounded by a rnob who demanded his&#13;
surrender. He, thinking they intended lynching,&#13;
blew out Ins own brains. Although divorced,&#13;
he had always beeriJ very jealous of&#13;
any attention paid his "wife by other men.&#13;
MONTHKAL'S PLAGCB.&#13;
Cholera has been declared epidemic in Montreal.&#13;
Several isolated cases appeared a few&#13;
days ago, and every effort was. made to keep&#13;
the matter (jiiiet. Theclisea.se, however, developed&#13;
itself all over the city and the board of&#13;
health was obliged lo diclarw- the disease epide-&#13;
inier— U4-e^-indign&amp;f.ou-iaxists at the refu^-ahi&#13;
of the physicians t o attend small-pox patients, j&#13;
even when they are the family physicians. T h e \&#13;
simplest precautions are disregarded by the •&#13;
people among whom Che disease, is prevalent. '&#13;
HOME AOAIN. ]&#13;
Maxwell, the suspected murderer of Prellar j&#13;
in a St. Louis hotel, has been brought* back&#13;
from New / ( aland, the steamer retelling San&#13;
Francisco Aug. 10, Maxwell, when question- j&#13;
'ed, podtively refu-ed to make any statement :&#13;
respecting the criinie he is chargeil'with. saving •&#13;
he nad been so auvsied by his counsel before&#13;
Ieavii g Auckland. He I nek &gt; cheerful and savs '&#13;
he n ver felt better in his life. The otlicers (&#13;
were equally reticent, ..dec ining to diseu-s the&#13;
subject of "(rime o. Maxwell's supposed connection&#13;
thcrewitJi. I&#13;
F o r i , MtKDI'Ut IN ( tlK'AOO. !&#13;
Mr% M. Walsh, a widow t'O years old, win |&#13;
found the other day iu a small" back room nt.' ;&#13;
(10,) Fulton street, with her bands tied ami&#13;
marks of violence on her body which led to the&#13;
supposition thut she was m u n i e m l . The.'inns&#13;
and limbs were tightly bound together YHth a&#13;
, small cord and a n o t h e r c ucl was drawn tightly&#13;
round her throat causing death by strangulation.&#13;
• The murdered woman was thought by&#13;
her neigbews as somewhat e;a/.v. , Everything&#13;
in the house ransacked. There is noelew to&#13;
the perpetrators.&#13;
TIUEVINCl INDIANS SHOT.&#13;
Ed. Goulding, with two associate cattlemen&#13;
on t h e Musselshell, near Billing*. Montana,&#13;
met a marauding band of Piegitn Indians between&#13;
the Raaor and Half-Breed crei ks. The&#13;
Plogaois numbered 20 and were accompanied&#13;
by 75 stolen horses. Goulding aud party fired,&#13;
killing one Indian; but being greatly out-numbered,&#13;
were compelled to retreat for reinforcements.&#13;
Obtaining the latter aud overtaking&#13;
the Pierans they killed the entire party aud&#13;
recovered all tho stolen horses. \\ hat effect&#13;
this battle may have on the neighboring bands&#13;
js unknown.&#13;
A HIOII-TONRT) nOUSB THIEF.&#13;
C. P, Judl, appointed by the presideni&#13;
16 l**t to be special a^ent of the national labor&#13;
bateau for Nevada and the territories, launder&#13;
arrest iu Denver, Col., on a warrant charging&#13;
him with horse-stealing. Judd drew up and&#13;
signed a statemeut admitting his g u i l t&#13;
and stating that he has served a term in t h e&#13;
penitentiary at Leavenworth, Kan., and two&#13;
terms in the penitentiary in Colorado for a&#13;
similar offense. J u d d claims bis application for&#13;
a government position was signed by severs!&#13;
well-known Democrats of Colorado, to which&#13;
state his appointment is accredited.&#13;
TUKOUGU A TREBTLK.&#13;
A passenger Irafu on the Cincinnati &amp; Eastern&#13;
railroad, which left Cincinnati at 10 o'clock&#13;
the other morning, fell through a trestle over&#13;
Nine-mile creek, about twenty TU_iles from Cincinnati,&#13;
with fatal results. The elistauce to&#13;
the creek was forty feet, and the entire train&#13;
consisting of an engine, one passenger coach&#13;
and two coal cars, crashed down. Mrs. Donaldson,&#13;
wife of the maBter mechanic, was killed&#13;
outright and her two children elangerously&#13;
hurt. Conduct** Din-hum had an arm and two&#13;
ribs broken. Harry Moore of New Richmond&#13;
and J. Sutton of Batava sustained grave injuries,&#13;
and ulue other passengers were seriously&#13;
h u r t&#13;
"it. H . " CALLED HOME.&#13;
Mr*. Helen Hunt Jackson, authoress, whose&#13;
writings under t h e ' n o u de plum of 11. H. are&#13;
well known, died In San Francisco recently, of&#13;
cancer in the .-tomueh Mis, Jackson was appointed&#13;
special Indian eeiminis-iom-r by President&#13;
Arthur, and was also eneageel by the&#13;
Ce'iiturv company to write a aerie&lt; of articles&#13;
on-Southern California, Oregon and Washington-&#13;
territory. While .staying in Los Angeles&#13;
she fell and broke her knee. She came to San&#13;
Francisco about four months ago for treatm&#13;
e n t Since her arrival she was attacked with&#13;
low fever and gradually grew worse. Her&#13;
stomach became so weak as to be unable to retain&#13;
any k lad of foo#f, aud for the last two&#13;
months'she ha» subsisted entirely on frozen&#13;
cream, V&#13;
A HHAVE KNUINKBR.&#13;
As a heavily laden Pacific express drawn by&#13;
two engines, wa* entering the Grand T r u n k&#13;
yards at Merriton, Out., the other afternoem it&#13;
was found that the air brakes would not work,&#13;
and that the train could not he stopped with&#13;
the hand brakes. The swing at the WeUaud&#13;
canal, just beyond, the depot, was partly opened,&#13;
and the train daahed past the depot and&#13;
both engines a&lt;i*3 the foremost cars were&#13;
plunged into the canal and adjoining pond.&#13;
Seeing that the accident was unavoidable,&#13;
several of the employe* whose dnfy it was t o&#13;
have remained at their posts, jumped, b u t&#13;
brave Engineer'Co v remained at his post. He&#13;
was found soon after i» the wafer beside the&#13;
boiler, dead. William.'- J e n n i n g s , e-xpfess messenger&#13;
Of Buffalo, wa« badly sraldeci ami died&#13;
in a short time. S. Jacksein train porter of&#13;
Niagara Falls, hajhhis back hurt aud was Injured&#13;
internally. R. Gurel, porter of Niagara&#13;
Falls, had'Tis shoulder dislocated. The pas-&#13;
'sengefs al' escaped injury.-&#13;
HOMELESS FAMILIES.&#13;
A fire oroke out in MiuMud Day's barrel factory&#13;
in Jersey City the other morning. The&#13;
tire" spread to" an '..adjoining tenement bouse&#13;
and Men to it-two-story storehouse belonging&#13;
to the SnpTicrt furniture company of Williamsport,&#13;
Pa. A l l t h c - e buildings were destroyed..&#13;
Tiie&gt; flames then spread to a tenement house in&#13;
•Railroad avenue until six three-story double&#13;
tenements, oee-upied In all by 7.1 families, w&lt; re&#13;
e-onsumed. The t e n a n t s were driven into the&#13;
streets in t h ir night clothen, and many of&#13;
them narrowly escaped with their lives. The&#13;
total los.-, is'csitimat.'d at ?*&gt;!).000. The origin&#13;
of the tiie is unknown. There was&#13;
a scene of wild excitement; among&#13;
the poor people who resided in a n d near the&#13;
burning buildings and wdio were awakened lo&#13;
see utter desolation and perhaps death staring&#13;
them in the face. The i\renu.u worked nobly,&#13;
however, aud the're'were no accidents- of any&#13;
moment. Seventy-two families w, re rendered&#13;
homeless by the tire' and many workmeu will&#13;
i e thrown out eif employment."&#13;
CLEVELAND MEANS lUlSINESK.&#13;
President Clevclanel had prepnrcel a p r o c&#13;
iama-tion ln-fore leaving for the Grant funeral&#13;
relative to the cattlemen on the pul lie domain&#13;
which has be n made- public. After r e c t i n g&#13;
the nature Of the public domain, he orders that&#13;
every unlawful enclosure of the public lands&#13;
lie immediately removed and forbidw any per-&#13;
-on from preventing or obstructing by means&#13;
of enclosures or t o n e , threats or intimidation&#13;
a n y o n e entitled thereto, from settling on any_&#13;
i'art o'f such public land which is uhjevtU*'&#13;
entry and settlement Under the laws of the&#13;
I'nifed Stales, The military an the rities are&#13;
directed to enfoice tho proclamation. It is&#13;
understood that the president will give the&#13;
cattlemen additional time, if they .manifest an&#13;
honest desire to move. If the cattlemen make&#13;
good use of the-40 days-beginning to round up,&#13;
showing that they are eloing all in their power&#13;
to comply with' 1h# proclamation, their time&#13;
will be extended by whatever may be deemed&#13;
actually necessary for their interest. The&#13;
mil.tary force at Fort Reno has been increased.&#13;
DETKOIT MABXEIM&#13;
Wheat—No. 1 white $ 'J 1 (ft&#13;
Wheat—Nb. 2 red 0,) (a)&#13;
F:our, rohcr process............. 5 ()0 («&gt;&#13;
Flour, stone process.; 4 75 (a&#13;
Corn • 47 (tit&#13;
Oats !£* (it&#13;
Burlev I ^ ("5&#13;
Rvc per 100 4 00 ai 4 •„'&gt;&#13;
Bran ., .,-...-... J-L.7J—(&lt;i.j:U)0&#13;
«J3&#13;
'.r7&#13;
j lo&#13;
5 00&#13;
AH&#13;
3&gt;&#13;
1 40&#13;
W&#13;
14&#13;
6&#13;
VI&#13;
!0&#13;
l4&#13;
.15 00&#13;
. 0 00&#13;
. 5 no&#13;
7.)&#13;
i : ( )&#13;
10&#13;
s&#13;
.10&#13;
.12&#13;
(.c1 li 0 0&#13;
M l 2&#13;
cu&#13;
(ii)&#13;
\(t&#13;
(&lt;c&#13;
(«)&#13;
ur,&#13;
(n\ ) oil&#13;
,-0&#13;
i 5&#13;
h&#13;
Clover Seed fl bu "&gt; (Hi&#13;
Timothy Seed .1 7o U6 1 j.0&#13;
Apples per bbl 1 50 {tt 2 50&#13;
B u t t e r ^ lb 16 &lt;&lt;d&#13;
C h e e s e . . . * - S (fy&#13;
Eggs 11 (fk&#13;
Cii'ickens — 0 (&lt;6&#13;
Turkevs "... 10 ut 12&#13;
4-\)ta4*i+'s, iu vv, per bu „ „ „ 40 id ^--&#13;
Turuips 150 (ro S5&#13;
Onions'"^bu i)i (i(. 1 00&#13;
Honey 10 (.'C. 11&#13;
Bi'ans", picked ... 1 25 tw I MO&#13;
Beans,.unpicked 75 uc I 00&#13;
H a v . . . 15 ut)\] 00&#13;
Straw Ut 7 00&#13;
Pe»rk,(h-essed V 100&#13;
Pork,mess new&#13;
Pork, iamdy&#13;
11JUIU» •• •&#13;
Shoulders&#13;
Lard 7&#13;
Dried Beef 12&#13;
Tallow 5&#13;
Beeswax .'{(&gt;&#13;
ft't-f extra mess 10 25&#13;
Wood, Beech and Maple 75 (:t\ 00&#13;
Wood Maple. !"&gt; 5 Ofi (5 50&#13;
Wood Hickory 50 (th 5 } &gt;&#13;
CATTL!'.—The niarki t is aeiive an 1 rteo.ig&#13;
choice una c\tra goe»d grad s of sm jdng c-it&#13;
tie are . u te i at St. , 0 ^ 5 00; good to clioici."&#13;
stoekers a.u&lt;l feeders ,n i-2 0 ur, e mini u an I,&#13;
goe&gt;,i iti.ts. nii.iii' (OWs, h h rs an ' a m i i n g&#13;
grades (). (-i.-tle- are &lt;jt:o td iu £&lt;l i] ]{&lt;c\ 40;&#13;
i.Ulk at s'J '.H(«) i 4 ' ; gooil to i b ice through&#13;
Texas cattle, huoug at $2 9 \ ' ' 4 2"&gt;; We-stern&#13;
ranger.' linn; nutiee^ and ;.al -o.e'edt at S3 W&#13;
(i i H 15.&#13;
Hoys—Common /find rough and mixed grad* a&#13;
of hogs arc quoted nt .,-4 1 0 » ; 4!L - O i d a n i&#13;
I'Xtra assorted choice lie avy jiae.king DM«1 shipping&#13;
grades of hogs. $4-.0^(-4 10; skij&gt;^ u'ud&#13;
cuueu graeles at ^.3^4.&#13;
SHEEP—The market is s t a l v ; inferior t o ,&#13;
fair native siiorn siieep sed 1 at $k'&gt;)\ 2"r;,,Tc1cans,&#13;
ifi 4(%)3 75; lambs, per head, -il^^'i .-'o\&#13;
WOOL. ^ , ^ ^&#13;
Eastern advises are&gt;--''fhe ma.ket Is firm&#13;
with a good demauiV^T)hlo and I'ennsvlvauia&#13;
fleeces, 30(r/'51*^7&lt;)r X and U2(&lt;0 c for . \ X ;&#13;
Michiga&gt;--X lleece* at 2S^29e; No. 1 Ohio&#13;
choji^combing, ,34&lt;a!35 c; e h o f i n ' d e l a . n a&#13;
_ j d Michigan didatue and eoiid)Iiig, ;)lo; pulled&#13;
weoU at 20(SS0c for c .uumon to good tuners.&#13;
^&#13;
)Jl '*?»*.'&amp;•• : ¥ '•fjS',&#13;
*~*\,&#13;
A THE COMING MAN.&#13;
"1&#13;
Tfce Coming M&amp;n I i-hjg: tin- Coming Man&#13;
Evolved iu nature iduce. IIHJ wornl kgtm&#13;
By Energy Divine; tie Mnu foretold&#13;
Foreveimore, whom Hope and Faith bebo'd&#13;
All voices Khali ho liear, oil volumes rend:&#13;
Probe to the heart of every code and creed;&#13;
Cut uucut pages of Creation's book;&#13;
lu life itself ior life's deep i-ee.reU look;&#13;
Intent his heart end v gtlant hl« bruin Jr The seventh essence of the truih to gain.&#13;
He shall be humble, yet supremely bold&#13;
The scroll of Time's experience to unfo'd:&#13;
Where Seiwice hits her daring flambeau high&#13;
He greets the glowing torch will feadess e^e;&#13;
Where, past the known, Religion WIDKB her&#13;
^ flight&#13;
His solemn guee pursue s her starry light.&#13;
Not knowledge only enter* in the p'an&#13;
.And consummation of the Coming Man,&#13;
And not belief alone, however true:&#13;
Ttie best u no' to rest, it is to do;&#13;
The Coining Man sh»l) be, a man of depdg&#13;
Km ploying substance and supplying needs.&#13;
His widest word t-nall tear a fitting act,&#13;
And it 1 ids SH'CUIHHOU bloom to fact.;&#13;
The goodness of his eihicH he shall prove&#13;
By luukal resulis of active love.&#13;
— W. 11. Vetwble, in The Current.&#13;
BKOUGI1T BACK.&#13;
&lt;'11AI*TKK I.&#13;
There was time, since I have been&#13;
n man. that I hardly knew my name,&#13;
but, 1 am pleased to say that I know&#13;
now. I am John Pemebrton Oaks.&#13;
Aly father always called me Pern; but&#13;
, that makes no difference, for my&#13;
''lather had nothing to do with the&#13;
iwlful experience which I am going to&#13;
relate.&#13;
At the age of twenty-five) I was the&#13;
trusted book-keeper for the largo&#13;
wholesale firm of Pignian &amp; Gray.&#13;
Pigmau, who really carried on the.&#13;
business, made no attempt to disguiso&#13;
"his appreciation of me. You know&#13;
that I appreciated this, when I tell&#13;
vou that I was in love with Carrie&#13;
Pigman. I first met her while I occupied&#13;
a ^'roustabout" position in the&#13;
store, but even then she smiled upon&#13;
me. She used to come to the store&#13;
nearly ever afternoon a*id it was not&#13;
long until I began to eagerly watch&#13;
for her. One day when sue came in,&#13;
her father was out. Passing by every&#13;
one she approached me and said:&#13;
"Mr. Pern, do you know where papa&#13;
has gone?"&#13;
"No, I do not."&#13;
"Do you know how soon ho will be&#13;
back?" '&#13;
"No. He said nothipg to me about&#13;
his going. When ho has information&#13;
to mpart he communicates it to some&#13;
one occupying a higher position than&#13;
the position I till."&#13;
"Oh, yes, that is true, but I'll sit&#13;
here until he comes, that is if you&#13;
don't care." ,&#13;
"Ofcourse. I donotcare. You must&#13;
please excuse me as 1 am compelled&#13;
lo go about my duties."&#13;
"Oli, no, stay here and talk ta me,&#13;
Mr. Pern."&#13;
"I really cannot. If I do, your&#13;
father will give me a blowing up when&#13;
he comes buck."&#13;
"Oli, no, he is not so bad as that."&#13;
"He is very strict."&#13;
"Not with anything that concerns&#13;
mq."&#13;
"1 can't help it, Miss Carrie, I must&#13;
go about my duties."&#13;
She pouted in a most charming pretense&#13;
of nnger as 1 turned away, and&#13;
1 was half inclined to return and talk&#13;
to her. but knowing that my daily&#13;
bread depended on my position, I shut&#13;
out the bright picture. When Mr.&#13;
Pigman returned, I heard her say:&#13;
"Papa, Mr. Pern is such a stubborn&#13;
young man."&#13;
"W hy do yon think so, Carrie?"&#13;
•"Because! asked him to talk to me&#13;
and he said that he was compelled to&#13;
do his work." -&#13;
"He acted rightly, my daughter,&#13;
and f respect him for it.""&#13;
'•'lint 1 was lonesome."&#13;
"That makes no difference. The&#13;
young man has duties to perform, duties&#13;
with which I have entrusted him&#13;
ami any neglect on his part would&#13;
prove hiw to be unworthy of my conlidenee."&#13;
These declarations made me additionally&#13;
enreful in the future, and it&#13;
was not very long until I was promoted&#13;
to the posit on of head book-keeper)&#13;
One afternoon, Mr. Pigman invited&#13;
me to take' dinner with him at his&#13;
iionse. lt_was_the iirst time_that lie&#13;
had ever extended such an invitation,&#13;
and the eagerness with which I accepted&#13;
it must have been ill disguised.&#13;
for Mr. Pigman looked at me and&#13;
smiled. Carrie was radiant and Mrs.&#13;
Pigman whom I had never before so&#13;
beamed .•upon me a cordial welcome.&#13;
After dinner we had music, and when&#13;
evening came, Carrie and I went to the&#13;
theatre. How joyous she wits; how&#13;
ligh t-heartcd and gay. 1 loved her and&#13;
I could see that she loved me. Indeed,&#13;
she made no attempt to conceal it.&#13;
As we were going home I told her of&#13;
my love-asked her to marry me. We&#13;
tkissod eaeli other al tho gate.&#13;
The next morning I was much s'?r-&#13;
'prised and not a little ombarrassed&#13;
when Mr. Pigman said to me:&#13;
"So you and Carrie are engaged?"&#13;
"Yes, sir," I faltered.&#13;
"\yell, sir, she will make you a good&#13;
wife. Have you drawn off the Halpin&#13;
Brothers' account?"&#13;
j T looked wooderingly at hiua. Surely&#13;
he could,not be so unconcerned.&#13;
"Yea, sir, I haFO drawn off tho acc&#13;
o u n t . " 14All rights"&#13;
"Mr. Pigman, you do not seem to bo&#13;
much concerned ab.out our engagement.&#13;
"&#13;
'•Whoso engagement?"&#13;
•'Your daughter's—mine." ^^^&#13;
"Oh, that's a fact!" he replied. "I&#13;
had almost forgotten h^-^' •&#13;
"Mr. rigman^yiHrtreat it fts a very&#13;
lifirht m a t t e r ^ - ^&#13;
"Oh^jnrf can't bo light. You are a&#13;
iftty heavv t'eii ;&gt;\v and Carrie is no&#13;
dwarf. If i had :.ny ohiec/ons to ofare&#13;
either drunk or crazy,"&#13;
I told him that he&#13;
paragraph&#13;
matter with&#13;
fer, you would hear from me, but as 1&#13;
know you to bo capable and honest, I&#13;
gladly give my consent."&#13;
CHAll'tii II.&#13;
I was a voracious reader of newspapers.&#13;
Although my mind fondly&#13;
dwelled upon my love affair, yet 1 did&#13;
not neglect my newspapers. Humorous&#13;
items, clipped without credit, possessed&#13;
for me an especial fascination.&#13;
One day while 1 was walking along&#13;
the street, it suddenly occurred to me&#13;
that tho majority of men were without&#13;
credit, and I thought it would be&#13;
right to compel foreigners to display&#13;
their credits. For instance, on the&#13;
tail of a German's coat should be&#13;
srintcd the word "Germany," and in&#13;
ike manuer all other foreigners should&#13;
