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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. XV. PINOKNEY. No. 23&#13;
BiR&amp;AIB&#13;
SATURDAY, JUNE 12,&#13;
And continuing for one week:&#13;
5 Pieces Plaid Suitings at 4½&#13;
5 Pieces 36in. Fancy Suitings,&#13;
Regular 12¾ quality at 8¾&#13;
5 Pieces Corded Dimity 6¾&#13;
Ladies' Fine Shoes&#13;
$2.00 and $2.50 Values at $1.79&#13;
25 per cent discount on embroidery&#13;
Butter and Eggs Wanted. n.&#13;
Edwin Town of the Brighton Argus&#13;
anditia*Ida^ykee-wer*united Jn&#13;
marriage on Wednesday ending last&#13;
June 2. A special editioi^ the 4*-{tf18 village TaeBday.&#13;
gna was required to make the necessary&#13;
announcement.&#13;
Business Pointers.&#13;
NOTICE.&#13;
Notice is hereby given tbat sealed&#13;
bids will be received by me for the&#13;
performance of the duties of Village&#13;
Marshal to and until second Monday&#13;
in April, 1898. Said bids to be presented&#13;
at regular meeting, July 5th,&#13;
1897. Council reserves the right to&#13;
reject any or all bids.&#13;
R. H. TEKPLI,&#13;
Village Clerk.&#13;
L o c a l D i s p a t c h e s .&#13;
Lee Alley, of Dexter, was a callerTn&#13;
All kinds of Job Printing done&#13;
this office. Call and get prices.&#13;
at&#13;
Hotlce.&#13;
finhan giant fodder seed corn for&#13;
gale at 60c per bu JOHN W. HABRLS.&#13;
WANTED!&#13;
1,000 bu. corn, 1,000 bu. oats at&#13;
highest market price. C. L. BOWMAN.&#13;
ftoticc.&#13;
We will grind Feed Tuesday's and&#13;
Friday's. Feed Brand and Corn Meal&#13;
lor sale. C. L. BOWMAN.&#13;
Wool. Wool*&#13;
I am in the market for all kinds of&#13;
wool. Bring it in and get full market&#13;
prioe. THOB. BEAD.&#13;
JIOTlCf.&#13;
All persons who haye not paid ns&#13;
All or nearly all of their accounts&#13;
within six months, please call and do&#13;
BABKABD k CAMPBBLL.&#13;
)&#13;
Program Cards, School Cards, Envelopes,&#13;
Letter Heads, Note Heads,&#13;
Auction Bills, etc. Ceil and get&#13;
sample*.&#13;
Mrs. A. Goodspeed, of Howell, was&#13;
a guest of friends in this place the&#13;
first of the week.&#13;
Mrs. B. Jeffreys and granddaughter,&#13;
Miss Ella Black, are visiting relatives&#13;
in Detroit this week.&#13;
Mrs. Hattie Campbell is spending&#13;
several weeks with her daughter, Mrs.&#13;
N, B. Mamm, at Detroit.&#13;
Master Eugene Reason has so far&#13;
recovered from hi8*operation for apendicitis,&#13;
as to be able to walk.&#13;
Mark Swarthout is authority for&#13;
the statement that he and Mr. Maier&#13;
sa w a bald-head eagle near their place&#13;
last Tuesday.&#13;
Adelbert Finch and wife of Henrietta&#13;
have been the guests of bis brother,&#13;
B. E. Finch several days during&#13;
the past week.&#13;
The article on "Care and prepara.&#13;
7 SHOT DEAD,&#13;
Alfred Wilson, of Iosco, Aeeldently&#13;
Killed.&#13;
A Gun In the Hands of his Stepson did&#13;
the Terrible Deed.&#13;
i ABOUT&#13;
ONE MAN IN M TEN&#13;
Word was received here last Saturday&#13;
evening that Alfred Wilson, of&#13;
Iosco, was instantly killed by a gun in&#13;
the hands of his step-son, Fred Montague.&#13;
It seems that young Montague&#13;
was getting ready to shoot&#13;
wood-chuoks but discovering some rust&#13;
on the gun began to wipe the barrel&#13;
when it was accidentally discharged,&#13;
Mr. Wilson receiving the entire charge&#13;
of shot just below the heart, and died&#13;
immediately. The step-son is nearly&#13;
crazed with grief.&#13;
Mr. Wilson was born in Leroy, Ing.&#13;
county, Sept. 12, 1855, In 1877 he&#13;
married Mrs. Jane Montague, and has.&#13;
since lived on her farm in Iosco. He&#13;
was insured in the Maccabee order for&#13;
12,000. He leaves a wife and two&#13;
sons, besides a host of friends, to&#13;
mourn their loss. His remains were&#13;
burried in the Chapel cemetery, Iosco,&#13;
Monday. The deceased was a brother&#13;
of M. C. Wilson, of this place.&#13;
tion of cream and butter," will be&#13;
"concluded ~next~week. This should&#13;
prove a very interesting topic for our&#13;
farmer readers.&#13;
Do hot forget the benefit social for&#13;
Rev. N. W. Pierce at the home of&#13;
S. K. Hause, Tuesday, June 15. Every&#13;
one especially invited and requested&#13;
in particular to be present.&#13;
The M. E. society at the Lakin's&#13;
appointment will serve Ice Cream at&#13;
Mrs* G. W. Dinkis's, on Wednesday&#13;
evening. Jane 16. All come and have&#13;
a large dish of the article.&#13;
The Chesaning Argus came out last&#13;
week with a special edition containing&#13;
the write-up of the schools with \&#13;
illustrations. The paper did credit to&#13;
the management and speaks well for&#13;
the town.&#13;
Owing to lack of room the proceedings&#13;
of the common council could not&#13;
be printed this week. We notice,&#13;
however, that the council voted to extend&#13;
the time of closing the saloon&#13;
1 one-half hour, or until 10 o'clock local&#13;
H. G. Briggs is on the sick list,&#13;
The lady bicyclists of Fowlerville&#13;
have organized a club.&#13;
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Well Bennett&#13;
of Howell, a son, May 31.&#13;
P. W. Merithew of Howell was in&#13;
town Saturday on business.&#13;
Homer VanCamp of Ooeola, ownes a&#13;
calf"that"aTbTrlh'w^gtiedrr&amp;Hfosr —&#13;
Miss Florence Cook is entertaining&#13;
her cousin, Miss Mildred Gregory of&#13;
Bay City.&#13;
John Sigler of Leslie was the guest&#13;
of Hon. George W. Teeple and wife&#13;
the^ past week.&#13;
Children's Day exercises at the M.&#13;
E. church next Sunday morning.&#13;
Everyone welcome.&#13;
Mrs. John Wolfer, of Chelsea, was&#13;
aguest of her daughtes, Mrs, J. A.&#13;
Cadwell, the past week.&#13;
Mrs. John Schenck and a friend, of&#13;
Chelsea, were gnests of Mrs. J. A.&#13;
Cadwell the last of last week.&#13;
The latest fad at Brighton is girl's&#13;
base ball team. A game was played&#13;
there last week between two rival&#13;
nines.'&#13;
A good deal of fine hay could be&#13;
cut from the aides of the streets this&#13;
year. The season has been just right&#13;
DOES NOT&#13;
. . Trade With . .&#13;
. . . . us . . . . .&#13;
We're After That Man!&#13;
About one man in ten doaen't know&#13;
that his neighbors are saving money on&#13;
every deal, because they trade with us,&#13;
We're After That Man!&#13;
About one man in ten can't be expected&#13;
to know that we are headquarters for&#13;
A '&#13;
' • * / ,&#13;
' *&#13;
•'--=:1&#13;
•j M&#13;
And we expect to get his trade&#13;
ARE YOU THE TENTH MAN?&#13;
WE'RE AFTER YOU!&#13;
F. A. SIGLER;&#13;
PXNCKNEY, MKJH.&#13;
• • *&#13;
_ \ V E A R E&#13;
*i&#13;
•if. •&#13;
for a good growth.&#13;
Two houses on banks on Portage&#13;
lake. By the weak, month or season&#13;
Bent nttwakaVsttttt .-2. Braxm.&#13;
Anderson Repair Shops—Brasin*&#13;
and »MMPt4i«#vBiey#i. f w ^ M&#13;
ttowen aid other retakinc both&#13;
wood an ire*. Bike* aad fcatjdms,&#13;
h m r i OouaujR.&#13;
M»O Congregational society of&#13;
Church Workers will serve their regular&#13;
montbjfr tea at the heme of Mrs.&#13;
Geo. Brow, Wednesday afternoon,&#13;
June 16th. All s*e tnost cordially invited.&#13;
Those bavin* a© way * . ! • ,&#13;
will please be at P. A. Sigler's&#13;
denes at 2 p. m. shar&gt;&#13;
Mrs. H. E. Brown and son of Stockbridge&#13;
spent a part of last week with&#13;
Chas. Love's family and visited in&#13;
Howell with them Decoration Day.&#13;
Mrs. Robert Arnell received the sad&#13;
news, last week, that her father, Mr.&#13;
Sopp, of Genoa, had hung himself.&#13;
The funeral was held on Thursday&#13;
last&#13;
A good many farmers are busy cutting&#13;
the rye out of their wheat fields&#13;
as they have been notified that the&#13;
presence of rye in wheat will reduce&#13;
the price of the latter.&#13;
All members of the M. E. chnreh&#13;
are requested to meet at the church&#13;
Wednesday June 16 to clean the&#13;
church. Those coming bring their&#13;
dinner to the parsonage. Con.&#13;
Pinckney, one of the cleanest towns&#13;
in the state, is taking advance steps in&#13;
man** ways, bnt nowhere is the advanoe&#13;
more notioable than in the hotel&#13;
under the management of Mr. and&#13;
Mra. Smith. It is now a credit to the&#13;
town.—Livingston Eepubliciff,&#13;
There will be no service at the Congregational&#13;
chnreh next Sunday&#13;
morning. Bnt on Sunday, June 20,&#13;
wiU ooonr the annual Children's Day&#13;
program, interspersed with special&#13;
masks* seleetions. Sunday sofcoeij&#13;
will eenveae as usual next Sunday.&#13;
/ • '&#13;
Always,&#13;
| Everlastingly,&#13;
Continuously,&#13;
Persistently,&#13;
Effectively&#13;
Seeking Trade.&#13;
*4&#13;
W E S E L L&#13;
Oil Stoves,&#13;
Gasoline Stoves,&#13;
Wood Stoves,&#13;
Lawn Mowers,&#13;
~Brcyctes7&#13;
Farming Implements, etc.&#13;
W E W I L L&#13;
Gladly,&#13;
Politely,&#13;
Carefully,&#13;
Promptly&#13;
Wait Upon You.&#13;
Respectfully Yours,&#13;
TEEPLE &amp; CADWELE&#13;
M* SPECIALS FOR Saturday June 5, and continuing&#13;
one week-&#13;
WE WILL GIVE 20 PER&#13;
CENT OFF ON ALL TABLE&#13;
LINENS, NAPKINS AND&#13;
CRASHEa&#13;
at&#13;
A line of Mens Heavy Cheviot Shirts&#13;
-/- —25 cento&#13;
All rjackage coffee at 16c per pound.&#13;
Remember the dates...... Produce take*&#13;
BABNABD ^ CAMPBELL&#13;
: .\ #&#13;
/ / y&#13;
WITHIN QUilXALLS.&#13;
1 • ; • , &gt;&#13;
MERE M8r*T ir&amp;L; IQAN&#13;
MICHIGAN NBWS I T t I I 3 . .,&#13;
&lt;• George Stunt* w ~iarfier» tiv)nJr&#13;
'aotjfhkiJt «f ?Tintoi, «hot*an&amp; kill&#13;
ihmaelfSvtth t r i f l e . ' * ••••••&#13;
L. ' I.LI,.&#13;
MATTERS.&#13;
O • a m^i Bteeemb co-iV aneY&#13;
Md Kill**; * * |ita Own Daughter—&#13;
&lt;3r»*4 BapMs Draek BilW HU Wife&#13;
Convict Stub* a Keeper.&#13;
Mprdered by 111« Daaffhter.&#13;
Predetiak&lt;Ueedte well-to-do German&#13;
fmrywr living1 in Warren townsh ip,&#13;
Maoomb oounty,, after spending the&#13;
d * j in drinking at' a baloon (two inile*&#13;
4rom kit place started for home; his&#13;
horse r*n a^vayand he WHS thrown into&#13;
» Oate^wSere he ,waa found by&#13;
hie wife and son'in-law, Rudolph Wlrgan.&#13;
When they attempted to assist&#13;
klm he tnade an assault on his wife&#13;
with the butt of a whip stock. Upon&#13;
Benchinghome . Heidi; began to abuse&#13;
Ala daughter Minnie, aged 63. The&#13;
girl says that he drew a razor on her&#13;
• n d threatened to kill liaj as he had&#13;
dono many times before. She secured&#13;
the weapon, but he became HO violent&#13;
khatsbe.was afraid he would do her&#13;
harm. She went to the woodshed,&#13;
procured a gun and returning to the&#13;
kitchen took deli bo rati' aim at her&#13;
father, who was sittiug in a chair at&#13;
the time, and filled, the charge striking&#13;
him in the head und killing him&#13;
instantly; Heidt was 57 years of age&#13;
and his wife is 55.&#13;
The coroner's jury in the inquest&#13;
returned a verdict of justifiable homicide,&#13;
finding that his daughter Minnie&#13;
shot Heidt in self defense. Minnie is a&#13;
bright and remarkably, good-looking&#13;
g i r t In the neighborhood she is a&#13;
great favorite ami all sympathize&#13;
with her.&#13;
A Ooirardljr Wife Marder.&#13;
Jacob Welsh, aged 50, a stationary engineer&#13;
of Grand Rapids, had a quarrel&#13;
.soon after breakfast with his wife and&#13;
-daughter, the latter aged 18. He left&#13;
the bouse and did not return until&#13;
ovening,. When hjS was very drunk.&#13;
Without a ward pa. his wife, he drew a&#13;
revolver from kta pocket and tiring hit&#13;
her in the neck. The daughter, heari&#13;
n g the shot, slammed the door and&#13;
fled screaming out of the front door.&#13;
The father pursued, but was unable to&#13;
overtake her, and returning to the&#13;
house, found that his wife was still&#13;
alive and conscious. He lifted her&#13;
from the floor, and placing the revolf&#13;
e r to her head, fired again, and then&#13;
left the bouse. Mrs. Welsh died the&#13;
next day and the murderer was&#13;
locked up. - _&#13;
The anti-saloon league at Grand&#13;
Rapids intends to make complaint&#13;
against the saloonkeeper who sold&#13;
Welsh the liquor Which made him&#13;
drunk. They claim that the saloon&#13;
bondsmen are liable and that they can&#13;
be held to provide for the children of&#13;
the dead woman. This will serve as&#13;
an excellent test case of the law under&#13;
which they propose to work.&#13;
" *&#13;
-Coeuriet Carter Assaults Another Keeper.&#13;
i Convict Win, Curley made a desperate&#13;
assault upon Keeper Gus Southwfccfc&#13;
at Jackson prison. When the&#13;
keeper came to take away Curley's&#13;
breakfast dishes the convict leaped&#13;
against the door, knocking South wick&#13;
-down. Curley then leaped upon him&#13;
and began to stab him with a big&#13;
needle used in sewing brooms. Notwithstanding&#13;
a score of wounds the&#13;
-keeper regained his feet and fought&#13;
Ouriey back into his cell and locked&#13;
the door. He then summoned help and&#13;
was taken to the hospital where Dr.&#13;
Gibson dressed the wounds, some of&#13;
which artfvery serious.&#13;
—^This is the third assault Curley has&#13;
The call has beeu issued for the&#13;
tenth auuual covention of the National&#13;
' League Republican clubs, t&gt;6 be held aft&#13;
Detroit, July 13. _&#13;
George Goodwin, living" near Mongoinery,&#13;
Hillsdale couuty, committed&#13;
suicide by shooting. He had recently&#13;
parted from his wife.&#13;
la attempting to change seats in a&#13;
boat while intoxicated C. A. Molsnder&#13;
and John Seville fell into the&#13;
rivfr at Republic, and Molander Was&#13;
drowned.&#13;
The objection of the sultan to receiving&#13;
Dr. James B. AngelLof Michigan,, as&#13;
minister of the United States, is withdrawn,&#13;
and the state department notified&#13;
by Mr. ,Terrell, the present diplomatic&#13;
representative of this country in&#13;
Constantinople. i&lt; * v&#13;
Gilbert •Wilkes, fcoimnafldiug the&#13;
Michigan state naval, brigade, has a&#13;
letter from the secretary Of the navy&#13;
telling him that it is about settled that&#13;
the old tr. S. cruiser Yantic will&#13;
come to Michigan for tfye use of the&#13;
naval militia of the state » » a training&#13;
ship.&#13;
MrktEd. Roach was shot three times&#13;
by her husband, at Battle Creek. She&#13;
is not expected to live,, The couple&#13;
had lived apart for some time. Roach&#13;
followed his wife to the home of her&#13;
sister and fired at her four times.&#13;
When he gave himself up, he said he&#13;
wished he had shot himself.&#13;
Capt William Cary died at Beuton&#13;
Harbor, in his 79th year. He was 32&#13;
yea**, captain of1 various craft4_sailing&#13;
the lakes from Detroit,' Chicago, St.&#13;
.Joseph and other points before the&#13;
danger shoals were marked. Cary&#13;
sailed the first brigantine out of Detroit&#13;
that floated on Lakes Huron and&#13;
Erie. •&#13;
Mrs. Dettenhaver, of Paulding, 0.,&#13;
who has been taking treatment at the&#13;
Battle Creek sanitarium, fell while&#13;
riding a bicycle and sprained her ankle.&#13;
Her husband brought a pitcher of hot&#13;
water to treat the injury. Their infant&#13;
child pulled it from the table,&#13;
fatally scalding the little one, who&#13;
died in a few hours.&#13;
(Juinlan OLeary, a tramp, hailing&#13;
from Detroit, was stabbed by two fellow&#13;
hoboes, at Ray City, and died of&#13;
his wounds. There were five in the&#13;
crowd and they quarreled over 5 cents.&#13;
O'Leary was cut in the stomach so&#13;
that all his intestines fell o u t&#13;
O'Leary's assailants, Charles Wilson&#13;
and Lawreuce Reilly, were arrested.&#13;
Fitch Hill, aged 70, a farmer of Byron,&#13;
Kent county, for some time past&#13;
unbalanced mentally, became violently&#13;
insane and attempted to exterminate&#13;
his family and neighbors, but was subdued,&#13;
i l e then procured some strychnine&#13;
of which he took the dose and&#13;
died before assistance could be brought&#13;
He leaves a widow and four adult&#13;
children.&#13;
Several families narrowly escaped&#13;
death in a tenement house fire at West&#13;
Bay City, in the old Reardon house,&#13;
one of the landmarks of the city. The&#13;
building was completely enveloped in&#13;
flames before the alarm was given.&#13;
Patrolman Anderson broke in a window&#13;
and rescued two little girls, aged&#13;
6 and 7. None o( the people saved&#13;
anything other than the clothing they&#13;
wore.&#13;
W. W. Miller, an exemplary young&#13;
man of Car.sonvilie, went to Port Hu?,&#13;
rou with ¢75 in his pockets. It is said&#13;
that he spent the night at Stella&#13;
Grant's resort and the next morning&#13;
crossed the river to Sarnia with a girl&#13;
called "Bess." He returned to Port&#13;
THEIR LABOR* F . N ^ D , w*r*&#13;
made upon his keepers within three&#13;
yearsr His flrstrvtcttm was Foreman&#13;
HcCleary in Jibe atone shop whom he&#13;
nearly kjHed with a-chisel; next&#13;
nty Warden Nortbrup and severa]&#13;
gnards were badly injured in a riot in&#13;
theshlrt factory, ted by Curley, Huntley&#13;
and Boote, for which Cnrley had 10&#13;
j e a r s added to the sentence he was already&#13;
serving.&#13;
'•»•• ••&#13;
The Loyal Legion Concreae.&#13;
The f Loyal ,Legioe of , **»«. United ;&#13;
States*met in t h e eighth quadriennial&#13;
congress at Detroit r Although the&#13;
' number of delegate* was* smalt—7tt—&#13;
It was a representative gathering, and&#13;
In more than one way. Nearly every&#13;
state was represented, aa was the army&#13;
.and navy and many branches of official&#13;
and civil life, the Loyal Legion being&#13;
-commoted of officers and ex*offic^rs of&#13;
4he U. 8. army and navy. • There were&#13;
zaany*tA»ahmgmeetings of war-time&#13;
-comrades and stories wkieh stirred the&#13;
M a r t s and brought fcdth smiles and&#13;
-tears were told by the score as 'the&#13;
o k W veterans greeted each other.&#13;
Ifee^busioess sessions of the congress&#13;
muit presided over by Rear Admiral&#13;
tifcerjkdl, the oomnsauder-iQ-chief of&#13;
t h e c a l Legion.&#13;
W. C. «. V. -of sUekl* au.&#13;
'TJfctf twelBt^-aeoond annual session of ,&#13;
'^otnen** Cbriatkm Temperance union,&#13;
~^f l l ^ t e a y u eunyened in Benton Barb*&#13;
r, XJUe m/Anim of welcome in behaii&#13;
of the «U&gt;y was made by Hon.&#13;
Victor M. Gore, while Be v. &amp; A. Hoff-&#13;
•aan gave t h e address of welcome in&#13;
•he behalf of tan*. elMircj^ Mrs. J.&#13;
&amp; Farnsk, Of Day City, -eorresnondiing&#13;
eeeretary, re^oHMI: %ask f#om aU&#13;
-SOnroestll.OW.^rith t*.l*5oSThaniL&#13;
Huroh alone.toward" evening and a few&#13;
h«a«t la±fcr was found in th« street ttneonscious.&#13;
He died in a short time.&#13;
His friends claim that he was muriered.&#13;
The arrest of A. H. Currie, a Sarnia,&#13;
'Out., tattof, at Port Huron for sntug-r&#13;
gling created a sensation among many&#13;
prominent citiients of the latter eHy.&#13;
Currie, who is s son-in-law of' Gen.&#13;
Wm. Hartsuff, formerly customs officer&#13;
at Port Huron, had'taken orders for&#13;
«u&gt;ts ,for, many. eitizenJB, agreeing to&#13;
get them throujfh*The custiMna Jioluse&#13;
free. After Curries arrest the customs&#13;
otficiaia induced} \i\$ customers to pay&#13;
the da ties on'their clotlies.. They did.&#13;
Julian Tercey de Ovies, aged 17, son&#13;
of Senorde Ovies, mesmerist and psychologist,&#13;
was found dead in bed at his&#13;
residence, 66 Clifford street, Detroit&#13;
The body, which was half clad, was&#13;
still warm when found. The teeth&#13;
were set together, and the tongue was&#13;
almost bitten in two. On the bipodstained&#13;
pillow a towel, saturated with&#13;
chloroform, and a bottle, partially&#13;
filled with the fluid, were found. The&#13;
father thinks the boy wae«aurdered,&#13;
but can assign no reason.&#13;
The body of John Koller, a wealthy&#13;
Cincinnati merchant, was found on the&#13;
shore of Lake Erie near Newport.&#13;
Ifcere was a bullet wound in the back&#13;
et his neck aiwd. the ball had come out&#13;
at the month, splitliag the tongue.&#13;
There were also bruises about the head&#13;
and body aa of a blunt instrument&#13;
Koller disappeared May 7, after having&#13;
reached Detroit on a boat from Cleveland.&#13;
He is supposed to have had over&#13;
$1,000 on Iris person when h e arrived&#13;
at De bruit It i s undoubtedly fc'oaae&#13;
of&#13;
The atate Ue»uiature_Ola»e* U&#13;
,.-.xfar l M l t i tf - — , ,..i&#13;
' The weary, grtod of the : Michigan&#13;
legislature f w the y,wwtt 1^7-8 baa finished&#13;
alter Ave. months of labor and&#13;
the newapftper oorreanondent* and,the&#13;
Senators and. Eepjreaentative* and lobbyists&#13;
and, pluggera and clerks: and&#13;
messengers and, and Well, all&#13;
the rest ot the crew which has. been&#13;
battering away at making and unmaking&#13;
laws through nearly half a year,&#13;
more or leas to the advantage or disadvantage&#13;
of the people, have gone home&#13;
apparently satisfied with their work&#13;
and are ready to again become just ordinary&#13;
citizens if&#13;
Gov. Plngree recently threatened&#13;
that unless the legislature did aome-&#13;
.thiug to make railroads, corporations,&#13;
etc., stand a larger share, and more&#13;
just share, as he believes, of the taxes&#13;
of the state that he would call them&#13;
together in special session for that purpose&#13;
and see if they'd dare neglect&#13;
"the people's interests" then. There's&#13;
where the 4iif" comes in.&#13;
Two days before the adjournment of&#13;
the legislature Gov. Pingree sent a&#13;
message to both the House and the Senate&#13;
calling attention to the numerous&#13;
bills of greatest importance which&#13;
were, being allowed to die without&#13;
any effort being made to act upon&#13;
them. He also objected to the passing&#13;
of large appropriation bills which were&#13;
not brought in until within a few days&#13;
of the time set for adjournment, thus&#13;
preventing proper and intelligent investigation&#13;
of them. The governor,&#13;
therefore, asked that the session be&#13;
extended at least two weeks that the&#13;
bills mentioned might be disposed of&#13;
and the- appropj,iaUons investigated.&#13;
When the message was received the&#13;
Senate and House each had u bitter&#13;
flffht over it. The House passed a resolution&#13;
making the day of adjournment&#13;
June 14. The Senate refused to conenr&#13;
and so they had to "let the old&#13;
cat die" died on May 31, as had already&#13;
been scheduled.&#13;
An examination of the records show&#13;
that 360 House and 141 Senate bills&#13;
jwere passed. Two years ago there&#13;
were 365 House and about 2Q0 Senate&#13;
bills. The much-talked-of antagonism&#13;
between the governor and Senate may&#13;
not account for the entire falling off,&#13;
but that it does for a good proportion&#13;
of it there is no doubt. The number of&#13;
bills on the Pingree program as announced&#13;
in the inaugural message,&#13;
which fell outside the Senate breastworks&#13;
were both numerous and ia»-&#13;
portant, while the number of Senate&#13;
bills which perished at the hands of&#13;
Pingree lieutenants In the House&#13;
would also make a fair sized volume.&#13;
The appropriations of the legislature&#13;
for 1997-8, as reported in the budget&#13;
prepared by the House committee on&#13;
ways and means and the Senate finance&#13;
committee will be $4,377,398, providing&#13;
the governor signs all the appropriation&#13;
bills which were passed. This&#13;
is a saving of $705,059 over the taxesimposed&#13;
on the state by the preceding&#13;
legislature for the two years 1895 and&#13;
186*3: To this saving may be added&#13;
the estimated increase in returns from&#13;
the railroads under ^the Merriam bill,&#13;
which is placed by Railroad Commissioner&#13;
Wesseliusat$l*5,6841 and it gives&#13;
a grand total of saving in taxes to the&#13;
people of $860,743 over 1895-6. The tax&#13;
rate for the two years 1895-6 was 4 ½&#13;
mills on the dollar. The approximate&#13;
tax rate for the two years 1897-8 will&#13;
be 3.9 mills on the dollar, or&#13;
an average of less than 2 mills&#13;
on the dollar for each year.&#13;
So far as the expenses of state departments&#13;
are concerned, not much has&#13;
really been saved. There has been an&#13;
apparent cut of about $500,000, but&#13;
this is more than covered by the fact&#13;
./..¥iOTiua&amp;gBak4. i w •• • . i m&#13;
S A Y * . IT IS:TTSMIIBLB.&#13;
«!••, - WeyUr'a * MeMkofla era . iafaiaou*-*-&#13;
VAele B»ai s* de Somethlar Boon—&#13;
aoittea »ad Weyler^Meet lb Battle-—&#13;
Spain's Cabinet Reelaos.&#13;
While the resolution to recognise&#13;
the'Cuban insurgents-4s'bellIgereuts&#13;
, is being held up by t h e national house&#13;
J of representatives after being passed&#13;
by the senate matters jurj.. coming to&#13;
. the surface at various'polnts/wMch are&#13;
! sure to bring a crisis very soon.' Mr.&#13;
&gt; Calhoun, the special coinmissiqiMtr sent&#13;
I to Cuba by President McKuuey* has&#13;
beeu looking about during the*decays&#13;
in the Ruiz case and is gainlajjfrjh general&#13;
insight into the condition o f affairs&#13;
on the island. He already has discovered&#13;
that Gen. Weyler's talk of Cuba&#13;
being pacified is not based.pn fact&#13;
There is not a province in Cuba that&#13;
is iu a peaceful condition, and the&#13;
Spanish pickets have warned Calhoun,&#13;
who, in company with Consul-General&#13;
Lee, took a ride out of Havana, that it&#13;
was not safe to venture away from the&#13;
city more than 15 miles.&#13;
Consul-General Lee's report that the&#13;
war is no nearer an end than t w o&#13;
years ago, and that there is no prospect&#13;
of either side triumphing so long&#13;
as one can dig sustenance from the&#13;
ground and the other borrow money,&#13;
is fully proved to Mr. Calhoun's satisfaction.&#13;
The poor people who have&#13;
been driven from the coiliitry by Gen.&#13;
Weyler's orders have been seen by&#13;
Cdinmisstoner Calhoun and their ter^&#13;
rible miseries he will relate to the&#13;
President upon his return. At Matanzas&#13;
alone he saw 4,000 starving reconcentradoes,&#13;
and was told that 3,000&#13;
ipore had just been driven into the&#13;
overcrowded small towns of the district,&#13;
where their plight was hopeless.&#13;
Gen. Lee "and Mr. Calhoun, with their&gt;&#13;
interpreter, went from hut to hut&#13;
questioning women and children whose&#13;
feet and ankles were so swollen and&#13;
discolored as to present a shocking appearance,&#13;
due to a dropsical affection&#13;
caused b y thin blood and lack of nourishment&#13;
^ All said that they had been&#13;
without food for periods varying&#13;
from *3 t o . 72 hours, and their&#13;
appearance showed that they told the&#13;
truth.&#13;
It has been openly stated in Washington&#13;
that the discoveries made by&#13;
Mr. Calhoun, the special commissioner&#13;
sent to Cuba by President McKinley»&#13;
are so horrible that they cannot be&#13;
printed, but will be related to the&#13;
President as soon as Mr. Calhoun arrives&#13;
in Washington, which will be in&#13;
a few days, as b e bas already sailed&#13;
from Havana, It is also positively asserted&#13;
on good authority that the&#13;
President will take action suitable to&#13;
the circumstances very soon after reeeiving&#13;
this report&#13;
MY. J^rich, to. charge&#13;
bjll, answered i ^ . T f i l i&#13;
that two years ago $600,000 was appropriated&#13;
to make up a deficiency in&#13;
the state treasury due to unpaid taxes.&#13;
Some saving has been made in special&#13;
appropriations, however.&#13;
The closing scenes of the legislature,&#13;
with the exception of the mere formalities,&#13;
were very noisy and almost disgraceful.&#13;
The evening session of both&#13;
Senate and House was devoted almost&#13;
entirely to horse-play, songs were&#13;
sung, foolish speeches were made for&#13;
and against more foolish fake bills, and&#13;
the Representatives finally broke up&#13;
the session by throwing books, papers,&#13;
files of legislative^Dnrnab5,.rtc., a i each&#13;
other. They then; went o^iir | o the&#13;
Sen ate and assisted that body in indulging&#13;
in a aivsUar boyish fracas.&#13;
The only gentlemanly proceeding of&#13;
the closing hours was the presentation&#13;
of a silver water set to Speaker Gordon&#13;
by the Representatives, and engrossed&#13;
resolutions of esteem to Pre aide ft* Dnnstajs&#13;
by the Senators.&#13;
Miff Fire at Dorojodh-No Prstartloa.&#13;
A' disastrous fije, which -destroyed&#13;
nearly half the business pari of Durand&#13;
started shortly after midnight in&#13;
the LilUe building, on West Main&#13;
street As the only fire engine In the&#13;
village was broken i n a Decoration day&#13;
exhibition, the town was practically&#13;
Without protection. The flames spread&#13;
rapidly and within three hours the fol:&#13;
lowing buildings were in ruins: Brick&#13;
store of Mrs. Fred BowerA restaurant&#13;
Weyler and Govern Meet la Battle.&#13;
Reports have been received of a battle&#13;
at La Reforiua, Sencti Spiritua, in&#13;
which Gens. Gomez and Weyler met in&#13;
war for the first time. The engagement&#13;
was the resitlt of a plan of Gen.&#13;
Weyler to- surround and crush Gomez&#13;
with an immensely superior force.&#13;
The scheme w a s defeated by the brilliant&#13;
tactics displayed by Gomez, who,&#13;
eutnumbered by 20 to 1, succeeded in&#13;
holding the enemy in check for six&#13;
hours. Gen. Weyler formed three new&#13;
columns in addition to the 11,000 men&#13;
who were already operating against&#13;
Gome/ in Sancti Spiritus. At the head&#13;
of 5,000 men he marched upon Gomez&#13;
at La Reforma. The two other Spanish&#13;
columns of 2y000 men each were to&#13;
try t o take the Cubans in the flank.&#13;
WpyW thought frfr».». with this second&#13;
army he could pen Gomez up and annihilate&#13;
him, The Cuban commander&#13;
occupied a strategic position and&#13;
awaited the attack. The Spanish columns&#13;
were driven back repeatedly, and&#13;
even nnder (Sen. Weyler's own eye&#13;
they fled in terror at the charge of the&#13;
Cubans. Weyler's horse was shot&#13;
three times, and then he retired to the&#13;
rear. The Cubans routed the left&#13;
flank of the Spanish- completely, but&#13;
were not strong enough* to follow up&#13;
their sfeoees. The suj^nVUng columns&#13;
of the Spanish a r r i v e d ^ ,|be4hick of&#13;
thA tfapr, and Gotnev rievxed to a&#13;
stroHM' position, and;:«40nt coming&#13;
oo, Weyler abandoned ih&amp;4etyfc&#13;
&amp;&#13;
of T. J. Young; frame building «f Duran&#13;
Perry, millinery store of 'Mrs.&#13;
Agnes Berry; frame baildlngof Andrew&#13;
Lillie, bakery of Mr. Yoche; brick&#13;
building of Daniel Harrington, tobacoc&#13;
store and billiard room of Harrington&#13;
4 Co., and shoe shop of Andrew Lillie.&#13;
Xhe loss is estimated at $25,000.&#13;
;..!;'/ . fpeters Cabinet Be|trn*V&#13;
iPie pMknter b* Spain, ^enor tianoyas&#13;
del Ca*t«Ro, has tendered t o tW *&lt;»ueen&#13;
iregent the resignation of the, cabinet&#13;
owhftgMo the difflfiftlty the ministers&#13;
experienced in carrying on the government&#13;
in viefvoi.Jfte parliamentary ait:,&#13;
nation caused by' the refusal of the&#13;
liberals to take "part in the deliberations&#13;
of the corteS. The queen regent&#13;
accepted the resignation of the cabinet&#13;
and It has caused a profound sensation&#13;
in Madrid.&#13;
This attitude of the liberals i s due&#13;
to the recent personal encounter be*&#13;
tween the duke of Tetuan, -sinister of&#13;
foreign affairs, and Prof Comas,&#13;
| THE 6 5 T H CONURKsta AT WORK&#13;
? ^ m t i i - S o t h ^ ^ T V ' o U m i o a l&#13;
schedule o f the tariff bill NMss*eom-&#13;
AfteaYtft, WrthMwevrevand&#13;
schedule wew takokm npi and&#13;
»prWe^ms&gt;*te;aw*th* bnt&#13;
&lt;A*y«tf ,#^«Hatte*vva»4e«*ted&#13;
b&gt;^n4WrTillmah7^ftJbt*t^£swolena.&#13;
who preeensed'a resolution'4atUheappointment&#13;
of a special oommHtee of&#13;
five Senators to investigate charges of&#13;
speealatforf in sug«#stooks by Senators&#13;
while»the tarijr.jbiy ,wa^&amp;fef#r«rnhe&#13;
finance committee, fn advocating the&#13;
resolution Mr. Tillman threw aside the&#13;
usual conventionalities ufc'the &lt;Senate,&#13;
and with a plainness of speech seldom&#13;
heard about the hallsoiLcongress called&#13;
on his associate* V&gt;jkln,vastlgate the&#13;
published ehargfs o|/s^ng^oriai speculation,&#13;
and nVfound true, purge the&#13;
Senate of those w h o tlebn^theel i t&#13;
e of the tariff&#13;
,,,%w man in a sweep*&#13;
iafg denial, 'fhe resolution was refer-&#13;
! # i ' t o the comsnltsee on eontingent&#13;
expenses. &gt; ; &gt;. .' '&#13;
^SKNATK.—51st day.—Hut Uttle progress&#13;
was made on the tariff bill o w&#13;
tflg to an exciting incident Wenotor&#13;
Morgan, of Alabama, /ound opportunity&#13;
to severely criticise the inaction; of&#13;
the House of Representatives and declared&#13;
that the speaker of tbe^Hohse&#13;
was enforcing au uutocratic, trap-door&#13;
rule by which Representatives were&#13;
assembled and* disperstd, annChe characterized&#13;
this" action as "m outrage&#13;
against popular rights. &gt;fi? Frye, of&#13;
Maine, first gave warning: that a protest&#13;
would be made against criticisms&#13;
of the other house, and when Mr. Morgan&#13;
vehemently repeated his criticism&#13;
Mr. Hale,'pf ;Maine1 (made * point of&#13;
order against him. ' ^fhe temporary&#13;
presiding officer directed Mr. Morgan&#13;
to resume his seat, and then ruled that&#13;
he was o u t of order- Mr. Morgan resumed&#13;
his criticisms during the tariff&#13;
debate and made the point that congress&#13;
was not now in session* in accordance&#13;
with the constitution, the House&#13;
of Representatives having vacated its&#13;
functions. HOUSE.—I^*sessig&amp;&#13;
Fifty-second day—Nllejssio^. of the&#13;
Senate. HOUMK—A l!f/fe&amp;iUuiQftession&#13;
was heM, the, .only evajfct ofx interest&#13;
being We prOttst of Mr? |&gt;ewisy Democrat,&#13;
of -Washington, diainst '^e&gt; approval&#13;
of the journakaaying that ^here&#13;
was "no constitutional House that can aajly approve,, the^ journal, and if&#13;
fp was it oould sibfbe ft~pprpvjNl in&#13;
manner and form adopted.^-.¾&#13;
SMJJATK.—43¾ day.-^-Good progress&#13;
wan ma4e on the tariff bill although&#13;
considerable discussion was indulged&#13;
in, particularly on*'Uie«£hiM**tJhedule&#13;
which was finally accepted as U came&#13;
from the finance committee. There&#13;
was an echo of sb.e recent sensational&#13;
speech of Mr. TfTlraan in reference to&#13;
charges made that Senators had speculated&#13;
in sugar^ stocks with advance&#13;
knowledge of the intended action of&#13;
the finance committee before the tariff&#13;
bill was refsftfted ,opt. Mr. Smith, of&#13;
New Jersey, who was one of the Senators&#13;
so charged, entered an emphatic&#13;
denial. Housn.—The semi-weekly sessions&#13;
seem to develop nothing but a&#13;
war of worcls between the majority&#13;
(Republicans), who insist that the&#13;
House shall do very little business&#13;
until the Senate passes the tariff bill,&#13;
and the minority, '^he evont of the&#13;
sessjph waf avsnee^ J»y Mr, Simpson,&#13;
o^ Kansas, dfenouneing the'majority&#13;
policy. Conference reports Were&#13;
agreed to on the snadjy civil bill and&#13;
t h e revocation o f President Cleveland's&#13;
forest reservation otter. * '&#13;
'. teJTATE.— 54th day—A larger portion&#13;
of the tariff bUl WAswa^oJe4^djf than&#13;
on any previous day of its consideration.&#13;
The first break thus far from the com-&#13;
^BirttbeHschednles was the reduction of&#13;
„'fo&amp; irafe on! ^fiylls fh&gt;m 2c to l ^ c per&#13;
pound; Senator Tillman, -of South&#13;
Carolina, askediconsideration for a reso^&#13;
iti^n re^)ti"g the circumstannfta of&#13;
liberal senator, when the dake slapped&#13;
the senator in the face after * heated&#13;
debate.&#13;
Dr. .A. T. Qetdietl, while boring f&lt; r&#13;
water a t his residence at MIS' fteaaadt;^., A. . . .&#13;
struck a bed of cogl. six "ftet thick, 7*J * f l ^ ^ ; W&#13;
feet below the sartaa* ""x"- - .^«Jcick«s»t» « " j . '&#13;
the enactment of the South Carolina&#13;
dispensary law, its. effect in reducing&#13;
intemperance, the recent decision of a&#13;
federal Judge overthrowing1 t h e law&#13;
and requiring the sta^te to "reppen the&#13;
barrooms." The resolntioA then di-&#13;
^rects the judiciary committee t o consider&#13;
and report what legisht^dn i s&#13;
neeessary to restore to South Carolina&#13;
its right to regulate the Liqaor tkraffic&#13;
in its own way. Mtf Hoar, o f Massachusetts,&#13;
proposed a substitute omitting&#13;
*hr prtsm&gt;rlp nni^iifpiy 'tiri'i'ting&#13;
the jndic'iary cOminitsbe ha consider&#13;
and report the bUl or o t l ^ r w ^ , what&#13;
legislation, if any, is neeeesjary t o&#13;
carry out the statote of IMH eokitive ',&#13;
to commerce between, the state|. Mr.&#13;
TiUms&gt;o accepted the substitute and it&#13;
was agreed to.' -^ t '&#13;
SE?dL¥*.^^th d ^ v . ^ A ^ t k e r good&#13;
day's-work w^sa e&lt;jeony}ii*h#d\' jp jmgea&#13;
of she m e s d schedule of the tswui bill&#13;
being dUposed of without a' single&#13;
&lt;^snge o f the oomWfttee ratsei' T h e&#13;
only other feature of the snTMJJnti w a s&#13;
another outbreak on the part of Senator&#13;
Tillnsan, of South Carolina, w h o re- .&#13;
newestthe snjgar, inreaCigation discussion&#13;
an'S defended Bis action while&#13;
governor of his state. Hoffac. - t T h e&#13;
proceedings were enlivened by a single&#13;
incident, theiMiem^tof Mr. Terry,&#13;
isidecatkm as a privileged matter of a&#13;
jesolntion for she imaaedisvte appointment&#13;
of the. committee on foreign alruled&#13;
out of order and&#13;
•trlcUfieM.wie,: T^eWwa^stsVeh e x -&#13;
ietUnsr debate befesV KkM$HJtki&#13;
*s&gt;&#13;
V&#13;
lira. It wi&#13;
s&#13;
\&#13;
: ; • . * - » - • ,¾1 '•' I I * 3ft&#13;
Ptimti BlQpd Tkoea^am »|aom noVv&#13;
from taw maxwsji sao*, 4Mf*MfllifMKRffl9&#13;
•eistoaht wmitr^wM^ bmethsd, W*&#13;
the fag^- liMr &gt;«&gt;4 J&gt;QU9^4M bioo^&#13;
Kee»,th»*leja1 onre ta tottas food*&#13;
onraapUiUs and there wW be 1H*1« W « a »&#13;
from malaria. The mMtonftake&#13;
H O O O S oarffla&#13;
H w as st-ln feet the One. True Blood Purifier. hood's puis ^orer/'^ir&#13;
OUB BUDGET 4)* FUN.&#13;
t O s f t OOCT&amp; ^ K G * SWlfclNAL&#13;
i A M t * S E L E C T Bt&gt;.&#13;
a&#13;
Taw nse*aras•&gt;— ^ W m t y , tfc* 0*r— of&#13;
tha Oeantay" WM.,M*owHH»"^WWfll«i&#13;
sad Covetonajaeae Go, Hand In ljUn««—&#13;
FloUaaa aad Jetsam.&#13;
HALUS&#13;
Vegetable Sicilian&#13;
HAIRRENEWER&#13;
Beauties e«J restores Gray&#13;
Hair to its original color andr&#13;
Vitality; prevents baldness;&#13;
cures itching and ^dandruff.&#13;
A fine hair dressing.&#13;
I t P. Hail &amp; Co., Prom., Nashua, N,H,&#13;
Bold by all Druggists.&#13;
WE WANT&#13;
A MAN&#13;
—a lively fellow—&#13;
a«6od,fconestQU*&#13;
in as bustler—is&#13;
every&#13;
Town in this&#13;
State&#13;
wbr re ire have no&#13;
branch. We will&#13;
make It worm htr&#13;
while to represent&#13;
our standard line&#13;
of&#13;
CLOTHING, SUITS&#13;
and OVERCOATS&#13;
FROM $4.00 UP&#13;
No Experience or&#13;
Capital Required.&#13;
Write&#13;
White Cltf TitJors,&#13;
AJMrttS Maatt.Jt,.&#13;
CHICASO.&#13;
Laugh&#13;
at the Sun&#13;
Drink T *,&#13;
lootbeerj&#13;
•^ *&#13;
•v .fa** i'*C&#13;
iU.&gt;i. m&#13;
Keep**&#13;
Well-Drinfr&#13;
MIRES,&#13;
IRES&#13;
$100 To Any Man.&#13;
WILL PAY tHOO POR A N Y C A S E&#13;
Love's Repentance.&#13;
MONTH. »- tittle&#13;
month ago,&#13;
She filled my&#13;
fancy a dearest&#13;
flight&#13;
And Just becauae 1&#13;
loved her ao&#13;
I waked, to think&#13;
; oCi!, heft at&#13;
nigjit! . ,&#13;
Hut now I blush m&#13;
I repeat&#13;
Thai 1 repoae tfu&#13;
whole night through,&#13;
Altho'—well, sugar » just a* sweat.&#13;
An&lt;V violets are, just aa blue,&#13;
Juat thirty daya and nights ago,&#13;
We "went on many a Jcyoua Jaunt—&#13;
I ortly^ watched her eyes, yqu know,&#13;
While she gazed on the elephant—&#13;
Now, well—into those bloprning doors&#13;
You Wouldn't drag me in with raules;&#13;
All elephants, I vote, are boors&#13;
And folks who stare at them ara&#13;
fools. , ,&#13;
A month, a little month ago,&#13;
I laved to' sit and watch her eat,&#13;
I loved to see the pale Wine flow&#13;
Into her mouth so b"*ge and Bweet;&#13;
Now, well; I am inclint/ to think&#13;
, A fairy would be juat my size&#13;
The sort of lady love who"d drink&#13;
And eat to me only with her eyes.&#13;
-J. P. B.&#13;
KINO OsTUHQE IN DANGER.&#13;
m&#13;
-y l J*&#13;
'i j&#13;
Well Qu»UU«d.&#13;
He—That man U billed to lecture tonight&#13;
on "Whisky, the Curse of the&#13;
Country."&#13;
She—No doubt he will be interesting,&#13;
'or, he is certainly full of his subject&#13;
T o o Much for Her.&#13;
Biker—Talking about cattle, we&#13;
same across a mighty wicked looking&#13;
row when I was out with Miss Blumer&#13;
the other day.&#13;
Wheeler—What did she do?&#13;
Biker—Made a bee line for the next&#13;
county.&#13;
Wheeler—What; deserted you and&#13;
the tandem?&#13;
Biker—No, no, I was referring to the&#13;
cow.&#13;
At Waterloo.&#13;
It was just previous to the battle of&#13;
Waterloo. The Duke1 of Wellington&#13;
was eating. Before he finished his repast&#13;
he remarked: "I enjoyed that&#13;
meat, especially the Bonaparte, and&#13;
now of Corsica^ go some pastry. Bring&#13;
me a Napoleon.**&#13;
After the battle was over he said of&#13;
the opposing general: "Waterlooser ha&#13;
was."&#13;
Of Wamka tat Mtm Thar Traat and&#13;
Vatl to Con.&#13;
An Omaha Company places for tha first&#13;
time before tha public a MAAIO^L TBSATM&#13;
»NT for tha core of Lost Vitality, Nervous&#13;
and*«Jtual-Weakness, and Resteiration of&#13;
Lite Foroe la\ old and young men. No&#13;
worn-out Fsenen remedj: contains ne&#13;
Phaaphoroua or ether harmfol droga. It is&#13;
a WoypaarmL Tn»ATirorr—magioal in ita&#13;
effeeta— positive in ita care. AM t seders,&#13;
w4lo are auflering from a wankneaa that&#13;
ifhtstneiritfe, eauaisg that mental and&#13;
hynleal entering peetiUar to Lost Man-&#13;
_ood, ahoild write to the STATE MEDICAL&#13;
OOMPA9Y, Omaha, Web., and tner will&#13;
' yen absolutely FREE, » TaloaUa&#13;
The Author Appeared.&#13;
Crtasip—I hear that Scrawl had to&#13;
make a speech at the first presentation&#13;
of his play last night What did&#13;
he say?&#13;
Dale—He said if the audience wootd&#13;
not tear up the seats they could hare&#13;
their money back.&#13;
a^pjr&lt;mtaaaadisaaaas, and positive proots&#13;
ofthairtruly MJL«IC^lasATMSITT. Tnona-&#13;
&gt;o&lt; men, who have lest all hope of a&#13;
being restored by tnetn to a parfee^&#13;
condition.&#13;
l U a MAOIOAL TnsATiaejrr may be taken&#13;
at home under their diraotiona. or they will&#13;
pay railroad fare and hotel bills to all who&#13;
prafmAojp tnero for treatment, if they&#13;
TaUtoenreT Thef are perfeotir reliable;&#13;
'Have no Free Preacriptions,free Cure,&#13;
FreaBeaaple,or C. O. i&gt;. take. They have&#13;
m»,W oapital, and. guarantee to euro&#13;
evary oaee tnew treat or reXund every dol-&#13;
Var J or their charge* may be deposited in a&#13;
bank to be paid to them when a euro la&#13;
: IT KILLS&#13;
CrmyMin#ralA^i&#13;
Covetooaa«&#13;
i t Flo—I'm atmid: I muat give up cycling.&#13;
I find tt # much more dlsVm*&#13;
to be good. ^ ^&#13;
Tom—Why? Btstcpivemy?&#13;
Flo—No;' bsjt Vjm always coTealng&#13;
my neighbor'a e*eei—Pick-Me-Up.&#13;
" 'Scue*&#13;
helped hlmeeW to another&#13;
cake. *' / „&#13;
piece&#13;
Wkty- «on't yon a^k ate. Tommy, tt&#13;
- jm wxP^* m o ! ? r a^alW* tfca&#13;
' ' - ''CCMaSMa«e 'taia^ p'lite.-—Delf&#13;
Preaf _.&#13;
of a Severe D l o ^ bj Pr. Williains* Pink Fills for fate&#13;
People After Physicbs FalH'&#13;
"!^"&#13;
\1 L&#13;
Ptot R. 8. Bowman, the able Inatnseter&#13;
of natural science in the famous BArtaville,&#13;
(lad.,) College, is wall and favorably&#13;
known, not only aa an educator, but also&#13;
aa a minister of the gospel, as for a nam*&#13;
ber of year* he waa pastor of the United&#13;
Brethren church a t Charlotte, Vieh., before&#13;
coming to Hartavilla&#13;
and was en-&#13;
I&#13;
la* ameeo*Tnrklek&#13;
Affairs—Hotes on the attaaalon.&#13;
A Cehwtantindple olkpaten aaya that&#13;
the embassies reeeieerj word from their L&#13;
reapeetiVe miniatere at Athens that Uie J&#13;
p m i t ^ M *&gt;* Greek royal family ia ftffc± $. BOWffialL IlJetnijCtW «f BatHTal SdtfMB ill HeTtSTflfc GoflttL C Q ( | |&#13;
ally biivrleaded'In •' the palace and it la&#13;
rei&gt;ortcJ that he la making his prepaid&#13;
atlona to leave Atheus itv .order to&#13;
evnde the fury of the populace.&#13;
From a Russian sob roe comes news&#13;
of a conspiracy against King tieevge,&#13;
o? (ireece, far moi-e deeply rooted than&#13;
VVRH supposed. There IK indisputable&#13;
evidence that Premier Raiii and hia&#13;
colleajrueH in the cabinet are gravely&#13;
implicated in a plot to overthrow the&#13;
dynasty. It is said that Kingtlebrge&#13;
paid fc'visVt to M. Onou, the Suaaaan&#13;
minihtei', and after a two hours* interview&#13;
bent a long telegram to the czar&#13;
urging-hircrto* intervene on behalf of&#13;
(freece.&#13;
Athene T h e T u H i s have occupied a&#13;
poHition at 'fKopanatos, in the neutral'&#13;
zone. The (Jreek government has protested&#13;
against this movement to the&#13;
repi*6entatlv&lt;es o f - t h e powers. Tur-&#13;
Icey'K eontmue'tl anning and reported&#13;
Russian preparations, with other rumoi.-&#13;
s of a bellicose character, raise the&#13;
hopes-of some of theOreek newspapers&#13;
that (Jreece may yet benefit from a&#13;
general Kuropean war. But tha majority&#13;
o f the nation, sobered by a sad&#13;
experience, is only desirous that Europe&#13;
should protect Greece against her conqueror.&#13;
The negotiations a i Constantinople&#13;
have entered upon the anxious stage,&#13;
owing to doubts us to the real intentions&#13;
of the sultan whether he means&#13;
to resume the war or not; A spirit of&#13;
conciliation is Khown towards the am-&#13;
Imssadors, butTlTxe Turkish government&#13;
is playing a double game and is inciting&#13;
public opinion secretly to oppose&#13;
the abondment of Thessaly. The sultnn&#13;
affects to be greatly afraid of the&#13;
Islamic party, and the attitude of the&#13;
grand vizier, as shown by the report&#13;
which he presented to the sultan urging&#13;
that the whole of Islam was fully&#13;
determined to retain Thessaly, and&#13;
tendering his resignation in case Abr&#13;
dul-Hnmid differed with these views,&#13;
has strengthened the suspicion that&#13;
the sultan is prepared to plead that Islamic&#13;
pressure is the reason fcr not&#13;
yielding to the powers. The sultan's&#13;
show of tesistanee to&gt; the powers La&#13;
generally attributed to German backing,&#13;
but it is also rumored that negotiations&#13;
between Turkey and Russia have&#13;
been in progress -relative to the eventual&#13;
administration by Russia of a portion&#13;
of Asia Minor.&#13;
The&#13;
MlchiuaiL H rigjaeejfg.&#13;
annual meeting of the State&#13;
Pioneer and Historical-society washeld&#13;
at Lansing. There much disappointment&#13;
expressed because of the governor's&#13;
v«Ao of their appropriation bill,&#13;
'but it was agreed that a vigorous effort&#13;
should be made to make the^ coming&#13;
year the most successful in thettistory&#13;
of the society. The publication of a&#13;
volume of collections will be abandoned&#13;
temporarily, however. The papers&#13;
read weiv unusually varied and interesting.&#13;
The following officers were&#13;
elected: President, Cyru6 G. Luce, of&#13;
Cold water; secretary, Geo. H. Greene,&#13;
of Lansing; treasurer, B. F. Davis, of&#13;
I^ansiutr.&#13;
The date for the National Guard encampment&#13;
has been changed to Aug. 10.&#13;
Work in to begin on the proposed&#13;
wcIdles* tube and steel work at Newark&#13;
by June 15, and it is expected to&#13;
be in operation before October. The&#13;
company has $90,000 capital paid in.&#13;
Muo Spurgeon, of Fife Lake, was&#13;
instantly killed while blowing into&#13;
muzzle loading"rTfle~~%T see if it was&#13;
loaded. He had his foot on the hammer&#13;
stnA_iti sHprM»dT diwharying the&#13;
rifle.&#13;
The supreme court has decided that&#13;
there being no other provision for the&#13;
sale of land for the payment of drain&#13;
taxes than that found in the general&#13;
tax law, that drain tax titles are an&#13;
valid as any other tax title.&#13;
T H E MARKETS.&#13;
U T S STOCK.&#13;
BeNate gwr aYde»sr.k —Cattle&#13;
Lower grades&#13;
Spring * W&#13;
Best grades.&#13;
lK&gt;wer grades.&#13;
Best grade*...&#13;
Lower grade*.&#13;
Best grades...&#13;
Lower grade*&#13;
/P.&#13;
«*SdM«Q&#13;
.4 00A4 4Q&#13;
tuSan&#13;
« 0 9&#13;
4 «&#13;
SaO&#13;
4 »9&#13;
Bent grades. »80&#13;
Lower rrade&#13;
4Wg&amp;l5&#13;
graees..tas#S7»&#13;
Ctavetaad—&#13;
Best grades.... 4 S&amp;A4 a*&#13;
Lower grade*. .2 se$4 *&gt;&#13;
Pitteoar*—&#13;
Best grades....5 WtVt »&#13;
Lower grades. .2 a4N 7*&#13;
4iBAlN. KTSJ.&#13;
Wheat. ^Gorn.&#13;
No. 2 red ita t&#13;
K«w Vwrk 7» «J»H&#13;
Ckieagw M&#13;
7« miw&gt;&#13;
ite&#13;
tat&#13;
1 * tw&#13;
tlft&#13;
H&#13;
6 »&#13;
» at&#13;
: :&#13;
tm&#13;
IS&#13;
5S&#13;
J :&#13;
: :&#13;
3 «&#13;
sta&#13;
Oats.&#13;
Mas white&#13;
Fiatsnerg m&#13;
aWCalo Si&#13;
Po•tD*etotre*o,i tn-eHwa yso. aKthoe n1 uttfmLomtl bpTe,r « o•n ;p oe]r4 ttpiacv. L.„_iv«« Poul«trAy_, cvh—icmk enstar,iJcctljya efrrIebsmjd,u acsus, Mc; tuckeya. 10c. Kggs,&#13;
doa Butterr.. d' airy, lie S?&#13;
pBor.&#13;
Some time ago he had a severe tSIneaa&#13;
which-was-cured ahnost miraculoosiy. A&#13;
reporter bearing of this, interviewed him&#13;
regarding bis experience. Prof. Bowman&#13;
was in the midst of bis work when U&gt;e reporter&#13;
called, but he cheerfully gave him&#13;
a hearing.&#13;
"A year ago last fall,''said the professor,&#13;
-i* I broke down with nervous exhaustion,&#13;
and was unable to properly attend to my&#13;
flwA.tMbEeaubUeaa, Qelnmbua, InA,&#13;
dntlesv I trtendjEemiae paiyHalmai taA wlft.&#13;
ap relief, and aUcatsd aaang Oi/UnmMP'&#13;
prietary medicines, apending aimosi frfly&#13;
dollars for these mediciaa* alone. 1 tneav&#13;
rttoonuibVd to a alegelaf » • ' grip ta «m&gt;&#13;
middle ei winter, and we* left/ nt at much&#13;
-*'A minister ineeafsransi laawiliaref a y&#13;
\oondition advised ma to try Dr. Williams'&#13;
Pjnk PiUa *or Pale PeoSa, I had k^ar*&#13;
much about the wenderftl curatlva powera&#13;
of this medicine, but ft was with raiwemnee&#13;
thatfl waaEaaUy p**«aadeal4e4rf m,«»lt&#13;
seemed that nothing eonM do maamaxMiL&#13;
However, I procured three boxaa of pjra»&#13;
and took them atrlctly acoording to dJree*&#13;
Hone. By the time the last dose waeWkm&#13;
Iwaeahnoat cured, and la batter healqi&#13;
than 1 had been for veers, I continued&#13;
using the pills awhile longer&#13;
tirely cured. I can cheat&#13;
Dr. WsWama* Pink Pills&#13;
Such was processor Bowman's wondt&#13;
story which waa further aodoraed by&#13;
following affidavit T ) ' '&#13;
BAUTSVIIXB, Ind., Mareh H, WR.&#13;
I affirm that the above aeoords w1H» (be&#13;
facta In. my case. R. 8. BOWMAX.&#13;
Subscribed and sworn to before me tale&#13;
16th day of Marco. 1*97.&#13;
LTAIAX J. ScxiDpaB, Notary PuhUe.&#13;
STATE or INPIAKA, sa.&#13;
Dr. Williams' Pink Pffle for PaiaPeopte&#13;
contain all the elements neeeesaiy to grro&#13;
new life and riehuaaa to the plood anoTtrestore&#13;
shattered nerves. They are aokt (av&#13;
boxes (never in loose form, oy the doaeav&#13;
or hundred) at £0 cents a box* or six boxes&#13;
for ¢3.80, and may be bad of all drnrgiata&#13;
or directly by mail from Dr. WUUpma*&#13;
Hedicine Co.,, Schenectady, H. Y.&#13;
BOWMAX.&#13;
Marriage is the only partnership not&#13;
entered into on business principles,&#13;
and that failures often occur should&#13;
not excite our special wonder.&#13;
There is a Class of People&#13;
Who are in jnred by the use of coffee.&#13;
Recently there has been placed in all&#13;
the grocery stores a new preparation 'a Michigan cereal cOmpsriry against 13»&#13;
called GRAIN-O, made of pure grains,&#13;
that takes the place of coffee. The&#13;
most delicate stomach receives it without&#13;
distress and but few can tell it&#13;
from coffee. It does not cost over H&#13;
as much. Children may drink it with&#13;
great benefit. 15 cts. and 25 eta. ner&#13;
package. Try i t AsV for (JRAIN-O.&#13;
A meeting commemorative of the anniversary&#13;
of the death of Jose Marti,&#13;
the Cuban patriot and leader was held&#13;
at New York.&#13;
With the chisel a trained hand brings&#13;
^orth^a "thing of beauty;" with the&#13;
same tool ~a~ child: may destroy thenoblest&#13;
work of art.&#13;
Shake Into Your Shoe*&#13;
Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder for the&#13;
feet. It cures painful, swollen, smarting&#13;
feet and instantly takes the sting&#13;
out of corns and bunions. It is the&#13;
greatest comfort discovery of the age.&#13;
Allen's Foot-Ease makes tight-fitting&#13;
or new shoes feel easy. It is a certain&#13;
cure for sweating, callous and hot,&#13;
tired, aching, feet. Try it today. Sold&#13;
by all druggists and shoe stores. By&#13;
mail for 25c in stamps. Trial packa?e&#13;
FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le&#13;
Roy, N. Y.&#13;
B Burglars got 130 worth of cigars&#13;
from Anderson &amp; Orth's drug store at&#13;
Midland, and tried to open the vauH&#13;
in the savings bank.&#13;
T H E G R A I N - O L A W • ! * ! * .&#13;
Rocheater, N. Y„ May 1», 189T.—Tliagreat&#13;
$50,000 damage suit rhatttdted by&#13;
Genesee Pure Food (3otnpairy aa at a a&#13;
end. They settled it and took it o a t&#13;
of court, for this ridiculously small sun*&#13;
of $500, and, as a practical result*.&#13;
Grain-0 is in greater demand: thAB*&#13;
ever. The new,plant, only, just,completed,&#13;
is to be duplicated, ao that not&#13;
poly the old friends of tha delicious&#13;
food drink, which completely takes the&#13;
place of coffee, but the hew frlende It&#13;
is making every day can be supplied.&#13;
The beverage which the children, a*&#13;
well aa the adult, may elrlak w i t h benefit&#13;
will be furnished in unUralied'&#13;
quantities.&#13;
Suits may come and suits inajrgOv&#13;
but Graln-0 goes on forever—N, Y\&#13;
stall and Expreaa.&#13;
They who hare the power to make&#13;
the best of life's misadventures and accidents,&#13;
are likely to reach a green&#13;
old age.&#13;
West Bay City police discovered a&gt;&#13;
counterfeiter*,' den and arrested Jos.&#13;
Turcott The molds and 13&#13;
dollars we re captu i-ed.&#13;
The editor, of this paper advises blare&#13;
aders that a free package of Peruviana&#13;
the best kidney and liver enreon earthy&#13;
will be delivered FREE to any sufferer,&#13;
if written for promptly. PmwmAX*&#13;
Rjuuu&gt;r Co., 28o 5th S I , CancaonaAi, £.&#13;
Nancy L. Stevens, an aged lady who.&#13;
is almost deaf, was run over by sav&#13;
electric car at Jackson and at is fee\red&gt;&#13;
she will not recover.&#13;
For Itching Piles, irritation of the&#13;
genitals, or itching in any portion of&#13;
the body, Doan's Ointment is worth its&#13;
weight in gold. No matter how longstanding&#13;
the trouble, Doan's Ointment&#13;
will not fail to give instant relief.&#13;
Educate Yoar Bowels Wish&#13;
Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever.&#13;
Me. If C. C C. fail, druggieta — *—*&#13;
%&#13;
Be not pliant wax for outward circumstances&#13;
to seal. Make your own&#13;
thought the mold, your own will the&#13;
stamp of your life.&#13;
Burdock Blood Bitters is nature's&#13;
true remedy for constipation and kindred&#13;
ilia.. I t acts directly on the bowels,&#13;
the liver, the skin, and while&#13;
cleansing the blood imparts strength&#13;
to the digestive organa&#13;
Bill—What d&gt;d they throw the policeman&#13;
down the well for? Jen*—I&#13;
guess they wanted to put a copper bottom&#13;
into it.&#13;
The negiieet of a eoad ia often fataJ,&#13;
t&gt;r. Wood'a Norway Piave Syrup eontaina&#13;
all the soothing virtues of the&#13;
pine. Never fails to cure.&#13;
When sin hides it forgets that at cannot.&#13;
cover up its tracks. IGREAfWENSi&#13;
To Carry omr asriimsotWall Ion Wi&amp;L-&#13;
—At lAst the Fight is Oror.&#13;
' ' • * '. v\&#13;
Our representative caMed at 86 Battle&#13;
Creek Avenue, the roridence of 8 L Boo&#13;
bins,aad in an interview with him btonght&#13;
eoA the following facta. Mr Bobbins tell*&#13;
of ma wife's experience in a manner that&#13;
canfes conviction with his words, B e&#13;
aays. " I am sorry my wife la not at i&#13;
this P. k t , but no one knows bettor&#13;
I how she has suffered durfa&#13;
For twenty years ahe has T&#13;
with the rarioua forms of kklsey&#13;
pmlqtaad an enlargriaroa » T t i&#13;
She was often confined t s hsr hoi&#13;
tsastwow^efaatartaaeaMffermi&#13;
agony, floe has doctowd&#13;
r h a r e paid out to 4A0toflaf bttk fir herr&#13;
alone ss much as tMt.06, asst then hsr re&#13;
IkfwmoiUy such t a ^ she wookl be sblan&#13;
He—Do you know. I think you are a to be. a. rou. nd for a speJL -&#13;
moat singular girl? She (coyly)—I «* j ahe felt the symptoms of&#13;
aure you it ian*t from choice. oominf. 0¾ a w h a s a pain&#13;
• j ikniddunceeyds amneds ob ack. I&#13;
One application of Dr. Thomas' Ee&gt; 1 PiUa, instead of&#13;
ieetrie Ofl takes away the pain of * &lt; flTS, ' . " T . ^ . . ^ t •Ti"T[..T'!i.T'!!ihJn&#13;
saostaeeesobnro. I t k a a T i d o a l t m ^ \ f ! S S S L J S S ^ V J ^ T t £ '&#13;
*\— ii-» -*&gt; . ooma^anooi soar one. i t wm % aorpraw&#13;
ilyltoimeot. ' toue bc&lt;h to see the4re«sion; thestta,^&#13;
her.'* "Yea, ooottooad takingget&#13;
a lot et good pointa aaont&#13;
aae'd make a apienftld hat*&#13;
V e will audi free to anyone our complete&#13;
Drug Cataiogne. Out-Bate PrtceUet.&#13;
It will save you money en everything is.&#13;
Dross, Patent Mestciiiea, Rubber Goods&#13;
Wlaevetc. Beery family aOouM ttave- one&#13;
^s^Onax^o w a sr oo^HS^a* v o ^i^^s^ a ^a^a&gt; oaonoa • aossnass^s&gt;asa% ^sSavSaasst&#13;
Ho-snaa Bdgorton reminds me of a d«ll&lt;&#13;
o t e piece of china. She—Hand^palntedf&#13;
Oaarratse^&#13;
s^ blood anre, JOcsv&#13;
AUklndaof lnaecU,A8 t&#13;
aertof&#13;
5%¾ o f t h d r t s m Ahem&#13;
BSSseeotoyoasa,«hepeinis&#13;
others to the kidneys have «&#13;
HatxUy 0 day goes W thai wo do sot&#13;
tkm s W s ^ o x f a W D o m r s aDdney Pitta.&#13;
/&#13;
•&lt;&#13;
&gt; v^ijJij&#13;
W&#13;
m&#13;
" • • : 1&#13;
W4&#13;
1\&#13;
. '•"'''A&#13;
• • ^ #&#13;
.. ••';}&#13;
» -&#13;
M&#13;
'**.:&#13;
_x&#13;
MfflR^ffllittiMWMIIMfliiMyirafl JttMlll^ltM^^MMMMNM'&#13;
*••• if&#13;
! v&#13;
/^'"•V^^'.-?^&#13;
. , ^'&#13;
P • ' • / / •&#13;
* • * • «J"f M&#13;
tt-&#13;
Jfc&#13;
§huhm jflfr**.&#13;
F. L. ANDREWS, EDITOR.&#13;
THURSDAY, JUNE 10, 1897.&#13;
Care and Preparation of Cream&#13;
and Butter.&#13;
"fF&#13;
Continued from last week.&#13;
The oldest of the gravity pror&#13;
cess is the fcolifltein system. In&#13;
this,.the complete rising of the&#13;
creajfeis secured by the thinness&#13;
of twrtayer of milk, and by rather&#13;
high iSferaperature at which the&#13;
milk-serum is but little viscous.&#13;
The developement of the bacteria&#13;
is rather incompletely checked.&#13;
The temperature sinks s b ^ T in&#13;
the pan and the final, .teRaperature&#13;
(65 to 59 deg. F.) wbt» not very&#13;
favorable'to the bacteria is yet by&#13;
no means unfavorable and as the&#13;
milk is under the influence of this&#13;
and Btill higher temperature for&#13;
at least thirty-six hours, it is evfc-j'&#13;
dent that a considerable bacterial&#13;
growth will take place.&#13;
It is often very difficult in thlsj where the method is recommendgravity&#13;
process to fight especially ed as gupperior to the others of&#13;
be present in the milk is&#13;
to the wall, forming the BO&#13;
separate slime and the&#13;
is separate from the skim-&#13;
By this application of the&#13;
te or centrifugal, the eream&#13;
separated from the milk&#13;
as it comes to the creamater&#13;
that is allowed to rein&#13;
the tanks for days or&#13;
•aeke, becomes more or less subjected&#13;
to milk splashed out of the&#13;
creamer, an although kept at a&#13;
low temperature, that which&#13;
splashes on to the walls and floor&#13;
evaporates and sends the bacteria&#13;
into the air of the room, where it&#13;
'easily affects the milk. Cream&#13;
obtained by the so-called ice&#13;
method is comparatively clean&#13;
from bacteria providing there has&#13;
been vigilenc(* and cleanliness.&#13;
By this method the cream may&#13;
be separated from the milk as&#13;
soon as it comes to the creamery.&#13;
This, of course shortens the period&#13;
for the contaminations from&#13;
organisms in the air, and the developement&#13;
of bacteria. This is&#13;
Subscribe for the Our ITCH.&#13;
Wanted-An Idea S 3 B&#13;
ln*eSV want&#13;
Watch the DISPATCH liner columns&#13;
of To rent, For 9al*», etc. They may&#13;
prove to be of interest to you.&#13;
torn**i*jrw6&gt;A&#13;
aInnde DllMit leabtersta sntyslhese o^fTayapaee, eattae.U, *^¾^¾¾¾&#13;
us to eaeeute «11 kind* at work. •&lt;&#13;
nunplett, Fosters, Pregrewmes, Bll&#13;
Heads, Statements, OiMt, Auction&#13;
suparier styles, upon the shortest not&#13;
iv*t as good work can fee MM.&#13;
#LL BlfcfcS PATAMOi N U T Of I V S * * MOMtV. tf&#13;
BU&#13;
u^ttoxa&amp;«gr svt Xi«w.&#13;
STOOKBRIDOE, MICH.&#13;
Will attend to »11 business of the profession&#13;
wlthndellty audcare. Speaial atteatloo given to&#13;
business along the line at Uw U.K. U, Hallway.&#13;
Telephone oalli responded to,&#13;
the lactic acid bacteria. The dif&#13;
ficulty in keeping the pans clean&#13;
is another objection. It is the&#13;
duty of the person in charge to&#13;
personally inspect the pan-when&#13;
cleaned In the ice methods now&#13;
generally Used in many diaries,&#13;
light and cleanliness are the principal&#13;
mediums for fightiug the&#13;
fermentation, bu J by Cooling. The&#13;
low temperature checks the&#13;
growth and developement of the&#13;
bacteria but it does not kill, only&#13;
placing in a dormant or sleeping&#13;
state. If there is carelessness or&#13;
-neglect in proper cooling or the&#13;
use of unclean vessels the developement&#13;
of obnoxious bacteria is&#13;
liable to take place before the&#13;
temperature is low enough to stop&#13;
the fermentation; injurious results&#13;
may be observed later on in the&#13;
product. The outcome of carelessly&#13;
made, or slowly cooled, or&#13;
unclean butter will be of a,n undesirable&#13;
flavor and the butter made&#13;
from such cream will not be of&#13;
such a quality as the cream would&#13;
otherwise have been. Milk subjected&#13;
to temperature of 79 dee;.&#13;
F. will develppe the bacteria very&#13;
quickly and in proportion as this&#13;
temperature is lowered the developement&#13;
will decrease in ratio&#13;
until at or below 30 degrees F.,&#13;
the developement stops entirely.&#13;
- I n f h ^ if» fnfti.hnd_j|jift_jnjlk is&#13;
creamed in high, usually narrow&#13;
tins. This should be completely&#13;
serilized by clean, scalding water&#13;
and dried iu sweet air, and if convenient&#13;
in the sunshine or near a&#13;
good fire with scrupulously clean&#13;
surrondingB. Do not start in the&#13;
use of the ice, and endeavor to ascertain&#13;
if the ice is from clean&#13;
water places, that is, not near&#13;
banw, outihouses, nor swampy nor&#13;
stagnant places or in a stream polutted&#13;
by privy discharges or sewerage.&#13;
It is better to use finely&#13;
divided ice in the creamer in the&#13;
beginning of the work. When&#13;
the milk has been sufficiently&#13;
lowered iu temperature larger&#13;
pieces may be used.&#13;
CJse'only pure, clean water in&#13;
creamer, and see that this is&#13;
changed frequently. Cream so&#13;
obtained by the so-called ice method&#13;
is comparatively free from bacteria&#13;
providing there has been&#13;
can tipn And cleanliness observed.&#13;
Mora* aeHom form in it- as iu the&#13;
ahaHq* svatem or that so-called&#13;
velvety appearance.&#13;
Separator .Cream;—In this&#13;
method the heavier parte of the&#13;
milk are whirled against the cir-&#13;
«omfere«ce of ft#teei bowl wfcile&#13;
jfe lighter parts, the cream, re-&#13;
Main near the center. " hf tittf&#13;
of work all fikn tflttt&#13;