je treated. The American should be&#13;
eadod out as original matter. It&#13;
made me mad to think of the numerous&#13;
foreigners who were leading themselves&#13;
out, parading as original matter.&#13;
I passed Pignian's house and&#13;
saw Carrie standing on the steps, but&#13;
I did not speak to her. I was too&#13;
busy thinking of my new3paper idea.&#13;
I met a young fellow whom l'kuew to&#13;
be of loreign extraction. He was&#13;
strutting as original matter. I stopped&#13;
him and remonstrated with him.&#13;
"Sir," said I, "you ought to wear a&#13;
credit on your ouat-tail?"&#13;
"What's tho matter with you?"&#13;
"I'm all right; I'm original and have&#13;
a right to be leaded out.v'&#13;
"You&#13;
he said.&#13;
Then I raved,,&#13;
had insulted an American parag&#13;
and I wanted to light, him, but a policeman&#13;
came up and separated us. 1&#13;
went to the store and began work on&#13;
my books. Mr. Pigman. I noticed,&#13;
regarded me curiously. After a white&#13;
he came to me and said&#13;
"Oaks, what is the&#13;
you?" ,&#13;
"Nothing, why?" %&#13;
"On your books I noticed the words&#13;
'leaded out,' and 'solid.' What do&#13;
you mean?"&#13;
"I tried to explain to him but he&#13;
could not understand. I told him&#13;
that he was original and hall a perfect&#13;
right to be leaded out but that the Irish&#13;
porter ought to be solid and credited.&#13;
"If you don't know where ho&#13;
came from," said I "you'd better&#13;
credit him to exchange,"&#13;
Still he did not understand. His&#13;
obtuseness.angered me, and seizing a&#13;
poker I was about to strike him when&#13;
the trncreditedTrismau rushed iu and&#13;
disarmed me. Then there came a&#13;
darkness through which 1 could scarcely&#13;
see. The sunbeams on the windowsill&#13;
fell like shadows. I lost my recollection.&#13;
When I regained it, I was&#13;
in a sort of prison. The light had returned&#13;
but my mind was still disturbed,&#13;
Carrie appeared at the grated&#13;
door.&#13;
"Hello, Carrie," said I.&#13;
'Oh, I am so glad you know me,"&#13;
she rejoined, pressing her face against&#13;
the bars.&#13;
"Know you, why I have known you&#13;
—letme*see—I have known you eiglitysevon&#13;
years."&#13;
"Oh, Mr. Pern."&#13;
"It's a fact. 1 wouldn't tell you a lie.&#13;
I got acquainted with you eighty-seven&#13;
vears ago the lirst of last June and the,&#13;
last of duly."&#13;
How strange it is that I should&#13;
remember all these foolish tilings,&#13;
but 1 do; I remember them clearly.&#13;
"Mr. Pern, are vou never going&#13;
to get well? Vou have, been&#13;
in this asylum two years. Oh, if you&#13;
hadn't gone insane we would have been&#13;
married."&#13;
I laughed at her. "Married," I exclaimed,&#13;
"why we were married fortysix&#13;
years ago."&#13;
She burst into tears. "You&#13;
are hopelessly goue," she said&#13;
**1 fear that you will never be brought&#13;
back."&#13;
"Oh, I'll get it straightened out&#13;
after awhile/ Tho credit system&#13;
is improving. I saw an odd looking&#13;
fellow yesterday, that was&#13;
credited to exchange. A few weeks&#13;
ago he would have been run in as&#13;
original. The ready print fellows are&#13;
doing the square thing. So don't&#13;
fret.v'&#13;
She wept for joy, I thought,&#13;
ami when sire had~gont% - I gafr-&#13;
"Carrie will be around in a day or&#13;
two."&#13;
"All right; tell her that as soon as I&#13;
collect my occupation tax from the&#13;
city council I will pay her for washing&#13;
those six shirts."&#13;
"Poor fellow!"&#13;
"Yes, haven't a cent at present.0&#13;
Tho next moment—though it may&#13;
have been longer—I looked up and&#13;
saw Carrie looking at me.&#13;
"How's crops? I asked.&#13;
"Oh, Mr. Pem, will you never'be&#13;
brought back, when you know that I&#13;
love you so?"&#13;
"Yea, I'll be there directly. Unlock&#13;
that door and I'll present you with the&#13;
finest foot-race you ever saw. Oh, I'm&#13;
a jack-rabbit when I turn myself loose.&#13;
I once ran from Kansas to prohibition."&#13;
"I don't know what to do," ihe&#13;
sobbed.&#13;
"Unlock the door. Say, a fellow&#13;
came in here yesterday with a cofRn&#13;
on his arm. I am in favor of tho Russian&#13;
idea. Hike beautiful coffins. There&#13;
is nothing prettier than a speckled&#13;
coffin. It may not last as long as the&#13;
black ones but it is more attractive."&#13;
"Do you ever read anything?" she&#13;
asked.&#13;
"No, the people who keep this&#13;
boarding house won't let me read."&#13;
"They are cruel. Hero is a newspaper."&#13;
,&lt;She shoved tho newspaper though&#13;
the bars and I took it up. Carrie withdrew.&#13;
1 unfolded the paper. WTith a&#13;
thrill I read the following dispatch&#13;
from New York:&#13;
"A peculiar epidemic is raging in&#13;
the east. The man who started "the&#13;
mother-in-law joke has just died and&#13;
the disease is spreading rapidly among&#13;
the paragraphers. It is thought that&#13;
they willalldie."&#13;
A dark cloud was lifted from my&#13;
mind. I threw down my paper and&#13;
uttered aery of joy. I realized it all.&#13;
I had been crazy. The keeper, hearmy&#13;
cry, rushed to my cell. A glance&#13;
satisfied htm. Unlocking the heavy&#13;
door, he said. __&#13;
"You are free."&#13;
I lvurried down stairs. How bright&#13;
everything was. My first thought was&#13;
of Carrie, but not wishing to shock&#13;
her, I hastened to her father's store.&#13;
The old gentleman was sitting in the&#13;
business office. When I entered he&#13;
sprang to bis feet as though he would&#13;
run away, but seeing my altered expression&#13;
of countenance, he threw his&#13;
arms around me and wept.&#13;
"Brought bask, brought back!" he&#13;
said, over and over again.&#13;
When we were seated,! explained Ihe&#13;
cause of my sudden cure.&#13;
"Well, sir." said he, "when Carrie&#13;
found that dispatch, the other morning,&#13;
she spoke of what a Wonderful iu-&#13;
Hueuce it might have ou you, and .sue&#13;
asked the advice of a physician, wl&#13;
said that it might be too great a shock&#13;
to you, but agreed that it would either&#13;
kill or cure you. She said that she&#13;
would rather see you dead than to&#13;
know that vou would always be&#13;
crazy.&#13;
"Bless her," I exclaimed. "Lot us&#13;
hurry to the house."&#13;
Carrie was almost delirious with&#13;
joy, and the old lady dropped many&#13;
tears of gladness.&#13;
The next day I resumed charge of&#13;
the books. My mind was so clear that&#13;
I could anticipate sales several weeks&#13;
in advance. One month from tho&#13;
time 1 was brought back, Carrie and I&#13;
were married. Among tho gifts was&#13;
one that we prized above all estimate.&#13;
It was a silver tea pot on which, skillfully&#13;
engraved, appeared the dispatch&#13;
from New York.&#13;
The next day after the marriage,Mr.&#13;
Pigman came to me and said:&#13;
"I have need of a partner. Half of&#13;
my extensive establishment is yours.&#13;
1 was very happy, and am still in&#13;
that state. Every time I take my tea&#13;
—and I take it very often —I read that&#13;
blessed dispatch. — Opie P. lleiuU •*'«&#13;
Arkaiisaw Traveler.&#13;
DOMESTIC ECONOMY.&#13;
.'he Uivat Valne of Small Frnlt* to a Fanner'!&#13;
Family—Industrial Brevities&#13;
Maine's Gum Crop.&#13;
This is a great gum year in Mrcine,&#13;
especially on the Penobscot, and now&#13;
that the sun is climbing up into the&#13;
north a little ami the lumbermen are&#13;
coming out, the air is fairly redolent&#13;
wjth the perfume of spruce. The-logs,&#13;
-k-treea-«-nd bark are not Uie_jHii_v__vaTudown&#13;
and congratulated myself upon&#13;
the prosperous condition of the&#13;
country-press. It may have be&#13;
.butflt only seamed to be a&#13;
utes, wlren I looked up and saw Mr.&#13;
Pigman.&#13;
"How are you getting along?" he&#13;
asked.&#13;
"First rate," said I.&#13;
"Does your mind seem to be getting&#13;
any (dearer?"&#13;
"My mind is as clear as a bell,&#13;
sir; It is as clear as the Arkansaw sunshine&#13;
and as strong.as mountain moonshine."&#13;
Pigman sighed, "1 earnestly hope&#13;
thatyou may be brought back, but I do&#13;
not see much chance. I have sent for&#13;
several leading doctors. Thev may savo&#13;
you."&#13;
Koyr doctors, wise looking old&#13;
fellows, came and examined me.&#13;
It was fun for me. They tickled&#13;
me nearly to death. Theyundoubt&#13;
edly said something to Pigman&#13;
shortly afterward he came anmnrcfand&#13;
said:&#13;
"The doctors sayj&amp;al your case is&#13;
hopeless." .&#13;
"Ail rightrt'll take beer."&#13;
^Xkey say that you once had&#13;
very strong mind, but that it is&#13;
entirely goue, or that is, hopelessly&#13;
shattered."&#13;
•'Give me a little straight."&#13;
"They declare that your caso is ft&#13;
remarkable one, and advise your&#13;
friends to ,como around and talk, to&#13;
you."&#13;
"All right, help yourself." *~r&#13;
^y&#13;
able parts of the great timber tree, for&#13;
the gum is worth considerable, even in&#13;
nmonthsjrts rough state, just as it is hacked&#13;
few min- | from tho crotches of the_old trees.&#13;
There sire two or three firms in&#13;
Maine which buy large quantities of it&#13;
from lumbermen and gum-hunters for&#13;
the purpose of refining it, as they say.&#13;
But as a general tiling the relining&#13;
consists of aduheVation with resin.&#13;
They throw it into a big kettle, bark&#13;
and all, and boil it into about the eons&#13;
steney of thick molasses, skimming&#13;
the impurities off as they rise to the&#13;
surface. .Then, if the purpose be to&#13;
adulteate, some lard or grease and a&#13;
lot (f resin is added, in some cases &gt;&#13;
little sugar. The mixture then^becomes&#13;
thicker, and after mortf stirring&#13;
is poured out on a slab; where while&#13;
it is yet hot is Jrolled out in a she«t&#13;
about a quarter of an inoh thick, an.t&#13;
thehclKJpped with a steel die into&#13;
oubt- rpieCes half an inch wide and throe-&#13;
, ^for' quarters of an inch long. The»*5&#13;
pieces are wrapped in tissue pap.*i&#13;
and packed in wooden boxes.&#13;
Sortie gum' is treated in this \r*ay&#13;
without adulteration. The best £nni&#13;
comes from no partipular locality, but&#13;
always from ihe biggest trees. Tho&#13;
lodgers, in their many idle hours by&#13;
tho camp fire, whittle out miniature&#13;
barrels from blocks of cedar or white&#13;
pine, hollow them out and. till them&#13;
with the choicest gum the woods afford&#13;
for gifts to their sweethearts,&#13;
children, or friends when they "come&#13;
down" in the spring. — POrHaud (Me.)&#13;
Pres* .&#13;
Umall Fruits on the Farm.&#13;
1 alwajs advise' the growing of&#13;
&gt;lenty of small fruits on the farm,&#13;
writes a correspondent of Vtctc'.i Maga*&#13;
,ine, not as a matter of profit in the&#13;
vay of dollars and cents, but because&#13;
! believe that such products are condu-&#13;
:ive to the health and pleasure of the&#13;
amily, therefore profitable in the best&#13;
neaning of the word. In no others&#13;
vay can so much variety in the line of&#13;
ruit be secured. The woman who unlertakes&#13;
to set before a family daily,&#13;
&gt;n a farm where little or no attention&#13;
s paid to the growing of small fruits,&#13;
i bill of fare which shall not be open&#13;
o the charge of monotony, finds herelf&#13;
often at her wits' end to accomjlish&#13;
her undertaking. Potatoes,&#13;
neat, and bread, and butter are all&#13;
food in their way, but wo tire of a&#13;
epetition of them day after day, and&#13;
vish there might be "something new."&#13;
I'he skillful housewife will contrive&#13;
various attractive dishes from the United&#13;
list of material which most farms&#13;
ifford during the winter, but she will&#13;
ligh for "something new". also, for&#13;
svery woman knows how much easier&#13;
t is to please the palates of the "men&#13;
blks" when she has a variety of maerial&#13;
at hand to work with. With&#13;
denty of fruit, canned or dried, at her&#13;
lisposal, she can . concoct pies, pudlings,&#13;
and sauces which will afford the&#13;
lesired variety, and act as "relish"&#13;
or the more substantial articles of&#13;
bod. But on not one farm in ten, I&#13;
hink I can safely assert, is there&#13;
imall fruit enough grown to supply&#13;
he family through the winter. This&#13;
s not as it should be.&#13;
Some farmers are under the impression&#13;
that there is a "knack" in growng&#13;
fruit which prevents any but tho&#13;
&gt;rofessional grower from succeeding&#13;
pith it. Others think it is "puttering"&#13;
vork, like gardening, therefore they&#13;
never undertake it. Some begin makng&#13;
a collection, but they soon lose&#13;
heir enthusiasm, and in a year or two&#13;
he bushes they set out are" swallowed&#13;
ip in a sea of grass, and they con-&#13;
:lude it "doesn't pay to bother with&#13;
t." It does not pay to "bother with&#13;
t" in that way, but it does pay to set&#13;
&gt;ut strawberries, raspberries, currants,&#13;
jooseberries, and grapes, and cultirate&#13;
them well. The amount of space&#13;
ind labor required is greatly overesttnated&#13;
in the opinions of most persons&#13;
vho have no practical knowledge&#13;
imall-fruit growing. They hi^vV"no&#13;
dea of the amount that cjin^be raised&#13;
m a small piece ofgxeitnd well Cared&#13;
!or. The laboi&gt;-rJf attending to the&#13;
)lants is&gt;arall. Give the plants you&#13;
et^HrTon an eighth or a quarter of an&#13;
:re of ground the same amount of&#13;
tare each year that you give your&#13;
;oru and you can grow small fruits to&#13;
perfection. Let the soil be made rich&#13;
ind mellow to begin with; after that&#13;
teep the weeds down, and give the&#13;
)lants pro], or pruning or thinning o«r,&#13;
md in some eases protection in win-&#13;
:er, and that is about all you have to&#13;
lo. You can do all the work at times&#13;
vhen you can not work to advantage&#13;
n the fields. A half hour now and&#13;
hen with the hoe will keep the ground&#13;
dean and mellow around the currants&#13;
ind the raspberries and between the&#13;
•ows and among the strawberries you&#13;
:an use a hand-cultivator, thus makng&#13;
the labor easier and more expediious.&#13;
If every farmer would start a&#13;
iiuall-iruit garden, I venture to say&#13;
lis wife would lind some means of&#13;
teeping it cared for, if he did not, beore&#13;
she would go without the proiucts&#13;
of it.&#13;
The expense is small to begin with.&#13;
in many neighborhoods one can pro-&#13;
;ure all the plants he .cares for by&#13;
iigging them up, for owners of garlens&#13;
always prefer to g*vo away uni&#13;
leeded plants rather than throw them&#13;
I tway, and most kinds will need thinj&#13;
ling out yearly. But if one has to&#13;
j my plants" the outlay is small, for&#13;
i Jealers grow them so extensively uow-&#13;
I id ays that they are very cheap.&#13;
i Y\ ith such a garden yon can have&#13;
. [ruit for table use al! through the&#13;
f tummer, and there can be enough&#13;
( canned for winter use with but little&#13;
i -rouble or expense. When fruit i&#13;
1 ,ip at home you "knowali ajjowlf^it;'&#13;
i you buy canned gomb^r^you don't&#13;
mow all about it^^jtniay- be good&#13;
ind healthv, JUKfit niav not.&#13;
Industrial Brevities.&#13;
r^'Wiro fences are not a new thing&#13;
fnder the sun. As far back as 1816&#13;
:hey were in limited use in the neighborhood&#13;
of Philadelphia. The wire&#13;
*vas manufactured by White &amp; Hazard, 1 it their wire-works at tho Falls of&#13;
'! Sehuykill. In a communication from&#13;
this firm to Hiehard Peters, president&#13;
)f the agricultural society, dated Jan.&#13;
2, .18-16, the use of wire fences was&#13;
recommended, and an elaborate call&#13;
nilatiou was given to show the eeouoi&#13;
my thero would be in using them. In&#13;
j speaking of tho strength of a wire&#13;
fence they said: "We have given it a&#13;
! "air trial at the Falls, with the most&#13;
breachy cows of the neighborhood,&#13;
i ind it i's remarkable that even dags&#13;
i woid passing over it." It was recommended&#13;
that living treorbe used as&#13;
i substitute for posts.'aud that the&#13;
wire used be protected by a coating&#13;
jf linseeiLoit or paint. Of course the&#13;
Ience at tho Falls was without barbs.&#13;
.Southern journals are just now diatine&#13;
on the value of cottonseed.&#13;
There are 3$ pounds of seed io every&#13;
pound of liber. More than 4,000,000&#13;
tons are produced annually; but, notwithstanding&#13;
tlie rapid increase in the&#13;
number of mills, only about 10 per&#13;
no tot of the seed is crushed, most of&#13;
the rest being thrown away. A ton of&#13;
seed yields 35 gallbus of oil, 22 bounds&#13;
m&#13;
of cotton, and 750 pounds of oak*&#13;
used for fattening cattle. ^The value&#13;
of these products is about $20. Tho&#13;
oil is largely used for making 'tine&#13;
soap, and, when retinod properly, can&#13;
hardly bo distinguished from olive oil,&#13;
it ia said. The hull of the seed constitutes&#13;
about one-half its bulk, and&#13;
it is found that the hulls supply fuel&#13;
sufficient to operate the mills; not a&#13;
pound of coal is needed.&#13;
According to former practice, it has.&#13;
been customary in the case of railroad&#13;
land grants, where the road ha*&#13;
been awarded tlie alternate sections&#13;
within a radius of ten miles on either&#13;
side of the road, to reserve a further&#13;
strip of five or tefi miles on cither side&#13;
of the original grant, from which the&#13;
road might indemnify itself for any&#13;
shortage in the grant ou the first reserve&#13;
due to homesteaders already established.&#13;
This practice shut out&#13;
from settlers very large areas where&#13;
the actual area which could be required&#13;
to indemnity the roads was very&#13;
small. The present land commissioner&#13;
has decided that the raid roads&#13;
having only ri contingent interest in&#13;
the indemnity lands settlers.can go ou&#13;
to these lands' and acqure homestead&#13;
rights at any time.&#13;
Cabbages and beans are now being&#13;
cultivated as in Switzerland—as associated&#13;