Cream Separation.&#13;
The milk should by no means&#13;
be left in the handling cans for&#13;
any length of time excepting what&#13;
is absolutely necessary to start&#13;
the work. The witholding of milk&#13;
for hours because of ap insufficient&#13;
number of separators is to be discouraged.&#13;
If it is done for eco-&#13;
Con tinned on pace 5.&#13;
'CURBS IN THE RIGHT WAY, BY REQULATINQ THE LIVER'&#13;
AND KIDNEYS, AND PURIFYING THE BLOOD.&#13;
It is a positive cure for Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Dyspepsia, Sick and'&#13;
' Nervous Headache, Fever and Ague, Chills, and all diseases arising from*&#13;
'a diseased liver or the kidneys, or impure blood&#13;
YOUR MONEY BACK J U t f i r a t t a J B M&#13;
you bare had your money'* worth, send us back the guarantee, which you win&#13;
fjfetr taking"&#13;
not thUl&lt;&#13;
youl find in Uw&#13;
&gt; box, and we will aend you a check' for tx.00 by return mail.&#13;
It !a put uotn two forms, powder and tablets. The tablets are the easier tb take, requir-&#13;
Price $1.00 for »80 doses of either kind. Sent post paid upon receipt ox&#13;
cents for ten days' treatment and copy of Nature's Guide to Health.&#13;
.A. H. LEWIS MEDICINE CO., • Bolivar, Ma&#13;
Railroad&#13;
tf raat Trmt Railway System.&#13;
A r rival and1 Departure oof TDTraaiat*a rtWttctaoj.&#13;
UEffeeOfayMWr.&#13;
WStTSOVKP,&#13;
hr,&#13;
Jackson and Interm'dte SU. t*.4s as* " tWps»&#13;
•ASCftOQirp . ,&#13;
Pontlao Detrolt-Od. Rapids&#13;
andlntejrftMdIsteeto. tWVpra&#13;
Pontlao Lenox Detroit and u •&#13;
IntermediateSta. t^QOam&#13;
Mioh. AUr Line Dfv. ftsins ^&#13;
leave Pontiaa at tCM a m&#13;
for Romeo Lenox and int. st*.&#13;
D. A Mi DIVI8IOK LKAVB PONTIAC&#13;
WSSCtXWMB&#13;
A*.&#13;
* 4 0 p *&#13;
Saginaw Gd Bsplds and Gd Haven&#13;
otfRapidsaTfii L&#13;
SCahglionaafw 0 aOndd IKntwerlm^ edi,a te sta.&#13;
aven Chicago&#13;
10i MUwaftkee&#13;
SOHfsTTHINO TO KNOW.&#13;
It may be worth something to know&#13;
that tbe very best medicine for restor&#13;
ing tbe tired out nervous system to a&#13;
healthy vigor is Electric Bitters. This&#13;
mediciB1 e is pufely^vegetable7"actsr by&#13;
giving tone to the nerve centers in the&#13;
stomach, gently stimulates the Liver&#13;
and Kidneys, and aids these organs in&#13;
throwing off irr purities in the blood&#13;
Electric Bitters improves the appetite,&#13;
aids digestion, and is pronounced&#13;
by those who have tried it as the&#13;
very best blood purifier and nerve&#13;
tonic. Try it. Sold for 50c or $1.00&#13;
per bottle at F. A. Sigler's drugstore.&#13;
The Oast Line to MACKINAC&#13;
*—TAKBl T M « — •&#13;
TO&#13;
308 WORK&#13;
PHI DfvlpTLY and NEATLY&#13;
MACKINAC&#13;
D E T R O I T&#13;
PETOSKEY&#13;
CHICAGO&#13;
New Steel Passenge* Steamers&#13;
The Oreatest Perfection yet attained in&#13;
Beat Constructlea—Luxurious Equipment,&#13;
Artistic Fernlsblej, Decoration and Efficient&#13;
Service, insuring the highest degree of&#13;
COMFORT, SPEED AND SAFETY&#13;
Fou« TRIPS PER WEEK Bcr*K»&#13;
Toledo, Detroit and Mackinac&#13;
PETOSKEY, "THE SOO," MARQUETTE&#13;
ANO OULUTH.&#13;
LOW RATES to Picturesque Mackinac and&#13;
Return, indudieg rieals wm-J Berths. From&#13;
GteveUad, $i3; freeu Toledo, $15; trow&#13;
Detroit, $1350.&#13;
DAY AND NIGHT SERVICE.&#13;
Between Detroit and Cleveland&#13;
Connecting at Cleveland with Earliest&#13;
Trejias for all points East. South and South&#13;
west and at Detroit for ell points North and&#13;
Northwest.&#13;
Suae** Tripe Jane, Jutjr, Aefvet sne* Sept Only&#13;
EVERY DAY BETWEEM&#13;
CleveUnd^ut-in-Bay /Toledo&#13;
b e n d for Illustrated Pamphlet. Address&#13;
A . A . S^OMASfTZ, « . 9, ».. OSTTMQIT. MIOH.&#13;
Mr. R. B.Greeve, merchant of Cbilhowie,&#13;
Va.t certifies that be bad coagoaaption,&#13;
was given np to 4M, sought&#13;
all medical treatment that money&#13;
could procure, tried all cough remedies&#13;
be could bear of, but got no relief;&#13;
fepent many nights sitting up in a&#13;
chair; was induced to try Or. King's&#13;
New DiaoQgery, and iraa&lt;curedjby the&#13;
use of two bottles. For past three&#13;
years has been attending to bnain668&#13;
18 AT THE&#13;
PINGKSEY DISPATGH JOB RGOMS,-&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICH.&#13;
and aaya Dr. King's New Dtsoovery is&#13;
tbe grandest remedy erer made, as it&#13;
baa done so much for him and also&#13;
for others io his oommmnky. Dr.&#13;
fLimrV Kow Diacovswjr it gnaranteed&#13;
for Coughs, Colds and Conanmpiioa.&#13;
Itdont fail. Tna4 baatiae free at&#13;
W. A. Stgiars drug rtMft.&#13;
Qd Ksplde E S T Muskegon&#13;
KABTBOUND&#13;
Detroit East and Canada *6.8fi a a»&#13;
Detroit East and Canada tlO.M a »&#13;
Detroit and South |a.t*7 p at&#13;
Detroit East and Canada Y&amp;9g P »&#13;
Detroit Suburban |7.0&amp;ata»&#13;
Leave Detroit via Windsor&#13;
BAtTBOCMD&#13;
Buffalo—New York «t Boston&#13;
Toronto Montreal New York&#13;
London Express&#13;
Buffalo New York &amp; East&#13;
7,4ft am tarin hasileeplujcoars Detroit to Jfew&#13;
York and Boston. 19.00 noon train kas parlor&#13;
car to Hamilton—Sleeping car to Buffalo and New&#13;
York 11.25 train has sleeping oar to New York;&#13;
fDaily except Huudaj. 'Daily.&#13;
W. J. BLACK, Agent, Ptaekuejr Mtcb.&#13;
W. E. DAVIS E. H. HUOHKS&#13;
G. P, a T. Ageu*. A. G. f, k T Agt.&#13;
Montreal, Qua, Chicago, 111,&#13;
B m r S t r e a m , Trav. rassrAgt,DetroitMiehv&#13;
*T.45*s»&#13;
•12, noon&#13;
t&amp;40pa»&#13;
•11.25 urn&#13;
toffi&#13;
T o m&#13;
Popular route for Ann Arbor, Toledo&#13;
and points East, South and for&#13;
Howeil, Qwosso, Alma, Mt Pleasant,&#13;
Cadillac, Manistee, Traverse City and&#13;
points in Northwestern Michigan.&#13;
W. H. BEVNBTT,&#13;
G. P. A., Toledo.&#13;
TKAOff MAwJCaV&#13;
MsV&#13;
OOf»YfHOHT« «t«.&#13;
qnAionkylornaea oseefntaaiuaw, f»r eaek, awtchhe athnedr r teene elrnlpvteino«sii aoanajyi fpornofbtdawbliyr iiniLa teOatioa&gt;M&gt;te .a #Ceno&lt;o7u nfournwiKeaMtiorlnBaf vaatrtteootsv) inr &gt;AUntetrttse ata. keWn et hhraovewe ha MWuananb inat tCxmo. orseaoeaei.v a lnatteeint2»— 8CIEMTIFIC AMERICAN,&#13;
banearnsetjlfeunjdijfrl.etljloaaantriaatle, dw. eeUknlyr,e tsetr neuifr&amp;enSlOat aio ay eaont auOaUc saonths. Speoimen copies ana &amp;AJK*&#13;
BOOK O * PATKKTS sent free. Adoreaa&#13;
M U N N A CC&#13;
M l Bretfulwaf, Mow&#13;
A Sufferer Cured&#13;
" Every season, from the time I&#13;
was two years old, 1 suffered dreadfully&#13;
from erysipelas, which kept&#13;
growing worse until my bauds were&#13;
almost useless. The bones softened&#13;
&amp;o that they would bead, aodsey^raj&#13;
of my lingers Are now crooked from&#13;
this rause. On my&#13;
luuid I carry large&#13;
scars, which, but! or toues&#13;
SsW&amp;aparilla, would&#13;
be sores, provided I&#13;
was alive and able&#13;
to carry anything.&#13;
Eight bottles of&#13;
Ayer*s Sarsaparilla cured toe* so&#13;
that I have had no return of the&#13;
disease for more than twenty years.&#13;
Tlie first bottle scmicd to reach tlte&#13;
8jK&gt;t and a persistent use of it haa&#13;
perfected tbe eure.**—o. C. lUna,&#13;
Wautoma, Wie.&#13;
vmmMMi&#13;
mr+*hpm*gtM um&#13;
n&#13;
V&#13;
/&#13;
tJas^^-^yiaaaiL^^.&#13;
;*t'k.Mt.r •• -.w^.flfc^jwfcjtjliirt&amp;.a^vt.&#13;
» -&#13;
" ^ I ^ ^ T e ^ "T" ' **, '"""""•••••pi ' H P • . P1IIIMI W " l | | M » F I ] " " ||*&#13;
&amp; . ' £&#13;
# »&#13;
&amp; ' I- ;."&gt;* M$ft&#13;
v - . • \ •&lt;&amp;; - • &gt; • • . . - . . - • » • , . . . . I . , • • ,&#13;
•:ity;$&amp;* m&amp; (iife&#13;
• ' &lt; &amp; " •&#13;
u *&lt;*!.&#13;
• V ; ^ v y . ^ . * ^ i 4 l j fliWIi'tW-M. «iX..&#13;
'^SSSSSSSkSS? •SP&#13;
• » • • •&#13;
/&#13;
1¾&#13;
&amp;&#13;
y&#13;
t&#13;
#&#13;
• a * &lt;« M ''&#13;
-kv.~-&#13;
e»*. a/ita-1 ».&lt;*•'•.'^-.jniBiir&#13;
PI&#13;
pajta^psape?^ .•'«•"" I * THE ttejWIT* REMEDY&#13;
-««in in m&#13;
Rasp a Battle ta &amp;\t HMW,&#13;
•L^MVB YOUR. LIFE,&#13;
F I I I C E ) , A S C e n t s .&#13;
; We can give ewployment nenoanent and&#13;
lucrative to a TOOdMtotrfi 1 ^ »cUo». For&#13;
pajUoukuacall op pj&amp;Uabir of tWf paper.&#13;
JAMES W, PMTM CO.. Mf« DftMMTt,&#13;
BATH, N,H.&#13;
*H *N tuvg &lt;*00 sJSJJOa ' M SlWVf&#13;
J 5&#13;
ft&#13;
13&#13;
2&#13;
o&#13;
*&#13;
•ooixoidnno «0 *&gt;4&#13;
5&#13;
3 mo&#13;
m&#13;
01&#13;
i*pi.iwiiis»»fss«*ejBiseesss«v*r*,»r:TT?"""&#13;
Coaibmedtroiu page4.&#13;
I i 11 i e. »»&gt;*w m&gt;&#13;
" » * " " * W P W W » " ^ "&#13;
*&#13;
kit:*en Naive,&#13;
in the world for&#13;
&lt; -, inoer*, pa It rheum,&#13;
&lt;. ci'ripped bands,chill&#13;
i nil skin eruptions,&#13;
v s .in'M piles or no pay&#13;
It IA guaranteed to give&#13;
pet fr»w Mi ti-faction or money refunded.&#13;
r*rit^ 25 cents per box. For sale&#13;
b? P. A SM*r.&#13;
Mlchlf«ii&gt;Piopte.&#13;
l ^ f ^ W f t l ^ ^ penny wise&#13;
jpd poaadfoxsliih idea, and ahould&#13;
be reproted, A sufficient-number&#13;
of separators to start the milk&#13;
when it arrives is conductive to&#13;
the greatest economy, because the&#13;
greatest saving and the best quality,&#13;
of produce results thereby.&#13;
The method of pasteurizing new&#13;
milk before separation gives a certain&#13;
cooked, taste to the bntter,&#13;
while the pasteurizing of the&#13;
cream alone avoids this objectionable&#13;
flavor.&#13;
The separator method also&#13;
thrpws the greater number of bactes^&#13;
a from the creain into the separator&#13;
bowl, thus tending greatly&#13;
to. purify the cream and give&#13;
cleaner products. In this method&#13;
the greatest of care must be observed&#13;
in removing constantly the&#13;
layer of slime filth from the bowl&#13;
because when allowed to accumulate&#13;
part of it will again be washed&#13;
into the cream ard skimmed milk.&#13;
It is frequently observed that&#13;
in some dairies, persons dusty or&#13;
even dirty are allowed to approach&#13;
and come in contact with the separators,&#13;
the drivers and teamsters&#13;
will pass in and out handling&#13;
utensils and shaking off the "road&#13;
dust indifferent to the results.&#13;
This is damaging because the&#13;
cream and skim-milk as they come&#13;
from the separator in their streams&#13;
offer a larger surface for infection.&#13;
As soon as the cream comes' from&#13;
the separator it must be either&#13;
rapidly cooled or pasteurized in&#13;
order to destroy or check the bacteria.&#13;
The cream, if cooled&#13;
should be lowered to a temperature&#13;
not higher than 43 degrees&#13;
F., this, of course, consumes considerable&#13;
ice, but insures splen-&#13;
4'i; l"i&#13;
&gt;*asv&#13;
iLOCATEp&#13;
DkttOy Qpp&lt;**M.£'*'y Depot&#13;
la He Center of 6»Vhoksak&#13;
?fe^ M t ^ fr Ekdric CSJS to Re-;&#13;
B Center urf at Fhca of Ammtmntt.*&#13;
tRites, $2.0» to $3M per Day.:&#13;
cleaned or prepared The so-called&#13;
'white specked' bntter is due to an|-&#13;
exoeas of buttermilk remaining in&#13;
Again a smoky flavor occasionally&#13;
met with will invariably be&#13;
traced to poorly kept establishments&#13;
where the air supply is insufficient&#13;
and also the place infected&#13;
with smoke.&#13;
Moldy Butter or Milk:-This&#13;
taste and flavor will sometimes appear&#13;
in eream or butter when, the&#13;
•ample is fresh, and it has the appearance&#13;
of small white specks&#13;
and teems to be both on the surface&#13;
and in the inner portion of&#13;
the substance. Under the microscope&#13;
these appear in colonies of&#13;
mold or fringe. " In rare occasions&#13;
this has been noticed as pale green&#13;
fringe.&#13;
Dappled putter, This disease&#13;
appears mora especially in the&#13;
warm season rather than in the&#13;
winter time, and has a mottled or&#13;
spotted and sometime streaky&#13;
grey effect, and is. undoubtedly&#13;
due to both contamination of the&#13;
milk in poorly kept dairies or&#13;
stables, or else in the handling or&#13;
milking, and to the developement&#13;
" • m i ii i i m i w w y ^ w&#13;
I A MICHIGAN NEWSPAPER FOR MICHIGAN PEOPLE. §&#13;
TUB PWTRPtT BVBWPW MBWj h e j — r 1000 epedel ssrwspeniwto wne eft I&#13;
ever t u t * * alert fer tteewefoewe wMcta arid* l«Ure« * * * • r«e4«rf. 3&#13;
If yen we«M fcevt all the t**eral newt of the *gr, trjr It far a aealfe* S&#13;
Two ents 16Hi. TacNtsifttfc $1,25 fir3«itH 1&#13;
(otu^nao). civ MAJU.&#13;
AQmNTB IN&#13;
*m&#13;
RY TOWN IN M/OHIQAN. ~&#13;
The Evening News, Detroit*&#13;
lilitiiiililitliill&#13;
Ifae |itirhnr« Jli^tcb. ij S o e C i a l Bargain&#13;
PDBU8BBO KVKJ&gt;T THI7R8D1Y MJBSISG BY |l ^*W mmmmpmmAi^^m~&#13;
THE MASON ARTIFICIAL STOKE WATEfi TA^E. A womtert*\\&#13;
iavenUoaaBd • neat bo©n to UrnMn.&#13;
eaM &amp; a o t effect &amp; • » , aaaMhej win kM&#13;
MtroyeA by an earthquake while Uw earth&#13;
re lavite y o u inapeeaea. They win aot&#13;
tea, raei or wear out. Warranted for fire yean.&#13;
For farther parUcalen cell or write to&#13;
WILL EVEBS,&#13;
Ageat and «i»iiiJ«itt»ui,fctockJbrioj«,Mic h&#13;
^-j-didresults. — — — —&#13;
A bad practice in many dairies&#13;
is the saving of ice by allowing&#13;
the product to cool slowly in a&#13;
cooling tank filled with cold water&#13;
after the cream has been heated&#13;
to a temperature of about 176 degrees&#13;
FarenheitTtk]$ cooling is too&#13;
slow. Iced water, or better, ice,&#13;
and the continued stirring of the&#13;
entire quantity of cream so as to&#13;
insure uniform cooling is far mere&#13;
preferable.&#13;
The milk in order to be sufficiently&#13;
pasteurized should be&#13;
heated up to 170 degrees Farenheit,&#13;
and then subjected to strong&#13;
cooling to 39 degrees Farenheit,&#13;
immediately after; this last step&#13;
avoids the cooked taste in the&#13;
butter. The steaming or pasteurization&#13;
should be done quickly,&#13;
by cans inserted into snug wooden&#13;
reservors, and steam blown 4n-f&#13;
between the wood and the can&#13;
from a pipe, and the cream kept&#13;
constantly stirred with a cream&#13;
spade. *&#13;
I have taken up these tW methods&#13;
in order to Illustrate, that utmost&#13;
care and cleanliness should&#13;
be exercised in the manufacture&#13;
of bntter. and the handling of&#13;
cream and milk.&#13;
DISEASES OF BUTTE*.&#13;
A great many people imagine&#13;
tha* the so-called diseases of the&#13;
batter are mainly attributable to&#13;
t^qiMiity and variety, of food&#13;
given the cows. I eonsider these&#13;
abnormal conditions, the outcome&#13;
of bacterial developement and f ereneatations;&#13;
no doubt the faulty&#13;
feeding of tiie cows has some influence&#13;
on the quality of the batter;&#13;
but there are other faults&#13;
than those already mentioned.&#13;
Striped bntter j» caused by an&#13;
uneven division or distribution^&#13;
the a«H o* "pnevttf color" to the&#13;
faulty jarcflMeWsiifLMinjynnf»otnre;&#13;
"wood t a B t e f / a * ^ e s r * n c t wit*&#13;
in hotter, oa*t% £ ^ a b * a l * &gt;&#13;
W m* h«ttoW^vi»» J f a i tops&#13;
4» to£a or paik *nade iroaa jan&#13;
U iuad of wood not&#13;
of a bacteria^wTiicirspreads or in^&#13;
creases with great rapidity and&#13;
starts from small centers and radiates&#13;
out in all directions so as&#13;
to form little start like colonies.&#13;
It has been the general belief&#13;
among dairymen that the occurence&#13;
of these needle like crystals&#13;
in the milk or butter was certain&#13;
proof of the adulteration of the&#13;
same and indicated the presence&#13;
of lard or some other animal fat;&#13;
this appearance will occasionally&#13;
be met with in warm weather&#13;
when the butter has been fused&#13;
and again allowed to solidify; to&#13;
somethisappears-on the surface&#13;
of cream or butter as a scum or&#13;
pellicle. The only recourse in a&#13;
case of this kind is to subject the&#13;
infected produce to an even heating&#13;
to 135 degrees F., for fifteen&#13;
minutes agitating wellv to insure&#13;
thorough distribution of heat&#13;
Cotcluded next week.&#13;
PDBU8BBO SVB9Y THURSDAY »JB»I»G BY&#13;
F R A N K L„ A N D R E W S&#13;
Editor and Proprietor.&#13;
Subscription Price $1 in Advance&#13;
Entered at the FoatenUe at PiAeltoey, Micbi*»a,&#13;
M eecoiul-claeii muter.&#13;
Advertising rutea m*dt) known on application.&#13;
Buslneas Cardj, $4.00 per year.&#13;
Death and inarrietie uoiicee publiaaed tn«.&#13;
Announcements of entertainment* may- be yaid&#13;
for, it desired, by presenting toe office with tickets&#13;
of admission. In case tickets are not brought&#13;
to tne office, regular rates will be charged.&#13;
All matter in local notice column wiU be char.&#13;
ed at 5 cents per line or fraction thereof, for eac&#13;
Insertion. Where no time is aueclned, all notices&#13;
will be Insetted iiDiil.^Kisred oMacontlnned, and&#13;
will be chaiged for accordingly. fcs»"*All chcuuee&#13;
at advertisements UVut reach this office ae early&#13;
as TUESDAY morning to insure an insertion the&#13;
same week.&#13;
3.&#13;
Mr. Isaac Horner, proprietor ot&#13;
Burton House, Barton, W. Va., and&#13;
one of the most widely known men in&#13;
the state was cared of rheumatism&#13;
after three years of suffering. He&#13;
says: "I have not sufficient command&#13;
of language to conyey any idea of&#13;
what I suffered, my physicians told&#13;
me that nothing could be done for me&#13;
and my friends were tally convinced&#13;
that nothing but death could relieve&#13;
me of my suffering. In June, 1894&#13;
Mr. Evans, then Wesmau for the&#13;
Wheeling Drug Co., recommended&#13;
Chamberlains Pain Balm. At this&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIRECTORY.&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PBSSIDBKT-. . _ « ....Claude L. Sigler.&#13;
TtiCSTHS, Geo. Reason. Jr., •ff. K. Murohy. 1\ G.&#13;
Jackson, F. J. Wright. E. R. Brown, C. L. Grimes.&#13;
CLBBK - ,..fi. II. Teeple,&#13;
J A. Cadweli.&#13;
ASSBSSOB .D. W. Mnrts&#13;
STBIST COMXISSIOMSB A. Monke&#13;
MAB*AHL P. Monroe.&#13;
HBALTH umoMM. Dr. U. F. Slider.&#13;
ArroBMEY M W. A. Carr.&#13;
e $5.00.&#13;
Special&#13;
Price af&#13;
long as they&#13;
, ast, t h »&#13;
I bigsestbar-&#13;
; pain ever&#13;
{offered,&#13;
&gt; ^ ' . 9 7&#13;
ifK J8uEstB o-ut 192* • page book of \ innolanneyd aav- vo.r-iiieoaleraualdlee . V/rite for IL&#13;
Finianed in f;old&#13;
acqaer.&#13;
has N o 2&#13;
Rochester&#13;
chimney&#13;
and Wick,&#13;
with either&#13;
» handsome&#13;
14-inch&#13;
shade or id*&#13;
inch fancy&#13;
crepe tissue&#13;
paper shade&#13;
or fancy&#13;
band painted&#13;
banquet&#13;
Clone, with&#13;
rold trimmings,&#13;
all for / '&#13;
I&#13;
^CHURCHES.&#13;
-IjfaiHODlST^WSCOP Ai, GHUAGM^&#13;
UM. Rev. M. H. McMahoa pastor. 6ervicea every&#13;
Sunday morning at 10:3u, sad every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:00 o'clock. Prayer meeting Thursday&#13;
evenings. Sunday school at close of morn*&#13;
e^service. Mrs. £stella Graham, buDerlnteud't.&#13;
CONURUOATIONAL CHURCH.&#13;
C. 8. Jones, pastor. Service every&#13;
Sunday morning at 10:80, and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:0C o'clock. Prayer meeting Thursday&#13;
evenings. Sunday school at close of morainn&#13;
service. I. J. Coek, Sunt. S. T. Grimes, Sec.&#13;
time my foot and limb were swollen&#13;
to more than double their normal size&#13;
and it seemed to me my leg would&#13;
burst, bat soon after I began asing&#13;
the Pain Balm, the swelling began to&#13;
decrease, the pain to leave, and now I&#13;
consider that I am entirely cared. For&#13;
sale by F. A. Sigler.&#13;
s e e » « • * - * • * &gt; • « &gt; SMth A A&#13;
"NothlB* dse like it")&#13;
The most nfreshfaig and&#13;
pkaumt Soap for the skin.!&#13;
Il ltd! leTinr as loaf a*e9thers.i&#13;
A trial wiU eeoviaee esTlts) arreat1&#13;
WOI&#13;
CHARUSF. FILLER,!&#13;
eejr.eJ n B M M mmilB WMLBT&#13;
*+*&lt;+* SOAlPS AreB UssVI IWH1ILY,&#13;
Tiniistni Pi&#13;
iPeP99&gt;9P \wHfm • W&#13;
ST. MAKE'S 'JATH(»L1C CHURCH.&#13;
Rev. M. J. Cominerford, .Pastor. Services&#13;
every third Sunday. Low mass at 7:3U o'clock,&#13;
high mass with sermon at 9:30 a- m. Catechism&#13;
at 8:00 p.m., vespers and benediction at 7:80 p. m.&#13;
SOCIETIES;&#13;
The A. O. H. Soetetr ef this place, meets every&#13;
third Sunday in t&amp;e Fr. Matthew Ball.&#13;
Jefca MoGuiness, County Delegate.&#13;
Pinckney Y. P. S. C. E. Meetings held (very&#13;
Sunday evening in Cong*l church at ¢¢30o'clock.&#13;
M i&#13;
EP WORTH LEAGUE. Meets tvttry Sunday&#13;
evening at «.-00 oclock in the M. E. Church. A&#13;
cordial invitation is extended to everyone, espeeiaUy&#13;
young people. Miss Jennie Haze, Pree.&#13;
$1.97&#13;
A. M. ROTHSCHILD &amp; CO.&#13;
. . WHOLESALE.&#13;
State, VeaSsrea te JecUoe^sU., CkJcaf*. Mention thin paper.&#13;
» » % a e j ^ &gt; ^ &lt; % » j ^ PATENTS Caveats and Trade Marks obtained and all Patent&#13;
businesscondnc ted f, r Moderate Fees. •&#13;
Bend model, driving or photo. Weed viae if&#13;
patentable f r eo of chirgo. Our fe*» not due till&#13;
patent! a secure 1. A Pan-pLlet "Uow to Obtain&#13;
Patents." vrilb coat of same in the U.&#13;
and foreign countries sent free. Addread&gt;&#13;
C. A. 8NOW &amp; CO.&#13;
_ O^r. PATCNT O r n e t , WaSMIHOTOH. D . C^L&#13;
JSpiicj^y cored b/ Dr. Miles Nsrtta*.&#13;
Junior Epworth League,&#13;
afternoon at &amp;00 o'clock, at M. E church.&#13;
Meets every Sunday&#13;
. All&#13;
cordially invited.&#13;
Mrs. Estella GrahamSuperintendent.&#13;
Tie C. T. A. and B. Socletv of this place, meet&#13;
every third Satoroay evening in the Fr. Maitaew&#13;
Hael. John Doaohue, F reainesU.&#13;
KNIGHTS OF MACCABEX9.&#13;
Meet every Friday evening on or before fall&#13;
of the moon at their hall in the Swarthout bide.&#13;
Visiting brothers are cordially invited.&#13;
Cxaa. OaxPB&amp;XL, Sir Knight Commander&#13;
T iTingaton Lodge, No.W, F d A. M. Kepilar&#13;
J j Comsaunication Tuesday evening, on or before&#13;
the full of the moon. H. F. Sigler, W. M.&#13;
ORDER OF EASTERN STAR meets each month&#13;
the Friday evening following the regular F.&#13;
AA.M. meeting, Mas. C. ELASX facauBps, WJf,&#13;
J ADIESOFTHE MAOUABEIC&amp; Meet every&#13;
J 1st andSrd tiaturdayef each month at »:30&#13;
clock at the K. «&gt;. T. M. halL Viaitins) slaters&#13;
cordially invited. JVLU Saaua, Lady Cos*.&#13;
&gt;9K ' -NIGHTS er nut LOYAL GUARD&#13;
. _ _ Jt eeery seooad Wsdaeedar&#13;
ewniaw ef every monthinthe K. O.&#13;
T. M. flail at7:S0odock. All visiting&#13;
.Guards&#13;
F, L. AxDBKWa, Capt. Gen.&#13;
BUSiNESS CAROS.&#13;
H. F. StGLEft M. 0- C L, SK3LER M, O&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
Physiciaas aadSeurgeons. AU calls proaaptly&#13;
attendedtodaj or night. Oftee on Maiostreet&#13;
:^pi5h€&#13;
THE WHEEL OF WHEELS.&#13;
THE PERFECT&#13;
^ 4* WHEEL.&#13;
f w r&#13;
THE CARLISLE and get oca? prices.&#13;
THE CARLISLE MFG. CO.&#13;
1 2 2 ¾ ^ } 2(ttlvfidlfgai»Bot*WM4&#13;
BTSIIiTBnU?&#13;
r " «j&#13;
• ••; q&#13;
«&lt;*a&#13;
•M&#13;
m&#13;
Sold by F; *v, *M9r.&#13;
/ J«V&#13;
&lt;&lt; '-5K-&#13;
*\&#13;
' *&#13;
t i&#13;
n&#13;
mmMmMs mmmtmsm^&#13;
• ' • • • ' - - ' i . " • » ' ''•i1'-.&#13;
,'( • ' • . . - &lt; / • • • • "&#13;
&amp; ' • * •'• •&#13;
''¥'„*&#13;
(PV»e!&#13;
-^..: ^ • £ ,&#13;
X . , ' ,&#13;
M l&#13;
• ; &gt; ' «&#13;
• &lt; , • '&#13;
r." : '&gt;"•&#13;
r&amp;r&#13;
?K&#13;
'•£•&#13;
^&#13;
\&#13;
' , ' fr - .-• • - . • • . • • * * • : ! - - • v . . • * , . . . * • .1 . A, , » ? - \ .', . ••,'•&gt;. nl--*i". • ( ; - • • ' • ' - • • • • • • i i ' . ^ v ' i . v \ . . , '&#13;
' - ' - ' • , ' ' ' • • . • v • • ' ' • • • • ' ' ' • ; ' . . * • W&#13;
, . - ;.-T.' ^ ^ ^ : ^ - , - - . 1 i&#13;
_ &lt; , - " ' f * V . - &lt;&#13;
••».. ;&#13;
~ - f&#13;
Xjinchnen ZfitigatdL&#13;
FaXirrL. 'f^^ileW*, P«WUhtK&gt;&#13;
PIKOteS^'&#13;
•ion. &gt;|7h7 Mt l«t her iat&#13;
^ w i e e , which, too often ^alteuds&#13;
weaWi, (a ,a greater evM ^han, any that&#13;
-,'.A :-t -. TA'.-^ -:'';rr ; • . i f v ; . ., . , ,&#13;
It may be true that the gods are, in&#13;
tfa^oj eiathc.araeks, but iwtorUiaater&#13;
Xf the odda-are in favor, of tha Turks.&#13;
Vr«m tfc* V*U*wl«c *«ii;K. "Th» Wtn«&#13;
W M Ooatff»t7"'&#13;
Vdi&lt;J« or OhrUtUaft/&#13;
native 1B i&#13;
pTa ttip.no6 «ono«tr rate tin* noc«s«i?&#13;
ty, jnatiwa^^an JleWtto tbenj.in.auch a&#13;
manner as to b« greater thau M wo&#13;
•ould. -1 ' •'&#13;
TALMAGEy . iiEBJION.&#13;
••wf&#13;
1 - Oretoatlon is ^eheapeV, an* by^ many&#13;
thought to b* better than burial. With&#13;
'the advances In the prices of buriwl&#13;
ground'the crematory should receive&#13;
consideration;&#13;
l"- -&#13;
Thirteen w^ell-kno-wn physieians oi&#13;
the abuth are tc be tried on the charge&#13;
of adverting., When the medical profession&#13;
shall bt&lt; so far advanced th&amp;.t&#13;
all doctors will advertise we ahull&#13;
bear no more ol these contentions, and&#13;
phyalciana generally will be more pros*&#13;
parous.&#13;
An important tnd a just ruling has&#13;
Jjeen made reeenly by the postoffiee&#13;
'department. The chief of a labor&#13;
r munion~ia St. Louis mailecha-letter^ftying&#13;
on its envelope a colored - poster&#13;
requesting the receiver to boycott a&#13;
•" well known firm. The postolflce aui&#13;
thoritles decided that the letter.was %&#13;
violation of t^e federal law prohib^&#13;
. lng the sending through the .malla of&#13;
•: matter dee'tned to reflect injuriously&#13;
tupan the character ov conduct of another.&#13;
to onang* a name. Saul of Tortus be*&#13;
star." We have in America* and I suppose,&#13;
# 4gvsp i|&gt; aU/cftun^lea, name*&#13;
whjw^ioughf to ba »bo|Ji8he4f and tan&#13;
be. a&amp;4.«Ul be tbo^hed,Jku;,^ reason&#13;
that thay am a U U l and* slander, ^ t&#13;
U for any reason you arc Bubnx&lt;?rgtJd&#13;
either by a given name or by a family&#13;
name that you must bear. God will help&#13;
you to overcome the outrage by a life&#13;
consecrated to the good and uaetul.&#13;
You may erase the curse from the&#13;
name. If it once stood for meanness,&#13;
you can make it stand for gcaeroBtty,.&#13;
If once it stood for pride, you can&#13;
make it stand for humility, ff It once&#13;
There fafp^fh fli|Dant tflir If Eftg-&#13;
. land abousr conqiiermg the'fibers; 'but&#13;
the" BoVr is not a man to be despised,&#13;
" as English readers are told in a recent&#13;
article. The Boer is "a man with&#13;
fOwhom the predlkant (perer.n) is always&#13;
van honored guest; who loves,, and&#13;
thinks much of the opiaio%of i$B wile;&#13;
'' whofftp h t o d i e s s V h ^ i t s l w * | i i \ l who&#13;
^i^tgh^qrn&lt;ratght^^ rThi Ouliir V&#13;
• their Jfeife and 1¾ Ueir, shpv tiag.brij»*&#13;
to iniBd CromwW5 im en. aa good sofdierreswfche&#13;
world ever savr Fighting&#13;
the Boers in London club talk, and.&#13;
fighting them within rifle range, are&#13;
&gt; vastly different affairs, as Raidti Jaxne-&#13;
"son can testify.&#13;
boffterous^that you&#13;
^ure,in doi|bt as to&#13;
whether j o u will&#13;
land on tha shore&#13;
,or oq th,e .bottom of&#13;
the deep. The disctyeB in the text&#13;
were ciught in such a' stress of weather&#13;
and the sails bent and the ship plunged&#13;
for "the wind was contrary." There&#13;
is in one of the European straits a&#13;
pls^ce, where, whichever way you sail&#13;
the'i/w^nos are oppoising. There are&#13;
people who all th^ir life seem sat!!-Jff&#13;
in the teeth' of the wind. All thing*&#13;
seem against them. It may be said of&#13;
their condition ap p t ^ a t qf the disciples&#13;
in my text: "(tie wind^was contrary."&#13;
" t " '&#13;
A great multitude «f p*opio *re under&#13;
seeming -disadvantage, and I will&#13;
today, in the swarthiest Anglo-Saxon&#13;
that I can manage,, treat their eases;&#13;
not as a nurse counts put eight on ten&#13;
"drops of a prescription, an^t sTIra Jftein&#13;
in a hali-glass of Water, but &amp;.&amp; when&#13;
a man has by a mistake taken H large&#13;
amQunt of strychnine, or Paris green,&#13;
or belladonna, and.the patient is walked&#13;
rapidly round the room, and shaken&#13;
up, until he gets wide awake. Many of&#13;
you have taken a large draught of the&#13;
poison of discourage niefit, trod I come&#13;
out by the order of theT Divine Physician&#13;
tc* rouse you out^w that lethargy.&#13;
First,. |nany petf^fc ire under t ^ d i s -&#13;
advantage of an unfortunate name&#13;
given them by parents who thought&#13;
they were doing a good thing. Sometime*&#13;
at.the baptism of children, while&#13;
I have held up one hand in prayer, I&#13;
have held up the other hand in amazemegf,&#13;
that parents should have weighted&#13;
^ baj&gt;e with s«;h a aieeonaiit and&#13;
repulsive nomenclature. I have not so&#13;
much won4erad rnat some ehiidrei;&#13;
brougaVttp-&gt;g w w *nSlSrm*Ar i « r x ^&#13;
The literary societies of Central college,&#13;
of Fayette, Mo., are in a quandary&#13;
aa to whasn they will secure to deliver&#13;
the annual address during commencement&#13;
i n June. Several months ago .the&#13;
Aristotelian society, whose time it is&#13;
to select the June speaker, invited ex-&#13;
Senator John J. Ingalls of Kaiisas to'&#13;
deliver the address, and the dintin-j&#13;
. guished gentleman accepted, but r(nee&#13;
;f ha tafk so prominent a pert tin the&#13;
•" Cdrbett-FiUsimmona prise light the&#13;
board of curators and faculty of Central&#13;
college have entered a protest&#13;
against the Kansas statesman, md the&#13;
.young men are at aaa&gt; and commencement&#13;
day draws nigh:&#13;
—— »^g.&#13;
The National Prsnrtsioner publishes&#13;
details of the visit afiome Danish gentlemen&#13;
to this country "for the purpose&#13;
of buying meat wherewith to fill&#13;
contracts for supplying the Danish&#13;
army.** Denmark, in common with other&#13;
European powers, has been feeding&#13;
her soldiers and sailors for some&#13;
time ©a Austrian beef, but has lately&#13;
notified «re contractors, whoae agents&#13;
are MOW am this country, that a change&#13;
for the better la the character of the&#13;
l e t tarmiahed was desired.* The ot&#13;
derm, therefore, will hereaft(»be placed:&#13;
la Kaunas City and Chicago, aad pos*&#13;
stbly at other centers. What is our&#13;
gala is Attatralia*s leas. We alio have&#13;
this neWevldencarof the fact that whei;&#13;
It comes to a caseation of quantity and&#13;
quality in regard to beet the Baited&#13;
States atasds witheag a rival/*&#13;
antii&#13;
^ S &gt; e ^ j ^ A l t e i r&#13;
» a ^ f a p w by&#13;
axpertBfflStrDll Lake&#13;
Galilee, one hour&#13;
ailv mj^\^ltVcalm&#13;
lift thevn^avt hour&#13;
the winds and&#13;
waves witt bo rfp'f atod fdr fraud, you can make*it stand&#13;
for honesty. If once it stood 4or wiekedness,&#13;
you can make it stand for purity.&#13;
There have been multitutdes of instances&#13;
where meo fend1 women have&#13;
magnificently conquered the disasters&#13;
pf the name Inflicted* upon them.&#13;
Again, many people tabor under the&#13;
misfortune of incomplete physical&#13;
equipment. We are iy*our'Creae»r so&#13;
economically built'that we cana^t afford&#13;
the obliteration of any pVfBlca)&#13;
faculty. We went our two osrflfli our&#13;
two earB, our tw'o hands^. bur, two feet,&#13;
our eight fingers and two' terrace. Yet&#13;
what, multitudes of .people have but&#13;
one eye, or but one foot! The ordinary&#13;
casualties of life have been quadrupled,&#13;
quintupled, sextupled, aye, centupled,&#13;
in our time by the Civil War, and at&#13;
the North and South a great multitude&#13;
are fighting the battle of life with hull,&#13;
or less than half the needed physical&#13;
armaments. I do not wonder at the&#13;
pathos of a soldier during the war, who,&#13;
when told that he must have his hand&#13;
amputated, said: "Doctor, can't you&#13;
save it?" and when told that it was impossible,&#13;
said, with tears rolling down&#13;
his cheeks: ''Well, then, good-bye, old&#13;
hand; I hate to part with yo*. You&#13;
have done me a good service for many&#13;
years, but it seems you must go. Goodbye."&#13;
A celebrated surgeon told me: of a&#13;
scene in the Clinical Department of one&#13;
pf the New York hospitals, when a&#13;
poor man with a wounded leg was&#13;
brought in before the students to be&#13;
Operated, on. The surgeon was pointing&#13;
out this and that to the students,&#13;
ajid handling the wounded leg, and was&#13;
about to proceed to amputation, when&#13;
the poor man leaped from the table&#13;
and hbbbIf8d~to the doorr and—saiey&#13;
"Gentlemen, I am sorry to disappoint&#13;
you, but by the help of God I will die&#13;
with my leg on." What a terrific loss&#13;
is the loss of, our physical faculties!&#13;
* • « * *&#13;
But to full use all the faculties that&#13;
t«main, and charge on all opposing circumstances&#13;
with the determination of&#13;
John of Bohemia, who* was totally&#13;
blind, and yet at a battle erled out, "I&#13;
pray and beseech you to lead me so&#13;
far into the fight that 1 may strike one&#13;
good- blow with rhis swerd of mine."&#13;
Do not think so much of what facilities&#13;
your have lost as of what faculties remain.&#13;
You have enough left to make&#13;
yourself felt in three worlds,.while you&#13;
help the earth, and balk hell, and win&#13;
heaven. Arise from your discouragements,&#13;
O men and women of depleted&#13;
or crippled physical faculties aad see&#13;
what, by the special help of God you&#13;
can accomplish!&#13;
The skilled horsemen stood around&#13;
Bucephalus, unable to mount or manage&#13;
him, so wild was the steed.. But&#13;
Alexander noticed that the sight of his&#13;
own shadow seemed to disturb the&#13;
horse. So Alexander clutched him by&#13;
the bridle, and turned his head away&#13;
should "cry out at the christening font&#13;
as t^at others wlth'jjuch amilihg'face&#13;
should take a title that wtlt-Wthe burden&#13;
of their lifetime. It Is outrageous&#13;
to afflict children with an undesirable&#13;
name because it happened to lie possessed&#13;
by a parent or a rich u n c ^ from&#13;
whom favors are expected, or |tome&#13;
prominent man of the day wisovAnay&#13;
end his life in disgrace... It is no excuse,&#13;
because they are Scripture frames,&#13;
to call a child Jehoikhn, or T^ath-&#13;
Pileser. I baptized one by the name&#13;
Bathaheoa! Why, under all the, circumambient&#13;
heaven* any parent should&#13;
^waat to gire to a e y ^ the name of that&#13;
loose creature of Scripture times I cannot&#13;
Imagine. I haye often felt at the&#13;
baptismal altar, when names were announced&#13;
to met like saying, as «1 Id the&#13;
Rev. Dr. Richards, of Morrlstown, N.&#13;
J„ when a child was handed nfm for&#13;
baptism and the name given: "Hadn't&#13;
you better call it something cfse?"&#13;
Impose not upon that babe a name&#13;
suggestive of. flippancy or meanness.&#13;
There is no excuse for such assault and&#13;
battery on the cradle when our language&#13;
is opulent with names musical&#13;
Jdm, jhneanlag/the graeioua* gjft of&#13;
God;" or Henry, meaning "the chief&#13;
of a household;" or Alfred, meaning&#13;
"good counsellor;" or Joshua, meaning&#13;
"God, our salvation;" or Ambrose,&#13;
meaning "immortal;" or, Andrew,&#13;
meaning "manly;" or Esther, meaning.&#13;
"star;" or Abigail, meaning "my father's&#13;
Joy;" or JLxrjac',aMsmiiqr4'grace;"&#13;
or Victoria, meaning "victory;" or Rosalie,&#13;
meaning "eessrttful a a * rose;" or&#13;
Margaret, enematag V .fe*lVM.ar Ida,&#13;
meaning "godlike;" or Clara, meaning&#13;
"iHaetrioas;" or Asaelia. meaning&#13;
"Is**;* or Baethft, aneaning "beautiful."&#13;
aad hundreds of other names Just&#13;
When the great preacher, Spurgeon ae good, that are a help rather than a&#13;
wag «t the height of hia fasae a well&#13;
known lecture ageat wrote him. mak«&#13;
lag him the trssaanaoae offer of a&#13;
hundred thoasaad dollars for a preaching&#13;
tear, asking at the same time for&#13;
a reoly by cable. What was the agent's&#13;
surprise to receive a cable measace&#13;
eoaatating of only the words: "Acts&#13;
•Hi: J#." When the agent had i a a l l y l * * « ke » aajr relation to 8o-aajft&gt;«o.''&#13;
arocured a Bible he opened it and read&#13;
"But Peter said unto aim&#13;
perish with thee.&#13;
he fjaveattata with money." Thh&#13;
the teat effort made to induce&#13;
to do what ae many emtaeof&#13;
too, of unquestioned piety&#13;
make a show of&#13;
•old. The great&#13;
re acora for money was&#13;
always high, aad not too COSMDOB in&#13;
these *«JW when oven the noblest gifti&#13;
of God aoe not Inrriqasalsj^hoaght foi&#13;
ao a^asvdothmaaeMaaoaoe. i n this reittoaiag&#13;
or&#13;
family celebrated for&#13;
It is a wonder to&#13;
that ia all sue*&#13;
t h e heat thoaght thf • +hr ^ft of Qot QJJ^wj^ojo* oo— m^'rtie. aajrlag to&#13;
at aaesae. i wiU.hfep U no longer that&#13;
until the qtbdeeet course of law I can&#13;
slough o f thtt gengrawe." The city&#13;
directory Am handaeda of names the&#13;
more pronancistioti of which has been&#13;
a me Aoag ohetacto. If /ou have started&#13;
life under a name which either through&#13;
rtdicukms orthography or vlcsoue augaeation&#13;
has been an eacnariseaaoe, resolve&#13;
that the naat generation ahall not&#13;
so as&gt;&#13;
graduated&#13;
pu^rioulu ago"-*-"-' you get up tb thejgafh90t;'h^van^ag;&#13;
one will ask yon whether you can p#f«e&#13;
the tirat chapter of Genesis, but wbftU-&#13;
,er you, have.learned thei.fear ^ the&#13;
Lord, which U the beginning of wisdom;&#13;
nor .whether you, know **ow .to&#13;
square the circle, but whether you have&#13;
lived a square life in a round world&#13;
Mount Zlon is higher than Mount ParhaSSUa&#13;
; n'i • • • ' „ , M ; tt*y4.^&gt;'t&#13;
But what other multitudes tiieve are&#13;
trader other disadvantages! Herein a&#13;
Christian woman whose husband thinks&#13;
religion a sham, and while- the wife&#13;
ptays the'children one way the husband&#13;
sweats them another:' Or^here is^&#13;
a Christian man who is trying to do&#13;
his best for God and the Church, aud&#13;
his wife holds him back anu says on&#13;
the way home from prayer-meeting,&#13;
where he gave testimony for Christ:&#13;
"What tffooi ybtf made of yourself!&#13;
I hope hereafter you will keep still."&#13;
And ,when be would be benevolent and&#13;
give fifty'tolfuWeu'e crttlcisos htm for&#13;
not giving fifty cents. X must do Justice&#13;
and publicly thank God that I&#13;
never proposed at home, ,to, give anything&#13;
for any cause of humanity or religion&#13;
but the other partner in the domestic&#13;
firm approved i t And when it&#13;
seemed beyond my ability andiajth in&#13;
God was necessary; she- had three^&#13;
fourths the faith. But I know men&#13;
who, when they contribute to charitable&#13;
objects are afraid that ihe wlfo&#13;
shall find it out. What a withering&#13;
curse such a woman must be to a good&#13;
man!&#13;
Then there are others under the&#13;
great disadvantage of poverty. Who&#13;
ought to get things cheapest? You say&#13;
those who have iittle means. But they&#13;
pay more. You buy coal by the ton,&#13;
they buy it by the bucket. You buy&#13;
flour by the barrel, they buy it by the&#13;
pound. You get appafel cheap, because&#13;
you pay cash.' Tneycpay dear because'&#13;
they have to get trusted. And the&#13;
Bible was rfght ^hen ft salA: "the destruction&#13;
of theJpoor is their poverty."&#13;
Then there are those who made a&#13;
of&#13;
el* 4 hibT * f&#13;
the-&#13;
_ . _ Columbian eg&#13;
^ it is an the main line of&#13;
VathvIUdBaUroad it is the&#13;
travel between th» North and'&#13;
South, and can be vbltsd en routs with&#13;
low of hat little time The extremely lew&#13;
rates that hive ueen-establittbed make it&#13;
cheeps* to go. e&lt; litem out of yeas way,&#13;
even, to take in this great show, w^ils its&#13;
own attraction* will well repay a special&#13;
vlSit. Write' Mr. &lt;0"rV "Atmcre, HenerO,&#13;
Passenger Agent, Louisville, Ky*£air*e*e&gt; .&#13;
tor ee»ac#»i*gait. j,.. H . ,. •&#13;
I NE dbue»cta,t aionnd UtU lekaKdiihneg whubmata^ns' l obmests t&lt;o e fwthheatm . Tthheem tsrealvitn'Hin,g wMchnv»k«snM!P happieut in bletootherH U*IKitOtt »mWaiaie « thenbi m6"«t scrfricaso&#13;
V!&gt;.'./,.AtMM»iiit&lt;tly Pt^ft* &lt;Qn*pa&gt; J a i f f t&#13;
)o&gt;eler fbeyc teiyle cdtirviicsitt«yr ta nodf faulml ifgearmtioenn,t itnhgaptdrfi nucni - ccoorrkkeedd uapn dai &gt;ha.intl tam inlieoitHttaet eulya eda nadn pdl awceedll um'poauldthe sU; obf-uut hifi aal loi:wooeld ptlaoc ec,o fmt We iinll .k iex&gt;mPt afoctr awbitsho rtbh etb aei t leinrm ae wnatrtnm* tgeemrmpe rtHatoumte tfhte waililr abnecdo wmie; iotodti ^lshi*tieyp g&lt;awlcdo,hi)oulti cw. ill Ffedrrm tetnaite a bnyd druggUto.&#13;
ia meaning, &gt;iyft BH from the shadow,-and-toward the sun,&#13;
and the horse's agitation was gone, and&#13;
Alexander mounted him and rode off,&#13;
to the astonishment of all who stood&#13;
by. And what you people need is to&#13;
have your sight turned away from the&#13;
shadows of.your earthly lot over&#13;
which you have BO long pondered, and&#13;
your head turned toward the sun—the&#13;
glorious sun of Gospel consolation, and&#13;
Christian hope, and spiritual triumph.&#13;
But sometimes the great hindrance&#13;
in life in not in the given name, bat in&#13;
the family name. While legislatures&#13;
are willing to lift such Incubus, there&#13;
famlttee that keep a peine which&#13;
ail the generations with a J u l were etch or in tsombie, Jhan any&#13;
Yoaaay: "I won-&#13;
Now, suppose a man finds himself in&#13;
mid-life without education, w,hat is he&#13;
to do? Do the beet he eaa. The moat&#13;
effective toyman 4» * former pastoral&#13;
charge that I ever heard apeejeon religtovo&#13;
themes ooaid, within Ave minutea&#13;
of exhortation, break all the laws&#13;
oi English grammar, and if he left any&#13;
law uaxractured he would complete the&#13;
murk of Ungual devastation..m the&#13;
prayer with which he followed i t But&#13;
I wouM rather have him a n y for me,&#13;
chIoti coeft eonf glolaorkess ians t htheo cuhguhr cthh eis . dtoe vbiel' so nf itrhset mutfic committee. .' v '&#13;
— ™——*-: . " f r 1 " -&#13;
New H*n for Or»pe*&#13;
caImt hiaa;*n eb eUeunu dt iasncAov etrheed Htnearbt uHseodr ewbiothu nBdlien- pperroftoierrm pinrgop owrotinodne rmfuald ec uirnet*o ian csotrudbibaol rins cases of colds, bore throat and hoarseness.&#13;
thPeu tbhlrioc aspt teoa,kaenrys ccloanimtw UUQ fna..r Isut pUejrCinomr finogi iAnu-gMen-IeUraclb au*sre8 a mUoonregh, opnhnyd^ tcOtaonrsa. ia_iA akF oforrsale&#13;
by druggist*.&#13;
SCIENTIFIC NOTES.&#13;
Patches for singie^tube pnetrmatis&#13;
tires which can be used temporarily,&#13;
without cement or tools are formed of&#13;
a rubber band with a flexible plug in&#13;
Its center and lacing holes at the ends&#13;
to be wrapped around' the "art over&#13;
the puncture, the pltog, lying over the&#13;
hole and closing It.&#13;
Coai wagons wttfch are Ihtendea' for&#13;
uae In najxpjy stree^where they cannot&#13;
be backed up j o jLhe curb without&#13;
blocking traffic havej an openinr In the&#13;
i center of the bottom with an mclined&#13;
floor made lower at the center than at&#13;
the ends, the.wagon body being raised&#13;
on the track-to discharge the eoal&#13;
miBtake In early life, and that over . _, ._.... w^w****-^ *~A •«»«««.&#13;
shMa dows a^l l •th"e ir d^a'y¥T . "Do^'y ou rrotr who^ hav^e n*eed^ of ^a ru^le f1or ^mar2kin^g&#13;
purposes a newly designed .implement&#13;
has a flat surface to Test on? the hook&#13;
or paper to be ruled; with a hinged&#13;
projection which can be raised pr lowered&#13;
by means of a screw at the side to&#13;
prhvent the edge from getting ameared&#13;
with ink.&#13;
know that that man was once in prison,"&#13;
is whispered. Or, "Do you know&#13;
that that man once attempted suicide?"&#13;
Or, "Do you know £hat that,man once&#13;
absconded?" Or, "Do you know that&#13;
that.man was once discharged, for dishonesty?"&#13;
Perhaps there was only one&#13;
wrong deed in the man's life, aAd that ^,&#13;
one act haunts theauhaequeat half century&#13;
of his existence.&#13;
Others have unfortunate predominance&#13;
of some mental (acuity, and&#13;
their rashness throws them into wild&#13;
enterprises, or their trepidation makes&#13;
them decline great opportunity, or&#13;
there is a vein of melancholy In their&#13;
disposition that defeats them, or they&#13;
have an endowment of over-mirth that&#13;
causes the Impression of insincerity.&#13;
Others haVe a mighty obstacle in&#13;
their personal appearance, for which&#13;
they are not responsible. They forget&#13;
that God fashioned their features, and&#13;
their complexion, and their stature, +he&#13;
size of their nose, and mouth, and&#13;
hands, an*1 ~tet, and gave them their&#13;
gait and their general appearance; and&#13;
they fpr«et .that much of the world's&#13;
best work aad the Church's best work&#13;
has been-done i)y. homely people; and&#13;
Christian man I know of, and in that&#13;
church all the eeopie prereiiea him in&#13;
exhortation aad prayer to mil others.&#13;
Why? neceejee he wan so thoroughly&#13;
name spirit- pious and had each power with God he&#13;
waa Irresistible; aad aa he went oa in&#13;
his hrofihera and H a e n : **If yon want his pi^er slniwrt rei&gt;eirte« a a * sahrts^'&#13;
to Keep tide nuisance or scandalisation sh-out-e d for joy, and. t.h.e .b ereaved&#13;
ed to get hack their dead la'celestial&#13;
companionstitn. And when he had&#13;
stopped praying, gad aa soon m I coaU&#13;
wipe out of soy eyes enough tears to eoe&#13;
the cloning hymn, I eaded the meeting,&#13;
fearful that some long-winded prayermeeting&#13;
hove would pall aa down from&#13;
the seventh heavea.&#13;
Not a word have I to amy against accuracy&#13;
ot speech, or flew etociHJoa, or&#13;
high mental culture. Get all u«*e yoa&#13;
that Paul the Apostle is said to have&#13;
been hump-backed, and hia eye-afght&#13;
weakened by ophthalmia, while nuny&#13;
of the finest in appearance have passed&#13;
their time in studying klllmg attitudes,&#13;
and in displaying iht richness of wardrobes—&#13;
not one ribbon, or vest, sir seek,&#13;
or glove, or button, or shoe-string of&#13;
which they have had brains to earn tor&#13;
themselves.&#13;
• • •&#13;
An ancient warrior saw aa overpowering&#13;
heat come dowa anon hia small&#13;
company of armed eneaw aad mountlag&#13;
hia home he threw a handful of sand&#13;
in the air. crying, "Let their faces we&#13;
covered with confusion?" And both&#13;
armies heard hia voice, aad history&#13;
says it •earned as though the dust&#13;
thrown in the sir had become so many&#13;
angels of supernatural dettveraace, aad&#13;
the weak overcame the mighty, aad the&#13;
immense.boat Je#, back, and the small&#13;
naaahar maaehed^oa. Have faith hi&#13;
God* and though all £he ailleVSroes of&#13;
diacouragameat aeem to come against&#13;
yoa in battle array, and their .tough of&#13;
/dedeaaoe and oontempt lesoands&#13;
through all the valleys and moaajretae,&#13;
yoa might by faith in God, aad ieaaortaaaee&#13;
prayer, pick up a handtw of tav*&#13;
eenrduat ef yaar&#13;
throw it into the air, and K ahall he&#13;
come aacels of viotory over atl the&#13;
atmem of eamh aad.aeU. Tao vojpe*&#13;
at yoar sdveraaries. hasaaa aad&#13;
le, ahall he coverV with&#13;
while yoa shall be not only&#13;
which hew&#13;
«stUea helmet&#13;
dasal; tlM&#13;
tor/.&#13;
" O f * «*¥&gt;'&#13;
mtueMonti Utftlf WOM.W of wU— St . .&#13;
to (te'ooMteM*MMs of MMf «4«ipiftM* M l Vmtmrm.&#13;
fcWeMpitti of tartr— ih »••!••»• .S«4wtilAfto«Si&#13;
U&gt;» wprtt h»» f»rt&gt;&lt;x1 to ItMlt mm* «—ytof ttnm,&#13;
ta«M i&gt; UM may of*qaljpiM:it*o4 «d«e«aoMU »MUtf&#13;
Mtko MwKNwujf»CoxMsvifw«ror S m w t a Booton.&#13;
I f | i i Hi mn to-»ucf* — thoromghlf —4 wlO&gt;&#13;
M Kttek c*r» La tho berlnoiav of tk*tr ooara«,M to&#13;
«•• UictMak ****** thai •*• oCerad, w«Uo tk* npvte^&#13;
UOA of %b* LMtiWttoa M 4 the raoord a*d&gt; by Itofimtf.&#13;
«*toiboth*tmomit *nd*bro*d. *r*mimilHim»jiiM&gt;&#13;
n u t of tte AbtUty of thorn who&#13;
o»rrt©uiu«»&#13;
tsTeua ldeenpt e4eeieMhx«e ac aapia^cOitlyc aottof ud oalnadg taondTutshtirnyg; iTt olalu aat avroylu.—ntHarayx lIptLow er, wWlc genius i U la*&#13;
- « - * -&#13;
OealTekaeee SaH aad Ssieks Year UleAwey.&#13;
aeTtoic qJuuiitl toofb laifcccnoeeravmelayn adn dr ltgoorre.vUekr,e b Ne om-Taog-- OBKacD, tshtreo nWgo. ndAerll wdorrukgegri,o ttsh,a 4tQ mc aork eHs. wCeaukre sgtuearrlainngte Rede.m eBdoyo Okl*e.t Oanbdic asaaom polre Nfreewe .Y Aordk,.&#13;
taAinain egle, psh&amp;aantat rIltsy . fiafatyd twoi lsll altiyr ey eaa, rcse nIntu arty- and a naif.&#13;
'•^C-vtanr* Cere&#13;
Is a, eensri^tinnal car*. Price, _«c&#13;
yoFuorr c hwuhricchh -da or eyrolrua lw oorr ak fetshtlev haiarr dest in&#13;
To Coge^Teaartaoei— r&lt;&#13;
tf TCkC^Ce«fa aslclsa troe ctsaCrea^jum-uy&lt;ay^ttsatsa rrSeftucn d-S mcoorn8e5yc&#13;
It u as hard 1ot God to biesaaletthgy ma*&#13;
as it * for rata to fall on a«&#13;
poTuhtee rle tease ypaeorp^lwe ake&amp;n'oOwsaebyo meteesawclhr ?o t-her the&#13;
offering rare bargalaa In UcySe*. It will&#13;
pay yea to send for their large«&#13;
. • .iH.^l JU.&#13;
Ttathae«r*isUd«ojxthe&#13;
aeta« the measjeotrciotym. tertahkf they&#13;
wT«lhre^ mspaeno wtahios »hae«U1eferswe t^hawt *Q»oA*is"w^es» h«im^&#13;
- i — i£&gt; • l . v J&#13;
^*^^^*+ a^pwmm^apaajaamja&gt; jfJJBfJI ^ssmvma 4W*9QsV • U ' w * '&#13;
Wis.&#13;
*» • m»* am&#13;
em prices. imUser fteeeOa^tlS&#13;
/&#13;
W f w -^MTOJLJ. liJILLt5?Jffl:ig*. jd!l!LL^&#13;
„. ,, ,..-w-*v/;,;v .j,:&#13;
; ^ V " - - ;&#13;
• : ' - • »&#13;
• u , : . &lt; • . • . • • - • ••••;•• , :&#13;
'S'M! "I p i&#13;
!i!i-:BE!B2aiiEpa ^ • &gt;f)Vf&#13;
• " • / i i r i n&#13;
* r -• * • INI&#13;
« l&#13;
V CHAPTaTB XXVL~(qosTi»w»)&#13;
The passi/&gt;ii and acorn of her etpressed&#13;
&gt;n my features -caused her to&#13;
.ai;n"ft w a i l whemyouYsaw".! tajd, "I&#13;
r«was saved by a miracle, almost—"&#13;
"I, too, was saved," **•&lt;sobbed. "But&#13;
I scarcely know how. After you disappeared&#13;
from me, I found myself wjth&#13;
two'men on a rock, where we lingered&#13;
miserably till, by God's mercy, we&#13;
were rescued. But I will tell you all&#13;
by-and-by. Amon;** I' haw suffered&#13;
mu,db—-ob, so much! Haye* you no&#13;
word of love for me, after all these&#13;
years of misery?"&#13;
She clung to me, and would have&#13;
embraced me, but I flung her from me&#13;
with a bitter laugh.&#13;
"What would you have said to Mr,&#13;
Druce?" I cried savagely, "If he stood&#13;
before you Instead of me? You believed&#13;
nje to be dead! So did I believe&#13;
you to be—and hoped it, ay, hoped&#13;
it! A new misery has come into my&#13;
life, when I vainly hoped that my&#13;
troubles were at an end. Love for&#13;
you! You killed love, and poisoned my&#13;
heart to you years and years ago, when&#13;
you betrayed and deserted me. Till&#13;
then, I cherished you In my heart of&#13;
hearts, and was true and faithful to&#13;
you, as I voweaTo be.&#13;
My passion and my grief almost&#13;
choked me; but if I had not paused&#13;
from that cause, Mabel's attitude&#13;
would have arrestedi further speech.&#13;
She had risen from her feet, and was&#13;
now standing by the table. Her trembling&#13;
Up* denoted that Bhe needed&#13;
soma support,&#13;
"And you believe the stories that&#13;
were circulated about. ome?" she exclaimed,&#13;
In a tone of mingled pride&#13;
and despair. "You toMere^-".&#13;
"I believe what I kno^toWtrue,''&#13;
I said, interrupting her. "I have&#13;
heard and discovered enough, and w(sh&#13;
to hear no more; Had I been told it&#13;
was your face I should have seen tonight&#13;
when I entered' this ftouse. I&#13;
would have flown from it as from'a r 'flssttlenee. No words! I tell yon again&#13;
I wiH hear nothing further. But I came&#13;
her* for ^purpose;andfor my mother's&#13;
sake, I will ask you if she lives&#13;
asKl If you knew where she is to be&#13;
found."&#13;
"She lives," replied Mabel, faintly;&#13;
"and I know where she is to- be&#13;
found."&#13;
you —•''i-not?"&#13;
"It's&#13;
me Where to seek for her."&#13;
She v u not strong enough to&#13;
speak. With heaving bosom and&#13;
clenched hands she directed me to the&#13;
table by a look. Following her gaze,&#13;
I saw an envelope on the table, and&#13;
written on it my mother's name and&#13;
the addrea of a public house.&#13;
"Can I take-this?" leaked.&#13;
She nodded^ but made no farther&#13;
me. I received the nuts in my cap,&#13;
and gave her a shilling. She pressed&#13;
her fingers, over it, and put it to her&#13;
teeth.&#13;
"She is blind," whispered the detective*&#13;
The shock of the news almost struck&#13;
ine dup»b; for her eyas were wide open&#13;
and seemed to be looking at me. But&#13;
Alas! she was never more to see the&#13;
face of the son whom she had loved&#13;
so truly and devotedly.&#13;
"Giv« me a measure, mother," said&#13;
a sailor.&#13;
She laughed in a childish way as&#13;
she filled her measure again.&#13;
"The lads, bless them?" she piped,&#13;
"know that X was a Jailor's wife and&#13;
a sailor's mother: Here, my lad.&#13;
Where's the gentleman Who gave me a&#13;
shilling? Bless you, lhy lad! you don't&#13;
think 1 am rich enough to change&#13;
that?"&#13;
"Keep st. mother," I said, in a&#13;
rough, tearful voice.&#13;
"No, no, my lad," she replied. "You&#13;
mustn't be overfree with your money.&#13;
do not ooss* yoncsesT, lor I will not "Tie teo much the way of esilors, that&#13;
toe* *pon yenr lace. Write or send, | "Tie true I've had the good luck, more&#13;
There was something heavy in the&#13;
envelope. I ton it open, and took&#13;
from it a small piece of silver and a&#13;
few copper coma, and flung them on&#13;
the table. In the blindness of my&#13;
passion. I did not atop, to trace the&#13;
connection between the addressed envelope&#13;
end the money Inclosed.&#13;
"Before I go/* I said, with mt hand&#13;
on the handle of the door, "I wilL tell&#13;
you, as is my duty, what you may&#13;
~have a right to anus/. 'I see thai you&#13;
are poor; I have ihoner/"What H i t&#13;
incumbent upon me to do, as your unhappy&#13;
husband, I will do—but not for&#13;
love. I live in the old cottage, i But&#13;
T.&#13;
«/.r&lt;&#13;
saying what yon require and demand&#13;
.end I. will forward it to yon. I recognise&#13;
yoer claim upon sse as my wife in&#13;
the eye of the law. Yon may not know&#13;
JNt **r lover^ Mr/Dniee, who sailed&#13;
with pen in The ftistag Sun"-* look&#13;
' ot amasement flushed Into her eyes,&#13;
but J was in no mood to interpret&#13;
"si* ^Be was amvedy with&#13;
ethers, in a boat, which&#13;
ns to reach the shelter of an&#13;
IOT, where w* lived until, we were&#13;
a few month* ago. He died&#13;
there, a natural -death, saving *ay soni&#13;
frosgj^ &lt;»mmiMion of a &lt;rtme. For&#13;
^•^^t^e -^s&gt; rssjlsjRSBn\ * aw*ai^^^n ^•sawa „» • ^ * ^ ^ f c A M e i w i snvnswA • Isr4sajb"# re4sons#'' saw&#13;
*M forgive you.&#13;
Title rarrhed litsu "for&#13;
*c^rT*^^^nr^w^*ls^P»SBSi •'••saW^* " ^ * ^ F sinful tfeoughtt that&#13;
led .you tp the crime!**&#13;
t&gt; -.Insslfr nstiiff iiratha. .but not for&#13;
*^1*atM«&#13;
die&#13;
and good rand I have adopted her as&#13;
my datighfeerV ft &gt; for He* I live, tor&#13;
I lorvher as my own; and It is for&#13;
her sake that I forbid you to come&#13;
to me. 8he does not know the particulars&#13;
ot my unhappy history—she does&#13;
not know that my wife betrayed me,&#13;
and played me false. The story i* too&#13;
shameful for jnjr Pearl to hear, and I&#13;
would saveberfrbm the ooatamination&#13;
of your presence,"&#13;
She gave a wild screw..&#13;
"Your-rPearl! Pearl! • Saved—from—&#13;
death!" she cried, tottering toward me&#13;
with * .wild, appealing motion of her&#13;
trembling hands.&#13;
But JL waited to hear no more. • I&#13;
reeled down the stairs like a drunken&#13;
man, wlthal^my pulses beating furiously.&#13;
The. detective caught my arm&#13;
and steadied me, and the action recalled&#13;
me, to myself, I placed the envelope&#13;
In his hand, and asked him if&#13;
he was acquainted with the place.&#13;
"WclU" he answered; "It is in the&#13;
sailors' quarter—one of the common&#13;
dancing'notifies."&#13;
"Let us hasten there."&#13;
"You know the name the woman upstairs&#13;
goes by, 1 suppose?" he said.&#13;
"Yon mean to ask me if I know she&#13;
Is my wife. That is enough, is it&#13;
*?&#13;
no business of mine," he replied,&#13;
taking his cue from my sullen&#13;
manner. "1 never interfere in family&#13;
matters. Peace and quietness is my&#13;
motto."&#13;
In less than ten minutes we arrived&#13;
In the cab at the. sailors' home. It&#13;
was situated in the most squalid part&#13;
of the East End of London, and I heard&#13;
the sounds of music as I entered.&#13;
"We shall find her in the dancing&#13;
room," said the detective, after exchanging^&#13;
a few words with the landlord.&#13;
"An,old woman answering to&#13;
your description comes here every&#13;
night, and sells puts."&#13;
r followed him into the room, where&#13;
a number of sailors were dancing, and&#13;
there, standing by the bar at which&#13;
men were drinking t saw my mother,&#13;
an old, old woman now, with a basket&#13;
of nuts on her arm.&#13;
?foT considering what might be the&#13;
effects of the sudden surprise upon her,&#13;
I placed my hand oti her shoulder, and&#13;
looked in her face.&#13;
'Seme nuts, my lad?" she said, in a&#13;
thin, piping voice.&#13;
"Thank God for that!" I exclaimed. I Aud without waiting for an answer,&#13;
*You will refuse, I suppose, to tell 1 she fiMe* a measure and,held it out to&#13;
than once, to sell out say basket to&#13;
one man—"&#13;
"You shall do so now, mother. Measure&#13;
them ail out to me."&#13;
The landlord, at a eign from me.&#13;
gave me a diah which stood on the bar,&#13;
into which-say mother poured alt ha*&#13;
nuts Aaeaeufie b* measure.&#13;
"Tfciflteejw&gt;enoe, my lad,", she said.&#13;
^handed Jthe nuts to the. landlord,&#13;
and 4f»ve mjr mother another pens/.&#13;
(Thet men would have, crowded round&#13;
us, bjut,4h*t the detective, whispering&#13;
ont " C k ^ l ^ k l o&#13;
and gave me and m|&#13;
sympathising,look. Bat&#13;
one, lens camtJoo&gt; than the ethers, cried&#13;
out, -WTsat! Aasoa Beecrott atfve! I&#13;
knew him, and served with him in the&#13;
Indies*. Ofve sis a grip ef yoiar hand,&#13;
.tojtfeasa', kept the©&#13;
one. leas cawaoos tl&#13;
ake answereo,^wHh- ss&gt; heart! Wa«&#13;
It yon sailed in the Indiana with ay&#13;
woman's .husineei. to stuTtr: They Vp&#13;
tie k n o w ^ . p * y W l r j ^ i r r ,&#13;
"A saildfr, mother/ f whispered,&#13;
^hrough;'n7y teariJ/'^ never dead IM1&#13;
he's buried, sti yon have leafrned be*&#13;
fore tb^nlgir; DM aot Amce, yoiir|,..? son, come home after he was supposed&#13;
to be dead? And suppose he wah&#13;
speaking to yon now."&#13;
It was useless saying anything mure,&#13;
for she could neither see nor hear me.&#13;
With a deep sigh she would have fallen&#13;
to the ground, but that I supported her&#13;
in my arms. '&#13;
I earned her to- the cab which was&#13;
waiting at the door for me, and amidst&#13;
cries of "Good luck to you, mate, and&#13;
the old woman, too!" we drove oft&#13;
to Beeeroft, Mariner's, .cottage of&#13;
shells, in Brixton.&#13;
WISE ADVICE TO HUSBAND&amp;&#13;
Hs»lfr m»H»T» Mia* vnrm W f m t 0 J M « | | m&#13;
my way home 1&#13;
had stopped at the&#13;
house of a doctor,&#13;
who accompanied&#13;
us in a cab, and&#13;
who left me only&#13;
half an hour since.&#13;
"It is difficult to tell,v were bis last&#13;
words to me, "in what condition she&#13;
will awake, or, indeed, whether she&#13;
will awake at all. Remember how old&#13;
she is, and wnat she has passed&#13;
through. It is wonderful, from what&#13;
you have told me, how ehe has borne&#13;
it all,"&#13;
Sitting-alone- in- the little-parlor, my&#13;
thoughts naturally turned on the&#13;
strange discoveries of the night, and&#13;
on those events of my life which led&#13;
up to them. But I could not reduce&#13;
them to order, my mind was in such a&#13;
whirl; and one thought was never absent.&#13;
Had I wronged my wife in believing&#13;
her to be unfaithful to me? Her&#13;
pale, suffering and her poverty were&#13;
stronger witnesses in her behalf than&#13;
all the circumstantial evidence which&#13;
proclaimed her false. Pearl's light'&#13;
step aroused me from my painful mus-&#13;
In*6-.&#13;
"She is awake,'* said Pearl, "and is&#13;
asking for you."&#13;
I went upstairs at once, and sat by&#13;
my mother's bedside.&#13;
"I know my Amos' step," she murmured.&#13;
"I have not been dreaming&#13;
then—and yet it seemed so real. Kiss&#13;
me, my son."&#13;
—"Do _yo_u._feel_ better, mother?'' I&#13;
asked, as I embraced herr — —&#13;
"I am yery "weak. Amos, I didn't&#13;
hear your 4Yo, heave, ho/ when you&#13;
came home to-night. You didn't forget&#13;
it, my son?"&#13;
"No, mother, I did not forget it."&#13;
"It was your father's call. His lover&#13;
call, he sometimes said. I shall hjear&#13;
it soon again. You mustn't grieve, my&#13;
son, when I am gone. , I have had&#13;
great pleasure In my Ufa , Trouble&#13;
has come to me in my dreams, but all&#13;
my happiness has been real waking&#13;
happiness, and you, Amos, have bestowed&#13;
it on me. Is Mabel here?"&#13;
(TO as cosTurosD.)&#13;
a t Bp*0$ wrangle and quaneL jmft finely man into the eowrmandtryttfel*&#13;
m ^ ^ P m T ^ t ^ ^ w m b^tiust^toj^m^fnen^s^fh^kl W&#13;
wife, who was even-tempered and amiable, and all that was lovely when ywn&#13;
married her, has enankwi^ Kow,s*&gt;e la peevish, urritakfej*s&gt;&#13;
ap * ^s&gt;s^^e,«s^nni^Bjnini^^a^^' sssn^^v ejoaMss^sve *seeffe^»^^^0|SjBj j n * • w» es^s*ewe/ ^ew^Wi sss^ssss *SB1 ^^PW wsss^By •&#13;
disorder.,e«f eosne kind.&#13;
Lew Is not the remedy for tJiUeood^tion, she needs me*&#13;
leal ttaefcment, her uterine system is at fadit l&#13;
My advice to yon is,' sit down and write m&#13;
letter to that friend of women, Mrs Pmkhaaa,&#13;
of Lynn, Mass., state folly end freely'the&#13;
whole case to her and she will honee% «4.&#13;
rise yon what to do. Give yomr wife that&#13;
ehance, good man 1&#13;
If yon do not wish to write abewt year&#13;
wife, bring her a bottle of fcydie hV Ping*&#13;
ham's Vegetable Compound, watch its of*&#13;
feet* you will soon see the begin ning 01&#13;
improvetnenU then gen her anether and&#13;
keep it up until she is restored to yon, the same&#13;
lovely woman you married years ago.&#13;
Following we relate, the elrenmatanees of a&#13;
of thh&gt; nature. Mrv MS+VA &amp;oyxoir, of&#13;
*V&gt; Camby. Ind., aays:&#13;
" I have need Lydia S. Pinkham'a Vegetable&#13;
Pearl was watch-' Compound and found it to be of great benefit to me. The doctors said I had&#13;
lng over her. On womb trouble. I had the headache all the time, also a terrible ba/ekaope,&#13;
was nervous, cross and irritable. I looked so pale that people would ask me&#13;
what was the matter, 1 suffered in this way for about four years, until one&#13;
day about in despair my husband brought me a bottle of Lydia K. Pinkham'e&#13;
Vegetable Compound. I commenced its use, and much to every one's surprise,&#13;
it cured me. It has completely changed my disposition for the better also.&#13;
Several of my neighbors, knowing what the Pinkham medicine has done for&#13;
me. are taking it, and are much pleased with the result"&#13;
CHAPTER XXVH.&#13;
T was two o'cloqk&#13;
the morning&#13;
and my mother&#13;
wa§ in bed. and&#13;
a, . . v ^&#13;
•&gt; with a warning&#13;
Oh CM! Tea, yes!" It&#13;
speasing now, not the! criedt&#13;
**Whw&#13;
_ island&#13;
boy And In my&#13;
1 wwved him back&#13;
gesture/\M&gt; mother drenpsd her&#13;
ket, and k* a feeMe. qwernlous&#13;
or am I mad r she&#13;
a dansd hwfc. "The&#13;
hay died la your armsf&#13;
tnr.ssnAed nvmd re|(ne In the islnod,&#13;
death a tittle&#13;
g * t&#13;
lie died doing&#13;
Marteerv hss&#13;
hksB, did. Oh&#13;
.»*•_&#13;
f/mm, mr, v&#13;
.*&lt;&#13;
w|U m1|at**, » see&#13;
ss^ tiw t« he (fitreng?*'&#13;
w»A-snr h&#13;
METHODS, HERE AND ABROAQ&#13;
ivajrr ot MMrlag I U M U In E a * U a * ,&#13;
A comparison of the different methods&#13;
of doing what is practically the&#13;
same thing In various parts of the&#13;
world is both interesting and yT«^f&lt;ng&#13;
to the thoughtful observer, says Catfiler's&#13;
Magaslne. On American ferryboats&#13;
the import is well known of the&#13;
"ting-ting" or "jiigle-jlagle" of the bell&#13;