crops. The beans are planted&#13;
in February, in drills thirty-nine inches&#13;
apart, and five inches between each&#13;
dibbled-i.n seed. A plow or horse hoe&#13;
keeps the intervals freshed up, when&#13;
the thousand head cabbage, or other&#13;
hardy variety, previously sown in a&#13;
nursery bed in autumn, is planted out&#13;
toward the close of March, and at a&#13;
line distance of twenty-six inches. By&#13;
the end of July tho beans are removed&#13;
and the ground fhey occupied is loosened&#13;
up to mold the cabbage. The&#13;
latter can be stripped about Christmas,&#13;
and will send out sprouts until the end&#13;
of March, when they can be eaten&#13;
down by breeding sheep.&#13;
In the Atlantic states, from Maineto&#13;
Virginia, 65,000 long tons of land&#13;
plaster and 60,000 tons of stucco—&#13;
total 125,000 tons—were made in 1884,&#13;
of which nearly all was from Nova&#13;
Scotia gypsum. The statistics for&#13;
Michigan, have not been reported, bu^.&#13;
the production did not vary gjjeatly&#13;
from that in 1883, in w h i c ^ y e a r i t was-&#13;
60,082 short tons otiand^plaster and&#13;
15&amp;.100 barrels^ol 300 pounds) of&#13;
stucco. ln^-Oliio 4.217 short tons of&#13;
land^piaster and 20,307 barrels of&#13;
ceo were produced. There was&#13;
also a small production in other parts&#13;
of the country; but the totar amount&#13;
of domestic gypsum used is not known.&#13;
Dr. Sturtevant, of the New York experiment&#13;
station, says "that careful experiments&#13;
have shown that unripe tomato&#13;
seeds will grow and ^ive a gain&#13;
of fifteen days in earliness" over ripe&#13;
seed from the same plants. Ptase and&#13;
corn tit for table use will grow and&#13;
produce earlier crops than ripe seed,,&#13;
but plants from immature seed are&#13;
more feeble than those from ripe seed.&#13;
Earliness seems to be in proportion to&#13;
the state of ripeness of the seed from&#13;
wiiich Ihe plants have b«en raised.&#13;
The practical question to be determined&#13;
is how to Combine both&#13;
earliness and vigor in. the same&#13;
plant.&#13;
A-petition to tho Canadian government&#13;
is in course of signature amonjj&#13;
Montreal cattlemen which set* forth&#13;
the necessity of adopting regulations&#13;
to provide a larger standard for space&#13;
ou cattle steamers. By long experience&#13;
the trade has placed the space&#13;
necessary for each beast at two feet&#13;
eight inches by eight feet. This ismore&#13;
than was formerly deemed&#13;
necessary, but as of late yedrs the size&#13;
and quality of Canadian "export cattle&#13;
have very materially improved, an increased&#13;
allowance1 of space has&#13;
become requisite for the transportation&#13;
of the animals in £jood condition.&#13;
The Mexicans stand in need ot^er&#13;
machine that will' effectiveiy&gt;"^and&#13;
cheaply treat their tibrons-pfants, especially&#13;
those belongkrg to the agave&#13;
family, so thapwifhout injury to hie&#13;
fiber theputp can be removed. Ex&#13;
ceoU^gouly manilla, there is no better&#13;
aper stock in the world than is furnished&#13;
by.the maguey, but because it&#13;
can noTtnreconomically prepared-fovmarket,&#13;
hundreds of thousands of tons&#13;
of this material every year go to waste&#13;
— being left to rot on the ground&#13;
or else burned to get it out of&#13;
the way—iu the pulque districts,&#13;
where the plant is grown for its&#13;
juice.&#13;
A Honolulu publication states that&#13;
it is interesting to learn that the mice&#13;
and rats, long the scourge of the&#13;
farmers, have been successfully dealt&#13;
with—not by the importation of any&#13;
moderd representation of Whittingtou's&#13;
cat, but simply by the introduction&#13;
of the mongoose. Thirty-six pairs&#13;
of this useful animal were imported&#13;
from Jamaica two years_&gt;hice into the&#13;
district- of Hilo, yvitti the . resftlt of&#13;
instantly clearing' four thousand acreg&#13;
of cahe of this nuisance. The proprietor.--&#13;
aT one plantation estimates his&#13;
saving in cane from this cause last&#13;
year at about $50,000.&#13;
In preparing rhubarb for the market,&#13;
especially if it is to be sent a considerable&#13;
distance, it is best to cut oil&#13;
the leaves close to the stalks. Thisv&#13;
foliage is of no value to the purchaser,&#13;
is heavy to transport, wh-W it presents&#13;
a large amount of surface for tlie&#13;
evaporation of the juices contained iu&#13;
the stalk-". Tho stalks will be in tho&#13;
best condition if the leaves are cut otl&#13;
close to them and. the^v are protected&#13;
from the heat of the sun.&#13;
It is now reported that not a case of&#13;
foot-and-mouth disease exists m Ureal&#13;
Britiin.&#13;
,Jbrt«iLs. • ^ » - • ' • \ L ZZSZZ^* *••,„• £ = ^ . a* » f r • •^gq^frP&#13;
I N C K N E Y D I S P A T C H .&#13;
J. L. NEWKIRK, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER.&#13;
Pinckney, Michigan, T h u r s d a y , August 00, lH8.ri&#13;
public travel.&#13;
There is apparently no end lo the&#13;
anecdotal literature about Gen. Grant.&#13;
Readers are entertained by it, but probably&#13;
they get more fiction than fact,&#13;
inventive genius in America is by no&#13;
means wholly applied to mechanism.&#13;
An illustration of how keenly satirical&#13;
fate can be in shaping the fortunes&#13;
of men is contained in the announcement&#13;
that James W. Marshall,&#13;
the discoverer of gold in California,&#13;
died last week "a poverty-stricken&#13;
and disappointed man "&#13;
THIS, THAT AND THE OTHER.&#13;
An old bachelor is a traveler on life's&#13;
railroad, who has failed to make the&#13;
proper connections.&#13;
THE REV. GEO. H. THAYER, ot&#13;
Bourbon, Ind., ;ays: "Both myselt&#13;
Keiley may yet have revenue on tlie i and wife owe our lives to SHILOH'S&#13;
iblTc by&#13;
writing a book of ' i 0 7 e t e n T 1 C C W S O T p T 1 U K CUHET' Sold by F.&#13;
A. bigler. 9&#13;
"Yes. my boy, there are 53,200,000&#13;
people in this country, and you are.&#13;
only one of them—'just. one. Think of&#13;
that once in a while, when you get to&#13;
wondering what would happen to the&#13;
world it you should die/'&#13;
ARE YOU MADE miserable by in,&#13;
digestion, constlpation, dizziness,.loss of&#13;
appetite, yellow skin? SliiloVs Vitali/&#13;
er is a positive cure. Sold by F. A.&#13;
Sigier. 10&#13;
A tall man having rallied his friend&#13;
on the shortness of his legs, the, triend&#13;
replied: "My legs reach the ground;&#13;
what more can yours do?"&#13;
WHY WILL YOU cough when&#13;
Shiloh's Cure will tfive you immediate&#13;
relief. Price 10c, 50c. Sold by F. A,&#13;
^igler. \i&#13;
''It's no use to feel of me wrist, ddcther,,,&#13;
said Pat when the physician&#13;
began taking his pulse, "the pain is&#13;
not there, sir; it's in my head entoirely."&#13;
SHILOH'S CATARRH R.EMEDYa&#13;
positive cure tor catarrh, dipth ria&#13;
cankered mouth. For sale by F. A&#13;
Sigler. . _ 12&#13;
Said the rich and quiet-loving citizen&#13;
: "If a man bores me a.nd I don't&#13;
like him. and want him to keep away&#13;
from me, I don't snub him. I just&#13;
lend him $5."&#13;
"HACHMETACK" a lasting and&#13;
fragrant perfume. Price 25 ana 50c.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler. 13&#13;
SHILOH'S CURE will immediately&#13;
relieve croup, whoqpinar cough and&#13;
bronchitis. Sold by F. A. Sigler 14.&#13;
Pat says that if men could only hear&#13;
their own funeral sermons, and read&#13;
their own head-stones, there would no&#13;
living with them in the woflct at all.&#13;
W&#13;
./3)&#13;
\ PU M PS,&#13;
Spanish doctors are required by&#13;
cjie-tefa patients to taste their own&#13;
' medicine. These suspicious Spaniards&#13;
will take no chances. It appears&#13;
to go hard with the physic dispensers&#13;
to thus sample what they prescribe&#13;
for patients, and the next census&#13;
over there is expected to show a&#13;
considerable falling off of doctors.&#13;
Eastern advices are that the business&#13;
tone is firmer and that the outlook&#13;
for a trade revival is encouraging.&#13;
If there is a relief, in the depression&#13;
of eastern cities its influence&#13;
will be. speedily felt everywhere in&#13;
the country. Michigan, with its&#13;
large crops, seems to be ail right for&#13;
a good fall trade at all events.—&#13;
Journal.&#13;
The ' Government' has adjourned,&#13;
the avenues to office are practically&#13;
closed for the summer,-and the worst&#13;
of all, Cleveland has chosen a mugwump&#13;
doctor for his sole companion&#13;
in the woods. To the faithful who&#13;
have looked from afar, in the hope of&#13;
being ultimately satisfied, the fruits&#13;
of victory thatonce grew red on £he&#13;
tree are shriveled and ashy^ - ' "&#13;
Cleveland's silver' letter, written&#13;
shortly aftex-fris election to the Presidency;&#13;
was in substance an uiujual-&#13;
... ified declaration against the further&#13;
coinage of the standard dollar. It&#13;
did not please the majority of Congressmen&#13;
from the West and ^outh,&#13;
who have for years taken too kindly&#13;
to the sophistical pleas of bonanza&#13;
kings in favor of. emptying the mines&#13;
into the Treasury. The procoinage&#13;
opinion prevailed in the last House.&#13;
It is likely to prevail also in the&#13;
next. The presumption is that&#13;
Cleveland's views have not changed.&#13;
I t can be said almost positively that&#13;
the President d«es not endorse the&#13;
Warner certificate bill; and perhaps&#13;
only a majority of Congress will follow&#13;
AVarner. Of course, a compromise&#13;
measuie of some sort is possible.&#13;
But it looks now as if Cleveland and&#13;
the House woukl come squa-rely-krrocollision&#13;
on silver coinage.&#13;
FOR DYSPEPSIA and liver com-&#13;
I hint, you bave a printed guar.n tee&#13;
.-)11 evejry-botUe of Shiloh's Vitaii/er.&#13;
(.t-utfver i'ails to cure. Sold by F. A.&#13;
"Sigler. 15&#13;
A NASAL INJECTOR free with&#13;
each bottle ot Sliiloh's Catarrh '^medy.&#13;
Price 50 cents. Sold by F. A.&#13;
Sigler. ; Id&#13;
It vou are in need of-&#13;
WOODEN PUMPS for OPEN WELLS&#13;
or Wooden Heads for Drive Wells&#13;
•Oil ANYREPAIRSFOR&#13;
WOODEN PUMPS,&#13;
SVXK AS&#13;
The Rev. Father Andre, well known&#13;
in connection with the troubles of the&#13;
North-west, has published a letter in&#13;
two of the leading papers of Quebec,in&#13;
which he says that the half-breed rebellion&#13;
was brought on by "the government's&#13;
fatal obstinacy, culpable&#13;
negligence, and delays in doing iustice&#13;
to the reasonable claims of the haltbreeds."&#13;
He says that "petition after&#13;
petition and letter after letter was&#13;
sent to them by the most influential&#13;
men m the Northwest, urginc justice&#13;
to the half-breeds, and the danger of.&#13;
procrastination; but no heed was paid&#13;
to their representations or warnings.'1&#13;
He says that, while he rejoices in the&#13;
suppression of a rebellion which he&#13;
and his colleagues strenqusly opposed,&#13;
yet "truth compels him to state that&#13;
Gen. Middleton's troops disgraced&#13;
themselves by the most shameful pillage."&#13;
He confirms, "not From hearsay,&#13;
but from personal knowledge and&#13;
repeated investigation, the story that&#13;
Gen. Middleton personally appropriated&#13;
a.fiite horse and vehicle belonging&#13;
to/a half-bred named Champagne."&#13;
authority, have produced ajjreat sen&#13;
sation in Quebec.—J^ejjoii Post,&#13;
A Wonderful Discovery.&#13;
Consumptives and all, who suffer&#13;
from any affection of the throat and&#13;
lungs, can find a certain cure in Dr.&#13;
King's New Discovery fur Consumption.&#13;
Thousands of permanent cures&#13;
verify the truth of this statement.&#13;
No medicine can show such a record&#13;
of wonderi'ul cures. Thousands of&#13;
nnce hopeless sufferers now gratefully&#13;
proclaim they owe their lives to this&#13;
NewDiscovery.lt will cost you nothing&#13;
to give it a- trial. Free triFbbottie&#13;
at Winchell's Drugstore. Large&#13;
size $1. 4&#13;
^ Very "Remarkable Recovery.&#13;
JVfr&gt;Q^o.V. Willing, of Manchester,&#13;
Mich.T^vrUes: "My wife has been&#13;
almost helplessTor^ive years, so helpless&#13;
that she could nWLfurn over in&#13;
l&gt;ed alone. She used twoi&gt;«ttles of&#13;
Electric Bitters, and is 30 much&#13;
proved, that she is able now to do her&#13;
own work."&#13;
ElectricBitters will do, a l l t h a t i s&#13;
claimed for them. Hundreds of testimonials&#13;
attest their great curative&#13;
powers. , Only 5fr cents a bottle at&#13;
Winchell's Drug Store.&#13;
Bucklen's \ r n l c a Salve.&#13;
THE "REST SALVE in the world 4 for&#13;
Cut° Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt&#13;
Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped&#13;
Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all skin&#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 DRUO STORE.&#13;
VALVES, LEAJHEliS f»' P L/tTNGERS,&#13;
, "": /&#13;
~- /&#13;
Handles or Plunge Rod,&#13;
OR A N Y T H I N G I N T H E P U M P L I N F ,&#13;
CALL AND SEE M E&#13;
I C A N R I G Y O U O U T ! !&#13;
F. L. B10WN.&#13;
The kidneys cannot perform their&#13;
proper office when diseased and at the&#13;
Same time expel the impurities that&#13;
should pass off through their proper&#13;
action. A few doses ot Kellogg's Columbian&#13;
Oil will convince the most&#13;
skeptical that it acts directly on the&#13;
kidneys.&#13;
IMPORTANT.&#13;
W h e n you visit or leave New Y o r k CUy, save&#13;
baggage expressa^e and carriage hire and atop at&#13;
t o e Grand Union Hotel, o p p o s i t e Grand Central&#13;
Depot.&#13;
Elegant r o o m s fitted u p at a cost of one million&#13;
dollars, reduced to $1.00 and upwards per&#13;
day. E u r o p e a n plan, E l e v a t o r , Restaurant supplied&#13;
with the best. H o r s e cars, stages and elevated&#13;
railroad to all depots. Families can live bett&#13;
e r for less money at the G r a n d I ' n l o u Hotel t h a n&#13;
a n y other first-class hotel In the city&#13;
. - . . . . . „ . . „ . SHILOH'S VITALIZES is what&#13;
These charges, made upon such hhr*r-&amp;°£ ^ r ? L f i ^ t ! } J a a f ^ k s 8 ^ P P ^&#13;
.«*!..-:*- 1. J . . „ O . _ _ . . . . = • t l 'M!.Mmete, and all symptoms of&#13;
uy pepsia. Price 10 and 75 cents per&#13;
bf-iUe. Sold by P. A. Sigler, P ?&#13;
)&#13;
&gt;M^ The ujofltN-ri)optt:flrWe«klynew»i&gt;u(. r&#13;
(_••' IIKVOW to f i e n ™ . mechanic*, engineering. *iii»~&#13;
&lt;\.\vr;es, iiiventi&gt;i»*«rul patenUi'ver published. r.wTj&#13;
, . ' i i ' i r i;!uMr;iMl with HMKUWM ourrnvinga. JM*&#13;
1 diction, fun;i&lt;tlios a most valuable oiiiiycloreoi.i or&#13;
:..\;rn:tiun whit'U no person ultoi'M bo without. 1UB&#13;
ip,-Mjii!nritv of tho BerzNTina AMVHICAN is »uch tha*&#13;
i /r!M;ilution ii'iirly eqiiulii thiit. of all otliyrimpcrjol&#13;
P.S class combined. Price, ¢3.20 a Tfnr. .P'*™11',,-&#13;
"iiliK. Sold l.y all nowsdculors. MIIN.N d tO-i i t&#13;
i.;hers. No. M Lroadway, N. Y.&#13;
I V i a M V f t Munn A Co. hfve al« , ATENTS. h/e&#13;
d&#13;
arir^"^fz • H M M B M H {on tlio Patent Otiico,&#13;
»Tid har«prepared more than O n e H u n -&#13;
d r e d T h o u s a n d •PPbc'iUonil for jmt-&#13;
«11 Is In the " u i t e d p l a t e s and foraUn&#13;
»(,untrie8. CaveotB, Trii&lt;ie-Mark», Cop&gt;-&#13;
n r b t s , AssiRnriientu, and all other j&gt;«i&gt;era&#13;
rrbcfurinu to inventors t h u r riijbta in Hv.»&#13;
i ' n i u . l S t i l t s , Cdiiadii, EnKlnml, Ii'oa*-...&#13;
C\.nnr.:iy and other foreign errantries, proparwl&#13;
tttKbort, notico and on reiusonablu tcrnm. ,&#13;
J:-furiiw'tir:i I.H to obtu; ui"R ontcutH clioprWlr&#13;
irlvcu vithout, chnrifo. Hhmt-lxioks of iiitnriua-&#13;
Vion sc'it i n n . riitents oblnitmd ibroii|.'b M.'t'l&#13;
, ,'.• ( 0. urn uotii-ed in the HciMiitifie Aiuorietin (&gt;•« •«.&#13;
("••^iv.inUffl of such notice iswnll uniii'MCHXi liy u 1&#13;
-,. -;,-)n.^ 'vJio wish to dispos.rof ibcir iwtr.Tits.&#13;
Addr«»MtO:UNN * CO., Oflioo ^Li^avio AsiJaiCAM,&#13;
»)1 il/ornlxviiv, Now ' ork. TUTT&#13;
PILLS&#13;
25 Y E A R 5 J N . USE.&#13;
The Creates Msd?.:a\ Tr-.u;^pli of the i'!».&#13;
SYMPTOMS OF A TORPID LIVER. l.osrsot f - p p i ' t i t c i ; u « e ' . » c o n l i v p , I ' u l m u&#13;
t h e lit^ad, W i l l i n d u l l n c r s u t i o u In »!*»&#13;
b a c k pr.rf, T t s i n m i t i r r l l i o s h n u l d f - r -&#13;
b l a r . e , I ' u l h i r » ; » vStcv c u t i n g * w i t l i » d ) » -&#13;
i u c l i n a t i o u t o o a c i T i i o n *;*" b o d y o r « i l n « f ,&#13;
l r r i m b i l i t y o f t o m p c r , ^&lt;^v^ » p i r i t » , w i t h&#13;
u t'^cliau oi" t;:xv i n f H o s l p o t e d nomci n a t y ,&#13;
W c a r i r t c K d f J . J i K ' A i n o B , F l u t t e r i n a r m »l«rt&#13;
I l u u r t , lioin b u t ' i i r o l h o e v e * , l l u a d n c b o&#13;
o v e r tlio i ; i : l u t ' v e I£C-*I1PNSIII^I*. « &gt; ! ' *&#13;
iiti"u 1 drc"iiii«, i i i v i i f y coiovttil Tvim** a.:i&lt;l&#13;
C O N S T S P A T J O f i .&#13;
I " ' ! " ! " " ' ^ ' i'Z"* nr&lt;5 vspot.iMl1', :v •'.'••d&#13;
1&gt; MiiH fii^ •", o;•'•&gt; d.'-ti! &lt;M!'e&lt;.".s s'ioit a&#13;
, ; i ; . , ' • i &gt; t ' \ ' c i "'.•• . n ) : l - ! ' - n i - ! i 1 . , . t &gt; - - ! " l ' ' ' V f " .&#13;
' t l r - ' t . T ' . l v . ' O . : I ' l o - ' l . f :\\i»&gt; U ' l l l l S&#13;
l &gt; f J 1 . f &gt; 1 . . Ct. : ' ! J ' V ' l T « n j f - . A « ' &lt; » l » n ' i U&#13;
&gt;• .&gt; (.(,. i. j - . i - , . ,"»&gt;•. i t X\ n r y n y *\..\*T~&#13;
TUH'S-HAIR DYEv&#13;
U&lt;.'.V liMK o " ^ iH -KKiib oJin:vg'd t o IU.&#13;
i i i i i n r r , . It t!i;'f&gt; i " 1 ' ' " &gt; ' ni;&gt;; co:oi-,.tic &lt;&#13;
i.i;;''(u!nii'"Mi-!• -•". I b .' I.1 I ' T . i s ; ' . '•"&#13;
fifRICHTS INDIAN VEGETABLE Pi LLS&#13;
FOR THE LSYER&#13;
A n d all B i l i o u s Complaints&#13;
^:.le to t a k e , bolnj: purely TeRe^able; nognj&gt;»&#13;
Ing, ft'ice'iS e l s . All. i)ni«ijlaU.&#13;
* w I ! i f 55&#13;
Who buy your FURNITURE of&#13;
L. H. BEEBE,- PINCKNEY&#13;