by which the man in the wheelhouse&#13;
communicates with hie fellow-mortal&#13;
in the engine room. On the Thames,&#13;
however, it would be considered practically&#13;
impossible to convey Information&#13;
in this manner, and the captains of the&#13;
small paddle steamers on that stream&#13;
stand on the paddle-boxes and sing&#13;
out "Bate erT "Back 'err etc.,&#13;
apparently to nobody in particular,&#13;
while these interesting remarks are&#13;
promptly repeated tn shrill tones by a&#13;
small boy into a speaking tube which&#13;
communicates with the lower regions.&#13;
On the Seine, in FVemce, this process is&#13;
sis&amp;pUAed and a- large &lt;rwmno» shaped&#13;
meuthsaeee teres out tn front njt the&#13;
man at the wheel and he yells Ue commands&#13;
into this fusotet th**ether end&#13;
of which It supposed to reach the en&#13;
gdneer. The large steamers en the&#13;
Rhine, la Qermany, are controtted, not&#13;
*y naw usual wheel plncad in the wheeldnrward,&#13;
bet by a very large&#13;
on a vertkel eaia, plsesd right&#13;
-&#13;
or briege, and teearni esan nana fehe&#13;
bandies from night to halt or, jssan occasion&#13;
tnot rennd In a cirolq, as&gt;d it&#13;
would doubtkss be rnnsidsrsd a aerkras&#13;
temptation of Providence, or at least a&#13;
caneeOon upon the fat norland, M any&#13;
tn attempt to constrnct a&#13;
eteamer with the rOfdlnary iorm&#13;
of steering&#13;
Some quaint and ourlous toys, 1^00&#13;
mm old, were recently found hi a&#13;
i wA1inrsj»t. atm 4iegme- [ »httd's grare to eourae of 1 ttans in an old Roman «&#13;
In Rheinhessen, Oermany. Mont of&#13;
made of glass. ^&#13;
hard wor£» fight drift, and in short, to tmtivty. There are&#13;
dWtcott ss moth, but rhwrs/s motblag clamper tbmm tMebmt&#13;
nTJcynrtsicfc TfsVvvtjtisjsj Mnchsnc&#13;
The Ufht-Raflnlnir McCongdck Opca nicrator&#13;
T h e y r a t - R s u d B C MtcCormlck New 4 t t e d Mower,&#13;
Tfie Light-Running McCormick Vertical C o n Bteder&#13;
The Ught-BJuuuss' McCormick Dotoy Reaper for&#13;
9 73&#13;
R/D£A&#13;
%&amp;o&#13;
\&#13;
rWtgUrnwheeC VorKg&#13;
v&gt;0«' MAKCR5 &gt;V&gt;J&#13;
CtitCAGO _ UHAiOtS&#13;
CATAL9Gt/C £££L&#13;
AUBASTINE 18&#13;
WHAT?&#13;
A pure, -&#13;
ready for t&amp;e bruab by mixing ia esM i&#13;
F t * $AtC t r f AIST OCAIXIS EVECYWHEtC&#13;
4 A Tist Car* shoving- '* oertrablo tin*.&#13;
FREE &lt; alao Alabastine Souvenir Rock aaaAfct* to aay one mentioning tkU paper.&#13;
A L A a A f m » | E CO , GKAMO HAMOS. MICMV&#13;
DIUNIUaUS SAVED! TSeeme*Mr jtarertek tea&#13;
COM tor which ha* baoa SiaeoTi&#13;
/aaV* whidk mtk— the taeoriau , _&#13;
atroasdnok wtthoat kaowtos war, aa to&#13;
Sir-nmcrtHir hi tea, coffee, aeay aat aha"&#13;
ir»**j*s-JacM laaathesc hy fm*4m&#13;
oaa Solar 10 tha ReaovaChaaafeai Co..&#13;
way. Kew York, oad M w4U be&#13;
wkb «att&#13;
aeccetlr.&#13;
. 1&#13;
A dtuly. copstitotinnai&#13;
and a Columbia bicycle&#13;
— there's healthy&#13;
economy lor you—invigoratkm&#13;
in the exercise—&#13;
economy in the&#13;
wheel Perhaps Colunv&#13;
bias cost a little more in&#13;
the beginning, but tbew&#13;
are cheapest in the end: *&#13;
Uttmfia Bicycles&#13;
•too-411&#13;
nW&amp;nttnV Mnt tonti{Wfftf!$f4&amp; (&#13;
6ET B d VS£*T»»0 a o*. M* nrarJIavYeHb&#13;
aend for book of t4MtliBMt*U wMl 1 0 " "&#13;
PATEHTS, TRADEMARKS mmd Adrle* MM to FMeateMUtf Of ,&#13;
(or -towoafcorr1 OaMe. or Bow toOea*&#13;
O'raaBJELL * BO*, yrmtkingtnm. P. C&#13;
R. H. ansAD a p u m i a a ,&#13;
Only $ 2 5 ^ ? '•&#13;
•" 'V"**&#13;
Cnicagi« CaJiffffia |&#13;
At ma tima of n r&#13;
Sontt f e Route.&#13;
m ' T***jfb. i 'assna^fsr 1&#13;
I Open to All.&#13;
ftuatt sWjee asat salta ssarwfc tnaltf.&#13;
a? the&#13;
h\iiu«f «Lf.L,L,t t t i r i ,&#13;
t L kWInX I € t. i ,&#13;
spew 999 w ftewwarw-ee&#13;
MT»JM«&#13;
-*a&#13;
•9*0»&#13;
• # * ^ .&#13;
fe&gt;K $ .^:&#13;
#4&#13;
!HP" »•• •"••^..'t&#13;
'!'• :x,&#13;
! " - . - . ' ' • " ; ; '&#13;
' . * : ' •&#13;
Ri J V\&#13;
i'l'.Vi' '&#13;
•• '-I-&#13;
8 ^ /&#13;
K:&#13;
fir:-'&#13;
PAR8HAUVIUE.&#13;
Mrs. Win. Payne o£ Bancroft&#13;
Tisited tar mother, Mrs. 0. M.&#13;
Smith the past week.&#13;
B. F, Andrews and wife are&#13;
spending a few days with their&#13;
BOU and daughter in Owoaso.&#13;
Children's Day exercises will be&#13;
held in the Methodist church one&#13;
week from next Sunday evening.&#13;
Mrs. Lucius Riddle of Wttliamgton&#13;
is spending a few weeks with&#13;
her daughter, Mrs. Burt Wakeman.&#13;
Miss Maggie Walker of Parahallville&#13;
and Miss Carrie Parshall&#13;
of Hartland attended the S. S.&#13;
convention at Vernon last week.&#13;
MARION.&#13;
Mr. Taylors' people of Unadilla&#13;
visited at S. Smith's a part of last&#13;
U. A. Gates and wife, of Gregory,&#13;
spent Sunday with her mother,&#13;
Mrs. Harger.&#13;
Miss Clara Murningham, who&#13;
has been very sick with apendicitis&#13;
is getting better.&#13;
Mrs. Louisa Hawse, of Chicago,&#13;
is spending the summer with her&#13;
cousin, Walla Sanders.&#13;
Charley Hall had a runaway&#13;
Sunday morning which resulted&#13;
in his buggy getting badly demolished,&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Mitch el,&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. E. 8. Nash and&#13;
Andrew VanPatten from the Centre&#13;
church attended Quartely&#13;
meeting at the Wilson school&#13;
house in Iosco, Sunday.&#13;
CHAPEL HEMS&#13;
Edith Van Buren has the measles.&#13;
Will Foster Sundayed in Jackson.&#13;
Frank Farrington is on the sick&#13;
list&#13;
Mrs. A. T. Watson has been&#13;
visiting her mother, Mrs. Stevens&#13;
of Mason.&#13;
alias Margie Wasson has been&#13;
very sick but is some better at&#13;
this writing.&#13;
Ladies' aid society will meet at&#13;
the home of Mrs. Sheets Wednesday&#13;
afternoon Jane 16.&#13;
Some of the young people of&#13;
this place attended the social at&#13;
Will Caskey's Thursday evening.&#13;
A terrible accident occured at&#13;
the home of Alfred Wilson last&#13;
Saturday night. While Fred Montague,&#13;
his stepson, was cleaning&#13;
and loading a gun, it discharged&#13;
striking Mr. Wilson just below&#13;
the heart, killing him instantly.&#13;
They have the sympathy of the&#13;
entire community. The funeral&#13;
was held at the Chapel Monday at&#13;
two o'clock, Rev. J. B. Wallace&#13;
officiating. The remains were interred&#13;
in the Lewis cemetery. He&#13;
was buried with the Maccabee&#13;
orders.&#13;
Harry Williams of Waterloo&#13;
w as the guest of his parents over&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Clarence Bennett and wife of&#13;
Howell visited her parents first of&#13;
the week-&#13;
Darius Pangborn of Howell&#13;
was the guest of his brother Isaac&#13;
last week.&#13;
Emory Holmes and wife visited&#13;
relatives in Anderson a few days&#13;
the past week.&#13;
N. D. Wilson and J. L. Roche&#13;
went to Jackson last week to train&#13;
their fast horses.&#13;
A. G. Wilson is improving the&#13;
looks of his store by a fresh coat&#13;
of paint Enoch Smith is doing&#13;
the work.&#13;
Miss Emily Stephens, who has&#13;
been spending the past two weeks&#13;
with Miss Florence Marble is now&#13;
visiting in Pinckney.&#13;
Miss Florence Marble is spending&#13;
a few days with her sister, in&#13;
Howell, after which she will go to&#13;
Lansing to spend several weeks.&#13;
A number from this place attended&#13;
the funeral of Pat Wilson&#13;
of Iosco, who was accidently shot&#13;
by his step-son on Saturday last&#13;
Weak Lungs&#13;
Hot weather won't cure weak&#13;
lungs. You may feel better because&#13;
out of doors more, but&#13;
the trouble is still there. Don't&#13;
stop taking your Scott's&#13;
Emulsion&#13;
because the weather happens ^ the person to address for' it&#13;
to be warm. If you have a&#13;
Additional Local.&#13;
Big Maooabae'blojrtmt' at Jackson&#13;
Saturday—better go.&#13;
Are you going to Jaokion Saturday?&#13;
Only one and one-third fare for round&#13;
trip.&#13;
Several from here took advantage&#13;
of the excursion te Detroit this week,&#13;
over the M. A. L,&#13;
There was no school in the Grammar&#13;
department Monday owing to the&#13;
illness of Prof. Grimes.&#13;
Several ladies of oar village called&#13;
on Mrs. P. 0. Teepie at her father's&#13;
home last Friday afternoon.&#13;
I.J. Cook, wife and daughter attended&#13;
the Town—Dykes wedding at&#13;
Brighton last Wednesday evening.&#13;
Have yon seen that big box of plug&#13;
tobacco at Swarthont Bros.? It is a&#13;
'whopper' and contains 189 pounds.&#13;
John Small of Crystal* Falls, Me.,&#13;
called on friends here the first of the&#13;
week. Mr. S. is in the newspaper&#13;
business at that place.&#13;
The Ohalker family are looking forward&#13;
to a reunion soon. When they&#13;
come together, if they bold their present&#13;
avoirdupois they will tip the beam&#13;
at the following weights: John 180,&#13;
William 208, Lewellyn 22t\Zera 193,&#13;
Jesse 275, Pbebe 249, David 323. Combined&#13;
weight is 1,654,—Ing. Co. News.&#13;
Summer brings the Bay View&#13;
announcements again—this time&#13;
radiant with 150 beautiful halftone&#13;
views and a most tempting&#13;
intelectual, musical and educational&#13;
menu. Everyone knows something&#13;
of the wealth of atractions&#13;
at this great summer resort There&#13;
is no place where people get so&#13;
much for their money. The June&#13;
Bay View Magazine (rives full assembly&#13;
and Summer University&#13;
information, and whal it cost to&#13;
go there. J. M. Hall, Flint, Mich.,&#13;
wmmp&#13;
the&#13;
^ * n i5TiPIiii WWliiii mmaj——&#13;
Sent free. All Michigan railroads&#13;
Alt Uaftirt Dead.&#13;
We clip the following from&#13;
Livingston Demount:&#13;
"Abraham Loaford, the pioneer barber&#13;
of Howell, after a severe illness of&#13;
about a month and a half, died last&#13;
Saturday forenoon at the age of 76&#13;
years, 5 months and 17 days. Deceased&#13;
was born in Boon ooanty, Kentucky,&#13;
December 12, 1820, where be&#13;
grew up and lived' until the latter&#13;
part of October 1849, being at this&#13;
time sold as a slave to southern cotton&#13;
planters. Not agreeing fully with&#13;
the right of his master to sell him as&#13;
a slave, he ran away, taking a skiff&#13;
across the river to the Indiana side,&#13;
where he secreted himself until late&#13;
that night, when he again crossed&#13;
back over the river and told his wife&#13;
what he bad done, bid his wife and&#13;
child good bye and again crossed the&#13;
river to Indiana, where be wandered&#13;
about for some days until he landed&#13;
in Goshen, where he lived until the&#13;
year 1850 whence he came to Nilee this&#13;
state from when he went to Canada&#13;
•V for a short time, then again returning&#13;
to Miohigan and located in Detroit&#13;
where he learned the barbers trade&#13;
and lived until the latter part of Oct.,&#13;
1855 when he came to Howell being&#13;
the first colored gentleman that ever&#13;
entered Livingston county, opened up&#13;
a barber soop and continued to live as&#13;
one of its time honored and most law&#13;
abiding citizens until the time of his&#13;
death. Possibly true no man was&#13;
more favorably or better known in&#13;
Livingston county than the deceased.&#13;
His ever pleasant appearance on the&#13;
streets was a joy for all who knew&#13;
him to meet; his relations with the&#13;
citizens of this place for the 42 years&#13;
which he lived here was that ef the&#13;
kindness toward his fellowman. He&#13;
enjoyed a jest and his hearty laugh&#13;
ever merrily rang through the avenues&#13;
of our village and will be sadly&#13;
missed by all who knew him.&#13;
The Herald,man at Howell is gating&#13;
angry. He says that all subscript-&#13;
SAT. JUNE 12,&#13;
We will sell&#13;
ANDER80N.&#13;
School closes Friday with a&#13;
•^ picnic.&#13;
Mrs, Sanford Reason is on the&#13;
list&#13;
''.^v*y N. D. Wilson made a flying&#13;
. trip to Detroit&#13;
Willie Mitchell has come to&#13;
meke hia home with James Marble.&#13;
Una. C M. Wood was the guest&#13;
uodajr.&#13;
8mi&amp; jfartirt of Hamburg spent&#13;
Sunday with hia aunt, Mrs. £. W.&#13;
Martin.&#13;
Dell M p d wilt &lt;rf PSbckney&#13;
called on 1 jiWaan Irisada to* of&#13;
afce week.&#13;
I PLUG PRUNE JUICE&#13;
TOBACCO for&#13;
16 CENTS&#13;
8 Bars Jaxon or Lenox&#13;
Soap for&#13;
25 CENTS.&#13;
* i&#13;
These sales must be CASH.&#13;
tween July 12 and 22, return limit&#13;
August 20.&#13;
• • * *&#13;
BeawfcJag tfee OyiUKi, .&#13;
Tke street* of the New Jenualen,"&#13;
mm. the Rev. Mr. Sprocket**, "are&#13;
p*v«4 with the smoothest aepfeait. aad&#13;
Crook delivery wasjoia are not allowed&#13;
en the loads." There were 1*9 convert*.&#13;
-Sondes Figaro.&#13;
in short order, will&#13;
hands of a collector.&#13;
be pat in the&#13;
weak throat, ^r-siigFrt-haekinf |WJH ^¾ baiHaTe^eket8-thet*4je--^ not settled&#13;
cough, or some trouble with&#13;
the bronchial tubes, summer is&#13;
the best time to get rid of it.&#13;
If you are losing flesh there is&#13;
all the more need of attention.&#13;
Weakness about the chest and&#13;
thinness should never gp together.&#13;
One greatly increases&#13;
the danger of the other. Heal&#13;
the throat, cure the cough, and&#13;
strengthen the whole system&#13;
now. Keep taking Scott's&#13;
Emulsion all summer.&#13;
For sale by all draggista at s*c aad&#13;
ParlM BnadArysahool lost 9tt*4ay&#13;
too Pretnyterian ohnrch at Hawaii&#13;
was ittuok by lighting, a ball of Era&#13;
rolled into a olaasin the gallery, two&#13;
boys. Yarn Aokley and Boy Cook wart&#13;
knocks* from tnair state and sevtral&#13;
girls wart shocked but no serious&#13;
damage was done. Great confusion&#13;
prevailed. The ball entered on an&#13;
eleotrio light wire.&#13;
On Tuesday the U. 8. senate began&#13;
the consideration of the tariff question&#13;
ten weeks after the meeting of the&#13;
extra session, the sole object ef which&#13;
was to pass the measure, Is it any won*&#13;
der that the people are growing restive&#13;
at the slow progress of legislation&#13;
in Congress ?—Re view. Oh well, Bro.&#13;
Adams, they are doing as well as some&#13;
other legislative bodies we might men*&#13;
tion.&#13;
An exchange says: A traveling ed*&#13;
itor, on reading that a young lady in&#13;
New York kneads bread with her&#13;
glores on, indulged in the following&#13;
solliloquy: "It is said a New York&#13;
girl kneads with her gloves on, but&#13;
this is not strange to us. We need&#13;
bread with onr boots on; and we need&#13;
bread with our panto on; and if those&#13;
subscribers who are in arrears don't&#13;
pay up pretty soon we'll need bread&#13;
without anything on.&#13;
Hundreds of thousands have been&#13;
induced to try Chamberlain's Cough&#13;
Remedy, by reading what it has done&#13;
for others, and haying tested its merit&#13;
for themselves are'today its warmest&#13;
friends. For sale by F. A. Sigler.&#13;
WEAK MEI MADE VMtMSS.&#13;
Hold by V.&#13;
Lyach Law on tave Dooll&#13;
The victims of Judge Lyves ft* 1«W&#13;
Member** 209; in 1894, U0;&#13;
m , aad in 18M, 1?1 frewhaa&#13;
is Mia,&#13;
o^V«&#13;
"For three years we bave never&#13;
been without Chamberlain's Colic,&#13;
Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy in the&#13;
house" says A. H. Patter with E. C.&#13;
Atkins &amp; Co., Indianopolis, Ind., and&#13;
my wife would as soon think of being&#13;
without flour as a bottle of this Remedy&#13;
in the summer season. We have&#13;
used it with all three of our children&#13;
and it has never failed to cure—not&#13;
simply stop pain, but cure absolutely,&#13;
it is all right, and anyone who tries it&#13;
will find it so. For sale by F. A. Sigler.&#13;
MORTGAGE ttAJLC,&#13;
Default having t*en made in the condition&#13;
of a certain mortgage (whereby toe power of aale&#13;
therein oontainod to sell h«e become operative)&#13;
made by Michael Lavej and Jennie Levey, hit&#13;
wife of the township of Dexter, Washtenaw&#13;
county, Michigan to William Clark of the place&#13;
aforesaid and dated March 1», 1897 and recorded&#13;
in^the office of the Begiatet of Deeds for the&#13;
county of Livingatoa etate of Michigan 00 the&#13;
Slat day of March 1887 In liber 00 of mortgages on&#13;
page 166 thereof, on which mortgage there la&#13;
claimed to be doe at tl» date of this notioe the&#13;
•urn of four hundred and fifty-one dollars and.&#13;
eUty-eight cents (0451.08) and no suit or proneeding*&#13;
at law or In equity having bees 00m&#13;
meneed to recover the debt secured by said mortgage&#13;
or any part tbastof: Therefore nvttce it&#13;
hereby given that on Friday the 16th day of July&#13;
•.!&gt;. 1867 at one o'clock in Ibe afternoon of said&#13;
day at the west front door of the oourt house&#13;
it the village of Howell in said county (that being&#13;
the place of holding the circuit oourt for the&#13;
county in which the mortgaged pvemissi are situated;&#13;
the aaid mortgage will be foreclosed by&#13;
seieet public veoeae to the higfeeet Udder of&#13;
the atemieei described la miA •aoftjag* er so&#13;
much thereof as may be mcssitry to satisfy the&#13;
amount dun nil atlti tWTsWSy * * * itereat sad&#13;
BUSY BEE HIVE&#13;
legaloo«U, that it tossy: AU&#13;
c* parcel* of Uadettaate la the rttlaja of Pincaaey,&#13;
Liviagatoe county, MMbigaa and described&#13;
asfoUoemtowtt: Lots foar (d) aad 4*s ja&lt;ea&#13;
Blade foar ¢6) aooording ******* aawl eMfe?&#13;
said village as&#13;
Dated HnwsM dgwS w A, at. IS*.&#13;
WARM WEATHER GOODS,&#13;
are making lively bosinesas. Dimities, Organdies,&#13;
Lawns, JacDnetts, Muslins, Swissese&#13;
Percales, Yankee, French and Scotch&#13;
Ginghams. All of them in great variety.&#13;
They are so inexpensive that really the&#13;
only fun in having them is to see how well&#13;
pleased and happy our friends look when&#13;
they see them at the price- For your&#13;
WARM WEATHER DRESS S00DS&#13;
FIELD'S Jacfcaan, MM*.&#13;
TO-.*'-&#13;
/&#13;
,v&gt;*;ft'&#13;
* # -&#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 June 10, 1897</text>
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                <text>June 10, 1897 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1897-06-10</text>
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                <text>Frank L. Andrews</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>PINCKNEY, LIVINGSTON 00*, MIPH., THURSDAY, JUNE 17, 1897.&#13;
PRE-INVENTORY SALE.&#13;
Our Serai'Annual stock taking will occur on July 1st.&#13;
Previous to that time we propose making such keen reductions on many lines&#13;
tnte placing the stock in betteHnvoice trim, and making it ready for the&#13;
Autumn buying, that it will mete the month of J*one a memoriable-one iox&#13;
economical purchasers, A stock that is nght in every way fall&#13;
*nd complete every detail of quality and style the bestat the lowest prises.&#13;
PRE-INVENTORY FLYERS.&#13;
A few prices not all of the'best not any lower in&#13;
price than others but to give you a general'idea Of the clearing prices the&#13;
keen redactions we are making. It's a splendid opportudity jost&#13;
when you need the good? in the baying season.&#13;
_ _ _ _ 6c Unbleached Cotton for 4 cents .j _ __ _&#13;
50o High Bnst summer corset for 44 cents.&#13;
8o Shirting for 5 cents.&#13;
S3 and $3|iiadiesV Shoes for 12.50^5&#13;
Men's Neckwear a choice line of correct ideas at prices&#13;
almost like finding them. ^ .&#13;
Shoes for lien and Boyd correct tees correct colorings&#13;
to clear the stock at once at raarvelously low prices.&#13;
• Price reduction of great interest, all throng* oar&#13;
store the lowest, clearance prices. - It's by such methods we place the a'toc^&#13;
in belter shape for the Autumn buying offering you fresh stocks for your&#13;
selection. This makes June a selling mourn 'of especial intereit to our trade&#13;
makes lew prices.&#13;
Busisess Pointers.&#13;
NOTICE*&#13;
Notice ie hereby given that sealed&#13;
bids will be received by me for the&#13;
performance of the duties of Village&#13;
Marshal to and until second Monday&#13;
in April, 1898. Said bids to be presented&#13;
at regular meeting, July 5th.&#13;
1897. Conceit reserves the right to&#13;
xejeet any or all bids.&#13;
; fi. H. TMCPLI,&#13;
Village Clerk.&#13;
^ o e a i D i s p a t c h e s .&#13;
OBITUARY.&#13;
Mrs. Martin Harris died qaite sad*&#13;
denly last Saturday of heart trouble.&#13;
Mrs. Harris was well known and&#13;
much respected. She leaves a large&#13;
circle of friends to mourn their loss.&#13;
The funeral services w^re held from&#13;
St. Mary's church Monday morning&#13;
and a large number ef people were&#13;
present to pay their last tribute to&#13;
the departed.&#13;
Mrs. Martin Harris was born in&#13;
bounty West Meatb, Ireland, April 9&#13;
1822. Came to Michigan* about 1845&#13;
and was married shortly after to&#13;
Martin Harris. They settled on a&#13;
farm near here and she has resided on&#13;
the same farm for the past 50 years.&#13;
The country was all wilderness and&#13;
Mrs. Harris helped build their log&#13;
house. Mr. Harris dieoMn Sept 1892.&#13;
Wedding Bells.&#13;
The following should have been&#13;
printed last week bat the copy was&#13;
lost until too late for publication:&#13;
"Married at St. Mary's chnrcb,&#13;
Thursday morning, Miss Eliza Morgan&#13;
and Mr. John Donehue. Nuptial High&#13;
mass was celebrated by Re*. J?r. Com*&#13;
mertord at 8 o'clock. The Krjde was&#13;
tastefaHy attired and was attended by&#13;
Miss Agnes Loaghlin of Fowletville&#13;
and Mr. James Harris acted as best&#13;
man.&#13;
Alter the ceremony about 25 invited&#13;
goests partook of a most bountiful&#13;
repast at the borne of Mrs. J. Birney.&#13;
The presents were numerous and valuable.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Don oboe went&#13;
Bapids^—carrying the best&#13;
wishes of a host of friends.&#13;
All kinds ef Job Printing done at&#13;
this office. Call and get prieea.&#13;
Mettee.&#13;
Cuban giant fodder &lt; seed corn for&#13;
tale at 60c per brf" J OH* W. HABBIS;&#13;
l.OOG bu. corn,. 1,000 bu. oats at&#13;
highest market price. C. L. BowMA»&#13;
We will grind Feed Tuesday's ancV&#13;
Friday's. Feed Brand and Corn Meal&#13;
for sale. C. L. BOWMAH.*&#13;
All parsons who h*ve not paid* us&#13;
all or nearly all of their #eeounU&#13;
within six months, please call and do&#13;
'•©.&gt;•;.&#13;
BABNABP k CAxrnnm&#13;
Program Cards, School Cards, Envelopes,&#13;
Utter Beads, Note Heads,&#13;
Auction Biila, etc. Call and get&#13;
•ample*.&#13;
f»&#13;
Two honeat on banks on .Portage&#13;
ink*. JBy toe week, mouth or eenoon.) tow peiuiM*from Pinctaey that &lt;Jid&#13;
Bestraaaonalde. 21t25 T.Braurr. ' '&#13;
4|kUeeon Bepair&#13;
wood j » iron, Bikee and Snndrieii,&#13;
Jmr k&#13;
B. D. Bocbe of Howell was in town&#13;
on business Monday.&#13;
Howell has a new system of incandescent&#13;
electric lights.&#13;
Mesdames F. A. Sigler and George&#13;
Reason, Jr. were in Howell Monday.&#13;
Jay Shehan and wife of Munith&#13;
spent Sunday with relatives near here.&#13;
The street commissioner is repairing&#13;
some of thi» dilapidated sidewalks.&#13;
The Orientals will held a banquet&#13;
tin the Maecahee hall, on Saturday&#13;
evening Jaae*26,1897^&#13;
Monday June 14, was the 120tlT anniversary&#13;
of the adoption of the stars&#13;
and stripes as a national flag.&#13;
Mrs. Myro* Mills and daughter of&#13;
Marysiille are the gueels of her&#13;
mother, Mrs. Mary Mann of this&#13;
place.&#13;
PostofSce appointments are beiag.&#13;
made in several &lt;fa our sister village*&#13;
We presume Pinckney will fall in line&#13;
jbefore long. Who will it be?&#13;
John Schenck, wife and children of&#13;
Chelsea and Mrs. Jeanefte Caefwell of&#13;
Qraes Lake were guests of J. A. Cadwell&#13;
and family over Sunday.&#13;
Work was^commenced Monday on&#13;
* *&#13;
— 4 *&#13;
on the corners of Main and Mil st'e.&#13;
Wm. Moran will do the mason orork.&#13;
The Birhett—Klemm suit was settled&#13;
Monday satisfactorily to all concerned,&#13;
the mill will soon be in&#13;
other hands and we are promised a&#13;
good thing.&#13;
The train left Jackson last Saturday&#13;
eroding at' 4:15 hot ihere were&#13;
AtTENTION! LOYAL GUARDS.&#13;
Having been petitioned by ten.members&#13;
of division No. 46, K. L. G., to&#13;
call a special meeting" to elect and install&#13;
a paymaster to fill the vacancy&#13;
caused by the resignation of M. £.&#13;
Fohey, 1 hereby call such a meeting&#13;
for Friday June 18, and hope that&#13;
each member will try and be present.&#13;
Yours fraternally, ^&#13;
F. L. ANDREWS, Capt. Q&lt;&#13;
We^rj After That Man!&#13;
Abouttme man in ten dosen't kndw&#13;
that his neighbors are saving money on&#13;
every deal, because they trade with us,&#13;
We're After That&#13;
About one man in ten can't be expected&#13;
to know that we are headquarters for&#13;
And we expect to get his trade.&#13;
IRE YOU THE TENTH MAN?&#13;
WE'RE AFTER YOU!&#13;
F. A. SIGLER&#13;
A PINCKNEY, MICH&#13;
ten.&#13;
WE5ARE&#13;
• • ' V ' • . .' ... •• • • — ' Alwa/s,&#13;
Everlastingly, .&#13;
Continuously,&#13;
Persistently,&#13;
Effectively&#13;
Seeking Trade.&#13;
We wera unable to attend the social&#13;
Tuesday evening hot Mrs. Hause has&#13;
oar tbanks for remembering us 3fitb&#13;
a beautiful coquet and a delioLeus&#13;
cake.&#13;
The second division of the ladies' of&#13;
the M. £. society will hold an ice&#13;
cream social at the opera house Saturday&#13;
eveuing June 19. Everyone&#13;
welcome.&#13;
The Loyal Guard banquet on Wednesday&#13;
evening of last week was not&#13;
very largely attended owing to some&#13;
misunderstanding in regard to the&#13;
date. The boys are not discouraged&#13;
however and will try again.&#13;
W E SELL&#13;
Oil Stoves,&#13;
Gasoline Stoves,&#13;
Wood Stoves,&#13;
Lawn Mowers,&#13;
Bicycles,&#13;
Farming Implements, etc.&#13;
W E WILL&#13;
The people appreciate a good place&#13;
C.Xt. Bowman's cold storage building 1 to attend a' social,,and on Tuesday&#13;
9&#13;
to '.. . '\'b&gt;n&#13;
'•}.&#13;
OILS!&#13;
Hlkiri»«ad«i*lt* &lt;tf atoflg&#13;
to be noid pbeayeir Htmn&#13;
«go«l Xtfrifi be 4» jmax |d-&#13;
Aocailoa&#13;
T. CtlNTON.&#13;
not get *&gt;m station until 440;fhey&#13;
oasne hesne hyChekia a#eV onjoyed -a&#13;
moonliga* drive. Ahemf "&#13;
The banquet giean i y the Eastern&#13;
Sswr lodge, ^at too opeam house laet&#13;
iy evening wae 4 graAiJ tuoaod&#13;
enjoyed&#13;
of the finest ejwr gam hf the eocie^;&#13;
We * » in receipt of the 60te a»-&#13;
nieataary numbor of too Dhioa^d Tri*&#13;
bnne. "It is surely a work of art, aeveral&#13;
nagai being printed im oolort and&#13;
the entire paper lull of intereatias&#13;
history and half-tone engravings of&#13;
the gnowtt&gt;«nd oevo^opoaaeat of the&#13;
n&lt;?r&#13;
evening a large crowd attended one&#13;
at the pleasajttt home of 3. K. Hause,&#13;
just north of the village. Fveiwone&#13;
enj dyed a vesy pleaaant evening. The&#13;
social was iojr .the benefit If Bev. N.&#13;
W. Fierce and the receipts were 920«&#13;
The members of the Order of the&#13;
Eastern Star wish to thank Miss&#13;
Georgia Martin for the beautiful&#13;
flowers she so kindly foxnishot for&#13;
their recent reception, ajeo for the&#13;
very taetefuj manner in*^s/aien the&#13;
decorated the opera house wf*eh added&#13;
so much to the pleasure ol the occasion.&#13;
Many thanks to Mint M**tin&#13;
fyqm all the members of *»%$- &amp; &amp;&#13;
.The Graduating ejeroaoi of the&#13;
at&#13;
the &lt;&gt;pena House at ^his plsjjien Wod-,&#13;
n^eday evening, June A 28. fJtoooalanxnate&#13;
eidress by Rev, C. $«U*cm at&#13;
the Congl ohuToh Sunday evening&#13;
Juno^Ot: Although &gt;heN o^egi sunhers&#13;
bfrt two this year t^ey a«a. making&#13;
propamlions for one of tho finest.&#13;
eatrttinmoriU th*t^a*Jfce*% l»e)d&#13;
horn. Be ssun nad jaJMad *ho&#13;
GladJv.&#13;
Politely,&#13;
Oarerully,&#13;
Promptly&#13;
Wait. Upon You.&#13;
Bespectfully Yours,&#13;
TEEPLE tP CADWELL.&#13;
9 • ' • * * % ' • ' the&#13;
;i.&#13;
SPECIALS&#13;
FOB Saturday June 19, and continuing&#13;
one week.&#13;
30 PEB CENT OFF ON&#13;
ouE^n^iTEMr OF lac&#13;
DIES' saiBT WAISTS.&#13;
BAKN&#13;
KMSHpK.g'; , *&#13;
RK*wE8HRpr; v:"• -'... 1*,&#13;
KJHSP&gt;.V '••,,,» KB^'"o^'&#13;
•npiKt.^i -r •'••;,&#13;
Eft.'*1 ,,'•-&gt;.-', , rRottee'4.- ^:*.-:•••• B S t V ' • • •-\••&lt;'•••&#13;
BHBfry^v'^ ;•'•"•*'.•&#13;
K+~-r •,.;,. &gt;.••&#13;
Ha'*,,? • V&#13;
Kwv,- I'.\» *K/.-&gt;&#13;
afe.?u •: B» V, 1--( »rha&gt; 'X .-;-'vl -.'.: . '•'' Blffv •';,*'.' -&#13;
IF&amp;&amp;';' W: V- lie,- fev-&#13;
EV" . ft r&lt;' •&#13;
K^&#13;
t^'', -&#13;
&amp; ! • ' ' . " ^&#13;
S*'&#13;
i ' : JV . •&#13;
(•&gt;'- df'.' ' ,&#13;
' M l .&#13;
•• -I1&#13;
:.^.- ,i i .^ ,&#13;
••:!.:v: - ... . . .r:v v:,^.;.:v ^^ : \*v-:u &gt;$;/.&gt;. -'S••:•::%». ^-'"••••V " '.;•-?*•. -,-4 ,v&#13;
' « - . v . ' &gt; ' / - ' . - . " , . - . • - .• . ; - • , • • - . • . ". . . , . . . » • ^ , •&gt; \ f , . , . .-, • j ' • , - - , . » • , • &gt; * , , - . , .&#13;
, -. - x .'Si1 ft. 1 ^;i C - '-."&#13;
• * . . ( - , . , . • • " ; . ' ' ' ,&#13;
". 1 ~ * ' .&#13;
• k i k t ' t M r n M U f i ' M * •&#13;
w ; » - • • • , " ' ' . W M * : &gt; \ , - i ' \ ' . &lt; . &gt; ' / • ; • • •"'-'« , . . . ' ' *'%•_»•:•&lt; ' ' - i f ' . - ' • - . x r , .: ," •:•&lt; ,,'• ••'• 1..'. *•• " --i ' , •• ". ,.--. • - . '• v , &lt;w ., ^•' . .. &lt;f.^ "• ' 4 '••• '"*•'••;, . ' • « . ' \ •'..'.....'*'' • • » •• 1 ' » ' . . ^ . ^ * ' • f / . v ^ " &lt; « * V A ;.&#13;
'TWL:&#13;
i l . C H . G A N N«Wm J j j t ^ y TOLD&#13;
FOR MICJUQANDBRS.&#13;
- . ' • • • • • ' ^ " ' l ' * * Crop lUpert of Ua,«*v»i Impart&#13;
*on» P|ppajiw,,^fwaWe&#13;
After M Team — Ifyaiet&#13;
Hsve Loa^ ef Vaa at Detroit,&#13;
K:&#13;
if&#13;
^&#13;
I&#13;
TOMPeflP GapMur«d l»/ PlnilwMi&#13;
^ C A f r o t ^ Straits, the bfautif«1&#13;
« a ^ W ^ ^ » p l e n d | d a t ^ v ; ^ te&#13;
lt» hiatory wltnea*ed son» ffraat and&#13;
iBtereattag crowdh, as&amp;emb^d wHhta&#13;
ll|jr»jtoa, Irotn Indian couneUe of war&#13;
mA&amp;PWcete the national «Qoa«|||r&#13;
•oentof the-tt. A. B., InokKitoy state,&#13;
•national aud ioternational eo%«bntipns&#13;
o i ? « V * t n 4 » . Hut nerer Onfll Hbia&#13;
pjp)pierablfi month of June has she ever&#13;
entertained or been entectained by such&#13;
» H&lt;n&gt;erlag aa whefr the nobles of the'&#13;
Ipperl&amp;l oouncU of AacUnt and Arabic&#13;
Order of the Mystic Shrine, with&#13;
w e i r aunela, elephants and caravans,&#13;
,*wept across the deserts from Ne&gt;v&#13;
York, and Texas, and OsKkosh, and&#13;
Windy, wicked Chicago and elsewhere&#13;
.ttuwisrhotft UpcJe, gain's domain's and&#13;
took possession of the entire city. The&#13;
l i n e of the oasis of Detroit was well&#13;
Unstained and the nobles lacked for&#13;
Wotbing. They drank their fill from&#13;
vibe sweet flowing waters and ate to&#13;
their limit of the bountiful products of&#13;
the place. Likewise they took excur*&#13;
if&amp;aaat*, various points of interest in&#13;
nod near the city and had any amount&#13;
of Jolly tun. incidentally a little busl-&#13;
4ej* was transacted including the election&#13;
of new officers with Albert B. Mc-&#13;
Gaffey, of Denver, CoL, as imperial&#13;
ootentate. The cowboy Arabs of&#13;
9Gexaa captvred the imperial council&#13;
'vrMn a lasso and nearly drowned the&#13;
apembers in tarantula juice before seonring^&#13;
a promise to visit Dallas next&#13;
American BexoluSvoo* .naa requeatedthe&#13;
mayors of the cltic%. ejid tqwns&#13;
th/ou^hout thej state ^po%U attention&#13;
&gt;by proclamation to tAej.VMatJQnal * W&#13;
xj day, June J,4, as a dayjaat apa/tby cpngrass&#13;
for .a^ch observajace, being the&#13;
lapth aani,veraary\of the adopj^oa of&#13;
Itae stars an4» stripes fal the&gt; jajttipnal&#13;
ibanner of our country; and aa^a for a&#13;
^ n e r a l ^ r y a a o e of the day *#: unfurling&#13;
tojthe ,breaae Old Cfter? from&#13;
all public buildings, pnvaterea&gt;danoes(,&#13;
stores and other appropriate place*.&#13;
Three Boys Probably DrowaaeY&#13;
On May 30 Charles Roaa, Bert Qrane&#13;
and George Hall atarted from LarkinV&#13;
PJLRT(, six .wi^i, froi% ^rawrae C4t?s 4» »&#13;
yawl with 75 bushels ,pf potatoes for&#13;
ManUtique. Nothing has been heard&#13;
from the boys since. The yawl was&#13;
not strong, and it is feared the whole&#13;
crew m Uflt 4» the,,beayy «ea on&#13;
Lake ^ o h i g a n . All were unaocUjB'&#13;
tomed to managing a boat.&#13;
MICHIGAN NEWS ITEMS.&#13;
INTBRamTINfl A N D .II^POJtTANT&#13;
N « W » MATTERS. '&#13;
•.-J J &lt;.&#13;
Oaeamlsslenar Calheaa Jtetafsjs&#13;
aa« stepocei to tiU Fees-&#13;
Meat. Was Wto Seoa Take Aetliaa&#13;
I n , ^'iP'l ^ f f ^ y ^ n n i n i i i u.HmHw yi iwin ! - i n Minium i . . ^ ^ ^ s a ^ i n i i I P I&#13;
of Montana/ made atftaiJ c J B l m J t m o W f h&#13;
In fact&#13;
v •&#13;
Crop Boport for Jaaa.&#13;
The Michigan crop report for June&#13;
,la of unusual importance. It says that&#13;
Che average condition of wheat June&#13;
*i, was In the southern counties 82, and&#13;
sn the state 78. One year ago the aver-&#13;
J»Jte«,|aere 09 and 77. Wheat is late,&#13;
a n d h a f bee»ia\inrod asaap than usual&#13;
by m wef weather. The Jaan* is&#13;
flaita^emy^eperte^yeaew'' near&#13;
isfaigpouwdV The presenee of insects&#13;
la n e t noted*&#13;
Tjife number of bushela of wheat reported&#13;
marketed m May la 610,976, as&#13;
e^eapared with ftit,74# reported in May,&#13;
llHNK and the amount in "the 10 months,&#13;
AugvatrMayr-isv aVV7sV3P4- taishel*, « s - Gapt P. DanTelT, aged 7*, we ll-known&#13;
eoatpared with B,%lj&gt;M* buaheia in the&#13;
•ame months last year.&#13;
* l i t e acreage planted to corn is reported&#13;
a t 9§ per cent of average years.&#13;
TJse aevaage aewed to oats la HI per&#13;
eamt, and the average condition of this&#13;
^erop la 86 per cent. The average condition&#13;
of meadows and pastures, and&#13;
«a* clover aewed thai year ia 06. Apples&#13;
'pvomiee abont two&lt;thirda, and 'peaches&#13;
'on*-fourth of average crops. One year 1 Ago the estimate* were va per cent for&#13;
61 .per cent for&#13;
awe fewer than&#13;
&lt;rf Che state, and&#13;
they were lower&#13;
ef aiusep&gt;«4pew on&#13;
ie nearly £V*}»r cent&#13;
Ja I**. I t to probable&#13;
complete retnraa jvill s h e w teas&#13;
1.606,000 sheep 6 month* old and&#13;
o*er in the state this spring.&#13;
I&#13;
roam* the Powahte T:&#13;
OapL Smith, with the wrecker EL A.&#13;
Boot, has located the long-lost steamer&#13;
Bewnbie, which was sunk in Lake Huln&#13;
eoUiaion with the Meteor 32&#13;
* g a She- lay* in 160 feet of&#13;
i, three mile*off the course where&#13;
'.she wa* supposed to have gone down.&#13;
'She to nearly seven mile* off Thunder&#13;
bay ttght 8he rests on the bottom in&#13;
SSL BBtight position, her upper works&#13;
gone entirely, but the arches* deck and&#13;
hall intaei, ,: .The wreck is covered with&#13;
aaad aavlmoas to* the thickness at several&#13;
inches. The steamer had 900 feet&#13;
keel,..and era* valued a t $800,000.&#13;
I t has been *Jm cargo* however, t h a&#13;
hasjnade the sesceh so attractive for&#13;
wre#era, ^On board the Pewabie were&#13;
e*9^aon*^ocing«4eopper. 6&gt;M worth 11&#13;
ee*teaexMmd,or686^006. The copper&#13;
torn e**r**i»d6ie mats d o ^ t a i c u&#13;
P ^ M W r j e ^ r e p n ^&#13;
tiwph]&gt;. There were alas several hnadresl&#13;
te»*o* iron ere 4 n ^ hotd^ and,&#13;
Johnnie Sheehan, aged 14, of Calumet,&#13;
was drowned in a small pond.&#13;
a James Weitvliet, aged 28, accidentally&#13;
shot and killed himself at Holland.&#13;
Sebastian Farritt, a Pewablc miner&#13;
ati Iron Mountain, fell 40 feet and was&#13;
killed.&#13;
Three barns owned by John McKay&#13;
at Romeo, were destroyed by fire; loss,&#13;
63,000.&#13;
Peter Beay, aged 15, was drowned&#13;
while playing on logs in the river at&#13;
Manistee.&#13;
Daniel Morea's house at Jackson was&#13;
badly wrecked by lightning, but no&#13;
one was seriously Injured.&#13;
George W. Clark, a Grand Rapids&#13;
painter, fell 50 feet from a cottage at&#13;
Ottawa Beach and may die.'&#13;
Mrs. Patrick Murray, of Black man&#13;
township, Jackson cqunty, has died&#13;
from injuries received in a runaway.&#13;
A bolt of lightning split the flagstaff&#13;
on the high school at Pontiac, throwing&#13;
the greater part a distance off 300&#13;
f e e t&#13;
Two masked men with revolvers&#13;
forced Louis Kreuts, a Menominee&#13;
butcher, to hand over 660 which he was&#13;
counting. ?&#13;
The new Grand hotel at Lansing was&#13;
again partially-destroyed by fire,' the&#13;
loss of 16,000 being fully covered by&#13;
insurance.&#13;
It ia said that the bill for the improvment&#13;
of Maple river, which has been'&#13;
signed by the governor, will reclaim&#13;
15,000 acres of swamp lands.&#13;
..While probably no one officially;&#13;
Knows What action President MoKlnley&#13;
win take in regard to Cuban mat*&#13;
ten there are several public men i n | benefit fromnproteeAl vs. tariff for four&#13;
Washington who are near enough to' years to oome. Mr. Butier, of • North&#13;
the executive to be able to quite ae- \ CaroUna, mads* a •speecrr favoring' an&#13;
income tax and opposed the "indecent&#13;
haateV with (whte^^^aMfVPtcff*'^;&#13;
ing made to force the pooling bill&#13;
through the,Senate; He said the pooling&#13;
KM would* destroy the interstate&#13;
commerce law and waa in the interests&#13;
of gigantic trusts. Mr^Cullorq, ohairman'of&#13;
the interstate' fommeree&gt; tpmmlttss&#13;
« which re*pMrt*d the bllirdedled&#13;
an uqdne haste and also denied that&#13;
it would injur* the kHerstatc ^ o m -&#13;
mero^ lawJ, m ^ iCkttto«v\ e^ Tex»*s a'&#13;
member of the committee, said that as&#13;
n ¥ s ¥ w I f Mr. Butler's assertions were&#13;
t r u e . ' ' '&gt;.»••&gt;•»•• (.--"'^-&#13;
SxtfAffr.-Wfh'day.-^rbe W&lt;Hoa: schedulewis,&#13;
under consideration and many&#13;
In the copper country, fell from the&#13;
fifty-first level in the Calumet 4 Hecla&#13;
mine, 300 feet, and was killed.&#13;
John Yonts, aged 60, w a s OMiving t o&#13;
Cold water when he waa run into by a&#13;
runaway team and fatally injured.&#13;
One runaway horse was killed*&#13;
Alfred French, aged 96, o n old vet,&#13;
went fishing at Otsego and fell is to&#13;
the water and was drowned. He&#13;
leaves a widow and two children*—-—-&#13;
Hsrald Hoag, aged 8, fell into the&#13;
mJH race «4 Grand Rapids and had&#13;
sank the second time when Lewis E.&#13;
Davis rescued him by diving in, clothes&#13;
andalL&#13;
T h e church of the Holj Trinity, a&#13;
new German Catholic church at West&#13;
Bay City, was destroyed by a fire which&#13;
waa deary incendiary, causing a loss&#13;
of $3,000.&#13;
Thomas Kelly and Peter Parley Indulged&#13;
hi a neighborhood, quarrel at&#13;
Grand Rapids, and Parley fractured&#13;
Kelly's skull with a stone, and he will&#13;
probably die.&#13;
John Scarrow, wife s a d three children,&#13;
at Wayne, were token ill from&#13;
eating mushrooms. At one time it&#13;
seemed as if some deaths would result,&#13;
but all are recovering.&#13;
Andrew Sandon, a Swede, of Eastlake,&#13;
was locked up at Baldwin with a&#13;
bad case of "snakes" and upon being&#13;
released he ran and jumped into the&#13;
lake and was drowned.&#13;
Charles Mead, working south of&#13;
Alma committed suicide by hanging&#13;
in a barn. Two children taw the deed,-&#13;
bnt^were too frightened to aid him.&#13;
Cause of suicide unknown.&#13;
^aUfVffnmlley. aged 15, wa* found&#13;
dead in the woods near Olive, with his&#13;
bead Mown off and the body maiigledV&#13;
r f t * f t lay rMuAnts;; of V fbc^rutf&#13;
whmn nadevidently explocteSL*&#13;
£ a s t TaWap cit^eps b^ave organized&#13;
a company 'to resume the manufacture&#13;
of salt at the plant of the defunct Holland-&#13;
Esaery Co., which will be&#13;
H* f « £ capacity, 600 barrela a day&#13;
H John Cuddehassr, of ^ the&#13;
^ Wond ^dfe far^ry &gt; t ^ilesjra*&#13;
in a fast revdvm*; abaft f ^ s * J i o s t&#13;
i l l l l i l l l l M I J I a w t i U n i f t i l l JsM 4li^sUswswswsCswd&#13;
^sva^BSBM awsw^aimawa* f*w^»^^»»j ^ ^ • • , ~™^^^^awW^Bpjaf'^&#13;
Uawvft, kswing hsJsind both Ut**hir}#&#13;
T h e Pieeti/terjan church a t Howell&#13;
struck, by Ughtsiac white Sooday&#13;
school was in session, A ball of fire&#13;
rolled into the *aUery, knocking t w o&#13;
boys from their seats and shocking severalgiria.&#13;
The aait lifters in the State Lumber&#13;
Co.^ mill at Manistee have struck and&#13;
caused the fchnntts*; down of the entire&#13;
masher mill and «oH block as well as&#13;
these lumber camps dosin*;, throwing&#13;
several hsmdred men ovt of employourately&#13;
forecast his policy,&#13;
one of these gentlemen eayifc&#13;
"The President has already decided*&#13;
upon his policy, but he he* delfcyed action&#13;
until h e could obtain oerUhyspecific&#13;
information from Commissioner&#13;
Calhoun, whidn he has n o V received,&#13;
and the President has learned enough&#13;
toebnvinoe him that the interest* of,&#13;
the Uulted S i t e s demand" a ce'ssaitim&#13;
of hosWrUes in Cuts! The method^ of&#13;
Spanish warfare on " t h e bland Are&#13;
damnable, as everybody knows. Aside&#13;
from the sentiment invdlvedf the trade,:&#13;
Interests df this country are entitled&#13;
to some consideration:, ah# the President&#13;
has the names ef 1,200 Americans&#13;
who have been mined b y the Insurrection,&#13;
to say nothing of the millions of&#13;
dollars in reciprocal commerce that&#13;
has been cheeked.&#13;
"President McKiniey will soon appoint&#13;
a minister to Spain who will be&#13;
instructed to tender the friendly offices&#13;
of this government In the matter of&#13;
terminating hostilities. The President&#13;
is none too hopeful that these offices&#13;
will be accepted, but if all offers of&#13;
mediation are rejected the President&#13;
will intervene to stop the insurrection;&#13;
for the United States cannot contemplate&#13;
another 10 years' rebellion In&#13;
Cuba.&#13;
"The Intervention of the part of this&#13;
government means war with Spain,&#13;
but Mr. McKiniey has considered all&#13;
the consequences, and If It must ije&#13;
war he is prepared to accept the inevitable.&#13;
He is confident that the people&#13;
will sustain him in his course and&#13;
there is little doubt that he Is right."&#13;
Wm. J. Calhoun, the special commissioner&#13;
sent to Havana to investigate&#13;
the death o f Dr. Ruiz, an American&#13;
citizen, in Guanabacoa prison, has. returned.&#13;
. He says Ruiz was undoubtedly&#13;
killed by a blow on top of his&#13;
head, but it was impossible get witnesses&#13;
who dared testify as to how he&#13;
received the blow. It waa_proyenifa*fc+B,pnbileauB&#13;
Ruis was falsely imprisoned and his&#13;
treaty rights violated in that he was&#13;
not allowed to communicate with the&#13;
U. H. consul. Mr. Calhoun also received&#13;
some vivid impressions of the&#13;
general condition of affairs in Cuba&#13;
ana the suffering of the people ini er&#13;
ersl trips to Matanzas and interior&#13;
point*. He says the country seems to&#13;
be almost depopulated and that there&#13;
are no signs of any buildings standing&#13;
except at the railroad stations. These,&#13;
by the way,.are practically forts. The&#13;
island, is rapidly being devastated by a&#13;
relentless, cruel and bitter slvil war,&#13;
so that very soon it will not &gt; e worth&#13;
anything to anyone. Mr. Calhoun&#13;
ajMke o f the terrible suffering of the&#13;
slarvfag old men, women and children&#13;
who have been concentrated without&#13;
means of subsistence at various points.&#13;
His heart has been stirred by the woes&#13;
of these wretched, starving reconoentradoes,&#13;
and witn the memory of the&#13;
scenes of Matanzas upon him, with the&#13;
memory of dving and the unburied&#13;
dead, he will undoubtedly soggpst that&#13;
President McKiniey use what means he&#13;
can to stop this war of extermination.&#13;
, - — • ' • ' " , • ,. • • " • ' / * * .&#13;
Ufce Tnrktoh&#13;
Constantinople: The Turkish council&#13;
of ministers issued orders to the governors&#13;
of the vsrioa* provinces to form&#13;
with the quickest dispatch commissions&#13;
for drafting and forwarding troops of&#13;
all classes, and to hurry all reserves of&#13;
war material' fit) Constsnttnople. T h e&#13;
hands enseieyed in she imperial ammunition&#13;
iJ^etory are heiswt rqehed&#13;
night and day in mannfaetnring cartridges.&#13;
Transport cruisers Jtave arrived&#13;
a t Ismsd, 60 smiles southeast of&#13;
Cons#*n*.isople. to embark troops for&#13;
.unknown points. «-.~^r&#13;
This action of tbprporte tn&gt; t h e face&#13;
of Its apparent aineerity inr Entering&#13;
jnpon the peace negotiations' has diseoncegtod&#13;
the sr^bsssjl^raof ^he powers&#13;
and alarzne4 w ( populace. The&#13;
gravest appfehensions ore everywhere&#13;
felt regarding the- tetexittans of she&#13;
roffcint h a s onnnrsssd nannei Ganemaar&#13;
TTp ' ft ^*w~ ^ ^ ^ ^ " ^ ^ ^ ™ _ / I T T * ^ ^ 5 * . J ^ F ^ ^ I ' ^ T W I&#13;
erteisto&#13;
ilssdlns-&#13;
Hit aihinet svill-&#13;
4te persona*!&#13;
Tb^ snjnaten of&#13;
minijse a s all the&#13;
a s well&#13;
Wsrsssl Bianco&#13;
f a s , 3who were sansnllid by her. xssa&gt;&#13;
e s t / , advised the nssatt o i&#13;
Weyler&#13;
Cohan policy, and lv was&#13;
pjsiedtha* this&#13;
it to&#13;
peril of the&#13;
IS:&#13;
pwJwewwJ a m w&#13;
to not y e t&#13;
•6*0, which Mrs. Joan Okley. aXeebk&#13;
«M lady, had secreted in hex had.&#13;
of the paragraphs, were agreed to. bpt&#13;
that restoring Iumber((to the dutiable&#13;
list at S3 per 1,000 (which was finally&#13;
agreed.to) proved,,th« greatest scumbling&#13;
block encountered Since the debate,&#13;
during which a wide divergence&#13;
of views was developed on the Democratic&#13;
side of the chamber. Mr. Bacon,&#13;
of Georgia, gave his support, to the&#13;
committee rate, saying i t was essential&#13;
to the lumber industry of the south.&#13;
He also spoke in favor of a revenue&#13;
tariff, so adjusted as to give equal&#13;
benefits to all industries. Mr, Bacon&#13;
and Mr. Vest clashed several times on&#13;
tariff doctrines, Mr. Vest expressing&#13;
his regret that a Democratic Senator&#13;
would aid in restoring to the dutiable&#13;
list one of the three products—lumber,&#13;
salt and wool—which the Wilson bill&#13;
put on the free list&#13;
SEKATK—58th day—The lumber paragraph,&#13;
which has been more stubbornly'&#13;
contested than any feature &lt;?t the tariff&#13;
bill thuB far, was disposed of by defeating&#13;
the motion of Senator. Vest to&#13;
place white pine on the. free list, yeas&#13;
20; nays, 38. The contest was mainly&#13;
significant in hreajking party .lines*&#13;
which have been, maintained with few&#13;
exceptions during the early stages of&#13;
the debate. 6 » Jthe finoU vote- eight&#13;
Democratic senators voted against Mr.&#13;
Vest's proposition, and three silver&#13;
voted "for it .FoilowlajT&#13;
this a vote to substitute the Wilson&#13;
lumber schedule was defeated, 21-37,&#13;
*&gt;Mvo-Greek peace&#13;
$£« of&#13;
i Mr. s t m t to.&#13;
for a h i f h tariff for the protection of&#13;
! the wo*} grower. r$e presented fully&#13;
**nd sunjKjrter with n u s ^ r o n t tables&#13;
and sfspatlotfne w o o i ^ s w e r ^ side o n &gt; ^ ^ / » | &amp; j i l S g D m I S ? or R&#13;
t h e c o ^ v e r a y awd saowed U * e n o r - f « t A i s h pcae^ cbnrUsstocer/ y h i s ,&#13;
mous lenaesTsusnnned.by the moob&#13;
grower* in the do*repJ«tte* in.raiuc,&#13;
of sheep'and wool, dqriog • the. past * &amp;&#13;
years. He declared that, by reason of&#13;
enormous i m p o r t tions in anticipation.&#13;
of an enactment of the tariff law, the&#13;
wool frower wouid a n t reeefve much&#13;
was&#13;
and the schedule was agreed to as reported.&#13;
A general discussion of the&#13;
future program on the bill led to a&#13;
statement by Mr. Allison, in charge of&#13;
the bill during the illness of Mrf Aldrich,&#13;
that the committee probably&#13;
would submit amendment* t o the sugar&#13;
schedule. HQUSX.—Only routine&#13;
affairs were disposed of, as the majority&#13;
forced an adjournment •&#13;
SfttfA.TX&gt;—5ftth day.—By the decisive&#13;
vote ef 42 to 19 an amendment to the&#13;
tariff wa* adopted placing raw cotton,&#13;
the greet product of the south, on the&#13;
dutiable list at 60 per eent ad valorem.&#13;
It to the first time in the history of&#13;
tariff legislation that a duty on cotton&#13;
has been incorporated in a bill The&#13;
amendment wa* proposed by Mr. Bai,&#13;
oon, Democrat, of Georgia, on his individual&#13;
responsibility and led to a&#13;
spirited debate, Densoeratie, senators&#13;
disclosing a wide difference o f views&#13;
sndattiBaesexchsnginjr sharp personal&#13;
criticisms. On the fined Tote six Democrats&#13;
voted with the Republicans for&#13;
the Bacon amendment while the negative&#13;
vote was solidly Democratic with&#13;
one exception, Kyle, Populist The&#13;
debate took np the most of the day&#13;
and b u t little progress was made on&#13;
the bill. Early In the day the sugar ;&#13;
schedule was passed over and the agricultural&#13;
schedule token up, which&#13;
gave Mr. Vest occasion to say, in his&#13;
usual ironical way, that the latter&#13;
sehednl* wa* a fraud concocted to&#13;
eateh farmer^ votes. Seversl senators,&#13;
however, showed wherein the&#13;
duties proposed on agricultural product*&#13;
would greatly benefit,the farmers&#13;
of th«irste^e**&gt; least.&#13;
SXWATX.—60th day,^Very, little progress&#13;
was made on the tariff hill owing&#13;
to a lengthy- ittosnssinn between Mr.&#13;
Rawlin*, o f Utah, n o d Mr. Milk, of&#13;
T*x**, upon th«r Democratic attftosde&#13;
on the tariff from their respective&#13;
standpoints.&#13;
-*i }•&#13;
uls, oser.whic^ tite&#13;
tiMsariff hiii.is&#13;
_ K o ^ j s ^ t t e ^ i h ^ ^&#13;
the Hone* psiftoioiii o f t h e m U wish&#13;
differential from 676-1066 to »6-100&#13;
cemte per nsnnd. - T h e&#13;
lating to the Hawaiian&#13;
over by mu&#13;
tine business and a f e w&#13;
were dtepeeed of when&#13;
m nsssinm to&#13;
was resisted by the aouanntty&#13;
i*W vote resnlted in a tie, 67-67.&#13;
^*^aw*r^snnasw# tswB9^Ms&gt;'angpnisjnMi 6jnvjBn 'isass^sun'eBjgsni 6»*^»&#13;
lug; yen, Demtait U&#13;
from both sides, and Che roll&#13;
The&#13;
together with Qtt\r Vefnsal t o .&#13;
th**s*ts«tion of &gt;TH*j*||1»t by Tnjfkey,&#13;
thnswithe sultan into saem a rags that&#13;
heforths»ith1 *nmmfwtdii» manti»goi&#13;
the special IJurUuih-.commission appointed&#13;
to qoDsidsr tb*,term* of pence.&#13;
He keptlAte^«gropJJc^coi»munication&#13;
with most of tthe European eapjtal*,&#13;
vixier, who Immediatelv ,re*ignedU; The&#13;
special coinrnWibo aooofnjjlishin^g nothing&#13;
but a split iniong ft* memberk the&#13;
majority &amp; i'whon? A p f c * i e F fivemaelves&#13;
emphatically a* opnnasd to&#13;
yielding to the powers.' The Turks&#13;
jore very angry at t h e alleged brfiaque&#13;
dedaraiioq. of Sjr, Fhillip Currie, the&#13;
British ambassador*, that England will&#13;
never permit Christians t o rftj&amp;rn to&#13;
Turkish rnle; It l i also stetodH that&#13;
the German ambassador is very much&#13;
disconcerted to find Count Nelidoff,&#13;
the RuMsla/i /ambassador, sunporUhg&#13;
Sir Phillip in this respect, and though&#13;
It is still alleged that Germany is^sdvisiog&#13;
Tdrkey to pnt eVery mw',n^|isr&#13;
srms, it is believed she has seen the&#13;
advisability of falling into line with&#13;
the other powers.&#13;
Disastrous Error in a Mow Law.&#13;
An error, which may lead to disastrous&#13;
complications,, has been discovered&#13;
in the Graham law amending the&#13;
general te*iaw^*o as to.ehsjge the&#13;
time of the annual tax sales from December&#13;
to May. It has always been&#13;
the custom to continue the sales by&#13;
the county treasurer frdm day- to day&#13;
until all the delinquent descriptions&#13;
have been offered, and in many counties&#13;
the lists are so extensive that it is&#13;
an impossibility to offer all the lands&#13;
in a single day. The recent legislature&#13;
intended to re-enact this provision, hut&#13;
the house clerk who engrossedytbe, bill&#13;
ehonged^tb^ontlre pvovision by, inserting&#13;
the 'word "not."1 thus providing&#13;
that such sals.'^fthall not be continued."&#13;
The word "not" does not appear 1» the&#13;
original bill as passed by the two&#13;
houses, but to in the bill ,ss slgnetfoy&#13;
th6 governor. The'auditor and attorney-&#13;
general are . trying to figure, opt&#13;
some way of getting around the difficulty.&#13;
I*e*s Boport on the Bats Kara**.&#13;
The New York Journal publishes the&#13;
which is in substance as folloowwss::&#13;
First-Rpiz^was arrfntofl qnf a J\&#13;
charge. Second—He was placed under&#13;
B.nW0tiW*imAimWiM'&amp;*&amp; before&#13;
the proper trtbuhal considered his&#13;
case; thereby giving him n o opportunity&#13;
to prove Tils Jn^nocejic* . Thirdr-&#13;
He. was Kept "inconunpnicsao id a&#13;
solitary cell for H5 hours in viplatioh&#13;
of his, trenty lights, which limit such&#13;
confinement to 22 hours, Fourth—He&#13;
died from congestion of the brain, prodnced&#13;
by a blow on the top of the hendr-&#13;
Adrlan attorneys will petition the&#13;
governor to appoint Capt C, R. Milter&#13;
as circuit Jadgytof Lensere* eonnty a s&#13;
•userassr of Jewlg* L*n*r re«igs*d.&#13;
A &gt; o r s e driven V H e n r V BenhJer&#13;
and wife j»ear S*gSn*# became frightened&#13;
at an ejec^rJc oar, ran in^to a telegraph&#13;
pole, throwing Mrs. Benhter out&#13;
upon her head, killing her hsstently.&#13;
T H E AfAHsCwTS.&#13;
•,--.jj—-?T"&#13;
f. .Mft^S* * H | l &lt; S j 4&#13;
• Of&#13;
..Pf^eteri&#13;
* .6-.16&#13;
Ittf IS It&#13;
4eMMat&#13;
i » 6 &gt; »&#13;
.4 966)6 01&#13;
•'tew***&#13;
, . i "r&#13;
»san*a 4» &gt; M&#13;
t &amp; j S f n 66» •»»&#13;
is&#13;
4»&#13;
SIS&#13;
616&#13;
• 61&#13;
6 «&#13;
Best.&#13;
Lower grades --*%i., i t . IK ~r&lt;&#13;
• - t&#13;
J :&#13;
•I?&#13;
15&#13;
Wheat&#13;
Mat red&#13;
• Oornv&gt;i:&#13;
No. tsmiS&#13;
" Oats. .&#13;
# M P * l t e&#13;
.1» n ^6, .aw*&#13;
Tososnos ti 428 » 6 p l &gt; 6 6&#13;
C U d s s o t t i t OM OJHnuV » «66&#13;
••••'• •• ^ ^ L S a f R ^ J w W&#13;
The onlv faverats^laatoa^s^sh^ie&#13;
snoosrif nmrnt it thr our&#13;
sees an*. improvesMnt In&#13;
of iron •*** steal. Crops&#13;
the prospect favors larger&#13;
from tbe.PacULccoast At&#13;
lofcWlf tesoTooptfuttes at&#13;
ni&gt;6sseststh ennnf wheat&#13;
asa whole shows nopronoai&#13;
the teaoencv of funds Is&#13;
ot a vears^^sVSMoes ia&#13;
are freo.uenUy soxedi&#13;
yearn saovement teas&#13;
Irjstt&#13;
r6an bustevsadprioes&#13;
vsts*, an*&#13;
-of wheat&#13;
&gt;+%&#13;
&gt;&#13;
. *&#13;
• &gt;&#13;
/&#13;
.A- • -&#13;
A - '&#13;
• * - H « «&#13;
• r &lt; .'.i;-'"&#13;
-.¾ -, i&#13;
'V V&#13;
I % . • &gt; :&#13;
• • J l V "&#13;
" ''I&#13;
'r'V:;S' ........i- ' . \&#13;
* : . , ' •^•sv^---.v-te&#13;
sseas&#13;
FblaA via,&#13;
vL&#13;
• »».i{.«. ».J\&gt; &lt;"•&#13;
k4 '.&lt;&#13;
' • J * I ,&gt;. w &lt;rM1&#13;
ITS*&#13;
MKWIY JMNB16 TMviviilT nl iShgt,,.&#13;
Qaah*rtia&gt; CUL &amp; it**&#13;
BU**&gt; rtiy on. .PoQ4Mrb uMd it wUlouta oon«&#13;
je#t&gt;att&lt;m, biliomeoeenv eioklioAdtooht* and the&#13;
. * oamer ilia that rooult frpm torpiel liver. Ayetfa&#13;
«f nilla a*e» not 4eaic»ed to eptxr the liver Into a&#13;
momentary activity, leaving It in yet mora&#13;
ittdapable oondition ait»r ^-immediate affect&#13;
" \f pate. *Thty are compounded with• the puiv&#13;
pose of toning up the entire aye tern, Temoving&#13;
the, obettnotingoondition^-and^ putting* tha&#13;
'live* tptp! P^per relatione with the ree* of the&#13;
,Aftf*J&gt;m 4ur^ng,the half o^ntury.jte^ fiaVa&#13;
been in puhjio uae eatabJIflea thety gjpa^.^fl;,;&#13;
L*&gt;. • * •&#13;
i:-..,&#13;
perwmest value in all live? affection*.&#13;
AyerV Cathartic Pills, i i "n&#13;
. _ . _ .• * •j» h on land a clummms*ym animal, tmhme&#13;
•sal 1H wonderfully quick in the water, and&#13;
In a fair race ea*. generally catch almost&#13;
aaycih.&#13;
ingsb.uhiyersala* lovet for&#13;
e v S y ^ ^ r e l u m an being either baa loved, Ajee&gt; love or expects to lore.&#13;
Hall's Catarrh Govs&#13;
Bi taken internally. Price, 78c,&#13;
The world ii dVrlded into two claeees—&#13;
those who master their troubles and those&#13;
who are mastered by, them.&#13;
Mr*. Winlow'i ftoothtag ayrms*&#13;
Fer ehIWrMKeiiaBtf,«&gt;ft4Mtbfi gi)nu.r«duMi InfUow&#13;
jn«Uon,»uiy»p*Ift,cuxw wtt»a&lt;WUiB. MMnttabdtti*.&#13;
. t «_*&#13;
Loverk love poetry because poetry is not&#13;
hampered by cold facts. ,,., . ,&#13;
.—*~n - •&#13;
To Cur* Con«tlp»tlon Forever.&#13;
Take CascareteCandy Cathartic I0cor«5c&#13;
If C.QC. fails' to cure,drugKisU refund money&#13;
Fe»r men work/bard after they get. old&#13;
eno^agj} toknow befter.&#13;
I'belleYe my p1?bmpt use of Plsb'sCurepre-&#13;
•ented qiMckooDsuinvtioamK**! Loey malo&#13;
lACf, Mactyie^ Kan^., Dec-1«. i«&gt;i.&#13;
Fofbtadeto' fruit floc»n*f atways grow on&#13;
tk» tallest frees. - , t '•&#13;
vtn-y,—r,-- T —»-rr ..-,•.•,•&#13;
Mlllst* Seekwbe»t and other seeds, bm*&#13;
est prices. Salser Seed Co., La Crosse. Wis.&#13;
Beahty may incite tore, bat it cannot&#13;
ssaintaialt,;. , . ,&#13;
The eril men do lires after them; so does&#13;
the good.&#13;
Success if cads on the heel of alLright effort&#13;
If Tea U t r e , tforVi t h e ffar t o Rid&#13;
Y/MU*etfo{l*eW*ariae4s a a 4 .&#13;
P a U A t t e a 4 i a f I t .&#13;
86me| people suffer with headacfi&amp;'&#13;
many people are Worn out antl weary at t tunfe. many thore people iuf^p (am&#13;
k apa backache, r e w people, unde:&#13;
stand the real cause of 'their aches, am&#13;
fairer yet know how easily tbey can fine&#13;
a cure. Just a word of explanation befor.&#13;
we •prove _that what we say ts trtie. 'tii*&#13;
t&gt;uck is the key-note ot tne kidneys;—V~&#13;
•fJies; that's a sij^u that the kidneys ar&lt;&#13;
IK* working p#operiy; it ts lame; another&#13;
sign, thekidaeyaareout of saa«; The kid&#13;
neys, you fcaow^aae tb»4|taas W taaakwi&#13;
courses ouougn tLe enttre system Impiteg&#13;
listed wftb p o W o o s uric acid DringWg&#13;
&lt;m nmay a disorder wbich, if negleeeed.&#13;
tneaos disesM perheps ineurabte. A.nd&#13;
now about title cure:—front take our word&#13;
for it; read wbat^ftevt^ay^ -&#13;
Mr. David C. Oak* Is proprietor of the&#13;
well known hardware e a 4 paint shop at&#13;
^aaailSeaTgwIaty&#13;
atlmenw; he d e e c H a e e ^ «&gt;«fh1e*^Bd&#13;
cure at follows: "Ihad a bad, laasa^hsjfk&#13;
A. great many errors in the ancient&#13;
manwyrjgatfl were perpetuatad. by a&#13;
rule pf the menaatxe orders^ that, a&#13;
take, be must not correct it. "&#13;
Th^'annual taxes of the world aargrejrate&#13;
the enormous sum of $4,350,-&#13;
000,000. "" •*&#13;
New Holland's local option Taw nas7&#13;
bedn repealed.&#13;
i&#13;
' TheWM» a d a s * of FMsfte&#13;
Who are injured by the use of coffee.&#13;
Recently there has been placed in all&#13;
thagroeery stores a new preparation&#13;
c»Uf4 GEAIN-O, made of pure grains,&#13;
that takes the plane of coffee. The&#13;
most delicate stomach receives i t without&#13;
distress and b u t few can tell it&#13;
fro&amp;i coffee. I t does not cost over X&#13;
aamnrfh: (Jhildren may drink it witfr&#13;
great benefit l s e t s . and 25cts. per&#13;
paokage. Try i t Ask for OSAlN-0.&#13;
Gen. Grant was called Old Three&#13;
Stars in allusion t o his symbols of&#13;
rank; also Uncle Sam Grant, Unconditional&#13;
Surrender. United States, and&#13;
United We Stand Grant&#13;
gbak* lato Tour Shoes&#13;
Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder for the&#13;
feet. It cures painful, swollen, smarting&#13;
feet and instantly takes t h e sting&#13;
oat of corns 'and bantona. I t i s the&#13;
greatest comfort discovery of t h e age.&#13;
AMen's-foot*Esse make* tighfcfitting&#13;
or n e w shoes feel easy. It is a, certain,&#13;
cuce for sweating, callous, and h o t&#13;
tiradera«ming ffftt _ T r j i t l p d a y . jSold&#13;
by all druggists and shoe stores. By&#13;
mail for 25c in stamps. Trial package&#13;
FREE. Address Allen S.Ohnsted, Le&#13;
Roy, N. Y.&#13;
A Hew York syndicate has been&#13;
formed for the purpose of buying an&#13;
island o f tiae coast of Maine, stocking&#13;
it with.-black foxea ,and engaging in&#13;
the fu|f trade., . ; ,&#13;
4 , i h a v e nsed. Burdock B^bod Bitters&#13;
in my fanilly for two years. It Is the&#13;
best ^medicine I ever used. It cured&#13;
m e w erysipelas in ve*y short time;&#13;
time-to&#13;
. If we will faithfully plow, and plant&#13;
and cultivate, God'will see "to i t that&#13;
neys&#13;
attacks. I&#13;
I la^e&#13;
The urinary or&#13;
being aoaatv. J&gt;r&lt;r*»i* roiamd and ^diffkailt&#13;
m paaaafe\ I was in a bad aaaas whea&#13;
I got a box of Doan's Kidney fiik, about&#13;
which I had heard, 1 have utattaow&#13;
two boxes of them, mad the p i l l have&#13;
•amoved all the pain aad trouble. There&#13;
Doan'i^KkiMyPiteaMthaiighi&#13;
we d o not have to live, on husjlfs.&#13;
s VI burned my fingers' very badly.&#13;
The 'pais w a s interne. Dr. Thomas'&#13;
Beiectrie Oil brought relief in three&#13;
annates. I t waa almost magical. I&#13;
never saw anything like K." Amelia&#13;
Swocds. SaunderaviUe, O.&#13;
along. Doan's, Kidney PU&#13;
fiff h\ the tight place.-&#13;
f o r aale by aB dealers—price, 60 eanta&#13;
Hafled tar Foaaw Mttbora Co.. Buffalo.&#13;
V. Yj.aofcageatsfortheU. S.&#13;
aW aame.Doaa'*. and take no other.&#13;
also cured my son of scrofula alter the&#13;
doctors hsd failed." Louie &amp; Woodward,&#13;
Lanjnal HiU&lt; Fayette Couftty* Pa.&#13;
• i 1 ^ i Bear piaoed in dishes near,flower&#13;
pota will tempt a l l %he snails in t h e&#13;
vicinity, and the next morning they&#13;
will be found lying alongside dead.&#13;
•&#13;
Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup is&#13;
pleasant to take, positively harmless&#13;
to the most delicate constitution, and&#13;
ahaolntoly sure, t o eu*a&gt; 4ha most ob*&#13;
stiaote fcongh or ooht A aousehold&#13;
^HKM,- . . . . .&#13;
CEOvSSOFTHKL&#13;
/(.^,4&#13;
fmimmmmmm&#13;
rather eat&#13;
yon daad at ay&#13;
t e e t ^&#13;
MI anail go, fath-&#13;
ST iiaBtat &gt;emt.#'ia«av&#13;
, s o aha. went o a t of&#13;
He waa a a old&#13;
'Putttan—grtm,' aaeeliev&#13;
daad to ail&#13;
plaaaure and amnaamant.&#13;
There were but three thinga ^er&#13;
him: h i t Plhle, h i t swerd and hia,&#13;
o^ugbtfl/.H* had laid aside ilia aworC&#13;
for b e w w growing old; hut the Bible&#13;
waa4%|0|fay.f4 u y . h i n v aad he loyed t o&#13;
interpret it in bis own harsh fashion.&#13;
And then h,is, daujb^agrrbut aha had&#13;
•oat,,&#13;
^ » : W ya«»* « ^ i oeautiful. pan&gt;&#13;
lag .fw all that a a k e a Ufa sweet and&#13;
gratefuf—for love, triumph, lor t ^ t&#13;
applause of thousands. She had reaolT-&#13;
*b ^ e M&amp;frm anAito have tn^a,&#13;
a l l Sbfl was afciiiad in that ugly, square&#13;
home In Scotland. • T h e dell unending,&#13;
^P^.oyerjrJa^med^vBft ,The coW.gfey&#13;
*$***±9hk*r * * » * cniahed, put aU her&#13;
Use. Ebe longed tor the glare and.gjfc&#13;
^ . « ? %°ffe Veat;city;,( So one da&gt; t h e&#13;
4l**»PWreji,iAn4 Jwea^Jprdou was l,eft&#13;
alone .with his -Bibie,&#13;
He uttered no reproach,, but bit grim&#13;
a j a W , t e w e d , ;to . cJote ..mor't nimiy,&#13;
wJ^Ue the.JJnos gxew^daauer on bit njggQd,&#13;
,face. The neighbors were disappointed&#13;
at his apathy. They mentioned&#13;
his daughter's name to him. In the&#13;
hope of arousing soma emotion or torrent&#13;
of abuse. But be merely half rote&#13;
from his chair and looked at them.&#13;
They were silent, and left him. So a&#13;
year^passed away;and be began to grow&#13;
weary of sky and moor. He sat all&#13;
day in his oaken chair, with bis hand&#13;
on the Bible.&#13;
Meanwhile Ruth Gordon's name was&#13;
on everyone's lips in London. Her&#13;
beauty had brought her all she had&#13;
ever dreamed, more than ahe could ever&#13;
have hoped. It was the last night of&#13;
the burlesque wherein she made herself&#13;
famous. The house was crowded,&#13;
and she excelled herself in every song&#13;
and dance. At the close of the piece&#13;
the. stage was covered, ( with bouquets&#13;
from adinlrere—from men she knew and&#13;
men who wished to be known to her.&#13;
She stood amid a bank of flowers, and&#13;
bowed to the thunders q£ applause. She&#13;
was a queen, for that night at least,&#13;
Then,, when the curtain bad gone&#13;
down for the last time, she picked up&#13;
one or two of the offerings and went&#13;
off to the dressing room. One ahe hell&#13;
in her, hand had attracted her by jyi&#13;
uncommon shape and condition. It&#13;
a half-faded cross of white lilies. She'&#13;
threw it contemptuously on her tabled&#13;
and pressed the other—the gift of a&#13;
young EarT^tb her tips.&#13;
"Who dared send me that shabby&#13;
thing?" she said to ber dresser; and&#13;
then picked it up, from sheer curiosity,&#13;
to see the name of the man who&#13;
trad ventured to offer I t She dropped&#13;
it, and uttered a cry of surprise and&#13;
pleasure, then picked It up again and&#13;
kiased it passionately. The label read:&#13;
"To my daughter. Come home, l am&#13;
angry no more." Truly it was the hap-"&#13;
pleat day of her life—a triumph and reconciliation.&#13;
&gt; ,&#13;
She left for Scotland teat atgbt Jipw&#13;
slowly the, £raia ctawled on, taj?eugfc&#13;
.s^aa^p astsMB •*aas^nmgv a , •^^agr^S' ^a*™'^t'™^ari aa^ewa* vspw^wa^pe^ tsaema&#13;
she watched the lighted towns go by&#13;
one by one until the dawn. Then the&#13;
etead. "beeveir,&#13;
- £&gt;arwin asserted that there is inaan-&#13;
Ufey among animals, joat a s there i s&#13;
among people.&#13;
For Pin Worms, Ecaema, Hives, in&#13;
fact, any of the various tortnriag, itehjr&#13;
diseases of the akin, Doan's (Hutment&#13;
W s a iaetant aad positive remedy. G e t&#13;
it frosa your dealer.&#13;
KHMTBD B t m VDHMBft Of&#13;
a s a supreme testef abeVaam Aauef i f *&#13;
Uiswiagfetj^ U a t K be s a g j a g l s s s a i a &gt; *&#13;
kaees W troaeera forsauaeef*&#13;
^r a ta*^m^tmav^s^"^^ a^p^^B •^•aaw&#13;
. . . t o paat har;vta« t a w p ^ w o m h a .&#13;
atoodr i n the ^ray. i h a teei*~i &gt;oSu4&#13;
dowa her face, •••;'V4,*V&#13;
^ e a J a W ^ e a m i l i . what i t ' t t f Oet&#13;
ssa b r / - «h« cried, and pttantng ht?&#13;
aetdel the rushed into the darlc^iaitti&#13;
r o o * ' V n e r e her father was w d &amp; T ?&#13;
att The &lt;aken chair was" empty,'°«4t&#13;
the BSMe lay 6a the table—pjlta at ^ht&#13;
hooft^of Hutu. One ijassage waa,taar*-&#13;
ed%ith a Wue pencil, i t was the yarat&#13;
beginning: Entreat me trot t o leave&#13;
thee." The blue pencil had dropped&#13;
to the ffooa v *&#13;
Jeannie had folknvtd her teio if&#13;
room with tottering steps.&#13;
••^Tnera mwy^ father, jWmnwr? Doea&#13;
h e not expect nlet^-I t r f" ?JiVi 1 A ' &lt;&#13;
"Come awa'i he is not here."&#13;
"Npt htrer* •; .*&#13;
"Ha m not here. I tell ye,*'shrieked&#13;
the oltfvomau! "Cotrie aiftV' « M&#13;
elotohing hold of the girl tne Wed&#13;
to drag her from the room.&#13;
Ruth shook off her feeble hold and&#13;
turned upon her like a tigress.&#13;
"Where i t ha? What have you dona&#13;
to him,?" she cried.&#13;
The old woman moaned to herself*&#13;
then crawled to (he window. There was&#13;
a distant view of the klrkyard on the&#13;
tide of the purple hiU. The setting&#13;
tun fell on the white stones and tbey&#13;
glittered like stars. She pointed her&#13;
skinny finger in silence and then croaked:&#13;
"Yonder, yonder, yottder."&#13;
The girl looked out, straining her&#13;
eyes to see the beloved form. When&#13;
the white atones dashed on her &lt; sight,&#13;
the awful truth began to dawn on her.&#13;
, "Yonder," she muttered, almost unconsciously.&#13;
Then she broke into a&#13;
wild laugh, and flung herself into a&#13;
chair. She read the marked passage,&#13;
knd laughed again, still more wildly.&#13;
"So I killed him, Jeannie, I killed&#13;
him, and he—bow much did he pay&#13;
you, Jeannie, to do this thing? All his&#13;
wealth?' It Is well. It was not too&#13;
much for a deed like this."&#13;
"Stay, Missieritay," aha whined, putting&#13;
.her fingers to her ears to abut out&#13;
the terrible voice. "Ye shall have i t&#13;
a'. I am auld, and the money—1 couldna'&#13;
help i t "&#13;
"Keep It; it is accursed. I would not&#13;
touch it If I were starving. But the&#13;
cross, woman, the cross, the erase o f&#13;
H i a t a l • ' ,&#13;
"ft was his orders," «me whimpered.&#13;
"It was—O, the puir bairn, the pair&#13;
bairn."&#13;
"It was what?" the girt said hoarsely,&#13;
rising from the chair and gripping&#13;
the old woman by the arm. "Speak&#13;
you old bag, speak."&#13;
"It was from Tils grave7T^Blacg a ^&#13;
White.&#13;
World*! Sapply of Cotto*.&#13;
According to the beat sources of informatlea,&#13;
the world's supply of cotton&#13;
in 199S aggregated 18,200,000 bales, or&#13;
7,2a»,eot,OOe pounds. Of this lmmenae&#13;
crop 10,6O»,e00 bales were produced In&#13;
the United States; 2,(00,000 in India&#13;
and 634,000 in Egypt The remaining&#13;
bales were produced in the various&#13;
parts of the globe. In different countrias&#13;
different standards ot msaturemant&#13;
obtain, and In no two countries&#13;
is the weight of a bale of cotton exactly&#13;
the same. The American bale averages&#13;
450 pounds,the Indian bait 406&#13;
pounds,, and the Egyptian hale 717&#13;
pounds. Some idea of the vast astemt&#13;
of the world's cotton area may he gathered&#13;
from the fact that in the United&#13;
States alone it covers over 20,000,000&#13;
acres. In 1830 die. world's total output&#13;
of cotton aggregated only €36,000,000&#13;
pounds or eleven times leas than in&#13;
139$. Within a single decade, however,&#13;
the product almost doubled, amounting&#13;
•in 1840 to 1,192.000,000 pounda. fence&#13;
then the world's product has been aa&#13;
follows: 2,391,000,000 pounda in 1800,&#13;
4,039,699,000 pounds in 1880, and 7.190,-&#13;
009,000 in 1895. Prom these figures&#13;
some idea of the vast iniportanee of the&#13;
cotton plant aa a factor in the world's&#13;
growth and progress saay be obtained.&#13;
0DR 9 &lt;*««M.*«»*&#13;
&lt;.'r • *&#13;
•&gt;*'&lt;&#13;
T mm$c* .:.-/¾&#13;
i -eevfata «**""•* aaw aaai1&#13;
I » I m (-*?»*'&#13;
The mm af Ufa,&#13;
I A R O B 8 R a t&#13;
* a aid. * bo a* dE3£S mwtranged f w n v a i&#13;
of Ufa's&#13;
hghta,&#13;
tJnlearnei n yJ^th*t:" v •- m&#13;
&gt; ^lafr—• •• i •- Who talleat^jeat&#13;
But^vl^ln^SS&#13;
depths of ta9a&gt;'&#13;
| : ytodstrua^rleattothafcasn; ,n ,,&#13;
bl.oome a a d vtaw;tWaiaad^of a m .&#13;
Lover of woman, wheae sad near! :&#13;
Wastes like a, fountain l a the sua.&#13;
Clings meet, Jrnere moat its pain o o ^&#13;
Dies by* the light It Uvea upoa; •&#13;
Come to the land of graves; for here&#13;
Are beauty's amile, and beauty's tear&lt;&#13;
OatheVd 1n holy treat:&#13;
Here slumber forms aa fair asvthoaa .&#13;
Whose cheeks* now living, shame the&#13;
, rose, , , ;. „,,&#13;
Their glory turn'd to dust.&#13;
i^over of fame, wboee foolish thonaht ;&#13;
Steabi onward o'er the wave of time.&#13;
Tell me, what goodness hath it brought.&#13;
Atoning- for that restless etirnaf •&#13;
The spirit-mansion desolate,- • ...&#13;
And open to the storms ot fate,&#13;
The absent soul in fear;&#13;
Bring home thy thoughts and cobs*"&#13;
w i t h me, • . &gt; i&#13;
And see where aU thy pride must hat&#13;
Searcher of fame; k*oJi_bereii-_l.&#13;
And, warrior, thou wtth snow? pfcttaa.&#13;
That goest to the bugle's eall,( .&#13;
Come and look down; this lonely tomb&#13;
Shall hold thee and. thy glories an.&#13;
The haughty brow, the manly frame.&#13;
The daring deeds, the sounding faajst.&#13;
Are trophies but for death!&#13;
And millions who have toiled like tnea.&#13;
Are stay'd, and here they sleep; aad-&#13;
Does glory lend them breath?., ,&#13;
Q » T « Her M«te« Away,&#13;
WaUe the failaat oradk ahoald be&#13;
d v a a t o the staff of this isaportaat hegjltadoa&#13;
(the State laafttute of P a t h o l&#13;
ogy), H l s b u t fair l a atate that the&#13;
study of toxaemia *a riaaarilna with&#13;
laaaaity Is by a o ateaa* a aawatty, nor&#13;
i s i t the discovery of the eoiarnriaing&#13;
young gentlemen (opjt»ejeted witfc that&#13;
establishment) who have been credited&#13;
therewith. Over A decade ago aaipsaoa.&#13;
Regm and othara reeogaiaed t^e toxic&#13;
orlgia of atantal disease, while no lata&#13;
than tan othara. asaoag theai Hartar&#13;
aad StDith. have wrattea exlaaaivaly pie&#13;
(he aubject. Perhaps saoat creak&#13;
shoaJd be gdwaa t o Dr. Attaa lfcLaa#&#13;
Haaatttoa. wkoae paper oa "Autotoxis&#13;
of Loadoa l a siay&#13;
It was a long U n a sine* tbey aad&#13;
seen each other, ami naturally snowgdj&#13;
they had Lota of real aice thinga an&#13;
say to each other, eat her little aletav&#13;
Grace waa very much in the way ge&#13;
to speak.' - ••'•*•&#13;
"Run along t a m f i w i , aear^ « h a&#13;
said to the little oaa. "HI give yaa&#13;
soma candy if yoa wiU."&#13;
"No, I don't waea tew" •.. .-,.&#13;
"Ah now, please ao. Hat a awed&#13;
little girt"—rr- ^ -&#13;
"But I'd rather stay hare.'*&#13;
"I won't take yoa. out driviag srhm&#13;
me tomorrow, if you don't"&#13;
Hay 8*eaaiagn wera l a&#13;
tha littla owe rantateei&#13;
maaama eaaaa la, aad the eoai&#13;
Laggad a trifle. Suddenly a&#13;
attack little aister.&#13;
"Say," aha asked, " v a s t &lt;&#13;
want me t o g o t o ma mm s for a Batls&#13;
while a g o T&#13;
ff-&#13;
Mot te mm&#13;
No one has a more sol&#13;
the world than the professkmtl&#13;
of Jokes. One such man tells&#13;
"humorist's wife" called away&#13;
tit boy from hie papa's door,'&#13;
"You meat not trouble your&#13;
just now, dear," she said; "in his&#13;
eat mood he k« not to be trifled&#13;
"What la ha doing, gtammaf**&#13;
"Be ft writing taiagt t o&#13;
pie laugh, and he's awfully&#13;
yke&#13;
* * *&#13;
tn&#13;
i . i. :x,-&#13;
sounded i n t h e&#13;
slowly, aad&#13;
vaat^ confronted aer.&#13;
theoid woaaana&#13;
taeasr&#13;
c - M .&#13;
a abort time annateaantly. l a this paper,&#13;
which onntalnefl much origlaal re.&#13;
search, the connection between toxaemia&#13;
aad teaanity was fatty shown.—&#13;
Now Tork Medical Record.&#13;
He—And ao you love ate becaaat I&#13;
am AOt Uae other men.. Aad hoar d o&#13;
yoa kme# I am not ttke ether gaea? She-Toe are the dnly aaaa who has&#13;
never told me he wa^ 'net mmTatmaf&#13;
| ttaa. Breaklyn Ute.&#13;
K&#13;
••' lA.&#13;
' %&#13;
Mi&#13;
•%ft&#13;
•A.M&#13;
^&#13;
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^IDematfy^ aa&#13;
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.••WSa taonhle wdtfc&#13;
la 4aat yoa&#13;
that far t h e&#13;
north&#13;
• i ' &amp; •&#13;
1 V,&#13;
V&#13;
^ » W S V Tf%»::.f**&gt; "t'fJlie/Vi * * t **x&#13;
ft1'-1 ' • ' ,. J'&#13;
* * • •&#13;
W^w'-;-&#13;
} 1 -. • '•&#13;
1»' $&#13;
i »&#13;
i,-&#13;
if*. P&#13;
«fc.:tc':&#13;
4&#13;
fe".&#13;
' &gt; • ! • « !•&#13;
k A " - "&#13;
;&gt; 1¾ '"&#13;
Iki&#13;
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i ^ .4.-, :'&#13;
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-•-•I " , . , ' • v ^ t f . - . - &gt;.... •'/'•• &lt;&gt;" ^ ? ; M ;&#13;
. &lt; • • • • mm mm mwmmmmmmmmmm&#13;
gbvhuf jg#ft*toll.&#13;
F. L. ANDREWS, EWTOR.&#13;
THTISWAT, JUNE 17,1897.&#13;
•asBeawsggai 1 1 .„-im.i,.ijnB----&#13;
Care t v i Preparation of Cream&#13;
WMl Butter.&#13;
Ooaoluftod Jfrom l««t WMk,&#13;
Off Falvor Butter j—Comes&#13;
from a slovenly method of preparing&#13;
the butter and uncleanly&#13;
habits in the care of the utensils.&#13;
I n the ripening of the cream, the&#13;
immense number of different kinds&#13;
of bacteria tend to imperfect curing&#13;
and consequently a poor quality&#13;
of produce.&#13;
At this season of the year we&#13;
are liable to frequently meet with&#13;
bitter and unclean milk and cream&#13;
or even butter, and these conditions&#13;
are ascribable to the great&#13;
variety of conflicting bacteria and&#13;
their products and consequently&#13;
the normal liwtio acid fermentation&#13;
is prevented.&#13;
BttterBnttero r Milk is-due to&#13;
the presence of certain different&#13;
germs; some microscopists claim&#13;
it to be a micrpcoccies; others to&#13;
a bacillus; at any rate it causes a&#13;
bitter taste to milk or butter but&#13;
does not show up iu these. I t&#13;
usually destroys the flavor of the&#13;
butter in a short time. Turnip&#13;
taste does not come from feeding&#13;
the animals on the turnips or&#13;
other roots, but is due entirely to&#13;
a bacillus which develops in the&#13;
cream or milk before the ripening&#13;
of the cyeam; this flavor has been&#13;
frequently found in butter made&#13;
from the milk of animals that&#13;
Were not fed on any turnips or&#13;
other roots, and further the disease&#13;
can be spread in milk or&#13;
cream by introducing the least bit&#13;
of the infected into the sweet&#13;
flavored and normal milk or cream""*6&#13;
and by the rapid developement of&#13;
the germs, the entire batch will&#13;
become so effected.&#13;
Rotten Butter, Oily Butter,&#13;
Tallowy Butter and Blue Butter&#13;
of harmful bacteria infection in&#13;
the various manipulations that&#13;
thoughtfulneas, good judgement&#13;
and well-deloped power of observation&#13;
are essentials for any and&#13;
*lh&#13;
GEO. H. BORRADAILE,&#13;
State Analyst&#13;
Michigan Dairy and Food Commission.&#13;
TtMttd&#13;
Hundreds of thousands have been&#13;
iuduced to try Chamberlain's Cough&#13;
Remedy, by reading what it has done&#13;
for others, and having tested its merit&#13;
for themselves are today its warmest&#13;
friends. For sale hy F. A. Sigler.&#13;
George M. Pullman has received&#13;
from Archduke Bainer two&#13;
maqniflcient medals and a richly&#13;
wrought diploma as testimonials&#13;
of honor and merit in founding&#13;
and building the most perfect&#13;
town in the world. This distinction&#13;
for the suburb came as a result&#13;
of an exhibit in the International&#13;
Hygenic and Pharmaceutical&#13;
Exposition in Prague. The&#13;
Archduke wasJbe protector of the^&#13;
exposition. Pullman won against&#13;
the settlements created by Krupp&#13;
the gun man and Stumm, the&#13;
great maker of steel, and Baron&#13;
von Binghofer, The verdict of&#13;
the jury was unamious, finding&#13;
that Pullman was without a peer&#13;
in the matter of comfortable&#13;
homes for workingmen, sti+ets,&#13;
sewers, water system, shops, public&#13;
halls, churches, grounds and&#13;
the rules and regulations governing&#13;
them.—M. A. C.&#13;
THERH IS NOTfllNGSO GOOD.&#13;
There is nothing just as good as Dr.&#13;
King's New Discovery for Consumption,&#13;
Coughs and Colds, so demand it&#13;
and do not permit the dealer to sell&#13;
you some substitute. He will not&#13;
claim there is anytbin? better, but in&#13;
order to make more profit he may&#13;
laim sometbing else to be just as&#13;
You want Dr. King's New&#13;
Discovery because you know i^to be&#13;
safe and reliable, and guaranteed to&#13;
do good or money refunded. For&#13;
Coughs, Colds, Consumption and for&#13;
all affections—of Throat, l'b»st, and&#13;
•»^^*"»^(iwr^*"^™^»"»»»»^|.^ "»|n T« mmmmmm&#13;
Subscribe for the DISPITGH.&#13;
Wanted-An Idsa^s^S&#13;
Watch the DISPATCH liner column*&#13;
of To rent, For 9&amp;K etc. Thny may&#13;
prove to be of interest to you,&#13;
UU{dU ttMW bUMU»Mt ottfraiMM,* o«fMTcyUf*lt,y *ti eW., *tfWawr tU—l ua to tstcuU Ml kind* of work, mm&#13;
«LtM!4*f*f4f*a«*eit:af •?•»* MOUTH.&#13;
1 1 1 " ••••pw^jspuijiiiiiiu&#13;
8T00JCB&amp;1DG&amp; Mica.&#13;
WiUotteodto Ml BMiae« of the profoMlon&#13;
wtthfldeUty udcftro. 8pMl«i tttontioo aivea to&#13;
buttneM along the line at tbe M.A. L. BftJtwar.&#13;
Telepbon* call* ropoodM to.&#13;
*&#13;
-^-...-=3: m&#13;
CURBS IN THE RIOHT WAY, BY REQULATINO THB LIVER'&#13;
AND KIDNEYS, AND PURIPYINQ THB BLOOD.&#13;
It Is a positive cure lor Rhetimatfom, Neuralgia, Dyspepsia, Sick and&#13;
' Nervous Headache, Fever and Ague* 0 1 ¾ and all diseases arising from4&#13;
'a diseased liver or the kidneys, or impure blood,&#13;
;YOUR MONEY BACK aiusifasiaiy^^'ss.'aa;&#13;
yyoo«o ih tv* had your monaVt wort_h, wad ua back tht guarantet, wfakh yon WW £ M iatho&#13;
&gt; bos, and we will aend you a chock' for $1^0 by return mail.&#13;
, It la put up in two forma, powder and tableta, Tbetableuai^tbeeaalartotake,iwnaiw&#13;
•iof 00 mixing. Price %u6o tat tBodoata of either kind. Sent poet paid upon receipt of&#13;
pike. Send locents for ten day*1 treatment and copy of NeturVa Wilde to Health,&#13;
A. R LEWIS MEDICINE C O . - Bolivar, M a&#13;
Urea&#13;
Arrival tad&#13;
eT Treak Ba^lwar SystMs*&#13;
wamsolwo.&#13;
^ e*ew^aaeja*^w^a&gt;^ ™&#13;
'"*-,,il*,**,*ar;tte*P»»&#13;
Oetrolt»&lt;4d. Saptde&#13;
Xleh. Air I4ne Div. Ualna&#13;
aaatBoeanv * Pontiao Oetroit-Gd. sapida&#13;
Pontlao&#13;
;•;.__ 4m\&#13;
forltomeoUnoxenltftlate. T»fvP'&#13;
0, A M DIVISwInOtnNK LKHnAipV a POUTUC •&#13;
,KaplOa&#13;
andJnterm«&#13;
venOhloafb&#13;
wankee&#13;
Bxx F L M C U B , Trav. Pasa. Agt., Detroit Ifieh.&#13;
TOLEDO&#13;
MAR BO&#13;
are flavors and colors due to bacteria&#13;
which develop tbess respective&#13;
and characterise flavors in&#13;
milk or butter. From the preceeding&#13;
one would anticipate that&#13;
dairying in these days is a very&#13;
complicated industry; it is not an&#13;
industry for a careless and indifferent&#13;
person to engage in; but the--&#13;
utmost care and cleanliness should&#13;
at all times be observed and a&#13;
thorough knowledge acquired in&#13;
the underlying principles.&#13;
Pure Air, Pure Water, Pure&#13;
Food are the three great requisites&#13;
in the dairy business. The&#13;
demands on all who make or deal&#13;
in dairy products for high quality&#13;
of goods have very much increased&#13;
of k t e y«ars. There is a growing&#13;
demand for the best, both at&#13;
home and abroad, and the standard&#13;
is constantly ascending. I t is&#13;
sincerely hoped that our Michigan&#13;
dairymen and fanners will keep a&#13;
•trict vigilance for eyery inducement&#13;
offered by the United States&#13;
Secretary of Agriculture, Mr.&#13;
-Wilson, in his latest undertaking&#13;
to promote the American dairy interests&#13;
abroad. Americans can&#13;
make butter equal to that manu-&#13;
Ifejured in other counirlesTltudr&#13;
tie* Michigan dairymen should&#13;
not wait lor other states to lead&#13;
but be Amongst the foremost in&#13;
for th&lt;&gt;ir prod QCJ*.&#13;
Lungs there is nothing so good as is&#13;
Dr. Kings New Discovery. Tiial bptr&#13;
tie free at P. A. Sigler's Drug store.&#13;
Regular size 50c and $1.00.&#13;
The Coast Line to MACKINAC&#13;
«—TAK« TM1—»&#13;
Jhe place to get&#13;
5 ^ 3 0 8 WORK&#13;
TO MACKINAC&#13;
D E T R O I T&#13;
PHTOSKEY&#13;
OHIOAGO&#13;
New Steel Passenger Steamers&#13;
The Or—teat Perfection yet attained in ,&#13;
Boat Construction—Luxurious Equipment,&#13;
ArtUtlc Furatftriitjr, decoration and Efficient&#13;
Service, insuring the highe3t degree of&#13;
COMFORT, SPEED AND SAFETY&#13;
Fouu TRIM PM WEiK BETWCEN&#13;
Toledo, Detroit and Mackinac&#13;
PETOSKEY, "THE SOO," MARQUETTE&#13;
AND DULUTH. * .&#13;
LOW RATES to Picturesque Macktaacnad&#13;
Retain, including fleets and tJcrtBs. From&#13;
Clevelnad. $18; froea. Toledo, $15; trotu&#13;
Detroit, $13.90.&#13;
OAY ANO NIGHT SERVICE.&#13;
Between Detroit and Cleveland&#13;
f Connecting *t Cleveland with Earliest&#13;
Trains for all points Eap;. houth and southwest&#13;
8H'l «t Detroit for all points North and&#13;
Northwest.&#13;
Sunday Tripe June, inly, August an-3 Sept Only&#13;
Cleve!and.l&gt;ut-in-Bay#To!edo&#13;
b»-»jd for Illustrated Pamphlet. Address .&#13;
A. A. &amp; C H A N T Z , a. P. ».. DCTKOIT. MIC 14. Hie fitareu 5 Ctew!^ v m Hat. ?*&#13;
P^DMPTLY and NEATLY&#13;
18 AT THE&#13;
PINGKNEY BISPATi JOB ROOMS,-&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICH.&#13;
r&amp;awSd Kaplda Mil&#13;
,..: - ata.&#13;
I&gt;lda. Maakagon&#13;
BAaTBOUirD&#13;
Detroit Beat aad Canada&#13;
Detroit East and Caaada&#13;
Detroit and South&#13;
Detroit East aad Ganada&#13;
Detroit Suburban&#13;
Leave Detroit via Windsor&#13;
BAanouiro&#13;
BoJWo—New York 4 Boston /&#13;
Toronto Montreal New York&#13;
London Express&#13;
Buffalo New York A East&#13;
tr.Ofiaai&#13;
•7.ifla m&#13;
•tlLnoon&#13;
•UJ6j»a»&#13;
1M a m tarin baa aleeplnR oara Detroit (to Jrew&#13;
York and Boston. 18.00 noon train ha* parlor&#13;
ear to Hamilton—Sleeping oar to Boifctfo and New&#13;
York 11.26 train has aleeping ear to New York&#13;
tDelly except Bnnday. 'Daily.&#13;
W. J. BLACK, Agent, Plnekoey MtolL&#13;
W. E. DAVIS E. H. Huousa&#13;
Q. P. a T. Agent. A. G, V, A T Agt.&#13;
Montreal, One. ~ Chicago, BL; -.&#13;
Popular root* for Ann Arbor, To*&#13;
l«do and points East, Soatb and for&#13;
floweil, Owoefo, Alma, Mt PtMsant,&#13;
CadillaOt e1anistaet Trav or a» City aad&#13;
po»i nts in N^ » orti *h west. ern Ma ^ i*c1h_ *i gan.&#13;
W. H. BENVITT,&#13;
G. P. A., Toledo.&#13;
= . ' n&#13;
DKSftOlM,&#13;
OOPYRICHTS eW.&#13;
_aAi«nkyloyaaes caeerntdatimn,r f are aek,e wtethae athnedr d aeneo JrlnpTti«onnt taoanaj»r opoioobaaaoonirMjpaal.j tOenldueuset .a aCenoomffa^worn steoeautlrotnna« paatrtieooto^.&#13;
fia ABMrleav We hare a'Washington&#13;
Patents taken throajth Munn s&gt; Oo. reotavw&#13;
apjalal notice to the&#13;
SGIENTIfW AMERIOAM,&#13;
heantif ally lllnstrated, lamest ctreulatloa of&#13;
BOOK oifPATaarra aetuYfree. Ad4reea MUNN 4 OC&#13;
• 6 1 Bfaelwatf* Hew&#13;
But i« tbifl competition with foreign&#13;
pFodacet* the best and most&#13;
^gooeWffi jpetbods of mauufacture&#13;
UHBett ibe«ppfied. Systematic&#13;
methexfc ewe abeolutely aeoeesary.&#13;
The 4»k a^ooe -that the raw material&#13;
witto wiiich d4uyjgien aud&#13;
farmers hare to 4e«i i» •o.delioate&#13;
And easily ohaD,jodr **t*8 into&#13;
j&gt;lay one's highest «foi^«&lt;rf&lt;iea«v&#13;
too**. J\mewto*&gt;m^&lt;kw&amp;*&#13;
Mel Vow Brer&#13;
Tiy Eiectrio Bitters M * regMdf for&#13;
pmpvoMm* if not, get a boUk&#13;
•ow a&amp;d ^ai relief. This nMdidae&#13;
he paeoliariy adapt&#13;
ed to teWBslitf and cure of ill femal&lt;&#13;
complai«fcsV«B»rtin«i a wonderful di&#13;
rectiofloeo«»Jsm«ivin(? strength a**&#13;
tone to tfle asftns. If you bavf lo*&#13;
of appetite, constipation, s hea^scb&#13;
tainting speik,#r i re nervous, sleep&#13;
less, excitable, melancholy or trouble*&#13;
withdktiyspt^^leetrk Bitsjm i.&#13;
the meitiqjsjsj you need. Hesif&gt; «ad&#13;
•ttr—Wth mr gfiagjtnteed by i l l «s#.&#13;
U r f e hottlss osOsv JHy oeaV M i l l *J «\ A» Aickr*a&gt; sktW atom. ^ nnan^ ^^^s^nnn^^w^ S»F nnepwW4Bfl ^js^n^^snam&#13;
Well batisiitd wits&#13;
jzfs Hair Vigor»&#13;
• Nearly forty years ago, after&#13;
-oi.it&gt; wefks of sickness, my hair&#13;
• - 'IHMI triay. x began using Ayer*a&#13;
:;.iir Vj^or, an^ was so weU satis*&#13;
:.'d wiil/tli:* results that I have&#13;
never t tied any other kind of 4BSSSing.&#13;
Itrequkesonly&#13;
an occasional appii-&#13;
Lcation of&#13;
LMEII^&#13;
Hair Vimt to&#13;
my hair'of -fooi&#13;
color, to roacsjj&#13;
^ _ ^ ^ _ _ dahdrut; to aalBB&#13;
itrhiuK iitutiors, and' pferent ths&gt;&#13;
liaii ironi fulling*Hrt. 1&#13;
tate to recotnnvend Ayer's ine4kinea&gt;&#13;
to my frjends.'*—Mrs, II. M.UaJOMT,&#13;
Avoca, Nebr.&#13;
Hair ¥k»r&#13;
w ^^i^sp» .• mr •••asw'w^-''&#13;
a%ajanl&gt;|Pr&gt;#^ JtyeT»Oc,L«weH,&#13;
VJ*&#13;
:rtr."&#13;
!'TH*.*&#13;
;*1&#13;
3&#13;
•&amp;A&#13;
vrm&#13;
•HK ^Sfm^Tvrr &amp;%* *?»: ^ ; : Ts^:"'•^~'TI-w'17'\ 1? !.*,&lt; i: J ^&#13;
S^H"&#13;
gH&lt;*t&#13;
&amp;-:&#13;
•••/,.t&#13;
..if .-^:- *&#13;
•,V*. ;„,L,- &gt; ' » " ' ^.:-1 ;-• •;•/.'•:, ,^i.J' "V . . r - •• ; ; , . , . , " . ;•.' : V. *::'.,. „"'";. . v ' . , . . " A . ' • ; • • • - ' ' , ": •j"'-' ''••; * •"..:,!', . ' • • • ' • ' . \ ' Y '&gt;• " ••-. • , ' • • •..' » &lt; " . '&#13;
ML « HI m . » J » n W M w i &lt; f m i m i l i &gt; n n y n n i « i i i ) ipi &gt;I&gt;&gt;II wi&gt;i i n ii ii i n . mi ii n ii » in i«»i) »n ii^iiwium .——»^y»»iii1 n , &gt; y&gt;m m &gt; • y 1 -, r •.«' .^, m »iim . • ••&#13;
/ W -&#13;
.i^EW. nt-»J A V.&#13;
»1 —I' vwm^n^iytM^lffiamm&#13;
Idea ~ • - - t y ^ v - •-ftf&#13;
* i&#13;
a : ..•••*- •&#13;
in?'* '"--&#13;
tffiucaiiuiL •EM inn m&#13;
Keep a M!e tn tie Bwse,&#13;
• v X»*UCX2» fr5 C e n t * W« can give emptoymewt jMitnan«at Mo"&#13;
toOfatlMtoftgpeda«aeini33tjs«eion. For&#13;
particulars cnfl on pttoliaher of tbl» paper.&#13;
4AMU W. FMT1R 60., M*M Owjwm,&#13;
•H ** ***• *oo.awto4 'M aaiwr&#13;
ft*.-&#13;
•V *, -V.&#13;
•TOt»idmo3 oqj 403&#13;
IBBSSlBSaSSSaSSaSSBSBMawaejMei&#13;
&gt;&#13;
2 PI&#13;
O&#13;
§&#13;
m&#13;
sw**viaMav»*Mi &amp;^#wsadinos.&#13;
. ..*-•&#13;
• 7n he world&#13;
:'fe. •. &lt; • r - M&#13;
Hi. r..&gt;.&#13;
W : •&#13;
^d. Vru&#13;
bv F. A M&#13;
for&#13;
• 1 &gt;, nloers, gait rheum,&#13;
.. ciinpned liantls.phill&#13;
• 1 all skin eruptions,&#13;
, u w piles or no pay&#13;
it ib Ruar^nteed to give&#13;
diction or money, refund&#13;
~'&gt; cents per box.&#13;
for.&#13;
For salf&#13;
i&#13;
Mlchlfan^ People.&#13;
»LOCATED&#13;
Dincdy Oppose M. C R*y Depot&#13;
Two Hock* from Union Depot&#13;
Three Bfedb M k t n x r Docks.&#13;
Tbrce l«ik«t« ^ ifectrlc C m to Re- J&#13;
&gt; tefCoetcraai^Pkcee of Am«cmcot &lt;&#13;
• RoeeM with Stetm Heet&#13;
$ao,ooo la New taproveaieaU. J&#13;
Cahaae Umwrpaned.&#13;
; Rates, M.00 to $3.50 per Day.&#13;
Singlo Meals 60e. i&#13;
^ ^ May S%'97.&#13;
Council convened and called to&#13;
order by Free, Sigier.&#13;
Preewjt, Trnsteea Beaaon, Murphy,&#13;
Jaoltson, Brown and Grimes.&#13;
Abtent, Trustee "Wright&#13;
Tae following bills were preaented;&#13;
Francis Cur, Ught'g Umpi, m«tub«i IT.M&#13;
W. £. Murphy, BotrU of fiarlew 8.00&#13;
, Totfci, II0.M&#13;
Moved and supported that the&#13;
bills as presented be allowed and&#13;
orders drawn to pay the same.&#13;
Moved and carried that the following&#13;
resolution be adopted:&#13;
"Be it resolved by tne- common&#13;
council of the village of Piackney&#13;
that the sum of one and fifty hundredths&#13;
dollars be levied against&#13;
each one thousand dollars valuation&#13;
of taxable property of said&#13;
village for contingent tax and further&#13;
that the sum of one dollar,&#13;
valuation of taxable property of&#13;
said village as a highway tax."&#13;
The following resolution was&#13;
presented and adopted:&#13;
"Be it resolved by the common&#13;
council of the village of Pinckney&#13;
that tbe village treasurer for his&#13;
service as collector of..taxes be entitled&#13;
to collect 2 per cent on all&#13;
taxes paid him by the 15 day of&#13;
July 1897 and shall be entitled to&#13;
4 per cent on all taxes paid him&#13;
thereafter."&#13;
Moved and carried that the following&#13;
resultion be adopted:&#13;
"Be it resolved by the Common&#13;
council of the village of Pinckney&#13;
that a poll tax be levied and spread&#13;
on 1897 roll."&#13;
Council adjourned.&#13;
R. H. TEEPLE.&#13;
Clerk.&#13;
W A Carr^waMj lumber&#13;
Geo Rewon loppliej&#13;
T Read S'walk lumber&#13;
Total flOa W&#13;
Moved and carried that bills as&#13;
read be accepted and paid.&#13;
Moved and carried that the&#13;
clerk be authorized to advertise&#13;
for sealed bids for the performance&#13;
of the duties of village marshall&#13;
to and until the second Monday in&#13;
April '98. Bids to be presented&#13;
at next regular meeting and the&#13;
council reserves ^the right to reject&#13;
any or all bids.&#13;
Moved and carried that the following&#13;
resolution be adopted:&#13;
"Be it resolved by the common&#13;
council of the village of Pinckney&#13;
that the time for. closing saloons&#13;
in said village'be extended \ hour.&#13;
All saloons to be closed at 10 p.&#13;
m. local time until Oct. 1, 1807.&#13;
To E*«ry Family. I&#13;
Tba way to advertisoU to tell tbo wheat&#13;
story lot plaJn, simple language, in a j f t *&#13;
wordt a t possible, and a t direct at a rifla&#13;
tboott a bullet. Very well; here It our ttory.&#13;
• We want yon to read&#13;
THE DETROIT EVENING NEW5 regularly.&#13;
It will cost you very little. . . •&#13;
The Detroit Evening News.&#13;
Agrat* In every town in Michigan.&#13;
Wat gitufcucii J)isii&lt;!tcU.&#13;
P U B U I H B D EVBFT TUUMDAY UO&amp;lllSQ B 7&#13;
F R A N K L. A N D R E W S&#13;
Hditor amd Proprietor.&#13;
bubacrlptlon Price f l in Advance.&#13;
Moved and carried that the Enterea at tt9 ^^SOTT^^ey, wcai*:**.&#13;
«e »econa-cl«M matter.&#13;
Kegular. June 7, '97.&#13;
Council convened and called to&#13;
order by Pres. Sigier.&#13;
Present, Trustees Jackson,&#13;
Reason, Wright and Brown.&#13;
Absent, Trustees Murphy and&#13;
Grimes.&#13;
Minutes of last meeting read&#13;
and approved.&#13;
Bills presented—Contingent&#13;
fund:&#13;
T A C, oil from Apr 7 to June 1 'VI $6.15&#13;
clerk notify H'y^ com of Township&#13;
that the arch bridge north of&#13;
J. Swarthout's farm is in a dangerous&#13;
Condition and instruct him&#13;
to repair same immediately.&#13;
gloved and carried that the&#13;
street commissioner be instructed&#13;
to place_a railing on arch bridge&#13;
north of J. Swarthout's as soon as&#13;
bridge is repaired.&#13;
Council adjourned.&#13;
R. H. TEEPLE,&#13;
Clerk,&#13;
"For three years we have nerer&#13;
been without Chamberlain's Colic,&#13;
Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy in the&#13;
hoase" says A, H. Patter with £. C.&#13;
Atkins &amp; Co., Indianopolis, Ind., and&#13;
my wife would as soon think of being&#13;
without flour as a bottle of this Bernedy&#13;
in the summer season. We have&#13;
used it with all three of our' children&#13;
and it has never jfailed to cure—not&#13;
simply stop pain, but cure absolutely.&#13;
It is all right, and anyone who tries it&#13;
will find it so. FoFsale by F. A. Sigier.&#13;
Advertising rates made known on application.&#13;
BuslneM Carda, $4.00 per year.&#13;
Death and marriage uodcea publUtied tree.&#13;
Announcements o( entertainments may be paid&#13;
for, if declared, by presenting the office with tickets&#13;
of admission, in case tickets are not uro^ut&#13;
to tne office, regular rates will be charged.&#13;
All matter in local notice column willpe chars&#13;
ed at fi cents per line or fraction thereof, for each&#13;
Insertion.. Where no time is specified, all notice*&#13;
will be inserted until ordered discontinued, and&#13;
will be ch*:ged for accordingly. fj^Ali changes&#13;
of advertisements MtfbT reafik this office a* «*rly .&#13;
as TDBSDAT morning to insure an insertion the&#13;
same week.&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIRECTORY.&#13;
Special Bargain&#13;
c&#13;
TH E MASON ARTIFICIAL STONEWATEB TAKE. A woaderftti&#13;
iBventtofi and a great boon to tanner*.&#13;
Seat or col* do not eSeet taws, s*4 they will bat&#13;
mules • destroyed fry an earthquake while the earth&#13;
teste. We invite your inspection. They will s o t&#13;
ro4, r net o r wear oat. Warranted for Ave years.&#13;
l o t farther perUowlars call or write to&#13;
W1LLBVS8S,&#13;
• gent an 4 KSLViattuur, fctockbrldfe.Mich&#13;
W. B. Darrow, blank book and paper Hi&#13;
D. W. Murta, making roll, B'd of Rev'w&#13;
and notices 1M6&#13;
P. Monroe, marsht' services for May 6.25&#13;
W. A. Can,-B'd ol Lteview 2 da 8.00&#13;
Geo Season, 8 eds of wood 2.75&#13;
M Buen, setting trees .W&#13;
A Monks, " .7»&#13;
D Grieve, carting lumber .50&#13;
Total $87.80 -&#13;
Moved and carried that bills as&#13;
presented be accepted and paid.&#13;
Moved and carried that the&#13;
Street Commissioner's report as&#13;
presented be accepted.&#13;
Moved and carried that the report&#13;
of the Street committee as&#13;
read be accepted.&#13;
Street fund bills presented:&#13;
$1,25&#13;
1.25&#13;
W W Barnard labor 1 da&#13;
W JB Mufphy&#13;
M Mortenson,&#13;
i t&#13;
i i&#13;
i t&#13;
i«&#13;
i t&#13;
i i&#13;
F G Jackson&#13;
J A Cad well&#13;
B Culhane&#13;
W B Darrow&#13;
H W Crofoot&#13;
C Lynch&#13;
F H South labor S-10 da&#13;
B H Teeple "&#13;
J Jeffries&#13;
CHilk&#13;
J Fite 8immoa8 labor 3 8-10 da&#13;
J Bowers labor 1 | da&#13;
M £ Coalker labor 2 da&#13;
| / t l ^ i * - *- - - i S, J — —- —•&#13;
Ur uLoawveeryi lIaAbOoOrT 3x doaa&#13;
T Turner Ubor« 840 da&#13;
J Mortenaoa labor 2 &lt;U&#13;
E W M i u&#13;
SOriflMe M&#13;
JLCobyaborBda&#13;
J Cay ton 4 to&#13;
N Reison labor aid team 1 da&#13;
1.25&#13;
1.25&#13;
1.25&#13;
1.25&#13;
1.25&#13;
1.25&#13;
1.25&#13;
U00&#13;
too&#13;
1.00&#13;
1.00&#13;
4.75&#13;
1.87&#13;
2.50&#13;
1.25+&#13;
3.75&#13;
4.75&#13;
2.50&#13;
2.50&#13;
2.50&#13;
3,75&#13;
Ffieaaon&#13;
F D Johaaoa&#13;
J Monks&#13;
I 8 P Johnaoa&#13;
J Swartbout&#13;
AMomk.&#13;
• • • »&#13;
M&#13;
si'&#13;
u'&#13;
«4&#13;
2 da&#13;
Ida&#13;
2 4a&#13;
I d a&#13;
1 da&#13;
» 4"&#13;
2.50&#13;
3.50&#13;
8.75&#13;
5.00&#13;
2.50&#13;
2^0&#13;
78-10&lt;ia2a35&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PassiszHT.. .Clau.de L. bigler.&#13;
T*OST»BS, Geo. IteaeoiLjr., N.&amp;. Murphy, t. (i.&#13;
Jackson, F. J. Wright. £ &gt; £ . Brown, C. L. Grimes.&#13;
CXBMK - . \ .-• ii. U. Teeple.&#13;
TsxAsasUB. .J A. Oadwell.&#13;
AssEseoa D. W. Mnrta&#13;
SiBBsrr CoHHissioNSB A. Monks&#13;
MABSSJII. P. Monroe.&#13;
U&amp;U.TU OFFICSB. Dr. H. F. tiigler.&#13;
ATTORNET n W. A. Carr.&#13;
Mat*&#13;
QUiCA.&#13;
Kc^nlar&#13;
Price ¢5.00.&#13;
Special&#13;
) P i ice a s&#13;
) ion^ a s t h e y&#13;
&gt; ast, t h e pLFhaisinse e*&gt;16ear r- { offered,&#13;
:, only i $I»Z&#13;
; r r t K B -&#13;
S Just out 192*&#13;
i o&amp;ff&amp; book of&#13;
\ ^;oaey sav-&#13;
\ i'i?and&#13;
; vanlea;Ue&#13;
'I '.VrLte ror i t&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
M1THOD18T EPISCOPAL CHURCH.&#13;
Eev. M. H. McM«hoa pastor. Services every&#13;
bund ay morning at 10:3u, and every Sanday&#13;
evening at 7:00 o'clock. Prayer meeting Thursday&#13;
evenings. Sunday scLool at close of mornn/&#13;
tservice. Mrs. Eattlla Graham, Suoerintend't.&#13;
/ ^ O X G I&#13;
GRUMMOND'S&#13;
DETROIT and CLS7ELAND&#13;
LINE OF STEAAEB8&#13;
50¾TO&#13;
CLEM&#13;
A DELIGHTFUL&#13;
Moonlight Trip A m Lake Erie&#13;
LOCAL TIME. . . ... , . DAILY.&#13;
Lv. Detroit, 9:00 P.M.&#13;
Ar. Cleveland, 6:30 A. M.&#13;
BICYCLES CAKRIED FREE.&#13;
U. S. GRUMMOND&#13;
GEN'L MGB.,&#13;
TEL. NO- 162- OFFICE &amp; DOCK, FOOT FIRST 6T.&#13;
Sdeytsolt,&#13;
eferfto A A A M M b ^ M M N&#13;
"Nothing else like it";&#13;
| The most refreshing and&#13;
pleasant Soap for the skin*&#13;
it lasts twice as&#13;
i Atrial wilt convince yon of l i s great;&#13;
|«fcrit. Will please the moat faptidioaa.&#13;
tmRLESF. MILLER,&#13;
Mar. of FRENCH MiLLO» T09JBT&#13;
S&lt;MJPS AND ralQFUMEKY.&#13;
f&#13;
E l T A B L m H E D . l^»&lt;&gt;.&#13;
m i • II' I&#13;
RBGATIO&gt;AL CHURCH.&#13;
_ O. 6. Jonos, pastor, iiervice every&#13;
Sunday morning at 10:30. and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:0C o'clock. Prayer meeting Thursday&#13;
evenings. Sunday school at ctoee of moraine&#13;
service. I. J Coek, ttupt. 6. T. Grimes, Sec.&#13;
ST. MAKr'H'JATHt»i.IC CHURCH.&#13;
Rev. M. J, Comuierford, Pastor. Services&#13;
every third Sunday. Low mass at 7:30 o'clock,&#13;
high mass with sermon at 9:10 a m. Catechism&#13;
at 8:00 p. in., vespers ana benediction at 7 :&gt;Mi p.m.&#13;
SOCIETIES;&#13;
A. M. ROTHSCHILD &amp; CO.&#13;
_ WUOLBSAL?:.&#13;
Gtate, Van Buren to Jackson-sU., Ctakafo.&#13;
M-Mi'i'jii ihiH p a p e r .&#13;
msssmsm&#13;
PATENTS Caveats and Trad a Marks obtained and all Patent&#13;
business conducted for Moderate) Peas*&#13;
Bend model, drawing or photo. Weadviselfi&#13;
patentable free of charge. Ou r fee not do e till;&#13;
patent is secured. A Pasaphlet "How toOb-|&#13;
lain Patent*," with cost of same i n the U.&#13;
aadfpreiga oounMea sent free. Addressj&#13;
C. A. SNOW &amp; CO.&#13;
O r * . P A T E N T Ornce. WaSHIflOTOM, D . CJ&#13;
av&#13;
XpUopay coxed hy Dr. Mller N(&#13;
riWe A. O. H. Society of this place, meets every&#13;
1 third Sunday in tbe Fr. MaUhew Hail.&#13;
John McGuinees, County Delegate.&#13;
Oinckney Y. P. 8. C. E, Meetings held every&#13;
IT Sunday evening in Cong'I church at €¢30 o'clock,&#13;
EPWTORTH LEAGUE. Meets every Sunday&#13;
evening at 6:00 oclock in the M. E. Cnurch. A&#13;
cordial invitation ib extended to everyone, especially&#13;
young people. Miss Jennie H aze, Pres.&#13;
Junior Epworth League. Meets every .Sunday&#13;
afternoon ar3e00 o'clock, at M. E church. All&#13;
cordially invited.&#13;
Mrs. listeU* Gr^haajSuperintendeot,&#13;
eApisLG&#13;
\f rie C. T. A. and B. Society of this place,&#13;
ever/ third Sstaroay evening in toe Fr.&#13;
thew Hall. John Donohae, President.&#13;
meet&#13;
Mat-&#13;
KNIGHTS OF MACCABEES.&#13;
Meet every Friday evening on or before foU&#13;
of the moon at their hall In the Swarthout bldg.&#13;
Visiting brothers are cordially invited.&#13;
CHAI. (JiKPBiiL, Sir Jaaieht Commander&#13;
ivingston Lodge, No.T«, ? 4 A . M . Keyi'ar&#13;
•• - • , on or before&#13;
, W . M .&#13;
Communication Tuesday even!&#13;
the fall of the moon. K.&#13;
0' the Friday ev&lt; following the regular F.&#13;
BOER OF EASTERN STAR aaaeu each month&#13;
AAJL meeting, Mas. C. EIXJCMTUCVABOS, WJC,&#13;
ADIESOFTHE MAOCAJKISS. Meet every&#13;
1st and 3rd Saturday of each month at »:30&#13;
o'clock at the K.O.T. M. halL Tiaiting&#13;
cordialiy Invited. J c u a SiOtan, Lady Cosa.&#13;
1 KNIGHTS OP THK LOTAL GUARD&#13;
meet every second Wednesday&#13;
evening of overy month in the K. O.&#13;
T. M.Hall a* 7-io o'clock. AU visiting&#13;
.Guards waloome.&#13;
F, L. AjrDBEWa, Capt. Gen.&#13;
-BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
H. F. 81QLER M. O- C, U SIGLEft M. D&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
PhyaieUas and Surgeons. All calls promptly&#13;
attended today/ or night. Often on Main street&#13;
THE PERFECT&#13;
0 % WHEEL.&#13;
Don't buy l *&amp;eel until yott see&#13;
THE CARLISLE and get ou* prices.&#13;
THE CARLISLE MFG. CO.&#13;
Pinckney Ml&#13;
wntmw&#13;
^aw«^M^he^5naCel&#13;
S o l d b y F . A . S i g i e r .&#13;
••a*..&#13;
• '?&gt;•?&#13;
• • m&#13;
M&#13;
w&#13;
•M&#13;
.&lt;«&#13;
•I&#13;
• %&#13;
-4J&#13;
'M&#13;
,v-.&#13;
•,! r. «; »,! V&#13;
• ^&#13;
*VifI&#13;
/&gt;;.'."\tf&#13;
^ •&#13;
N.&#13;
w&#13;
• v&#13;
li*&gt;!&#13;
ivt - • .',&#13;
^ r '*'•rf,&#13;
ifo '•'••..•&#13;
IW&#13;
. ; V '&#13;
ft.&#13;
4-- '&#13;
;&gt;• J&#13;
• • \ \&#13;
* * • : • • * ) 9 ft&#13;
• i v&#13;
W*H. &lt;W^i: WK'C $T&#13;
?m f+'mi&#13;
WPM-M&#13;
; .AV v--:-, ' » • ^ ¾ « * &lt; *&#13;
* : . * • - ¾ 1 ) - . « • ' • # &amp;-&#13;
# :&#13;
; V&#13;
i n f i l l •Si*"****&#13;
FBAJTX L.&#13;
PINOKNEYi"&#13;
•»DBSIM, £ubUahaa&#13;
(/ \ri • •»! v. MICHIOAH,&#13;
TAIiMA&amp;B^S -BEBS0N:&#13;
••Nit^TroN*" FOUT WpoTORt&#13;
^ ,&gt;AST 9UNQAY'»&#13;
3 *&gt;r, A&#13;
it^r^gft^not'*%w&#13;
lt A«i IJamvr JWd gUUar couM be&#13;
ta}MHnr$t ,(&amp;,«!* the. d&gt;viT|i right&#13;
arnf would be cut off, c|oaV to ^ s h o u l -&#13;
der: •&#13;
?ro m t*e&#13;
•ad Mtata 9*»* » t&#13;
la&#13;
H a&#13;
U Hletrees Uasfi sjb)&#13;
Bsoe s4b»g ?r«a,t"~IL ptiTo^&#13;
His —&#13;
'p&amp;A. H. Gardner oiJtaw York is&#13;
the apostle of.quietude, sjle has inaugurated:&#13;
a /crusade against the disturbing&#13;
noises which are destroying&#13;
tho-boi'Toa of Uxoaa who ltva la large&#13;
cUlea. Next!&#13;
« IJ&#13;
•fBk* hterole ha4 to be ^iuppraate&#13;
ii^ China 2.J00 years baiore the Chria&#13;
tiift ara, lt la alleged, became the&#13;
celeatial ladles spent too much of their&#13;
tima on it The feet of the Chinese&#13;
ladlea then must hare been much larger&#13;
and leaa deformed than now. Possibly&#13;
lt was deoraed that their feet&#13;
should he cramped in order to prevent&#13;
any revival of the wheel erase.&#13;
f-~—. A&#13;
There la In Chicago a scheme to, provide&#13;
workrooms for men out of emr&#13;
ploymen t. No money will be given&#13;
tbenw but, they will be paid In clothing&#13;
o' whatever else they may need of&#13;
the articles made in the workrooms.&#13;
Old clothes will be mended and old&#13;
shoes made more serviceable by cobbttng.&#13;
Aa soon aa the workmen ean&#13;
get place* where they will be paid&#13;
they will go to them. The idea ia European,&#13;
and, ptoperly carried out, is&#13;
likely to result In much good.&#13;
Tihfs&#13;
year, whan m«diaal&#13;
coliegea of all&#13;
aehools of medicine&#13;
aw giving diplomas&#13;
young doctors,&#13;
and^at the capital&#13;
a*o&gt;m many of the&#13;
citWk medical aaaodatioas&#13;
are aasembllng&#13;
to consult&#13;
a-i ^ v about vtha advance-&#13;
0^ Went oMgie Interests oVthrtr profession,&#13;
I n i l this discourse te appropriate,&#13;
f,&#13;
In m^ text&#13;
gout. High livfr^ and no exercise&#13;
vitiated his blood/Wnd my text presents&#13;
him with his inflamed and bandaged&#13;
feet on an ottoman. In defiance of&#13;
Ood, whom he hated/he sendB for certain&#13;
conjurers or quacks.' They come&#13;
and give him all sorts of lotions and&#13;
panaceas. They bleed him. They sweat&#13;
him. They manipulate him. They blister&#13;
him. They poultice him. They&#13;
scarify him. They drug him. They&#13;
cut him. They kill him. He was only&#13;
a young man, and had a disease&#13;
which, though very painful, seldom&#13;
proves fatal to a young man, and he&#13;
ought to have got well; but he fell a&#13;
Beggarweed seems to be rivaling&#13;
cow peas In the south as a fertilizing&#13;
crop, it also m*hea a good hay.. In&#13;
Virginia it ia cut when about three&#13;
feet high and thoroughly cured. After&#13;
mowing It makes a second crop, mature*&#13;
its seed and Is good pasture until&#13;
lt succumbs to frost. Turned under&#13;
when plowing, it makes ao excellent&#13;
fertilise*, one man wtiUnj^tP an exchanjee&#13;
jtfeat with no &lt; ^ r aVrUUaer&#13;
h^ am'toesajvad Ws «DTH arop from&#13;
tan wuaaehi to thirty bushete per acre.&#13;
* A» b-uWetln &lt;Nc&lt; T) o^ tM d/fiaton of&#13;
entomology of the tJttlt«fl Statea Depaifsusat&#13;
pt AgricaU«na,«ays chat In&#13;
France and Peju*yJv|tftfa an Industry&#13;
has recently /fcruiMt u&gt;y *WjalaK ^enslats&#13;
of the farming ottspWets tor the&#13;
purpose of stacking winaj cellartv and&#13;
thoa aejcnrtnc almost immediate coating&#13;
of cobwebs to new wine bottles,&#13;
gfvth* them the appearance of great&#13;
agja. Thla industry j a carried on ia a&#13;
little French vitftagaM the Department&#13;
of Loire, and near Philadelphia, where&#13;
•iaira Tmlgarie^aihir^VepbiW plumipes&#13;
a#s raised fn larga tpiatitftlea-andaold&#13;
to. wine merchants at the rata of flo per&#13;
handred. This application at entomology&#13;
to industry is one which will not&#13;
ha .highly commended&#13;
'A Mexico City telegram says: "A&#13;
oempaay haa been ia«orporhted here&#13;
with a million dollaAa capital, the&#13;
larger part of the shafetf being taken&#13;
by Pearson A Bon, I k U jaoqtractoca&#13;
having ia hand t A ^ i a a j w , M the&#13;
valley of Mexico and IJsV j ^ 4 w e r k s at&#13;
Vera Crux, with a raW^Mtfean ahareholdera.&#13;
The new- ee'mpaW will be&#13;
*aown as the Mexican Lea?, Narigatlaa&#13;
and Railway Company. The flrat&#13;
object of the company Is to build a&#13;
railway from aeme aaitable point on&#13;
the National Tehuaatepec Railroad to&#13;
arAe«iraWe point ia the state of Vera&#13;
Cra, Tha goreouaent givea a aubaie&gt;&#13;
of over 8&gt;P00 acres of public lands&#13;
pay allrtmeter of railway constructed.&#13;
Oft aoaae «90^00 aerea of land thus ac-&#13;
««|red the coaapany wtH aattla Baropaaa&#13;
aai ocfear ffrtoaifata A&lt;MMM&gt;^ ochar&#13;
plans of tfia eoatpaay is to a«*ake rallwaya&#13;
In taa aoatthern part of Vara Cnre.&#13;
am else &lt;aw igejlkNsMi at aew linns&#13;
Part of the main railway line haa already&#13;
been located, gad eoaatruction&#13;
win begin in two&#13;
le^rife,&#13;
Many ottee-holdera esa» fjpaat *Hbly&#13;
the anhariam that "a gejaHc omca&#13;
ht Ja pabac tmat,- hat a Ma*Y Jersey&#13;
aaaaty eoUector haa pfavad taa aiaoerity&#13;
of his oonvtetloaa la a vary uaeaaai&#13;
way. Foar year* *g» the Kew&#13;
leraey legislature paglad a law auof&#13;
their collections aa&#13;
gjM. Under this law the oaVial i«&#13;
la entitled to nearly forty&#13;
dollars a year. But he haa&#13;
always nCaaad to take more than h!s&lt;&#13;
yearly aalary of forty-nve hnndred&#13;
a&gt;tjaa gaaaai that the lawl&#13;
A robbery from the people&#13;
he was not wtlUag to deriva&#13;
any nawsail baaavt. He will not&#13;
dig a rtca a m Vat he has whartr&#13;
more to he dealred thaa waalth, the ret*&#13;
apect aai eoasUeaee af Ida neighbors.&#13;
His example af aAc^tl unaeHlshneas&#13;
and integrttr At worth more la its uplifting&#13;
aaajal adtaet jaapa the &lt;amaaunity,&#13;
thaa if aa a&#13;
«k0aen he had craea ft Jtt*lawa to the&#13;
victim to charlatanry and empiricism.&#13;
"And AMyin th« thirty and nin^h year&#13;
of his reign was diseased in his feet,&#13;
until hJa disease was exceeding, great;&#13;
yet in his disease he Bought not to the&#13;
Lord'' but'to tte physicians. And Aaa&#13;
slept with his fathers.': That l*/khe&#13;
doctors killed hlmf • • '•&#13;
Men of the medical profession we often&#13;
meet in the home of distress. We&#13;
shake hands across the cradJ/H of. agonized&#13;
infancy. We join each o^her in&#13;
an attempt at solace where:tb^|aroxysm&#13;
of grief demands aa anodyne^ as&#13;
well as a prayer. We loom into each&#13;
others sympataette fatees througfr'^jae&#13;
dusk, as the nfg^t.ofleath is fallihjrfn&#13;
the sick room. We do^aot'bare} to&#13;
climb over any barrier today in ordej^tb&#13;
greet each other, for out. -j&gt;rofeae|ann&#13;
are in full sympathy. ' Yoay doctor&gt;'a«e&#13;
our first and laat earttt^,friend. ,l^o»t&#13;
stand at the gates of life, when we&lt;nter&#13;
thla world, and you*"'*jM[, ^.thfe&#13;
gatea of death when we go out of tl.&#13;
In the cloning momenta of our eafthly&#13;
existence when the hand of theWfe,&#13;
or mother, or sister, or&#13;
hold our right hand/jjftf f*f&#13;
strength to our dying :~ ""•&#13;
can feel the tips of your&#13;
the pulse of our left wrist We do not&#13;
meet today, aa oa olhep44?s, ladsiiaaeji&#13;
of dlatMav but by "m &amp;****$, tl^Tf&#13;
of God, and I proposeaaermonofnelp^&#13;
fulness sad good cheer. Aa in the&#13;
nursery children sometimes re-enact all&#13;
the acenea of the sick room, so today&#13;
you play that you are the patient and&#13;
that I am the physician, and take my&#13;
prescription just once. It snail be a&#13;
tonic, a sedative, * dietetle, a disinfectant,&#13;
a stimulus, and aa anodyne at the&#13;
same time. "Is there not halm in Oilead?&#13;
Is there not a physician there?"&#13;
In the first place, I think all the medical&#13;
profession should become Christiana&#13;
because of the debt of gratitude&#13;
they owe to Ood for the honor he has&#13;
put upon their calling. No other calling&#13;
ia all the world, except it be that&#13;
of the Christian ministry, haa received&#13;
so great aa honor as yours. Christ&#13;
himself waa not only preacher, out iihysiclan,&#13;
surgeon, anriat, ophthalmologist,&#13;
and under his mixhty power optic&#13;
and auditory nerve thrilled with light&#13;
and sound, and catalepsy arose from its&#13;
at, and the club foot waa straightened,&#13;
ana aaahyioais weat oat of the.etifceaed&#13;
feaflotii. and the fftfitdirg *?*•rfr* bev&#13;
caaae placid aa a ctdld, sad the streets&#13;
of Ja as nl am became aa exaemporised&#13;
hoanital crowded with ccavaJeacent victima&#13;
of eaaaalty aad invalidiam. All&#13;
hare wovea the garland Jor the&#13;
MOW. Homer said;&#13;
A wiae aayaiciaa. akilled aar w^uaeW;&#13;
to aenL., • ^"""' • •'•J-.&#13;
Is more than armies to the pubUe weal.&#13;
Cicero eaid: "There is nothing; in&#13;
whid^BMa an aaaroaca the&#13;
whewTtawy arr to give health to&#13;
asaft" Charles IX made nrnrlamaflmi&#13;
taagraa jnar triaaaacaata. ,kor . .^rsaae&#13;
should %a pat to death oa »t Baftholowmmimmtm.&#13;
ii&gt;u rug. m,ii«in n ^ ^ ^ - — — w y&#13;
1 orV or reaflPt^oa/uiTTl Harvey the circulation&#13;
of the blood.aud Ascell the use&#13;
of the lymphatic vessels, and JTeniir&#13;
balked the worst disease that svtr&#13;
scoujia4 aiuropa, and Sydenham'dave\-s&#13;
oped the recuperative forces of tba&#13;
^ ^ v ^ W W , aad clnchbM 6»rh;&#13;
i w ^ % AstMy,a9fMW »pd A ^&#13;
X* &lt;•#«;, BoaauX^ *nd $mwn* fr&amp;&#13;
Orisoom, ani Valtntine Molt of the&#13;
generation-Juat paajed, ^honored God&#13;
and fought jbac^deMh with their V«ten&#13;
scalpels.&#13;
U.we,who are laymen in medicine&#13;
would, uaaaxitand what the. medioai,&#13;
profession has accomplished /or the&#13;
inaane, let us look Into the.dungeoaa&#13;
where tha poor creatures used.to .b« Uk»&#13;
earceraiaai. Jdadmen chained naked to&#13;
the wait A kennel ol ratten straw&#13;
their only sleeping place. Room mv.&#13;
ventilated and unlighted. The wosat&#13;
calamity of the race punished with the]&#13;
very worat punishment. And then como&#13;
and look at the Insane asylums of'Utica&#13;
and Kirkbride—sofaed and pictured,&#13;
librarleti, concerted, until all the arts&#13;
and the adornments' eom% to ceax^ret'reasoTi'&#13;
to Aseume' her thrbne.&#13;
Look at Bkrward• Jenuer, the great herb&#13;
of'medtelne, , Four hundred thousand&#13;
people annually dying* in Butope from&#13;
the amallnox, Jenner .finds that by the&#13;
lno^ukit!on of people with vaccine from&#13;
a cow the great scourge of nations may&#13;
ber arrested. The mtniatere of ' the&#13;
Gospel .denounced .vaccination; small&#13;
wlta carlcatujred Edward Jenner as aiding&#13;
in a great .procession on the back&#13;
of a cow; and grave men expressed it&#13;
as their opinion that all of the diseasesof&#13;
the brute creation would be&#13;
transplanted into the human family;&#13;
and they gave Instances where, they&#13;
said, actually horns had come out on&#13;
the foreheads of innocent persons, and.&#13;
people had begun to chew the cud! But&#13;
Dr. Jenner, the hero of medicine, went,&#13;
on fighting for vaccination until it has&#13;
been estimated that that one doctor, in&#13;
fifty years, has Baved more lives than&#13;
all the battles of any one century destroyed.&#13;
Passing along the streets -of Edinburgh&#13;
a few weeks after the death of&#13;
Sir James Y. Simpson, I saw the photograph&#13;
of the doctor 'n all the windows&#13;
of the shops and stores, and well might&#13;
that photograph be put In every window,&#13;
for he first used chloroform as an&#13;
anaesthetic agent. In other days they&#13;
tried to dull human pain by the hasheesh&#13;
oi the Arabs and the madrepore&#13;
of the Roman and the Greek; but it&#13;
was left to Dr. James Simpson to introduce&#13;
chloroform as an anaesthetic.&#13;
2. ?---r&#13;
:. AI&#13;
to Inarekte the appreciation of'iaymeu&#13;
in regard to the ^ ^ f c w W i B i ^&#13;
medical IWJttils)&#13;
^ «UVIswViaW*A'^avWwl •aaea*&#13;
lowed topi^J^a^ha^jfltfiucaa&#13;
^ 3 &amp; # T$(*\*$^tn^^W^a*™ bt*^&#13;
{Have y^EiJttMig&#13;
tude forfe^H^^ujlgr? r ^ V^u&#13;
feel thaa«runa&#13;
doctor, you ara nqft a^vn^suaaf&#13;
that the old proverb .waioh-Christ&#13;
quoted in hla sermoa may be appNT&#13;
prlate to you: ."Phyilclan, healnthy-&#13;
• ..•, ,* ,..&#13;
There.are many -who always blame&#13;
thadcetor because the people die, forgetti&#13;
ng • the Divine enactment; **It is&#13;
appointed unto all men once to die."&#13;
The father in meaie^ne'whd^itBollheed&#13;
the fact that he had discovered the&#13;
whfeb to Inake'men in this&#13;
and that the of Bare, the father-of&#13;
T^aaaatleaaldaof the&#13;
aswoluUqpv.&#13;
the Freacav amay a*as antirelr demoralised&#13;
at fear af&gt;,tae plague, the WPP&#13;
aargaoa^f that army Uuu&gt;c»bued hlaV&#13;
eelf with the piagw&gt; to *bow the soldiers&#13;
that laaigwa* aa&gt;aaatag*oa la it;&#13;
aad their oousage roee, and Chey weat&#13;
on to the eoasaot Ood haa honored&#13;
thla prafeaiW «11 the way through.&#13;
sxlrjui«meut from tae days&#13;
with hellebore and 4 ^ -&#13;
poulttosa daeja to far latox eaatfaMar&#13;
iirai 'in IT tat" Caw.&#13;
ysteav Sarta-&#13;
BfcxlPiirlBw.&#13;
Hopd'» PrttetKSSSTW''"os8a*ts'.8 *&#13;
tttm Though am butwadss nave*paiaid away n&#13;
The naberaan detkvUe in weigat ••&#13;
Some peoDi«4antneltaer •ttehaadnort^.foot&#13;
Alas.for the writhing subjects of surgery&#13;
in other centuries! Blessed be&#13;
God for the wet sponge or vial in the&#13;
hand of the operating surgeon in the&#13;
clinical department of the medical college,&#13;
or in the sick room of the domestic&#13;
circle, or on 'the batrfe field amid&#13;
jbousa/ids of amputations. Napoleon&#13;
after a battle rode along the line and&#13;
saw under a tree, standing In the snow,&#13;
1 .array tha aiirgftnn operating Upon tUfi&#13;
wounded. Napoleon passed on, and&#13;
.twenty^four hour*. afterward came&#13;
along the same place, and he saw the&#13;
same surgeon operating in the same&#13;
place, and he had not,Jeft it,... Alas for&#13;
the battlefields without chloroform.&#13;
But now the soldier boy takes a few&#13;
breaths from the sponge and forgets ail&#13;
the pangs of the gansaot fracture, and&#13;
while the surgeons of the field hospital&#13;
are standing* around him, he lies there&#13;
dreaming of home, and mother, aad&#13;
heaven. No more parents standing&#13;
around a suffering child," struggling to&#13;
get away from the sharp instrument,&#13;
but mild slumber Instead of excruciation,&#13;
and the child wakes up and says,&#13;
"FatherK what's the matter? What's&#13;
the doctor here today for?" Oh, blessed&#13;
be God for James Y. Simpson and the&#13;
heaven descending mercies of chloroform.&#13;
The medical profession steps into the&#13;
court room, and, after conflicting witneasea&#13;
haveJaft everything in a fog, by&#13;
chemical analyses shows the guOt or&#13;
innocence of the prisoner, as by mathamatlc&#13;
deaoaatratlon, thus adding- boors&#13;
to medical Jurlsnradence. * • •&#13;
Jfr seems to me that the moat beautiful&#13;
benediction of the medical profeaaiofi&#13;
haa been arppped upon the&#13;
poor. No exouseaow for any one's not&#13;
hmiftg -rirTH*r •**y*«"^ Diapenaarjas&#13;
aad innrmaries avarywhare aadar&#13;
the control of the beat doctors.&#13;
some af them poorly paid, some^ of&#13;
them not paid at all. A haif-etarved&#13;
,wapsaa omaaa ant froea the low ieaejnent&#13;
house JUpto^ha dispensary, aad.&#13;
ana^«a C2M rag&gt; fro* her bahe;&gt;&#13;
handle od aicara, aad rheuaa, aad pnatulsa,&#13;
and orer that ttttto mdpsner&#13;
beads the accumalaaed wiadom of the&#13;
«ges, from Wacwwyli eto-ejn to Itft&#13;
waalra aatonay. Ja aae dispensary, in&#13;
oae year, one huadrad aad afty. thouaaad&#13;
prescriptions were iaaaad. why do&#13;
I show you what God haa allowed this&#13;
profession to o&gt;? Is At to stir up yoar&#13;
vanity? Oh. no, lis) day has gone by&#13;
for pompous ac^ra* with e^nsplcuoaa&#13;
gale&gt;hea4ed aaae* aad aowdered w^gs,&#13;
wmch ware the aftTomaap 1 m#nU 4Mhe&#13;
days when the baii»er iaaad to ,cvry&#13;
through the streets af London Dr.&#13;
Brockelear'a wig, to the aaaalraUon&#13;
and awe af the people, aaylng: "Make&#13;
wayj here comes Dr. Bco4keUby*s wig."&#13;
No, I announce these thiaga aat agdy&#13;
*..&#13;
art by whftJH ^T ^mke fmen&#13;
worldf immortal, himself died at fortyseven'years&#13;
"of aire, shWtnnV that lmthortkmy&#13;
Vas;i^sa thaa, half a century&#13;
for Jrtm. Oh, h'oif easy it...» whjn people&#13;
die, 'ip' 5r^sout: Vhwaptactice."&#13;
Then thephVsmi&amp;tt'n&gt;e»t*hejrrVwlf| all&#13;
, the whIms, and the sophistries, and the&#13;
deceptions^audihe strataa^mjr ind&#13;
the. irrltailona iiftHe sha^fa^dnerves&#13;
apd the, beclouded brain' of • women,&#13;
and more espeQlaU^ of men, jybo never&#13;
know ho^w gracefully to be. sick,,and&#13;
who' with their salivated mouth aurse&#13;
thf doctor, giving hin^^bls dues, as^they&#13;
Qsy-rabout the only dues he will in&#13;
that case ooliecti The last hill, that is&#13;
paid is the doctor's bill. It seems so&#13;
incoherent for a restored patient, with&#13;
ruddy cheeks and roUnd .form^to be&#13;
bothered with a bill charging him«for&#13;
old calomel and jalap, The physicians&#13;
of this country do more missionary&#13;
work without charge than all the&#13;
other professlones ant together From&#13;
the concert room, from the &gt; •• merry&#13;
party, from the comfortable couch on&#13;
a cold night, when the thermometer is&#13;
five degrees below zero, the doctor1&#13;
must go right away1, he always must go&#13;
right away. To keep Up under this&#13;
nervous strain, to go' through this&#13;
night-work, to hear aH these annoyances,&#13;
many physicians hava rteorted&#13;
to strong drink knd perished. Others&#13;
have appealed to God for sympathy&#13;
and help, and have lived.' WhlcY were&#13;
the wise doctors, Judge ye? "&#13;
I do not mean to say that piety Wil]t&#13;
make up" for medical skill, A bungling&#13;
doctor/ confounded with, what was not&#13;
a very bad' case, went into the next&#13;
r^om to pray. A skilled phyitclan was&#13;
called In. He asked for the first practitioner.&#13;
"Oh," they said, "he's In the&#13;
next room praying;." "Well," said the&#13;
skilled doctor,; "tell him to come out&#13;
here and-help; he can pray and work&#13;
at the same time." It was all in that&#13;
sentence. Do the best w* e*n aad aak&#13;
Gcd to help usw There ara no two mea&#13;
in all the. world, it aeema to me, that&#13;
sb much need the grace of God aa the&#13;
aiafeter who doctors, the sick soul, aad&#13;
the physician who prescrlbee tor the&#13;
diseased body. &lt;&#13;
But' I mast close, for there may be&#13;
suffering men and women waiting in&#13;
year office, or on the hot pillow-, wondering&#13;
why you don't come.' Bat before&#13;
you go, 0 doctors, hear my -prayer&#13;
for your external salvation. Blessed&#13;
will be the reward in heaven1 for the&#13;
faithful Christian physicfattJ dome&#13;
day, through overwork, or from bedd-:&#13;
ing over a' patient and catching* his&#13;
contagious breath, the doctor, conies&#13;
hqme, and lies down^fajnf and sick,&#13;
ite Is too*Weary to feel his own pulae or (&#13;
take the diagnosis of hla own" complaint.&#13;
He la worn out The fact i» his&#13;
work,on earth Is ended. Tell those&#13;
people in the office there they need not&#13;
wait any longer; the doctor will never&#13;
go there again..He haa written his&#13;
last preacripUon for the aJJevJatiou of&#13;
human pain, the people, will ran up,to&#13;
his front steps and inquire: "How.la&#13;
the doctor todayr All the » maalalns&#13;
of the neixJiborhood wiU be aroaaad,&#13;
and there will be many prayers that&#13;
he who baa beea ao kiad to the aick&#13;
may be aomfortod in his last pane. It&#13;
Is all over now. In two or three days&#13;
hla coaraieeceat satlaata/ with aaawl&#13;
wreapsdsaoaadthem, wttt aasae ao the&#13;
treat wtniewead took ant aa tha passing&#13;
hearse, aad the poor af the city,&#13;
bare-faeted, aad bare-headed, wiU&#13;
stand, da the street corners, saying:&#13;
•&lt;Oa, a*w good ha waa taaaalir* Bat&#13;
oh taa other aide af the rrvar af aeath&#13;
of Ma aai patients, waa&#13;
ttfvrcvM cared. w « come to&#13;
or tnemseivea ana aying unie traps for ap»&#13;
probation. ..* t. &gt;,M ~'&#13;
Ummuech t ot eplirgaiyo uinii swecorrket o n hand he never has LidU lleet tQerir, lp U(toa'w-b?e rM tmamammma-aO)n- eW thhaatt ihsa as „Tnh eR tolvVehm etoa nydt tuaris effittthefe ro ft ot opootsst i s^alMJtr,- vsaing and irremediable;-" . i * i ^ ^&#13;
, i i ^ . " . HI &gt;&lt; i « mi - ^ {. 4\\?&#13;
A GOOD THlNty.,."&#13;
, . , . . , . , - • • ' . . . l i - i i&#13;
For Women to Rcmemben&#13;
That In addresfingHrs. ^Inkbam^ejvAn*&#13;
communicating with a woman — a woman&#13;
who«e experience In treating woman's fits Is&#13;
greater-tnahtttatof any living pavafcftaB**&#13;
male or female. \&#13;
A woman can talk frcejy toa,womaA,wben&#13;
it la revolting to relate ber private trouble*&#13;
to a man—besides,-*, man noes' aOt UnderitaneVaimplrbecaaae&#13;
he la a man.&#13;
Many women suffer In, silence and drift&#13;
along from bad 4o-worse, knowing fhT)t well&#13;
that they should havelmmedfateaaihatsnce,&#13;
but a natural modesty impels them tosbrink&#13;
frfOmexpostaa themMlves, to, the auej^iona&#13;
and probable, .examinations of even their&#13;
family physician'. It is unnecessarv. Wlthdnt&#13;
money or price they can consult a woman,&#13;
whose knowledge fr^in actoai «xnerienoe la&#13;
s f r e&#13;
accept it in the same spirit&#13;
greater than any local phyaTcTan'itving.&#13;
T-"h e'follow-i*n•-g Iinvitation ila freely offe red;&#13;
ccept lt Same .&#13;
Women suffering from any form of female&#13;
weakness are invited to freely communicate&#13;
wltbUrs Pinkham at Lvnn.kfaaa. A l ^ t -&#13;
rar eadr eb y rwecoemiveend o, nolpye,/ntaetdti, hraesa db eeann'dea taanb-- Jisbed the eternal confidence-a&gt;etweeoafia,&#13;
and the women of America which&#13;
has never been broken add baa indHeeeYmore&#13;
vast volume of experience walcatsb* WUt*&#13;
draw from. (t4s more than ppssiMe tbatshe&#13;
poor, ia. ve*r-%y f..o ousblf sab^ .d—o.e «aanaoAtattsanc*aev—ia»-&#13;
LrnSllas7&#13;
MMT. ie very foousb If sab doe*&#13;
aatage of this generouaoffer of&#13;
Liyy dla E. Plnkhlm Hediane Co.,&#13;
The outer layers of ta« aiUg^Caafa skta are&#13;
said to contain a percentage of alUca;&gt;aence&#13;
•he bardneaa of the bide&#13;
. . • i « « » « t i i i i » a ^ U »&#13;
TMat the Wines and Brandy of the ftpeer&#13;
N. J. Wlae Co^ Passaic ^ f e are leading.*!!&#13;
others in public favor. Their. Brandies are&#13;
unexcelled- tec delicacy of flaVer, aad are&#13;
proavoaaoaa by theisiwiaaaalttojailgss to be&#13;
the very best in the market, while their flue&#13;
Q»a*\&gt;t^ead-sjarfermtBBia Osape j S c e are&#13;
superior to aUottesajtotbeetek asoat aad&#13;
Communion Table, ror pare grape Brandy&#13;
itaeir OldCUma*. vintage JaWts^aelBltted&#13;
the beat to be,h*4- , Vln*yard an4ja&gt;Haraat&#13;
Passaic.X J. . ; .^ ^ . . , , , ^ .,. .&#13;
There are eame parents fce Nriota tneb&#13;
children never arrive at an age of jpespen&#13;
albiUty.&#13;
teatt «f Spear's W!a\e by the&#13;
Fatcaltv of If. f/. .-&#13;
TheOommtttee of Paysteiaae yesjoehtrt to.&#13;
examine into tbe meritsi&gt;f the wanes.of Alfred&#13;
Speer, report these wines atrictly jare*&#13;
acceptabie haaaavor. patactable Tanavdch&#13;
wistM. * 'Oft fflfo. "w.- Tjji,&#13;
• .miiJo4die stv ?i'»s'• no'..t^ wor—d"inwarwill v'" ft snu'e-^tnimaata. la.m.- shldia m ofTSemwa ^ 5 ^ ¾ ^ ^ *^'tf •** a?"&#13;
Second matareila SMaedmea atreageT tftmn&#13;
the ftrst. "&lt;^' .,•••,' r'n.'O'iy.&#13;
Ooara^teed^baccb namt core&#13;
amen strong, blood pure. aSciL&#13;
j ; . . •;&gt; ««•.»' • * * •&#13;
tCer.&#13;
nojthlpg fn some jpedigress except&#13;
lengttU-^ •&lt;.'.. Jr '•*';-&#13;
PolHeaess costs Utile and yield* much.&#13;
'•"^"•W*eai?iBfls^sw»s*sp»iw*s"aa*&gt;»a»&#13;
• • • • • • &gt;•,•#)&lt;• •#••#••(&#13;
t.-ior-i'Sfl^tSi- -&gt;oi f'.trj-j &gt;&#13;
him, aa* the PhyaVaaA of&#13;
heaven, wfA JJocka- as w^hite as'aaow,'&#13;
according to Che A^oealyptle viatoa,&#13;
w « caahe oat ahefaay, Hfioaaa la, come&#13;
tm.twaat a^aa4yavk1tod&#13;
:r-&#13;
Aa the beat light in the world la the&#13;
warm li*ht of the sun, so the beat U-&#13;
«i isaiaj is aai&#13;
like haajaa of hamaa spexmlatjlopL hat&#13;
Iroavthelove^f God, l^aa^ava. Jtthe&#13;
the sun. opens the universe, taraa evea&#13;
douda 4ato glory, and lifts death itoeaf&#13;
toaaaoaatof&#13;
The'torpedo neh&#13;
eighty pounds, and a&#13;
this fah wffl kiU taa - 1 .&#13;
is a ..U "4&#13;
Who are ht;&#13;
oi oomaa. J U o a a ^ ^bare ] •&#13;
"*™** v***™a* pa»fS; is) ••ffti^sw t ^&#13;
aaration called Gh\AUM&gt;/&#13;
af aara«tali&#13;
aha ataae af&#13;
• t M - J&#13;
• • • • • • . m f &lt;&#13;
• sw**aw^aw*' t»*»T*av^a^ . ew^~ j s a j ^&#13;
^ 1&#13;
Ifry GraJn^O&amp;J&#13;
/ » • • ' fii'&#13;
""""iVrrMttr&#13;
,~*3&#13;
IMWIttaal ^aaaaaf&#13;
ASa^wWeb aaafc-a M* tet-braet Mae ail&#13;
jT^s&amp;'ss^'s&amp;erAa&gt;f«wesWi* »ea&#13;
t.jf *&gt;aWv«.i 'a&gt; •r.v«t W&#13;
¥%.&#13;
&gt; . • '&#13;
ka^asm^ mmmm, MMm*^.*.^,:, ** ^^mk*^^^.*^^^^ &lt; ^&#13;
tmmm mm W ^&#13;
T .,...*:. • A. . ! &gt; i . t '&#13;
, , - . ••tfj- • .: , # ; •&#13;
It jUartlednu H6 hair, her weak of&#13;
my &lt;tif*da&gt; * tear ^ tor*, and I no^&#13;
Uoed that Peirt ^rai listening now with&#13;
a •uddejv wiander lu hir.fAC«v,..&#13;
" ^ mother? she is not bare.''&#13;