ROOM SUITS, PARLOR SUITS&#13;
•mp3T€as^TREAus,-^QOKcasEyiasiES&#13;
STATfC^CHAIllS, ETCJETGL.. _ '&#13;
T H E L A T E N T S T Y L E S !&#13;
AT LOWEST PRICES!&#13;
PICTURE FRAMING OF ALL KINDS A SPECIALTY.&#13;
COFFINS, GASKETS, ROBES and FUNERAL SUPPLIES of all kinds&#13;
constantly on hand. Respectflluy,&#13;
L H. BEEBE.&#13;
FARMERS, READ THIS!&#13;
The undersigned having a large stock of .ill lfinds of Lumber, Lath and&#13;
Shingles at their ltunber yard in Pinckney, have decided to reduce their&#13;
stock and for the&#13;
=NEXTSIXTY DAYS= ,--'"'"'&#13;
WILL SELL AT "ROCK B0TTQM" PRICES&#13;
Parties about to-buiId will ftnd it to their interest ttfietour prices. We manufacture&#13;
our own lumber and shinafes and _ will sell according to the^itfies.&#13;
We keep on hand a full stock of Flooring Swlinj? and Barn Doaj^&lt;also all&#13;
lengths of Bill Stuff and T^mrWs^tfnJ on all bills will cmj^gpecial prices.&#13;
You, writ find-our-Agent; A^i^ifOYT, always _on hap^.^Oome and sec iw,&#13;
we will satisfy you tha^wfrnean business. yr&#13;
WBKETT, COWIIf;|^ CO., PINCKNEY.&#13;
. SH LOH'S COUGH and Consump.&#13;
t o n C u r e i ^ o l d b y m s o n a guarantee&#13;
l u u ^ n s u m f t i o n , Sold b^ p ^&#13;
.— _ — — -• f i&#13;
TH - ~*++mm, ..» Hpp»&#13;
.*&#13;
CURIOSITIES OP NATURE.&#13;
Thm J u m p i n g GaU, the Acrobatic U H U , U *&#13;
Meed* ihat Explode.&#13;
"Here is a curiosity, " sud a bct&lt;uaJat&#13;
It was a little ball of wood or fiber that&#13;
when held in the palm seemed endowed&#13;
with life, rolling over and over and flying&#13;
into the air.&#13;
I've had people come to me with&#13;
these," continued the speaker, "and say&#13;
they were bewitched. One man believed&#13;
he had discovered spontaneous&#13;
generation; another wrote an exhaustive&#13;
paper which he tried to read at all thi&#13;
learned societieH, showing that here was&#13;
the beginning of both animal and plant&#13;
life. In fact, the little gall, for that is&#13;
what it is, has attracted a good deal of&#13;
attention."&#13;
"So it is only a plant," said a reporter.&#13;
"Not exactly a plant, but the unnatural&#13;
growth of vegetable matter on&#13;
trees, bushes, or shrubs, oaubed by the&#13;
secretion in tho 1 avk of an insert egg&#13;
that hatches uiiJ 1.1,:,.2-, thu growth. In&#13;
this case, yon aw, the pail is little&#13;
latpor tlii^i a 1 . ;st&lt;r. &lt;1 ^eed.&#13;
"The gail is pruduivi in thiswiv:&#13;
The eggs of a \ery small 1aik-colorod&#13;
Insect, L-:&gt; vn as i v;;ips e deposited&#13;
In the leaf, anu. ?rom some sec ;tion&#13;
introduced into the wound, the vegetable&#13;
matter entombs the insect in a&#13;
ball of liber beparate from the leaf,&#13;
from which it finally 'drops. The larva's&#13;
movements in restraint create the "curious&#13;
activity.&#13;
"There are many kinds of galls, and&#13;
though they are injurious to trees they&#13;
are invaluable to man, and are staple&#13;
commodities. Tho ordinary oak galls&#13;
of commerce are made by a cynips.&#13;
When they are green, blue, or black,&#13;
the insect is in them, but when white&#13;
it has escaped. England is the center&#13;
of the trade, and receives'galls from&#13;
Germany, Turkey, Egypt, China, and&#13;
Bombay. The galls are used for a&#13;
variety of purposes. One sort of blasting&#13;
powder is made of powdered galls&#13;
and chlorate, but the most valuable&#13;
product is ink. This is made from them&#13;
almost entirely. ,&#13;
"Seeds often jump about in the same&#13;
mysterious way. In Mexico strangers&#13;
se© a curicus seed known as devil's&#13;
bean, or jumping seed. In appearance&#13;
it is a small triangular body. The first&#13;
time I saw these seeds I was sure that&#13;
they were arranged with mechanical&#13;
springs, as they not only railed about,&#13;
but jumped several inches in the air.&#13;
But open one of the seeds and the mystery&#13;
is explained. The shell is hollowed&#13;
out, containing nothing but a white&#13;
larva, that has eaten out nearly all the&#13;
interior-and lined it with silk. I t s&#13;
motions occasion the strange movements.&#13;
"Some seeds move by an entirely different&#13;
process—that ofexploding*. Afriend&#13;
of mine got some seeds in India&#13;
once, and placed them on kis cabin&#13;
table. All at once came an explosion&#13;
like that of a revolver, and he received&#13;
a blow on the forehead that drew blood&#13;
while a looking glass opposite was&#13;
shattered. The seeds had become heat-&#13;
•d, and all at once the covering exploded,&#13;
scattering the seeds rn all&#13;
directions. That is their manner of&#13;
dispersal, and-a-Iarge number of plants&#13;
have a similar method of scattering&#13;
their seed."—New York Sun,&#13;
A Hispitts Settled.&#13;
One night a party of NNeeww York:&#13;
Legislators arose h from the greencovered&#13;
table with* empty pdpketa and&#13;
"craven~ stomachs. I t was too late to&#13;
get anything to eat at their respective&#13;
hotels, so they adjourned to a wellknown&#13;
restaurant and enjoyed a hearty&#13;
repast.&#13;
'•How are you going to liquidate?**&#13;
asked one of 4he party, picking his&#13;
teeth rellectively.&#13;
"That's what I've been thinking of,"&#13;
Faid another, who hails from the land of&#13;
bards, paints and statesmen, "and I&#13;
wan'tyon to stand by me in what Fai&#13;
going to do."&#13;
The waiter'was rung for and to&#13;
the Celt explained thus&#13;
"Boss, we got into a&#13;
-hews—Eaeh-oae-oflittle&#13;
iculty&#13;
on-paying&#13;
the bill, and, as \ye&gt;*tfall pretty flush,&#13;
neither one wjU&lt;gTve way. Now, then,&#13;
to settle i v l p r o p b s e that we blindfold&#13;
you, and that the first man yon catch&#13;
pays the snore. It will be worth a&#13;
couple of dollars to you." ,;&#13;
The darkey grinningly consented;&#13;
they bliudtoldtd him with his own&#13;
apron, and he started with outstretched&#13;
SUGGESTION8 OF TALUK.&#13;
NKVEV. let tea bo:&gt;.&#13;
FOR roMgh hands use lemon ju*ce.&#13;
STIIOXD lyo cleans tainted' pork bar*&#13;
rels.&#13;
TEPID milk and water clean oil cloth&#13;
without soap.&#13;
A HOT shovel held over furniture removes&#13;
white Hpots.&#13;
TURPENTINE applied to a cut is a preventative&#13;
of lockjaw.&#13;
SPRINKLE sa^afras bark among dried&#13;
fruit to keep out worms.&#13;
OIL stains on carpets, if action is&#13;
taken at once upon the oil being spilled,&#13;
may be removed by scattering corn&#13;
meal upon them. The meal will absorb&#13;
the oil. Also the application of a hot&#13;
iron through a heavy sheet of blotting&#13;
paper will have n like effect.&#13;
A USEFUL and even tasteful cover for&#13;
the marble slab of the sideboard is made&#13;
of a strip of canton flannel just the&#13;
widt ' of tV&gt; ah. lj. It should be long&#13;
enough to hang over at the ends with&#13;
white rr eo-ored' 1^.11 fringe, ;md a row&#13;
of Ivate lireeiia\\.&lt;.v liguiv.s may be outlined&#13;
at e&amp;"h end. Line tin; ilannel&#13;
with fine white cottou cloth, or with&#13;
Turkey-ivd cotton.&#13;
THE broad and sometimes very tin*&#13;
sightly iookin?: window sills of the basement&#13;
windows- can be greatly improved&#13;
by being covered with the dark, doublefaced&#13;
canton-flannel. Tack it on with&#13;
Tery small tacks. First cut the flannel&#13;
to fit the window sill, aud tack the sido&#13;
next to the window on the under side&#13;
of the flannel, and then turn it over so&#13;
as to entirely conceal the tacks. I t&#13;
must be put on very smoothly,-and it&#13;
will give a comfortable aspect to &amp;n&#13;
otherwise barren-looking room.&#13;
To CLEAN PAPERED WALLS.—Cut&#13;
the crust off of Btale bread very thick,&#13;
and rub the walla careiully from top to&#13;
bottom, in a straight line, using a fresh&#13;
piece of bread as noon as it lookB much.&#13;
Boiled. Wall paper is cheaper than it&#13;
used to be. You can get a lair quality&#13;
of paper in exceeding pretty patterns&#13;
for 25 cents a foil. The American&#13;
papers measure eight yards to a rolL&#13;
The English rolls contain twelve yards,&#13;
and are about an inch and a half wider&#13;
than the American, so that if one fancies&#13;
patterns or colors most in the English&#13;
papers, it i3 just as economical to buy&#13;
therm, although the cost of each roll is&#13;
a little more than that asked for thosa&#13;
manufactured in our own country.&#13;
TJSE BORAX IN WASHING.—In employing&#13;
a common, cheap, but clean&#13;
soap, I often put less than a level tea'&#13;
spoonful of powdered borax into the&#13;
bot'om of my tub. pouring hot water&#13;
on it, and then cooling to the proper&#13;
degree. This borax makes the washing&#13;
more easy, ami is good for the&#13;
handB, healing thenYwhen chapped, aiT&#13;
leaving them in pood condition after&#13;
washing. Whatever good soap you&#13;
use, it is not necessary to boil the&#13;
elothes, but this process helps in most&#13;
cases, especially it the clothes are well&#13;
stirred a! out the boiler. It is not best&#13;
to leave them actually boiling many&#13;
minuteB. as this will turn them vellow.&#13;
The whole washing may be done without^&#13;
warm water, if desired, but more&#13;
or stronger soap must be used, and the&#13;
labor is harder. We want to loosen the&#13;
dirt between the fibres of the cloth as&#13;
easily as possible, and then to rinse it&#13;
all away. This is the philosophy of&#13;
making soiled clothes clean.—American&#13;
Agriculturist.&#13;
Napoleons'* Savagery.&#13;
Madame de Bourrienne, speaking of&#13;
the character of Bonaparte, as it displayed&#13;
itself in the early part of hi*&#13;
career, says:&#13;
"His smile was hypocritical and&#13;
misplaced. A few days afterjus return&#13;
from Toulon, he wa&gt;--felling ua&#13;
that, being before thaj^place. where he&#13;
commanded the^affillery during the&#13;
siege, one of^HSofBcers waB visited by&#13;
his wifextOwhom he had been but a&#13;
sh^yjtr'nme married, and whom he tenirly&#13;
loved. A few days after, ordera&#13;
were given for another attack upon the&#13;
town, in which this officer was engaged.&#13;
His wife came toGeneral Bonaparte,&#13;
and, with tears in her eyes, entreated&#13;
him to dispense with her husbandj&#13;
nervices durirffc that day. The General&#13;
was inexorable, as ho himseji^told us,&#13;
with a sort of savage equitation. The&#13;
moment of the attack, the officer,&#13;
though a very^brftve man, as.Bonaparte&#13;
him-elf assured us, felt a presentment&#13;
of hjs^tpproaching death. He turned&#13;
ha: &lt;ls to oaptuiv his man. After t n r n - ^ P ^ a u d t r e b l e d . He was stationed&#13;
bling ovt&gt;r everything in the room^eTd) beside the General, and durirg an intersustaining&#13;
several sever.) brnia^rnere- va*&gt; w n o n the filing from the town wad&#13;
and fotna himself ' rr&gt;r7 strongr, Bonaparte call out to&#13;
taining sever) bruises he re&#13;
moved the blindfold and^onnd himsel&#13;
the only occupant oi-^the room! The&#13;
festive feastershadslid out as soon as&#13;
the apron^hadoeen tied on.&#13;
It wilT not take away any from the&#13;
o say that the bill was settled and&#13;
an explanation given the next morning.&#13;
—New York Star.&#13;
'Taka oare, there is a bombcoming&#13;
!' The officer, instead of&#13;
Files,&#13;
In a file twelve inches lonjgL the first&#13;
six inches from the point~3oes the most&#13;
of the work. In a machine-cut file the&#13;
teeth of this part are shorter, and in&#13;
practice will not bite as well as they&#13;
will further up. This is because of the&#13;
shape of the files, in many instances&#13;
making it impossible for the machine to&#13;
work on all parts with the same effectiveness.&#13;
Out of a dozen or more machine-&#13;
out files you-will not find more&#13;
than one that is perfect-looking, and&#13;
very few machine-cut files wiiLbite a#&#13;
well as the hand-cut article. For this&#13;
reason their teeth break out less easily&#13;
—because they won't bite.&#13;
him,&#13;
shell&#13;
moving to one side, stooped down, and&#13;
was literally severed in two. Bonaparte&#13;
laughed loudly, while he described the&#13;
»vent with horrible minuteness."&#13;
To the Afflicted.&#13;
Since the introduction of Kello^g's&#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;
the forerunners of more serious dis*&#13;
orders. It acts speedily and surely,&#13;
always relieving suffering and often&#13;
saving life. The protection it affords&#13;
by its timely use on rheumatism, kidney&#13;
affection, and all aches and pains,&#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 used it never will.&#13;
It is absolutely certain in its remedial&#13;
effects, and will alvvavs cure when&#13;
cures are possible.&#13;
Call at WIVCIIELL'S DRUG STORE and&#13;
&lt;?et a memorandum book giving more&#13;
full details of the curative properties&#13;
of this wonderful medicine.&#13;
Keltogg's Columbian Oil is composed&#13;
of vegetable products in a highly&#13;
concentrated form, and acts directly&#13;
on the kidneys. I t cures rheumatism&#13;
and all other aches and pains.&#13;
Rose Leaf, Fine Cut&#13;
Navy Clippings&#13;
and Snuffs&#13;
^'!&#13;
NEW FIRM! NCWPRI6ES!&#13;
IN DRUGS AND MEDICINES!&#13;
1 have a full line of the latest FLUID EXTRACTS and other preparations&#13;
known to the drug trade; also as fine a line of Fancy Goods and Toilet Articles&#13;
as you will find anywhere in the county.&#13;
School Books &amp; School Supplies of all kinds&#13;
a complete stock. Miscellaneous Books, Blank Books and Stationary.&#13;
The Finest Line of BOX PAPERS in Town.&#13;
Call and see them. I have just received a new supply of&#13;
Wall Paper and Ceiling Decorations, the&#13;
Latest Patterns and Designs.&#13;
WINDOW SHADES A FINE LINE;&#13;
ORANGES. LEMONS &amp;BANANAS.&#13;
m STOCK OF GROCERIES IS COMPLETE=&#13;
A N D PKICES TO MEET THE TIMES.&#13;
The 'Night Hawk' and 'Big Bass' are the boss nickle Cigars of the town&#13;
j y A l l goods in our line are down to hard-pan. Save your money by buying&#13;
now. Don't look tor lower pricea, for you will never seevthem. Thanking&#13;
my friends for past favors, I hope by sqnare dealing to merit a share ot&#13;
your patronage in the future. Respectfully,&#13;
F. A. SIGLER.&#13;
t&#13;
H&amp;AS)&#13;
u&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH!^&#13;
J s the paper you should have- * J&#13;
MACKINAC,&#13;
SUMMER TOUR&#13;
fftlM* BtMaun. l o w B*tN.&#13;
Voor Trip* p«r Wwk 8 t t w * n&#13;
DETROIT AND MACKINAC—&#13;
And Mrary Week Dmj B«twM&amp;&#13;
DETROIT AND CLEVELAND&#13;
t i&#13;
Writ* for oar&#13;
Picturesque Mackinac," Illustrated.&#13;
Oo&amp;taina **&amp; Parttouten. I b i M r i w .&#13;
Detroit &amp; Cleveland Steam Nav. Co.&#13;
C. Dt WMITCOMB. OCN. PAM. A«T.,&#13;
DETROIT, MICH. MAKER la tHe Best&#13;
TABLE OE. Thousands ofjMticlfs »re now manufactured that&#13;
in formeryatffs had to be imported, paying high&#13;
import-duty aa it is now being done on Lea &amp;. Perrywruble&#13;
hauce ; the QUAXZB TABLK SACCK take*&#13;
^splaoe-; it has been pronounced by competent&#13;
finises just hagood and even better. The QUAKE*&#13;
Saccm Las Slowly but aurely gained great importance&#13;
and ia replacing the very best imported&#13;
sauce on the shelf of the grocer, the tables&#13;
of the restaurant and tho tables of the-rich aud&#13;
poor men, greatly prired and relished by all on&#13;
account of its piquaucy, aroma. ta*te, strength&#13;
and pureneas. The inventor has by years of&#13;
study of tun secret virtues contained in to* aromatic&#13;
spices of the Indies anil Chin*, auch as&#13;
mace, nutmeg, cinnamon, genuine Jamaica giuger.&#13;
and peppers and buds of treoa unknown to naont&#13;
men, and by long practice succeeded to combine&#13;
their extracts injslich a liquid form as we now&#13;
Audit of agreeable taste, and so invigorating as&#13;
to betakeam place ot stomach bitters. By man&#13;
unc&gt;5r1ng this sauce here, heavy import duties&#13;
amf freights are saved, and it is sold at • lower&#13;
figure to the dealer, who making a better profit on&#13;
Quaker Sauce era sell it "to the consumer cheaper&#13;
than he very beat imported article hardly equalin&#13;
« ours,- If your grooerdoes not keep it. write&#13;
us for prices, etc. Sold in bottles or by the gallon.&#13;
CHARM MANUFACTURING CO.,&#13;
Solt Proprulert and Manttfmctvrtrt,&#13;
l&lt;WA10bb,24ST.,St.Le*i*.JU.&#13;
Speaking of faro .aid other wiokedx&#13;
jrames, a \ ivgiuian, niter remarking tlmt&#13;
in the better days of tlu*republic, wm n&#13;
everybody played faro, a gentleman was&#13;
distinguished - by -tho—&amp;H»nwnt- 4,4f&#13;
plays with rod cheeks" from t'^e pool&#13;
white-check trash, dwelt UJ on the passionate&#13;
love for the game whiih po»&#13;
ge&amp;ses men who get into its clutches.'&#13;
"Years ago," he said, M two of the"finest&#13;
lawyers in New Orlear.g on their way&#13;
New York stopped at Charlotte^rffie,&#13;
Virginia, because they heard^-tfiat there&#13;
was a man there who dpanfaro. They&#13;
found the man 'ajMKplayed atPnigllt&#13;
About midnujkt^Jne lawyer whispered&#13;
to the oJJ*rf: * He'n cheating.' * Hush,'&#13;
saij^ltieother; ' I've known that for two&#13;
luTsTbni tUere isn't another fnro guma&#13;
thin forty miles.*"—Philadtlphia&#13;
THE WEEKLY POST !&#13;
For 1 year and an elegant a n d&#13;
„ life-like&#13;
PORTRAIT OF GEN. GRANT&#13;
(In whose world-famous achievements&#13;
all have a warm interest) will&#13;
be sent for $1.00.&#13;
T H E P I C T U R E O F G E N . GRANT.&#13;
Is on fine board, SIZE l l j X T s u i t&#13;
ir framing, andMjt^fs said by&#13;
those who knew hin*-^5est to be&#13;
ONE OF TB£-Sl?ST PORTRAITS OF HIM&#13;
iVER TAKEN.&#13;
It was taken just previous t o t h e&#13;
wasting effect of his last illness, and&#13;
therefore constitutes the L A T E S T&#13;
and MOST S A T I S F A C T O R Y pic-,&#13;
ture of the great soldier. Address&#13;
THE POST,&#13;
DETROIT, MICH.&#13;
IN YOUR HOUSEHOLD&#13;
ITOIVESALL THE&#13;