" T o * , » i ^ brftfc her Jp »e; proa-&#13;
IM me, Arnoi," .&lt;&gt; i/&#13;
•'^Tto lhe eowee, I wttl brtnaadr&#13;
toy^, ^i ^^;;v;:;;^1 ;7? , ! "' MI have eomethinf • lo taj to her--&#13;
and to you. I e»&lt;» wro^e&lt;| hfr.in mj&#13;
thoughts, and1 t ,*M&amp;M &gt;m .**? torglvcness.&#13;
She has behaved to me like&#13;
a true loving daughter while you have&#13;
been aftr} andr]h»e given me money&#13;
regularly—though I doubt she Is troubled&#13;
in her mind about you. Heed&#13;
what J( say, J»X son. (AU.(ther tajm&#13;
whispered about her were false. She&#13;
U better than gold—she is as true as&#13;
s|etf*3nd I mls}tr&lt;Jged her/' ; -&#13;
,,My breath came and went quickly,&#13;
and Pearl urged me to lie down and&#13;
rest.&#13;
"I/will Watch over your ttoiher," she&#13;
said, with a strange flush on her face.&#13;
"Who spoke?" cried my mother,&#13;
striving to rise in bed. "YOU told me&#13;
Mabel was not here."&#13;
"Neither it she, mother."&#13;
"She 'is. You can't deceive me, blind&#13;
as I am, it was Mabel's voice I heard."&#13;
The wonder expressed in Pearl's face&#13;
grew and grew.&#13;
"Nay," said 1, "there is no one in the&#13;
room but you, I, and a little maid&#13;
I'm fond of. Speak to my mother,,&#13;
Pearll*&#13;
"Can 1 4 o anything for you?" asked&#13;
Pm^;;*Imidj^&lt;&lt;-&#13;
"(Jive me,your hand, my child," said&#13;
iny mother. Pea« 'tmtMZWWmmL&#13;
•mile came to my mother's lips. "Ah,&#13;
my seuV tftht I* tide of yfcdr old tridm,&#13;
to tease end pliteeaymn. An-if I could&#13;
be mietwee^ in idSel'e voice! Mabel,&#13;
my ehild"-&lt;-ber voice grew move solo,&#13;
emn here "I have wronged you. flay&#13;
that you forgive me."&#13;
I saw thai my dear old mother was&#13;
wandering* in her mind, and I whkv&#13;
pered to Pearl to humor her.&#13;
"If you think I have anything to&#13;
forgjye," aaMi Pearl, in a low. trembling&#13;
voice, and with difficulty- restrslplpg&#13;
hat tears,"I forgive you/V&#13;
"Tbe-Lor* Ween you and my eon!''&#13;
murmured » y mothar; And then an*&#13;
peered to sink to sleep.&#13;
I crept softly to the room below,&#13;
with hope and remorse newly born m&#13;
my heart Pearl followed me a moment&#13;
afterward. She gaaed at me timidly,&#13;
wistfully.&#13;
"May X ask you a question?" she&#13;
"Tee, my child."&#13;
"Who ie Mabel, and why is my voice&#13;
"MabeUls my wife, damn child/*&#13;
Peart her tears flowing. "*8he&#13;
a sailor's wife, and my father&#13;
drowned. The* tar why I hn£3ke&#13;
Hush! I heard a cry outside! It&#13;
is a woman's voice!"&#13;
She was hastening to the door, when&#13;
I gently prevented her, nnd.bML her&#13;
go to my mother.&#13;
"And if yon love me, dear child,"&#13;
I anteVaa I tondasrr embrace* ne*v "«o&#13;
not eome down until J summon you1.&#13;
Nay, ask no more questions now* I&#13;
will explain all to you before long."&#13;
went elowfr upstair*' 4fcfth •*» ¢¢¢^&#13;
threw open the atreet-door. *&#13;
I also hoard the cry; and the inatlnlt&#13;
of aJtecttou, or resnorae, Jed m« tolaX&#13;
pect from whose overcharged 'bonofe,&#13;
it had proceeded. ,-r* -.,&#13;
My iaatmct *m)led;++ Aright- jfjsjtV&#13;
side by the window a woman crouched,:&#13;
At the sound of my voice the woman*&#13;
---*--A lower and1 lower; with soke&#13;
h a w com* from a broken&#13;
imid agata, "youneed net&#13;
,me now* My pessisa m spent*&#13;
AM unexneetad notajrf imeaftrn^H W&#13;
E^Hffi^rlnfffsj^^ fMQtpMmi* jo raise ner&#13;
. f ^ / r o m the ground, and*&#13;
: #**W*l*e mo; oh, forgjlve t»»&#13;
the point of death. The child I spoka&#13;
of U with her. Mabel, this is the moat&#13;
solemn; moment of. our lives. If I have&#13;
wronged you—and I pray to God that&#13;
I navel—I wli) do my beat X» maiia&#13;
atonement. Tell me your stery* and&#13;
as yauvbelleve there t# s, God in heayan^&#13;
apaahithe truih^', •-..,&lt;• -.-, .-.&#13;
CHAP^ipa apcyifl,,, ,,&#13;
OU whose hearts&#13;
aje mojr^, tejRdv,,&#13;
' I f f * " i •: W'Q'fr't*-. i &gt;*n&#13;
greater than mine,&#13;
wyi haye A\ylv&amp;&#13;
this night was hidden&#13;
from nte.&#13;
Briefly let me set&#13;
down^thestitManCe&#13;
of my wife's kad&#13;
Words. - -'&#13;
When i left hbnie )^ter our marriage,&#13;
she' had gone into the country to her&#13;
mother, who kept her there' for&#13;
monihs. flhe did not write, knowing&#13;
that TO/ mother could not read. When&#13;
they returned to Brixton, Mr. Draco&#13;
was the first to meet them, and he&#13;
filled' her ©ere with the slanders that&#13;
were in circulation about me. She&#13;
did not believe them; her mother did:&#13;
"If yourare—n5t civil to Mr. 1111166/4&#13;
said her mother, "I shall have to go&#13;
into the work house." She knew that&#13;
her mother owed money to Mr. Druce,&#13;
and, '/earing him, she did not quarrel&#13;
with him en the first night. But she&#13;
determined to go to my mother in the&#13;
early morning, and consult her as to&#13;
what ought to be done to vindicate my&#13;
good name. 8he went; my mother had&#13;
disappeared., Day after day, week after&#13;
week paesed, and still no news of&#13;
my mother until it .wan reported and&#13;
believed that she was dead. About&#13;
that tin&gt;e Mabel became a mother, and&#13;
the child that yas born was a girl. She&#13;
named it Pearl. Theu came the news&#13;
2f,the wreck qf The Blue Jacket, and&#13;
he loss of every soul on bpaxd. She&#13;
r^ceive^l no letters from we. If any&#13;
wer^ sent, they' Were intercepted. Mr.&#13;
Druce pressed his suit upon her, but&#13;
she would have nothing to nay to htm.&#13;
Stiff, loathing him, her mother compelledher&#13;
to be civil to him, and one&#13;
day proposed that they should emigrate.&#13;
She joyfully consented, to escape&#13;
Mr. Druce. They had been at sea&#13;
two days before he appeared. He had&#13;
* B D L ^ | k -V^stftv*—^BsnrsinvA~sy^fe~^^k^a ^"k:^ -ss^swHv^k- ^ ^ B &gt; A 1 .&#13;
and Mabel suspected that it was a&#13;
planned thing between him and her&#13;
mother, ewe then Jdetermrned to^have&#13;
nothing to say to him,' and she disregarded&#13;
sHl his attentions and solicitations.&#13;
When they landed lav Australia,&#13;
liar mother insisted on taking another&#13;
name, a&amp;Fing that she bad ill-lack&#13;
enough with the one they bore, and&#13;
that exchange might bring them better&#13;
fortune Thus It was that Pearl&#13;
did pot know; the nam* of PseerofC&#13;
For years Mr. Drue*-did not relinquish&#13;
his pursuit of her; but after one&#13;
lent and unsuccessful appeal he loft her&#13;
and *ke never saw. his face again. Than&#13;
her mother died, and she was loft Alone&#13;
w(t^ her cWld, , She led,a hard, life,&#13;
and when Pearl was ten years of age,&#13;
she determined to come horn* to the&#13;
old place. She had saved money&#13;
enough to pay for her passage, and&#13;
she took it in The Rising Sun. She&#13;
had no Idea that Mr. Druce wen a&#13;
passenger In the ship. When they left&#13;
iBngland he was with her by design;&#13;
but now ft wan chance—or fate, as I&#13;
mentally aald at this portion of her&#13;
etory. She was too ill to come on deck&#13;
until the night of the wreck; and then&#13;
a iMtutssse passenger conceived the idea&#13;
of saving* the two children, Pearl and&#13;
Bee, by lashing- them to one spar.&#13;
While he made Pearl secure, Mabel&#13;
held £«b, his own mother having been&#13;
weitiwi overboard during the night;&#13;
and whe»&lt;*hcTenel suddenly sank, Ma-'&#13;
bei had&gt;sBta&gt; mv bar nrma.- MMm from&#13;
the seas**, aha reenenmed see; them the&#13;
chiM- vaa anatched from, her, nam she&#13;
remea&amp;efted no more, until ake found&#13;
harestf on-a^ rock with two-&#13;
MV4^an8trS flown from my soul; and when the mat&#13;
words were spoken. I kherr before the&#13;
begged f^g1&gt;e^eei for my crtme-fof&#13;
R wad tw i e a a ^ e o d ' ! i y how my&#13;
•ppeal was m«t? It Is'women such as&#13;
the one I h&gt;d the han^inees to call&#13;
my wife who purifr tat world.J&#13;
"Come, my wtfe, and see your child,"&#13;
Softly we stole into thO bedroom.&#13;
My mother^ and'our child- were asleep.&#13;
In an agony of Joy, Mahal pressed her&#13;
Hps to Pearl's face, to her neck, to nor&#13;
hands, to her dress; bat with sneh&#13;
divine UmWrnese and gentleness as&#13;
not to awaken our dartshg. My heart&#13;
wont up to God the Beneficent!&#13;
Suddenly my mother stirred in her&#13;
"Amos!" she cried. Then,&#13;
"MebeU" • • .&#13;
W« w e n t &gt; bar alda,)&#13;
"You are together, my ohlldre9j"&#13;
. "Yea, dear mother.*,';. ..; ~. i&#13;
VJPhAnk God?,.,Ana*,, *u*.jrour arms&#13;
* * • » *&#13;
npund me. Wetan; . J hoar your father&#13;
calling, *XP. heave, hoi' Dear ones,&#13;
p ^ b ^ j g . ^ ^ l U J t ^ ' j r ^ t ; ' . ' '&#13;
To-morrow l* Christmas day, and }&#13;
am alone, vritfng thp ' concluding&#13;
v/ordi, Toni. Wren Is ooming to spend&#13;
Christmas with us.&#13;
Last night my wife and'child and I&#13;
were Bitting together in our little parlor.&#13;
Holly and mistletoe were already&#13;
on the walls, garlanding two pictures&#13;
which I have had drawn, one of my old&#13;
mother, the other of Beeerbft, Mariner.&#13;
The flro was burning brightly, and&#13;
peace won in our hearts. The only&#13;
heaven the earth contains wa* shining&#13;
upon us and within us, though we&#13;
saw no glimpse of the sky. We were&#13;
at Home, and It was a Home of Love.&#13;
"Mother," said Pearl, "what la the&#13;
first letter in the alphabet?"&#13;
"O, my darling, of course."&#13;
"And the next?"&#13;
"N."&#13;
"And the two next?"&#13;
"C and B."&#13;
"Once upon a time," aald Pearl, clapping&#13;
her hands. "Mow, mother, I am&#13;
going u&gt; read yon and father a very,&#13;
very pretty story*" • T&#13;
"Do, dear child. What is it?"&#13;
Pearl produced the torn text-book&#13;
of her island school.&#13;
"It ie called," she said, with the&#13;
most delicious little laugh in the&#13;
world, "Cinderella; or, The Glass Slipper.'&#13;
"&#13;
She read the story from beginning&#13;
to end, and we listened in. delight.&#13;
"Mother," then said -our chikV "if 4&#13;
three pumpkins were to suddenly pop&#13;
on to the table—"&#13;
"Mind, my darling! They might!&#13;
Strange thing* happen." JiWeH, if they^did, and, you had a&#13;
fairy wand, and wanted to make a&#13;
present to everybody—everybody mother!—-&#13;
thin Christmas, what would you&#13;
change them into?"&#13;
My wife nestled closer to me.&#13;
"Well, mother, what should the first&#13;
pumpkin .bar&#13;
"Faith, my darling."&#13;
"And the second?"&#13;
"Lovo.*&#13;
"And the third?"&#13;
"Cfcarityf *&#13;
A bleaeed Trinity, indeed!&#13;
THE END.&#13;
.mnhatiiii'i ifi ***ui .1 j-.Kk-T*&#13;
An* Coasidor U M AlMmportsM* H M * ,&#13;
Mr ----^1 -&#13;
' That is adoreealnf Mra. Pinkbam you are&#13;
disease* ia greaW than tha% of anj.Uf&#13;
ing physician—male or female.&#13;
You can talk freely to a wojnasl&#13;
when it ie revolting to relate your&#13;
private troublee p a man—bealdes;&#13;
a man does not understand—simply&#13;
because he in a man.&#13;
Many women sutler in silence and&#13;
drift along from bad to worse, knowteg&#13;
full well that they ought to hero&#13;
Immediate asslitsnee; but a natural&#13;
modesty impels them to shrink from&#13;
oospoalng fbemselvea to the^ocetioev&#13;
and probably examinations of even&#13;
their family physician. Itia unneeea-&#13;
WKhovt mosiey or prioa yon&#13;
can consult a woman, whoaw&#13;
knowledge from actual export&#13;
enoa la greater than any local&#13;
phyateiaas in the world. Tbefoilowlng&#13;
invitation is freely offered*&#13;
accept it in the same spirit:&#13;
MBS, PINKHAM^ STANDING INVITATIOK.&#13;
Women suffering from any form of female weakness are invited to prompt!*&#13;
communicate with Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn, Mass. All letters are received,&#13;
opened, read and answered by women only. A woman can freely talk of hew&#13;
private Mnes» to a woman; thus haa been established the eternal confidence between&#13;
Mrs. Pinkham and the women of America which has never been broken,&#13;
Out of toe vast volume of experience which she haa to draw from, it is mora&#13;
than possible that she has gained the ^ry knowledge that will help your&#13;
case. She asks nothing In return except your good-will, and her advice haa&#13;
relieved thi&gt;uitan^*; Surely any woman, rich or poor, ia very fooliehif she does&#13;
not take advantage of this generous offer of aaaistanee.— Lydia B. Pinkham&#13;
Medicine Co., Lynn. Mass.&#13;
OTTWJ&#13;
HER SUCCESSFUL 8CHEME.&#13;
Bow an&#13;
t**#Nv«.&lt; the other to&#13;
ho losfa, ,hut„iwUx&#13;
and sjer'oomiftgdomi were taken grom&#13;
the rook lata the bosk, and after anil*&#13;
u&#13;
*TlwJh! yon will alarm her! I has*&#13;
*••*%*&lt;•»•. • * J &gt; » »&gt;1H&#13;
t ^*wvt &gt;^Nh^ ^lamj.^-^hfi mttsj; imd-&#13;
*&gt;i^'&#13;
is«bexl&#13;
Wr W^.:TW&#13;
and&#13;
Arrivta*&#13;
to&#13;
was air*, but hftad and m&#13;
Mahal toM&#13;
or with my&#13;
the&#13;
What remains to ha sand?&#13;
bei gained hard SBM&#13;
kv her needle. an\d mat&#13;
no nam without&#13;
«f the man whom&#13;
It was a striking couple that entered&#13;
a carriage last Wednesday in front of&#13;
the Hotel Savoy. Both were tall, of&#13;
fine figure and easy grace, eays the&#13;
New York Herald. The man looked&#13;
on the sunny side of 60; the woman,&#13;
some years younger, wa» of the Juno&#13;
type. Their eyee and complexions had&#13;
a dash of the Spanish, while their talk&#13;
and manners were French.&#13;
"Curious history that man has had,"&#13;
remarked a hotel lounger. "Becomes&#13;
of A' rich Creole family In the Pontchartrain&#13;
district of Louisiana. They&#13;
were "immensely wealthy before the&#13;
war and managed to hold on to&#13;
of their estate*. His wife, also a Creole,&#13;
wag educated with the moat expensive&#13;
jrthm sbrc#L Tmmi&#13;
rled now fOr nuin^ yearn, tHe^re lovers&#13;
yet He was a wttd young&#13;
,drinking. dueltsg and gambling&#13;
family tried all means to curb u n ,&#13;
but he broke evury Wt&#13;
""One night he was taken homOfar^&#13;
aiyaed wim champagne. Hm old&#13;
maiden gfcmt had an rnapfratiosL She&#13;
hurried o f '4 trm*ed negro to Haw&#13;
handiea,&#13;
pmkssifztti the&#13;
thd sassaet arrtved the&#13;
was plaoed carefuily in&#13;
dear old schemer&#13;
ram sins" It w _ _&#13;
ho iwoorared enough e m m a m m i to&#13;
grasp the funeral oumt, but the old&#13;
lady's artmoe dtd the IT ••!••. It was&#13;
n*&#13;
Court of&#13;
ttn* haa decided nam&#13;
evidence In trials&#13;
rai!^:v: r '! «&gt;na.&#13;
I I of Hires Rootbeer&#13;
on a sweltering hot&#13;
day is highly essea~&#13;
tial to comfort and&#13;
health. It cools the .&#13;
blood, reduces your&#13;
temperature, tones&#13;
the stomach:&#13;
HIRES Rootbeer&#13;
[should be in every&#13;
home, in every&#13;
office, in every workshop.&#13;
A temperance&#13;
drink, more healthful&#13;
than ice water,&#13;
[more deHghtfhLand&#13;
estbfying than any&#13;
other beverage produced.&#13;
KafeMtoH *» OMH» B.&#13;
iw,c»..r&gt;uiiiii|Hi, *wfc- • U M&#13;
mtm^mm^tlm^mmm^ $100 Tojny Man.&#13;
WILL PAY aioo FOR A N Y C A S E&#13;
ett ie&#13;
yell tm Car*.&#13;
An Oam** Company pieces for tb#-dr»t&#13;
time before the peuuc a MAAICAX. Taaar-&#13;
*i£r,:rrm imp !!•'•£?• »•*«•&#13;
fKTCRffO, VIM (L.IMUW.UM*JBTIB.*xmfDlawuX&#13;
vM.osk» n«M«*w«»?w.stoouiaMs^«MUk7&#13;
•a s w ^ a f P f l H . svwiuaoN e&gt;oo,.WMaw&#13;
P ENSIOH8, PATOiTS,CUMM^&#13;
•fy'nJBUMWjiiAiWikmUwM niuu*,»tiy tin—.&#13;
NEW DISCOVERY; +-&#13;
__ _ _ _ qwlcJc T*liml *au anr— &lt; w S&#13;
CMM. bend t-A tHookS To. fs .fauv*etaaus»sUs'tses tusxst. I1H0M dJaITyWs*&#13;
^ . . , . . . , . .,r 1.1 1 Stt I T We can ts*» yes m—m un&#13;
9 ml Drup, Patent Kedldaes,&#13;
lH«esiiArie« list mSffln%Kto any Area*&#13;
PAUL V. FINCH * CO., 6ra*d RspMs, alien,&#13;
B. M. SfBAD A PRJCXTnttf,&#13;
need&#13;
Exercise-*&#13;
^&#13;
for the esse of Lost Vitality, N&lt;&#13;
and Sexual Wsaka&#13;
Ufe Force in eld&#13;
wom-oat Fnoch remedy; contains no&#13;
Phoepncrows or other harmfal drug*, It is&#13;
a WoxnaaruL TnnATManT msgieal ia its&#13;
•sTects positlvs ia its care. All raaders,&#13;
who are saffering from a weaknsat that&#13;
bagbta thair Ufe, c*aring that mental and&#13;
physical Nffft-itog paeaiiar &gt;tp Lost Manhood,&#13;
ehoald write to th« 8TATBMBDICAL&#13;
OOMPAHY, Oiaelis, Jffwli., and Ihsf wnf&#13;
send^you absolately FREE, a valaable&#13;
paper oathese diseases, and poaitivapreofs&#13;
of laefar tmly nUeicai. TnaayiimtT. Thaiav&#13;
DMB. who have ioat all hope of a&#13;
cure, era beuag reetored by them to a parfact&#13;
condition.&#13;
This MAOICAX. TaaATMnMT may be taken&#13;
at home under their dilution*, or they will&#13;
pay railroad fare and hotel bine to afl who&#13;
prefer to go there for tnsrmeaf, If they&#13;
fail to ear*. They are per*&#13;
have no Free Praaeriptfoaa, Free Cars,&#13;
Free Sample, or C. O. D. fake. They have&#13;
txexiai capital, and gmarantae m emu&#13;
they treat or refund every del*&#13;
tar: or their charges may he dayeeksd in a&#13;
b*ak to be paid to them wheel a cure is&#13;
ugeetettr WWr* *»—*• «o^#*. ••-'• r . - -,v.&#13;
erase there&#13;
would nbt be&#13;
Cobicy-&#13;
Ics to g»&#13;
• • • Columbia Bkyclet^.«&#13;
CytmUfiufrmfrum&#13;
kfaimilfora*. **mt&#13;
Chicly tfl Catilifiia&#13;
I T KILLS&#13;
Crmy mtingwrnl A * l i&#13;
I n M la br •» *t*&gt;VtmAm « « — ' "&#13;
Santa Fe Route.&#13;
Open to All.&#13;
erte&#13;
• . i t t r ^ l f . i . A ^ T s l t . r i ,&#13;
±±&#13;
W.M. u.--D*«^ROtT^*io.2m-^a&gt;Jr&#13;
4&#13;
.'•VS.&#13;
m&#13;
* r&#13;
"4~L&#13;
-Ol&#13;
/&#13;
&gt; J&#13;
• ' " ' ,&#13;
¢-&#13;
$ : ' • -&#13;
fete:* •&#13;
M:&#13;
t»-i- .'&#13;
^&#13;
* »&#13;
«*T&#13;
- r - f *.i_U.l_ ..„.j&gt;te.„.». .4.i)Wi':*j&lt;iJi'i. i • i-* i- V&gt;»u&gt;,'..« V ' v&#13;
— a — - u .&#13;
1 • V&#13;
**mmm&#13;
IHAINFUElnV&#13;
Whereas :-r*It has pleased Abe all&#13;
wise Creator to remove from our&#13;
midst the worthy Sir Knight and Brother&#13;
A. A. Wilson be it therefore&#13;
Resolved:—That wo the members of&#13;
the Plainfield Tent No. 669 K. 0, T.&#13;
M. extend to the wife and^ children&#13;
our^ deepest sympathies. Vv.&#13;
E&gt; L. TOPPINO, P.&lt;3om.&#13;
E. K. BRALET, Com.&#13;
P. M. VANSYCKEL. E. K.&#13;
CHAPEL ITEMSA&#13;
« JS. .Foster, wife and son visitedjfrfencU&#13;
at Holly fchd Detroit&#13;
last week.&#13;
An ice cream social will be held&#13;
at the Chapel on Friday evening&#13;
June 18 and all are invited,&#13;
Frank Coleman closes a very&#13;
successful term of school on Friday&#13;
June 18 at the Wright's&#13;
school house.&#13;
A June narty was given Miss&#13;
Emma Pecott at fcer home at D.&#13;
Wright's last Saturday evening.&#13;
There were present guests from&#13;
-45outh X*yon, North -Lake, Plainfield&#13;
and other places. The evening&#13;
was passed very pleasantly&#13;
with music and games.&#13;
PETTEYSVlLLfc&#13;
Tommie Shenan of the Ypsilanti&#13;
high school is home;'for.the vacation.&#13;
Tom Flintoff started today for&#13;
Toledo to deliver ice for George&#13;
8chu]^rv . ;&#13;
W | &amp; Jackson f ^ H noMtiey was&#13;
the gueSti of friends near iiere last&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Mike Bird of Iosc6 will help&#13;
Will McQuillan through haying&#13;
and harvest l&#13;
Additional Loc*tf&#13;
Do not forget the;lioyal Guard&#13;
"special" meetiufr on Friday evening&#13;
of this week.&#13;
The Juniors, of the Pincknay High&#13;
school, tend the Senior class a reception,&#13;
Saturday evening, at the home&#13;
of Wm, A. Spront. '&#13;
The funeral of Daniel Sackett was&#13;
held at Dexter on Tuesday of this&#13;
week. Mr. Sackett was well known&#13;
in this place having 'done much carpenter&#13;
work.bfilBfc...&#13;
A great many from here attended&#13;
the children's day exercises at the N.&#13;
Hamburg church last Sunday p. m.&#13;
The church was finely decorated and&#13;
the exercise* were fine. ' -&#13;
An extensive experiment is being&#13;
made on the Michigan Agricultural&#13;
farm of utility 6t the low&#13;
pea as a soil renovator. Its use&#13;
is quite general in the sou^h for&#13;
this purpose and it is hoped to be&#13;
found useful in the north.&#13;
Pinckney is talking of celebrating&#13;
the July 3, and are trying to have the&#13;
Stockbridge and Chelsea base ball&#13;
teams meet there and play a game in&#13;
(he afternoon—Stockbridge Brief.&#13;
Where did you get your news, Bro.&#13;
Morgan? We have not heard of such&#13;
a"vhing. : ~~ " ""&#13;
mm*trmmm*m*m&#13;
About 35 members^l -fee- k i t e&#13;
society took tea with Mrs. Fred&#13;
Jarvis last Wednesday.&#13;
Miss Treeea Melvin closed a&#13;
very successful term of school in&#13;
the Cady district last Friday.&#13;
Children's day' exercises were&#13;
largely attended at the church&#13;
laat Sunday the church was handsomely&#13;
decorated and a fine program&#13;
was rendered&#13;
Last Saturday as George Sweeney&#13;
accompanied by Mrs. Case and&#13;
her grandchild were driviug just&#13;
west of town, the horse became&#13;
frightened at some rubbish by the&#13;
side of the road and overturned&#13;
the buggy throwing the occupants&#13;
out and injuring Mr. Sweeney&#13;
quite bad.&#13;
ANDERSON.&#13;
Mrs. John Birnie is quite sick.&#13;
Jas. Marble and wife spent Sunday&#13;
in Pinckney.&#13;
F. A. Daniels of Gregory shipped&#13;
a car load of hay the first of&#13;
t h e w * &amp; J &gt; * V :f * J '••&#13;
David Taylor went to Owosso&#13;
Wednesday toTtttend the wedding&#13;
of a friend.&#13;
Thany and Nora Durkee spent&#13;
a few days the past week with&#13;
Gregory friends.&#13;
Frank Bugg of Howell called&#13;
on Anderson friends the latter&#13;
part of the week.&#13;
Miss Josie Baluss visited her&#13;
* » e k J. E. Durkee and family a&#13;
few days last week.&#13;
Miss Lettie Wylie,whr) is teaching&#13;
school at Hudson was the&#13;
guest of her parents Sunday.&#13;
Michael Roche closed a very&#13;
successful term of school at Parker's&#13;
Corners on Friday last&#13;
Depression&#13;
of Spirits&#13;
so -common in summer-tims&gt;&#13;
accompanied by loss of energy,&#13;
lack of thought-power, means&#13;
a deficient Supply of nourishment.&#13;
| The viul force is lost.&#13;
It isn't*aque£&amp;®n of muscle and&#13;
sinew, but of resistance and&#13;
endurance. At any age, but&#13;
especially in youth, It involves&#13;
the risk of lung disease. Loss&#13;
offlesh and a cough are threaterimgsigns.&#13;
_ _&#13;
of Cod-liver Oil, with the hypophosphites,&#13;
meets these cases&#13;
perfectly. It tones up, fattens&#13;
and strengthens.&#13;
In Scott's Emulsion the taste&#13;
of the oil is fully disguised,&#13;
making it almost as palatable&#13;
as milk.&#13;
For kale at toe. and $r.«&gt; by all drogrgfsta.&#13;
SCOTT &amp; BOWSE, Mfre.. Chemist*. N«w YYia rt&#13;
SAT. JUNE 19,&#13;
We will sell&#13;
I PLUG PRUNE JUICE&#13;
TOBACCO for&#13;
16 CENTS&#13;
1 ,J»»&#13;
tended tfce#tupriae party at Em&#13;
ma Peaoot^6|J0B Saturday night.&#13;
JF• &amp; Ka»d*U closed i i s "fourth&#13;
r, term of school m l}i*tri&lt;* K*.. fr&#13;
-, fefohooildt lak*. • V; -0m^ •&#13;
8 Bars Jaxon or Lenox&#13;
Soap for&#13;
25 GENTS.&#13;
C boioe' caneed Pears . . . . . ,15&#13;
Choice caw^d grapes . . . . .15&#13;
3 -Cans Piuflifce . . . A . . .25&#13;
The ex^roi** at tb« M. £. church&#13;
Sunday moraiag ware excellent and&#13;
the ohuroh WJJ finely decorated. A&#13;
large audience Was present.&#13;
Phis! Bang!! The glorious fourth&#13;
is nearly here. Several towns are&#13;
talking j6f celebrating the 5th as the&#13;
fourth comet on Sunday b«£. Fowlerville&#13;
will celebrate the 3rd so as to—&#13;
Well, the 3rd is not the legal holiday,&#13;
don't cher know (?)&#13;
For some reason many of our subscribers&#13;
have been xnissfng their paper&#13;
for the past few weeks. We&#13;
would be glad if such would report to&#13;
us personally. We intend to deal&#13;
fairly with everyone and will be only&#13;
too glad to look the matter up if notified.&#13;
Time servers exist in every line&#13;
of business and perfunctory service&#13;
is a bane to any office which&#13;
aims to do good work. The man&#13;
who is always ready to start out&#13;
at the stroke of the hour or who&#13;
dwadles and impatiently awaits&#13;
the moment when he can get off&#13;
from his desk or work is not preforming&#13;
his duty to his employer.&#13;
Faithful preformance of duty can&#13;
not be expected from men who&#13;
are ever ready to do the least for&#13;
the wages^ which 4hey earni&#13;
LOOK HEBE.&#13;
The social announced on page 1, to&#13;
be held at the opera house on Saturday&#13;
^vening, has been postponed and&#13;
will be annoanced later. Do not forget&#13;
this.&#13;
Notice.&#13;
All members of the Pinckney Driving&#13;
rflub are requested to pay in their&#13;
subscription immediately to the treasurer&#13;
as money is needed.&#13;
Notice.&#13;
The Pinckney mill has been re-opened.&#13;
Wheat, corn and oats wanted.&#13;
Highest cash price paid.&#13;
Like a Blr*.&#13;
Bmtth—You told me your friend sang&#13;
Ito-T-Wrtr-r^rtrtn*- He-larrficffrT&amp;Iy&#13;
hoarse voice. How can you say It is&#13;
like a bird?&#13;
Jones—Well, the bird I meant was a&#13;
crow.—Judy.&#13;
3559¾&#13;
Mr. Isaac Horner, proftnptor ot&#13;
Burton House, Burton, W^. T*-» and&#13;
one of tbe most widely known men in&#13;
the state was cored of rheumatism&#13;
after three years of suffering. He&#13;
gays: "I have not sufficient command&#13;
of language to conyey any idea of&#13;
what I suffered, my physicians told&#13;
me that nothing could be done for me&#13;
and my friends were fully convinced&#13;
that nothing but death could relieve&#13;
me of my suffering. In June, 1894&#13;
Mr. Evans, then salesman for tbe&#13;
Wheeling Drug Co., recommended&#13;
Chamberlains—Pain Balmi—At tbit&#13;
Miifn'm • M f i w v w H wB^M&#13;
Needle* are &amp; nude by «M*h*fitm&#13;
The -piece of meeHnUm by wMeh 0 »&#13;
aefflto to »a*a«actured takee the wi0fcv&#13;
at**! Mkr*, mm, % Into proper leogty^&#13;
flies the p e t e V f l a t t * * tfce a e * 4&#13;
pierce* the aye, then aharpeaa the tinf&#13;
Instrument and give* H feat poU*h ***&#13;
mlimr t«dthejuroha»r. There U . a l s c&#13;
a machine brwJUca needles are oeuntei&#13;
and pla«ed in tbe papers imverMen M&#13;
are sold, these betag atUnrard l i M l l&#13;
fey the BMB* Qoatrivanee.&#13;
&lt; • ' • ! rw AH*t Seke. •c ?.&#13;
"Did you not know/' a*M tfce oi«Pi&#13;
"that such a poor oopy-o* a genuia^&#13;
note would »ure»y he detected f&#13;
The counterfeiter tossed hit bgftr&#13;
back from hit blue-veined brow.&#13;
"I sought,"4he haughtily answers*&#13;
"an artistic rather than a nnaaolal s»t»&#13;
cesa."—lArks.&#13;
NIOARAO^A MAHQQAWV,&#13;
»ee «»efiP" i t ^ ^ t Twe' otnete, Atojpta&#13;
«t«d&#13;
It wm undoubtedly be news to many&#13;
that the vast mahogany forests of&#13;
Nicaragua are controlled In Boston,&#13;
says the Boston Transcript The cutting&#13;
and snipping at the immense exports&#13;
from that cowntsf ts a great enterprise&#13;
in itself, to say nothing of&#13;
bringing it here and manufacturing It&#13;
Into lumber. One steamer plies regularly&#13;
between Boston and Central&#13;
America engaged in this trade. At&#13;
present she is on her way out from&#13;
Boston. From 600,000 to 700.000 feet&#13;
Is her usual cargo. While the steamer&#13;
is now on her way to the lumber&#13;
ports there are somewhere on the seas,&#13;
bound to Boston, four schooners laden&#13;
with mahogany logs. Their cargoes&#13;
are about 250,000 to 300,000 feet apiece.&#13;
Employed in Nicaragua and the United&#13;
States of Colombia by Mr. Emory&#13;
are from 1.000 to 1,500 native workmen&#13;
and lumbermen. These are under&#13;
American bosses. The trees from&#13;
which mahogany furniture is made&#13;
vary in age and else. When cut they&#13;
range in age from 25 to SO years and&#13;
some of them are even 76 years old.&#13;
They average twenty-live inches or&#13;
more in diameter and run as large as&#13;
forty Inches and even more. For every&#13;
mahogany tree that i s cut two others&#13;
are planted; and thus the forests are&#13;
practically inexhaustible. From the&#13;
time that the tree is felled to the hour&#13;
that it is dumped off the steamer at&#13;
the Chelsea docks 1B an eventful life&#13;
for the mahogany log. The tree Is cut&#13;
into the proper lengths and then comes&#13;
the tedious journey to the coast, where&#13;
it is taken on board the vessels bound , Twinkles&#13;
for this port The greater part of the&#13;
cutting is done during the dry season,*&#13;
which in the United States of Colombia&#13;
begins about the 1st of December.&#13;
The natives of that country seem to&#13;
make better loggers and are better&#13;
adapted te- lumbering than the Nicaraguans.&#13;
In Nicaragua the season is&#13;
more irregular and for lumbering ts&#13;
less to ta depended upon. After the&#13;
tree is cut it is hauled to the nearest&#13;
waterway and rafted to the coast. The&#13;
logs are hauled by teams of oxen from&#13;
one to six miles in Nicaragua, but oaten&#13;
the distance is very much greater, I lMJ»*ei^»g«^Tjr^««i»«i&#13;
the journey sometimes taking? twoffS^^^^$^^^i$&#13;
K:.&amp;&#13;
. . S f l i D O N .&#13;
Di»wl«*e—"Much mors' oars la sj&gt;&#13;
quired in building a hens* with&#13;
windows t*aa Is necessary In bull&#13;
a house with small windows." "&#13;
Van Braaen—"How's thai?" *&#13;
Dinwiddle—"It takes great panes."—-&#13;
Pittsburg Chronicle-Telegraph.&#13;
• e ' » • Little Fellow.&#13;
A baby that weighs but eight pouasa&#13;
at the age of 18 months, which is a&#13;
pound and a half less than It weighed&#13;
when born, is the center of gossip in&#13;
the little town of Danbury, N. H,&#13;
: - ' * "&#13;
m*;i&#13;
No Dong or.&#13;
Doctor—"You won't forget&#13;
mediciner Patient-"Cajrt,&#13;
It's too disagreeable to forget'VWEAK&#13;
MEN MADE VttOROUI.&#13;
days. The roads consist of paths&#13;
through the forests that are nothing&#13;
more than swamps and morasses,&#13;
through which the oxen and horses&#13;
flounder along. Only animals trained&#13;
to this kind of work would ever make&#13;
any progress and American besets&#13;
would wallow about perfectly helpless.&#13;
: &gt;&#13;
=rrt fe'ttdo*io. sWs laartdh*s PoOfM to oMi Olti&#13;
b«fl*jrrls4ln*««tn * w ? £ U t t S ^&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler.&#13;
:.'. iiiltiii'&#13;
&amp;&#13;
time my foot and limb were swollen&#13;
to more than double their normal size&#13;
and it seemed to me my leg would&#13;
burst, but soon after I began using&#13;
tbe Pain Balm, tbe swelling began to&#13;
decrease, the pain to leave, and now I&#13;
consider that I am entirely cured. For&#13;
sale by F. A.Sigler. \, '&#13;
9 l g = = B B M S » g g g » g g g 8 g B&#13;
6~pkgs. Washing Pow. . . . . .25&#13;
/&#13;
These Bales must jbe CA^fi.&#13;
' * »&#13;
V* -&#13;
/ —&#13;
nearGAGE «AE.£.&#13;
Default having been made in- tbe coudition&#13;
of a certain mortgage (whereby- the power of sale&#13;
therein contained to sell h u become operative)&#13;
made by Michael Larey and Jennie I^avey, his&#13;
wife of the township of Dexter, Washtenaw&#13;
county, Michigan to William Clark of the place&#13;
aforesaid and dated March 19,1887 and recorded&#13;
In the office of tbe Register of Deeds for the&#13;
county of Llvinsaton state of Michigan on the&#13;
21st day of March 1887 in liber 50 of mortgages on&#13;
page 166 thereof, on whioh mortgage there la&#13;
claimed to be due at tlie date of this notice the&#13;
sum of four hundred and fifty-one dollars and&#13;
sixty-eight cents ($451.68) and no suit or proceedings&#13;
at law or in equity having been oom&#13;
menoed to recover the debt secured by said morttago&#13;
or aay psrt thereof; Theteiof-notke Is&#13;
hereby given that on Friday the 1Mb day of July&#13;
A.D. 18*7 at one o'clock in tbe aftetnoon of said&#13;
4ay «t the meat front door of the court noose&#13;
it the village of Howell In said county (that being&#13;
the place of holding the circuit court for the&#13;
count; in which the mortgaged premises are situated&#13;
) tbe said mortgage will be foreclosed by&#13;
tale at public vendue to the highest bidder of&#13;
the premises described In said mortgage or so&#13;
much thereof as may be necessary to satisfy the&#13;
amount due on said sjortgage with interest and&#13;
lo«al eoete, that la to ssy: All those -pertain pieces&#13;
Getting time for tbe&#13;
Weather to catch up with the Almanac&#13;
Getting time to&#13;
Shed the Heavy Underwear&#13;
AfField's we are ready for you on seasonable ,&#13;
i Underwear and Hosiery.&#13;
Men's 50c Balbriggan Shirts and Drawers.&#13;
Never wore better for the price.&#13;
Men's Balbriggan Knee Bicycle Drawers, double-seated, $1.25.&#13;
German Balbriggan Shirts and Drawers $L00 each.&#13;
Men's and Boy's Laundered Shirts&#13;
with fancy bosoms and detached eufts to match.&#13;
Excellent trade for yon at 50c.&#13;
*&#13;
or parcels otland situate Sitae Tillage «&lt; Flacknay,&#13;
Livingston county, Michigan and Oeeribed&#13;
as follows to wit: Lots leaf &lt;&lt;i) and Ave (*) in&#13;
Black four (4) according te a plat and survey o&lt;&#13;
said village as recorded i s 4be oHoe 0¾ BaflUterof&#13;
Deads of said Livingston county.&#13;
Datad How«U April i t A . O. lSff.&#13;
WILLIAM CLARK,&#13;
e*S ^ Mrrtjajsje&#13;
gaspae A. f*»we, Attorney iar Mortgsfas.&#13;
rtfrhTo^^HIWOtTWYOtt&#13;
TVs have about seventy Spring and Fall&#13;
Jaekets of last season's stock—j ust right for Dr.iving&#13;
and Bicyettel?. Ton can have them as follows&#13;
Eleven garments, | 5 qualities, your choiee %i$%.&#13;
Eighteen garments, $6 to $9, your choice $2.96.&#13;
Forty-five garments, up to $12 goods, your choice $3.96.&#13;
Fourteen garasents, up to $15, your oboice I6JW: ~&#13;
At these prices these Garments will go quickly.&#13;
Come in before the best of theia are gona.&#13;
Do not forget to come to Jackson to the * if&#13;
CITIZEN'S LEGAL oelebrat4on Juijr 5.&#13;
' - • . ' . . , ' • ' • ' - " Yoare fiespecifaJl&#13;
te.&#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 June 17, 1897</text>
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                <text>June 17, 1897 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1897-06-17</text>
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                <text>Frank L. Andrews</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>RfctHVEffllY ^ 1 ^ .&#13;
&lt; » f '&#13;
Oar Semi-Annual stook taking will occur on July 1st.&#13;
Pwriottt to that time we propose, majkjog snob keen reductions on many lines&#13;
tbuf pUcin^the stook in better intbice trim, and making it ready for tbe&#13;
Autumn buying, that it will make tbe month of Jane a memoriable one lot&#13;
economical purchasers. A itook that is nght in every way full&#13;
and complete every detail of quality and style the best at the lowest prices.&#13;
Jfancy Sateens, the 15c quality at 6%&#13;
JPaney Dress Suitings at 7%&#13;
Fancy Wool Dress Suitings 50c&#13;
"quality at 35&#13;
A Line of 50c Corsets, 35&#13;
8cSiiirting, 05&#13;
$3.00 and $3.50 Ladies* Shoes at $2.50&#13;
35T&gt;T.Ladtes'J&amp;OaShoes,&#13;
(sizes 2½ to 3¾) at $1.25&#13;
Men's 50 cent neckwear at 40&#13;
Butter tiP Eggs Wanted.&#13;
F. G. JACKSON.&#13;
M M DAT AT FMNIY.&#13;
8ATURDAY, JULY 3, 1897&#13;
TO BE A BAT OF SPORTS.&#13;
' Prink Moran, wno has been workin?&#13;
ittp He* 5Tork for some time re-'&#13;
to irnod bere on Friday.&#13;
dewberries have been selling in&#13;
this place for four cents per quart the&#13;
past week.&#13;
All of tbe eurrounding towns that Decker.&#13;
L o c a l D i s p a t c h e s .&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. BL G. Briggs visited&#13;
Howell relatives Saturday.&#13;
Mrs. J. Wright and daughter of&#13;
Lake City are guests of Mrs. flattie&#13;
The race track being completed and&#13;
a good diamond made on the grounds,&#13;
the Driving Club have deoided to hold&#13;
a day of sports on Saturday, July 3rd,&#13;
and have made great arrangements&#13;
for a grand time on that date.&#13;
At 10 o'clock a. m. there will be a&#13;
good ball game and foot races and at&#13;
2:30 tbe game of tbe day will be called—&#13;
Btockbridge YS Chelsea. As these&#13;
teams are rivals a good game may be&#13;
looked for,&#13;
During the afternoon |25 worth of&#13;
blankets will be given to the winners&#13;
of the horse races. There will be a&#13;
3 minute pace or trot, 2:40 pace or&#13;
trot and. a 2:30 pact* or trot, also a&#13;
rjinning_race. Bicycle races will take&#13;
plaee also and liberal prizes will be&#13;
given for a ladies' half mile race, boys&#13;
half mile race and a one mile race,&#13;
free for all.&#13;
Do not miss this day of sports but&#13;
join in the races as there will be foot&#13;
races, fat man's race, lean man's race,&#13;
sack race, etc. A dance will be given&#13;
in the hotel. Admission to the race&#13;
course grounds 15 cents. Children&#13;
under 12 free.&#13;
ONE&#13;
• * • •&#13;
celebrate will do so on the 3rd of July&#13;
instead of the 5th except Mason.&#13;
Well (?)&#13;
P. A. 8igler.has had a very fine&#13;
cement floor put in hie cellar at the&#13;
drug store, 8. Grimes and John MortensOn&#13;
have been doing the work.&#13;
Business Pointers.&#13;
Noticeis hereby given to the taxpayers&#13;
of the village of Pinckney that&#13;
the village assessment roll is now in&#13;
my hands and I am ready to receive&#13;
taxes. From now until July 15, only&#13;
will be ohargort wnri after&#13;
that date a charge ot four per cent&#13;
will be made for collection.&#13;
J. A. CADWKLL, Treasurer.&#13;
Get Starks fine photos on June 30.&#13;
All kinds of Job Prating done at&#13;
this office. Call and get prices.&#13;
Cuban giant fodder seed corn for&#13;
sale at 60e per bu. JOB* W. HABEIB.&#13;
I . in •&#13;
Program Cards, School Cards, Envelopet,&#13;
Letter Heads, Note Heads,&#13;
•nation Hills, etc. Call and get&#13;
samples.&#13;
To Seat&#13;
Two houses on banks on Mortage&#13;
lake. By the week, month or season.&#13;
Bent reasonable* jttt£5 T.Bnuorc.&#13;
The C. E. society will serve ice&#13;
cream, cake and lemonade during the&#13;
day and evening at the opera house&#13;
July 3rd.&#13;
There will be a strawberry social at&#13;
tbe home of I. J. Abbott, of Marion,&#13;
on Tuesday evening, June 29, for the&#13;
benefit of Rev. M. H. McMahon. All&#13;
are cordially invited.&#13;
The 2nd division of the Ladies' Aid&#13;
society of the ML £. church will hold&#13;
an loe Cream social at the home of&#13;
Dr. H. F. Sigler, nfet Friday evening,&#13;
June 25th. All are cordially invited.&#13;
We received a change of time and&#13;
price on the Grummond line of steamdin&#13;
Hi In HIHII lmo late to makn thfl&#13;
change in the table. They leave Detroit&#13;
daily at 11 p. m. instead of 9 and&#13;
the price is 25 cents instead of 50.&#13;
Children's Day exercises at the Congregational&#13;
church last Sabath morning&#13;
passed off very pleasantly. The&#13;
church was very nicely decorated with&#13;
ferns and flowers, and the children did&#13;
credit to themselves and teachers.&#13;
Pinokney is a very lively plaee these&#13;
days. Two brick blocks going up on&#13;
Main st, St Mary'8 parsonage on the&#13;
church property and T. Bead's residence&#13;
on Mill st, serve to keep most&#13;
ot the people busy. Good. Let tbe&#13;
good work go on—there is «o &gt; better&#13;
or finer Tillage in the country.&#13;
Tbe members of the Livingston&#13;
Lodge, F. k A. M* are requested to&#13;
meat at the lodge room, in Pinokney,&#13;
on Sunday evening, June 27th, at 7&#13;
OBITUARY.&#13;
Joel B. Dunning died at his home&#13;
in this place Monday evening June 21,&#13;
Mr. punning was born in Saratoga&#13;
county, N. Y., July 4,1815. Here he&#13;
lived for twenty-five years. On Nov.&#13;
18,1840 he married Miss Louise Miller.&#13;
They lived in N. Y. for ten years&#13;
then came to Michigan in 1855 settling&#13;
on a farm four miles north-west&#13;
of Pinokney-.- Tn 1870 they moved to&#13;
Pinckney. Mr. Dunning leaves a&#13;
wife and three daughters, to mourn&#13;
their loss. Funeral will be held this&#13;
afternoon at 2 o'clock from the residence.&#13;
' J&#13;
ABOUT&#13;
MAN * IN m TEN&#13;
D O E S N O T&#13;
. . Trade With . .&#13;
• « • • U O . . . . •&#13;
We're After That Man!&#13;
About one man in ten dosen't know&#13;
that his neighbors are saving money on&#13;
every deal, because they trade with us,&#13;
We're After That Man!&#13;
About one man in ten can't be expected&#13;
to know that we are headquarters for&#13;
• ' • : • $&#13;
•y&#13;
1&#13;
&amp; :&#13;
•4*1&#13;
• V 'J&#13;
' • ' • • «&#13;
•n&#13;
i&#13;
And we expect to get his trade.&#13;
ARE YOU THE TENTH MAN?&#13;
WE'RE AFTER YOU!&#13;
F. A. SIGLER.&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICH.&#13;
fa&#13;
•i'M&#13;
WEARE&#13;
m &lt;m&#13;
JUNIOR BAXqUET.&#13;
On Saturday evening of last week&#13;
the Juniors of the Pinckney High&#13;
school held their second annual banquet&#13;
at the home of their supt., W.&#13;
A. Sprout. The guests began assembling&#13;
about 8 o'clock and in a short&#13;
time a happy party to the number of&#13;
about fifty were enjoying themselves&#13;
in the best manner possible. Early in&#13;
tVu» Awning, th« a^mblv was called&#13;
Bepatr Shops Erasing | o'olock, for thrf purpose of attending&#13;
Divine services in a body at the&#13;
church. The members of Pinokney&#13;
chapter, O. E. 8., are also invited te&#13;
meet at the same time and place.&#13;
H.V. SxoLxa, W. M.&#13;
and Enameling Bicycles. Engines,&#13;
mowers and other repairing both&#13;
wood an iron. Bike* and Sundries.&#13;
A COLEMAN.&#13;
msi—ottsr&#13;
All kindi and grade* of maikfceeoila&#13;
to be sold cheaper than&#13;
neaei It wiH be to your advantage&#13;
to cell oa&#13;
T;&#13;
to order by Mr. Percy Swarthout,&#13;
Pres. of the class of '98, and the program&#13;
was opened with an instrumental&#13;
solo by Miss Etbel Bead. Mr.&#13;
Swarthout then gave an address of&#13;
welcome and in behalf of the class of&#13;
'98 he extended a cordial welcome to&#13;
the invited guests. The response was&#13;
given by Miss Anna B. Miller, Pres.&#13;
of the class of '97. Miss Maude Teeple&#13;
then read an essay entitled "Should&#13;
Education be Compulsory?" which&#13;
brought out many points concerning&#13;
the necessity of obtaining an education.&#13;
A duet was rendered by Messrs&#13;
Martin and Swarthout after which&#13;
Miss Alma Shehan gave a select reading&#13;
entitled "Time." An essay on&#13;
"Grinders" was then read by Mr&#13;
Fred Sprout, and after listening to&#13;
solos by Miss Nellie Gardner, Lucius&#13;
Wilson and Percy Swarthout the prol&#13;
^* 1 gram waa concluded by a few remarks&#13;
* fc by Mrs. W. A. Sprout.&#13;
The party then retired to the dining&#13;
room where refreshments were served.&#13;
Too mnch cannot be said of the host&#13;
and hostess for they did justice in en&#13;
The Christian Endeavoreri will hold! frrtamfafl their frneata. All enjoyed&#13;
Always,&#13;
Everlastingly,&#13;
Continuously,&#13;
Persistently^&#13;
Effectively&#13;
Seeking Trade.&#13;
W E S E L L&#13;
Oil 8toves,,&#13;
Gasoline Stoves,&#13;
Wood Stoves,&#13;
Lawn Mowers,&#13;
Bicycles,&#13;
Farming Implements, etc&#13;
i'-'-'i&#13;
W E W I L L&#13;
Gladly,&#13;
Politely,&#13;
Carefully,&#13;
Promptly&#13;
Wait Upon You.&#13;
.1 .*v-&#13;
Respectfully Yours,&#13;
TEEPLE 4*CADWELL.&#13;
9 1 SPECIALS&#13;
FOB&#13;
Saturday June 26, and continuing&#13;
one week.&#13;
&lt;.-r&#13;
ov REDUCE &lt;&amp;s&#13;
SHOE STOCK,&#13;
WILL SELL&#13;
EVERY PAIR OF&#13;
SHOES IN OUR STOCK,&#13;
AT&#13;
a sun rise prayer meeting J uly 4 lead&#13;
by the pastor. tenia, "boaeterated&#13;
patriots, what will they do?" Dent&#13;
82:1-18. We moat eordiaUy invite&#13;
•very one to attend than meeting and&#13;
ate how delightful i n to meet together&#13;
in the earry e^aiet Sabbath&#13;
morning to worship the ftoeat Bakr&#13;
ef the Universe. .^&#13;
a very pleasant evening and regretted&#13;
that the happy school days were nearing&#13;
an end. Though the days of school&#13;
ace one of toil and strife, yet in tbe&#13;
end they are priceless trenenree and&#13;
ean never be forgotten. In the future&#13;
many «f at may look beck anon our&#13;
aeaoel day* and regret that oar time&#13;
had been ee idly&#13;
.&lt; Absolute COST.&#13;
All package coffee at 13c per pound.&#13;
Remember the dates. Produce&#13;
BARNARD s» CAMPBELL.&#13;
^ .&#13;
i 'i ^ &gt;i&#13;
'•&lt; k&lt;&#13;
fc&#13;
•mi&#13;
&amp;K-&#13;
£ I:' ..&#13;
i •&#13;
« • ' ' ' • ' '&#13;
fcf&#13;
' ' ' ' ' ( » &gt; . ' ' -IV * ' ' ' ' • " ' " .\ • . -i. , . . 1 . , . * . \t . i: &lt; "&#13;
, ; v . ' &gt; . : • . .••• •,?.: ' ' / &gt; V ;.• « ' : : : ; ' • ; . ' . * &lt; - ' , ' , , : ' - ' . „ ' - . - ' ' . • ' .' • , ' ' •''&#13;
rv&#13;
-i—-¾—«_&#13;
. . ' • . • &gt;&#13;
- , 1 +&#13;
• i ,&#13;
• S:&#13;
'! * '.&#13;
' • , - i ' ' ' • • ' . . '&#13;
T •v&#13;
-L&#13;
4&#13;
i -&#13;
s* s as 4UUWUU-1&#13;
WITHIN OUft W&#13;
u«. -»« &gt;v&#13;
Vac ***** A ^ M i t u t rr»t»r«* OHyial&#13;
far, tee Sfsjct t v t X « W » T - A CJestt?&#13;
Keat Ooentf.&#13;
1 unta* gl.lts.ias.ts—f«r lgey-s.&#13;
Qeaeral jfente Aecountant?Huttpbrey&#13;
M l oompleted official figures giving&#13;
In, detail the amount and the puraoae&#13;
.pt, eajjji appropriation made by&#13;
WkgiaWWvtt fcw ••*&amp; °&lt; tho y « « n&#13;
{89?»nn4« lfW. These fifures show&#13;
tbat/*he special appropriations of the&#13;
laglOatave aggregate $1,384,177.^3 for&#13;
4flW&gt; «ml«M«,ad8.ttS for 18M. To these&#13;
ffttata must be added the lery for the&#13;
fenera.t plurpfoses of the state goye raiment&#13;
and the fixed charges provided&#13;
fsttbjr previous legislatures, In order&#13;
Co obtain the total amount of state tax&#13;
ft* the** years, which for 1897 will be&#13;
#9,971.99.31, as compared with $3,018,&#13;
Olft.53 for 1895; and for 1808 it will be&#13;
•3,018,2^.03, ss compared with 82,068,-&#13;
«88.03 for l M Thetotal for the curcant&#13;
two years is $4,303,134.85, as&#13;
against $5,088,458.14 for the previous&#13;
biennial period. This shows a saving&#13;
Of $680,333.88 in favor of the present Sfislature. There were however, as&#13;
e lawyers say, extenuating circumstances&#13;
which lavor the previous legislature,&#13;
as *fe appropriation of $600,000&#13;
had to be made to make up a deficiency&#13;
from the years 1803-4.&#13;
A P—r D N T Ktlllac&#13;
One of the deer in the park at the&#13;
Soldiers* Home at Grand Rapids escaped.&#13;
Charles See pies and Franlc&#13;
Hjder, well-known citizens of Courtland&#13;
township, saw it and killed i t&#13;
Then remembering that they had violated&#13;
the game laws tbey went before&#13;
a justioe, pleaded guilty and were&#13;
^They t h o % h l they had&#13;
le ga&lt;ae&gt; warden, but that offi-&#13;
&lt;ite&gt;hdaKbof&lt;tbe matteit, had them&#13;
brought before Justice Watt, where&#13;
• n e j pleaded guilty again. The law&#13;
says that the fine for killing deer out&#13;
df:season shall be not less than $50.&#13;
WfiettfeP Justice Watt can cut the fine&#13;
in two and give both $35 apiece after&#13;
both pleaded guilty ^ to killing the&#13;
deer, is a question.&#13;
• — • i • « — - • • ' ' - • j&#13;
M1CHIQAN NBWS ITEMS.&#13;
• Johnnie Sheehan, aged 14, of Calun&#13;
e ^ was drowned in a small pond.&#13;
Oakland -county farmers complain&#13;
"that potato bugs are more plentiful&#13;
-tibnn ever before "known.&#13;
-^he-Seventh Miehigaja infantry held&#13;
the annual reunion at Dundee. James&#13;
-Greenfield, of Flushing, was elected&#13;
president.&#13;
811 Lettala, a miner in the Cleveland&#13;
Lake mine at I&amp;bpeming, touched an&#13;
uninsulated electric wire and was instantly&#13;
killed.&#13;
Over 3.000 Maccabees of Detroit and&#13;
surrounding places held a big picnic at&#13;
Bette Isle in honor of the sixteenth anot&#13;
the order.&#13;
SMrs. ^Bertha Symoads. an inmate of&#13;
thei1 Kalamaaoo asylum from Grand&#13;
•Sapids hung herself with a cord which&#13;
fastened a canvss jacket about her.&#13;
Albert Brlggs, aged *, of Sonthfield,&#13;
•Oakland county, got in the way of a&#13;
logging iruck and was run over. Several&#13;
ribs were broken and his recovery&#13;
is doubtful.&#13;
A. R. Cichy's saloon, grocery and&#13;
t&gt;aroom factory partly .burned at Man&#13;
Istse, together with their contents.&#13;
The loss is estimated at $3,000, and is&#13;
fulty insured.&#13;
k north bound Lake Shore train was&#13;
saved'from being wrecked In a washo&#13;
u t near Kalamazoo by C. A. Poland,&#13;
wttft f e l l l n * fatal on the. track after&#13;
he had signaled the train.&#13;
A near village is being platted in&#13;
in Koaald township, Ionia county, and&#13;
will be called Johnstown; An effort&#13;
will be made to have the government&#13;
efetabHsh a postolWre there.&#13;
C. a BsmeJA, a lomber dealer of&#13;
Cleveland, accidenjtai]|r fell cJB.-tiae Bmr&#13;
erjrdock at Esai Twwas. B c t e h u g to&#13;
a pile fully 88 minutes before his cries&#13;
were hoard and be was rescued ia an&#13;
exhausted condition by four boys.&#13;
The third annual jubilee of Jaekson,&#13;
Washtenaw and Hillsdale county Maccabees&#13;
a t Jackson drew a great crowd&#13;
and a fine program, under the direction&#13;
of CoL John E. Tyrrell, of the&#13;
First infantry, was fully carried o u t&#13;
Section 31, a mine of the Lake Superior&#13;
Co., at Ishpeming, has been closed&#13;
Anmm f a r a f l ladcftafto frillM*.&#13;
Is the inability to m*\) the&#13;
' ^A horrible aooidlnt 6ocuire«r tf^'llol-&#13;
(ton. While engsffe^in alovhng dik'a&#13;
, &gt; , - , , w jth ^»»Vl»ia&gt; r1rJaaf' ftMaaa.&#13;
ag^d 7$Y was ulevrn u p \ ^ e flesh being&#13;
strtppo* from-both ardtWand'nis e?es&#13;
so%ad»y injured: that "Ht? will leu* the&#13;
sight of one and probably that df both.&#13;
T h e auWtvors of company^, of the&#13;
Fourth Michigan cavalry, held their&#13;
81st annual reunion at Lake Cora hear&#13;
Paw Paw. OtScers elected: Captain&#13;
David Dillon; first lieutenant, John&#13;
By an; second lieutenant, George Musger;&#13;
secretary and quartermaster&#13;
Heavy J.vLovelaid.&#13;
The question of issuing bands to the&#13;
amount of 830,000 with which to defray&#13;
the city's proportion of the cost of contemplated&#13;
street improvements at&#13;
Sault Ste. Marie, was submitted to the&#13;
electors and was carried .by a majority&#13;
of over 300.. Aweii^suJtJbfjthe special&#13;
election approximately $80,000 will be&#13;
expended in .building good •streets.&#13;
Daniel Sheehau, aJ carn^T foreman,&#13;
has been' arrested ehfcrged with a&#13;
murderous assault upon AJevwife, who&#13;
was formerly a Miss Kern, of • Hsginaw.&#13;
r The young lady was well-cosnested&#13;
and married against the wishes&#13;
of her paren ta. Sheehan sho( a t i i s wife&#13;
three times when she was on a train.&#13;
Lyons entertained the veterans of&#13;
the Eighth infantry at their annual&#13;
reunion and every one, enjoyed the occasion.&#13;
They will visit Hay City next&#13;
year. The following officers were&#13;
chosen; President, Orrin Bump, of Bay&#13;
City* vice-president, J. C. Wilson, of&#13;
Flint; secretary and treasurer, G. C;&#13;
Beebe, of Bay City.&#13;
Ex-Controller Hiram A. Waite, of&#13;
Port Huron, who was convicted of embezzling&#13;
$1,000 from the city while he&#13;
was in office, was sentenced to five&#13;
years at Ionia by Judge Vance. The&#13;
judge scored the common council for&#13;
its loose methods in allowing a condition&#13;
of things to exist which would&#13;
permit of such a theft&#13;
A very heavy thunder storm passed&#13;
over Owosso doing much damage.&#13;
Cbaa. Moss, a laborer, was struck by&#13;
lightning and killed while sitting at&#13;
the supper table. Miss Horigan wap&#13;
seriously injured^and a horse owned by&#13;
Castrie &amp; Shaw was killed while the&#13;
driver was holding the team. At Corrunna&#13;
the Baptist parsonage was struck&#13;
by lightning.&#13;
A party of five Detroit young people&#13;
that had beeh sailing back and forth&#13;
in a small sail-boat from Harsen's&#13;
island, on S t Clair river, near Algonac,&#13;
to the Can ad ian sh ore, was _capsi zed,&#13;
and Miss Ada Beebe, of 270 Sixth&#13;
street, a student in the Detroit high'&#13;
school, and Newell E. Avery, of 50 Selden&#13;
avenue, were drowned. Avery&#13;
lost his life trying to save Miss Beebe.&#13;
Wm. Finch, aged 17, of Port Huron,&#13;
was instantly killed in a terrible manner.&#13;
He was employed by the Bell&#13;
Telephone Co. and was helping- erect&#13;
poles on Stone street A pole was&#13;
being raised to be pnt into the hole&#13;
when the ropes slipped and the pole&#13;
fell, striking Finch on the head. One&#13;
of the spikes of the pole entered his&#13;
head near tbe right eye, killing him&#13;
instantly.&#13;
A card placed on the front door of&#13;
the State bank building at Fen ton&#13;
reads: "In the bands of the&#13;
bank commissioner." This action was&#13;
not unexpected, as excited depositors&#13;
had been drawing heavily upon tbe&#13;
funds Of the b a n t l o r three days. The&#13;
bank conunissioner says that while the&#13;
bank lacks ready funds it holds securities&#13;
which will enable a receiver to&#13;
pay depositors nearly in full.&#13;
Fire in the business district of Weidman&#13;
destroyed three stores, and it was&#13;
only by harnif. vltnrt* that H»» »n».irtt&#13;
7 T&#13;
I&#13;
,Ths l a j a w n i t i— «r OTTO? last Fasrs, af&#13;
with a B o a t -&#13;
is «k* W«rUI»&#13;
•alslaet a j Drswals*.&#13;
A|tsa****«&#13;
3 m$mmtm&#13;
r« e -ft-*&#13;
1* s *CTT • * * ^ ?&#13;
AttsassS to KU1 President sf&#13;
An attempt was made to assassinate&#13;
Felix Fan re, president of the French&#13;
republic, while he was en route to&#13;
JLongchamptf to witness the Grand&#13;
Prix. While M. Faure's carriage was&#13;
passing a thicket near La-Cascade&#13;
restaurant, in the Bois de Boulognei a&#13;
bomb, which subsequentry proved 'to&#13;
be a piece of tubing about six, inohes&#13;
long and two inches in diameter, With&#13;
a thickness of half an Inch, ohurged&#13;
with powder aod swanshot exploded.&#13;
No one was injured by the explosion.&#13;
A man in the crowd suspected as the&#13;
prime mover, was arrested*&#13;
The attempt pa the, life of M,, Fan re&#13;
waH made on the very spot where&#13;
Berezowsky tried to shoot the essr of&#13;
Russia wnlle driving to the- miliary&#13;
review at Longchamps in 1867, and&#13;
where Francois, a lunatic, fired his revolver&#13;
at M. Faure on July 14 last.&#13;
Having this in mind, the police had&#13;
taken extra precautions. Mr. Faure&#13;
continued his journey and on his arrival&#13;
at thejface course he was warmly&#13;
congratulated on his escape by the&#13;
Grand Duke Serglus, Mr. Hauotaux&#13;
and other members of the cabinet&#13;
The president's sang froid will greatly&#13;
increase his popularity.&#13;
It is generally believed that the act&#13;
was that of a madman rather than&#13;
of conspirator.&#13;
grade of ore produced a* this property.&#13;
About 128 men will be thrown out of&#13;
Over tOO bicyclists of Ann Arbor par-&#13;
In a demonstration in favor&#13;
of good roads and special privileges.&#13;
It was a unique and attractive parade&#13;
led sir the faculty of tfce U. of ML with&#13;
free* dignity, foiiUw-ed by the faculty&#13;
Llcaenls* sod Oora«t« Kill TUNM Ladles.&#13;
The lives of three young ladies were&#13;
blotted out by lightning while they&#13;
were on their way home from the M.&#13;
E. church at Jacobsbnrg, O. The victims&#13;
are Minnie McGuire, daughter of&#13;
Rev. Thomas McGuire, Alpa Taylor&#13;
and Emma White, all about 10 years&#13;
of-a^ge. Sarah Boh ring was stunned&#13;
and may die&gt; They were walking together&#13;
in the road about 100 yards&#13;
from the church when they were&#13;
struck by lightning. It is believed&#13;
that the steel corse ta worn by the&#13;
three ,who were killed were the chief&#13;
eau&amp;e^of their-death^-aa Miss JSoJhring,&#13;
who was only stunned, wore none.&#13;
B»rn«r Barntto Suicides.&#13;
A dispatch from Funchal, Island of&#13;
Madeira, off the west coast of Morocco,&#13;
says that on the arrival there of the&#13;
Brrtish steamship Scot, which—left&#13;
Cable Bay (Cape Town) June 2 for&#13;
Southampton, it was announced that&#13;
Barney Barnato, the South Africa&#13;
"Diamond King," who was among the&#13;
passengers, had committed suicide by&#13;
leaping'overboard. His body was recovered.&#13;
NEWSY C O N D E N S A T I O N S .&#13;
W. J. Calhoun, the special commissioner&#13;
who returned recently from&#13;
Cuba has been called to Washington&#13;
for further consultation with the&#13;
President&#13;
CoL L. p. Stone has asked permission&#13;
from Sheriff Plunkett, at' Deadwood,&#13;
S. D., to adjust the noose and spring&#13;
the trap at the execution of Charles&#13;
Brown, the murderer ot Stone's wife.&#13;
The sheriff has granted the request.&#13;
South Dakota officials are having a&#13;
town escaped. Two dwellings and a&#13;
number of out-buildings was were also&#13;
burned. The loss will approximate&#13;
$10,000, with insurance of about half.&#13;
The village has only measrer facilities&#13;
for fighting fire so both men and woman&#13;
worked with terrible energy,,and&#13;
after a hard fight succeeded in stopping&#13;
the spread of the flames.&#13;
Thomas Turk, one of the pioneer&#13;
residents' and merchants of Detroit and&#13;
Pontiac, died at bis home at the latter&#13;
place, at the age of 77. He assisted in&#13;
layfng tbe first plank sidewalk, one&#13;
plank wide, between Grand Circus&#13;
partt and the city hall in Detroit,&#13;
which Was laid in 18381 In' 1^44 he&#13;
opened a small -grocery store in Pontiac.&#13;
The business steadily grew until&#13;
1875, when then he sold to his sons,&#13;
who still continue it on s large scale.&#13;
R. A. Wilson, superintendent of the&#13;
electric light plant at Marquette, says&#13;
he has discovered a complete model of&#13;
an electric lighting plant made by an&#13;
eccentric inventor named JbtarfngaUs&#13;
which has lain in disuse aiaee 1887 and&#13;
has just b e e * unearthed * id 'perfect&#13;
fly It 8 Itgttt similar"&#13;
to the incandescent bulb is said to be&#13;
obtained without the use +f a filament&#13;
UM light being caused by waves of&#13;
electrical energy forced through a vacuum&#13;
on "high frequency.''&#13;
The second annual reunion of the&#13;
CJpper Peninsula Veterans* nasootafaon&#13;
W9* held a t Escanaba. Representatives&#13;
of G. A. R. posts, WkNuans Belief&#13;
crops and 8oas of f e t s m n s camps&#13;
from all over the upper peninsula at-&#13;
A wholesale jail-break at the Pontiac&#13;
jail was averted b y a mere accident&#13;
Turnkey George Black, in making his&#13;
usual morning rounds, found the,&#13;
hesvy screen torn s w s y from one of&#13;
the corridor windows and the first set&#13;
of bare had been severed, the outside&#13;
windows lacking only one bar of being&#13;
cut sufficiently to allow the prisoners&#13;
to escape. When thus near to liberty&#13;
their only available saw slipped out of&#13;
the window and nothing further could&#13;
hard fight against grasshoppers, wnlch&#13;
are devasting all crops in Edmunds and&#13;
Brown counties. There are millions&#13;
of them and they travel over a field&#13;
like a huge gray blanket A bushel of&#13;
the pestiferous things can be gathered&#13;
up in 20 minutes.&#13;
Phil Armonr says he will g o out of&#13;
the butterine business July 1 as a result&#13;
of the anti-coloring act signed by&#13;
Gov. Tanner. The industry represents&#13;
a capital of about $1,000,000 and 1,300&#13;
men will be thrown o u t The annual&#13;
product of butterine - in - Chicage is&#13;
about 30,-000,000 pounds*&#13;
Gen. Nelson A- Miles, after visiting&#13;
the scene of. the Xteaeeo-Turk coniUct,&#13;
has arrived in London to represent tbei&#13;
United States army at th* nneen's jet&#13;
bltee. He thinks- the Turksers^a fine&#13;
lot of men, and that Edhem Pasha i a n&#13;
great general. Tbe Greeks, too, he,&#13;
says, are good soldiers and showed a&#13;
wonderful devotion to their cause.&#13;
Henry G. Bryant has arrived at&#13;
Yaakutat s i t a e ease of Mt Jit Klias&#13;
ia Alaska with a party of five who will&#13;
seek the mountain. Bryant is a Philparty&#13;
o i e x&#13;
ls\oA&#13;
•* *» &lt;*ur « mm*!*'&#13;
to, | J p v 4 S h e ^ V e t f 8 b i | | i n to&#13;
«ht uflnanakm hnd laJUed. TliU&#13;
j « » the sharp exchange between Mr.&#13;
Hoay; of stssaaehusetts, a n ? Mr. Tillman,&#13;
of South Carolina. The latter&#13;
again referred to aubllshed-eaargea of&#13;
irregularity' i n connection with the&#13;
sugar schedule1 and' asserted that the&#13;
Senate would, stand convicted before&#13;
the, American people if it failed to investigate&#13;
the charges, Mr. Hoar&#13;
calmly and,impressively- Tepefied, this&#13;
statement, his tone and language being&#13;
calculated as a rebuke. He declared&#13;
that the vague cbsr^ges were •, pot poly&#13;
preposterous but infamoua. vMrV Allison,&#13;
in charge of the bill, mjide another&#13;
speech ih defehse of thai amhfifnU,&#13;
presenting tables which he de'elared&#13;
proved that the sugar refiners received&#13;
less protection under the Senate schedule&#13;
than tinfler the existing law. Mr.&#13;
Pettigrew, of South DakoU, spoke at&#13;
length in favor of his amendment to&#13;
place on the free list articles controlled&#13;
by trusts, severely arraigning the various&#13;
large trusts. Mr. Alien, of Nebraska,&#13;
urged legal procedure against&#13;
the trusts HOUSE—The Hous* adjourned&#13;
after a session4&gt;f 48 minutes.&#13;
The only attempt to1 transact busmen&#13;
was a request by Mr. Laoey, of Iowa,&#13;
for unanimous consent to a -bill for the&#13;
relief of cyclone sufferers in Greer&#13;
county, Ok la, Mr. Henry, of Texas,&#13;
promptly objected, and then, after the&#13;
usual Democratic protest against the&#13;
Republican policy «f oot appointing&#13;
committees, the House, by 88 to 78,&#13;
with 15 present and not voting, decided&#13;
to adjourn. Before the session began&#13;
the hub of a whee],. wound round w^th&#13;
a monster petition said to contain&#13;
6,000,000 signatures, appealing to con*,&#13;
gress to recognize the Cuban insurgents&#13;
as belligerents, was wheeled into&#13;
the space in front of the speaker's&#13;
rostrum. It had been in circulation&#13;
throughout the United States for'&#13;
about six months and was presented to&#13;
congress by Rep. Sulzer, of Now York.&#13;
SENATE.—65th day.—A great stride&#13;
forward was made by completing the&#13;
consideration of the sugar schedule of"&#13;
the tariff 'bill;' except the proVfslon&#13;
relating to&gt; Hawaii, which went"4 oVer.&#13;
This schedule has be^U the'storfr center&#13;
of the entire bill, and with it disposed&#13;
of there Is a better prospect for&#13;
speedy action on the bill as a whole. ^&#13;
The first paragraph of the sugarschedu&#13;
le served to bring out all the speeches&#13;
and test votes and when this Was&#13;
passed the other paragraphs of the&#13;
schedule were agreed to without&#13;
further opposition. The consideration&#13;
of the agricultural schedule was&#13;
taken up. _&#13;
SENATE.—66th day—There was rapid&#13;
work on tbe tariff bill. There were&#13;
no long speeches andV. the debate was&#13;
of a snappy character which atitbnee&#13;
enlivened but did not delay the serious&#13;
work on tbe bill. Thirteen pages were&#13;
disposed of, carrying tbe Senate&#13;
through the agricultural schedule and&#13;
up to schedule H, relating to spirits,&#13;
wines, etc. During tbe day the paragraphs&#13;
on dairy prod acts, farm] products,&#13;
fish, fruit and nuts, meat products&#13;
and miscellaneous agricultural&#13;
products were acted on. The finance&#13;
committee proposed many changes, in&#13;
the main advancing rates somewhat&#13;
over those heretofore reported. The&#13;
committee was sustained on every vote&#13;
although a contest was made on almost&#13;
every paragraph. Mr. Vest's&#13;
motion to restore Bait to the free list&#13;
was rejected—yeas 24, nays 31. The&#13;