£ IMPORTANT NEWS!&#13;
-Both at home and abroad.— '^—&#13;
ONLY $1.00 PE&#13;
50 CENXS-F6R SIX MONTHS&#13;
ONJOR o&#13;
25 CENTS FOR THREE MONTHS&#13;
B&amp;-IN A D V A N C E . ^&#13;
It is also a jgood&#13;
ADVERTISING MEDIUM!&#13;
&amp;&amp;&amp; REASONABLE HATES ARE &lt;HY£ST.&#13;
J&lt;0»B&gt;W&lt;Q&#13;
e make a specialty, and guarantee good work,&#13;
GOOD STOCK •• LIVING PRICES.&#13;
If you want anything m.the&#13;
K I N* T I N Gr X-IST 33net&#13;
oome to-&#13;
WE DISPATCH OFFICE&#13;
\&#13;
\ i.i&#13;
N&#13;
i** - V&#13;
^&#13;
\ \&#13;
•N.&#13;
"S \&#13;
'\...&#13;
r-i *&#13;
'&#13;
i *&#13;
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J . L. N E W K I B K , Publisher.&#13;
t t l U M Ja oi am&#13;
TIMELY TOPICS.&#13;
THE TRAMPS NEW SCHEME.&#13;
•' I N San Francisco a man drawn as a&#13;
trial juror failed to appear and was&#13;
pronounced in contempt of-eourt Next&#13;
day he cam* around and explained that&#13;
he had been under arrest lor cheating at&#13;
faro. The judge accepted the excuse&#13;
and purged him of contempt, and he&#13;
wont on duty in the panel.&#13;
W. F. Conant, an inmate of the Concord,&#13;
N.H., asylum, was made violently&#13;
insane, it is believed, by reniorsef&#13;
bee use ho deserted from the army in&#13;
the war. flis doctor recently wrote to&#13;
President Cleveland, as ting the man's&#13;
discharge, and has just received it. It&#13;
is thought the news will save his life.&#13;
SAYS the Rochester (N. Y.) Democrat:&#13;
The attempt to write a name oq&#13;
Gen. Grant's tomb moves a nation, but&#13;
it is the same species of lawlessness&#13;
which crops out every day in public resorts,&#13;
and defaces private property as&#13;
well,,.- Let there be a beginning of the&#13;
end of this vandalism. The lesson must&#13;
he learned, and it might as well be&#13;
learned now.&#13;
IT is generally supposed that the day&#13;
of religious persecution belongs to the.&#13;
past, but a case is reported from Montrealof&#13;
a man who was arrested, tried&#13;
iir^d fined, because, forsooth, he only&#13;
bended one knee while saying mass.&#13;
The man admitted h's willingness to&#13;
kneel on both knees, but at the time^vfas&#13;
physically unable to do so^-bUtT neither&#13;
civil nor ecclesiastical court would&#13;
acbept his jjxeuseT The man appeals&#13;
the ca&gt;&#13;
MR. STEPMtttV article, "The Twi.&#13;
Ight of the Poets," in the September&#13;
Century, is to be the closing one of his&#13;
series. It enumerates most of the poets&#13;
now active, men and women of the&#13;
middle and younger generations, but&#13;
does not, as has been erroneously&#13;
stated, attempt to weigh and measure&#13;
ihem. It is a designedly uncritical&#13;
summary of what they are doing, followed&#13;
by the writer's ideas of the present&#13;
condition of American poetry and&#13;
its ihances in the near future.&#13;
T H E people of this state may have to&#13;
combat small-pox before the cholera&#13;
irrives. The disease is raging in Mon&#13;
;real,and also has appeared in Toron'o- I * v e u e e n Kom' from one place to an-&#13;
How He Makes a Living at "Family Gatherings."&#13;
"1 'spose yeu don't remember&#13;
m e , " _said a maii in tho park as ho&#13;
name up and grasped a reporter by&#13;
the hand. The voiee was faintly familiar&#13;
and the speaker, who was docenliy&#13;
dressed, though evidently not&#13;
particular about harmonious colors or&#13;
perfect tit, had a slouehy movement&#13;
that indefinitely recalled some person&#13;
he had met. The man smiled and&#13;
drawled out, " I thought you wouldn't&#13;
know me; don't you remember a&#13;
couple of winters ago when you'd bo&#13;
comiu' out of that printin' office over&#13;
there, how you used to stop and 'buz'&#13;
mo about what you called the noble&#13;
army of trampsP I don't forget you,&#13;
sir. for when you'd get through, tal'kin'&#13;
you'd put up fureotleo and cakes, and&#13;
more than once for lodgin'. I'd be&#13;
leal glad if you'd go and have a&#13;
schooner or cigar or suthin' with me.&#13;
I'm fixed." s a d he, pulling out a&#13;
handful of coin and bills, ' a m i would&#13;
like to set 'em u p . "&#13;
The reporter declined, but upon&#13;
calling to mind the emaciated, dilapidated&#13;
tramp he had once known, was&#13;
forced to inquire how so marked a&#13;
change of condition had come about.&#13;
"Well;*' said he, "if you won't give&#13;
ft away I'll tell you--though I don't&#13;
care if you do, for I am going west ou&#13;
the same Jay. For the past two years&#13;
I've been working the family gatherings—&#13;
those folks, you know, wlio advertise&#13;
for everybody of their name to&#13;
meet at some one plaoe to chin about&#13;
themselves and have a picnic.&#13;
"You see, one day last summer I&#13;
was killin' time roadin' a newspaper&#13;
I'd found when I run across one of&#13;
these meetiu's. Well, it must have&#13;
been—must have been—what is't that&#13;
gives them poets a steer?"&#13;
" I n s p i r a t i o n ? ' suggested tho reporter.&#13;
"Yes, that's it, it must have been&#13;
that; for all b | a sudden suthin' said:&#13;
'•That's the racket for you, my boy,&#13;
o make believe you're one of the&#13;
gang!' You see, before I got way&#13;
down where I was when you first saw&#13;
me 1 used to 'supeJ around theaters;&#13;
that made me think !how easy 'twould&#13;
be for one of them actors to put up&#13;
such a job. Well, tho first lot I tackled&#13;
was on a big farm up the North river.&#13;
I got a piece of blue pencil, matte an&#13;
anchor on my wrist, and put their&#13;
name under it, so as to look like India&#13;
ink, you know, I had on a sailor's&#13;
blue flannel shirt when I went on&#13;
the grounds. There I told 'em I had&#13;
always follered the sea, and had lately&#13;
had hard luck; had read about the&#13;
meetin' and come to see if I knew anybody&#13;
of my name.&#13;
"Well, they're always jolly and fr«o&#13;
at these places; so they asked me to&#13;
rest myself, and raised me some better&#13;
clothes than I had on: after that 'we&#13;
had some bully grub. T walked around&#13;
and answered questions as well as I&#13;
could. Now and then, when no ono&#13;
was lookin,' some good old maid&#13;
would come up, unloch her satchel,&#13;
and slip a dollar or two in my handboforn&#13;
the good-by coulfl&#13;
Ncio York Tribune"&#13;
•aid.—&#13;
Daily hundreds of emigrants pass&#13;
chrough these cit'es and enter the state&#13;
\t Detroit and Tort Huron. Health officer&#13;
Wight of Detroit has already taken&#13;
ste. s looking toward the careful inspection&#13;
of all passengers from Canada.&#13;
Prompt action o h t h e - p a r t of officers"aX&#13;
these ports of entry may able to&#13;
prevent the appearance of the disease&#13;
iiere.&#13;
—. ^ .&#13;
A New York doctor says that ice if&#13;
placed upon the head for sunstroke&#13;
should be put on the forehead or top of&#13;
the head, not on the back of the head&#13;
or neck This will only drive the blood&#13;
up and forward where there is too&#13;
much already. But better than ice,, he&#13;
says, is hot wrater. heated to 115 or 120&#13;
degases and poured upon the neck aud&#13;
back-head and shoulders. This re&#13;
peated will determine the blood from&#13;
the head. Although the hot summer&#13;
weather seems to be over, there is frequently&#13;
hot weather in the latter part&#13;
of August and first part of September&#13;
which is more liable to cause sunstro&#13;
than even the heat of July.&#13;
T H E Rev. Father&#13;
in connection wifeh^'the&#13;
" &lt; i /&#13;
re, well known&#13;
troubles in the&#13;
Northwesjt&lt;^h~as published a letter in&#13;
twcvefthe leading papers of Quebec,-in&#13;
""which he, says that the half-breed rebel&#13;
lion was brought on by "the govern*&#13;
ment's fatal obstinacy, culpable negligence,&#13;
and delays in doing justice tc&#13;
the reasonable claims of the halfbreeds."&#13;
He savs that "petition&#13;
after petition end letter after&#13;
letter wasnsrentrto them by the&#13;
the most influential men in the Northwest,&#13;
urging just'ce to the half-breeds,&#13;
and the danger of procrastination; but&#13;
no heed was paid to their repres&#13;
tions or warnings-" -He says that,&#13;
while he rejoices in the^swpi^ssion of a&#13;
rebellion which -he^atfd his colleagues&#13;
strenously opppscetTyet "truth, compels&#13;
him to state that Gen. Middleton's&#13;
troops^oisgraced themselves by the&#13;
Jst shameful pillage." He confirms,&#13;
"not from hearsay, but from personal&#13;
knowledge and repeated investigation^&#13;
the story that d'en. Middleton personally&#13;
appropriated a line horse and vehicle&#13;
belonging"to"a Tialf-"breed named Cham-"&#13;
pagne." These charges, made, upon&#13;
such high authority., have produced s&#13;
great sensation in Quebec.&#13;
have&#13;
and&#13;
in any&#13;
names,&#13;
J&#13;
\ \&#13;
, v \&#13;
other, summer and fall, ever since. I&#13;
keep the run of 'em by the pnpers and&#13;
what I hear around, and I get plenty&#13;
of good duds and lots of cash. I play&#13;
the sailor dodge most always. Sometimes&#13;
1 fix up, but it isn't a good&#13;
way, for they expect you to chiu two&#13;
much.&#13;
" S a y , if ever y o u g o oh this racket,&#13;
let me give you the straight tip; don't&#13;
be fresh, don't talk more'n you can&#13;
help; let them do the chinin'. I made&#13;
a mistake that way where I was last&#13;
week. I was gottin' along lirst-rate,&#13;
had been there two days. At lunch&#13;
under the trees the last afternoon an&#13;
old lady squinted at me through her&#13;
specs for a while, and said I p u t h e r i n&#13;
mind of 'Ike,' who went out west some&#13;
years ago to see some cousins who&#13;
were not known out this way. Well,&#13;
I was fool enough to say I belonged to&#13;
the western branch, as they called it,&#13;
and remembered 'Ike.' That settled&#13;
it; they all soured on me at once, an&#13;
I found that tlm western b l o k e | ^ h a d&#13;
got 'Ike' a drinkin' and^gamblih1 ,&#13;
and that branch of thef&gt;rrfTly was looked&#13;
at as N. G. So^-Tdidn't get a rake&#13;
that time.&#13;
" A n o ^ e f ' t h i n g ; don't take&#13;
fojjjjj^witli long highfalutin&#13;
ith de or van to 'em; they generally&#13;
their families down fine&#13;
you'll get left sure; better&#13;
go for the Smiths, Thompsons, or&#13;
Browns.&#13;
"One time 'down east,' though,T&#13;
struck a swell crowd and got a good&#13;
stake w h e n 1 thought I'd no show at&#13;
all. A big chap with diamond' studs&#13;
saw me. and asked me 'what I was&#13;
doin' ' there! I gave him a ghost.story&#13;
about lookin' for my relations. And&#13;
I'm blamed if he didn't shake hands&#13;
with me and said he'd help me lo&#13;
em up. Then he took me a.Ui^le^to&#13;
one side and asked me ifj^d^dohim a&#13;
favor? He said he'dJ&amp;fflJoston without&#13;
sending a n j m p o r t a n t telegram,&#13;
didn't like-^tcAcave the party, would&#13;
I obli£j»-^him by goin' to Boston,&#13;
se^uHfT the telegram, and&#13;
aitin' for a n , a n s w e r ? 'Wait,'&#13;
said he, 'if it takes you all&#13;
day.' He handed me a twentv-dollar&#13;
bill and a railroad ticket. Well I did&#13;
the errand, waited a good while, no&#13;
answer came, and t h e n ' I tumbled to&#13;
it!—Yes, sir, just as you say. I was&#13;
paid, like the organ-grinder, to go&#13;
away! But, don't you see, even&#13;
that beat3 getting bounced from&#13;
a free-lunch counter, ^ike in old&#13;
times, eli?&#13;
"But come." and hero the tramp so&#13;
earnestly urged the acceptance of the&#13;
hospitable "schooner," that the reporter&#13;
had to compromise on calisaya&#13;
aud seltzer at a Broadway drim-sturo&#13;
\&#13;
\&#13;
Scenting a Slaver.&#13;
Many years ago, when slavery was&#13;
tho rule aud not the oxeoption, vessels&#13;
running a cargo were extremely&#13;
clever in eluding capture and putting&#13;
their pursuers oil* tho scenti A good&#13;
story is told of tho flagship—Winchester,&#13;
I think—going out of Simon's bay&#13;
bound to the Mauritius. When ort'&#13;
Cape Hangklip, latu ouo afternoon, a&#13;
very rakish, suspicious-looking craft&#13;
was sighted, carrying an unusual&#13;
number of staysails, who upon seeing&#13;
the mann&gt;f-war hoisted Spanish colors&#13;
and her number of Marryat's code and&#13;
requested to bo reported. She passed&#13;
quite close, and was apparently a&#13;
passenger ship of about five hundred&#13;
tons burden, for as she nearod them&#13;
about a dozen ladies, in very smart&#13;
bonnets, veils, and parasols, were observed&#13;
to come on deck and wave&#13;
thoir handkerchiefs with every demonstration&#13;
of cordiality to the officers&#13;
of the flagship. She seemed to have&#13;
also a largo crew -n~nd was very clean&#13;
and smart. Suspicion was quite disarmed,&#13;
and she was logged as a passenger&#13;
shipafrom Manila to Cadiz. The&#13;
admiral was alone in his opinion that&#13;
all was not right, remarking that the&#13;
ladies waved their pocket handkerchiefs&#13;
Uncommonly long and vigorously&#13;
to a mere passing ship; he also&#13;
thought the handkerchiefs unusually&#13;
large, and further he mentioned that&#13;
as she passed lie was looking out of&#13;
-the door in the astern gallery, and a&#13;
faint, curious whirl'came down on the&#13;
wind, reminding him of somothing&#13;
long past. He could not remember for&#13;
the moment «f what it did remind&#13;
him, but it suddenly occurred t o him&#13;
se?*iral hours after that the faint passing&#13;
ciior, as the strange Vessel swept&#13;
by, recalled the smell, of a slavesihip&#13;
which ho had navigated int;o port years&#13;
before.. And he was right.' This same&#13;
vessel was taken, off tho Havana, on&#13;
her subsequent voyage, and proved to&#13;
have b*en a Spanish ship.from Fernando,&#13;
Veloso river, in the Mozambique&#13;
channel, full of slaves for Cuba.&#13;
Her captain explained with delighted&#13;
pride his meeting with the flagship off&#13;
the cape, and how, seeing a large&#13;
man-of-war bearing down upon him,&#13;
with the certainty of capture and no&#13;
hope to escapo should the ship's&#13;
character be known, ho adopted the&#13;
clever expedient, doubtloss not for&#13;
the first time, of dressing up a number&#13;
of his men in wome's attire, a ruse&#13;
that was in this instance entirely successful.—&#13;
All the Year Round.&#13;
THE NEW TORY MINISTRY.&#13;
Liberal Prede-&#13;
— Pony Races.&#13;
One of the most characteristic scenes&#13;
of the New Forest is to, bo seen on the&#13;
day of its annual pony races. These&#13;
are "for the purpose of improving the&#13;
breed of ponies bred in tho forest;"&#13;
they take place every August on Balmer&#13;
Lawn, close *o Broekenhurst, the&#13;
o4tt Brocostc of tho "Domesday Book."&#13;
Broekenhurst is about_fivo miles away&#13;
across the forest; it is visible from&#13;
Bade lieu heath.&#13;
The little forest ponies arc not&#13;
troubled by the hundreds that are worrying&#13;
them; those that htvo been&#13;
trimmed and groomed for the racing&#13;
look handsome, spirited little things?&#13;
One pretty gray poney with long,&#13;
sweeping tail and mane has won many&#13;
a"race on this course, and wins again&#13;
to-dav; he has reigned lor along- time', . . . o ---&#13;
as The Kin^ of tho Foicst; but"now he j o b J e c ; t l o n that the rule has operated to&#13;
belongs to a new owner and bears a I k c u p b o t l 1 Edward Clarke, queen's&#13;
How It Corunarea . with Its&#13;
cessor.&#13;
Like its prodecessor, the new tory&#13;
cabinet lias sixtoen members, equally&#13;
divided between th/&lt; two houses. Tho&#13;
radical papers talk sharply, of course,&#13;
about Lord Salisbury's aristocratic'&#13;
leanings in having eigtit peers in his&#13;
cabinet, besides three sous of peers,&#13;
but they provoke invidious comparisons&#13;
with tho previous cabinet by doing&#13;
so. Tho grave weakness of Mr.&#13;
Gladstone's cabinet, writes a London&#13;
correspondent to The tsew York Times,&#13;
lay in its whig peers and. relatives of&#13;
peers, whereas, in thu new ministry&#13;
the stp'ugest element will be its nobles,&#13;
ancient and modern. It is hardly&#13;
fair, perhaps, to credit aristocracy&#13;
with peers who have earned their titles.&#13;
Of these Mr. Gladstone's cabinet&#13;
contained two—Lord Carlihgford,&#13;
who had been Chichester Fortescue,&#13;
and Lord Selborue, erstwhilo Koundell&#13;
Palmer. Of the others Earl Northbrook&#13;
and Karl Kimberley were elevated&#13;
from barons; thereat, Granville,&#13;
Derby, Spencer, Kosebery, and Argyll,&#13;
Lausdowiie, and Cooper, who seceded&#13;
in other years, all represented old titles&#13;
and old families. Tho two relatives&#13;
of peers were .Lord Hartington&#13;
and Sir William Vernon-'iarcouit, a&#13;
scion of the Vernous who say "J in&#13;
speeches that tho blood of kings"flows&#13;
in his veins. In the new cabinet there&#13;
are four old-title nobles, Salisbury,&#13;
Richmond, Harrowby, and Carnarvon,&#13;
and there are four new ones, risen&#13;
i r o m the ranks—Lord Cranbrook, who&#13;
was Mr. Gathorn-Hardy a few vears&#13;
ago; Lord Iddesloigh," tho still" unfamiliar&#13;
mask for Sir Stanford Northcote,&#13;
and Sir Hardinge Gifl'ord and&#13;
Edward Gibson, whose titles are not&#13;
yet announced. The sons of peers are&#13;
live in number—Lord Randolph&#13;
Churchill, son .of the duke of Marlborough;&#13;
Lord J o h n Manners, son of&#13;
the duke of Rutland; Lord George&#13;
Hamilton, son of the duke of Abercorn;&#13;
Col. Stanlov, son of the late Earl&#13;
Derby, and Mr. Stanhope, son of Earl&#13;
Stanhope.&#13;
The two lists compare with curious&#13;
closeness as to numbers. In point of&#13;
ability it is nowhere denied that tho&#13;
latter list has the advantage. But&#13;
when commoners are considered the&#13;
advantage-shifts! Hicks-Beach, Cross,&#13;
and Smith are ludicrously below the&#13;
standard of Chamberlain, Dilke, and&#13;
Trevelau, to say nothingot Gladstone,&#13;
who by tacit consent is no longer compared&#13;
with any other living Englishman,&#13;
or of J o h n Bright, who served,&#13;
during the old cabinet's first twoyears.&#13;
In a rough way the comparison "illustrates&#13;
the difference between tho two&#13;
parties. The tories liud their brains&#13;
and their qualified as well as naturalleaders&#13;
in the aristocracy, while in the&#13;
liberal party the aristocrats are more&#13;
of an incumbrance;than an aid. The&#13;
commoner element" in the new torv&#13;
ministry might have made a better&#13;
showing, perhaps, but for the silly and&#13;
indefensible custom of compelling a&#13;
minister to be re elected. There is a&#13;
leading article in The Times to-day attacking&#13;
this absurdity, and surelv it&#13;
eomes.none too soon. To pass by"the&#13;
obvious inconveniences of paralyziug&#13;
all parlimontary business for the next&#13;
fortnight in order that fifteen or twenty&#13;
men may go through the ceremony&#13;
of being re-elected by their several&#13;
constituencies, there is the grievous&#13;
lot of remarkablo things to win the affection&#13;
of the newly-eulranchised&#13;
Biuock-frooks.&#13;
The Irish appointments arg more generally praised than a n y / o t h e r s ,&#13;
ord Carnarvon is scarcttiyV]&gt;Ppular&#13;
man, perhaps, but he has repute as an&#13;
able mau, and respect as a goo J one,&#13;
according to his lights, a u d v t h e r e&#13;
seems to bo a general feeling that&#13;
something is due him for consenting&#13;
to try the Irish experiment without&#13;
coercion. It was extremely difficult to&#13;
lind a chief secretary for him. With&#13;
the record of Lowther and Forster&#13;
broken and discroditod with their respective&#13;
parties, Cavendish murdered,&#13;
aud Trevelyan aged and worn all beyond&#13;
his years, tho post frightened&#13;
m a p after man to whom it was tendered.&#13;
Sir William Hart-Dyke, who&#13;
has consented to take it, is an amiable&#13;
Kentish squire, who has some excellent&#13;
fishing in the Darenth, and has&#13;
served in tho shadow of Rowland&#13;
Winn as a junior whip. Why the dickens&#13;
he wants to bo Irish secretary and&#13;
why anybody thought of him for the&#13;
place is what no one can liud out, aud&#13;
the laughter with which tho Parnellites&#13;
greeted his name in tho house&#13;
yesterday was a fair reflection of the&#13;
general public amusement. Luckily,&#13;
he also can take a joke, and if the&#13;
whole Irish matter can bo kept on this&#13;
bas&gt; of pleasantry he may be a shining&#13;
success in the office.&#13;
The tory start is, on the whole, as&#13;
good as it could well be under the circumstances.&#13;
Of course they are absolutely&#13;
in tho power of the big opposition&#13;
majority, but at a certain&#13;
point that begins to be an advantage.&#13;
If tho power is used&#13;
harshly, with too obvious a disposition&#13;
to be merciless and make&#13;
capital out of ministerial helplessness,&#13;
tho constituencies may conclude, with&#13;
their hereditary instinct of fair play,&#13;
to help the under dog to get on top.&#13;
r-&gt;&#13;
new name. Another well-built ponv&#13;
is trimmed in quite a different style";&#13;
His mane is very short and his "tail&#13;
" d o c k e d , " in defiance of the Society&#13;
for tho Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.&#13;
He belongs to a dealer and&#13;
must needs present this.fashionable&#13;
appearance.&#13;
The wiuning-post is surrounujwt-'oy a&#13;
group of people who are reMr^Mn earn&#13;
counsel, and&#13;
a small street is&amp;reated by the various&#13;
shows wlnch^-set up here for the day,&#13;
and upland down this street, between&#13;
t^G-faces, wanders an idle throng of&#13;
peasants. It is the opinion of the&#13;
natives of the New Forest that these&#13;
races are far superior to the Derby**&#13;
the principal reason for this preference&#13;
being that the fun goes steadily&#13;
on, and waxes hotter as the dav&#13;
wanes. To an outsider the aspect of&#13;
this primitive, old-world-looking dissipation&#13;
is in itself very interesting.&#13;
There is a great sobriety about it to&#13;
air appearance; the peasants wander&#13;
slowly from one old-fashioned show to&#13;
another; there is nothing out or keeping&#13;
with the lovely setting which&#13;
rounds the picture. But in tkefheart&#13;
of it there is a fever of,^Blccitement,&#13;
after all, which buMfl accords with&#13;
tho placidity of^Jthreold forest. Heavy&#13;
betting gojis-pn in the group gathered&#13;
roumprtle winning-post; some" of the&#13;
ers of tho ponies, small farmers in&#13;
the neighborhood, will stako all they&#13;
possess irPtho world upon a favorite—&#13;
so that there is quite the air of a miniature&#13;
Darby about the scene as the&#13;
gitme little ponies come tearing past&#13;
the winning-post, ridden in every conceivable&#13;
fashion by their boy-jockeys.&#13;
These are mostly country lads, who&#13;
have learned to ride as a fish learns to&#13;
swim^ but not with quite the same&#13;
natural elegance. Now and again&#13;
there is a regular jockey amqng them&#13;
—one who has perhaps lost his chance&#13;
of riding in the large races -by reason&#13;
of some unprofessional trick—who will&#13;
come down and ride here, and possibly&#13;
make £1()0 or so. He is easily recognized&#13;
among the others as soo'n as the&#13;
ponies start by his businesslike style.&#13;
The ponies themselves all look exceedingly&#13;
trim; they have been taken in&#13;
for three months, and tho attention&#13;
they receive eiinverls thorn into wonderfully.&#13;
printy cre;Uure3.---#^/M/r7/-&#13;
tu&amp;ZntleU ilain^'ar.&#13;
Edward Macnagh&#13;
queen's counsel, p u t of the uvkristrv*,&#13;
for the rea.son that tho^hSvmor was&#13;
threatened with ajd^iTTcult campaign&#13;
at IMymoutli^tuitrthe latter sits for&#13;
CountV^airflm, which the liberals only&#13;
^eeently carried at ^a by-election.&#13;
e lawyby which this misclnef, personal&#13;
ai/cl general, is worked dates&#13;
from Ojieeu Ann's time, wiien it was&#13;
est about'the races; on-t^ch side of jf-j-Passejr to serve as a check on the&#13;
reor&#13;
crown's proclivity to bribo inconvenient&#13;
politicians by oiTice. All practical&#13;
need for such a check is as dead and&#13;
obsolete as the cause of the Stuarts,&#13;
but it still hangs on, to cost the country&#13;
delay, uncertainty, perhaps foreign&#13;
complications, and to deprive the&#13;
tory ministry of two of the ablest men&#13;
in the party. Yet when will it be&#13;
peaked? Probably twenty years&#13;
more from now.&#13;
Comment on the personnel of the&#13;
new cabinet is, aside from the indiscriminate&#13;
praise or detraction of partisanship,&#13;
rather favorable. The least&#13;
popiiXaVappointment is that of manwho&#13;
has not ono conceivablo&#13;
qualification for the postal department&#13;
save that he served there badly&#13;
before, and was originally appointed&#13;
to it because he had served badly in&#13;
some other oflieo. Mr. Smith, as&#13;
secretary of war, sounds odd, but it is&#13;
said that he will really, through his&#13;
his old subordinate, Capr. Codrington,&#13;
a new lord of the admiralty, run tho&#13;
Ravy, too, with a view to bringing&#13;
both arms of the service into working&#13;
order together, aud there is much hontidence&#13;
in his business ability to accomplish&#13;
the great undertaking. Jn Col.&#13;
Stanley's appointment to the colonial&#13;
office somo people think they discern a&#13;
studied design to expose Lord Derby's&#13;
blunders through the agency of nis&#13;
own brother and heir,. while others&#13;
see just as clearly a scheme to let Lord&#13;
Derby down easily and cover over his&#13;
short comings. The queer appointment&#13;
par excellence is t h a t of the duke&#13;
of Richmond, a country squire, pure&#13;
and simple, to tho presidency of tho&#13;
board of trade, and one is puzzled&#13;
which to wonder the, more at, his being&#13;
given the post or his consenting to&#13;
serve in it. Another typical rural&#13;
tory, Henry Chaplin, is more appropriately&#13;
placed as char-cellor of the&#13;
duchy of Lancaster—i. e., minister of&#13;
agriculture, and he is expected to do a&#13;
Purityinff Water With Alum.&#13;
Those of our r e a d e r s , who have&#13;
traveled on the Mississippi-river know&#13;
how turbid the water is, and t h o y m a y&#13;
have seen people tie a bit of alum to a&#13;
thread, lot it down into a tumbler of&#13;
water, and swing it about a little, after&#13;
which operation the liquid becomes&#13;
as clear as crystal. Recently&#13;
the matter has been carefully examined&#13;
into and reported upon by Profs.&#13;
P. T. Austen and F. A. Wilder, of&#13;
Rutgers college. In their experiments,&#13;
two-tenths of a grain to the liter (ono&#13;
and one-fifths grains to the gallon)&#13;
caused the settling of the impurities&#13;
in the New Brunswick, N. J., water.&#13;
Double this quantity may well be-used.&#13;
as a rule. T-hTs amount of alum is too&#13;
small to be perceptible to the taste, orto&#13;
_ e x e r t , any physiological ^action.&#13;
The alumun may bo u s e d i n c l a r i f y i n g&#13;
water by filtration. Jf a very small&#13;
amount be added to turbid water it&#13;
can be filtered through ordinary paper&#13;
without dilliculty, and yields a&#13;
brilliantly clear filtrate, in which there&#13;
is no trace of suspended matter. It is&#13;
not necessary to lot fcLstand before filtration,&#13;
as the aetimi of the alum is&#13;
immediate. The simplest form of filter&#13;
for considerable quantities of water&#13;
is a tube, one end of which is stuffed&#13;
with cotton. A drain-pipe is the b*&#13;
as it can be so easily c l e a n s e d r ^ T h o&#13;
plug of cotton shouhl bo-^trwo or three&#13;
inches thick, andjn^rfbo kept in place&#13;
by a ring ofjwotui tit'tpd into tho bot-.&#13;
torn o f t h c r p i p e . For household purpc)&#13;
se&lt;a glass tunnel may bo used, or&#13;
a filter may be made bv cutting ofTtbe&#13;
bottom of a glass flask or other bottle.&#13;
The neck of the funnel or bottle .&#13;
is to be plugged with cotton, which&#13;
should iirst be worked in warm water&#13;
to remove the adhering air, and to wet&#13;
it well. It should be packed in qnite&#13;
closely, a little at a time, until it&#13;
forms a layer two or three inches&#13;
thick. To insure accuracy in the&#13;
amount of alum used it is best to&#13;
make a solution of half an ounce of&#13;
alum to a quant of water. Dissolve&#13;
the alum in a cup of boiling -vater,&#13;
pour this into a quart measure, and&#13;
till up with cold water. Keep in a&#13;
properly labeled bottle. Fifty-four&#13;
drops of this solution, or a scant teaspoonful&#13;
will contain two and threetenths&#13;
grains of alum, which is the&#13;
quantity for a gallon of water. It is&#13;
not important to bo very exact, as&#13;
twice the quantity would be harmless&#13;
enough. Analysis shows—that the&#13;
water is not only clarified but purified&#13;
by this process, the g r e a t e r p a r t of tho&#13;
organic&#13;
matter being removed from&#13;
it.—Popular Science News.&#13;
No Choice Where There Was Copper.&#13;
" T h e r e was a curious feature of tho&#13;
outbreak of cholervin 1849 that has&#13;
not been referred to in recent y e a r s , "&#13;
a physician said recently. - , : It was&#13;
observed that no workmen engaged in&#13;
copper mines or in manufacturing any&#13;
sort of article out of copper, or in&#13;
handling copper ore was afflicted with&#13;
cholera. M. Andrand demonstrated&#13;
that there was much' less electricity&#13;
in the air in those n a r t s of Paris where&#13;
the cholera raged Most fearfully than&#13;
in the other parts of the city. The two&#13;
discoveries were put together, and it&#13;
was inferred that the galvanic action&#13;
generated by the copper acted as a/&#13;
preventative. It may be that the copper&#13;
absorbed into the system of t h e&#13;
workmon served as an a n t i d o t e / A t&#13;
any rate, the action of coppe* itr alleviation&#13;
some kind of cramps/is well&#13;
known, and there will be/no-'narra in&#13;
wearing strips of clean /copper or of&#13;
copper and zinc next tbythe body, as&#13;
has been recommendedyoy the English&#13;
physician."—New York bun.&#13;
h&#13;
Whftt la the rilffftrrWfc_h»»tWft&lt;&gt;n n. finrvl *r&gt;,}&#13;
an Hticry street car/tiriver?_ One breaks tae&#13;
dnm and tlic otU^/cwear&amp; with conblderable&#13;
v!gpr.&#13;
*•(&#13;
. • !&#13;
n&#13;
^&#13;
/ '&#13;
\&#13;
I T . \ ••••&#13;
, \&#13;
*&#13;
\ N&#13;
\&#13;
^ . &gt;&#13;
V - - \ \&#13;
•-,:\ , v ^ ^ a . « i ? A i f r J d&#13;
••.WWJW&#13;
&gt;'$&#13;
"O Lor» E i f i m Again!"&#13;
I n the early days of Methodism in&#13;
Qcotland, a certain congregation where&#13;
there was but one rich man, desired to&#13;
build a now chapel. A church meeting&#13;
was hold. Thu old rich Scotchman rose&#13;
a n d siicl: "M'othrun, we dinna need a&#13;
new chapel; 111 give £5 f o r repairs."&#13;
Just then a bit of plaster falling from&#13;
the coiling hit him on the head.&#13;
Locking up and seeing how bad it&#13;
was, he said: "Brethren, its worse&#13;
tijon I thoucht; I'll make it 50 pun' .11 "&#13;
4 '0h, L o r d , " exclaimed a devoted&#13;
brot'ier on a back seat, "hit 'im&#13;
again!"&#13;
There are mtiny human tabernacles&#13;
which aro in sore need of radical building&#13;
over, iiit we putter and fuss and&#13;
repair in spots without satisfactory results.&#13;
It is only when we are personally&#13;
alarmed a.t tlip real danger that we&#13;
act independently, and do the right&#13;
thing. J hen it is that we most keenly&#13;
regret because we did not sooner use&#13;
our judgment, follow the advice born of&#13;
the experie ee of others and jump away&#13;
from our p ils.&#13;
Thousan&lt; of persons who will read&#13;
this paragr-.ph are in abject.misery 'today&#13;
when they might be in a satisfactory&#13;
ijoudition. They are weak, lifeless,&#13;
full of odd allies and pains, and every&#13;
year they know they are getting worse,&#13;
even though the best doctors arc patching&#13;
them in spots. The origin ol these&#13;
aches and pains is the ;kidneys and&#13;
liver, and if they would build these all&#13;
over new with Warner's Safe Cure as&#13;
millions havo done, and cease investing&#13;
their money in miserably unsuccessful&#13;
Eatchwork, they would be well and&#13;
appv and would bless the day when&#13;
the Lord "hit ' e m " and indicated the&#13;
common sense course for them to pursue.—&#13;
London Press.&#13;
.—Hugh.&#13;
i r ^ B P P T Absolutely —-— ,&#13;
Free from Opiates, Emetics and 1'OWfWff.&#13;
!'A PROMPT, SAFE, SURE CUBE&#13;
&gt;-: VA3fc»i, auiiiTy, PaHw 1» ^-^ *na 0UXVi&#13;
".' . 'itfteboni of tha T h r o a t »nd Lung*.&#13;
TMCO SO c e n t s » bottle. Bold by Druceists and Deal'&#13;
I^^UMumbleto induce their dealer to promptly&#13;
• aetitYorthVnic illfeneire two boUles,Expres* &lt;*urge*&#13;
' oaULbu tending one dollar to&#13;
r- THE OUMXKS A. Y0GS1ER COMPACT,&#13;
fi.lo (.Hvueisand M»nnf*ctnr»Mi,&#13;
. . . . . - .&lt;^-^|f»T.rf. V . H . * . _&#13;
Greece la exceedingly "hard up."&#13;
If the heart be given, all Is given&#13;
Stowell.&#13;
Guns on divers EnKllnh vessels hereafter will&#13;
be discharged by electricity.&#13;
An average of one picture per day 1» added&#13;
to the Ik'rlln rogueH' gallery.&#13;
The richest man in Lconardvllle, Neb., ia also&#13;
the oldest, the tallest and the heaviest.&#13;
More than half a million dollars' worth of&#13;
real estate in New liaveu 1» owned by a few&#13;
Yale professors. &lt;&#13;
The Deeds public library « u so poorly&#13;
lighted hy electricity that a return to gaa was&#13;
a practical neccsssity.&#13;
Wild beasts and poisonous snakes in India&#13;
make way with between 120,000 and 23,010 human&#13;
beings every year.&#13;
The sea is probably nowhere more more than&#13;
five miles deep, and the tallest mouutain is&#13;
not quite six miles high.&#13;
Over 24,000,000 fish eggs have been put in the&#13;
waters of the eastern shore of Maryland this&#13;
seasou.&#13;
A Massachusetts sexton has just died, having&#13;
in his life dug the graves of over 3,000&#13;
people,&#13;
Nearly a million new testaments have been&#13;
sold, at two cents a copy, in the past year in&#13;
England,&#13;
President Lincoln appointed five supremo&#13;
court judges, tirant four, Hayes two, (Jartield&#13;
one and Arthur two.&#13;
San Francisco people haveatla?t come down&#13;
to usiuti; live-cent pieces, and a resort to pennies.&#13;
is imminent.&#13;
• Red and white roses are the ornaments worn&#13;
bv a pony driven by a White Sulphur Springs&#13;
belle.&#13;
One Boston judge has oj&gt;enlv expressed his&#13;
dlsgust'at the insolent questions which some&#13;
lawyers delight to'put to witnesses in court.&#13;
The organ grinder who passes around his hat&#13;
for pennies, ufter he has ground out a tune is&#13;
not begging. So decides a Washington iudge.&#13;
About three dozen cattle to the square mile&#13;
manage to exist—despite depletion of their&#13;
n n k s by butchers—in the noble state of Iowa.&#13;
The old Brandeth house property on Broadway,&#13;
New York, sold recently at $11,000 per&#13;
foot front. It was not wanted as. a postoftice&#13;
Bite.&#13;
Cremation Is very "catching" in Italy,&#13;
crematories already established have all&#13;
business they can attend to and furnaces&#13;
building.&#13;
The poet Gray has at last got "on a bust" in&#13;
the grounds of "i'erabroke college,- Cafhbridge,&#13;
because he was professor of modern history&#13;
thereabout a century ago.&#13;
A mad farmer in New York cut off the&#13;
"switch ends'' of his cows' tails because they&#13;
bothered him while milking. His revenge was&#13;
sweet, but it cost him a tine oi$l(J.&#13;
From a Seme of Duty.&#13;
Some people shrink from m a k i n g&#13;
public the benefit they have re.eived,&#13;
while others are free to tell it abroad&#13;
for the good of fellow mortals. Of the&#13;