S T — — &gt;.-.v&#13;
-~#rWr:8&gt;&gt;4A»KK« « F ^ * e « J U $ :&#13;
T ^&#13;
AtreatyJarthe annexaObn ol&#13;
on tea went over at the suggestion of&#13;
Mr. Allison, who expressed hope thai&#13;
this duty on tea migfet be dispensed&#13;
with. A message was received from&#13;
President McKinley together with the&#13;
Hawaiian annexation treaty. As soon&#13;
as they had been read in executive&#13;
session they were laid aside for the day.&#13;
SEX ATE. — 87 th day.—Greater progress&#13;
w s s made on the tariff bill tbanoo&#13;
any day since the debate opened.&#13;
Two entire schedules, covering 90&#13;
pages, were completed, namely, schedule&#13;
H on spirits, wines a n d /beverages,&#13;
and schedule J on manufactured cotton&#13;
goods.—This brings the Senate to the&#13;
flax schedule erithAhe important :wool&#13;
schedule standing next, (The portion&#13;
of the bill pnaeed is substan.flally the&#13;
same as that reported, all committee&#13;
changes being unimportant, wh4* the&#13;
opposition amendments of Mr. Jones,&#13;
of Arkansas, and,. Mr, Vest wene systematically,&#13;
rejected by majorities&#13;
varying from five to ten. Mr. Allison&#13;
secured the addition, of a new paragraph&#13;
to the cotton sohedulc with a&#13;
view to compensating toe cotton&#13;
•faetarers for recentaxHloo of Ihe neapiorersin&#13;
Jebrsdor in 188L n T w a s 1 »jf In&amp;u^'rri-ita^'tm^fisaalso&#13;
a member of the Peary nsjUsf expedition&#13;
in 1894. He will plant the&#13;
Stars and Stripes on the summit of the&#13;
mountain.&#13;
The HOUSE was in session&#13;
a half, most of the tirne^&#13;
able l i s t&#13;
an hour&#13;
being taken up with roll calls, Mr.&#13;
Sulxer, Democrat, of New York, sue-&#13;
ISlUs island the landing plane of kn-1 ^ ^ J ^ ^ J ^ th*JFZ*'&#13;
igrants at New Y o r k i s V m s e s of U migrants **?» ™***P*«&gt;* .¾ **Jor of Cuba in&#13;
black umolderiflg ruins. All the huge&#13;
ouikiingA whieh sines M8$ have housed&#13;
hnudreds of thonsanau of invnigrants&#13;
were demolished in a eonilagraUon,&#13;
whieh threatened the lives of 800 emigrants&#13;
who were on the island, but&#13;
there was no loss of life. The loss on&#13;
buildings will amount to something&#13;
like $800,000, white bund rede of volumes&#13;
of valuable records&#13;
which he denounced Weyler as a&#13;
" t h i e f and "murderer." The bill for&#13;
the relief of the cyclone stricken residents&#13;
of Greer county, Oklahoma, was&#13;
A severe cold w»we«w**t over southwestern&#13;
Idaho, and three inohes of&#13;
snow fell at bode Springs.&#13;
The large barnofA. B. Youngs, near&#13;
Qulncy was b^rfned by incendiaries.&#13;
, . / • •&#13;
t y J a r t h e aanexaflbn o f HamalLte.&#13;
sne TT-**—* fisaien hejttean sent&#13;
for its ratification- The tssatjr *&#13;
been written and a » lis dete*e agreed&#13;
upon and finally atgaett by Ike . W i ^&#13;
ised representatives of the executives&#13;
requires le^ialauys aequlessnoe.&#13;
The"treaty is on the same general&#13;
ilnee of the treaty negotiated during&#13;
the admiuisMwttou of PDesideat Hnexlson&#13;
and! v^thdrawn b&gt; "-'Prettiatli&#13;
Clevelwo. I t p i o ^ j s f o r annexation&#13;
without the exaction o j ; eojitytyons on&#13;
the part of the HaweHans astbthjs&#13;
form of government to bf vouchsafed&#13;
to Hawaii, waving*/that ouestion to be&#13;
entirely disposed of by the g o v e « m e n t&#13;
of the United 8tates. The United&#13;
States will agree/hovvevir, V&gt; asfume&#13;
the debt of the present Hawaiian fOr&gt;&#13;
e m men t, but will come l n w possession&#13;
of all the Hawaiian crown lands&#13;
and other possessions. L AH" revenue&#13;
from these lands shall be used solely&#13;
for the benefit of the inhabitants of&#13;
the Hawaiian Islands for educational&#13;
and other. pnbU*j#nreesee. Hawaii&#13;
shall be admitted into the Union ai a&#13;
territory of the United States, local&#13;
laws to be passed by a h&gt;cal&#13;
legislature, but subject to the approval&#13;
of the President further immigration&#13;
of Chinese laborers is prohibited&#13;
pending congressional action, and the&#13;
entry of Chinese from Hawatt into the&#13;
United States likewise is prohibited.&#13;
No mention is made of any gratuity to&#13;
ex-Quee^ tftftfowataht bt the Princess&#13;
Ksuilsni.&#13;
The present condition of affairs&#13;
in Hawaii, it is said, has had much&#13;
to do with the favorable considere*&#13;
.tienof^the treaty of • annexation* "The&#13;
present government of Hawaii and the&#13;
people who support it are very much&#13;
concerned about the Japanese slttfetion,&#13;
and it is felt that the Japanese,&#13;
at any time/may—take some action&#13;
looking to the acquisition of the island.&#13;
This IH borne out by the fact that just&#13;
before the treaty, was signed Secretary&#13;
of State Sherman w a s presented with&#13;
ja formal protest by the Japanese government&#13;
through its legation againBt&#13;
ithe consummation of ^be ^reaty. The&#13;
protest is understood to be based on&#13;
apprehension that the special treaties&#13;
now existing between ' Japan fiend&#13;
Hawaii, utoder whicp'tne Japahes#en*&#13;
joy special advantages, willbe.ajftpe^ted&#13;
injuriously;by annexation. .&#13;
—: :—3 T T " " - " ' &lt;, ,&#13;
CUv«bis4 Abssvlens &lt;Mv&gt; . , , ;&#13;
] It is announced on the authority of&#13;
the mostTntlmate iriends i£arUrover&#13;
Cleveland will tiM again ejjgag^ a #&#13;
ively in the prSCUos oi law, and that&#13;
he' wlft tibt directlv' otvftfiTAumtt&#13;
with big law firms, as has been reported.&#13;
tClie ex-president has retired permspen&#13;
try f roitf an acdVe career and will&#13;
hereafter be heard of only through&#13;
the medium of addresses on public&#13;
occasions. ' '&#13;
Snltoa Accept* Ur, AayelL&#13;
Washingtoni Information recervesV&#13;
s t this state department from Cojpsennt*&#13;
tiffbple states that the, sultan ^baslf^&#13;
suednn iraoie announcing the aeeepthas&#13;
«+&#13;
anee&gt; nf' Or.J«rtjfel( as&gt;in4nhjWriA»m&#13;
thd United States Theection of the.&#13;
porte is veTy-^velcoxen at t*e slate .department&#13;
and was communicated at&#13;
once to Dr. Angell at his home in Ann&#13;
Arbor. ,r&#13;
' i » i. ,. j&#13;
Prof. Faneiullf, leader d? the U. &amp;&#13;
Marine band, Who refused to play ee^-&#13;
tain- marches on Deeoratibn day, When&#13;
ordered (^' do au- by 44esrt fUraneTT&#13;
bas^een found guilty^of dlsojbedVepq*&#13;
of oxders by coiprtrmartial, anpV, d i s -&#13;
missed from the service.&#13;
Wnile; aervliaxy i««r%«i&gt;«lng^i.%eM in&#13;
knojri&#13;
bule*a&#13;
1st into i ^ ^ ^ ^ i ^ M ^ h e n -&#13;
citement ensued, and tneeewtees were&#13;
stopped. Some- of the women fainted*&#13;
Thefuiclde was. apparenty ajyiiit 50&#13;
years; of age, with, white hair Jg^W s&#13;
delicate, refined face. v&#13;
J-4-&#13;
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Mew York—cAtle&#13;
BestJjeradeS.&#13;
Lower grades&#13;
Catesce—&#13;
Bestgrases...&#13;
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Detroit—&#13;
BLoewstva3x%aare«se^e»..,&#13;
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Bestsrad&#13;
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Ctaslnastl 81 M8'&#13;
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suitse* « yearXuio, M m r u u n i j&#13;
IMM and mucajpegkVaftor JT h&#13;
see** eftcctive for M U M and colas by the&#13;
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n.ii irt'Hiuin &lt;-.'&gt;&#13;
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»peer.' erf New Jersey, toe cele*&#13;
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this country. I t is alio used for Invalids&#13;
M^ttiLW^VJUblt^fltMti lor uoo«*a»ajksns&gt;&#13;
Baltt*Uk« UW« wMrt'tter «UI aofM&#13;
gaasmateeeV *yK&gt;ktet&amp;a«'tou^el1ree&gt;'W&#13;
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' • . M l ' ' • „ i i i&#13;
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TojeekvGod j» every man's highest duty&#13;
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Take Gasearets Oattdy Cathartic. 10c ortSe&#13;
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The cucumber wai originally a tropical&#13;
Mr*. 'rVinilow's BoottOnf Syrup&#13;
r«r ehik)r*n te«t)ilnff,M&gt;rteM the sums.r*dnew taflam-&#13;
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&lt; U J ?* U INTCRNATIONAL PRCSS ASSOCIATION.&#13;
He) H i nobosly.&#13;
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i t&#13;
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Apricots are indigenous to the plains of&#13;
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U*wn*»m*B Cmm»**r j c o w U k oiyewrtao.&#13;
Tk« orirtoal and onlj inimlo*. Cure* QBAM) Haocln&#13;
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Some people get no higher than a towertag&#13;
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• , . • • » • • • ii i i » • •&#13;
Piso's Cure for Consumption la the best of&#13;
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La,, AugusttJ, 1803.&#13;
A moderate drinker is the devil's travellag&#13;
man." T ,-.&#13;
MllleS, Buckwheat and other seeds, lowcat&#13;
prices. SaUer Seed Co., La Crosse. Wis.,&#13;
To choose time fsto save time.&#13;
• • M i - i . » • • • i . - - - . 1 •' — i II i ' i .+.m&#13;
No. need to tear t o e approach of&#13;
crojepi^yophave Dr. Thomas' Eclec-&#13;
Neyer was a&#13;
S J ^ j g ^ would« t..c. ure if used at&#13;
thBerene eadnicott—he"rW mhayin w Monm'te schaes emf arSriyn gyloeuto fn —Is "Yea* aer father.":&#13;
^m, ^ * V ^ ^ &lt;^4 paysieal strsngtii.&#13;
A n i M t l t * When the. b l o o 4 1«&#13;
a « « p | ^ 7 1 I W wiak, thin and Impuw&#13;
thai appetite fail*, -flood's Barsaparilla Ja&gt;i&#13;
a wonderful modlciaf fojr cpefH&amp;ff *A sppetite.,&#13;
Jt porlflea and onriobes the bloody&#13;
toaes tb* stomach, givss strength to tha&#13;
Dsrves and health to the whole system It&#13;
is Just the medioino needed now.&#13;
Sarsa-&#13;
IstaeTteW^ttfact toe One True Bfcod Purlaer.&#13;
' '—f- !- '- • • • • • - • - \-t m ^ - ' - - '*1 ttjt !_J Hood's 'VUmrU^mstSBSt.^t&#13;
CHAFTKR I!&#13;
11 WAS Martinmas&#13;
Sunday. The a r t s -&#13;
lng service was&#13;
just over, and the&#13;
congregation, more&#13;
scanty, haa d)a-&#13;
JM'rjied :MU(^' JP^i"&#13;
the Moaa toward&#13;
the y,iur^ua ^arnia&#13;
8^4. Ae l d * w Mch&#13;
were «catt«red here&#13;
a*,* tj^^re upqu \t. .AJ^ht.atMl huau*,&#13;
• ^ ^tt , ^ e . ,YWtry, „.wfcUe),, Solottjw&#13;
Mucajebackit, the sexton, waited .on.&#13;
the porch for the minister to eome:&#13;
fOrth.' . , | ; :, II ] •&#13;
VTteice'U. b# anaw .the uifht,^ he&#13;
muttered, placing, the key in thai oaken&#13;
door.; preliminary to looking op;&#13;
"there'll he saaw the night, or I'm aair&#13;
mlsta'en. And the Annan'*s rising—&#13;
It's snawlng noo amang the hills.'*&#13;
All at once the Mgbt in the 'vestry&#13;
was extinguished, and the minister, a&#13;
m*n about fifty years of age, appeared&#13;
on the threshold, wrapped in a heavy&#13;
winter -cloak and carrying a thick&#13;
staff..&#13;
"Lcck up, Solomon, my man," he&#13;
said.&#13;
Solomon obeyed^ turning the key In&#13;
the inner door, and then that of the&#13;
outer one of solid oak, while the minister&#13;
stood waiting on the path. Then&#13;
the two, side by side, and with much&#13;
the same kind of mechanical trot,&#13;
passed across the churchyard, pausing&#13;
now and again to struggle with the&#13;
fierce gusts, and to hold on their beadgear—&#13;
the, sexton his Sunday "bonnet,"&#13;
and the minister his broad-brimmed&#13;
plerlcaj hati . ,&#13;
Reaching £he Iron^gate, ,wb4ch was&#13;
rattling and creating .in the wind, they&#13;
descended three qwaa-giown siaps, and&#13;
reached the highway. Here all was&#13;
pitch dark, for the shadow of tall yewtrees&#13;
fall from the other side, deepening&#13;
the nccturnal blackness1; but,&#13;
crossing the .road, they opened another&#13;
gate, .oroased the garden where the&#13;
yaWftrse* grew, and reached the door&#13;
of the manse.&#13;
Standing here In complete shelter,&#13;
they heard the "sough" of the blast&#13;
overhead among_the tossing, boughs,&#13;
ilka, the wild thunder of a stormy sea.&#13;
The manse was a plain two-story&#13;
buUdl&amp;ferv a* otd aa the times of the&#13;
Co*««an* and containing numberless impassioned, wrathful, and in the nar&#13;
cheerless Chambers, the majority' of&#13;
wnteh W§Ye unfurnished. Here the&#13;
Reverend Sampson Lorraine had&#13;
dwelt In'solitude' for flve-and-twenty&#13;
years. He Had come to the place as&#13;
a shy young bachelor, a student, and&#13;
a bookworm; and despite all the sieges&#13;
that bxJL been laid to his heart, as was&#13;
inevitable in a place where marriageable&#13;
men were few and spinsters many,&#13;
a bachelor he had remained ever since.&#13;
People said that a love disappointment&#13;
in early life bad made him thereafter&#13;
invulnerable to all the charms of women)&#13;
but at first his single condition&#13;
made him. very popular. Presently,&#13;
however, as,bis position as * bachelor&#13;
gryiw morn oftnflrmtjsl, ftn&lt;Thl| »onentrl&#13;
to awaken&#13;
-TT&#13;
v* m^mufmS&amp;M-&#13;
,erUes increased, he oaasad&#13;
much interest&#13;
Opening the door with a latch-key,&#13;
he entered a bare lobby, and striking&#13;
a light, led the way into a large room&#13;
o n the ground floor. It was scantily&#13;
fufttiaaed with an old carpet, an oldfashioaed&#13;
circular table with drawers,&#13;
and several chairs; but.on the walls&#13;
were numerous shelves, covered with&#13;
Dosflat. The room had two large windews&#13;
looking on the back lawn which&#13;
aloped down to the river, but was with"&#13;
out curtains of any kind.&#13;
• fire burned on the hearth, and a&#13;
rud* box of peat fuel stood by the&#13;
fireeide. One «Me of the table was&#13;
spread v i t a a etean doth, on wfrteUt&#13;
stood a tray with broad, oatcake,&#13;
cheese, and butter, and a large atone&#13;
watef-yttf, a black-bottle, and some&#13;
glataec.1' "&#13;
"Sit y e down, Solomon/' said the&#13;
minister^ piacinc a Hghted candle on&#13;
the table).&#13;
Solomon stood, hat in hand. Every&#13;
Sutiday evening tor many a long year&#13;
peated; "and take a glass—the night&#13;
1» cold*" „ . . ,-. , ,, *.*i&#13;
, Solpmon placed, his bonnet carefully&#13;
on the edge of the table, and seated&#13;
himself, respectfully on pne of ti)e&gt;&#13;
cape-bottonied^haim. .Then, leiaurely&#13;
and eolomftly, h a poured out a giaas of&#13;
raw spirit. Meantime Mr. Lorraine,&#13;
haying, divested hienaatt of his cloak &gt;&#13;
and hat, sat down in &gt;he arm-chair by&#13;
the fireBlde, . . . . .,:-.-,.,-.-&#13;
"Here's fortune, air," aald Solomon,&#13;
drinking oft the whisky; then, wiping&#13;
his mouth with his sleeve, he sat bolt*&#13;
upright and expectant, .waiting to see&#13;
if Ills superior had anything more to&#13;
say. But, as the minister remained&#13;
silent, Solomon rose to go.&#13;
"Are v e mlhdfa' the funeral the&#13;
morn?"'the sexton asked, taking up&#13;
his bonnet.&#13;
Mr Lorraine nodded.&#13;
"Can I bring ye anything before I&#13;
gang to bed? 1 maun rise at five to&#13;
feenlsh the grave."&#13;
"No; go to bed. I shall sit up and&#13;
read a little."&#13;
"Weel, good-night, sir."&#13;
"Good-night, Solpmon,"&#13;
Thereupon Solomon left the room,&#13;
closing the door softly behind him.&#13;
Lighting a candle in the lobby, he&#13;
made his way quietly to a chamber in&#13;
the upper part of the house, where&#13;
he slept, and which was, indeed, the&#13;
only chamber in the manse, excepting&#13;
the minister's sitting-room and adjoin*&#13;
lng bedroom, which contained any furniture.&#13;
Many years before Solomon had&#13;
taken up his abode there, on the minister's&#13;
invitation, and it was his only&#13;
heme. Besides performing the duties&#13;
of sexton and clerk; h e acted generally&#13;
as factotum to Mr. Lorraine, attended&#13;
to the garden^ and groomed the pony&#13;
on which the minister made his visitations&#13;
about the country. An aged&#13;
woman, Mysie Simpson, came in every&#13;
day to clean and cook, but invariably'&#13;
retired to her own dwelling at nightfall.&#13;
So the two old men were practically&#13;
alone together, and, despite the&#13;
difference in their social positions, regarded&#13;
each other with a peculiar attachment&#13;
The minister sat for some time musing,&#13;
then with a sigh h o took a book,&#13;
from 4he s h ^ e ^ a n A bejan to read.&#13;
It was a volume of old sermona, written&#13;
by a south-country clergyman,&#13;
row. sense Calvinistie. As he read, the&#13;
wind roared round the house, and&#13;
moaned in the chimneys, and rattled&#13;
the shutterlese windows; but as the&#13;
wind rose the darkness decreased, and&#13;
the vitreous rays of the moon began&#13;
playing on the window panes.«&#13;
Mr. Lorraine lit his pipe—the only&#13;
luxury in which he indulged; for&#13;
despite his* plump figure, which he inherited,&#13;
he was abstemious and a tee^-&#13;
totaler. Then, with another sigh, he&#13;
rose and walked thoughtfully up and&#13;
down the room; paused at one of the&#13;
windows, and looked down the moonlighted&#13;
lawn which sloped to the riverside;&#13;
talking all the time to himself,&#13;
flfi " i f hft ^"ftrmH haHt &lt;&#13;
f i l l . WMMllwf fcoufc of Umjmrrt»ln*mLJJt4bgf&#13;
PaTan^^xSs&#13;
"Ay, ay, a wild night!—and snow&#13;
coming, • Solomon says! Eerie, eerie,&#13;
is the sough of the wind in the trees.&#13;
It minds me ever of her, and when the&#13;
moon's ap it is like the shining of her&#13;
face out of the grave. Wee Marjorle!&#13;
my bonny doo! Thirty long /ears ago&#13;
she died, and I'm still here! still&#13;
fTiere!"&#13;
Tears stood in the old man's eyes&#13;
aa he looked out in a dream. Through&#13;
the long years of loneliness and poverty—&#13;
for his living was indeed a poor&#13;
one—ho had cherished the memory of&#13;
one who had gone away from him to&#13;
God when only la her eighteenth year.&#13;
Suddenly, there came a load single&#13;
knock at the front door.&#13;
The Minister started, listening, and&#13;
the same moment a gnat of unusual&#13;
force- shook the boeae t o its foundation.&#13;
"Bless me, what's thatT" he exclaimed.&#13;
"I thought I heard a knock at the&#13;
ban door, bat maybe my ears ekeeived&#13;
a e . It waa only the wind, Pm thinki&#13;
n g " ,, . * •&#13;
,tj|»fw TO-eW.ePft,,.. y , j „&#13;
| ' l a f y l w a j and somewMcrtarte*****&#13;
a i m e d , Pf^^aift |ha a t a j i v a j * , ^ ! *&#13;
lataatajjaimsVi $ * .dflor^ wja*i torn*&#13;
land aiaaed behind him. He t o e * aalothaa.&#13;
atep forward, and^a&gt;js4oaia^aeB-&#13;
]b)ed over aomething Uke a dark bua*&#13;
fd^.o^.aH^biMJyte^&#13;
"B^eaa my aouir he marmured.!&#13;
"what'a UUa4^ - : »&gt;.-&lt; , . . ^ , 1 . i,-.«'i&#13;
J U the. aama rnaaant a faint ery.&#13;
eatma xiaoa* hls^ar; .8tooning down In&#13;
great agitation, he lifted^the .hnadk*.&#13;
and diacwrar«4, tokta »e«itaimaUoii&#13;
that it eonUined the form of a living&#13;
chUd.&#13;
A Teacher's Ejgfeiieict&#13;
Tlfsaeiai'l nliseseia1&#13;
*t** i0^¾ a ala TTfTTtSr&#13;
the M ew Bfa, Oifjsrieas*;&#13;
Miss Sarah Goaes who lives ease* taree&#13;
miles northwest of Aarere. Ii ., Is well&#13;
•aaaai abeat «s*e miles from hev aesae,&#13;
8he drives to and fro» her 100001 e s ^ d a y .&#13;
JSMloatotrtafJd robust, aad la t t r o e a s&#13;
of health, aa the raddj glow ember j | a » t f&#13;
(cheeksteLtMrea.*-^^1 ^ "*' v&#13;
The reporter happen ed leasee* Ula y«&#13;
lady's mother if Aarosa a few&gt; eun. aj&#13;
and learned that aJtaough her daafhter.&#13;
now kx eke beat of heedaf i S t wiaW •*&#13;
» i " l ! W •*-r&#13;
way, at the same hour, and received&#13;
the same invitation.&#13;
Seen In the dim Uf^t of the room,&#13;
the sexton waa a little wiaened, whitehaired&#13;
man, with hoary, bushy eyebrows,&#13;
keen gray eyes, and sunken,&#13;
tanned cheeks. He waa dressed in de-&#13;
1 K t a n V . +*t\* ^klta ahtrt, aajUkJI&#13;
kind of collar known in Scotland as&#13;
"atick-ups." Th* aajyaiater. on t u&#13;
other hand, was, tatt aad aomewhat&#13;
portly, with a rownd. boyish face, geaila&#13;
blue eyes, and solid, •oed-bumored&#13;
mouth. His hair'waa wtete a s snow,&#13;
aad fell almost to ads shaeaders.&#13;
"Sit ye down, sic y e deem.- * e rein&#13;
the same — A n t he ^ l a c e r ~ h t i precioas relies&#13;
back in the drawer, locktaa; i t carefully&#13;
and placing the Hey in a worn leather&#13;
$urse which he carried la his pocket&#13;
At that moment the kaoek was repeated.&#13;
"Dear me!" he cried, "there's some&#13;
one knocking- after all. Maybe k% a&#13;
sick call.M&#13;
~Lining Ihn ranrtln ftrrrm fhn tartln. Ttfi&#13;
troteed from the room, croesed along&#13;
jthe lobby, and opened the hall door.&#13;
As he did so the wind sprang to like&#13;
a tiger, and the Hgnt was Mown oat,&#13;
bat the front garden was flooded with&#13;
aioaaUcwt save u n d e r l i e r%rf shadow&#13;
CHAPTER I t&#13;
HO A RflaT Paisley&#13;
shawl was wrapt&#13;
round the infaa*.&#13;
covering all bat a&#13;
portion of its ttny&#13;
face, As it lay like&#13;
• a mammy In its&#13;
wrappings, it continued&#13;
to cry loudly,&#13;
and the cry&#13;
went at once to the&#13;
m i n i s t e r ' s tender&#13;
heart.&#13;
But in a moment the old man guessed&#13;
the truth—that the hapless creature&#13;
had been left there by some one&#13;
who had knocked and fled. Still holding&#13;
the child in his arms, he ran out&#13;
in the garden and looked on every&#13;
side.&#13;
"Come back!" he said; "whoever you&#13;
are, come back!"&#13;
But no one responded. The wind&#13;
moaned dismally In the trees that&#13;
lifted their black branches overhead,&#13;
that was all. He ran to the gate and&#13;
looked up and down the road, but&#13;
could see nobody. As he stood in perplexity&#13;
the child cried again loudly,&#13;
and struggled in hlB arms.&#13;
"Bless me!" he murmured; "I must&#13;
take it in, or it will die of cold!"&#13;
He ran back to the door and.knocked&#13;
loudly again and again,, It was some&#13;
tithe before he was heard. At last,&#13;
however, he beard footsteps coming&#13;
along the passage, and redoubled hia&#13;
knocking. The door opened, and&#13;
Solomon Mucklebacklt, half dressed,&#13;
apppeared on the threshold; . Without&#13;
a word the minister ran into the lobby.&#13;
"Losh me, meen later, is it yoursel'?"&#13;
ejaculated Solomon, in amazement "I&#13;
thought you were in bad."&#13;
"Come this way—quick!" shouted&#13;
Mr. Lorraine. "Bring a light!"&#13;
And still , carrying his burden, he&#13;
ran into the sitting-room. Solomon&#13;
closed the door, struck a match, and&#13;
lighted.a candle, and followed him immediately,&#13;
Then his amazement deepened.&#13;
To see Mr. Lorraine standing&#13;
by tha fireside with a crying infant in&#13;
Ms arms waa indeed enough to awaken&#13;
perplexity and wonder.&#13;
"My conscience, meenister, what hae&#13;
ye gotten there?'/&#13;
"A child! Some one left it in the&#13;
porch, knocked, ^nd ran away. Run,&#13;
Solomon, search up and down the road,&#13;
and see if you can find them. Shame&#13;
upon them, whoever they are. Don't&#13;
standstaring,bitrun.** "&#13;
Perfectly bewildered, Solomon stood&#13;
gaping; then with one horror-stricken&#13;
look at the infant, left the room, and&#13;
ran from the house.&#13;
Left alone with the child, the minieter&#13;
seemed puzzled what to do. He&#13;
held i t awkwardly, and its cries continued;&#13;
then, to still It, he rocked it&#13;
' to and fro in his arms.&#13;
—Wading it mill—troublesome, he&#13;
placed it down in the arm-chair, and&#13;
softly loosened the shawl in which it&#13;
was wrapt, freeing its little arms.&#13;
Its cries ceased for a time, and it&#13;
lay with eyes wide o p i X spreading it*&#13;
little hands in the warm twilight&#13;
The minister put on his glasses and&#13;
looked at it with solemn curiosity.&#13;
It was a tiny infant, about two&#13;
months old; its little pink face was&#13;
pinched with cold, and its great blue&#13;
eyes dim with crying. A common&#13;
linen cap was on its head, and Us&#13;
gown was of coarse linen. Bat it was&#13;
so small, so pretty, thai the minister's&#13;
tender heart melted over it at ,009a,&#13;
He offered it hia forefinger, which it&#13;
gripped with its tiny hands, biinkiag&#13;
up into his face.&#13;
"Poor wee mite!" he murmured, "I&#13;
wonder who your mother is? A wicked&#13;
woman, I'm thin ting, to east you&#13;
away on such a night a s this!**&#13;
As if in answer to bis words, the&#13;
child began to cry again.&#13;
"I cap see naehody," cried Soiosnoa,&#13;
re-entering the room; "I hae aaarchit&#13;
up a a d dooa, as far toonwaye^as Mysie&#13;
Simpson's door, aad fceyoat t o the&#13;
waterside, aad there's nene stirring.&#13;
It's asrfu' sxraager .&#13;
He looked at the child, aad&#13;
scratched his head; he looked at the&#13;
minister, and nodded it ominously. A&#13;
curiae* conjecenre, too irreverent for&#13;
utterance, had passed acrees bit naturally&#13;
suspicious mind.&#13;
(«0 as ooirnxtjao.) —&#13;
waa suffering nattilfl aglsay,&#13;
arising from exposure, •• ,.&#13;
Mra, Cones «aid: "Sarah has been teaching&#13;
for four years, beginning WfMa 'to a i t&#13;
siatseath year. e^aeia*elw«yetT»MSS -ej&#13;
the same school and got along well earns&#13;
last December, when the weather was aa*&#13;
usually changeable, and she took a severa,&#13;
oatd which developed into the«grip." " ^&#13;
waaeonflned to the aowraaoeftwo'&#13;
when she got out and wen* to her.,&#13;
again.; 8be had a relapse, and, Urn fama&#13;
w i s confined to the house several w&#13;
having te give op her wheoL&#13;
"She waa troubled with rl&#13;
nervooanem, and suffered great agony, her&#13;
nerves being almost completely ^&#13;
Bbe could scarcely e a t and in feat&#13;
not retain solid food on her eteeaaea'i&#13;
"We tried five different physicians bat&#13;
with little avail.&#13;
"One day our druggist advised as so try&#13;
Dr. Williams' Pink Pflla for Falo People at&#13;
they seemed to benefit many parse* above&#13;
Aurora.&#13;
"Sarah used one box of the pills with ,&#13;
satisfactory results, and by the time twj»&#13;
boxes were taken she was able to go abeiit&#13;
the house. Seven boxes were uaedj ibslest&#13;
one In July. She was entirely relieved ejf&#13;
ail pains or signs of rheumatism, and nsrv-.&#13;
ousneea. and has since felt as well as she)&#13;
ever did and has not tniaeed a day of uet&gt;&#13;
achool this winter."&#13;
Miss Sarah, who entered at this time*&#13;
verified all her mother had said, aa did&#13;
iggists of Aurora. The&#13;
arms of A. J. Marshall ft Co., J; A. Riddel*&#13;
also the druggists The drag;&#13;
ft Co. and John M. Ullrich, said the medicine&#13;
was a constant seller with teem, aneT&#13;
gave universal »attsfaction. "People wKo&#13;
buy once come and buy again/' they wmSL&#13;
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale Peons*'&#13;
contain, in a condensed form, all the elements&#13;
necessary to give new life and rifra~&gt;&#13;
nees to the blood and restore sbatterse&gt;&#13;
nerves. They are also a speeifle tor trosbl e»&#13;
peculiar to females, sueh as- suppressions,&#13;
irregularities and all forms of wee"&#13;
They build up the blood, and restpj&#13;
glow of health to pale and '&#13;
&amp; men they effect a radio*! eure Jat&#13;
cases arising from mental worry, overwork&#13;
or excesses of whatever nature, Pink Pllsv&#13;
are sold in boxes (never in locee bulk) at&#13;
SO cents a box or six boxes for tS.au, aneV&#13;
may be had of all druggists, or direct by&#13;
mail fronj Dr. William*/ Medicine Con*-&#13;
pany, Schenectady, X. Y.&#13;
c .-•• f - •&#13;
The eight-year-old child of IX M.&#13;
Hillyard, of Junctkw City, was criminally&#13;
assaulted, it is claimed, by James&#13;
Suttles, a farmer, aged 43.&#13;
The Trials and Tril&gt;ulatioas of a Bat-&#13;
U e Creek C i t i x e a - H e w Ha&#13;
Comes to Tell This Story. _; __&#13;
CFron tJU Bnttl* Creek Jfoew.)&#13;
Among the moulders at the works of&#13;
the Michigan foundry company can be&#13;
found Mr. Amos Maynard; he has IIvet*&#13;
is Battle Creek for over ten* years, ia&#13;
honored and respected by all who know&#13;
him; such is the man who makes thia&#13;
sjtateraent, he says: " I have had kidney&#13;
trouble for years, and it has made my&#13;
lite miserable. The heavy lifting, necessary&#13;
in my business, made me worse;—¥&#13;
"Well, Mam Molly, so there's a&#13;
baby, is there? Which is R, a boy or&#13;
a girl?" "Why, nobody dnsstit know&#13;
yet. 'oaase It haant been ahrlataaai,'*&#13;
— P U B .&#13;
have beeaeompeUed to lie in bed in a helpless&#13;
condition for as long as nine days at a&#13;
time; the greatest pain was from my back,&#13;
which sometimes felt as thoofh a bayonet&#13;
was being run through me in the region&#13;
of my kidneys; many citizens of Battle&#13;
Creek knew how bad I was. I could notmove&#13;
without the greatest caution, for&#13;
as soon as I attempted to stoop over, aenaV&#13;
to one side, or even turn in bed, the pain&#13;
was simply unbearable. I wore porous-&#13;
plaster• s constantly ior toe u f f l o *&#13;
porary relief they brought me.&#13;
tern-&#13;
. ~ Whenever&#13;
I caught the slightest cold it went,&#13;
straight to my kidneys and made raeworse.&#13;
I was advised to try Doan's Kidney&#13;
Pills, and got some. I haae token to&#13;
all four boxes of them, and I BOW feel asactive&#13;
as ever. A few moathsage I would&#13;
have ridiculed the idea of being aireA * v&#13;
quickly, and being able to work a s l caanow.&#13;
All the long-standing pains ace&#13;
£oae, and the former traces of&#13;
orders found in my urine haws&#13;
peared. I have raoommended Dosa'sL 5y PiUs to many friends whowefetosu*&#13;
»d as I was, sad in every case I Jheeer&#13;
learned they proved as beneficial as with*&#13;
me. Doan's kkiaey PiHs would twohoam&#13;
to raeatstoost any price:" ^ &gt;.&gt;-**-*- 1 Fsr sale by afl deaJers, price&#13;
Poster Milburn Co., BusUsTst- T.&gt;&#13;
agents tor the U.S. Reimisiwr the&#13;
iDbaa's, and take ^0 other.&#13;
Every water save that of springs&#13;
tains animal life, bat i t ia c o t&#13;
ily injurious to health o a that&#13;
ray Pi&#13;
afl of&#13;
For bronehitia, asthma or hundred*&#13;
troubles of the throat&#13;
Dr. Wood a Norway Pine tijrap, a h&lt;&#13;
hold specific for 1&#13;
A newsboy in FlUabarg ha^ a bank&#13;
aeooont eg e^Oflt, accumulated entirely&#13;
oa n*«rst^ac*eel*mdarinir last toyearev&#13;
Rev. Wax S t o a t Wiartoo, O n t , w a a&#13;
completely eared of scrofula after 17*&#13;
phyaiciaaa had fai e 1 tojrive him relief.&#13;
Burdock Blood Bitu-.-s did i t&#13;
.MoSteeri&#13;
_ ol Or. K t o t i l w r t No»^ XtSSSSkffSSBi'&#13;
People talk little ills into great ones. a**V&#13;
seldom talk little goods into great oaea&#13;
atoaeate T,&#13;
CaAejrCathartie. cure&#13;
J0c xTcaCfaltoxnsxlaU&#13;
* * w&#13;
1 &gt;v&#13;
mm mm*mmm&#13;
,. • r • . - •... I •&#13;
•J"&#13;
i r t l ^ ' . I l K ^ i liny l •&#13;
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! f« ^ ' : &gt; "'V&#13;
^ : , : ...&#13;
&amp; •&#13;
# &amp;&#13;
.'• ! .' •-. '' - . •:."'•• •''I'.- V i A V&#13;
J"&#13;
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4 t ' - » i i * ^&#13;
\*'i&#13;
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i i^m&gt;inwimi'i'^.&#13;
• . . &lt; * ,&#13;
p.&#13;
m| ,.—fc#il,&#13;
^f c ll WtMl i j^y^ i&#13;
'j&amp;iS&amp;'S* Y&#13;
* r . • * *&#13;
'•Vi •A-&#13;
'•;—wr-*~— •-&gt;-»&#13;
-*: ..-^-&#13;
if' 'V;,',''&#13;
;tf •' ( •&#13;
fcTpWH '&#13;
W&gt;&#13;
%:?&#13;
• ft.-&#13;
• • * ; * • ' •&#13;
&lt;*-&#13;
$ &amp; •&#13;
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it-- •&#13;
^&#13;
^¾&#13;
,f:.&#13;
fbvhuq gi^ffdU^&#13;
F. t. ANDREWS, ED* t O * .&#13;
THURSDAY, JUNE 24, 1897.&#13;
J.ll.l..lBi&#13;
WASHINGTON LETTER.&#13;
•Washington, D. C , June 18, '97.&#13;
The most important event of&#13;
the week in Washington was the&#13;
sending of the treaty for the annexation&#13;
of Hawaii to the United&#13;
States as a territory to the Senate.&#13;
There is jubilation among those&#13;
who believe that the true policy&#13;
of this government is to get cou-&#13;
' trol of all outlyiug islands in both&#13;
the Pacific and Atlantic oceans.&#13;
There is some talk about ratification&#13;
of this treaty being made a&#13;
party question in the senate but&#13;
it is hardly likely any considerable&#13;
number of Senators can be found&#13;
who will acknowledge themselves&#13;
to be so short-sighted as such an&#13;
act would proclaim them to be.&#13;
This is not a party question; it is&#13;
an American question, as President&#13;
Grover Cleveland quickly&#13;
learned when he thwarted the last&#13;
attempt at annexation. The Japanese&#13;
minister has been asking&#13;
some questions about the annexation&#13;
treaty which indicate an intention&#13;
on the part of his government&#13;
to make a protest against&#13;
a treaty. I t is not now certain&#13;
that the treaty will be ratified by&#13;
the Senate at this session of Congress,&#13;
but a protest from Japan&#13;
would make its ratification not&#13;
only certain but speedy. Senator&#13;
Kyle, who strongly favors annexation,&#13;
says he has made a poll&#13;
of the Senate and that fifty-five&#13;
Senators have declared for annexation&#13;
and twelve are in doubt how&#13;
they will vote. Sixty votes will&#13;
be needed to ratify the treaty. I n&#13;
order tolxe prepared for any contingency,&#13;
it is undurstood that the&#13;
friends of annexation will introduce&#13;
a joint resolution in both&#13;
House and Senate annexing Hawaii.&#13;
I n case there is a disposition&#13;
on the part of the opponents&#13;
of annexation to filibuster against&#13;
a vote on treaty in the Senate this&#13;
resolution will be put through&#13;
and annexation will be accomplished&#13;
just the same as though the&#13;
treaty were&lt; ratified. Texas was&#13;
annexed by a joint resolution&#13;
after a treaty had failed of ratifi-&#13;
Intcreattng Ittmt.&#13;
By actual count there were 579&#13;
bicycles in the parade at Ann Arbor&#13;
on Tuesday night of last week&#13;
although the claim is made that&#13;
there were 700 bicyclers present.&#13;
A new industry is being, practiced&#13;
in the southern part of the&#13;
state by a party of men who are&#13;
going about catching turtles from&#13;
the lakes aud pond. The reptiles&#13;
are shipped to the oities where&#13;
they find a good market price&#13;
among the hotel and restaurant&#13;
keepers.&#13;
Chas. Lattie of Coruuna got&#13;
drunk last Saturday night and&#13;
slugged his wife with the house&#13;
dog as a club, the dog's tail answering&#13;
the purpose of a handle.&#13;
He was arrested but claims only a&#13;
very hazy recollection of tne fracas.—&#13;
Bancroft Commercial. That's&#13;
a dogon tile.&#13;
The Ann Arbor railroad now&#13;
sells 500 and 1,000 mile mileage&#13;
books, for $10 and $20 respectively&#13;
good for two years. This is a&#13;
decided move in the direction of a&#13;
two cent a mile fare as the 1,000&#13;
mile books are good for the use of&#13;
the family of the person to whom&#13;
they are issued.&#13;
jl w&#13;
Subscribe for the OIBP4TCH,&#13;
Wanted-An Idea &amp;M&#13;
Watch the DISPATCH liner columns&#13;
of To rent, For sal •», etc. TliHy may&#13;
prove to be of interest to you.&#13;
j 09 / » f / * r . # * W&#13;
I a a A l i t o ^ A o b M . » « M o l « l t / . W«h«&#13;
andthslateststyle*ofT&gt;p«, «t», vhii&#13;
a* to wwoui» «u kind* of work, w e b&#13;
.YOftllklndi&#13;
iob t u b k *&#13;
i t Books.&#13;
mpwtor rtylw, apes Wo thorUtt notice. PiioetM&#13;
Wff •» good woiw eta bo aan*.&#13;
mU\, HUL! PATAU*! WlWt Of IVKMV MONTH. '&#13;
8TOOKBIUOGE, MICH.&#13;
Will utteud to »1) bu«lu«M at tb&lt;* profession&#13;
wtthfldeltty auricara. Spouinl attaatiou given to&#13;
butlnow along the Uae of the M l . L. K&amp;ilway,&#13;
Telephone c*Ua reejiondtid to.&#13;
CURBS IN THB RIOHT WAY, BY REGULATING THB LIVER*&#13;
AND KIDNEYS, AND PURIFYINQ THE BLOOD.&#13;
It is a positive cure for Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Dyspepsia, Sick and&#13;
' Nervous Headache, Fever and Ague, Chills, and all diseases arising from'&#13;
'a diseased liver or the kidneys, or impure blood.&#13;
YOUR MONEY BACK M £ K J O J ^ M S * ?&#13;
you nave had your noney's worth, send us back the guarantee, which you will and in the&#13;
, box, and w e will send you a check for Si.oo by return mail.&#13;
It Is put up in two forms, powder and tablets. The tablets are the easier to take, requJr-&#13;
*lng- no mixing. Price $1.00 for 180 doses of either kind. Sent post paid upon receipt of &lt;&#13;
price. Send 10 cents for ten days' treatment and copy of Nature's Guide to Health.&#13;
.A. H. LEWIS MEDICINE CO •9 Bolivar, Mo.&#13;
cation.&#13;
• Senator Pettigrew dosen't think&#13;
that the fact that sugar stock did&#13;
not rise as many points during&#13;
the consideration of the sugar&#13;
schedule of the present tarriff bill&#13;
. as during the tariff debate on the&#13;
Wilson- bill, gives the present&#13;
Senate any cause for pride. When&#13;
Mr. Pettigrew referred to the rise&#13;
in sugar stock he was interrupted&#13;
by Senator Gear who said that&#13;
the sugar debate in the Senate&#13;
three years ago sent up^sugar&#13;
stock 40 points and he exclaimed&#13;
in reply: "I think that the two debates&#13;
on sugar—now and three&#13;
years ago—justify the existence&#13;
of a new political party. Petitions&#13;
asking that the Senate speedily&#13;
-dispose of the tariff bill are pour-&#13;
T5g^~uporT Hi at l&gt;ody Tn~aT steady&#13;
stream and from almost every&#13;
'v&#13;
~Beotiop of the country.&#13;
The sugar tight ended as far as&#13;
tne Senate is concerned when the&#13;
sugar schedule was this wee]&#13;
adopted, but.the final round will&#13;
not be fought until the enti&#13;
and sent to a co«fer^npe\ Tiien&#13;
the House conferees ynll make a&#13;
decided stand-for tjke cutting out&#13;
of the Senate Amendments to the&#13;
original House su^ar schedule&#13;
«ud if the talk of member* is liv*&#13;
^WsNjr tor they will maiotalirir&#13;
« B £ 1 they carry their point&#13;
• •&#13;
Hundreds of thousands have been&#13;
induced to try Chamberlain's Couj?b&#13;
Remedy, by reading what it has done&#13;
for oMiere, and hayinpr tested its merit&#13;
for themselves are today its warmest&#13;
friends. For sale by P. A. Sigler.&#13;
The True Remedy.&#13;
W. M. Repine, edftor Tiskilwa, 111.&#13;
says: "We wont keep house withont&#13;
Dr, King's New Discovery for Consumption,&#13;
Coughs and Colds. Experimented&#13;
with many others, but nev^r&#13;
got the true remedy until we used Dr.&#13;
King's New Discovery. No other&#13;
remedy can take, its plane in our&#13;
borne, as in it we have a certain and&#13;
sure cure for Coughs, Colds, Whooping&#13;
Cough, etc. It is idle to experiment&#13;
with other remedies, even if tli^y are&#13;
urged on you as just as good as Dr.&#13;
Kings New Discovery. They are not&#13;
as good, because this remedy bas a&#13;
record of cures and besides is guaranteed.&#13;
It never fails to satisfy. Trial&#13;
bottles free at F. A, Siglers Drug&#13;
Store.&#13;
The Coast line to MACKINAC&#13;
«—TAKK T H E — •&#13;
TO MACKINAC&#13;
D E T R O I T&#13;
PETOSKEY&#13;
CHICAGO&#13;
New Steel Passenger Steamers&#13;
Tk* Greatest Perfection yet *tt«ioe&lt;i ie&#13;
Boat COBStmctioa—Luxurious Equipment,&#13;
Artistic Furnlfhloc, Decoration and Eific-&#13;
Jeot Service, insuring: the highest degree of&#13;
COMFORT, SPEED AND SAFETY&#13;
Foua TRIPS PER WELK BET*, EX*&#13;
Toledo, Detroit and Mackinac&#13;
PETOSKEY, "THE SOO," MARQUETTE ,&#13;
AND DULUTH.&#13;
LOW RATES to Picturesque Msckinscand&#13;
Return, including r\e«!s and tfertlis. Prom&#13;
Cleveland, $18; from Toltdo, $15; from&#13;
Detroit, $13 50-&#13;
DAY AND NIQHT SERVICE. Between Detroit and Cleveland&#13;
Connecting at Cleveland with&#13;
Trains for «11 points East South&#13;
west iihri at X&gt;etroit for all poiuls&#13;
Korrhweot. /&#13;
Sunday Trips Juris. July, August *rwl Sept. Only&#13;
EVERY D\Y E I T y E C ! Clevetafd.Put-irj^ay, Toledo&#13;
h&lt; u ) toi Hi'..-:1,.:,--1 i'jyitiyhic; /\&lt;i.'r--.'.s&#13;
A . A . S O M A X I T Z , a . 0. fi.t om* - ) / r . M)(~H&#13;
' jl _&#13;
Railroad Guide.&#13;
tir*n4 tm\ JUllmy System.&#13;
~. 1&#13;
Arrival and Psnwturs of Tratas s i PUuduMFk&#13;
InEfleclJaae 14, JW. %-&#13;
W»STBOOWU.&#13;
Jackson snd (otern'dta 8U. # - M s n . W 3 T n a&#13;
• *&gt;*jr»o(n?p ,,, t ^ ; ,^'-&#13;
» n d l D t S r m s d l i r t « W r ^ » p » 3 t « . i * s »&#13;
Pootlso Lenox JjSratfin* • • • ;&#13;
inwrmedl»t«8U. 1JM*n HMvm&#13;
latve PootUc st t « . « 0 s * fojtrbai&#13;
for AoneoLonoy Mdlalt^tt. • ,&#13;
D . d i l , i)I VISION LKAVfi P05TIAC&#13;
WMMOUW* - 1 T T .&#13;
' Lv.&#13;
uaw Od Bsplds and Gd Bavsn&#13;
H»plds Gd Hsven Chicsgo -&#13;
Sssiiuiir Ud H*9ldt Milw&#13;
Oolossjo and InUrtnediate its,&#13;
Gd Rapids Muskngou&#13;
K48TBOUKD&#13;
Detroit East and Canada&#13;
Detroit East and Canada&#13;
Detroit and South&#13;
Detroit Ka»t and Canada&#13;
Detroit Suburban&#13;
Leave Detroit via. Windsor&#13;
XASXBODMP&#13;
Buffalo—New York k, Boston&#13;
Toronto Montreal New York&#13;
London Express&#13;
Buu~f fa"lo N- ew -Y-ork 4 East&#13;
«6.07 a m&#13;
tHUMU m&#13;
Ti.tfjsu&#13;
tSJSpns&#13;
17.05 a m&#13;
•T.iSa m&#13;
*12. noon&#13;
jLaOpnt&#13;
»n¥ppm&#13;
7,45 a m tarin has steeping oars Detroit to New&#13;
York and Boston. 12.00 uoon train has parlor&#13;
car to Hamilton—Steeping car to Buffalo aniNesr&#13;
York 11.25 train has sleeping ear to New York&#13;
jDsAly except Bonday. r *DaHy.&#13;
W. J. BLACK, Agent, Plncknejr iiich.&#13;
W. E, DAVIS E. H. HVOHHS&#13;
&amp;. P, « T. Alien*. A. G. PJ &amp; T Agt. -&#13;
Montreal, &lt;4ue. Chicago, T ll.&#13;
B E » FLITCHKK, Trav. Pass. Agt., Detroit Mich.&#13;
TOLEDO r^&#13;
INARB0JY&#13;
-^^e-pkiee^feeget&#13;
308 WORK&#13;
PR' PTLY and NEATLY&#13;
IS A T THE&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH JOB 60918,-&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICH.&#13;
F r e e P H U .&#13;
Sead your addrass to H. E. Backki&#13;
HSi Co.4 CiiicaRO, and uetV f r«e tamplf&#13;
W o f Dr. Kings N«• vr Life Piila, A&#13;
)AMX will coflTince ; &gt;a of their merits.&#13;
These pilli are eac&gt; in actioe and are&#13;
particular 1 j etedivr in the core of&#13;
Constipation and h ' Headache. For&#13;
Malaria and liver 11 ^abkethey have&#13;
been proved invuiiuble. Tbef are&#13;
^arnnteed t o t e prt'edJy free ttpm&#13;
erery deleterious t. stanoeaad i i he&#13;
pnrel/ vegetable. 1 he/ do not weak&#13;
en by their action, bat give taa» to&#13;
the stomach and howelf n i m% inrigorating&#13;
the ^tem. ffniaUl A 2te&#13;
Popular roote for Ann Arbor, Toledo&#13;
and points East, South and for&#13;
fioweil, Owo«o, Alma, Mt Pleasant,&#13;
Cadillac Manistee, Traverse City and&#13;
points in Northwestern Michigan.&#13;
W. H. BENKETT,&#13;
* (J. P . A., Toledo.&#13;
txaop iavuaiMa aora .&#13;
T K A O I MAJUtev&#13;
ocaiona,&#13;
Aurooe sendlajr • sketch and description may&#13;
quickly ascertain, free, whether an invention!*&#13;
probabl/patentable. Oonimuntcatlons strtctbr&#13;
oonfldentiaL Oldest apency forseourins; patent*&#13;
in America. We hare a Wanblnc^on o«oe.&#13;
Patents tak&lt;&gt;n throuifh Munn A Co. reoelrs&gt;&#13;
•pedal notice in the SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, Deaotifqttjr Ulnstratod, Ursrest eixenlation at&#13;
anyscJentlflc Journal weekly, terms «3.00 a rear i&#13;
SUOsiz ssotitbs. Speoinien copies and H.4&#13;
BOOK oar PATSKTS sent free. Aildreja&#13;
M U N N 4 C f . ,&#13;
M l Bresistwsiv, N e w t e H U&#13;
L i n&#13;
The Only One&#13;
To Stand the Test&#13;
Rev. William Copp, wlrose father&#13;
was a physician for over fifty years,&#13;
in New Jersey, and who himself&#13;
spent many years preparing for thepractice&#13;
of medicine, but subsequently&#13;
entered the ministry of the-&#13;
M. £. Church, writes: "1 am fiad&#13;
to testify that I havehad&#13;
anaJyied all the&#13;
•wares pariNaprepara.&#13;
tons Itnoan la th»J&#13;
trade, but AVER'S&#13;
»is the onJy one of&#13;
them that I could&#13;
recommend as a.&#13;
blood-purifier. I Lava&#13;
given away hwwireds of bottles of&#13;
it, as I consider it the safest as well&#13;
aa tike fceat to he bad M»W&lt;t, COPI\&#13;
Jllltlli!'!".&#13;
«HI&#13;
HEEL&#13;
X&gt;raaViii&#13;
Pastor M. E. Church, Jacksoa, Minn.&#13;
fr&#13;
T&#13;
- V&#13;
»&#13;
~\mt:,:jl*il!i;?i!M.i!&#13;
. 1 V&#13;
K&#13;
i-M®'--''?^-"*1 ••-&gt;.' *&#13;
&gt; • &gt; :&#13;
/ V j&#13;
m .f:&#13;
i.*« j i i&#13;
4 • &lt; » • * "&#13;
«** «&lt;r'«4 Savta** fte* a* jmgfv*»&#13;
'•3B;'1* «y V f aUMUJCtf OUJk 1 ID M&#13;
Jfctf. BaffleMTw Hwse,&#13;
%*£ SAVE YOUR LIFE.&#13;
p u i o a »5 Camte. JAaoWre» Ucava.7 g«iavjer te^mnp^lo»y)m»elniat «p»e?rcmtlaonnen. t aFnodr&#13;
flntloulan «ul 0» pttSlaW *f thla p»p*r.&#13;
1 JAMMW.'F08TMCO.,M«™D*vo»m,&#13;
flATH, N. H.&#13;
&lt;&#13;
It&#13;
•H 'M 'H*vt ''00 MJJOJ *M 83WVC&#13;
moixoidraoo sin joj&#13;
&gt; s m0 5 m&#13;
CO&#13;
\ « 1 S a l v e .&#13;
11 1 he *-orld for&#13;
• -. 'ilr^ern, FHlt rheum,&#13;
•'iipned bands,chill&#13;
r. • iil «kin eruptions.&#13;
&lt;&lt;ry .. .implies or no pay&#13;
o&lt;; ' 1 1 11 is paaranteed to ffivc&#13;
feriru* ** "-miction tor money refund&#13;
fd. IVi &lt;•• .'•'&gt; centi per box. For saU&#13;
J.v P. A -Si 'er. .&#13;
*VWwWw^w^wWw^^**p*»V»*&#13;
Michigan ^, People.&#13;
I Peirtotr ha* another bank failure&#13;
and on Monday monjioK of last&#13;
week 1i« Fejato** State Bank closed&#13;
its door* and hang up this&#13;
notice: "In the hands of the bank&#13;
commissioner.1' It is claimed that&#13;
the bank had made too heavy investments&#13;
in the Electric Light&#13;
Co.', of Fentou.&#13;
Helen Constantinedes, a Greek&#13;
maiden, nineteen years of age, has&#13;
organised a company and started&#13;
for the fronyto fight against the&#13;
Turks. Her brother will accompany&#13;
her, She declares that she&#13;
will fight in the front ranks, and&#13;
has no fear of death. Thousands&#13;
of her enthusiastic countrymen applauded&#13;
her departure and hail&#13;
her as the Greek Joan of Arc.—&#13;
New Ideas.&#13;
One or two important billsimportant&#13;
to taxpayers at least—&#13;
have become laws, among them&#13;
being an act providing for the&#13;
publication of the proceedings of&#13;
annual school meetings, and an&#13;
annual financial statement in graded&#13;
school districts. Also for the&#13;
printing or writing of financial&#13;
statements of township for distribution&#13;
at the annual town meeting.—&#13;
Ann Arbor Argus.&#13;
G. A. B. Posts throughout the&#13;
country are passing resolutions&#13;
indorsing Judge Tourgee's suggestion&#13;
that Memorial Day be&#13;
changed to always fall upon the&#13;
fourth Sunday in May. The growing&#13;
tendency of young America to&#13;
make Memorial day one of sport&#13;
and frolic, to devote it to picnics,&#13;
base ball games, etc., is becoming&#13;
so common that it is feared the&#13;
beautiful intent of the observance&#13;
will be lost unless some change is&#13;
made.—Ex.&#13;
An exchange says an old German&#13;
had a son whose future he&#13;
was anxious to forecast. He placed&#13;
upon a table in a room a Bi^le&#13;
and a bottle of whiskey while he&#13;
contrived to have his son go in,&#13;
"if mwmm&#13;
urn w i n&#13;
(LOCATED&#13;
[ Directly Opposite M. CR'y Depot&#13;
I b f e O ^ of tfatWhoksak District.;&#13;
{ TbfetMia»t(»fayEfcKtticC*rttoRc-;&#13;
»tall Center mi all Places of Ammmuat *&#13;
* . . « . . . — *&#13;
\ 200 Ratqas with SUamMeett&#13;
( $a«)»ot* la New Improvements.;&#13;
- • - • - - • - - - - - j T&#13;
I&#13;
(Rates* $2.00 to $3.50 per Day.:&#13;
. Slnejle Meal* 6 0 e .&#13;
T &gt;HE MA80N ARTIFICIAL&#13;
STOVE WATER TANK. A wonderta]&#13;
invention and a great boon to tanner*.&#13;
Heat or eoM do not efteet them, and they will laat&#13;
male** deatroyed by an earthquake while the earth&#13;
bate. We Invite your inapeeuon. They wiU not&#13;
rot, mat or wear oat. Warranted for five year*.&#13;
For farther paxtlenlan call or write to&#13;
WILL EVEBS,&#13;
" Ajent in ( n jr.vli&lt;xu»tis Hockbridge.Mlch&#13;
Last year Ingham county borrowed&#13;
$&amp;0&gt;QQO ^o run the current&#13;
expenses; thia year the county&#13;
treasurer haa^,been ordered to bor«&#13;
rowW0,QP*.&#13;
The Grand Trunk has issued an&#13;
order that with June 1, section&#13;
foreman must dispense with the&#13;
services of all relatives working&#13;
under them and must not in future&#13;
engage any relative to work on&#13;
the section in their charge.—&#13;
Lansing Beview.&#13;
The dog poisoners have got in&#13;
their work iu great shape. We&#13;
understand that over 40 of Howell's&#13;
canines are dead. Whoeyer&#13;
has done this nefarious act, if&#13;
found out, would doubtless be&#13;
punished to the fall extent of the&#13;
law.—Li v. Herald.&#13;
while he stood behind a curtain to&#13;
watch the result. He said to himself,&#13;
"If my boy "dakes de Bible,&#13;
he will be a broacher; if he dakes&#13;
de whiskey, he will be a sport."&#13;
The boy came in, put the Bible iu&#13;
one pocket and the whiskey in the&#13;
other. "Mine Got!" exclaimed&#13;
the old man "he's going to be a&#13;
bolitician!"&#13;
The summer reason at the lakes&#13;
is beginning to open up, and every&#13;
day people are driviug through&#13;
town either on fishing excursions&#13;
or for a few weeks camping. * Several&#13;
new houses will bo put up on&#13;
Mletaken Ooodnea*.&#13;
We have become eclectics, observing&#13;
only those portions of the moral code&#13;
that are agreeable to us, and by zealous&#13;
devotion to pet commandments we&#13;
hope to atone for our failure to keep&#13;
disagreeable ones. The drunkard&#13;
thinks by being good hearted, he is excusable&#13;
for his drunkenness. The man&#13;
to whom chastity is irksome takes&#13;
refuge in the fact that he pays his bills.&#13;
And he who votes the prohibition ticket&#13;
is apt to think he. has merited heaven&#13;
thereby. "Know ye not that whosoever&#13;
shall keep the whole law and yet&#13;
offend in one point is guilty of all?"&#13;
—]R*v. William Kick.&#13;
He Was In.&#13;
Gitmore—You were not in yesterday&#13;
when I called. I wanted to borrow 110.&#13;
Glvum—Yes, I was; I was In flfi.—&#13;
Roxburv Gazette. .&#13;
"For three years we have never&#13;
been without Chamberlain's Colic,&#13;
Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy in the&#13;
bouse" says A. H. Patter with E. C.&#13;
Atkins &amp; Co., Indianopolis, Ind., and&#13;
my wife would as soon think of being&#13;
without flour as a bottle of this Remedy&#13;
in tbe summer season. We have&#13;
ubed it with all three of our children&#13;
and it has never failed to cure—not&#13;
simply stop,pain, but care absolutely.&#13;
It is all right, and anyone who tries it&#13;
will find it so. For sale by F- A. Sigler.&#13;
The Evening News,&#13;
-TIE MEAT DA1Y OF IKMiiN,-&#13;
will *""r -,,&#13;
Supplement Your Home Paper,&#13;
2 OMlt I Nflf. &lt;Hyla* you an the&#13;
lOuiitiwNk(willmi).&#13;
Jl.25fgr3iHtte(ktMJI).&#13;
.fitate,&#13;
National and&#13;
Foreign Newt*&#13;
AQENTB IN BVERY TOWN IN M/OH/QAN.&#13;
* T &lt; h The Evening News, Detroit&#13;
Ihe finchttijj §ispatth.&#13;
P0BLI&amp;11ID EVKPYTHUIU1IMY M JiiNI.No BY&#13;
F R A N K X . A N D R E W S&#13;
Ediior and "Proprietor.&#13;
Subscription Prlfje $1 In Advance&#13;
Entered *t iba Pu&amp;tofllce at Piacfcney, MhiSii^D,&#13;
as dticoud-cla»s matter.&#13;
Advertising rales made known on application.&#13;
BuuineM Cards, $4.00 por year.&#13;
Death and marriage uotlcee publlatied tree.&#13;
Announcements of entert&amp;inmeut* may be imld&#13;
tor, if desired, by presenting the office with ticket*&#13;
oradmlsaion. In case ticket* are not brought&#13;
to tne office, regular rates will be charged.&#13;
All matter In local notice column will be chant&#13;
ed at Scents per line or fraction thereof, for each&#13;
insertion. Where no time i* specified, all ootlces&#13;
will be inaerted until ordered discentinued, and&#13;
will ba chatted lor accoraingly, t^-All chaa^ea&#13;
ol adTertlsemeots MUST reach this office aa earl*&#13;
aa TDBBDAT morning to laaure an inaertlon the&#13;
tame week.&#13;
Special Barg*""&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIRECTORY,&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PEBsrosNT.. ^^. Claude L. Sigler.&#13;
TjiCBtKaa, Geo. Iteason Jr., ft. &amp;. Murphy, t. (i.&#13;
Jackson, F. J. Wright. E . R. Brown, C. L. Grime*.&#13;
CLBBK «. H. H. Teeple.&#13;
TBBA8tTKBB....„. M J A. &lt;J ad well.&#13;
ABSSHHOB D. W. Jlart«&#13;
STBBBT C O M X U S I O N E B A. Monk*&#13;
M A B S A O L ^ "...p. Monroe.&#13;
HEALTH urrtctn Dr. H. P. Sigler.&#13;
ATTOKHKY ^, „ W. A. Carr.&#13;
eujc*.&#13;
Price $»00.&#13;
Sp.'ctal&#13;
&gt; Price aa&#13;
t ion%i» they&#13;
\ ast, the&#13;
&gt; biegestbar-&#13;
\ calo ever&#13;
r offered,&#13;
{ oalv&#13;
$1-22 )) Jouas?t eout 192- OOOB of ) nouey sav-&#13;
} inland&#13;
.rice euirte.&#13;
' '.Vrite (Or it.&#13;
)&#13;
Banquet&#13;
FinLisahmedp* i n gold&#13;
lacquer.&#13;
lm* No. S&#13;
Rochester&#13;
(,'bimney&#13;
and Wick,&#13;
with either&#13;
»hamlBcr::e&#13;
14-inch&#13;
•hade or 16-&#13;
inch fancy&#13;
crepe tiBSiie&#13;
panershade&#13;
or fancy&#13;
band painted&#13;
banquet&#13;
frlob*». with&#13;
gold trimming*&#13;
ail for&#13;
$1.97&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
METHODIST EPISCOPAL C H U E C H .&#13;
Rev. M. H.McMahon pastor. Service* every&#13;
Sunday morning at 10:'Jt&gt;, and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:00 o'clock. Prayer meeting Thursday&#13;
evenings. Sunday scbool at cloee of mornng&#13;
service. Mrs. £stclla Urabam, Suoerlntend't.&#13;
GRUMMOND'S&#13;
DETROIT M CLEVELAND&#13;
LINE OF STEALERS&#13;
CO N U U E G A f l O N A L CHURCH.&#13;
C. S. Jones, pastor. Service every&#13;
Sunday t » o « a n ^ -at—10:80, and^avery Sunday&#13;
evening at r:oc o'clock. Prayer nie«tii^Thursday&#13;
evenings, handay school at cioae of morn-&#13;
Inn service. I. J. Coek, SupL S. T. Grimes, Sec.&#13;
50?; TO&#13;
both Base and Portage lakes and&#13;
improvements are being made on&#13;
the old ones. Some years ago it&#13;
was predicted that the lakes would&#13;
become a famous summer resort&#13;
and that too without aid of a sea&#13;
serpent. The prediction is being&#13;
rapidly fulfilled,—Dexter Leader.&#13;
What we need Bro. By an is an&#13;
electric road from Howell through&#13;
to Dexter and the lakes would&#13;
soon be ahead of anything around.&#13;
In a historical article recalling&#13;
the destruction of our National&#13;
capital by the British force* in&#13;
1814, Clifford Howard in th« July&#13;
Ladies' Home Journal will shew&#13;
that Dolly Madison, the most popular&#13;
and beloved woman of bar&#13;
day, waa courageous and fearless&#13;
In^thelaoeor grate- danger,&#13;
the mad stampede from Washingtern,&#13;
that proceeded the invasion&#13;
by the British troops, Dolly Madison&#13;
was the last to seek safety in&#13;
flight, and her final act before&#13;
quitting the White House, as the&#13;
enemy adTaaeed, was to aiezse the&#13;
diy^jfcaaJQiiof xAdepenajUaBoe&#13;
CLE7ELAND&#13;
A DELIGHTFUL&#13;
Moonlight Trip Across Late Eric&#13;
. DAILY.&#13;
9m ?. M.&#13;
LOCAL TIME. . . .&#13;
Lv. Detroit,&#13;
Ar. Cleveland, 6:30 A. II&#13;
BICYCLES CARRIED FREE.&#13;
U. S. GRUMMOND&#13;
GEN'L MGE.,&#13;
TEU NO. 162- OFPKJE &lt;t DOCK, FOOT FIRST 8T.&#13;
Aeytxolt, iwnerta&#13;
carry ft with fcex to * place of&#13;
safety. As ti» White Ho«ee wai|&#13;
im&#13;
burned by the BeitMh, Mr. Howard&#13;
declares tfeai b»t for bt#m&#13;
• Dolly afe^tifM^ the farioaleaeparohxsMit&#13;
woaJd hare&gt;eem totrof ed '&#13;
A A &gt; a i * a "NotuiK dse like it"&#13;
The most rctr&lt;shtrig and&#13;
pleasant Soap for the skin.&#13;
ft lasts fe»te as JoAf as oAcrs.&#13;
i «a«rviikc*&#13;
merit. WOt ptes«e«l»t&#13;
A trial wfl eaerviikc* ya*| «/ ita cr««t&gt;&#13;
Vm «4«**e&lt;i*e aMMlaattdioua,&#13;
1:.&#13;
•&#13;
4 u&#13;
CHARLES F.JttlLLER,&#13;
Mftr.ol PRBNCH ItHLLBB TOH-CTl&#13;
SOAPS AMa&gt; FBW^JMEltY.;&#13;
T mmilifTi Pfiiaii&#13;
*B«BiB^^^^^^^^^^^^a»^*y' ^ " ^^^^^^^^m&#13;
T^err^BLraHLXLtt. isa9. _J&#13;
a&gt;^*^a»ylpa»^-B»aaji&#13;
ST. MAKVTS 'JATHUL.IC CHURCH.&#13;
Rev. M. J. Coinuierford, Paetor. Service*&#13;
every third Sunday. Low maw at 7:3U o'clock,&#13;
high suae* with sermon at s&gt;:% a. m. Catechiam&#13;
at3:Oo p ui., veeperaanabenediction at 7:90 p.m.&#13;
SOCIETIES;&#13;
The A. O. H. Society of this place, meet* every&#13;
third Sunday in tne Kr. Matthew Hall.&#13;
John ilcGuiceM. County DelegBte.&#13;
pinckiiey Y. P. S. C. E. Meeting* held every&#13;
M&#13;
Sunday evening in Cong"! church at ft:"JO o'clock.&#13;
EI&#13;
«&#13;
PWORT1I LEAGUE. Meets ev«ry Sunday&#13;
evening at 6:00 oclock in the M. E, Church. ' A&#13;
cordial iavitatlun is extended to everyone, especially&#13;
young people. Mis* Jennie Haze, Pre*.&#13;
X. M. ROTHSCHILD &amp; CO. :&#13;
'VHOLK«iAL^. t&#13;
State, Vaa Bare* t o JacVsoavsU-, Ciiicago. i&#13;
M ^u'.loii ihi^ paper. f&#13;
VWVWA*A*WM%**&lt;%* | PATENTS Careata and Trade Mart* obtained and all Pat-1.&#13;
eat burineea condacted for Moderate Pees.&#13;
BendmodeLdrawingorphoto. Weadvieeif&#13;
patentable free of charge. OnrfeenotduettU&#13;
patenti**eeurei. A pBavplilet "Row to Ob-!&#13;
taiaPatents." with cost of aamo in the U»&#13;
and foreign, coontrle* aent free. Addreaa, C. A. SNOW &amp; CO.&#13;
_. O M . PATKNT Office. WaBMinoTOH. O* C ^&#13;
Xyilep*y earod by Dr. Hilar N&#13;
Meet* everv Sunday&#13;
J aiternooa 3:00 o'clock, ai M. E church. All unior £pworth League&#13;
aiternoon at i&#13;
cordially icvite4&#13;
Mre. Eatella CirahaaiSaperintendent.&#13;
eApisLe&#13;
THE WHEEL OF WHEELS.&#13;
The C.T. A. and B. Society of this place, meet&#13;
every third Satnroay evening in the Fr. Matthew&#13;
Hall. John Donohue, PreeldenU&#13;
NIGHTS OF MAtJCABEKS.&#13;
Meet every Friday evening on or before fall&#13;
of the moon at their hall in the Swarthout bldg.&#13;
Visiting brother* are cordially invited.&#13;
CBAS. UAMPBB&amp;L, Sir EjDlgat Commander&#13;
Livingeton Lodge, No. 7¾. F A A. M. Regular&#13;
Communication Tuesday evening, on or before&#13;
the full of the moon. M. K. Sigler. W. M.&#13;
: ? H E PERFECT&#13;
OB 0 4 R OF EASTE&amp;N 8TA&amp; meet* eoch aaoavth&#13;
the Friday evening following the regular F .&#13;
AA.M. meeting, Mma.C. E I X S M Eicsajioa, WM,&#13;
LADIES OF T H E MAOUABE1C8. Meat erory&#13;
1st aad8rd1 Saturday of e a c h m o M h a t 8:90&#13;
o'clock at the K. O, T . M. halL Viahting&#13;
cordially Invited. J C U A BIOIJCB, Lady Com&#13;
\i KNIGHTS OF m LOYAL GUABD&#13;
meet every second Wednesday&#13;
evenina: of every month in the K. O.&#13;
T. M. Hell at 7*0 oclock. All visiting&#13;
Guards welcome.&#13;
F. L. AxPKKW*, Cape Gen.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
. F. S*QLER M- 0- ' C, L. SIGLER M, D&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER, ,&#13;
Phy«4oia«aaBd Surgeon*- A l l call* promptly&#13;
attooood t o d a y ox utaht. Office on Mala street&#13;
?£&amp;&amp; ' • WHEEL.&#13;
Doo'l hoy a, wheel tmtil you&#13;
THE CARLISLE and get our prices.&#13;
THE CARLISLE MFG. CO.&#13;
1 2 1 ¾ ^ } 203Mkhig»Bode«4&#13;
saajar pd&#13;
ithestvec,!&#13;
jSold b y F . A • B i q l e n&#13;
, — ^&#13;
Nearly everyone rWes;&#13;
aa* t* ride wftkease as*&#13;
a petal that'i right.&#13;
ROCHESTER&#13;
•» PEDALS&#13;
ARERrGHT&#13;
every Mir is&#13;
«uatee»i* Tw atylea,&#13;
: ; ; . • ; . • • ' . . . ; ; - W&#13;
¥^H^&#13;
s&#13;
~ l&#13;
\ &gt;&#13;
1&#13;
&gt;%.&#13;
*--\3&#13;
'- ' i&#13;
,• J '&#13;
't' 'i&#13;
'.M&#13;
i V ' i&#13;
•Si.!*.. .&lt;*l • '. - V I C . ;&#13;
' • . * &lt; ' . • • • • • , ' . ' &lt; " . .&#13;
&gt; , * • ' " . • ' • ' • ' • : •&#13;
'•;/.;{'', '•.'.,'* • ' . M ; ' " ; ' * ' ' / ' ... . * • . : • &lt; • v . - ?&#13;
; v&#13;
• ^&#13;
^&#13;
• \ - .&#13;
• • # •&#13;
/,-&#13;
Ww^'''' HQT -'&#13;
lis V .&#13;
K c •, •&#13;
Wb r' •&#13;
BWf%'. : ',&#13;
P - v^-'1 • m * •&#13;
n, . . lI$fyc. .v&#13;
«e Nib BS&#13;
Faun*;&#13;
PINCKNEY, *,- MICHIGAN&#13;
TALMIGE'S mmm.&#13;
•mm, jummmmm&#13;
FIRST WOMAN** LAST&#13;
DAY'S SUM&#13;
•he&#13;
The dismissal of ft/British, *****&#13;
official for groat blaculta to a hungry&#13;
child should be considered by the Britlab,,&#13;
nation before vlt starts ,U* loyal&#13;
jubilee. v .&#13;
Scientist* who do not want to go after41teMavo*&#13;
n try to get to the summit&#13;
ot Bat:St Bttas, Alaska, nobody&#13;
having yet'been-able to get up^there.&#13;
There* tsiaiwayat a chance for the earnest&#13;
man of acience.&#13;
. &gt; til' h i » i i • ' • . , !&#13;
"Peace hath her victories." A apecial.&#13;
wa^t ojt tbe IMpaxtwant Qf Agriculture&#13;
haa,left Washington for the&#13;
Argentine Republic, where he is to&#13;
plaife.a, oajapaign against the iocasia.&#13;
No doubt this war saems to the agriculturists&#13;
of our slater republic a far&#13;
more vital matter, than the struggle&#13;
la Qreeoe. A graaahopper in hand&#13;
may appear more formidable than two&#13;
Turks In the bush.&#13;
the,&#13;
D««lan«d to BfaM O M&#13;
Tree WMI Good&#13;
H&amp;J?**'&#13;
r*oon in&#13;
* exlaohoir&#13;
Lord.&#13;
5= 9&#13;
pnOatnc i*t -Manet&#13;
Haalthtul cUHbedt* &lt;has gdnrdown and •tAmwaMsW of the great Jeot&#13;
a eqndor pitching from Chimboraao*&#13;
r i-t.&#13;
of wmgaiand scales&#13;
afldvelottdB, and in&#13;
^Nfcbja nrajt leaaona in&#13;
I ifb^^gy and ornlth&#13;
It will be sad for aome of our ambitious&#13;
heiresses if Labouchere'a miachievous&#13;
scheme to do away with tttlea&#13;
should be adopted. He proposes that&#13;
every child that is baptized be endowed&#13;
by Its parents and sponsors&#13;
with the name of "duke," "marquis,"&#13;
"earl," "viscount." "lord/' or even&#13;
"sir," preceding the other Christian&#13;
name. With titles In every family,&#13;
they should become, toq common even&#13;
for foolish Americana to buy.&#13;
discretion ot editors in laying bare&#13;
private masters, haa instigated many* a ,&#13;
amecausr eaunldat iwonoam aonf uton tobludr nv amluaen. usIctr ipist •o* atarred epaniele aprawling them&#13;
wise to destroy immediately letters&#13;
which ^contain unpleasant personalities&#13;
4^eV not &amp; aave beyond, the time&#13;
of a|eia%a4 tJft.ose void ot eipe^iai &amp;-&#13;
tea^at or impertaxes. It ia also discreet&#13;
to congider what literature, history&#13;
and biography woufd bare lost&#13;
llVths/ friends of QbjvLea Lgmb, Oliver&#13;
Cromwell, Madame LVtPvngne and&#13;
ahosi of OAhei iaen ^fMofrtto bad&#13;
iugblged in the j f eseiy 11 Has ilf against&#13;
the* preaervatioa -of JiterUfB letters.&#13;
' -* ' - - • • • • • — | j ^ •*»* i;-, »&#13;
Ssjnator Penrose'tf BaaJtaytvanla has&#13;
raised a uww issae^ 8¼ Wa^anlngtoii. He&#13;
hai^fuaad to tip the waitera employed&#13;
ln-ithe hotej where be boards, and everfbody&#13;
at rthe national capital ia&#13;
agtnaat at this new declaration of independence.&#13;
a The waiters were not&#13;
quick to draw the lines. They&#13;
watted weesa after the senator's&#13;
appearanoa : before they adopted&#13;
ex^renaa measures. Than, after there&#13;
we* , ho longer roym to doubt&#13;
thai the Penneyivaniaa would not&#13;
"Us," tbeyraaoivad to piuilah him, Accozdlngly&#13;
at dinner one day last, week&#13;
four waiters in succession refused to&#13;
serve the eesator. A fifth was finally"&#13;
ordered to serve him, and obeyed, but&#13;
resigned immediately afterward, and&#13;
the&gt; white aproned brotherhood, jnas&gt;&#13;
Ing-eoaamon cause with him, resigned&#13;
that night&#13;
Much has .been said in the papers&#13;
ihe past few years con earning the&#13;
preservation of old letters. ^ i e injj grovea frem th^-tropica, and tamaxinda&#13;
bgy he haf notice* that the robins fly&#13;
the a l | j M f M , «nd that the fish swim&#13;
the wat&amp;nn twea, and that the lions&#13;
walk Ure fields in %(woa, and in the&#13;