latter kind is Mr. J. H. Coppuck of&#13;
Mount Holly, N. J., who writes: "I&#13;
am one of many who give their cheerful&#13;
appreciation of the merits of the efficacy&#13;
of your valuable Brown's Iron Fitters,.&#13;
from a sense of duty.. This' bittevs^'ia&#13;
doing much good in our^eotThty, for&#13;
which I can vouch.'1^-&#13;
The&#13;
the&#13;
are&#13;
Sulphur siuoktf'uiakes au&#13;
liopper^-vefytired.&#13;
- T H E&#13;
BEST TONIC. Thla medicine, combining Iron with puro&#13;
vegetable tonics, qnlckly and completely&#13;
C a r e t D y n p e i i s l a , I n d i g v f t t l o n , W e a k n e s s ,&#13;
I m p u r e B l o o d , ,&gt;Ial a r i a , ( J h l l U a n d F e v e r a ,&#13;
a n d N e u r a l g i a .&#13;
It is an unfailing remedy for Diseases of the ,&#13;
K i d n e y s a n d I . l v e r . /&#13;
I t i s i n v i ] u a b l e for D i s e a s e s p e c u l i a r Xri&#13;
W o m e n , a: l all w h o l e a d s e d e n t a r y l i v e s . /&#13;
It d o e s n o t i. ijure t h e t e e t h , c a u s e h e a d a c h e . o r&#13;
p r o d u c e c o n s i i p a t i o n — o t h e r Iron mtdioin/s do.&#13;
It e n r i c h e s a n d p u r i f i e s t h e b l o o d , s t i m u l a t e s&#13;
t h e a p p e t i t e , aula t h e a s s i m i l a t i o n o f food, r e - /&#13;
l i t r e s H e a r t b u r n a n d B e l c h i n g , a n d / f i t r o n g t b /&#13;
e n s t h e m u s c l e s a n d n e r v e s . /&#13;
For I n t e r m i t t e n t F e v e r s , L a s s i t u d e , L a c k o f&#13;
E n e r g y , «fcc, it h a s n o e q u a l . / /&#13;
*"#- T h e g e n u i n e h a s a b o v e t r a d e m a r k a n d&#13;
c r o s s e d red l i n e s o n w r a p p e r / T a k e p b o t h e r .&#13;
flu:. oulTbr .R'.'.HWN CHKXTCAL f 6 „ BILTiaOHK.&#13;
English and American competition has roused&#13;
1'arisiiin journals to some display of enterprise.&#13;
When Hugo died there were 82 reporters&#13;
for the city press waiting in front ol the&#13;
house.&#13;
Have used Dr! Thomas' Eleetrie Oil&#13;
for croup and colds, and declare it a&#13;
positive cure. Contributed by Wm.&#13;
Kay, 570 Plymouth avenue, Buffalo, N.&#13;
Over 3.000 people visit&#13;
art gallery each day.&#13;
the British National&#13;
BITTERS.&#13;
I T i s xoai'aj&#13;
BLOOD PURIFIER 9 HEALTH RESTORER.&#13;
It never fails to do its work in cases of Mala*&#13;
r l a , B i l i o u s t i e a a , € o n « t l n a t i o n * H e a d -&#13;
a c h e , loss of A p p e t i t e and S l e e p , N e r v o n i&#13;
D e b i l i t y , N e u r a l g i a , and aU F e m a l e&#13;
C o m p l a i n t s . Hops &lt;fe Malt Bitters ia a Veae»&#13;
t a b l e Compound. It is a m e d i c i n e not a B a r&#13;
r o o m D r i n k . It differs as w i d e l y as does&#13;
dav and night from the t h o a a a n d - a n d - o n c&#13;
m i x t u r e * of v i l e w h i s k y flavored wit!&#13;
a r o m a t i c * . Hops * Malt Bitters, is r e c o m -&#13;
m e n d e d by P h y s i c i a n * , m i n i s t e r s and&#13;
flurteias beta*the B e s t FamilvMedicine evoi&#13;
compounded. Any w o m a n or c h i l d can take it&#13;
"From my knowledge of its ingredients, undei&#13;
no circumstances can It injure any one using it&#13;
It contains no mineral or other deleterious subrtance.&#13;
Possessing real merits, the remedy U&#13;
deserving success.,r&#13;
f C. E. DEPCT, Ph. G , Detroit, Mich.&#13;
The only G e n u i n e are manufactured by tin&#13;
HOPS &amp; MALT BITTERS CO., Dstrolt, Mich.&#13;
T H E B U R D O C K PLANT is one of the&#13;
best diuretirs or Kidney i emulators in&#13;
the vegetable world, and the compound&#13;
known as Burdock Blood Hitters is unsurpassed&#13;
in all diseases of the kidneys,&#13;
liver and blood.&#13;
A sequel to ''Beckett*' is being written by the&#13;
British poet Laureate.&#13;
S'ME R E M A K K A I J L E CUIIKS of deafness&#13;
are recorded of Dr. Thomas1&#13;
Klectric Oil. Never fails to cure earache.&#13;
II. H1XCJIMAX * ^ ' ) N S . Detroit, Mich.. I W h ° H&#13;
.MES Ii. D A V I S &amp; v\&gt; l;etrott, Mtcli, { A Knit;&#13;
T&#13;
J A M E S&#13;
Sitting Bull has sent a present of a buffalo&#13;
robe to his holiness the pope.&#13;
Stated by H. B. Cochran, druggist,&#13;
Lancaster, Pa. Have guaranteed over&#13;
800 bottles of Burdock Blood bitters &lt;or&#13;
dyspepsia, sour stomach, bilious&#13;
attacks, livor and kidney trouble."&#13;
California condoles with Rouuuinla over the&#13;
advent of the 17 years locusts'.&#13;
'BOUGH ON CATAXXH."&#13;
Correct offensive odors at oner-. Complete c u r e&#13;
worst ca8e«,al»o u n e q u a l e d as gargle for D l p u t h o n a .&#13;
Sore Throat, Foul Breath. 50c.&#13;
There are no white servants at the White&#13;
House.&#13;
THE HOPE OP^THE NATION.&#13;
^ Children, alow 1n d e v e l o p m e n t , puny, »cr*vfny a a l&#13;
delicate, use "Well'uf lealth lieaewcr."&#13;
Parisian belles now carry pistols.&#13;
CATARRH OF THE BLADDER.&#13;
A Hotel Kan1! Discovery.&#13;
F A N F K A N C I S C O , Cal.—Mr. G e o r g e H .&#13;
Arnold, p r o p r i e t o r of the O c c i d e n t a l&#13;
Hotel, says t h a t as the air is p u r e r as&#13;
we ascend, a m a n should not object to&#13;
feirjg a s s i g n e d to a r o o m on t h e u p -&#13;
p e r m o s t iloor ; t h a t he s h o u l d n ' t m i n d&#13;
t a k i n g a r o o m - a t t i c , as it were, in view&#13;
of tho fact t h a t St. J a c o b ' s Oil so&#13;
p r o m p t l y c u r e s the r h e u m a t i c . B e&#13;
s t a t e s t h a t t h r o u g h o u t California it is&#13;
r e g a r d e d a s the g r e a t pain-cure of the&#13;
age.&#13;
An ullljrator strayed up Into Long Island&#13;
Souud and was eau\ht recently. ,&#13;
Hay-Fever.&#13;
ELY'S CKEAMB.VI.M was recommended to&#13;
me by inv druggist as a preventive to Hay-&#13;
Kever. Have ueen uain^ It as directed since&#13;
thi! lith of August and have found'it a sped tie&#13;
for that much-dreaded anil loathsome disease,&#13;
Kor 1) yi ari or more I have been a great suff'en-&#13;
r each year, from August 'Jtli till frost, and&#13;
have tried "many alleged remedies for Its cure,&#13;
but Kly's Cream Biliu is the only preventive I&#13;
lave ever found. Hay-Fever sufferers ought&#13;
to know of its efticacv.&#13;
FRANK B. AINSWORTH,&#13;
Of F. B. AIN'SWOKTH A: CO., publishers,&#13;
, Indianapolis, Ind.&#13;
I have been afflicted with Hay-Fever for&#13;
seven years— Elv's (jreum Balm*cured me entirely.&#13;
* H. D. CAUJHAN, B«g£:age Master,&#13;
I. cfejSt^L. R. K., Terre Haute, Ind.&#13;
Every'nervous person should try Carter's&#13;
Little NERVE Fibs. They are made specially&#13;
for nervous aud dyspeptic men and women,&#13;
ami are just the medicine needed by all persons&#13;
who, from any cause, do not sleep well, or who&#13;
fail to get proper strength from their food.&#13;
Case* of weak stomach, Indigestion, dyspepsia,&#13;
nervous and sick headache, Ac., readily yield&#13;
to the use of the Little Nerve Pills, particularly&#13;
if combined with. Carter's Little Liver Pills.&#13;
In vials at 25 &lt;-'ejnts;_&#13;
Prairie chickens are nearly as thick as flies In&#13;
Iowa.&#13;
I O B D Y S P E P S I A , iNRiOESTiox, aepresg:on oi Bpirits&#13;
and general debility. In their various forms; r.lso as u&#13;
preventive against fever anti agiu' and other Intermittent&#13;
fevers, the "Ferro-Phusphorated Klixlr of&#13;
Calisaya" m a d e by Caswell Hazard &amp; Co., N e w York,/&#13;
and sold by- all Druggists, Is the heat tonic; und Sot&#13;
patlonta r e c o v e r i n g from fever or other s i c k n e s s It&#13;
has no e&lt;iual. .__&#13;
Blindness has come upon the poet Philip&#13;
Bourke Marston.&#13;
A M E M B E R of the P i o n e e r rrrsB staff, troubled&#13;
for e l e v e n years with oosUhale t e t t e r oti'lils&#13;
Imnds, has c o m p l e t e l y eured It in less than a month.&#13;
by the use of Cole's Carbollsalve,"- P l o u e e r Prt»»&#13;
Si. Paul. - •&#13;
If a f f l i c t e d w i t h s o r e e y e r , u s e D r . I s a a c&#13;
T h o m p s o n ' s E y e W a t e r . D r u g g i s t s s e l l it. 25c.&#13;
P A T E N T S obtained b y Tjouis B a g g e r &amp; Co., A t •&#13;
tofnevs, WttanTngtoL, Di'C.'Bai'd 1864. A d v i c e f r e e .&#13;
U a l f n p r f Q a t i - &gt; a Expressly forfamlly use. Only sold&#13;
n d l l U r U O a u ^ B ) n fjottlea. Best and c h e a p e s t .&#13;
DYSPEPSIA.&#13;
j» cansed by carelesaness In d'et, high l i v i n g e a t l n s&#13;
toO rapidly, too rich fo&lt;jd, uvertaxlng the utomach&#13;
with Indigestible food, &amp;c. Constipation" h e a d a c h e&#13;
heartburn, sour stomach, distress after eating, faintnets,&#13;
dlzrlness, and capricious appetite are s o m e o&#13;
.lie many distressing symptoms. Hood's Sareaparllla&#13;
ones the stomach and promotes healthy digestion,&#13;
thus curing the most obstinate cases of dyspepula.&#13;
"I suffered with dyspepsia many y e a r s and d e&#13;
spalred of e v e r being well. The rnodlctnei I n s e d did&#13;
ine no good. Hood's Sarsapaiilla being recommended,&#13;
I tried It and consider myself entirely well. 1&#13;
eannOt express myself strongly enough in favor of&#13;
ilJod's Sarsapa-ula." Mrs. S. M. UEXDJC, Marblehead,&#13;
Muss,&#13;
"I had dyspepsia several years and tried Hood'sSarsaparlUa&#13;
with t h i very best results. Mrs.M. J. ByAX,&#13;
Indianapolis, Ind.&#13;
Hood's SarsapariUa&#13;
Sold by all druggists. II; afxfor$5. Prepared b y&#13;
C. I. HOOD $ CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, M a u .&#13;
IOO Doses One Dollar.&#13;
HAY F E V E R&#13;
I HAVE been a great&#13;
suffertr front Hay-Fever&#13;
for 15 years. I read of&#13;
the wondrous cures by&#13;
Ely's Crram Balm and&#13;
thought I would iryonce&#13;
more. After one application&#13;
I was wonderfully&#13;
helped. Two weeks&#13;
ago I commenced using&#13;
it and now I feel entirely&#13;
cured. It is the greatest&#13;
discovery known.—Dc-&#13;
HAMKJ. CLAKK, Farmer,&#13;
Lee, Mass.&#13;
WILL PAY YOtT&#13;
TO GO TO&#13;
DETROIT&#13;
AND HAVE YOUR&#13;
EXAMINED AND PITTED W I T H&#13;
SPECTACLES OR EYE GLASSES ,&#13;
ftOEHM &amp; &gt; A W X * I G H T » S ,&#13;
IMPORTERS, JEV7ELERS AND OPTICIANS.&#13;
140 WOODWARD AVE.&#13;
THEY MAKE NO CHARGE FORI&#13;
TESTING EYES. AND SELDOM&#13;
FAIL TO GIVE RELIEF.&#13;
•army" o'f grass-&#13;
A Ealoon-Keepcr's Lnck.&#13;
Mr. J. D. Jinks of Hrookland, Atk.,&#13;
a town distant some/JO miles froul' this&#13;
city, on the Texas and St. Louis parrow&#13;
guage railroad, has been in tho city for&#13;
two or three days, buying y stock of&#13;
liquors, cigars, etc A*Ledger reporter&#13;
learned that Mr. Jinks w a r the ho'dcr&#13;
of one-lifth of ticket No/48,954, which&#13;
drew Sic second capital'prize of $t?5,-&#13;
000 in the last drawing of the Louisiana&#13;
State Lottery, and questioned him concerning&#13;
his streak of good luck and&#13;
what he intended doing with it. "Ye3,&#13;
1 bought the ticjtet in this city, and was&#13;
somewhat surprised at the result, t&#13;
have bought tickets befbie, but the investment&#13;
has always met wi'h poor returns.&#13;
When asked if he intended giving&#13;
up Ivis present business and embarking&#13;
in i o m e other on a larger scale, tho&#13;
gentleman smiled and answered that he&#13;
w'ould only add the amount to his sinking&#13;
fund, and ' oritinuc business at tho&#13;
,^ld stand. The $."),0 )0 was colic ted&#13;
through the German national bank of&#13;
this city Wv. Jinks ,s a pleasant and&#13;
agreeable gentleman, and does not&#13;
snub any o his lormer friends on account&#13;
of his good fortune.—Memphis&#13;
(Tenn.) Ledger, July 2i).&#13;
DR. JOHN BULL'S&#13;
LSiiafsTiic S&#13;
FQR T H E CURE O F&#13;
FEVER and AGUE&#13;
Or CHILLS and FEVER,&#13;
AND ALL MALARIAL DISEASES.&#13;
The proprietor of this celebrated medicine&#13;
justly claims for it a superiority over all remedies&#13;
ever offered to the public for the 8AFE,&#13;
CERTAIN, SPEEDY aud PERMANENT cure&#13;
of Ague and Fever.or Chills and Fever .whether&#13;
oi short or long standing. He refers to the&#13;
entire Western and Southern -ountry to bear&#13;
him testimony to the truth of the assertion&#13;
that in no caso whatever will it fail to care if&#13;
tnedirectionsarestrictlyfollowedand carried&#13;
out. In a great many cases a single dose has&#13;
been sufficient for a cure, and whole families&#13;
have been cured by a single bottle, with a perfect&#13;
restoration of the general health, It is,&#13;
however, prudent, and in every case more certain&#13;
to cure, if its use is continued in smaller&#13;
doses for a week or two after the disease has&#13;
been cheoked, more especially in diffioult and&#13;
long-standing oases. Usually this medioine&#13;
will not require any aid to keep the bowels in&#13;
good order. Should the patient, however, require&#13;
acath&amp;rticmedrcinerafteThaviugtaken&#13;
three or four doses of the Tonic, a single dose&#13;
of KENT'S VEGETABLE FAMILY FILLS&#13;
will be sufficient. Use no other.&#13;
D R . J O H N B U L L ' S&#13;
SMITH'S TONIC SYRUP,&#13;
BULL'S SARSAPARILLA,&#13;
BULL'S WORM DESTROYER,&#13;
Tho Popular Remedies of the Daya&#13;
Principal Office, 831 lilnln St, LOUISTIT.LB,KT.&#13;
HALL'S&#13;
~ stinging, irriuiiao. wnafommo-n;mr&#13;
Urinary Cumplalnu, cured by "Uuchu-l't Kidney S E T&#13;
a l b A / V S l .&#13;
Is Recommended by &gt;hysiclansl&#13;
Wemamifiuture and sell it with a p o s i t i v e&#13;
g u a r a n t e e t h a t K. wi2! e u r o any&#13;
c a s e * and wo will forfAii tbo above amvuut&#13;
ifaftiisin &amp; s i n g l e I n s t a n c e ,&#13;
It la u n l i k e any -ether Catarrh remedy, as&#13;
'tii t a k e n internally, a c t i n g u p o n&#13;
t h e blOed* If y^u ar§ troublt-dTrlthTthis&#13;
distressing disease,asfc yourDrusnjfst for it.and&#13;
ACCEPT NO IMITATION OS SLBBTITUTK. If hfl&#13;
has not got it, send to u« and we will forward&#13;
tmmtdiately. Price, 75 c*ntsper bott!»,&#13;
• — P . 1 (1HFNSY * 0 0 Toledo. Ohlft&#13;
PlEWARD" wtn 6* p*M ftir «BJ Orala F m « -&#13;
nf i»iu« »ii» Ihil (»a clc»B u&gt;d&#13;
l,«t %} much Grkin nr SKSI In »a«&#13;
.lav ttour P«t«Ht M O N A U t M&#13;
Urmln mu4 (l«ed H^pamtof&#13;
•n.l B»KS«r or our l a i p r « r « 4&#13;
W « r t h * « M Mill «&gt;Ui fc\u«ilicr&#13;
wliich « • o(I«r oir«p. C l n v&#13;
Ur kDd PTIC* M&gt;t aailtd r&gt;Mk&#13;
All Sorts of&#13;
hurts and u&amp;uy sorts of ails of&#13;
man and beast need a cooling&#13;
lotion. Mustang Liniment.&#13;
Cream Balm&#13;
has gained an enviable reputation&#13;
w h e r e v e r known,&#13;
displacing all other preparations.&#13;
A particle Is applied&#13;
Into earh nostril; no pain;&#13;
airei'atile to use. HAY-FEVER&#13;
' Hce SOc- D y m a " o r ** drugjflsta. Send for circular,&#13;
/ KLY BKO'l'UKBS. Druggl«t^, Uwego, N. Y.&#13;
IM C H E A P , S T R O N G , e a s y t » « P p I y , d o c 9&#13;
n o t r n u t o r r m t t l e . 1« alt^-A""HTJBST1TUTE&#13;
F O B P L . A 8 T E K , jftt H a l f t h e C o s t i ottt-&#13;
U i U t h e b n l l d i a K - C A K P E T S A N D K U U S&#13;
of same, doubte the wear of cil cloths. Catalogue and&#13;
umjAiurfrt*. W . H . F A Y &amp; 1 0 . , C a z n d e n , X J .&#13;
ftnujl laais Agricultural Works, York, Fa,&#13;
LfailuM Standard Eopiart k Saw lilft&#13;
We W a n t 5,000 More Bc^i: Agent*tf&gt; Sell&#13;
T h e Personal-History of&#13;
TW lw*k » b r v n tk, G m n l ' l ntin Ml^tirj, r^tn nrriw, IM&#13;
BrtTtli m m , tod i» « • &gt;••{ t»«:pUt« &gt;i4 MLubt* h jt.rr if LIB • »&#13;
Uat. A l l r n tiiadtcnt KIITI ?olu»,, aupartlj tn«M»l*l&#13;
W t n a i H a * f « t U t,,r» Ur»rJ Araf PtM u d '.ntrrrr [•••atitp. tnA&#13;
f*r fu.1 ritlKiiten &gt;&gt;4 BflCUL TE»M"&lt; TO AUEVM. or M U N M M ,&#13;
M , I O I HT i n 4 l u k c u . frr •»!«•. '*'»-•&gt;•« ikli p»o»t 1 Aiintt.&#13;
AntRICAS P U B - M 8 H 1 N R C O . , H e r t f o r d&#13;
B o « f a « C h i c a g o t C i n c i n n a t i , o r S t . L.«Mi» DROPSY&#13;
TREATED FBEE.&#13;
DR. H. H.GREEN,&#13;
A S p e c i a l i s t for I Ie\ on V^cr« F a s t ,&#13;
lias Merited i rop-y a i l its c nyv.t'.i.l ns with tlia&#13;
ii ogt won,'.erfiii suci-'S''; u-*f- VF per a'. 1-- io ' I H I I M&#13;
• n. n-)v lini'.i le-g I.e-Miovoj ;il sysnpt &gt;u\s A dr. p y&#13;
lu &lt;lgUt to i w p i t v i'ay?.&#13;
Cure* P i:iciiti iT^nounc? J J&gt; r&gt;c'^ss liy t h i b^st ot&#13;
! livsli .% \*.&#13;
Vtoniihc' frit t'ose the iv!n?to-n« '-a-il'K dl.'ap-&#13;
;'( ar. end in ten il^ys at k a i t t w o - i h : i a » of all symp-&#13;
:01^8 arc re :io\ ed.&#13;
Sinu' ir.ay cry liamluisrwithout Jcnowlni? » a v t h l n j&#13;
«l'«&gt;i t ". l.ei^u':n i r, It doc* not co yon anytti n&lt;&#13;
. o n al ze the mc'ilt* cf mv t r e a f r i n' fo • yourself.&#13;
1 a;n c T i a i r . l - c u r . i n ; cases or i n , sundlntr. ca^ei&#13;
:iui&lt;--h-(vf been—tnpi-e ! a m i n e - or ' t 'les, nad the&#13;
patlca; do • a-vU nnali'v to i n e a « , e.]z. 1.,1 pe full&#13;
Ut..ry ot c a e , &gt;,'a 1 ic sox, h'nw !• ••TSC I "tU'tccl. h &gt;w&#13;
11*\ 1 v-«,-w-*ttvii Hft4 -w- h-er;v. 4 * Iwnv*^»^t&gt; U-« |ia v c !&gt;v ci&#13;
i m r e : an 1 (i i,'pcd wrttc-\ S--n4 fn . e • pam.d.le .&#13;
ci n A til' K '.ci: ii)0'!l-i:.H, tjucs 1 n&lt;,v c.&#13;
I o;i i av s' t, I'irmra' furnl-hM hy m:il'.&#13;
E.'i.« p v lit-1 o it'\ c!v c i:e .. \ /&#13;
it o r - t r tr.a:. i c i l i cc .•&lt; ! is:amp» , o " ^ v ros'aif*&#13;
H M. c.KKKNVM. 1&gt;..&#13;
:Vi,T&gt;;i * Ave'iiic A.'ft-ita. G:i.&#13;
Dr. Baiter of the BrlKht&lt;jn, Enjrland. Hospital, aays:&#13;
"Kldge's Food rcscmbh-j* t h e motU 1-^41111 fc so cloaely&#13;
that infants are reared, and WELL reared, exclu»ively&#13;
upon It." Another physician, at the head of an orphan&#13;
asylum, says: "I have he.en iiitlnj? this preparation for&#13;
live yearn or more, and have the moitt unbounded&#13;
faith In it as g diet for infants up to, say, elgiitecu&#13;
months old."&#13;
Canada's M I s k d Pair AND AGRICXTXTTJBAL EXPOSITION&#13;
1883.&#13;
Will be held at the City of TOKOKTO, September 0th&#13;