warm redolence of that Saturday afternoon&#13;
be lalia off in|p aUin&gt;ba,r; and as&#13;
if by allegory:|o teach all. ages that&#13;
the greatest of earthly blessings, ia&#13;
aound Bleep, this paradisaical somnolence&#13;
ends with the discovery on the&#13;
part of Adam of a corresponding intelligence&#13;
Just landed on a' new planet&#13;
Of the mother of all that t&amp;ing X speak&#13;
—Eve, the first, the fairest, and the&#13;
beat&#13;
- I make me a garden. I inlay the&#13;
paths with mountain moss, and I border&#13;
them with pearls from Ceylon and&#13;
diamonds from Golconda. Here and&#13;
there are fountains tossing HI the sunlight&#13;
and ponds that ripple under the&#13;
paddling of the swans. I gather me-'&#13;
lilies from the Amazon, and orange.&#13;
from Goyaz.&#13;
honeysuckle&#13;
There are woodbine and&#13;
eUmbisg over the wall.&#13;
selves on the grass. I invite amid these&#13;
trees the larks, and the brown thraabea&#13;
and the robins, and all the brightest&#13;
birds of heaven, s#d.tbey stir thAsi^j&#13;
with infinite chirps and enrol. And yei"&#13;
the place ia a desert filled with dark"&#13;
ness and death ss^ompsred with the&#13;
residence sf the Woman of my. text the&#13;
subject of my story. Never sine* have&#13;
such skies looked down thrquy^wdn&#13;
leaves into such waters! Nvrdr'hsax&#13;
river wave had such curve anid jto&amp;b&#13;
and bank as adorned the Piaon-, fhe&#13;
Havilah. the Glhon, and the HiddeAel.&#13;
even the pebbles being bdellium *nd&#13;
What fruUa, wllsw1**^&#13;
What flow«&#13;
onyx atone!&#13;
curcullo to sting the rind!&#13;
era, with no slug to gnaw ihe foot*&#13;
What atmosphere, with no frawt te-ohUJ.&#13;
and with no "heat to conaumet '.Bright'&#13;
colon tangled in the grass. • ^errttnie&#13;
in the air. Muaic in the skJ^.Grefct&#13;
scene of gladness and love and Joy, ,'&#13;
Tbe power which public opinion&#13;
sgrsph In a recent speech by Lord&#13;
BaUsWry. Oertamly two classes of&#13;
deluded persona are those who care&#13;
nothing for what people think and&#13;
these who are entirely swayed by what&#13;
pedple think. A man who refuses to&#13;
wear a. dress coat on occasions where&#13;
areas coataare In order provokea needleas&#13;
^gejsaT ani^ wastes Ii&gt; s. puny&#13;
war eawrgy that migkC be better emshosid&#13;
aha sat himaetf on ttsst seooont&#13;
!rojn a gairherlag wlaera he^ould be&#13;
welooxae fn afternoon dreaa. easw in&#13;
the opnoaits eU^etton. PwtUc opladoat&#13;
la so powerfnl an eleaaent in life taut&#13;
it behoovea the lndfrldttala of society&#13;
to^ee to it that they eontribnta only&#13;
sans and £a*amd;dssaft!tetevs to the #*neraf&#13;
i^eaultant '&#13;
. T3he newspaper that hesitates to p«bliesi&#13;
an acsonnt of the oocurrenoe or&#13;
diwovery of a secret msrrtsge is a&#13;
rsriry. yet avlde from a^tnal^rlaae few&#13;
events are the cause of so saseh reby&#13;
romantic ideas or by any&#13;
motive, urges a young woman to&#13;
to a clandestine marriage usnsJIy&#13;
by that very act weakness sad&#13;
e&lt; character; while statistics&#13;
that the majority of such mareeasat&#13;
ia divorce. The papera&#13;
have rccsanly given with a fullness of&#13;
detail whiah hat brought shame to a&#13;
large dicta of iamooent relatives, the&#13;
Right there under a bower W leaf&#13;
and vino and shrub oedarnag tfie first i&#13;
marriage. Adam took the hand ot this'&#13;
immaculate daughter of God and pronounced&#13;
the ceremony when he said:&#13;
"Bone of my bone, anid iiesn of-Wry&#13;
flesh." A forbidda* tree atopd in the&#13;
midst of that axoulalte park. Bve&#13;
sauntering out one dsy siona looks up&#13;
at the tree and aees the beautiful fruit,&#13;
and wondera if it ia sweet, and wonders&#13;
if it ia sour, and standing there,&#13;
says: "I think I will just jut any hand&#13;
upon the fruit; it arm do no damage to&#13;
the tree; I will not take the fruit to&#13;
eat bat I WlM lu»* tskn it down to&#13;
It haa studied, the myriads of animal&#13;
cuiaa tMt.maliia UP thft,pho#Dhoref.&#13;
oencein^abUi'a wake, and the mighty&#13;
mass of suns, and spheres, and constellatlona,&#13;
and galajUaa that blaaa on,&#13;
iio the march of God. •, JtfealthfaV ou^&#13;
rioaity haa stood by the inventor UQ-I&#13;
til forces that were hidden for ageav&#13;
came to wheeis, aj»d-»iv*rs,'S*d shmita&#13;
'and shuttles—forces that ly the sift or&#13;
swim the sea, or eicave the mountain,&#13;
until the earth jars, and roara^ ind&#13;
rlhgs^ and crackles, and booms With&#13;
strange mechanlfcm, and ships mth&#13;
nostrlla ot hot steam and yokes of fire,&#13;
draw the contlnenta together. f k&#13;
I any uotbing, agalnsl, heaj.thfu), eu: rloalty, May it have qtbjar t.Lajrdw&#13;
jars, and other electric batteries, and&#13;
other voltaic pUss.Attd othtr maanlfyin&#13;
«-glaass»» with whiah U* atom ths&#13;
barred easUes of the ngtu/ai world until&#13;
it shall surrender its last secret&#13;
Ws thank God for the geological curiosity&#13;
of Professor Hitchcock* sad the&#13;
mechanical curiosity of Ltebig, and-the&#13;
zoologies! curtoalty of Cuvler, and the&#13;
Inventive curiosity of Edison; but we&#13;
must admit that unhealthful and irregular&#13;
inguisttiveneaa haa rushed thousands&#13;
and tens of thousands into ruin.&#13;
Bve just tasted the fruit. She was&#13;
curioua to find out how it tasted, and&#13;
that curiosity blasted her and blasted&#13;
all nations. So there are clergymen In&#13;
this day inspired by unhealthful ln-&#13;
Qulaitiveneaa who have tried to look&#13;
through the keyhole of God's mysteries—&#13;
mysteries that were barred and&#13;
bolted from all human inspection, and :&#13;
they have wrenched their whole moral&#13;
nature out of joint by trying to pluck&#13;
fruit from branches beyond their reach&#13;
or have come out on Hmba of the tree&#13;
from which they have tumbled into&#13;
ruin without remedy. A thousand trees&#13;
of religioua knowledge from which we&#13;
may eat and get advantage; but from&#13;
certain trees of mystery how many&#13;
have plucked their ruin! Election,&#13;
freer agency, trinity, resurrection—in&#13;
the discussion of these subjects hun-&#13;
ArmAm *rxA thftllMnHa of n#QBl«t rttin t h e&#13;
soul'. There are men who actually&#13;
have'been kept out of the kingdom of&#13;
heaven because they could not understand&#13;
who stelchiaedec was not!&#13;
Oh, *hOw maoy have bejeh:i$eatroye4&#13;
by MM unhealthful lnquiaitiVAneas! It&#13;
is seen in all directions. There are&#13;
those who stand wjth the eye-stare and&#13;
mouth-gape of curiosity. They are the&#13;
tret to hear a falsehood, hjrfid it another&#13;
story ..high and two wings to it&#13;
About other people's apparel, about&#13;
other people's business, about other&#13;
people's financial condition, about other&#13;
people's attain, they are overanxious.&#13;
BJvery nice piece of gossip&#13;
stops at their jsoor, and they fatten and&#13;
luxuriate in the endless round of the&#13;
gtest world of, OtUe-tattle. They invite&#13;
and sumptuously entertain at their&#13;
house Colonel Twaddle and Esquire&#13;
Chitchat and Governor Smalltalk.&#13;
Whoever hath an innuendo, whoever&#13;
Mteetioa*-tor a d&gt;aeh, make thrwwrai ^ ^ 1 1&#13;
Uuf her ospriclouanssa of af-l&#13;
hsr hotnaaa ot tajn^gfTT =&#13;
v9mSS».,&#13;
ity.&#13;
•WWW*&#13;
manner or j&#13;
I «.«?.*/ at -M i\*:}ii4* sm tjjor wiWnJneas, tq*&#13;
» P, #^-,,, i... Diaobadiance G04-&#13;
ward and transgression manwaad can&#13;
give no excuse,,, ,(^co^mj^(ahm«nt&#13;
hes.venThlgh (gno anolpgyfor vice hell-&#13;
My subject also- Impresses me with 1 the regal influenca of woman. Whan I&#13;
see, flva. with this psjrerfua inftusajde&#13;
over 1 Adam land over the generations&#13;
that have followed, it auggaata to me&#13;
the groat yovar &lt;amv&gt;arojasn«Jnrvs for&#13;
good or forevli. Ijhave no aympathy,&#13;
ner.;hav» you, With *he hollow Satter*&#13;
Jea showered upon woman from the&#13;
pisttorm and' thr stags.••? They mean&#13;
nothing; they a** accepted ad nothihg.&#13;
Waman'B nobility consists In the exlerelseof&#13;
a Cbrtatiaa i^talivanear and&#13;
wheal see- thia* powerful Influence of&#13;
Bve upon bar husband and upon the&#13;
whole human race, I make up my mind&#13;
that fee fraft arm or woman'can strike&#13;
a blow which will resound through all&#13;
eternity down among the dungeona or&#13;
tftf among the thrones'. ~&#13;
Of course, I am not'speaking of representative&#13;
women-^-of Bve,' who ruined&#13;
the race by one fruit-picking; of Jael,&#13;
who drove a spike through the head&#13;
of Sisera the warrior; of Esther who,&#13;
overcame royalty; of Abigail, who&#13;
stopped a host by her own bettutlfUl&#13;
prowess; ot Marr, who nursed the&#13;
world'a savior; of Grandmother Loig,&#13;
Immortalized In her grandson' Timothy;&#13;
of Charlotte Corday," who drove&#13;
the dagger through the heart of the&#13;
assassin of her lover; or of Marie Antoinette,&#13;
who by one look from the balcony&#13;
of her castle quieted a mob*, her&#13;
own scaffold the throne of, forgiveness&#13;
and womanly courage. ' I speak not of&#13;
these extraordinary persons, but , of&#13;
those who, unambitious for * political&#13;
power, as wives and mothers and •inters&#13;
and daughtera, attend to the thousand&#13;
sweMofficss ofhome,: . j ,&#13;
Wheu at laat we come 0 calculate&#13;
the forces that decided the destiny of&#13;
najtions, it wIlLbAfound^thaUhe mjghtleat&#13;
and. grandest influence came from&#13;
home, where the wife cheered up despondency&#13;
and fatigue and sorrow by&#13;
her ow^symj»y^^and_ the . mother&#13;
trained her child for heaven, starting&#13;
the little feet on the path to the Celestial&#13;
City; and the sister* by their&#13;
gentleness refined the mannera. of the&#13;
brother; and the daughtera were diligent&#13;
in their kindness to the aged,&#13;
throwing wreaths of blpasinga on the&#13;
road that leads father andv-ntother&#13;
down the steep of years. God blesa&#13;
our homea! And may tha. hoojanxui&#13;
earth be thei vestlstile of onr home la&#13;
AHD .tL.c&#13;
* *11 rfihfc" ilJtWTfti jfr1 Ml u _u&#13;
be.&#13;
;C,A: :ra# W4ey«i« n«u% ,&#13;
BI4WDA hi&#13;
wUcbihg&#13;
And Marg&#13;
MarcellA IB Woeed*&#13;
ing wisa,&#13;
And* oisihr m fair&#13;
-Has'" ytrtsasv*-of&#13;
&gt;».«•&#13;
is; w \ t » #^1).()(..&#13;
The fairast ma+lden^&#13;
M I : &gt;/&#13;
heart tn tbrsdi;'&#13;
: •" ever _&#13;
"''Bhe'^^sldsi*' w*1&#13;
^Af.t iwdee tiorgFetthhee rb, omultetv'latrfd .. ^- ^^, *¾'•*•^* ' All eyea that see haa open wtde&gt; f&#13;
With eWdent refard; &gt; ,/&#13;
Her knickers are a perfect fit*&#13;
Her fiat's'* jaunty thtag; '&#13;
AnAffConaalaua that ahe.aaskea a hit&#13;
aha w&amp;m her oyela. aAng| .&lt; i,u&gt;&#13;
She smiles from her bewitching*' ey»s&#13;
Aa I admire&gt;her grace,&#13;
And theq ahe looks exceeding ^fiae,&#13;
And bluahea dye bar face. .. . ^ .&#13;
For since the law requires a sett,&#13;
On blfcea of every kJOd.1 Ivvii--&#13;
Thla beUe, you'll spon, I'ss. proud uto&#13;
Upotne lln, iy -. tandem flnd.t *. ., ... . r&#13;
1 1 ii 1 • • -&#13;
W©rd PaiBl.d the Typew^lten, r According,to the.Waghli^gtqn 'filv,&#13;
one mprnjng recentjy the rapreaeutative&#13;
came,in#/ila office with a Miffing&#13;
cold In his head and the first letter he&#13;
dlctate^.was to bia wife a£ bomsrHa&#13;
delight, by the way, he indulged In&#13;
every day, whatever, may be, said, of&#13;
congressmen in general—in which he&#13;
told:.her tb^t owing to th* faq| that&#13;
he had slept the night before In adraught&#13;
and the wind had blown&#13;
through hla pajamas,he had caught a&#13;
pretty aevsre, cold.^ The, word "paje*&#13;
niaa" was a new one for the typewriter&#13;
and he stalled at it&#13;
"How do you spell that word, elrr&#13;
be Inquired. - ^ ... .. ., llA&#13;
"P-a-j-a-m-a-a." spelled the representative&#13;
slowly, and added; "Didn't&#13;
you ever have to writs it before V&#13;
! "No. air.-&#13;
exewiajgv.it" 8h« !txaaain«d the fruit&#13;
She saJ4: MI dp^not tbiak t i i r U a n&#13;
be amy harm rn am/ just brcakfef *The&#13;
rind of it" She put the fruit to Tier&#13;
teeth, aha tasted, she allowed Adam&#13;
also to taste the fruit, the door of the; world opened, and* the monster Sin entered.&#13;
Let the heavens gather Mack'&#13;
ness. and the winds sigh on the bosom,&#13;
of the mlJa. and, uasiarsu and desert&#13;
to^ew&amp;SaX^to*^ « * . «*d »ky ioin 1. one long, deep,&#13;
to iswwre camventitmat sv^king Srtlre.1 ¢ # ^ ^ how^-rhe world ia&#13;
loatiM&#13;
Beasts that before were harmless&#13;
and finll sf play put forth daw. *&amp;d&#13;
sting, and tooth, and tusk,&#13;
itbatr heak for prey. Clouds troop in&#13;
the sky. Sharp thorns shoot up thsoogir&#13;
the soft grass. Blastings on.the leaves.&#13;
AH t i e eterda aSfjthat .great hsj^iany&#13;
areaaupped. fjpan. the brightest hoase&#13;
thia wwasd eret'sacw our&#13;
'turned their back and sad aorth.eh a&#13;
path of aorroer the broken-hearted any&#13;
riads of a&#13;
• Do yow not awe. In the first place,&#13;
-iter#» *iMfrj»f.a poorly&#13;
quiaWvcoessf She wanted&#13;
how .the fruit tasted,&#13;
but six taoussjad years .have deplored&#13;
^hat nnhealtwtui curtoaitr. te^glthtnl&#13;
Wrioaaiy has etaaw a grant deal fiat lettera,&#13;
for art fur science, and for reilgtea.&#13;
It has gone down lute the&#13;
depths ot the earth with the jwatlogtat&#13;
and swam the tat chapter tafiOeaeais&#13;
in the book of nature Ulus-&#13;
PJL&#13;
months before, of two colhaja students,&#13;
the subsequent dlax&gt;wrery of which,&#13;
with its attsaidant a*jaek, sratorlety&#13;
and wowniei pride was the direct&#13;
cause of dee** pa a devoted parent&#13;
How impceafhle, on such a ssemdexlon&#13;
of memory, Sj hawsi Saaj&#13;
1 ^&#13;
the&#13;
stood with the antiquarian while he&#13;
blew thetrnanpet V roawrrection over \ pUavsuenta of Mary Qneen&#13;
buried H*rcnlameuan nod Pompefi, until&#13;
trom their&#13;
shaft and terrace&#13;
Healthful curiosity has enlarged tfew&#13;
tolesbopk. riaton o&amp;tsM&#13;
^wurMa hidden in the&#13;
trooped forth&#13;
ble secret let him come and sacrifice&#13;
it to this Goddess of Splutter. Thousands&#13;
of Adams and Eves do qwtfrlng&#13;
but eat fruit that does not belong, to&#13;
them. Men quite well known aa mathematicians&#13;
failing in this computation&#13;
of moral algebra: good sense plus good&#13;
breeding, minus curiosity, equate minding&#13;
your own affairs!&#13;
• • •&#13;
Observe also in this subject how repelling&#13;
sin la when appended to great&#13;
attractiveness. Since KsWs death there&#13;
has been no such perfection of womanhood.&#13;
Y&lt;&gt;« could not suggest *n attractiveness&#13;
to the body er auggest Any&#13;
refineaaent to the paaasjar. Ton couad&#13;
add as gznccfnlness twthe «ast ne lustre&#13;
Co the eye, no aweetneaa to the&#13;
voice. A perfect God wiser her a pertect&#13;
woman, to be the wWapanVm of A&#13;
man in a perfect home, and her entire&#13;
nabsre vibrated in accord wttfc the&#13;
of Paoadlse. But&#13;
and with the aatne hand with which&#13;
she plucked the fruit ahe launched upthe&#13;
The&#13;
of Oathariae g. of Susaii/only&#13;
forth in more powertuT coartrast'&#13;
her unappeasahle asnliltiort TnetraaslagkiaM&#13;
from the4aseek and the Latin&#13;
hjr Jnslaahsth. awsfl&#13;
M 9ft6 CAUh«t be surprised at the slew&#13;
progress 01 education in certain parts&#13;
u _».. ». , _^_ -»*i0 ' Arkansas, where a visitor so rh»*&#13;
hmmeeMaevtt—e-nff,A attihns^eirr ,w haminaMoht,h^ eAprlm,a cTseoZ,n'mm. a yl•Uw awuceth^ essaiiuf*V j ^J. ,t*.^^. .^• •^^w m•^Rg^*m*t:?m. T*e, ard* aT »r«uwrarl sos cuhotwol to hig ^ ^ .&#13;
"Come, come, youug una. can't JOB.&#13;
set up a ll^Uemore ereeterr&#13;
And when .a tardy pupil eame in and&#13;
left the door alightly ajar the teacher&#13;
aaidr aharply;&#13;
brother, slater, grandfather and *rane&gt;&#13;
mother and graedchtld,&gt; and the entire&#13;
group of pueeiows ones, of whom we&#13;
must any in the words of trsnaporclns;&#13;
Charles Wesley: '•&#13;
One family we dwelt In him,.&#13;
One church above, beneath;&#13;
Though now diriated by the&#13;
The narrow stream of death;&#13;
One army of the living God,&#13;
To hie command"we bow;&#13;
Part of the host have crossed the flood,&#13;
And part arc^roaaing now.&#13;
"In that case, I'll bet you a,dollar&#13;
you don't know.what it means*? ifc ..l^lJfon^^^ir^yha^.hdsita^sA, ghwt&#13;
I guess I know whst.it men**/* i^.&#13;
"Well, what Is Ul"&#13;
"It's French for whiskers,'' and the&#13;
represenutive,. in tha kindness, e* his&#13;
^eart, smiled, sweetly and told she&#13;
young man he had guessed it tha very&#13;
flrat time.&#13;
_ ^ftf*.4°^. •*?• thAt there&#13;
*¥" " * # « » » * M ha said apologetically&#13;
to the visitor:&#13;
"I try to learn 'em mannera, but It's&#13;
darned uphill wark»iv Harper's: Ba-&#13;
The B t f ng«m• Dlwier.&#13;
Perhap* the moat remarkable difther&#13;
on record was that given by an ailU-&lt;&#13;
query named Goebel, in the city 'of&#13;
Brussels. At the dinner were apples&#13;
that ripened more than 1,800 years ago,&#13;
bread made from wheat grown before[ aucoeeasn. m i t ihfanda to*&#13;
the children of Isrnef passed through^ elevelaavjehe isad/ man ^riillaaseJewlB&#13;
the Red Sea, and spread With butter •* r * ^ ^&#13;
KpHeiM* ears DrevM&#13;
Henry Small. Afftrutea dVBr^xhton&#13;
township. Pa., dreamudV tsianty years&#13;
ago that a deposit of tend V« was located.&#13;
x&gt;a th^TfArm^ of /&gt;avid Irona^oo&#13;
BraS**» ftun. Four 9*mMt4&amp;±**ifr&#13;
creap^jnjpspectad andJk?und a deposit&#13;
ofles P^h r sixteen yeara he has been&#13;
aegoOagng for jthe lease and has Just&#13;
sncoeelwaVwa closing it He iniands tothat&#13;
was made when Snisaheth&#13;
Queen of England. The repast was&#13;
washed doers wish wine that was *MJ&#13;
when Columbus was playing with the'&#13;
boys of Genoa. The apples were from&#13;
an earthen Jar taken from the ruins,&#13;
of Pewapett. The- wheat was : taken&#13;
from a Aaanber te-ome ef the Mrrsjadds,&#13;
the butter from a atone ehetf in an&#13;
01« weal hi SeoUsawI, w*er# for ee ver-&#13;
* aanearim n had lain 1* an earthen&#13;
n toy wetsr, and the wine was&#13;
rebelled asjdnstH^, « ajOTern^pent j recovered from an old vsuH tt the city&#13;
c* Corinth. There were stt gtnata at&#13;
the table, add each hniwnwutfttftd of&#13;
asstnrallf irnlgaa ttvAt 1^^/"weet a &amp; a* finely flavored&#13;
We exseet 1 •* u *t had been preserved hut a few&#13;
who live in the ditch stall&#13;
have the manners of the dHcft; but&#13;
ahockittg when we find sin apth&#13;
In aweet simpUoHy&#13;
Xhe thougtals that Mod and the&#13;
of Soots that mm bamtetiun m h&#13;
- v ataaMUag, «std ateedily, wffm wnfaihn«&#13;
eye, fletecta and disclosed &lt;a «r&lt;s hraie&#13;
spirit&#13;
One&#13;
.»•%&#13;
you this* of *a«ae*&#13;
to me.that he never&#13;
w&#13;
'• « 7 -&#13;
thnt gaaw'osnwiwMen in hasnaarnnder- «rrr, .*I«T*• ^ ^ for ~m*y litt^se- ^ohsV^-&#13;
standing, «stt steadily, wffm wnfalhn* • • S i - 1 ~ * — ' ^ — * \ "^Ji «*• -&#13;
£ ^ M £ ? M ? £ £ V &amp; ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ f f i T&#13;
* ? •^W'ffjuJ^rerW'il&#13;
*rw&#13;
V.&#13;
Bf&#13;
f;'- .¾ x&#13;
«-.&#13;
-Jk&#13;
&amp;W' ••*•* W^'i! ejsaiBnwfnwewusss?&#13;
, ^&#13;
•'.:-;&gt;r — ' " * : •».' * . • — ~ « — ^ - - , ^ .&#13;
• &gt;.'"• ,''1. f" i f ' ' ' ••„ ' * ' . ' • ' ,&#13;
• &lt; * v , " • ' • - ; . • • • ~ • ' ' .&#13;
^: .(&#13;
,r...,&#13;
. 5 • . • • &gt; ' . • " . « .&#13;
*t—1 ';'",*t *' vi.,'1&#13;
H • t ' • • / • • . : • J,±:f .•'*J~&lt;":/ • • • ' . ' , • • . • • '.- ' •.., ' * - •&gt;• • • ' • . . ' &gt;• . . - . - • ' - ' • '&#13;
• ' • ' • ' ' - • &gt; . ' ! , * • ' • ( . • ' ' • • ' ' ' • • • - S . . . • • ' . : ' w - ' * ' - • • ' ' &lt; • ' • ' • •'• '&#13;
'. • • • • :. ' - ' '• ', '' • ' - ' V • ' , - ' " . « ^ ' ' • ' "&#13;
\ . ' • ^ • : • • • • ' " . • • • ' " ' r ' • " "&#13;
sa**a*^awa*a*ay»sa»wf»w»««imi i i u n i,u^pim,|j,i|i M ^ 1 1 1 ^ ^ 1 ^ ^ W i g ^&#13;
! • / • ' - ; ...... t . * .J .: i".. ,. i ,,-&gt;' •.'....' -(-1-1. :•'•*! •'.wffv .-'fSr'T.'H?'™] ™F^lPL&lt;rBWW&#13;
4&#13;
C A W ^ ^ ^&#13;
»a. st w u o o t %&#13;
"W"1 WflTstUMd'oflf Ww&#13;
—. emia. l a a month's&#13;
..tint v * j o t things&#13;
to running all&#13;
right, anil were&#13;
oon&#13;
sslt&#13;
west&#13;
•w1tt*8d weott^Vsa^t U teirejwnWd,&#13;
wbtB toinethtog hanpened thAfe-tsyew&#13;
.thVpsap l i ^ g r e i t e x c i t e s ^ - -'&#13;
( t o e ^ h t , Idr^RofsrsV^W^ W*lm&#13;
was next t* OUTS', had a fla&lt; horse jtolUrifrom&#13;
hfat. Confusion reignsdT A&#13;
thief Izwtamp!. Who could it be?&#13;
Bhrerybody was aoovs traspieion, of&#13;
eourse. Horss.-&gt;teaUng in the west is&#13;
punished by death. h&gt;4 no tr*&lt;ie of the&#13;
thief could be found.. &lt; t * • -'•'&#13;
And so, a week passed.' Tfcsn, one&#13;
morning t h e w . ^ v e d int ca»p,e man&#13;
dressed in a' rich Mexican »uit, with&#13;
his sombrerb trailed over his «yes and&#13;
* Ifudy #1¾ handkerchief iled. aroun*&#13;
his neck almost copcesJing * U face.&#13;
We ootfM only see that be bad imai)&#13;
eyes and a bUck masUche. H* was&#13;
of slight build ah* not talk&#13;
He-'tput np" at Jerry Orlfflim "hotel,"&#13;
which was, njgo poptoffice, runshop&#13;
and general house-furnishing&#13;
store at th# Oulch, and gars his name&#13;
as Don Pedro Gpmate*. The miners&#13;
looked wlti suspicion on this man&#13;
from the first, and whent two highU&#13;
Uter^lwck Allen was robbed of a peg&#13;
of "«stt'/' and Don Pedro "turned up&#13;
missthg,"' they were tfuick to deiiounce&#13;
him as the thief. . ,&#13;
Allen and Williams at ones' organised&#13;
a posse of men to search the&#13;
mountains for the Mexican. Father&#13;
was one of the party. In vain I asked&#13;
him to let me go. No, it was out of the&#13;
question—'I was too young, and as they&#13;
might be gone aH day I must stay at&#13;
home and watch the eta Im. Mother&#13;
had gone to Westend, the nearest town,&#13;
with a neighbor's wife, the day before,&#13;
m&gt; I would be alone in the dffito;'-"'&#13;
Jack Allen found what he said was&#13;
a traM up the mountain, so the procession&#13;
started after the thief. J was in a&#13;
•ery bad humor when I thought what&#13;
a bose it would be to stay cm the claim&#13;
all alone all day. I longed to have a&#13;
enhntie t* mrrj the new rifle that father&#13;
had give*«ev with afl « boy's eagerness&#13;
to "shoot aomethlng."&#13;
Tn* -**ay passed slowly and I was&#13;
giS4t #hen darkness came and the&#13;
moo* rose from' behind a dU|anj&#13;
dump' of bowlders. 1 went to the&#13;
window and looked out. How still&#13;
everything was! How bright the moonlight&#13;
gleamed on the rocks! 1 began&#13;
to wonder whether the men had captured&#13;
Den Pedro, and how long they&#13;
wosld be gone.&#13;
Suddenly a happy thought struck&#13;
me—Til play cowboy all to myselfr&#13;
I muttered, and running up the ladder&#13;
to the loft I opened my trunk and took&#13;
front it the buckskin suit that 1 wore&#13;
to-thvemasquerade last winter, and put&#13;
ft OBL In my belt I stocK two*usty revolver*&#13;
that I found on the floor, and&#13;
then descended to?&amp;e robm below. |&#13;
-www u^^diSfS^ifDijr&#13;
^ ^ J P *?? ***** ** &lt;hlt »*X stuofc&#13;
" • y i canria«kmti&gt; ** -•** **&#13;
wiiiHl&amp;ifaai*, grabbed my rifle and&#13;
begsnrin^samde up and down the room.&#13;
Wneij t had kept thlsiup for a MtUe&#13;
srhUsv t: happened Ko iohk at the door&#13;
nnd w«em t*h+umcer mI eesssMa ^ae siWnaefoxn whihso sras&#13;
I «av*-a eiprtJiin whsoh Jay ssw t&#13;
equally oombmed, for the&#13;
of slight build and had black eyes&#13;
Pedro, although he *ruce&#13;
lorteft:&#13;
to&#13;
at the&#13;
!&#13;
Oou*t mtvMf'4* yuur lifer&#13;
~E*r seid my Don Pedro. "Why I&#13;
r * ^ ^ * » T . » l w p » i w * i h n i s s y .&#13;
«*d sty nattor ebeyed UM. .&#13;
-KoSri:w«lk **r T *m. s t » hueping&#13;
2g^^.T^9BP!»JsV^,r:4|li*l :-«%*. Jl**iiius»mm .ftftuW&#13;
MWKh ples«iiWr sniu^my0 k «a|tr4;&#13;
-but, « y dear yosmg ssnu. ass Pojl «0t&#13;
* •Mumnf/ *r m* %&#13;
lqrtut&#13;
. Y-&#13;
•anHr&#13;
s t a r t i W u u d 4 SJ4SM»U.»C» Jpt lt&gt;&gt; sVe&#13;
western msu like, true t r * t r .._ ^&#13;
Bsn-murtetf? rtwnit fill the others'get&#13;
beret DonPedro;.doypu^ee th»t tree&#13;
out there? Watch it, for there you'U&#13;
« y ^Hsontf paled. '&#13;
' "Look here, young fellow!" he said,&#13;
stiU keeping his arms elevated, "you&#13;
present a dteidely warlike appearance&#13;
In that rig, and your actions are deoideilly&#13;
uuptoaiant. DonWyou t h i e *&#13;
yon had setter let- the joke drop r&lt;'&#13;
I was almost letting the rifle drop,&#13;
for it .was very, heavy, but i answered&#13;
that QeJden Oulch miners did not consider&#13;
ihorte-steaMng «a Jokepan* gently&#13;
reminded him that the rifle was loaded.&#13;
My avms were hegtnntng to sohe.&#13;
Suppose the boys should . not corns&#13;
back Wat night, what should I d o t&#13;
Just then, ,1. heard thedattsriOlhawes'.&#13;
hoofs o i u h e hMd TOSkyuroaiU Nea*er&#13;
and nearer came the sounds, aa^^hnn.&#13;
the whole party swept down the mountain&#13;
and drew rein in front of the&#13;
"Father! Jack! Dick!" I shouted,&#13;
"I've caught h i m l ^ H e ' s l n her*, at, the.&#13;
mercy of my rifle!" . (&lt;&#13;
"Who?" came the answer from without.&#13;
"Why, Don Pedro . Oomalss* the&#13;
horse-thief!" I said, as my father and&#13;
Jack Allen entered the cabin; "and&#13;
there he Uj"&#13;
1 lowered my rifle and looked at my&#13;
audience with a beaming face. Father&#13;
and Jack looked at each other, then at&#13;
me fa my warlike costume, then at my&#13;
prisoner and' thenr-they burst out&#13;
laughing!&#13;
"Well, 1*11 be pinched!" cried1 Jack,&#13;
between laughs .and roars. "Look at&#13;
the togs the kid's geft on!"&#13;
"Kidi" I yelled indignantly. "Is this&#13;
my reward for the terrible ordeal I&#13;
have just gone through?"&#13;
I ran from the cabin in a towering&#13;
rage to the rest of the party outside,&#13;
and saw a man bound on a horse and&#13;
guarded by Dick and Hfr Jfto$ers.&#13;
"Get•' on to &lt;nv hid" m war' clcithes!"&#13;
cried'-Btek'. l - y&#13;
"Dlci!'^ I gawped', pbiniiflg to" the&#13;
man on the horse. at» that Don Pedro&#13;
Gomalezr' ' '&#13;
That** what he ealls himself," said&#13;
Dick, "although his real name is plain&#13;
Jim Haddon, horse-thief and general&#13;
robber. We caught him half way across&#13;
the mountain on sir." Rogws* horse.&#13;
We found Jack's gold-dust on him.&#13;
and he confessed both crimes."&#13;
"Dick," I cried, "if that Is Don Pedro&#13;
who is the man I've been holding at&#13;
the end of my rifle all evening?"&#13;
"First I heard of i t / ' said Dick, and&#13;
I dragged him into the cabin.&#13;
JJy this time m y Boat Pedro had explained&#13;
that h » name was Donald&#13;
9mttli and that he was sent to the&#13;
Oulch by a large San Francisco mining&#13;
oompany to inspect and, perhaps, to&#13;
buy some claims. He had arrived that&#13;
eveglngj-and nnding t h e niace deserteri&#13;
had ventured Into the i r s t cabin he&#13;
found eoen. to he pounced upon by sae.&#13;
You may imagine my feelings! Suppose&#13;
Mr. Smith should repeat softs of&#13;
my big western talk—the hoys would&#13;
never quit guying ma.&#13;
But he did not give me away, for&#13;
which I thank him with all my heart.&#13;
He only gave me a wink and asked&#13;
me if, being a, hsuhurooiieiasu. I lisiT&#13;
ever heard of Davy Crockett's advice?&#13;
He said it was "Be sure you're right—&#13;
then g o ahead!" and 1 thin* It's gxtodadyice,&#13;
don't you?&#13;
Several miners sold out their clnimc&#13;
to the oompany that Mr. Smith represented,&#13;
and father finally did the same&#13;
for which I was giad. for I have never&#13;
feit comfortable after t h e night I captured&#13;
Don Pedro.&#13;
Bvery houVf&#13;
CHtCA ON© V^Zkcti.&#13;
cause of ft all ts the now/ widely k n o W&#13;
White Topsa The White Topaa, or&#13;
carbonated diamonds, have pome to b*&#13;
recognised as the nearest thing on&#13;
earth to genuine diamottds, so near Indeed&#13;
is it that the prupeietors o#-%be&#13;
DIAMOND PALACE do not hesitate to&#13;
place real diamonds in their windows&#13;
i amidst thsU'display'• of&lt; Whit* Tope*&#13;
and allow the public to pick them out&#13;
at the selling price of tbe Topas.&#13;
The lataer atones have-all the lovely&#13;
brilUanoy ot the diamee^ii, sparkling&#13;
•tendUy and with wonderful nre. The&#13;
th^nsands-of these stones in the wipdowf&#13;
iqrmyonpoi the,mott gorgepus&#13;
displays and has proven an attraction.&#13;
whichM one of the features of Chi-&#13;
In order to find out the advertising&#13;
medium best' suited fb *their business,&#13;
(this enterprlsrog coueerb offers to send&#13;
a gen nine White Topaz to all those&#13;
who^will cut enrt and send them their&#13;
advertisement, whieh •*• appewrs••&gt; else*&#13;
where hi this paper, together with 26e&#13;
in stamps.&#13;
flBM DIAMOND PALACE, like all&#13;
snosassfnl &lt; institutions, has many imitators,&#13;
who endeavor to sell cheap&#13;
rhinestones and other pastes oieiming&#13;
they are topaz. We caution the public&#13;
to be careful, as THE DIAMOND&#13;
PALACE, American Express building,&#13;
Chicago, are the sole Importers of these&#13;
Btones.&#13;
Stowly he disrated, placed his&#13;
sfeesnets on a convenient chair, 4M up&#13;
his whiskers and prepared to retire for&#13;
the sight The final duties accomplished,&#13;
he bent feartuly down and&#13;
pecked under the bed, Thesu wish s&#13;
sigh-of n e l K he nroae 4rom his uncoaafortabte&#13;
posture.&#13;
"Thnnsv heaven, these is no wosnan&#13;
the^!''J^ murmuped^AS fee gat «a-the&#13;
edge of it^he bed «nd 4at*Uly ecnatched&#13;
the back of his neok.&#13;
"Supposing them had beenr he&#13;
continued, sudrtwOy. "Would I have&#13;
sci!es«ie#t , W^nM,|T .&#13;
For a moment M paueed.&#13;
"Not^ou your nntucai. I wouldnX"&#13;
he then, enciedsaed. "I mould have&#13;
ULihw^bif-i&#13;
fonierJ JBut asm w*U never ossne!&#13;
And throwing htm s i l t with a&#13;
on the bed. the new hncjbelor fell into&#13;
a itfuL&#13;
World.&#13;
«artde«iwjnfcoJis*e&#13;
among the wumTu huniecs fur hue,&#13;
quantity of gpumu MUufl ay one fTtti&#13;
He is now M yeenu aid jmd during the&#13;
MM* head of gems meh pass, On^ene&#13;
0 panel on he shot * mKy emeananm | g&#13;
three minutes and kHled aU hut one of&#13;
He has Killed&#13;
of elephants amt&#13;
Xi&#13;
h * M t U ^ , » t « i « W. ,b* ; j U ^ . s i the&#13;
IJinsseae; Fslsjs&#13;
" *jkm f a * »ir4 •****&#13;
t: ham : , y j v , f i ' ^ H&#13;
\ saBnw|¥fJut''ejf ^ M f u ^ n C rrnHk "Sttsl&#13;
&amp;•. A Tito'n l^rvint Uttm. i\&#13;
The first newspaper in the modern&#13;
sense was issued monthly at Venice in&#13;
1536; the first English newspaper was&#13;
published in 1622; the-first American&#13;
in 1704.&#13;
Only from the solid ground of some&#13;
clear creed have men done good, strong&#13;
work in tbe world. Only out of certainty&#13;
comes power.—Phillips Brooks&#13;
Brass pins were first made by the&#13;
Saracens in Spain in A. D. 800 and were&#13;
first introduced in England by Catherine&#13;
of Arragon, wife of Henry VI1L&#13;
A man at Stamford, N, Y., hae the&#13;
watch Major Andre offered as a ransom&#13;
to bis captors. He has documents to&#13;
prove that it is genuine. :'• &gt;&#13;
SUM M R S C A B S OS1 B L A N K E T S .&#13;
Blankeie whieh h*T« been used all winter,&#13;
BO matter how white, ase never clean,&#13;
and should b* weaned before putting away.&#13;
Many housekeepers satisfy themselves by&#13;
. shaking and siring their blankets rather,&#13;
than risk spoiling them in washing. But&#13;
*M»4» a mistake, for if the w o r k b r property&#13;
done no shrinking will take place, and&#13;
the ueeey soft appserancemaj be retain**,&#13;
as well the«oLMr, foryaars. The necessary&#13;
thing in washing blankets is to have plenty&#13;
of soft water and good pare Soap. Inferior&#13;
seep is really the cause of the damage&#13;
done wocleajroods in washing. It hardens&#13;
the fibre and yellows the fabric. When&#13;
ready to begin the work shake the blankess&#13;
free of dust, nil ntub half full of hot&#13;
water. • DiateUe * third of a oaks of Ivory,&#13;
Soap in it. Put one blanket in at a time.&#13;
Dip up end down and wash geettljr with&#13;
the bands. Never rub soap on blankets,&#13;
or wash them on the washboard. After&#13;
the blankets are clean, rinse in warm water&#13;
until free of suds. Add a little blueing to&#13;
the last water. Shake and souses*: then&#13;
hang on the line until dry. Take dpwn,&#13;
fold, lay under a weight for a day or two,&#13;
endpaon securely in a box and cover.&#13;
Jntonketstbos weened will retain their&#13;
original freshness as well as wear three&#13;
times as long as if put away soiled year&#13;
after year. Xuza B. Pi&#13;
It Is no advantage for the farmer to keep&#13;
poor horses because they are dneap.&#13;
n : " — — - . ^ - .&#13;
T i y €trel»»0.&#13;
Ask your grocer today to show you&#13;
a package of GEAIN-O, the new food&#13;
drink that takes the place of coffee.&#13;
The children may drink it witbout&#13;
8n4n.Tr q« «^11 «L* the adult. All who&#13;
try it like i t GRAIN-O has that rich&#13;
seal brown of Mocha or Java, but it is&#13;
made from pure grains, and the most&#13;
delicate stomach receives it without&#13;
distress. X the price of coffee.&#13;
IS cents and 25 cents per package.&#13;
Sold by all grocers. Tastes like coffee.&#13;
Looks like coffee.&#13;
erxQerivceis pel eton tayl lo df ofmooedst iac nadm ean gtioae. s chance to&#13;
Snake late Taur&#13;
Attend Poot^Ease,' a powder lor' the&#13;
feet.v It cures peinful, swollen, smarting&#13;
feo4*B4inatantlj taken tfan stiog&#13;
out of corns nmt bunions. It ia the&#13;
gr«i0ast comfort 4iecov««y of the affe.&#13;
Alleys Foot-Ease m ^ e s tightrfitting&#13;
or new shoes f«el easy. It is a certain&#13;
cure for sweating, callous and hot,&#13;
tired, nebing feet. Try it today. *e*d&#13;
by&lt;sdld&gt;nggis«n and shoe stores, sty&#13;
maU for 86c in stamps. Trial pnuVusm&#13;
PB££- Address Allen &amp; Oimsteo, Lp&#13;
*oy/-S..Y. .&#13;
ISsarly everybody smokes in Japan&#13;
o Hogs grown under cleanly conditions mate&#13;
clean and wholesome pork.&#13;
Theodftor hm-Ar&#13;
the^&#13;
wm be delivered&#13;
if wnthea for prompUy. oo.;sse 6th su,&#13;
r*&#13;
Before u s i a r *Jwm sV&gt;«»inkham's .VefsJuibsU&#13;
Compound; my health w a s graduaUy being usdssw&#13;
tt^ined I suffered u n t o U agony from painful!,&#13;
nMnatruenion, backaehe, pain o n top o f s s &gt;&#13;
hand a n d ovarian tmuhle. a oonohidotf^u&#13;
try Mrs. Pinknam's Gompomsd; and fonnoV&#13;
shift it woe a l l any woman n e e d s who suffers&#13;
painful monthly gjsjdods. a t entirely&#13;
son* Mas. Gbsouum WAJU,&#13;
' ' 928 Bank »t.» Cincinnati, a&#13;
~ ? ' l •'••• ' • ' • • * '-•:•' i ' '&#13;
For ywntwl hjwisuffered vdtkpainftflnwfct&#13;
struatiom every month. At ^ e beginning of&#13;
menstruation it was impossible for me to&#13;
Joruwma than five minutes,W felt so misday&#13;
a UtUo book of Mrs. Pinkham'e was&#13;
honser mid I sat right down nod rend iV&#13;
of I»ydU K. Pinknam's Vegetable Com-&#13;
Pilla. 1 can heartUy any that to-day I&#13;
woman; my monthly anffcring is a t h u g&#13;
shaU always praise the Vegetable Compound&#13;
done tor me.&#13;
Mas. IsAauAaaT AirpiBson, M* Lisbon St., Lewistcm, Me.&#13;
Lydia B. Pinknhm's Vegetable Conipound has cured me of painful menstruation&#13;
and backache. The pain in my hack waa dreadful* and too agony&#13;
I suffered' daring menstruation nearly drove me wild.&#13;
Now this 1« all over, thanks to Mrs. Pmkham's medicine and! advice.—Mas.&#13;
CAnnxa V. WrxLiAics, South Mills, N. C&#13;
The great volume of testimony proves conclusively that Lydia X. Pinknam's&#13;
Vegetable Compound is a safe, euro and almost infallible remedy in cases of&#13;
irregularity, suppressed, excessive or painful monthly periods.&#13;
stand up , •&#13;
srable. One&#13;
thrown into my&#13;
X then got some&#13;
pound arid'Etver&#13;
feel like a n e w&#13;
of the past. X&#13;
for what it has&#13;
N^l',j&#13;
mk, We defy the Expei We hare assssaetrstii, can—to samfc sas every ens&#13;
vlacse that a***!** Watts Tie** nesit sedsteafci frsss n*&#13;
etssisedi. WalteTseas Is tke steas m l a v t n s l se ssoch&#13;
•Seat. fk^jssOts^lsmlsessStnspeesWsfars. PUoatasssstS*&#13;
by siss wttk jeeeies&#13;
isrsaes. We Save ss«&#13;
to tas esMsfs, bat la •&#13;
ttU&#13;
qawkty 15 well&#13;
fKtr&#13;
GIGANTIC OFFER We wilt tend yoti s besatiluL brilUset.&#13;
Ssnuisc Whit* Topes, wsick caa b« —uaSaS&#13;
in a riag. K*ri or mtckp* pta, ftBd. c u t bat.&#13;
tons, locket or pair eamnn, late say arnUs&#13;
ia thia border oa reo»i*&lt; «C——i trm&#13;
TheM Moses are ejtactlf the same as (MSB&#13;
we hare advertised at oae dottar&#13;
This offer for n f e w days osa&gt;&#13;
X»« «•« »bi» sd»ertiaw*eat sad send it So as&#13;
•Ifcer with WV i* coin e r stamps -mad ve~&#13;
1 send TOO a wkiseTesas by rotas* saail; . — _&#13;
_ tone that yon caa be Jnady proud ti and eae last puaki»ely cannot&#13;
be detected from • real diamoed. Ia ordering, be sare sad state&#13;
, erfusber satail, r-siMssn or larce stone is desired. , .&#13;
MO otoca F i u t s usxess accnaeaaicD SY THIS »irwiTts*u§*T.&#13;
/ ' ' w ) &gt;&#13;
2KT.&#13;
GENUINE WHITE TO Pi bears no relation *» ether e»caUed hnitat&#13;
under what aaave they are adweitited They&#13;
precious asones, iaipoetihle to detect Ireea real&#13;
to retaia their brillinary.&#13;
L with Wktse Tops*.&#13;
oW hardest of&#13;
rnAMMDe twrttUTsl hi vim Tafhz.&#13;
aeraMgr 6 ¾ ^&#13;
forRo&#13;
far Ysm?&#13;
T H E OPPORTUNfTV OF A LIFETIME&#13;
Don't Miss It&#13;
la can* e r&#13;
4&amp;i&#13;
1ST&#13;
,-^»!rt&#13;
PATENTS, TBiu%siA«lS&#13;
aadadrieeaesa&#13;
ter«Invanten&gt;&#13;
DRUNKARDS wMtki&#13;
ICe &gt;~,&gt;&#13;
TS67&#13;
tWt*U» WlH«f "Worhs&#13;
vp^snAKCSrS'^O^&#13;
CfttCAGO ntJMO*S&#13;
*ii*&lt; &gt;wm It KILLS&#13;
C M W MfamwffeM Aftm&#13;
feUo*«d.&#13;
Only $ 2 5 '&#13;
Fatal''''' '&#13;
GhiCnEi ttCsitmai At the ttaw of the&#13;
aodeaTor Coaveatioa fta iate.&#13;
Akeve mte wiU aiaoaat^y ft»&#13;
InfiiMinvMsrssall ssilsa&#13;
M&#13;
RUaardhnestowla a.&#13;
Bash nam poor alike&#13;
tores that oause wish that&#13;
nlajrne, Itehhag Ptteas rioh s&#13;
alOce find instnat *eiief nod \&#13;
oure in Doan's Ointment&#13;
it.&#13;
Ue&#13;
ihmeS tolkaeeo aahitcm i&#13;
ulrtnnajiiM hsaJ&#13;
HALL'S&#13;
HAIR BENEWEi&#13;
Buawtifras and restoteu 4sVray&#13;
Hair t o its original color and&#13;
vitality.; prevents baldness;&#13;
cures itching and daaomsff.&#13;
A fioe haif dressing.&#13;
ft. P. 8akia Oa. Pf UM.. M&#13;
8uW 4ty a^ J"*""*1&#13;
tt Witt se&#13;
Open to Ail.&#13;
g j e a kase walstdfoealaw_-- i ISjft fe vtoiranlr part of the ,&#13;
far Weavaahi ts »o«r opoeo&#13;
uai1&gt;y. for full n&#13;
se*4y to aa«. aeeat ef the&#13;
Featmie.erte&#13;
t.isV«,tr.i.,k,r sii.iY&#13;
nan Mi to si&#13;
•.•».•«.&#13;
i saw4v""'""we*u?snU&gt; at san^Bn|Bj^sn&#13;
• » •&#13;
•m&#13;
:4¾&#13;
1&#13;
•'•VI&#13;
- • . * • ' "«&lt;,&#13;
:&gt;m&#13;
;X;J\&#13;
i 'J 4- .• j&#13;
-n&gt;&#13;
j&amp;vWK&#13;
rni^t&#13;
&gt;^jH "• '''^.v'm :"/fl&#13;
•i&#13;
.'.•&gt;,?&#13;
- /!&#13;
^¾&#13;
/ •&#13;
m^mmmmi^mm v : ' * &lt; C 1 , ^ f ! ™ ~ ™ . •."--¾'-',"J^WTi.^jipTPTWT&#13;
•$:•'••..., ^ 4 '&#13;
• ' • ( • ' . •&#13;
•&gt; M i: V .&#13;
to-*• ••&#13;
» • . • • . &gt;&#13;
- ' : ' &lt; *&#13;
m&#13;
lfc&#13;
fe-&#13;
#1&#13;
^•S'-&#13;
m*&#13;
.'-5.'&#13;
'••fcS,&#13;
$3&#13;
m&#13;
- f&#13;
' •» ' ' '•• .. • A •» , ''. . , . . . ' ' • - . - • ', ; ' ';' '.7 ' f v ' • - T ,- ' &gt; :• ..&#13;
.« v . &lt;* . . . ' :-C&#13;
PUMNFIlLOr&#13;
S. G. Topping has men from&#13;
Jackson and Stockbridge fixing&#13;
his elate roofing.&#13;
Children's Day waa observed&#13;
here last Sunday morning in the&#13;
Presbyterian church.&#13;
8. A. and F. C. Mapes, proprietors&#13;
of the Chelsea steam laundry&#13;
epent Sunday under the parental&#13;
roof.&#13;
Bev. L. Dadds D. D. of Adrian&#13;
college gave a very fine address in&#13;
the M ^ P . church last Sunday&#13;
evening.&#13;
Several from this place attended&#13;
Children's Day services at the&#13;
Baptist church Gregory last Sunday&#13;
evening.&#13;
ANDERSON.&#13;
Ed Cranna is the owner of a&#13;
new buggy.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Durkee were&#13;
in Linden first of the week.&#13;
Miss Belle Birnie spent Sunday&#13;
with her parents at this place.&#13;
Frank Reason bad a calf bit by&#13;
a rattlesnake one day last week.&#13;
Gilbert Stock, of Unadill, made&#13;
a business trip to Anderson one&#13;
day last week&#13;
Thos. Bead, of Pinckney, was&#13;
through here buying wool, on&#13;
Thursday last&#13;
Mrs. James Marble was called&#13;
to Pinckney Monday by the sickness&#13;
of her father.&#13;
Dillivan Durkee attended teacher's&#13;
examination in Fowlerville,&#13;
Thursday and Friday.&#13;
-A number from this place attended&#13;
Children's Day exercises&#13;
at Gregory Sunday evening.&#13;
F. H. Coleman closed a very&#13;
successful term. of school at&#13;
"Wrights Chapel on Friday.&#13;
Sanford Reason and wife started&#13;
for Canada Tuesday where&#13;
they will spend several weeks.&#13;
Miss Julia Benedict, of Chubb's&#13;
Corners, was the guest of Anderson&#13;
friends the first of the week.&#13;
SPECU&amp; MEETING fOR&#13;
INITIATIONS.&#13;
- On Monday evening, June 28, the&#13;
Loyal Guards of this plant will bold a&#13;
special meeting for initiations, drill,&#13;
and extra work. Every member is&#13;
requested to be present J, M. Torfrey,&#13;
Deputy Supreme ComM will be&#13;
with us and assist in,the wdrk.&#13;
Mr. Torrey is here this week, and&#13;
with the assistance of the Sir Knights,&#13;
is securing several applications. Do&#13;
not miss this opportunity to get insured&#13;
in a solid company at a cheap&#13;
rate. Ladies join the order at the&#13;
same rate as gentlemen and throughout&#13;
the state many are taking advantage&#13;
of the low rate.&#13;
• • ^ -&#13;
ice « u F*lt.&#13;
"It waa so dark In tat paster wtjen&#13;
youag Dr. Ptummer came In thai I&#13;
didn't notice he had shared off hU&#13;
n&amp;uetache."&#13;
"Didn't you? I felt tie difference&#13;
while you were getting a light"—&#13;
Cleveland Plain Dealer.&#13;
Metallic Finished Otabrie.&#13;
Metallic-finished cambric, which, has&#13;
til the gloss of a real satin, is a sew&#13;
lining for thin dresses. It comes in all&#13;
the pretty colors, costs only 35 cents&#13;
a yard, and Is fully a yard wta*.&#13;
EAST PUTNAM.&#13;
Earnest Fish was in Bancroft&#13;
last week.&#13;
Miss Allie Brown was in Howell&#13;
Thursday last.&#13;
Alex Pearson and Mrs. Charles&#13;
Schifel were in Howell Tcesda^.&#13;
Miss Nettie Hall visited in&#13;
Williamston the last of last week.&#13;
Miss SaraE Pearson returned&#13;
from a three weeks visit in Ann&#13;
Arbor.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. W.&#13;
are , visiting their&#13;
H. Placeway&#13;
daughter at&#13;
Hartland.&#13;
Miss Mayme Fish, of Bancroft,&#13;
is spending her vacation with her&#13;
parents at this place.&#13;
Mrs.-George Brown visited her&#13;
daughter, Mrs. D. M. Hodgeman,&#13;
at Oak Grove, over Sunday.&#13;
Bert Schoenhals and Miss&#13;
Blanche Boylan, of Genoa, spent&#13;
Sunday with Miss Grace Lake.&#13;
Mr. Gilbert Thrasher and Mrs.&#13;
Lucy Manderville, of Williaxnston,&#13;
are visiting their sister, Mrs. Jas.&#13;
B a l l&#13;
, The C E. society held a^ very&#13;
this week;&#13;
that were&#13;
Losing&#13;
Flesh&#13;
You naturally lose flesh In&#13;
the summer and running down&#13;
is so easy. You get a little&#13;
weaker each day without hardly&#13;
noticing it. There is loss of&#13;
appetite, headache, weakness&#13;
of the muscles, disturbed sleep,&#13;
w e a k n e s s of memory, and these&#13;
are the beginning of nervous&#13;
prostration. Iron and tonics&#13;
and bitters may afford some&#13;
temporary relief, but what y o&#13;
need is a food for body, brain&#13;
and nerves.&#13;
of Cod-liver Oil with the H y -&#13;
pophosphites, furnishes just the&#13;
nourishment needed for those&#13;
who are run down and pale and&#13;
thin and weak. If you lose flesh&#13;
In summer take Scott's Emulsion&#13;
now. Don't wait till fall&#13;
or winter before beginning.&#13;
Per sale at 50c. aad fc.» by all druggiAta.&#13;
SAT. JUNE 26,&#13;
We will sell&#13;
fcsjteroafanK meeting&#13;
Hiose of the members&#13;
absent misted a rare treat&#13;
Mieaco Nellie and Grace Lake,&#13;
Nellie and Clella Fish and Flota&#13;
Hall attended commencement exercises&#13;
at Bancroft last Wednesday.&#13;
Several stores at«06ttui0 eat their&#13;
44fcof July stoefc. *&#13;
Miss Jennie Tapper, wbo Ins seen&#13;
visiting in Greenville, t*tmn»4 bom*&#13;
I PLUG PRUNE JUICE&#13;
TOBACCO for&#13;
16 CENTS&#13;
ALSO&#13;
A Foot of Tobacco for&#13;
8 cents.&#13;
8 Bars Jaxon or Lenox&#13;
Soap for&#13;
26\ CENTS:&#13;
,&#13;
Choice canned Pears . . . . J5&#13;
Choice canned strafes 15&#13;
3 Cans Plumbs . . . . . . .25&#13;
6 pkgs.WaebingPow. . . . . 2&amp;&#13;
These sales most be CASH.&#13;
SUlIUIlUti&#13;
A&lt;Mrtlonil Local. -&#13;
Glenn Biohaads is suffering with the&#13;
wbooping'oongh.&#13;
Mrs. D. Grimes ii the gnest ef relatives&#13;
at Adrian.&#13;
G. W. Teeple was in Howell on business&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Mrs. F. I. Grimes is the gnest of&#13;
relatives at Napoleon.&#13;
Fred Grieve and family of Stookbridge&#13;
spent Sunday with relatives&#13;
hare.&#13;
The race course in this place is now&#13;
in good shape and ready for working&#13;
out horses or bioyoles.&#13;
Floyd Reason raised a large- barn&#13;
frame on Friday of last week on his&#13;
farm just southwest of the village.&#13;
W. H. Harris had the misfortune to&#13;
cut his knee quite badly with an adz&#13;
one day the past week and is laid up.&#13;
Mrs. P. G. Teeple, who has been visiting&#13;
relatives here for several weeks&#13;
returned to her home in Marquette on&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
John Clark of England came to this&#13;
place on Thursday of last week.« Mr.&#13;
Clark is a brother of Mrs. D. Ewen&#13;
and is well known here.&#13;
H. Glenn Pierce, formerly of this&#13;
place, who graduated at Albion this&#13;
year gave the memorial address at&#13;
the Commencement exercises there&#13;
this week.&#13;
Miss Mame Fish was one of the&#13;
graduates of the Bancroft school last&#13;
week. Miss Mayme is a Pinckney&#13;
girl and we are glad to congratulate&#13;
her on her success.&#13;
The Junior League enjoyed a picnic&#13;
on Saturday last sJ: the home of their&#13;
superintendent, Miss Alice McMahon,&#13;
and in the grove. The little ones enjoyed&#13;
the day very mush.&#13;
Geo. Sweet and wife of Pinckney&#13;
attended the funeral of Mr. Sweet's&#13;
sister at South Lyon on Thursday&#13;
last. His sister was the wife of the&#13;
publisher of the South Lyon Excelsior.&#13;
The whole number of births and&#13;
deaths in this county for the year ending&#13;
Dec. 81, 1996 are as follows: Total&#13;
number of deaths 148, of which 79&#13;
were males and 69 were females. Total&#13;
number of births 266, of which 137&#13;
were males and 129 females.&#13;
Mr. Isaac Horner, proprietor ot&#13;
Burton House. Burton, W, Va., and&#13;
one of the most widely known men in&#13;
the state was cured of rheumatism&#13;
after three years of suffering. He&#13;
says; "I have not sufficient command&#13;
of language to convey any idea of&#13;
what I suffered, my physicians told&#13;
me that nothing could be done for me&#13;
and my friends were fully convinced&#13;
that nothing but death could relieve&#13;
me of my suffering. In June, 1894&#13;
Mr. Evans, then salesman for the&#13;
Wheeling Drug Co., recommended&#13;
Chamberlains Pain Balm. At this&#13;
time mv foot and limb were swollen&#13;
55?&#13;
—Jam* Harris, who' is tracking&#13;
horses at Jaokson, was horns over&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Hist Kate Farnan, who has been&#13;
attending school at Ypeilanti, returned&#13;
home the put week.&#13;
A. Swarthout attended the Banoroft&#13;
commencement exercises the past week&#13;
ana reports a very fins time.&#13;
Miss Anna Spears attended Commencement&#13;
exereUes of the South&#13;
Lyon High school at the Presbyterian&#13;
church, last Eriday evening,&#13;
Miss Addie Sigler, who has been&#13;
working at the millinery trade at Detroit&#13;
for several weeks, returned home&#13;
on Wednesday evening of last week.&#13;
The Christian Endeavor society of&#13;
this place expect to give an excursion&#13;
to Detroit Sept 1st Please remember&#13;
this and take advantage of the low&#13;
rates which we will give you in the&#13;
near future.&#13;
Mrs. Chas. Borabaoher of South&#13;
Lyon was hurried at that place the&#13;
past week. Mr. Rorabaober is the&#13;
publisher of the Excelsior and has received&#13;
many words of sympathy from&#13;
his newspaper friends.&#13;
The marriage of R. D. Ruen and&#13;
Miss Julia Crawford both of Howell&#13;
took place at St. Joseph's church last&#13;
Wednesday. R. D. was a former&#13;
Pinckney boy and we extend him our&#13;
best wishes for success in the future.&#13;
A very large crowd attended the |&#13;
Baccalaureat address dfttie Congregational&#13;
church lastSuUday, evening.&#13;
The address wae-glven by Rey. C. S.&#13;
Jones was listened to with the close&#13;
attention which it deserved. Music&#13;
was furnished by a double quartette,&#13;
also the Emerson and Cecelian quartette.&#13;
The music was fine and much&#13;
enjoyed by all present.&#13;
At the annpal business meeting of&#13;
the Epworth League of the M. E.&#13;
church Tuesday evening June 15 the&#13;
following officers were elected: Pros.&#13;
Jennie Haze; 1st vice pres, Jassie&#13;
Green. 2nd Grace BowmanT3rd Ferny&#13;
Swarthout; 4th Carrie Green; Sec.&#13;
Cora Wilson: Treas. Beulah Black.&#13;
Grganist, Jennie Tupper; Collectors,&#13;
Lucy Swarthout and Blance Graham.&#13;
SESSSCST i " M M *&#13;
yerth JUwtorg $» ft. will Hold ea*&#13;
#ext Bonis/.&#13;
Toe following program hu bjtcv&#13;
preparedf or the Sunday School convention&#13;
at the North Hamburg chursh&#13;
Jane 27th, 1897, at 2 o'clock P. M.&#13;
SongfttrrtM&#13;
DtYottMl IxaroUM&#13;
Xa4o.&#13;
•ddf«N«fW«laome Qto.bBuU.&#13;
BMPOBM HOB Mbltd Darls,&#13;
should th« ilm of too Saa&amp;y •* .•• T r "?&#13;
School Ttoehwr bo to oiaoate&#13;
the mind or the htartf Mre, B. OartraU,&#13;
Mmlo Saenoa QatrtotM.&#13;
TheSundo/SchoolSoholw XlHBoUtBuJU.&#13;
Music.&#13;
Bible l e u o u for luad&amp;r&#13;
School Workers Mrs. &lt;i. Much.&#13;
Mtuio Smtnoa Qnertotto.&#13;
All topics are open for discussion,&#13;
and all are cordially-invited to be&#13;
present,&#13;
7 ^ :4&#13;
^&#13;
XJ.Oook.&#13;
Btr. y. W. Plena,&#13;
•M. "••&#13;
v. • £&#13;
• . • &gt; • ' . ' • • • - . '&#13;
•v V&#13;
THAT SPECIAL MEETDTG.&#13;
At the special meeting of the Loyal&#13;
Guards on Friday evening of last&#13;
week, Sir Kuight, G. A. Sigler was&#13;
elected and installed as paymaster of&#13;
the division. The auditing committee&#13;
looked over the books and they ware&#13;
turned over to Mr. Sigler and the order&#13;
is in a growing condition. Everyone&#13;
present was entirely satisfied and&#13;
are ready to extend the hand of fellowship&#13;
to any who wish to join nnder&#13;
reduced rates.&#13;
Sir Knight, J. M. Torrey Deputy&#13;
Supreme Commander of Flint was&#13;
present and after installing several&#13;
officers, gave the boys a short talk on&#13;
the work. There was a large attendance&#13;
of members and all were much&#13;
interested. There are now over 30&#13;
members in good standing and several&#13;
applicants.&#13;
The Loyal Guards are all solid in&#13;
Pinckney and don't you forget it.&#13;
Those who join before July 1 have&#13;
the privilege of greatly reduced rates.&#13;
Ast some member about it.&#13;
Y PILLS&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler.&#13;
to more than double their normal size&#13;
and it seemed to me my leg would&#13;
burst, but soon after I began using&#13;
the Pain Balm, the swelling began to&#13;
decrease, the pain to leave, and now I&#13;
consider that I am entirely cured. For&#13;
sale by F. A. Sigler.&#13;
Default haying been made In the condition&#13;
of a certain mortgage (whereby the power of sale&#13;
therein contained to aell bie become operative)&#13;
made by Michael Larey and Jennie Lavey. bia&#13;
wife of the townahip of Dexter, Washtenaw&#13;
oounty, Michigan to William Clark of the place&#13;
aforesaid and dated March 19,1887 and recorded&#13;
in the office of the Register of Dceda for the&#13;
county of Llrinxaton state of Michigan on the&#13;
Slat day of March 1887 In liber BO of mortgagee on&#13;
page 108 thereof, on which mortgage there la&#13;
claimed to be due at the date of this notice the&#13;
•tun of four hundred and fifty-one dollar* and&#13;
aizty&lt;eight cents ($451.66) and no suit or proceedings&#13;
at law or in equity having been com&#13;
menoed to recover the debt secured by said mortgage&#13;
or any part thereof: Therefore notice is&#13;
hereby given that on Friday the lflth day of Inly&#13;
• . D. 18S7 at one o'clock in the afternoon of said&#13;
isy s*-t»je vrest front tloor of the court noes*&#13;
it the village of Howell Innsid eountx(the*-beUg&#13;
tfce piece of holding the circuit court for the&#13;
oounty in which the mortgaged premises are attested)&#13;
the said mortgage wiU be,foreclosed by&#13;
described in said mortgage or eo&#13;
moon thereof as may be Diosenry to satisfy toe&#13;
amount due on said mortgage with internet and&#13;
legal eosta, that U to ssy: AUehess certain pieces&#13;
ernnrcewof landsltmateiothe vliufe of Pinckney,&#13;
lirlngston county, MtobJfMi m4. etoeedbwi&#13;
to wit: Lots fee* (4) and 4ve (•} in&#13;
(4) according tea plat gagt «•**•? •*&#13;
aeMeittige as •learisd in theesws&#13;
of said Llvlsgetsn ciiwsy.&#13;
lewoU Antn » A. afc ttW,&#13;
iJS&#13;
Getting time for the&#13;
Weather to catch up with the Almanac&#13;
Getting time to w&#13;
Shed the Heavy Underwear&#13;
we are ready for you on seasonable&#13;
UndenTear and Hosiery.&#13;
Men's 50c Balbriggan Shirts and Drawers.&#13;
Never were better for the price.&#13;
Men's Balbrigg&amp;u Knee Bicycle Drawers, double-seated, $1.25.&#13;
German Balbriggan Shirts and Drawers 11.00 each.&#13;
Men's and Boy's Laundered ShirU&#13;
with fancy bosoms and detached cuffs to match. '&#13;
Excellent trade for you at 50c.&#13;
HERE'S A TRADE FOR YOU:&#13;
™f ht^ftfj^^gff^pty Spring and Fall - ^ —&#13;
Jaekets of last season's stock—just right for Driring '&#13;
and Bicycling. Yen can have them as follows:&#13;
Eleven garment!, $5 qualities, your onoioe $1.96.&#13;
*.'&#13;
bifl^ ^ j Eighteen garmeiitA, |6 tof9, your choice $2:96.&#13;
Forty-fire garinen^upl^|12lfo^^ your ohoiw $336.&#13;
Fourteen garments, up to $15, your eboioe $196.&#13;
Attfeeee prices these Garments will go quickly.&#13;
Come in telec* the best of ts»u are go*e.&#13;
Do netferftt to come to Jedceoa to tfre&#13;
OITIZ^NB UBGeiL oelebfstioB ifily *.&#13;
• v -&#13;
Yoare fieapeetfni^, L. H. FIELD.&#13;
/&#13;
J&#13;
* &gt; JhitfUlL s J # l ; (iJtik .&#13;
4S*</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 24, 1897</text>
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                <text>June 24, 1897 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1897-06-24</text>
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                <text>Frank L. Andrews</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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      <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>&lt; •.'.*•&lt;&#13;
'V •'• 'Vr--&#13;
«rf«f&#13;
traiar*)*:&#13;
4?f fcfyiJftu :&#13;
' V I 5 .J.\. ' . •&#13;
. . • * • "&#13;
• * J V&#13;
t'% "iy ' -'&#13;
k- -¾ ^ • • r&#13;
•."..4J'.^.: ,V - ,,&#13;
• * &amp; v -•: •••:•&#13;
life::"&#13;
ur#day f priday and $atuixid^;&#13;
7%Q&#13;
^1¾¾ Fancy Dimity&#13;
quality Dress Goods&#13;
16c quality Dress Goods&#13;
50c Fancy Wool Suitings&#13;
IndigeJUue Prints&#13;
60c'8hirt Waists&#13;
$1.50 quality Ladies' SJ ippers&#13;
5 doz. Ladies' Embroidered Hdkfs&#13;
,VA&#13;
v i'.;&#13;
1 ^&#13;
.1 i&#13;
B^sort and read the' article "Aa&#13;
bland Domain" on page 4 of this is-&#13;
•tta—rt U mtorattiag. _ _ , J_&#13;
Mw. 8. Jeakias of Ma»oa and Mrs.&#13;
yarf Parks of ^Nortb Lansing visited&#13;
fritads in thla Ticimitj the £aat weak.&#13;
Jinv Brogan of Chelsea paaeed&#13;
through this place on 8nnday last&#13;
bonnd for Howell, lie had with him&#13;
the Sheriff of Allegan Co, who waa&#13;
going to Howell to identify a party.&#13;
•#A&#13;
- &gt; » ' • • • * * , . .&#13;
SAP?&#13;
§ • * • • • • . - '&#13;
Jlra 4. B. Danning and family deaba&#13;
- to return to their many kind&#13;
neighbor and friend* their heartfelt&#13;
thanks for the many aete of kindness&#13;
shown them daring their late fceraai*-&#13;
ment in Die loss of a M*4 hugfaaad&#13;
and knringfather.&#13;
Business Pointers.&#13;
Local Dispa tees*&#13;
Mrs. M. 0. Wilson is on he sick&#13;
m^_ _ _ - • •&#13;
J. A. CMwetl was in Cbel^a Wedneaday.&#13;
Whoever fonnd a buggy-boot please&#13;
leaw at this office.&#13;
Eugene Parse 11 of Flint was in&#13;
town oa basiaess the last of last week.&#13;
m$Mm&gt;&#13;
Plnekntjr Hig*k ««11001 Stlfl&#13;
Td tht Front.&#13;
As ui*ej the Pindknev High School&#13;
comes to the front with a class of&#13;
gradaales. Although the class only&#13;
numbered two* the exareises were exeellflnt&#13;
and/* We Two" (too) are to he&#13;
congratulated on their sneoess.&#13;
Tbe^exerciMs were held in the opera&#13;
house anWedaesday-evening of last&#13;
week and rnfly bw^eaple listened to&#13;
the excellent program and went away&#13;
entirely satisfied. Although the&#13;
speaker, Jason B. Hammond,' State&#13;
Superintendent pt Public Instruction&#13;
engaged early la the season for the&#13;
oooasion, went hack on tbem*at almost&#13;
tho last moment, his place was better&#13;
filled by one of toe graduates and an&#13;
address by He v. Fr, Comer ford and no&#13;
one was the loser except P-rof Hammond&#13;
himself.&#13;
The following excellent program&#13;
was rendered:&#13;
"Ball of Koontaoltjr*" Orcbe.tr*.&#13;
iBTOCAtiOB, Ber. M. H. Mc»sboB.&#13;
"Th* WtUt MUJ," XaMnoBO.nart«lto.a&#13;
OUMHUtory, A B J U B . MUl«r.&#13;
Ptano Solo,' •OUttertag Spray,"&#13;
AmftU* Clark.&#13;
Looking Forward, Jalla X. Bwwdiet&#13;
"Clowa'a F-olk." OrchMtra,&#13;
Freaentatioo oC Diplomaav^&#13;
Prof. W. A. Sprout*&#13;
"Anita," OraoWra.&#13;
AddrtM. m Tm. Fr, Comerford,&#13;
"Pickaakiaa," •• .- Orehaatra:&#13;
Frjaaptattoaoraiftabjtaa Oittorlaa.&#13;
• •[ . /alia I*.Banadioi.&#13;
"UnSer t«a ICI»tlet&lt;*," Orehaasta.&#13;
BaaadlttloB, Bar. M. H. AcMaooa.&#13;
"Plekaaiaaiaa on Parada," Orcbeatra.&#13;
Field Day Saturday.&#13;
lire. Geo. Season Sr. and daughter,&#13;
Josie started for Sen Francisco, Cal,&#13;
Tuesday.&#13;
w'i;..',&#13;
'%:"•&#13;
Notice is hereby given to the tax*»&#13;
payers of the Tillage of Fiackney that&#13;
the village asseesment roll is now in&#13;
my hands and I em ready to receive&#13;
taxes, fcrom nownntil July 15, only&#13;
two pat cant will be charged aad after&#13;
that data a charger ot four per cent&#13;
will be made for collection.&#13;
J. A. CAPWXXX, Treasurer.&#13;
: # • : • •&#13;
All kinds of Job Printing done at&#13;
this office. Call aad get prices.&#13;
Settee.&#13;
* Cubaagiaat fodder seed com for&#13;
aaiensxaOeaarhu, Joaa W. HAJERXS.&#13;
rVograsa Cards, School Oarda, BnvekfMav&#13;
Latter BaaoV Note Heads,&#13;
' -Aaotaon Wta, etc. Call aad get&#13;
Jackson are visiting their grandparents&#13;
here.&#13;
Mrs. Harry Ayers and children of&#13;
Detroit are gnasits of her parents. Mr.&#13;
aad Mrs. JnVNash.&#13;
Chester Newman and wife of Butler&#13;
lad-, were guests of Eugene Campbell&#13;
and family last Friday.&#13;
A very pass tent time was enjoyed&#13;
at Dr. if. F. Sigler's last Friday evening&#13;
a* the ice eream social.&#13;
.0. J. Harris and wife and F. L.&#13;
Lewis aad wife of Lantiag were&#13;
gaests of W. T. Allison the past «|eek.&#13;
slraBattoa of Fleshing, who has&#13;
been visiting her mother, airs P. F&#13;
Miss Blanche Graham visited her&#13;
anat, Mra. Potterton at Hamburg the&#13;
past week.&#13;
Dr. W. a Watts and wile of Jackson&#13;
were guests of friends and relatives&#13;
here over Sunday.&#13;
ise Memi* and Blanche Buen of! C. J. Smith and wife of Detroit&#13;
were gaests Of H. F. Kiee and family&#13;
near here the past week.&#13;
Boot Smith of the U. of M„ was&#13;
the guest of his ancle, Daa Biehards&#13;
one night last week. He came oa his&#13;
wheel.&#13;
A good sized eudtenee was present&#13;
at the Masonic service at the M. E.&#13;
church Sanday eveniagk Bev. Mentation&#13;
preached the sermon.&#13;
Mrs. John Teeple went to Kalamazoo&#13;
oa Saturday last with her uncle,&#13;
Philo Goddard and remained to the&#13;
funeral of his wife Monday.&#13;
A number from here attended the&#13;
8. S. convention at the North Hambarg&#13;
charch last Sunday afternoon.&#13;
ABOUT&#13;
f i'&#13;
NOT&#13;
.. Trade With . .&#13;
» • • e • U 9 a t • m #&#13;
We're After That Man!&#13;
* About one man in ten doaen't know&#13;
that his neighbors are saving money on&#13;
every deal, because they trade with us,&#13;
We're After That Man!&#13;
About one man in ten can't be expected&#13;
to know that we are headquarters for&#13;
:%l&#13;
if&lt;:&#13;
~t&#13;
4MS&#13;
•£*&#13;
'/„.»;«&#13;
And we expect to get his trade&#13;
ARE YOU THE TENTH MAN?&#13;
WE'RE AFTER YOU!&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICH.&#13;
W E A R E&#13;
.'V.vfffiS&#13;
• ' •• #4&#13;
•' *• ,* y v j&#13;
^ | ^M&#13;
•^M .'• * - ' i * « - -r v^3 ^¾ '•-^-••&gt;Ht&#13;
:4 ;• -i.-f&#13;
; '^'A&#13;
Always,&#13;
Everlastingly,&#13;
| Continuously,&#13;
Persistently,&#13;
Effectively&#13;
Seeking trade.&#13;
TM&#13;
W E S E L L&#13;
Ewea the past week returned home&#13;
Friday.&#13;
• C. L. Grimes has bean keeping&#13;
bachelor's hall the past week—wife&#13;
and children visiting relatives in&#13;
Lansing. ~&#13;
Wanted by a small boy :^A firecracker&#13;
that will make a noise like a&#13;
cannon aad warranted not to barn&#13;
the fingers or put oat the eyes.&#13;
Sherman Saekett, who has been occupying&#13;
rooms over Barnard k Oampbeffnj*&#13;
ere while building T. Bead's&#13;
residence, returned to hie ^oma on&#13;
Friday last, having completed the carpenter&#13;
work.&#13;
Four brothers, W. A. De May of&#13;
Danbary, Hek, a at. of Chicago, HL,&#13;
J. I. aad J. al of Jacksoa, MielL, put&#13;
ap at the Toasaey floase one day last&#13;
weak. They had been overland to&#13;
ParsuallviJle aad Deerfield viattiag&#13;
their old home. They were a happy&#13;
Oil Stoves,&#13;
Gasoline 8toves,&#13;
Wood Stoves,&#13;
Lawn Mowers,&#13;
Bicycles,&#13;
Farming Implements, etc.&#13;
W E W I L L&#13;
Gladly,&#13;
Politely,&#13;
Carefully,&#13;
Promptly'&#13;
Wait Upon Yon.&#13;
They report a very interesting time.&#13;
Mrs. B. P. Campbell left as a quart&#13;
of the finest cherries in has been oar&#13;
lot to sample in many jrears. In size*&#13;
looks and taste they were better than&#13;
the California fruit. *&#13;
Miss Amelia Clark wishes aa to inform&#13;
her music scholars tfcaf she frill&#13;
be absent for some time as she goes to&#13;
Detroit to attend the Michigan Music&#13;
TeacherV association*&#13;
The Knights of the Orients with&#13;
their ladies' enjoyed one of faear popalar&#13;
banquets on Saturday evening&#13;
last aad about 80 were preoeat aad&#13;
partook of the lay oat&#13;
The following committees have been&#13;
appointed by taa Driving Club far the&#13;
Com&#13;
•- ,• 5"*^&#13;
* T*r&#13;
fih&#13;
BieycJee.&#13;
at# othar repairing both&#13;
.«a«lfp iraaw. Bikes aad Saadriev&#13;
. JsTFFnr A Coxa***.&#13;
T T&#13;
*•* ?!|i.S TMSt&#13;
f.&#13;
» . * . T All kiada md grades "«i asv&#13;
chix«a oiit to ba aoid cbaa|Mr t U a&#13;
aaual It win U ho ^eav ad-&#13;