to 19th.&#13;
THE largest Prizes, and the bent :»hr&gt;w of Horapa.&#13;
Cattle. Sheep, I*iK*. Poultry. Agricultural. Horticultural&#13;
and Dairy Products. Machinery, Inirlc'ijents&#13;
and Manufactures of all kinds in the- rJomlulon uf&#13;
Canada.&#13;
Prize Lists and Entry FynriS will be sent a n y w h e r e&#13;
on application hy post-card to the aec-&#13;
. f e t a r y , at Toronto.&#13;
Entrtea-cTose A u g u s t '2d. A larffe number of snerlal&#13;
attractions are heintf prcpaied for tiiat time, for&#13;
full particulars of w h i c h see special programmes.&#13;
CTreap rates and e x c u r s i o n s on al railways. The iA&gt;st&#13;
time to visit the City uf Toroutu.&#13;
J. J. W11 nr.ovy, H. J. H I L L .&#13;
President. Manager a n i Secretary.&#13;
IF RAGES&#13;
LIQUID GLUE e Ii nwdbrthouMndJof fintclass rtaanfuerrrrore "" "&#13;
and MecniTiics on their uest work. Keeuivcd&#13;
GOLD MEDAL.London."fl3. l&gt;roj\oune*di"^)-st&#13;
flutknotm. Send cardrf^df ilerw'io dr*s not keep&#13;
it,with. Ave 2c «t»mpi for 6AM PLE CAN p p C t&#13;
Bossia Cement Co. .Gloccccter.Mass, LHE1-'&#13;
Tff&#13;
OVER&#13;
1600&#13;
INCH&#13;
N E W E N G L A N D&#13;
CONSERVATORY OF MUSIQ&#13;
B o s t o n , M a a s . , O L D E S T In America: L a r g e s t&#13;
a n d B e s t E q u i p p e d in the W O U L D — l i &gt; » I nstri^t-&#13;
6rs, 1 9 7 1 Stitdtms hist year. Thorouuh 1 iistructu&gt;ti i:i&#13;
Vocal and Instruiiientii!'MiKie. Piano iisid Or^'iin Tun-&#13;
In?. Fine-Art'i. Oratory, Literature 1 rem Ti. (lcnn,i:i,&#13;
and Itulian Luneiint:"*. KnelisM Ur.melic-s, Cvmnas'!. -,&#13;
etc. Tuition, *"&gt; to f*r. tx-ard and room. SVJ tu $;"&gt;&#13;
per term. F a l l T e r m tie-'ins Sri.trnr-rr fl, l^-&gt;. y,.t&#13;
Illustrated I'.iletul.ir. Kiviiu' (nil ::1:^1 niition. mlili-'1&#13;
U&#13;
fAROUHAR VIBRATING SEPARATOR&#13;
_ » u»EuNrDi rrermm CAATTAALLOOCGu S.&#13;
11&#13;
kiinm. A. D. F i a q L U i a , York&#13;
JOSEPH CI LLOTTS&#13;
STEEL PENS&#13;
SOLD Br ALL LlEALERSTHRouci-iouTTHe W 0 R LD&#13;
GOLD MEDAL PARIS E X P 0 S I T I O N - I 8 7 8 .&#13;
R. U. AWARE&#13;
THAT&#13;
Lorillard's Cliznas Plug&#13;
b e u r l n c a -ed tin tag; t h a t Lorillard's&#13;
" • K v t e I ^ e n f tine c u t ; Chat LorlUar.M&#13;
V n v y C ' l i p p l i i v a a n d th.it Lorillard's 8 n u &amp; s . a . i&#13;
the best a n i ^ « » p " " ' , «"^'1tr o n ^ d c r e d ?&#13;
CONSUMPTION. 1 hare a poiltive remedy for tha above disea»«; by lt«&#13;
UIO thiiosan » of c&amp;sea ol tho wont k iad ;iiiil of Ion?&#13;
stindlnsr llaTe^eencl4red. iTulecti, 'ost-"ri^is mTfnUh&#13;
la lisertlcacy.tlmt I wl I nendTV.'O BOTTi.ES KREB,&#13;
WjjetncT &gt;-"" a V.».! " ».''!.^".'"- iTTSK'on thindiseua&#13;
tOia/£Ufi"i-ror. Givrfc.t;r&lt;4ia:iJ P O. adiir f^.&#13;
SK. T. A. SLOCUM.lbl Pearl St., New York.&#13;
/t UDY AGENTS Verm.ilient&#13;
o m v I o M i n u t und poiM swh.r-/&#13;
rielhu/ &lt;i«tH&gt;n C i t y S k i r t am/&#13;
onttU fff*-. Am'.re^s t'iiiciuu4ii&#13;
S u s p e n d e r Co., CuicuuiMt,, O&#13;
S OLDiEHS N E - V I.A.'W;&#13;
, _ CO;;HII!MI;I U ,&#13;
F r n i l o n i A:I&lt;1 hieren^e&#13;
imcoeg* or s o teo W i l l&#13;
O f i l c e r s ' pny frnTi&#13;
D -s'tT'erftT l:CTed;&#13;
,-\p'-: 18 l--e l:i vears J&#13;
""r c':vij,;-.ri a a l law*.&#13;
-A. W. Mci;ORUiC&amp; &amp; SOIf. Cluctauail, Oalo.&#13;
KIDDER'S PASTILIf&amp;0S£!S&#13;
OPIUft!&#13;
ris^Cowsi,&#13;
M o » p l i i n « » Hs»!:lf O r e d I n 1 0&#13;
t o J ( M » &lt; » V « . N u p a v .1 1 C u r e d .&#13;
D B . , J . bi'iruA.ss, LubaLoa, Uhl&lt;&gt;.&#13;
iliMCECLECTRI&amp;OIL bago. Lame Back, Sprains l i w B i B i W • 1 ^ 1 ¾ ^ W I M&#13;
and Bruises, Asthma, Catarrh, Coughs, Colds, Sore Throat. Diphtt:ria, Bums, |&#13;
Frost Bites, Tooth, Ear, and Headache, and all pains and Aches.&#13;
FOSTER, MILltrRy&amp; COMp,Ayr. Proprietor*, Enffalof&gt; line Tor*, V. 8. A.&#13;
. . L Y D I A C . P I N K H A M ' 8 . *&#13;
VEGETABLE COMPO^-D&#13;
• , • IS A POSITIVE CURE TOR * « /&#13;
A l l tlione p » l » r u l C u m p l a l n t *&#13;
* t * d &gt;» u»kne«)&lt;r» i « t o i u i u o n &lt;&#13;
* # • « • * t o our b « » t » • * * » •&#13;
., • FESALK POrULATIOS.« ,&#13;
frit* $1 !• U««M, y i U w MMap «*»•&#13;
• m tmrpom to toieiy / 1 • tht legiHinaU *«oi»nv «&#13;
ditaue and tkt reliff of pain, m\d that &gt; doe* aU&#13;
it claims to do, thousandsofladi*sca* 0'otf«v ttstifi. *&#13;
• It will cure entirvly &amp;11 ur*rlan trouble*. InfUmaK&#13;
tlon and Ulceration, Failing and Inaplhoucuala, am.&#13;
oonaeqacat Spinal WcakneM, a;.d ir uanlcolarJ^&#13;
adapted t o the change of life. * » * • * • * • * • * •&#13;
• It remoreo Katutn«i», Flatulencr, d*»trorsall CTavlnlf&#13;
for »tiinulanV&lt;, artd rellerea Wea^nv« of the sto»i*.'b&#13;
,11 care* Bloating^ Headache*, :Jer»oii8 rro^ratlon,&#13;
General iH^ilUy, Slee.ple^nene. lHjpmsaion and lndl&#13;
geetlon. That fed'.nx of kx^rtng down, causing pain,&#13;
an&lt; baclraohc. is alw»».« pemianeDtly eured br H» u *&#13;
• Send atamp to hfaix, iUsx., for aamphlec. Lettor*p&#13;
"t""i"^"u lrrvoAOde: tenl\M,UjMMAweihl.fruitalfatdr*.Jt***&#13;
e » « « * e e ^&#13;
W. K. V. O—S—34&#13;
The Mirror&#13;
is no flatterer. Would you&#13;
make it tell a sweeter tale?&#13;
Magnolia Balm is the charmer&#13;
that almost cheats&#13;
looking-glass.&#13;
\&#13;
\&#13;
• •'?&gt;=&#13;
•i. v &gt; - / • N&#13;
l \ \ ^&#13;
~4if4&#13;
« ! i&#13;
•!i|-&#13;
i.&#13;
• •. i,&#13;
i&#13;
;;*' s&#13;
* • ! ) ! . • I&#13;
Ml;&#13;
? r&#13;
:1&#13;
If&#13;
r*v,&#13;
( t&#13;
I&#13;
/&#13;
:..v,&#13;
Additional Home News.&#13;
V/m, Yancy returned Monday.&#13;
Walter Reason, of East Saginaw,&#13;
visited his brothers here this week.&#13;
The ladies of the M. E . church will&#13;
give a ' b e a n " social at the residence&#13;
of Mr. Geo. Ismon on Thursday eve.,&#13;
Aug, 27. Good music and the game&#13;
of beans will be the special features&#13;
of the evening. No effort will be&#13;
spared to make the occasion an enjoyable&#13;
one.&#13;
Through perseverence Anderson&#13;
has at last been made a postoffice,&#13;
and J . T. Earoan (rep.) \yi\\ be the&#13;
P . M. Evidently Mr. Eaman isn't&#13;
an "offensive partisan," and we are&#13;
confident he will give satisfaction to&#13;
the people. He will begin official&#13;
duty as soon as his commission arrives,&#13;
which may be to-day.&#13;
We understand there is a farm in&#13;
this vicinity upon which is growing&#13;
Canada thistles, and the owner thereof&#13;
is taking no pains to keep them&#13;
from going to seed. The law is quite&#13;
strict on this question; and, besides,&#13;
we should hardly thirik a man&#13;
would so far forget his own interests&#13;
—to say nothing of his neighbors—&#13;
as to let these pesky things once get&#13;
root in his soil.&#13;
-»—•—&lt;•-&#13;
UNADILLA REMARKS.&#13;
From our Correspondent.&#13;
J. Pickell is much worse this week.&#13;
Mima Pyper is on the gain, although&#13;
she looks rather pale and&#13;
thin.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Ed, Keizer spent the&#13;
Sabbath with his people in Francisco&#13;
ville.&#13;
Etta Stiles, of Lansing, visited, her&#13;
sister Ella and grandma Hays last&#13;
week.&#13;
Bertie Rugg has been home from&#13;
South Lyon for a visit to his mother&#13;
and brother.&#13;
Jimmie Livermore has returned&#13;
home from his labors on the lakes,&#13;
around Michigan.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs, Wm. Livermore have&#13;
gone to Bancroft to see their daughter,&#13;
Mrs. Fred"Douglas.&#13;
Mrs. (r. K. Moore and Hattiehave&#13;
gbne to Stockbridge to see the new&#13;
boy baby that came to live with&#13;
Emory and Georgie Holmes last week.&#13;
Flora Watson is on the, sick list&#13;
this week; but her son Johnnie, who&#13;
has been suffering with several of&#13;
"Job's comforters" lately, is much&#13;
better.&#13;
Mrs. M. J. Wagoner and Mrs. H.&#13;
Carpenter, of Galesburg, 111..; Mr.&#13;
Lockwood, Mrs. Jane Griffith and&#13;
h e r son Sidney; of Sing Sing, N. Y.,&#13;
are visiting their many .relatives in&#13;
Unadilla and Lyndon. -&gt;&#13;
loudly waited the result ot his, lour&#13;
week's stay in Detroit.&#13;
Quite a sensation was in a fair way&#13;
to make food for the tongues of curious&#13;
ones Monday, but as near as we&#13;
can learn it has all blown over. A&#13;
West Side lady thought sho had been&#13;
scandalized to that extent winch nothsin&gt;?&#13;
but law could adjust, and she went&#13;
'to Howell for the purpose of having&#13;
warrants issued for several prominent&#13;
citizens, both malq, and female. Perhaps&#13;
the Pros. Attorney has got his&#13;
fill of such business from this town,&#13;
and desired a rest.&#13;
STOCKBRIDGE NOTES.&#13;
from the Sun.&#13;
"Shall we have a saloon," is the&#13;
brewing question. Let every individual&#13;
who loves good order and sobriety,&#13;
who has the best interests of our sons&#13;
and daughters at heart, respond with&#13;
an emphatic "NO!'.'&#13;
0. K. Brownell has a four-legged&#13;
chicken, brisk and lively. It only&#13;
uses two of its legs for walking however.&#13;
It doesn't fall to the lot of&#13;
simple men like editors to view such&#13;
curiosities often.&#13;
As the railroad company would not&#13;
offer sufficient inducements therefor,&#13;
Wm. Cochran, of Wiliiamston, will&#13;
not erect a grain house as contemplated.&#13;
The company are laboring&#13;
under a mistake when they suppose&#13;
they will get fust as much produce,&#13;
withovrt a competition in the wheat&#13;
market at this place,~OT along the line&#13;
of their road, as they would with such.&#13;
Men are slow to submit to one man&#13;
power, and the other roads are too&#13;
close not to effect them bv this course.&#13;
HOWELL COMMENTS.&#13;
From the Uer&gt;ublican.&#13;
Mrs. C. Carl, an old and respected&#13;
pioneer resident of this township, living&#13;
three miles northwest of here,&#13;
4ie4-Saturday -morning. a4 the very&#13;
SOUTH LYON DOTS.&#13;
From the Picket.&#13;
James Carey will buy wheat at&#13;
Hamburg for h. fl. Cogswell, of&#13;
Green Oak.&#13;
.TSyo dogs killed ten sheep and injured&#13;
several others tor J. Harker,&#13;
Tuesday night.&#13;
L. C. Hammond has threshed 850&#13;
bushels of wheat from 25 acres, the&#13;
largest yield we have heard,of.&#13;
The front glass for the bank will be&#13;
82x126 inches in size. One so 1&#13;
is seldom found outside the^&amp;rry&#13;
We understand^DrT^Howes has decided&#13;
to becjorrfe a citizen of New Orleamv-&#13;
ttfT which place he became attached&#13;
on his recent visit there.&#13;
Richard Bridson returned Sa&#13;
night from the Ionia hpjase^bf correc&#13;
tion and since hjsj^turn has been enjoyed&#13;
himselfm his old accust&#13;
st&#13;
IHTOIM SAYINGS.&#13;
From tha^Argus.&#13;
in Odd Fellows lodge will be or&#13;
ganized here in a short time.&#13;
Mr. F. E. Judson was able to come&#13;
home Monday. He i s lookim^-alicl&#13;
felling better than for seYefal years&#13;
past, and the doctpwr^ay his Unit) has&#13;
improved&amp;ttfflctently as to make no&#13;
furthei^trouble. This is good news to&#13;
vanVs many friends, who have anxadvanced&#13;
age of 92 years. The funeral&#13;
occurred Sunday, the remains being&#13;
interred in the Howell cemeterv.&#13;
a/&#13;
John Meyers, a carpenter by trade&#13;
who lives near the fair grounds, was&#13;
arrested Saturday night by Sheriff&#13;
Cook on a warrant made out by the&#13;
prisoner's wife, on tire complaint of&#13;
drunkenness and disorderly conduct&#13;
on the streets a n d - a t his home. After&#13;
sobering-up in the cooler over&#13;
Sunday Meyers was brought before&#13;
Justice Riddle the next morning and&#13;
bound over till the 17th instant.&#13;
Mrs.. Judge Crotoot and son have&#13;
returned to their home' in Howell after&#13;
some weeks stay at the farm*in&#13;
Putnam township.&#13;
From the Democrat.&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Brower, of this place, has&#13;
in her possession an English document,&#13;
dated in 1805, during the reign of&#13;
George the Third, binding her father,&#13;
Jos. Sykes, out to a cotton weaver for&#13;
the period of seven years to learn that&#13;
trade.&#13;
Isaac Teller, in the United States&#13;
government survey, returned-hoine on&#13;
Satuaday for good, as that branch of&#13;
the survey in which he was employed&#13;
has been abandoned for the present&#13;
by the government, no money being&#13;
appropriated for its further existence.&#13;
Being duly eiected County Surveyor&#13;
he will now pay attention to that&#13;
business here.&#13;
An exciting game of base baJUwalf&#13;
played at this Vace last^Fffiiay between&#13;
the HoweftantTFenton dubs,&#13;
resulting m^a^victory for the'home&#13;
t e a m j w a s c o r e ot 21 to 17.&#13;
'Howell had completed raising&#13;
her $20,000 required bonus Tuesday"&#13;
night, and so informed^tn'^A.shley,&#13;
who assured the peopteln return that&#13;
the road wopJd^urely be built h&#13;
andjtbalTihe work of cpjwtfuetion&#13;
ould shortly commej«re^from Howell&#13;
north, gangs^of^worknien being stationed^&#13;
a+ialong the line/ The ea-st&#13;
melrom Howell is not definately settled&#13;
upon as yet, or that it will go to&#13;
Brighton is not a positive fact. It is&#13;
designed soon to make a surveyJj&#13;
here south through H a m b u j ^ ^ n d the&#13;
company may decjde-^to take that&#13;
route. Mr^jjE^TeT of the syndicate&#13;
who haj^Tcontracted for the building&#13;
lie road, is daily expected here to&#13;
begin operations on the northern portion.&#13;
A large force of hands will be&#13;
put at W6rk, it being the design to&#13;
have the cars running by the first of&#13;
January. Thesright of'way and aid&#13;
north from here has been secured.&#13;
BARGAINS! BARGAINS! BARGAI&#13;
We offer, this month, decided bargains in every department ttf clean up stock.&#13;
PRINTS and GINGHAMS in STAPLES and DRESS GOODS.&#13;
And all light weight Worsteds marked down to prices that will close them out at once.&#13;
PARASOLS, FANS, ETC., ^¾^¾¾¾^¾LEFTBUTTNEYMUSTGO'WECARRYNOTHINQOVER&#13;
SHAWLS—SHETLAND, CASHMERE&#13;
And all S U M M E R S H A W L S we will CLOSE OUT regardless of COST.&#13;
TEAS, TEAS, TEAS, TEAS. We have just opened up a very fine line of New Teas iu&#13;
GREEN &amp; UNCOLORED JAPS, OOLONG DUSTS, ETC/&#13;
Try a pound of our 40 cent Tea, we guarantee it to draw with any 50 cent Tea in town.&#13;
All in search of Bargains should visit our store this month for we&#13;
intend to m^ke things HUM if low prices and good&#13;
goods can do it. Come and see us when you have anything&#13;
to sell. Come and see us when in search&#13;
yZg^ei goods.*^g&#13;
"West End Store." LAKIN &amp; SYKES.&#13;
PRICE LIST&#13;
-of-&#13;
GROCERIES&#13;
-at-&#13;
RICHARDS'&#13;
Sugar, Granulated 7£c&#13;
" Confectioners A 7c&#13;
" Extra C. Y e l l o w . . . . . . b'.J u Brown e.. .. .5i&#13;
Coffee, Arbuckles 18c&#13;
" Dilworth 18c&#13;
" McLaughlin's xxxx 18c&#13;
•k Old Government Java and Mocho&#13;
mixed 30e&#13;
" Green Rio- 12k&#13;
T e a s . . . 15,25,40,50,00c&#13;
Pure Spices, per lb 40c&#13;
YOU WILL ALWAYS FIND&#13;
BEST GOODS AhD LOW PRICES&#13;
AT WINCHELL'S DRUG STORE.&#13;
Bird Seed,&#13;
Saleratus,&#13;
Corn Starch,&#13;
Gloss Starch,-&#13;
Raisins,&#13;
Rice,&#13;
Prunes,&#13;
Oat Meal,&#13;
(i&#13;
((&#13;
•OC "\ •» . . . . .&#13;
8c&#13;
. . . . . . 7 c&#13;
8c&#13;
8c&#13;
10 to 12c&#13;
.8c&#13;
iC&#13;
4c&#13;
.Galvanic&#13;
Soap, 3 bars for 25c ITT.. . Ivory&#13;
I Magnetic&#13;
Soap; 4 bars for 25c. \ V \ v ' ' ' J / e n o 1 ' ( Anti washboardJ&#13;
Town Talk, G bars, 25c&#13;
Lard, per lb 10c&#13;
Herring, per box, 20c&#13;
White Pish. 10 lb kits ..$\m&#13;
Mackerel, 15 lb kits, .^J^CJlro&#13;
Dried Beef, sliced, per lb^-r-rT'... .18c&#13;
Sugar-cured H a m s ^ &gt; ^ T l i e&#13;
Mason Fruit Cansfl qt., per doz. $1/25&#13;
" 2 u 11.50&#13;
THE GOQDS&#13;
•iflGHESTET&#13;
PRICE&#13;
BUTTER&#13;
WR PRODUCE MARKET.-&#13;
CORRECTED WEEKLY BT&#13;
Aug 20,1885. TOMPKINS*ISMON&#13;
Wheat, No. 1 white,.&#13;
" No. a white,.&#13;
No. 2 red,.,.&#13;
No. 3 red,.&#13;
Oats&#13;
Corn&#13;
Barley,&#13;
Beans,.&#13;
Dried Apples ftVft .()0&#13;
Potatoes, 86® .40&#13;
Butter, la&#13;
KggB. .,...^....,:. 10&#13;
lluimml ffliickens 1¾&#13;
Clover Seed -,,,,¾ 4.S0&#13;
DreewedPork • 5.00&#13;
P T T H I S MONTH.&#13;
SWJEWUlf REDUCTIONS&#13;
fti order to Close&#13;
A&#13;
ARLY,&#13;
E THE SIZES ARE BROKEN.&#13;
W.B. HOFF.&#13;
Sold by F I R E ARMS,&#13;
HABDWARE&#13;
and Other&#13;
Trade.&#13;
- *&#13;
\&#13;
jTm %.'&#13;
*«wwrti'—&gt;-</text>
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          <description>Extra information that can be shown with the item.  Such as how to get a physical copy of the item.</description>
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            <elementText elementTextId="36196">
              <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="3009">
                <text>Pinckney Dispatch August 20, 1885</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="3010">
                <text>August 20, 1885 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
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              <elementText elementTextId="3011">
                <text>Newspaper archives</text>
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            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="3012">
                <text>No Copyright - United States</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
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              <elementText elementTextId="3013">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="3014">
                <text>1885-08-20</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="3015">
                <text>J.L. Newkirk</text>
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        <name>pinckney dispatch</name>
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