Tiptaay tooaBoa&#13;
T,CIHIT0II.&#13;
•f.\ ;•»%,&#13;
&amp;!B$*&#13;
Weaaeaday saoraiag and&#13;
place oa their wadding&#13;
Detroit. T. K. wae&#13;
aeyboyaad hat the&#13;
ef a taiydwla at* friends.&#13;
far the past fifteen&#13;
of the Krwatt Mfg.&#13;
Hudson, is Jocmng,&#13;
to Piaekaay, where he has&#13;
flouring mills owned by&#13;
• Mr. Erwm is a first-class&#13;
_ was larnawiiy employed ia&#13;
^rborCity Mills, fie is a&#13;
, an all aroaad good fellow&#13;
rmers aad eitiaatts of Pinckoongratalatad&#13;
thai their&#13;
art to be ia aaoh&#13;
day of sports, July 3&#13;
Sports, E. R. Brown, E. H. Foaey aad&#13;
James Darken; Borses, B. B. Gardner,&#13;
D. W. Maria and W. H. Planeway;&#13;
Grenade, H. fl. Swartaaat, 8.0.&#13;
Teeaaeaad Alfred Monks. A good&#13;
to.&#13;
day a&#13;
On Thursday met, Mr. aad Mrs,&#13;
Philo Goddard ef gahmoeoo easne to&#13;
this place to viaH relatives aad went&#13;
to the home of her aaiaa, Mia. J. J.&#13;
Teepia that a^nainav Mia. Goddard&#13;
retired feeling usually wall hat at&#13;
about halt peat aae oosaflsined ef her&#13;
heart aad before help oaasa aa secured&#13;
she passed away. Mrs. CMtdard&#13;
was 76 years old aad much&#13;
The remains ware taaea be&#13;
Bespectfully Yours,&#13;
TBEPLE tf&gt; CAD WELL.&#13;
'."M_&#13;
SPECIALS&#13;
FOB&#13;
Saturday July 3, and w t I&#13;
tinning one week.&#13;
1-2 off oa all odes aae' ends in SHOES.&#13;
1-2 o f as all oats aad ends ia CQ88CTS.&#13;
v_y&#13;
:#*&#13;
•*v«&#13;
1-2 off oa all odds and ends fat SUWHR&#13;
UNDERWEAR.&#13;
l-2sffso all odds aadanda in GlltwHMI&#13;
andTHMWASN&#13;
•m'\i&#13;
M I I C ;#»&#13;
in rlalamaaoo for banal aad Mr.&#13;
Goodard aae the sywsaaaaf el e\ latye&#13;
otrela - - • - * - ^&#13;
BABKABD * CAMPBELL. i ^ » v*w*uBBweuw»wa^F^ajBBajjB^B^B^awnuw*»' mr ^^-^^^^^~^^~^^ . ... ^ ''•^^^^^•^^^•^HW&#13;
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K M&#13;
pi/'&#13;
-^-&#13;
:•«.',.&#13;
B^lrqi^ U o o d t j , A o g o i l » , over the&#13;
QintraL The rate of fare&#13;
v t i l b e o ^ e cent per liile ©ecb way.&#13;
t f e k e U will be food j o i n * Aufust »1,&#13;
£ ft*a»* to reture from Aiigtuit 34 to&#13;
•L taelosire. Detroit post No. 884, G.&#13;
i r I t , fe«a been detailed as ao eseort&#13;
i s department eommaoder while' at&#13;
WMb enoamiMoetit&#13;
Hon. Wi a Green, of Detroit, has&#13;
Aetdered h k reslirnatieo as chief of&#13;
ft* w d Maj. &amp; W. Jaeklio, of Del&#13;
^ t , haalwea appojtaled.&#13;
DepartiaeAt Commander BUas has ap*&#13;
Urn foMewtof addiwooal aidee-&#13;
^^w ^BSjajBBJ^p ajS^arS) W OvSJ w ^ a &gt; ^ ^ A ^ B V W B B n O f ^ S^PW&#13;
Hi C Osonon, of. Bvart; T. M.&#13;
&lt;3harapliA, of HeailooV; W n . A. Baiter,&#13;
4tf Colotta; J.Hr. BUI, of Berrien Center;&#13;
/ , D. Bailor, of Charlotte; Robert&#13;
O a r l c o f Midland; (X 0 . Da Pnyk of&#13;
Kalk^kk; Tti, g ^ i e l c s , of t o w e f c T.&#13;
&lt;1 Starfle, of Hedson; A. E, PsjrshaU«&#13;
•ej Bowoll; W. EL Ootrom, of Newaygo;&#13;
O w r lM Meon, of OtlsVills; George H.&#13;
4Hlbert,«f Reed Cttyt P. H- MeBrMe,&#13;
fa%&gt;ert Alfred wlfcoo',&#13;
&lt;mm\ ifl'l^jiwli&#13;
IK&gt;i»otte^;byeating to»&lt;Ssa«iJ: AUhave&#13;
reoofbred but Mrfc KimbaHoame Very&#13;
near dying.&#13;
Some miserabl** . Vlgain' one dark&#13;
night, entered' Johjs 'Fi^ir^* orchard&#13;
with a n a * and deliberately chopped •&#13;
down US peach trees, eorn^ of them :&#13;
10 years old, /&#13;
At Torch Lijce village 19 people. In *&#13;
boarding House were poisoned, it i s&#13;
thought by eating head oueese. All&#13;
as£*tgM O, A . a . u&gt; in* » e w i w f f » v&#13;
I n ^ J ^ h a T ^ been Isened by the&#13;
Miohigan department, ¢. A. 9 . , deecrjbftujr.&#13;
the route -and giving information&#13;
ex to the trip to the natkmal encamp-&#13;
Qo, t , of BatUe Opeek, took a taste*&#13;
of real army life by marching to Gou&#13;
gao lake and camping on the ground&#13;
all nl^h^', ^»ch cooked his own break&#13;
fast the next morning.&#13;
The eterenth annual meeting of the&#13;
Miohigan district conference of the&#13;
Evangelical Synod of North America&#13;
was held a t Owosso and the former&#13;
officers were re-elected.&#13;
Abram Kylemanen and Henry Aja,&#13;
Finnish , miners who' came t o this&#13;
country two months age, were struck&#13;
by falling rock and instantly killed at&#13;
the Ropes gold mine at ^shpemkiff.&#13;
The Pere Marquette statue, a replica&#13;
on the famous one in the1 naiiional eapttel,&#13;
will be dedicated a^ Jfarqnette,&#13;
July 15 or 2 a Don M. Dickinson will&#13;
probably be the orator.&#13;
Mrs. Roxanna Tpwnsend committed&#13;
suicide at Penfewsjter by hap^lapr herself&#13;
to a bedpost with a piece of ribboo.&#13;
8he was eif years old- nndVior&#13;
ci'HfeHland; B. B. Hughes, of Big Rap-&#13;
4 % Wttlk Dibble, of Brant&#13;
\ •' slelli'eail-ittMmeeratam^wV' '&#13;
Ameottng r/as held a t Saginaw o l&#13;
MMbrotherhoodsof loeomoitve firemen,&#13;
^BglnMra, railroad trainmen and eon-&#13;
•dnesorsv with about 8,000 visitors pres-&#13;
«OOt Mayor Baum welcomed thnm.&#13;
{•reeeot, among whom were ' P. M.&#13;
Arthur, thief of. the Brotherhood of&#13;
sTiooomottve JBnginnora; ft H. WMklns,&#13;
a&gt;sjs|aj|| grim* chief of the Order of&#13;
BnOway Oondnetors; F. W. Arnold,&#13;
rgrand eejqretfur of the. Brotherhood of&#13;
l o e o m o U r e ; Engineers, nn4, ,T. B.&#13;
Dodge, drst vloe-grand saaaifcer Broth-&#13;
-orhood of Railroad^Trainmeo.&#13;
t MICHIGAN HMW9 ITBMS.&#13;
Sugar beets planted by Wexford&#13;
ity farmers are coming u p nicely.&#13;
Frits Wagner, aged 6, eon of acigarmsker,&#13;
was drowped in the mill race&#13;
• s B a i t i e Creek , ,'&#13;
M. &lt;L Anter and kirn entire family of&#13;
f o v e k l M r a m n l Maple Rapids are ill&#13;
4alth the measles.&#13;
Cats pinyiag in John V. Bobbie's&#13;
a* Yantlaast, npset a 4s*4er*, and&#13;
a $1,000 fire.&#13;
The train dk^sntosTsrs' om&gt;a&gt; pi. spe&#13;
©., G. Rr A W. wiU be. mored from&#13;
Ionia to Grand Rapids.&#13;
s^'Mj^yareVs flathollo rbereh at Otnsgo&#13;
dpsHgatert a chime of belie weighi&#13;
s f 460. M 0 &gt; c 4 IM po«no&gt;.&#13;
£s*eat,fte'dry jkJlns of the Palmer-&#13;
4en\ Wooden ware Co., at SaginAw, has&#13;
hnrfted with a loss of $6,000. r&#13;
Owosso will bold a special election&#13;
July 7 to vioto on t i e proposition of ieesUng&#13;
$35,000 wortf of paring bonds.&#13;
The large eaW and planing mill of&#13;
#nha H. Grills and biryrit repair shop&#13;
«C Was. Grills barned at Athens. , I«osf&#13;
Geo. Baird. aged 35, a brakeman on&#13;
&lt;heC. * W. M.. feU between the ears&#13;
a t Bast fletigstnnk and was instantly&#13;
killed. - , .&#13;
A lens factory employing t o men is&#13;
40 more to West Branch from Hartford.&#13;
0*Meaiy. oldest eon of&#13;
died anddealy a t&#13;
fiff^fliii^ froat drtnking^ t o o maeh'&#13;
ecUwaljpr:&#13;
H e a r , C^aer. e^ed W, ;wne WUed b y&#13;
" TBoariav JUnkocsea ssmasee&#13;
d e a d r«emedeMPsm the erack^&#13;
Max BmuMBii fnwfcMrln ••—Hntend&#13;
^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^-^^^^^^^^¾ ^^^^^v^^^^^s^^^ns^^^^^^^^^s^^^^^*1^^^^^^^^^^^^^™^&#13;
« n t of a ifrge sugar beet larem m&#13;
sassiy, kas been fng^gad t o lnatrnot&#13;
eonaiy&#13;
In cold Mkjft SMudered'nie erMe e*&#13;
' ~ " ' i been eenfteten « f&#13;
in Use mrst degree&#13;
. - . , / ; :&#13;
wp- r^- &amp;*• i^^^00^^^^yx&#13;
JiumUW&#13;
fteaeailean' aamte' 'vlen-ff—il— af &lt;uJe&#13;
CasMstate'fer Oeaater. ^ r v » K&#13;
l r&#13;
TheGnen.BanubHee* asate eonyen*&#13;
tion opened at Toledo with ova* 4,000&#13;
people present and a big fight on hand,&#13;
H has been the custom for she hand of/&#13;
YoiW Jones-of A*stanaas&lt; nod&#13;
t a f t o ^ part h^\nq exposition of P M - I ^OOgJmffda^sV&#13;
.,eocjriflb ,^s :Sh&gt; taW«,^ m ^ ^entiastnrasnr«en»r»d ta*he men,&#13;
the M«te tklret lo Ohio t o » • » • thin 1 ^ «rtreme court of the&#13;
chalreaan.ei the sts&gt;te-exeoutivtt coodb o w W t e t h e i n t t r e s t l n&#13;
mittee and thus Gov. BuahneU desired ^ 9 - ^ ^ " " ' r r ' * * *&#13;
to re-elect tbjo present chairmen, Chen.&#13;
some time has suffered from mental&#13;
aberration; . ' *x.&#13;
A can of gasoline exploded in Miss&#13;
Van's dressmaking parlors at North-&#13;
'ville, burning-Miss Van and destroyed&#13;
ner outfit, and $3,000 damage was done&#13;
to the dry goods stock of Holmes,&#13;
Danoer 4k Ca by water and smoke.&#13;
Geo. R. PraW and John Refan; t w o&#13;
Detroit boys eaon aged about id,' started&#13;
to row across! Detroit river* ttbf f n&#13;
crossing between two vessels the toW&#13;
was pulled tant*nd their boat was ups&#13;
e t ^Pratt vras drowned, but Re#aawas&#13;
rescued.&#13;
• Fire destroyed 800,000 feet of lumber&#13;
belonging t o a L. Grant A Co., a t 2ilweukee,&#13;
and a small amount owned by&#13;
Whtttier A Co. Grant's lose is $15,000;&#13;
iosnranee $11,500. Whittier's $1,600;&#13;
insurance $l,00a T wo small residences&#13;
were also horned.&#13;
It Is believed that there will be 8,000&#13;
men working In coal mines near Bay&#13;
City within a few months. The Cincinnati&#13;
Coal Co. and the Conmna ..Cou&#13;
have secured options in hundred* of&#13;
acres south and west of Bay City,,and&#13;
preparing to sink shafts... =. 4 :&#13;
Richard Barrett paying:teller of 4he&#13;
National lumbermen's bank a t Mne»'&#13;
kegon, while sailing in e small canee&#13;
to Lake Herbor&gt; was eapsined wken he&#13;
was three miles out and the waves&#13;
dashed above hie head. He gave up&#13;
hope, but the life-seeing crew saw him&#13;
and in 30 minutes ihey had rescued&#13;
him—nearly exhausted.&#13;
The Valley City Desk Co.'s factory&#13;
at Grand Rapids, barned. .The fire&#13;
originated in the finishing room from&#13;
an explosion, end the flames spread eo&gt;&#13;
rapidly that the employes escaped with&#13;
difficulty. The loss on contents fa estimated&#13;
at $35,000, and on. the building,&#13;
owned b y the J. W. Converse estate,&#13;
$3,000. lnanrahee $13,000.&#13;
Mrs. Shsyeri the young wife of Free*-&#13;
e»s^9re*qis streets, Jaekeon.&#13;
&gt; $3,000, pardy insured.&#13;
stare and heading factory&#13;
Clare teaegki fire&#13;
man, J*. Shaver, a 70-year-old citizen of&#13;
Portland, alleges that she has been repeatedly&#13;
insulted by some of the young1&#13;
mien of the neighborhood. Recently&#13;
her hatband g o t his shotgun and&#13;
opened fire on a party that were hanging&#13;
aromnd' the house. One'young&#13;
man received a load of bird shot in his&#13;
ehoulderV&#13;
Charles Ray, a young grocer, of Napoleon,&#13;
was taken to fed! at Jackson, j&#13;
ineaae. Last year Bay took greet interest&#13;
in RevivaUet Bettton Middlekauf,&#13;
w h o now conducts the nsmslonnry&#13;
school * t Groese Pointe, near TJ0-'&#13;
trolt Disciples of Middiekauf, it Is&#13;
»Uegedfc wrought »P«&gt; Saj ?*&gt;&amp; he&#13;
waseeBed t o j b m ^ T S r S a B e t n n d&#13;
foUow his teeehings.. , •&#13;
During the war of 1812 Gen. WilHem&#13;
Hnnieon, an his way to Detroit with&#13;
troops to battle with the British and&#13;
Indians established a fort a t Upper&#13;
&amp;anduaky,a Ma*y wounied sokners&#13;
were brought from ihe frontier and&#13;
died. Recently excavations far JsneX&#13;
rcourt&amp;natn^artisan i s s e t&#13;
toef hmmen akeietons together w k k&#13;
them to He Heyefaomii&#13;
^ tke&#13;
4f. e n d the neat a dmftar b«rmi; met&#13;
L. Kurta, but Senntof, Paemsv wanUd,&#13;
Mai. Chaa.,W. Dick, secretory a! J h a&#13;
national Republican committee, t o b e&#13;
chairman and it was on thin that the&#13;
fight came up. Gov. Bnshnell ;we* SBJK&#13;
ported by the Forakajr follower^ r b u t&#13;
in the meeting* pf thv delegates b y&#13;
congressional district^ Mr. Hanna wonr&#13;
more than two to.one, Wlt^ this, jfc&#13;
tory assured It was deeideaVto postpone,&#13;
the formality of naming the chairman&#13;
for two weeks, bait Maj. D^clc «U sure&#13;
to receive the; honor: I:&#13;
With thisshowlbVof howopmpUtely&#13;
Senator Haena controlW the eon venison&#13;
the other business was transacted&#13;
without further trouble; Hon. H. P.&#13;
Crouse, ebalrmsn of the' state central&#13;
oommittee, introduced Gen. Che*. H.&#13;
Grcevenoeas temporary chairman o f&#13;
the convention, and after a speech b y&#13;
Mr. Groavenor,'the new state central&#13;
oommittee and the oommittee on reaolutlonewere&#13;
named and adjonrnment&#13;
was taken for the day. i\.' .: * *&#13;
The second day Vvrork .vras dnisbed&#13;
up in comparatively abort «order« ? The&#13;
temporary officers, Mr^ Gnosyenor a s&#13;
chairmnp. and John R. Malloy seore*&#13;
tary. eiere made pevmnnenl The&#13;
platform adopted is in substnoee a s&#13;
follows: The. Reppblieans of, Q&gt;k&gt; re*&#13;
jolee in the magnificent rectory of . l a s t&#13;
year, whereby the people of the United&#13;
States overwhelmingly decided in favor&#13;
of en.hoqest dollar add a chance t o&#13;
earn i t . a n d elected as JPr^idenA. t h a t&#13;
»pkpdM«ooof 0 h l o , . V n v McXinley.&#13;
'r™iot s&amp; o#f &amp;th'j*be* *In *tb*e*lr? *ef!fo&amp;rt s &amp;U, &amp;e&gt;*ih•i&lt;cv*e #•,&#13;
freedom,' and we hope that' the. day of,&#13;
their deirrerance is near at hand. We&#13;
believe that the administration- in :ne-'&#13;
irotiatritir the treaty f^ortfte annexation&#13;
of flaW»il has aetett wisely;'- We denounce&#13;
the violation oV fh^ crviiservUs)&#13;
*Ct by President Cleveland; end AentsmeVanei&#13;
r^oe^tsenofWderibr'nSod^&#13;
ifleetion tof the4awa«^ Witt' i^eonspfmk&#13;
lt» ssnaifest pferpos*/ WO eeenmend&#13;
*ed^m thO-1&#13;
fswnevn tt&#13;
oiswWUeskmfeeshe&#13;
anph differences as may arise between&#13;
eoiroTotltmtangaged in interetaie oonv&#13;
meree and MtUr employes, e n d demend&#13;
for the w ^ j r o w » r i ^T-Ohlo such&#13;
a n i p U : ^ P e p M k ' ' to&amp;&gt;*&amp;:i.mt shall&#13;
spesdlh/'fssniesp Ameittdn n^ekAewf.- ^¾¾^ are due tq 8enaiora F4&gt;rake#n«A4 &amp;sns|a&gt;&#13;
for thefr splendid 'estorts during t h e&#13;
proposed ' a' swenpihW ameud«&#13;
a:tw;jte^sdzirxwstitio«A&#13;
tipg the emnjidysnt Mr. Mi&#13;
,WSH[,** »we&#13;
b y ^ ^ a n g ^ t h T r f&#13;
peove^fiinejs for OkeponiOoit.Mm' indorse&#13;
the cendmaey of Hep, MarcnO A.&#13;
Henna for U. a eenator t o sueueed&#13;
himself. ' ' •.&#13;
The mention of Senator Henna's&#13;
Stifttiens end* he waa called for. He&#13;
thanked the Woven tie* f o r sbis exof&#13;
^eonfidenoe and pl*e&gt;6d&#13;
bearer for Repsiblieea eueeees in OMe.&#13;
fie dUrnesed the pending ter4jrbtitMM&#13;
length end paid a nigh tribute t o Pieei&#13;
d e n t MeKiniev^ efforss tn tetn^Mnont&#13;
prosperity&#13;
dHions for the cosmary,&#13;
sTnmipsMonejrsse shsw sneji e e f o l - ^&#13;
Iowa: Governof, Ana &amp; Bnehnell;&#13;
preme lodge. Jeeob F. Barkett;&#13;
tnftseurer, hem eel Ceannhnll&#13;
InunedkvteLr.elter one -*d&#13;
O f f fr* ^ n i F n ^ r t n l T s i j\Ut n t r i r t t M l t i l nmtefrtinll&#13;
^ o a m f ^ oryanined nHth.Herry M.&#13;
mndjlheeyy kilns were&#13;
of Oxford,&#13;
he- e ieaie while croesiag the&#13;
neer river.&#13;
Meisel, Jr., son o f a fu-osii-&#13;
, of Bey d t y ;&#13;
the mm*k&lt;mtamgh&#13;
heat drifted nwny&#13;
«&#13;
9$4 en « M -&#13;
# m e miner weilcsBedhy V eave-ln a t&#13;
Uahedkjwsnga. Ceim. He fteaves a wife&#13;
At AAMAM «mAtA'«ea Ad STfliA^^^aAL * * •&#13;
•^o^^ esB^BwesMsm^en simB^ssw^^mf '^s^nvws s a w nieMSs^ssnmjmjmjsjm^pwMv&#13;
of MM former trnaty be; t h e&#13;
eotien of the annate ieft the eatyset i n&#13;
eeoh ^e«4swOAihM&gt;Mie firitssh #overneittingone,&#13;
eieeay of throe space. The&#13;
I wind blew a f a i e and she eea waxed&#13;
wroth e l l tbjwe^gn she long night, and _&#13;
in the momiog Meseei-wns fouod b y * J fcat did not feel disposed&#13;
fishing tug half dead from exposure . . .&#13;
Suropsbim sheep be- and hunger. He had heen jgieen up,&#13;
teriayWAlsmae Hardy esese stilled a s h i s b o e t had seen found, heUom nn,&#13;
% Ik^rbsinff erfdto MMW ISAM e ^&#13;
being dragged ear mlsjeony&#13;
,«ee»»y.-&#13;
Preeideut Mcktinley nee d^tdrn^ned&#13;
to revWfcbe sbendoned treaW of g e n -&#13;
eral arbitratiott between thlr United&#13;
Suites end &lt;3eent&#13;
jUreeekm of • aeeretagy Sherman - t h e 1&#13;
ereetjr Wiethe f e l l y&#13;
teeaty i s signed I t m end^rntood thwt&#13;
she isUtiasi ve in t h e precent ones witt&#13;
Stuten.&#13;
Hawai&#13;
annennUon ^aeiiph, ^Mti Davis,&#13;
L M^o#so,ta5 oe^ened c an ^ngfeement&#13;
the printiaif of J ^ O g . eopies of&#13;
treaty itna otipnr os^aMienenr^&#13;
^a^^r^-WUf^trnViJ-^nie finen&#13;
oonMpl^eA reoeised a. turn down on&#13;
* • * ^ ' ¥ O T » r ^ # ^ w d matting parag&#13;
r a M ^ U i e ^ f f Wll /(This resulted&#13;
i u M ^ t n g ^ 9 &gt; n ^ i n j ^ ^ o n the f&#13;
l i s t 1 * were cOttdn -cloth for b a g g i e *&#13;
and woven fs#^paof jute yarna. The&#13;
De$c*i»ta were enAbled t o carry their&#13;
point Afminei these paragraphs by the&#13;
Of thesivef RepubUcans and&#13;
Pop^ffists and b y the' help of Messrs.&#13;
ton fftd Hansbrougb, straight Rspnblieans,&#13;
o n mattinge • - - '&#13;
SnnATX^TOih day—The record was&#13;
broken by the disposal of 56 pages of&#13;
the tariff bill during the day. The&#13;
wool and silk schedules were laid aside&#13;
temporarily, and. the work wenf on&#13;
rapidly until the last two schedules of&#13;
the dutiable list covering paper and&#13;
, manufactured suhdries, were completed&#13;
w i t i r a t exception of the paragraphs&#13;
on hides, gloves, ccel and some lesser&#13;
ertlclee,-Wttich Went over. Tfcif advanced&#13;
t h e Senate- t o the free Hat,&#13;
which was taken np and completed in&#13;
three hours. Aftor wool and s i l t i r «&#13;
disposed of the tobaoeo' schedule, the&#13;
reciprocity provisions and the internal&#13;
revenue portions of the bill, as well as&#13;
the many isolated paragraphs passed&#13;
over,^in^^yglip^»S»&lt;iier^rl&#13;
S K N i ^ ^ ^ t i b ^ : ^ ^ ^ c i t i n g debate&#13;
ma;&#13;
r e l o p e i t h e fiftt^*»rips5^£greemeot&#13;
o n the RcpuhjjpUp side W the chamber&#13;
and led t o a ^rer.m personal emehaoge&#13;
between Senatorf Carter, of Montana,&#13;
jahd Kornker, of^&amp;Mo, otr\,,one hand,&#13;
k n d Mr. AIUsou, of tow*, in charge of&#13;
4the bill, on the other. MV. Foraker&#13;
asserted that an agreement concerning&#13;
rates on oerjtisie wools vVa* "beleg vio-&#13;
Whfti,^amt'ty&amp;, onder anM^clSmitasdehnen&#13;
every Senator woo Id be Hide to&#13;
W for himself: VMK ' Allison^ with&#13;
4$Mm v*beeiee#ee, ^eeclarMt^«ia^"&lt;e'&#13;
eheM motbe e&gt;»vesy«%y HArewb* ' Mr.&#13;
Cnrterv w h o had aronsesVthw ssorel^Dd&#13;
e e v e r e d t o nerve the perngrephe relatlng&#13;
Ueekipsw'snoMe^&#13;
view to eeeerjeg ssiml&#13;
b e t -m&gt;. Vest, hi&#13;
pbire^edmidemytng ••***&#13;
jualij smdiMietaMiiiug Use 'pmblie, hntsinem&#13;
while Republiean ^ n e v o r e h e k i e r&#13;
esMaene, Mn TeUervef *XJoJa*edo,' elee,&#13;
sneke emeinatdelnv • iomd, ieeatmasaekm&#13;
to say be would -not veto- for the bill&#13;
unices objeetjosuvnle lee to res were&#13;
^ 4 f ^ ™ 4 ? f j V "***¥*- e&gt;^T7TBW^^™™^» • • • • • &gt; ^fMsMMy'&#13;
m w h l p A mm^r^surtenlAmne^A is_eh&#13;
e i n s t j r f V e '&#13;
The city • of* Tehnantepee,. Mexico, .&#13;
haaexperienoeda 16a^e*rt*a«t*nfth- "&#13;
fJfHiksl rt\$ffft Thjffh M7^;jjMewlilt$T f9***- ..&#13;
•iwrrWT^n^n^^'JMo^lt?' It is feared • '* " """'" *'fl"f%V-&#13;
»f MontgpijauTy&#13;
sweo^ienr^&#13;
rtvtth-e/&#13;
hettow,&#13;
SAXATn.—7*4 day.—Senator Morgan,&#13;
of Ambema, introduced a bill for the&#13;
annexation of 4he Hawaii** islands.&#13;
with loinl demon-) The b ^ p o y k l e s i h e t the i s l e t s tfaTT&#13;
becosae ff *ef»*knar f-9/t..- the -,.United&#13;
States, in aenordsmej rwiljh the t*nssv&#13;
of the recently nee^ilaied treaty. The&#13;
date net for the extension. of the laws&#13;
o f this country over .the islands is the&#13;
fith of March, l^OA After a contest&#13;
lesting throughout nenriy the wl&#13;
day i h e Seneto ooeipleted t h e&#13;
g m p h e p f the wool schedule relating&#13;
30 raw wool n a d «dvanoed into4 the&#13;
features neleMng t o • nMnnfarlaired&#13;
woolen goosW • T&gt;e d a j wen devoted&#13;
largely to a discussion ^ o f ^ o g e o t of&#13;
tarit? reAes fartt^priee of v r i ^ a a ^ t h e ^&#13;
•t-t* -t-f- J-L,&#13;
T w o sharp a n d severe shoohsr e f&#13;
earthquake Were felt a t JBau Francisco&#13;
/ - -_-.. '.'.'"'.• -*-, -,-'—._ wene&#13;
the&#13;
t o b e&#13;
tente e i Pollleaer&#13;
eurred thongfc me y narrow&#13;
brack bnlldkiw&#13;
hi tewnhneimJBered, end i n thepanrt&#13;
end eelUag have lost&#13;
and e f i e e wall&#13;
At^otlfvye&#13;
f thefa-hemm hi terror.&#13;
enene -of petty&#13;
m nenriy every houee&#13;
m**i.&#13;
Abig^eattlejBanchwlUbe smwtsd in&#13;
^., ••* •J'&#13;
Ind., hue burned. T h e fnetnry i s&#13;
owned by the United Ohms C a , e n d&#13;
employed 400 peopde And&#13;
exSU,beAiOO,000,.&#13;
ttfiyfAJdlea.&#13;
The -Sal vatiea? Away s«d^t4e»r rWala».&#13;
the American Volunteers, bpcame s o&#13;
noisy in theiricompetltten at^Maoiatef&#13;
that they w#fe warned t o m e n t h e&#13;
street meetings. They foftttnied bold* .&#13;
tog them, %owever, n a d fin|Jly five&#13;
Salvationist and four Volunteers were •&#13;
arrested. ;«• J . J,&#13;
Phil Armour asys h e i w l l l g o out of&#13;
the butterine business wuly 1 a* » result&#13;
of the anti-coloring net signed by \&#13;
Govj..Tanner. . Th,e:industry represents&#13;
a capital of about $1,0^),000 a n d 1 * « »&#13;
men will be thrown b u t The Annual&#13;
product, of .buttering Jtl&gt;x flhlm)go » J&#13;
* « • • - * ' •'*'-&#13;
&gt;•- • • . ' • . v 4&#13;
•• '... V .-*&#13;
... '-.ift&#13;
• + s ,*• #&gt;••.&#13;
- * ' ' • • • ,&#13;
about 30,000,000 pounds,&#13;
Over 5,000 unemployed Polenmtrehed&#13;
to the city hall at Boiffalo v^r* demand&#13;
bread. The, /ftth/reek aroee. becanne&#13;
8,000 men neked for work onj$ftnee4xM&gt;&#13;
way oonatructioo, afl^only.50 faere engaged.&#13;
The men h M long looked fnr&#13;
employment n t this wo*k. Afte# their&#13;
rejection's meetlag waa hjpl^,'1¾^aU&#13;
officeholders were a^pugof&amp;. .&#13;
^ J o h n B e e U U , »fa^u^rneerBlAmingk&#13;
hnm, took two.^suieef ^ t , l a » 4 a o u m&#13;
w i t h suicidal intent H i s deuxnier&#13;
Emma, a pretty girl, becajne ^ngaged [^¾¾¾¾&#13;
stay with one of her married slaters,&#13;
f b c Michigan Asenpieiioo&#13;
pendent Teiophrtn^ (fapfm^fci^Am&#13;
with nearly 30 n^o, raprasentbig (he&#13;
moat ot the, independen'^ oomps«Me)f W&#13;
the state, preeenC J 6 * e ^ H Ware, of&#13;
Grand *aj&gt;kle, waa elected president&#13;
and Alex L McLedd,' of t t^M/Bw&#13;
e ^ ^ o n i e l ^ ^ e ^&#13;
for * sefoeg moyemeiitt t o fight t h e&#13;
Bell tolephon^monoply. __'&#13;
Albert and LouU Sickmiller, Charles&#13;
Faile and George"' Btetehelder weU-&#13;
; known young men, were rue over b y&#13;
van Erie fart express near Mansfield, O.&#13;
Louis Sickmiller wee fnstnntJr kiBAd&#13;
s n a t h e other three will d i e of their,&#13;
in^rtes m m tmen moaV horribly&#13;
ernahed.; . T h e / were nWadHnirhse ar-&#13;
^ v a l o t s f r e ^ t t r e t o . h a ^ a * Menrnd&#13;
4he peeernger. They lav d u e u nee*&#13;
the tracks to Weep end YTmjrHfirtlirfMlfl&#13;
suddenly by thetinen^rmmneVwAuh t h e&#13;
tracdes kt their eonfueioe. &gt; . - ^&#13;
•&gt;&gt;£".V-'-; f'&gt;J?'i&#13;
V,&#13;
.v..&#13;
• • &amp; . • •&#13;
^•r&#13;
• ^ 1&#13;
•'•fr&#13;
T H E MANKaVrsV - » % " » •&#13;
M^^rSPW. j&gt;&#13;
1 M 4 9 441&#13;
|testnra4es^.ti 7aM5 if&#13;
^owergraoes .8 flkps s»&#13;
Jnest grades... .4 00*4 »&#13;
4S0jSn« 4M I P is&#13;
ESS srades&#13;
«f» tJ*ew 3 «&#13;
8est crneee. .^ie&lt;MMft4§:&#13;
Lower graees. -t «*]£ f , L&lt;&#13;
Loeeriernees.^fMfif i n&#13;
a&gt;&gt;»..** rj&#13;
If&#13;
I P ^&#13;
4*1&#13;
3M&#13;
h*.&#13;
473MI If 4 t t&#13;
J M S f t f 111&#13;
4&gt;.M&gt;!•.»$*:&#13;
..•ti»# rf$iw«T&#13;
- - -.«•;* •-&#13;
I f e w - f&#13;
j£S£t' * K?8nW Wttmm&#13;
»HW4 M'mMJt*' nt MM*&#13;
tr &amp;r tV-m^f- m ejMtf&#13;
M t)M . m^MM..,.M. #M}4&#13;
ft.-. M MM*^.&gt;«;&gt;.$|&#13;
•*sv|Bt-* -^r*&#13;
j»*i ;&#13;
0. i «anothy, pr&gt;;&#13;
.*u&#13;
:s&gt;»;.&#13;
-., V ,&#13;
•?r&gt;:r^ V *» ; &gt;• J&#13;
The retarding Influence of osM and unseasonable&#13;
weather has passed. *fse gala&#13;
la business m apite of it wasesena week age&#13;
and has become clearer to all,. As a&#13;
iue ImjOovement ever begins wirtt&#13;
-ItM^niref prices before the&#13;
ue gena-&#13;
" an up*&#13;
beforethe pradnetag tore5 r &amp;l^MUrMUS&#13;
A-&#13;
&gt;&#13;
Lflu.&#13;
la evidefice o?rkrsuuailv efchVrfiof&#13;
mere estab1U« pheivneeraytJ iI mhapvoer thaenetn dseepf^aarltwmoernltt&#13;
and SaofelrAndi employed, and while pru-&#13;
AeBoe^iftll hinders jpecnlative excesses, UM&#13;
progreasjowatd better thingH unchecked.&#13;
Reports from the various cltlS shov/averi&#13;
general prorress and a continuing large distribution&#13;
through retail trad*. The proof It&#13;
clearer as it should be, la the industrial snaa&#13;
laAne trading felid. l^trsjomprovldlng fat&#13;
nanannmt^eneyea m U W mes^ytr*n&#13;
e w s s w . . s s m w j s r&#13;
f H i M i i&#13;
' ^&#13;
V#&#13;
i &gt; &lt;.."'''' Rr' y-T,&#13;
; * « : . t:\&#13;
i' ' » " " Ass&#13;
• • * •&#13;
MM&#13;
:.YV&#13;
l o t Je*nfc. If a n t h e r ittcbath may&#13;
' Kteke: a e ajarm, Pelnten and^Jtn*&gt;army&#13;
",i\ *•&#13;
i f ^ . , - - ^ ^ B i r f l u S k ^ i B d o T T l C B V / 1 '' i»p^ic,,;wtMJft tjjm&gt;xnpte«t cornere&#13;
•-:r-.:' - ^ / v ^ / a g h t / ^ ' . • • " ' * ' '*'•' '• "''•' • • •;'&#13;
to nroddry we haii'd at the twiflght's&#13;
test gleiunmg— '&#13;
'"^V 4 . •*•*'..•• '•&#13;
&amp;-^&#13;
tofjef and bHght stars,&#13;
V';' f ^ M N f k tte chjuds of the fight,&#13;
&lt;yeV tn* tn»nerbi;*ne watched were so&#13;
Arf^ml5ckyi*• war gia&gt;*, me bwmb*&#13;
*, bursting In air,&#13;
0«T^ #rtot through the tttgkt*Bs* &lt;kr&#13;
O hmyfSee that ettu^aa*J|tn&gt; betraef&#13;
&lt; ^ ^ t e ^ * i ^ l j ; »••* t**&gt;ugfc the&#13;
,. , mists &amp; t&gt;e deep, '&#13;
^ • ^ " t h a toiVttatithtt host In dt*hd&#13;
W*At Is tfuTwhtch die breestf, o'er the&#13;
* t.;....t^wettntattep.r /." , -V. .'"&#13;
stfow&#13;
^^fce*4» « * a16*" a**"* *or?K&#13;
. ;, tog's first heam,J&#13;
Tto the etar-spa*ngUia banner; *&gt; long&#13;
may it ware&#13;
O'er the Ian* of tho free and the home&#13;
:\ o/the'brpiyel ' , . ^&#13;
Analwhere *» that hand who so vaunt,&#13;
TbAt the bavoe of w v a ^ , # bajtje/i&#13;
A M P a***yCou*tir * ¥ * *••*•&lt;*&#13;
•* *&gt;-. ne&gt; mote? -4.^.- &gt; • -r •• •. *&#13;
Thaftrn4e*e; hag wiahadpwt their fool&#13;
»•* .Mfostatane'..flgJIwkW'' •- v —•••««•&gt;&#13;
No refuge ooal4aaare tea JMreJlng and&#13;
alar*&#13;
aw™ t h f tArff»*f •ftht.or the gloom&#13;
Of the fOT&amp;tt .* : /&#13;
And th# eter-«nenglea banner in tii-&#13;
• r ; ^ a f j k * ^ - ^ ^ : / - - t.;;; ^--^-&#13;
&lt;y«r the lani x&gt;f the Xre* and th^^hQtoe&#13;
of thetearth, have walked ereot a a ^&#13;
cure under* tb*U. hann^r wjh^hs 4W&gt;&#13;
opppnehta wouKS^tMr down and tr»a»-&#13;
pte, under &lt;npt._ l^wM Jn Mexlcp: when&#13;
that clt* wee t*h*n ^ oy eaeault T h *&#13;
houae-ot the Americaname«i*iMier w*t&#13;
then, aa i t oofht to be, the refuge ot&#13;
the jMpejd of I S T I&#13;
• a ^ e j ' m^F* J(r^a^^wey,«|^B^^anBF^e^njpipe^^^aaw^ai^^^^ ^•eje)¾•e^^••w•'.&#13;
f» tteaa^bntwltf^A^raaeneeraentto&#13;
thAt MMt^ P^eloliesvaralch, ftnila at^&#13;
ed reptiJet.&#13;
T?» bc»aii«t onnnon" at midnight&#13;
u^e^HAvtiie w a t f n ^ ; ^ « ^ ^ e « » y .&#13;
and'jajio*^ '••&lt;{. --v ^•-^•^ ,4-- ,-. ,r.-^"&#13;
i- ,.&gt;•'..;.'ri.!$ld&lt;;aieep tm mom/' &gt;. «,v.j v :&#13;
'or thereafter* You&lt;begin'to dream of&#13;
thetoh)aii4iaie that &lt;vlrlee&gt;fou!sf'« w t w&#13;
mea^f tarter from *ttetr vouchee at Tffc&gt;&#13;
itoaf of » foreign-U««f and there^—&#13;
oita«W-^earTFOW- wiiid^w-goee otf a&#13;
: « W « f toniethlnjrworejk. !7ou cojntote'&#13;
, j»our»elf, TkoweVer, • irtth' the thought&#13;
fcM»*m«r be the ftrtt and the iaat eala-&#13;
^tfoireo-near atliAUd; and with thjf&#13;
M i M t i ^ M W e falUag toto a 4eHheard;&#13;
nearer atlll/ ArtJ tuch another f&#13;
Yoli ttfte%; and wonder Whether the in-&#13;
•miment burst orvho^,aMoat hoping!&#13;
it did, in order to ie^ininate this sereUf&#13;
ade of thunder. Well» jo^j about conclude&#13;
an actual explosipn took place,&#13;
and you begin to fear the juvenile Jupiter&#13;
hw been kick64or«r and wounds&#13;
«1 iii the causa jot hi* country. ,ln&#13;
your eymjiathy fpr the. fallen: patriot&#13;
you U»ten anew,; end are Umpted to&#13;
turn out to his «llef, when—by the&#13;
shadow of ,PlutO\aa4 aH hi* subterran*&#13;
aan ermpry!—right mnder, your window,&#13;
bellowa. eueh'anodxer gmnpowder&#13;
fuiiminatiopaa you never expect t«&#13;
hear again* No matter, however, for&#13;
the occasion gives moment to the most&#13;
triflliig ciremnetaneee, and you feel&#13;
reeMttitoe^-witfc thonghta &lt;e» the blese-'&#13;
edneaaof liberty.'Yet, with a remnant&#13;
of -deeperation, you wish- all the »ulphu*&#13;
and saltptetre ofthe undet kln^&#13;
domthMit'ibto somepleesof artillery,&#13;
like that-which Miltoo ascribe* to the&#13;
inventive gehlui of Satan, and tbuched&#13;
off at once and forever; r&#13;
But' the sun Is*ud, and the "r6ckribbed&#13;
hillgrt'tremble ai da"wn with tb.^&#13;
boo^hdfJ dt £ hundred " cannonading&#13;
echoes, tabm yonder tall stair stream?&#13;
the banner highland gay in the mom*&#13;
ing light and breese—a ribbon sail&#13;
which. the. .Angel ^ Creedpm rt^es,-jtotha^&#13;
heavens, oyer. thA nations of ear^tfr,&#13;
groan.&#13;
^ ¾ ^ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ lastaiawt weseheawd&#13;
the flrst PteIttdja^oM^jpamt 4 a f ^ 4 a 4 a ^ ^ &lt; ^ a . ^ l s ^ \ JrtUe espele the&#13;
ia&gt;»et]waMAwm1'WaUlb-ft&#13;
/thesjitemwIUlettesadkates&#13;
the shops and faeeoria* have turned , f t f ^ ^ * ! *&#13;
out their flAuaUng tr^opa of fashkw I f l f N M l i l m&#13;
i»PUiaii'iui. atream- ft^niiiiyTll B M f l i &gt; " ^ P ^ 1 1 1 1 1 »&#13;
lB#&lt;^%a«*rtrA4»«t&lt;ramJv.J^^ f W | v W s » W t-*eetopar«y.ew^ ••&#13;
with, &lt;\9VX t&amp; XU nu^hAT eHment, and vwajtee tWlisetv: «4PW% gaHapaJ&#13;
. • • . * '&#13;
M&#13;
•'ST'U: mp^ ^&#13;
d amrtlai melody, ware Jjt ?&#13;
heed of some spit o f . liquidv_thefla- \&#13;
^S^-jtfk&#13;
» ) * • •&#13;
Into fans; and, consl&#13;
circuraAances, look with ; VPJT'.* cobf&#13;
complacency.' upon the upfpH^nate.&#13;
ones who are Jeft to hrlai 'ifymiMl&#13;
, 800* fountains and small beer e«ADui&amp;&#13;
ents are now' In U e ^ W r o t&#13;
operation. Phis!—crack I—-popplefrpopple!&#13;
add'expelled stopplef go .whiting&#13;
and booming front' the foaminf&#13;
musiles of angrjr bottles, ^w'giad fa&#13;
break loose and take revenge tor pan.&#13;
confinement A thousand throats are&#13;
gurgling the delicious liquids/ and&#13;
twtce that number of lips are bmsck-&#13;
)i&#13;
; ' • » . ' " • '&#13;
, t A %4FB 9JBJFV9IL t , ,.f though millions beneath thee&#13;
the.dlAtreAfed. aA4nper»e^ntaffc..itjWAa - y e i a ^ t t l e jsdatle^loftgej!, and tk*Aheut.&#13;
pointed oat to thfrtefartatffl aoJ4lagt ihjg| rings from &gt;£a|nerfp-drego» shall&#13;
as a place- filled with their enemies, be ,th# about of a raoer redeemed front&#13;
They,,rgBpb*&lt;kfce.the aUaek. :My «eir the.JaAt.boBg, Now mellpjelr msnglee&#13;
defence WjM|ihe4agiOA«iX country ^AJWJ&#13;
ltj WAAw»UR«iaut At th* instant,thAt,&#13;
hentlPAjW ^rf, m«ek*t* wM-eJeveied at&#13;
UA*- Mr. Mssoaiqaasa seysesf pisiwii port&#13;
aitesa^li ssiaeyW lssuamwsis#rtei4e; y We&#13;
did net, Maneen for we feH streMg In&#13;
thes^eteettM arta stst t h i s mighty repuhsk;.,&#13;
W»t4tdtfth«»]|sssts»e^AJW^hs^&#13;
waved e&gt;ee a» wee she4»^neT ef thaination&#13;
&lt;«owtM&gt;ee %usamrle they&#13;
their miePiyi^asBl^tot e&gt;hjeee'&#13;
they 'were; Indebted for'their safety.&#13;
The scene changed as by enchantment,&#13;
and t h e same men Wfco were on'the&#13;
point ef sittsKslrhg^my "hoWjse and men*&#13;
adng the inhabrbmts, cheered the flag&#13;
of this country, and placed sentinel*&#13;
to protect it from ectoage. - Fellowcitixews,&#13;
in aich a isomeot as that,&#13;
wbuteT tt have l^een any &gt;rotectioW to&#13;
me^asMef&#13;
the hrave.&#13;
«i)»,1:, ..^HB&#13;
Ot thus be it^ever. w s s m : f r e s s ^ ; t i ^ t *&#13;
Between their loved&#13;
I&#13;
- &lt; &lt; - • • *&#13;
fiXeet TJ m:i"-&#13;
heev'n-rescued land -&#13;
Praise &lt;ke power that *a*h&#13;
preeerved us a natlosL&#13;
And • the&#13;
,mAyO*a&#13;
,«'.,&#13;
A ..•*&#13;
ft "If Just,&#13;
a,w^| thss. be om* motto—"IarOod fa onr&#13;
: , « •&#13;
• / • •&#13;
• f HWA4!M,; x&#13;
east tae etar-epaagled banner la trlnsnph&#13;
ahaTl w*ve v&#13;
Car f i e ^ n d . p f ^ fre*ie»*fte home&#13;
..-,-41 .tint Jhijgve. .. , .&#13;
»s&lt;IB*e&gt;. -^ v.•.-•.!*- :'•'• &gt; * I « A &gt; * ? , ^&#13;
Tlm^aoa. Jge} « . Polepo^ a native&#13;
«C«amta Oaroti«m,«nd ome of her saoet&#13;
during (*e"Utt#r "pert of&#13;
jtdx^bajftrj^wi of Joha Quincy&#13;
it jrtabe, jpejnssMa«ae^,reg«^&#13;
JDaUtedAnatesattheuceflitsi&#13;
setrg€arte|ihiatff ghbeSdt bare bees&#13;
here to ten you ti&amp;l&amp;fflt had hung&#13;
out the Palmetto an* the single start&#13;
Be sasured that to be respected abroad;^&#13;
we must maintain our plaee, in the&#13;
unionf&#13;
AAY THOopa ifianw -»-J&#13;
tbe&gt; thorougbiare, as proud ef&#13;
selves ae the boys are who mAreh by&#13;
their side, in anarchlal dm, keeping&#13;
(. KOW W I L D I ^ O A ^ N C ^&#13;
!ng,; expressive of graiefnl aaUeCactiou*&#13;
much to the aggravation of innumerableyoungsters-&#13;
wbo'stand looking on,&#13;
mournful from the want of a few coppers,&#13;
tp,aj»Joy similAX .indulgencea,&#13;
flfBneA^bqcWng pAvaripos, in erow4-&#13;
ed bAlUf, or, happHy ip. t*e green grove,&#13;
* t last gather the eager, host. Fans&#13;
flit like/swarms of cooling phantpme&#13;
before glowing faces, and jthe orator&#13;
of the day opens with the ominous&#13;
"Fellowcitisens!" For a s hour he&#13;
sinks and soars, generalises from Rom*&#13;
to Plymouth, end becomes lost in taw&#13;
Immensity of themes. But now th&gt;&#13;
grand festival is at hand. Toasts, mn-&#13;
Wlc, cheers—and, then, there is no calculating&#13;
how easily the responsibilities&#13;
of the country iweigh upon the minds r the well-feasted mulUtude.&#13;
The day declines and the sun hovers&#13;
4 n the west like A Roman candle, flinging&#13;
He hasy light over the hills. Or,&#13;
thA.Aouad otmarsiAl mesirtirMn-th'r- there it glares, with a great red eye,&#13;
mprnjngi Mr itTsy tr^ape- marrh, w4ts 'towards the east, as thougn winking&#13;
gay plumes and glistening arms, along .in.*enaneeief tshe moaarchlcal newess&#13;
A..»&gt;... ' .-. f^i^u^^'M-: K : r beyond the Atlantic. The streets beit&#13;
ifn MI •_' -^^-r^sBBBSfcL..." ' -" gin to ectto the tread of flagging feet&#13;
Day pales into twIHght, and; as the&#13;
western star comes out, a rocket ascend*&#13;
to greet it, and mock its distance.&#13;
As darkness creeps over the lahdctpe,'&#13;
lawns and''parks darken with&#13;
human throngs; while windows, baw&gt;&#13;
conies and housetops tremble under&#13;
the weight of pyrotechnical gasers.&#13;
Shout after shout rises through the&#13;
imoky air l i t e the munnurtngs of the&#13;
sea, as the heavens glow ,with eeeenhric&#13;
llrrei, in mimicry of die.ftrewarks&#13;
of the nrmament Bui the hoar has&#13;
gohl 1&gt;'y, and Urthe gioom of night the&#13;
weary wanderers hie to "their homei.&#13;
• A&#13;
-From the Atlanta 'Constitution:*&#13;
R i p K ^ h e r t Cook;' of Americue, 1 a C&#13;
I tantipn In Amerjcius* wfg reared^heflj&#13;
an4 and) two .years a^b was act^fcaengaged,&#13;
la mercantile, Jmsinaas. ' | K&#13;
wdilw&gt;4w on thfl CbAVahaocne.B4^ a *&#13;
Ophimb^ tJiiA.^eekr.gp^^tJenee: h&gt;&#13;
Lake PontchArtraio to practice for A&#13;
walk&gt; en the Ohkr Elver from Ptttsherg&#13;
ta qj|gtnna|ii t&lt;. .-. ; -&lt;- ,&#13;
- ^ . . 1 . 1 . 1 . .1 1 in a t 11 • • • • •&#13;
.*f'XHi&#13;
Xffeettve&#13;
Maude—^Wander n e w R happeastf'&#13;
that Mr. Smarte propose* 1o Carrier"&#13;
Edith—"I understand s h e toUt hrat&#13;
that another man was trying |a&gt;&#13;
her for her aoMy.v-^goatest&#13;
There's no such thing ae perfswl&#13;
.aontenfment,- rejns^wF.thh ^win^w*&#13;
OHgan. '-ft^hen John was alive I w e e '&#13;
half the time worried as to fila whsrv* t abouts, end even now there i? &amp; na^,&#13;
certainty that still makee me m a f g ^&#13;
Ms^smg^Tnat big building m where&#13;
all the little boys who have no n * * -&#13;
era and fathers live, Arnold. Ias/t H&#13;
niceT Arnold (after some thonghf)^-&#13;
IM rather live in a amaUer hoaae am»&#13;
b a v e . / p u , jthough.-&#13;
tnercial Tribuae.&#13;
.AwSvour brbonrVW4afw&gt;'&lt; ( ' ^ ' .&#13;
show7 yow* 4v;pAekege; er&#13;
V,' '• l -i ' i •' '. '&#13;
*^sWLt:'£y .'.' f&#13;
drink&#13;
of ooffse&#13;
Tfcecmldre* may'drmk h&gt; 'M&#13;
wifhoet injary a# weUAsUiA , *&#13;
aduU.. Alfwho try Teniae *' ,&#13;
it. GRABt-O hMtbatriost&#13;
seal brown of s|oeha or Java;&#13;
bet it is made ttom pore '&#13;
grains,sAd the most dettcate' *"'&#13;
If-the psieA&#13;
II cents end »&#13;
1-^ I&#13;
T«s^MfiKa&gt;&lt;offww&#13;
LooU MM CoWwe&#13;
.... - t , . , ,&#13;
• 1 i&#13;
i - »•&#13;
t , "&#13;
•J .;'•*&#13;
Silence and darkness draw their curtains&#13;
over a sleeping nation, while&#13;
dreams of the departed day still lingtime&#13;
with nfeanddmnL Boom, ineun.4 « r around. Morning # i l | soon come&#13;
again, and call forth the toiling millions&#13;
to the heat and burden, o f a&#13;
weary day.' But Ajeep now in peace, ye&#13;
sufCering sons and daughters of Mammondom!&#13;
and dream ye of a liberty&#13;
not your own, though a name dear, and&#13;
adored by hearts of Columbian soil'&#13;
Sad1 and solemn the scene of erc.}atteled&#13;
multitudes, yet eve^gloribns with&#13;
prophecy is the Jubilee of a n Ameri-&#13;
Fourth.&#13;
^ptUtttll&#13;
now. for the lAnd-eons of Meptnne,&#13;
wtth- eoet* of mady hues and Joseph&#13;
shirts, draggjag their tridents behind,&#13;
(trimmed eod trusty for the raging cos-&#13;
Oagrartea. And them cemes Flora, with&#13;
her fairy band, deeked in green and&#13;
blnsneai arniTrnsoving onwardWgemtie&#13;
and' smiling protiensloni Dke a flew-&#13;
•f err^staw^^flomtinf dewm^he meadowstream,&#13;
to the* music of nyntphs and&#13;
the«fppHng ef nMen^rntere. Th* belie&#13;
ring In Joyous pea!, an*-seen' stroke of&#13;
, . the emettfl^thrilis Che traaptng mufti-&#13;
AAAnMMAbie 4&lt;nme^rlE%Jra^kof1^^&#13;
^^vfl^rjlo^^lahwfla^ %*$L. e u u i and:&#13;
Iaat w^ny a bosom, wholly unused to any&#13;
t,beyond the,.&#13;
sdaaimt^a does&#13;
plan ahaitol wW» ^ ^ 1 ¾ ktend,yonder Ja t h e atreeV&#13;
. sdanr ^af»the&#13;
, ' ^ mr. Poinsett reAided" there1, the city WAS j LinawAleTZdea tor&#13;
~" ny one ef aheieanwending fee- ' ceaafcaa&#13;
" ^ ^ g i a n a . a n d he and hie family monrred the&#13;
BO&#13;
« • 1 • « • » » UKV m^m mam i » i « n j t w w n f&#13;
r amwM degree of'nereonal danger nona from 4me e^olenee ef the sotdUre, by amoke. Yeeterday,&#13;
- • - • • , t n f r « ^ , a i a n « c t ^ ^ ^ ^ 1&#13;
Tier&#13;
1-&#13;
Kf&#13;
' M v l d | b ^ ^ ^ ^ and beer shope&#13;
aU look aarnoe,&#13;
Kr-* •&#13;
• H *&#13;
ftaf an addrese and nat&#13;
u i ^ SA tsK&gt;«gh,trTU«^ mAto peo-&#13;
•il*~.Witr - r.;i\&#13;
^&#13;
, ' » . . .:.1 } • • • • • ' ' ^&#13;
I ^ . ^ M ^ - J " " ^ ^ - * * wahen* they sprung n» and grep&#13;
n &lt; : , , ^ * v " : • r• / &lt; ' , . . &amp; * - « * * * . » ^ ^ * * * * * * * ^&#13;
^onsuelar-'Tepe telle me that yen&#13;
areata" Paint b r a ^ n ^ , HowarP&#13;
"Isnt a man known by the company&#13;
&gt;s^*ordinary, emoli^na. ,.With. ^ajrhatp ^ keeps?" **I anppoee "•Wi,&#13;
-.r-„. ,,»i»furle4atrean^r»*..ww':irf^ .snm^aa*&#13;
•:,^SSm^SSTl!i .»« than ^g ^ b a w w etrnng area*&#13;
,¾ ^ •- ^^T~inlHidjr&gt;r~"itanf;"Hrr" 'tafmemsr1 ^he-1 ah«a»ney» -emg nbnsnle^^e&#13;
1 , ^ w e a t ' . Aoeaedi that *•*•»•! The town foihe take him i d - ^&#13;
W : » g g » ^ y ^ ^ ^ ^ ' * S a r a l r ^ T l S e a ^ ^ ! ! S W ^ * * W v e &gt; a . Pnna&gt;ae&#13;
harisen. glewed -with , the • propoAtlc { hleen rmioaen, tnm fojrea ^thwa^n 'fgarf f ^ J S S . ! " been decayed. I F0*&gt; believe anyvan*&#13;
"udeJtr nannting. and A hesl^nsarneii&#13;
in o«U- ^&lt;aam1WP«i enough *e hold all the&#13;
nngerkeaed he aan sJtond te&#13;
WeH. K he has no right w&gt;4oesr~ee%«&#13;
)leaees. nor t o thrust his&#13;
&lt; • •&#13;
'J&#13;
1eg«.nd«nt haaWereoer of his sjagf-&#13;
Oom, and An such A day. ef what ewejn&#13;
are AU the boasted&#13;
'i *»v&gt;5. * v tr- •&#13;
.v.,«r.'i;',&#13;
r'v&#13;
then, if 4he company he keeps is all&#13;
this world to iflm, and aga^n the very.&#13;
best and meet chArmlng, i a o n k pr^qf&#13;
T38T&#13;
mere*&#13;
-Weetem Wtxel "WorKg&#13;
SlOO Tfliny Man,&#13;
^sflLI. P A Y g&gt;OQ FOR AMY C A S E&#13;
Of **—*••— U U M Tha; TMas' mm* *'&#13;
WmU. M C m . -•«&gt;*.&gt;.¾&#13;
An Omaha Company places for the flret&#13;
time before the pahUe e UAMSUOK XSSATKSAV&#13;
for the ears of Lost VitAlity, Nervoee&#13;
eod Sexual Weakness, and Restoration of&#13;
Uto- «eree-i» eadend «*omaersssav&gt; ••*»'*'&#13;
worn-oat Freoeh remedj; contains a n *&#13;
Phosphorus or other harmful drags. It JA&#13;
a WuXBSMvck TABttmasT ssegicer to^lnV'&#13;
afleets^ygsiaive ia 4 * enre All resdsrs^fe&#13;
send -yew ssawhttefy FRBB, a&#13;
iapsr en these si MITSS, and a*&#13;
eftbeir treiy hUeicas.Ten*mi&#13;
• of men, who hare lest sal&#13;
1*&#13;
Thai hUeiCAL TsBATwawr ssey betaken.&#13;
at hesseasMier their eii%e«oBe,erhWwli&#13;
nay reisroad fare and seieikiDs w7a¥ wanto&#13;
esaergso. sTa ese tar.&#13;
hay e en Free&#13;
that he is g o o d r - | ahawta think sa-Jgs»u,ooo spie.erC. O. Ufnjke^They hsweV&#13;
|anBspagT«e a^^awW f i ^ ^ W P ^ W w V F ^ asmp^a;&gt; a^piasgVanfen * '^hg^gejat ^ B ^ - a B j f flA|B'krJBteB&amp;tuBBBBBBBBBV ngnt^gjml ^^-Ol^gjgjnu Agui&#13;
thing agA^aat non&gt;", And she threw her.&#13;
self into hie arms.—New York Tribune.&#13;
. . . . . - . ' * • •. .^ r&#13;
- - • r ' i , '&#13;
A # • « • e n n&gt;e P f t t t -&#13;
hrr«; MclJUtt^ty--9oW did ye 'git'&#13;
along wid* &amp; alntiat, Martyr Me-'&#13;
Lubefty—•'SnTe; he molgbty near kOt&#13;
me, so he end: but, bedad. ol hot th*&#13;
laugu on him. aU thH same." Ufa. a t e&#13;
%,- • » t - '&#13;
w, 'j.} .i*'•' --; ^¾^&#13;
. ^ * » . •&#13;
i '&#13;
•'•'•' •&gt; ' J * ' ' l . v - i ' '&#13;
,» v, -yj; , ai'i;&#13;
i • « .&#13;
::-,-.-^,,.-&#13;
--¾¾ •ry-h*&#13;
4&#13;
«^i&#13;
•wi&#13;
^•v;:&#13;
' -r^i&#13;
&gt;&#13;
• - * &lt; ,&#13;
r?CT&#13;
:¾&#13;
• • ' ' &gt; •&#13;
• ^ '&#13;
* .tfa&#13;
Luberty—M» thot a o r Mc^noerty--!&#13;
"YiA Bngerran! k e mallei ts^, PPweaf •&#13;
toot»--*ndne. . v - ' : ; V |&#13;
:^&#13;
»if,'&gt;.&#13;
&lt; A &gt; '&#13;
&gt;&#13;
•**»&#13;
';.' &lt;ri S't'.'V'&#13;
ti^Kf^Lt^al?X$$$&lt;:&amp;~&amp;\&lt;k .-'-iS\&#13;
$OQ*and the/pot^i swingf hank&#13;
held deposits of 1982,681. The&#13;
foreign trade wa»^it,Q98,270 of&#13;
which the United Stttet had ¢15,&#13;
d90,55&amp; . V .&#13;
The population in 1890 was 89,&#13;
\JJ&#13;
*&#13;
I&#13;
P?.i •'&lt;*r'•--,&#13;
^&#13;
&gt;;'..&gt; ?i&#13;
&amp;f;&#13;
.•&lt;•&lt;;&gt; i&#13;
I V ,&#13;
&amp;&#13;
*&#13;
tv.&#13;
IF"&#13;
£$ :v.&#13;
trr&#13;
An Island Domain.&#13;
THE HAWAIIANS, THEIR&#13;
CLIMATE,THEIR COUNTRY,&#13;
' THBIR HISTOBT.&#13;
We dip the following from the&#13;
Ann Arbor Argus which will be&#13;
reed with interest at this time:&#13;
The Hawaiian Islands comprise&#13;
an archipelago in the Pacific&#13;
O^ean about 8,500 miles west of&#13;
Mexico and 2,700 miles southwest&#13;
of San Francisco, They lie between&#13;
latitudes 18 degrees and 51&#13;
minutes and 22 degrees 50 minutes&#13;
north longitudes 154 degress 50&#13;
minutes and 161 degrees 40 minutes&#13;
west. There are twelve of&#13;
them, covering an era of 6,677 sq.&#13;
miles. There are two active vol-&#13;
: canoes on this island—Bilauea&#13;
and Manna Loa, Many eruptions&#13;
attended with lose of life, have occured.&#13;
The highest point on Hawaii,&#13;
Mauna Eea, is 18,905 feet above&#13;
the sea level, and there are other&#13;
great altitudes on the island.&#13;
The rock of the whole group is&#13;
volcanic. The following are some&#13;
of * the minerals that have been&#13;
noticed: Sulpher pyrities, com*&#13;
mon salt, garnet, labradorite, feldspar,&#13;
gypsum, soda, alum, coperas,&#13;
glauber-salt, nitre and calcite.&#13;
The vegetable kingdom is rich in&#13;
interesting forms, and'many new&#13;
species and varities have been discovered.&#13;
A. CIIMATE HOT AND COOL.&#13;
The climate is much affected by&#13;
locality and varies from cool,&#13;
frosty ^weather to ~a h igh average&#13;
of h e a t T h e northeast trade&#13;
winds blow the greater part of&#13;
the year and prevent the heat&#13;
from becoming oppressive.&#13;
The soil i s fertile and well&#13;
adapted to planting and grazing.&#13;
I t i s estimated that there are&#13;
Meetly2t000,Q0O acres of grazing&#13;
land and 290,000 acres of arble&#13;
land. T h e mountain sides abound&#13;
in forests in which there is plenty&#13;
of ship timber and ornamental&#13;
woods. Sugar, of course, i s the&#13;
principal product. There were in&#13;
1890 between forty and fifty planrtyotations&#13;
which raised, and manufactured&#13;
about 40,000 tons of&#13;
sugar, besides qualities of molasses.&#13;
Wool, hides, tallow, rice and&#13;
bananas are exported in considerable&#13;
quanities. Nearly all the&#13;
crops of temperate climes cau be&#13;
grown but they are not profitable&#13;
because of lack of markets. In&#13;
1890 the value of sugar plantations&#13;
was estimated at 132,847,690&#13;
owned as follows: By citizens of&#13;
the U. 8., $24,735,610; by British,&#13;
$6^88,180; by Germans, $2,008,600&#13;
by Hawaiians, $266,250; by all&#13;
other nationalities, $299,100. The&#13;
area of land under sugar etjltiva-&#13;
, tion was 67,839 and the exports of&#13;
augar were 292,083,580 pounds.&#13;
% W H O A B f f T H £ HAWAIIAN*. ,&#13;
,VvX&#13;
origin of the Hawaiians. One oonta*&amp;*&#13;
for their relationship with&#13;
tits JCoitec branch of the great&#13;
Nana* family of Mexico. This&#13;
makes the Hawaiians the oldest&#13;
Polypesiaav/»lonjr, from which&#13;
the &lt;*tWlfe\a*lie« of the family&#13;
sprang. The other theory supports&#13;
t i e hypotfceais that all the Pacific&#13;
archipelagoes ' and islands were&#13;
oolonizedbjaaceeesire migrations&#13;
from southern Asia. This theory&#13;
hm the support of the '&amp;***&amp;&amp;&#13;
Jttditions. .'V-.i&gt;' •'"&#13;
: l a 1391 the real a a d petaocal&#13;
property was estunated a t 4381,009,&#13;
« $ 4*» pattiet debt was «,313,1 ai « , . * Si&#13;
' \ ., . -,--^ ',••':' - ',&gt;"••. -?Vv+ - :•. 'V ':-&#13;
half-castes, 6,186; born in Hawaii&#13;
of foreign parents, 7,495; Chinese&#13;
15,301; Japanese, 12,360; Portuguese,&#13;
8,602; natives of the United&#13;
States, 1,92S; British; 1,344; Germans,&#13;
1,034; Norweigans, 227;&#13;
French, 70; Polynesians, 688;&#13;
other foreigners, 419t&#13;
WHEN TH3BY WERE POUND.&#13;
The islands were discovered in&#13;
1542 by a Spanish navigator&#13;
named Qaetano. Long before this&#13;
several Spanish vessels, had been&#13;
wrecked on the coast of Hawaii&#13;
and the survivors had intermarried&#13;
with the natives, Oaptian&#13;
Cook visited the islands in* 1778&#13;
sighting the islands of Oahu and&#13;
Kauai on January and anchoring&#13;
at Walmea, Kauri, January 19.&#13;
After visiting the island of Kilhau&#13;
he sailed for the American coast&#13;
but returned and was finally killed&#13;
by the natives.&#13;
THE HAWAIIAN FEUDAL SYSTEM.&#13;
The Hawaiians at this time sup.&#13;
ported elaborate feudal system,&#13;
closely analogous to the system in&#13;
Europe in Middle Ages. Karaeh&#13;
a meha I. was the first king. In&#13;
1892 and the two following years&#13;
Vancouver visited the Hawaiian&#13;
islands and introduced cattle on&#13;
May 8, 1819.. Kamehameha died&#13;
after a successful reign in which&#13;
he had established his kingdom&#13;
over the whole group©. His eldest&#13;
son, Liholiho succeeded him under&#13;
the title of Kamehameha II with&#13;
Kaahumanu widow of Kamehameha&#13;
I, as Premier, and she in influenee&#13;
and power^wae. the real&#13;
sovereign. Shortly* after, on April&#13;
4, 1820 the first missionaries arrived&#13;
from the United* S t a t e s -&#13;
seven men with their wives. They&#13;
immediately began to reduce the&#13;
language to writing. The first&#13;
printing was done in 1822. In&#13;
1823 the King and Kamamalu his&#13;
queen visited Great Britian where&#13;
they both died the year following.*&#13;
Then the Premier became regent&#13;
and governed until the majority&#13;
aha JIX 1fn^840 the King aj^d MJflnfril ( I n ' M m&#13;
chiefs promulgated the cooatita- ffWlWMj m l . WW;,&#13;
tion granting civil rights to the&#13;
people. n6ni Teoruary £5» W&amp;&#13;
the provisional cession' of the&#13;
islands to Great Britian OOQUM$&#13;
hameha III approved the famous&#13;
Land act by which he released&#13;
the royal right to a large portion&#13;
of the lands of the Kingdom and&#13;
provided for their conveyance to&#13;
the people.&#13;
In 1849 the temporary occupation&#13;
and embargo of the port of&#13;
Honolulu by the French took&#13;
place. In 1852 free suffrage was&#13;
granted as a civil right. The King&#13;
died in 1894 and was succeeded&#13;
by Alexander Ltyioliho, son of&#13;
Kinau, the daughter of JL&amp;mehameha&#13;
I, He reigned as Kame*&#13;
haneha. IV. -Lot Kamehameha&#13;
brother of the late king, succeeded&#13;
as Kamehameha V, and abrogated&#13;
the national constitution&#13;
and promulgated a new one limiting&#13;
the right of suffrage by a&#13;
property qualification. , He died&#13;
v Continued on page S.&#13;
o{K«4a^jpL&#13;
w e w a A ^ a a ^&#13;
cnmiiial lawswe^re e n a ^ d wi iLW &lt; eiata^rlaia^ Colifi. Oaelera WMT IHsr^&#13;
990. The natives were 3i439;ft^cmisaiona^e4 ar^&gt;ed July 7,&#13;
1.W7; rE**»beaooU aasumed a w j ^ e i g , ,^ x ^&#13;
^overnm»ntin sm^ ^SatnehiJB^ i ^ ^ :^m ii •v,::' fo*&#13;
_ M?^. James Jonsrei( t|is 4ro*firmof&#13;
in wnsequencV'oflie h a r a h ^ P f ^ W * ^ ' ^ P ! m ^ k M \ ^ * ^ 9 -&#13;
mands o£ Lord George fanlet ^ ^ ' ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ l ^&#13;
This arrangement was lerminiiM 'P***'***" »»/J*fwas attaekad&#13;
and ihe ^awallan flag wai: restore J- .^ f^hj6iljUni c6ttUj do notbed&#13;
by Adrafrar Thorn** on Jxily 3V i n ( r ^ ^ Iteasiaed to daralop iaof&#13;
the same year. I n 1846 Kame- t 0 h a g t y ^ngamp^ou, Ha,via g Dr.&#13;
Kinpr's New Dwcoyery in store and&#13;
salliojr lots oHt, he took a bottle home&#13;
and to the surerise of all she began to&#13;
get better from first dose and a few&#13;
bottle* edled her sound and well. Dv&#13;
King's New Discovery for- Gotrghs,&#13;
Colds tad Consumption it guaranteed&#13;
to do this good work,. . Free trial bottles&#13;
at P."Angler's Drug ^tore.&#13;
1' ' • \&#13;
'M f^*sa a m• '**&amp;A,' tr&#13;
""•Tifi'iiitiimiiifiSnwi *^iy» Mi&lt;tai4iaaW'&#13;
„. . . . ^ r ^ ^ S t j K s . ft* «St' tiJtV*^ Ilkfa. Air Mu D^gfaMk •££&lt;** j£2r •&#13;
stoN^sivaPdirfu&#13;
xrsmetnup -&#13;
T 1 ^ •&#13;
&lt;*&amp; S!Ssa:a^ MotRMfOB aataw.&#13;
Subscribe for tbe DWPITCH.&#13;
In »11 l u br»nt*«», a •ptcUHy. We h»Ttal}ldiida&#13;
tad 4h« tatMt itflM ofType, «tfl„ wblch taablaa&#13;
u* to ecwmU all kinds of work, wcti *»Boo*a,&#13;
P»mp!«U. Pootan, PTOfnbnataa&gt; Bin Kaedi. »&lt;*•&#13;
J&gt;atfott E»*t wii Canada&#13;
PatroH 8ubnrtan _ •&#13;
-&gt; Laftva Detroit via Wisdfor&#13;
ftUTBOUVB&#13;
Baffalo—Now York 4 Booton&#13;
Toronto Montrtai Now Ycgp&#13;
London Exprou&#13;
BaSUo Now York A Ewt&#13;
f»45 a m J»rlo baa tteoplnK oara PotroU&#13;
York and Boaton. w.ot) 000« twin sia pi&#13;
tOaUyoMaptvSunday.^^ ftiS&amp;.l&#13;
W. J. BLAOK\ Agent, Plockooy Mich.: s&#13;
W. E. DAVIS "3.H. Hraww •'•'".•c-'^-vfV&#13;
0. P.* T. AROD». A. O . P f * T Agfr._&#13;
Montreal, Quo. Chicago, IU,&#13;
Bxv PunoHi*, Trsv. Paaa. Agt., DolfolllUaa.&#13;
Toteoo&#13;
WVL BILLS PATABCS FIBW 0 * » V * M MMTTB.&#13;
•aporior Itrlot, upon tkt&#13;
ir* as good wojck can ba oona*&#13;
&gt; dftwtt03ni&gt;S&gt;9'&#13;
BTOOKSRIDQE. MICH.&#13;
Will attend to »11 boil DOSS of the profoaaton&#13;
sodoaro.- Speotal ntasntton civali to&#13;
.A.L. HaUwar.&#13;
wlthfideltty&#13;
BiOBr tna lino o&#13;
TelepboM oails roapondsd to&#13;
buotnees SIOB* of tbe M.&#13;
The Coast Line it) MACKINAC&#13;
*—TAKS T H « — •&#13;
TO M A C K I N A C&#13;
DETROIT&#13;
PETOSKEY&#13;
CHICAGO&#13;
New Steel Passenger Steamers&#13;
Tko Orostest Porfsctloa rat a^talaod la&#13;
Boat Caaatmctioa—LuxiHioas EajripsaoBt,&#13;
ArtUtU Pmrnithimg. Docorstioa mi EMit&gt;&#13;
lost S*rvtaa&gt; insuHsg tbe highest degree of&#13;
COMFORT. SPEED AND SAFETV&#13;
FOUR Tnn pes Wax BETWUN&#13;
Toledo, Detroit and Mackinac&#13;
PETOSKEY, **THE ebo," MARQUETTE&#13;
AND OULUTH.&#13;
LOW RATES to PJctore*qi»« Mackiaacaad&#13;
Return, ladadlaf /leala aad Berths. From&#13;
Cleveland. SiSi Inai Toledo, Si«; trosn&#13;
ttotroM, #•*•»••&#13;
PAY AND NtSHT «E«VICC»&#13;
Between Detroit anddeveUttd&#13;
Covoectinf at Cleveland with BaHlest&#13;
Trains for nH-peiota East feotrth uod South.&#13;
wMt and at Detroit Cot all poiots Nocth and&#13;
Korthwert.&#13;
taadayTrlpt torn. Inly, Avaast and Seat anly&#13;
EV*aY DAY BETWEEM&#13;
'CURES IN THE RIGHT WAY,'BY REQULATINQ TUB LIVER'&#13;
_ A N D KJDNEYS, AND PUR1FYINO THE BLOOD.&#13;
It is a positive cure for Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Dyspepsia, Sick and'&#13;
' Nervous Headache, Fever and Ague, Chi&amp;s, and ail diseases arising from'&#13;
'a diseased liver or the kidneys, or impure blood. *&#13;
.vTH MICHI&lt;5&#13;
RAILWAY.&#13;
IN ARB0&#13;
VOUP MONPV RXCIC u the plan on whkh It la sold. If after tak&#13;
• T U ^ . * ^ 1 V n C T " A V / I V u,,enSr, ^ 0 f oMdldne rou do pot to!&#13;
yoo nave had your money's worth, seiulusback thegiiarantao« whlat YMirnttDdla&#13;
• boa, and we will send yon a aback for I1.00 by return mail.&#13;
tie put np {a two forma, powder and tablets. Tlte tablets a n the easier to taJ^ rem&#13;
' no mixing. Price %IM for 180 doses of either kind. Sent post paid opoq receipt&#13;
DO. Send locenu for tea days' treatment, and copy of KaturVa Gside toEaahh.&#13;
A. H. LEWIS MEDICINE GO., - Bolivar, M a&#13;
Clevdand,PutMtt-B«y^Toiedo&#13;
Jfibeie are two theories as toite ^ A ^ S S ^ - J 1 " * 1 * - Addreaa&#13;
i - _ . TAie. As.e atCnMuA ta jCTZfe,*v.»m. *i., SoatT*R*or ar.w etK. a&#13;
014 people who require oaedioaas 1«&#13;
reg&amp;lata tbe bowab aad kiaasyt wil&lt;&#13;
aatii tbe Ucm fsfasd/ ia Kattrit Bttters,&#13;
Tliii medlelas doss aai aUssalate&#13;
aad ooataias no arhUke/ or ataai&#13;
intoiieaat,&#13;
tits. It aets salidlr oa taa&#13;
aad bswaK a i i l a f straadrta aad f i r&#13;
ins tons to the*vgaat,Hbet)sbf aidiaai&#13;
aatoif i s taa parformaoaf a f (fee&#13;
faaeOaaa. lUstric BaUavs is aa at*&#13;
^eUaat appsttsar aad sidt diflastloa&#13;
O l d f a s f t s ted k )ast exsataf sjaW&#13;
4fe*T*e*d. P r i c e « %&#13;
ill "AM aiOJalt&#13;
.».i&#13;
&gt;/\&#13;
'M ••'•*)&#13;
• * -&#13;
^.J,&#13;
Jar Yoqta for Ann Ar^pr, Toledo&#13;
and point* East, 800 tb and for&#13;
Boweil, Owo«o. Alma, *Mt Pleasant,&#13;
Cadillac, Manistee, Traverse City and&#13;
points in Northwestern Michigan.&#13;
W, H. BavKirr,&#13;
G. P. A., Toledo.&#13;
"V"&#13;
^ • f ;&#13;
: • : &gt;&#13;
TSJAM MARKSa&#13;
Ooa&gt;pvanstotnHaTias , *«• o *Aenkyo&amp;nea a«eonedfla^f ja^ ajkraltieeh tahn«d dISesTcrnipytoi on 1 antabta. Comaani^oos&#13;
PAatmenatrst ctaa.k' eWn et hhraovoea ha lWUanaabTttOrtooa.&lt; raoeiff apeolal nouee to the&#13;
SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, ,&#13;
MUNN * Of., f&#13;
Ml mnrntwi, «•» f wk.&#13;
Over Thirty Years&#13;
Without Sickness.&#13;
Mr. H. WETT*TEqr*a well-known,&#13;
enterprising cttlsea of Byron. 111»&#13;
writes:, /'Before I paid much atten- *&#13;
tion id refuftting the bowels, I j&#13;
hardly kr^aH?,at«n day; but since I&#13;
fteatfced the avU ra- :&#13;
a™a^Baw^Pav*W^a^#aa^|«^^Fja5^&#13;
ai^tilas^Boa^olo.t :&#13;
• * * .&#13;
/ • • . v&#13;
» ' :^-&#13;
fJBls, I have not had&#13;
« * day's sickasat ';&#13;
foe over thirty years v&#13;
— not ooe attack /&#13;
thai 4*i aot vsadily yisM to this '&#13;
naaedy. My wife Jhad been, 'pfaVt.v&#13;
«aas i o our marriage, an invalid f or -&#13;
years. She had a prejudice aftiitslv."&#13;
a^aihartica, b a t » soon as aha begSarr-&#13;
| o use Ayer*i W i s a « b e &gt; » 4 ^&#13;
fastored.*'&#13;
&gt; ? • , '&#13;
; &gt; * • • '&#13;
Ctttaartfc W i t&#13;
at WertsTs fak.&#13;
afafSl&#13;
Hi • . , ' - - . i&#13;
s .&gt;'v"&#13;
••&gt;%?' .••*&gt;j5 ( • • • i / • • &amp; . - • ' &lt;&#13;
V «*- «'• ;'iii»&#13;
It'-'&#13;
* * V LAi^V •&lt; ** v'&#13;
Blti&lt;i&lt;-/«'i..-..V .„&#13;
&gt; • . ' •» -.1&#13;
KV-- : '••&gt;-.&#13;
4| vtrtfi,«^RAirrsRe«EpY!&#13;
IK m MM M V H P i l l P l . f ' eWswJ, ; *JfamJ BJUWMB:&#13;
uSorpffi&#13;
Keep a ftH Wto'-Vm&#13;
«S»!SAV1 4&#13;
Deo, 1M872&#13;
«... ,j*%,&gt;'( / * ~ , * s - •&#13;
Coatlaneftftify ^ 7&#13;
V ' ^ W - ' V * ' ' •: .-"•• • '&#13;
• ' •? . . . • ' ; ' • : • •" * &lt;•"•'•/ • ' • '&#13;
ir*-»..'i&gt;,v. •- •&gt; .w --. «••;--' •• ..'i^r,&#13;
• - • - • ' ' ' • • • * » , * &gt; . ' V . . H&#13;
' W&#13;
-M,'V ^&#13;
'**, ;yi« saw&#13;
mi;,m &gt;.''•» r-&#13;
. - : &gt; ; • • • • * .&#13;
•,.» • V •' - •&#13;
*Q0pc9tdm07 *n J&amp;J&#13;
•f.-i.-'&lt;'\r" n »II iii&#13;
t&gt;T.&#13;
K&#13;
r-V^' '5-&#13;
. , afmcfclehVa Aratea *»ITBV &gt;; •'&#13;
Tha B«t Sabre in the wMd for&#13;
Ate, Wit^i* «»•» nloert, mlt rlituin,&#13;
Imriom^ tetter, o|apmd b*nd§, chill&#13;
; Wiint, cornf, a&lt;n&amp; all, skin ernptioBs&#13;
U4 positively ourtt pilw or no p«)&#13;
feqnired.J U !• ^nmrtBtetd to trif&#13;
lti«tootto*;o* Btoiief refund&#13;
f«b 25 ieinti per box. For •" i&#13;
Ai)8h(|iei,.&#13;
v&#13;
l T »&#13;
f-,. After »&#13;
Luni^lo we#&lt;iamiB*ted QOMBJOIU.&#13;
ly by Unpeople aud wu electa&#13;
Kiog by %e UgUlatare, Hte|&#13;
rti^reignf one year was oote&lt;J&#13;
I'ttor the inetitution of meeaaree&#13;
for the restoration of liberal priniiipale&#13;
of the old constitution for&#13;
the unpopular ministerial* effort&#13;
rj; ^eomtoeroial iW^irooify&#13;
p i i e 1¾¾^ States oi t^6 b».&#13;
10¾ a ceaeioa of the Pesif Biver&#13;
Lagoon, and lor the b.loodleaB matiny&#13;
61 the troops at the barracks&#13;
in, Honolulu. LunaUlo died Peb-&#13;
J ruary 3, 1874 and left no issue.&#13;
On February 12, Kalakaua was&#13;
elected King by the Legislature&#13;
DotwitfarBtauding the determined&#13;
opposition of Queen Dowager&#13;
Emma, whioh culminated at the&#13;
election in a riot by her supporters&#13;
in which many of the represenatives&#13;
were severely injured&#13;
and the legislative ball was partially&#13;
demolished. Order was restored&#13;
by armed forces from&#13;
British and United States warships&#13;
^n the harbor.&#13;
QUEEN LIL APPEABS.&#13;
In 1887 the progressive party&#13;
demanded a new constitution providing&#13;
for a cabinet removable&#13;
only by vote of the Legislature.&#13;
This was accepted by Kalakaua&#13;
who afterward however tried to&#13;
regain his lost power, Kalakauadied&#13;
in January 1891 and was&#13;
succeeded by his sister, Liliuolalani,&#13;
who from the first was opposed&#13;
to the new constitution.&#13;
Soon she began to evade some of&#13;
its essential provisions, * especially&#13;
by the repeated appointment of&#13;
ministries in opposition to the&#13;
vote of the Legislature and gave&#13;
further offence* by her alliance&#13;
with a' lottery project and the op-&#13;
111¾'/ industfyT Finally it was&#13;
learned that she intended to proclaim&#13;
a new constitution. This&#13;
caused her overthrow. A provisional&#13;
government was established&#13;
which finally led to the present&#13;
republic. .&#13;
'' .V&#13;
It required jus! five hours to ar*&#13;
| r ^ try, w n v ^ ^ a Imprison an i Ohio pctm*W bkvikrWM&#13;
jehortroWac*«t*. Thefaciiitiet&#13;
for l«eWnir ^ui small&#13;
•reunAfrpassed*' • * '&#13;
[- Mr*7. ft£fty$e, proprietor ot&#13;
the Wayne Hotel, Detroit; leoogu&#13;
niziog the very popular demand&#13;
for cheaper hotel r*tej&gt; not oily&#13;
from the commercial men, but&#13;
from the traveling public xn general,&#13;
has decided to satisfy this&#13;
demand in making some radicalj&#13;
change* in price by reducing the&#13;
rates of the Wayne hotel to 92.00&#13;
and 12,50 per day and the rooms&#13;
with bath 13.00; Single mealu to&#13;
be 50c. Mr. Hayes wants it thoroughly&#13;
understood that the reduction&#13;
in rates will not in any&#13;
way intefere with the hotel being&#13;
kept up to the same standard of&#13;
excellence as in the past&#13;
We are in receipt of the Michigan&#13;
Farmen&gt;\Institute Bulletin No. 3, a&#13;
book of 275 pages, giving a report of&#13;
the work done at Farmers' Institutes&#13;
during the past winter. A large portion&#13;
of the book is taken up with a&#13;
very interesting and oomplete report&#13;
of the large Bound-up Farmers' Institute&#13;
held at St. Louis last March.&#13;
In addition to this is a series of&#13;
lectures on "The Soil" by Dr, R. C.&#13;
Kedzie of the Agricultural 'College&#13;
which lectures alone are well worth&#13;
the cost of joining the Institute. In&#13;
the book are the quotations from&#13;
many of the best local papers read at&#13;
the various Institutes. Besides this,&#13;
there is a complete report of the Superintendent,&#13;
Conductor and Secretaries&#13;
reports from each institute held last&#13;
winter, together with attendance at&#13;
each meeting and officers of the different&#13;
Institute societies. The 'Superintendent&#13;
of Institutes informs us&#13;
that these books will soon be shipped&#13;
to the Secretaries of the various&#13;
county Institute societies by wbcm&#13;
they will be distributed. Each paidup&#13;
member of a county institute&#13;
society is entitled to and should insist&#13;
upon--receiving from the secretary&#13;
one of these books. Such members&#13;
can get their b3oks by calling on the&#13;
Secretary of our county Institute, Mr.&#13;
F. J. Fishbeck Bt Howell.&#13;
: &gt; , • * • m 4&#13;
J * ! ^&#13;
Intf rtttlrij Item*,&#13;
Jackson will hold a cbldwater&#13;
celebration on the 5th. All temperance&#13;
and law-abiding people&#13;
should patronize it The Grand&#13;
Trunk will run special rates for&#13;
that and the next day.&#13;
A wild-eyed, bareheaded individual&#13;
was seen to take it southward&#13;
on Clinton street Tuesday&#13;
GRUMMOND'S&#13;
DETROIT and CLEVELAND&#13;
LUTE 0FSTEA1IB8&#13;
IHE MA80N ARTIFICIAL STONBWATKB TA*fc* - A woaderM&#13;
teMfttUa sad » m i t wondcrftd&#13;
E S T W«faT&amp;7oarlB*p«aiM, T ^ vffl aot&#13;
MS. m t or v«*t Mb w«rr*Btt*fot ftr&lt; jmn.&#13;
As tat and nanvfaetaier, 8tockbrMft,1Uea&#13;
m&#13;
afternoon at a century' gait, fran&#13;
tically beating a tin pan. He was&#13;
neither drunk nor crazy. It was&#13;
the editor vainly endeavoring to&#13;
corral a swarm of runaway bees.&#13;
—Stockbridge Sun.&#13;
The Dexter marshall lodged&#13;
four young men, hailing from De-'&#13;
tropin the village lock-up one&#13;
night last week for riding their&#13;
wheels on the walk. They were&#13;
[released the next morning and&#13;
went to Jackson where they were&#13;
arrested for stealing three of their&#13;
wneele ftom Detroit parties.&#13;
G. G. Carterof White Oak had&#13;
12 p«a$*l* oi wheat stolen frps*&#13;
hisgraua^^Be found it in a&#13;
neighbo^^gzvNary and •] youug&#13;
manby the name of DeWitt in&#13;
the neudibor, own-&#13;
STnniliffhtTrip Aersctteh Wei — - ^&#13;
X «v«/f tali&#13;
&gt; * •&#13;
Oat a ..__&#13;
i • • P ii — ^ :n^Bf«* ^a» , ^ - • • • • •&#13;
4kua&gt;OG?r" 4- *&#13;
cmMwt «rc. co.&#13;
25¾TO mm ^ DELIGHTdFUL&#13;
J.OCAL TIKE DAILY.&#13;
Lv. Detroit, 11:00?. M.&#13;
BICYCLSS CARBIBD FRJfE.&#13;
U. 6. GRUMMOND&#13;
GEN'L MOB.,&#13;
TEL. NO- 162- O f T C t db DOCK, FOOT FiMT ST.&#13;
IVwhowou^.keep .,^..,^, ^&#13;
Every family aboold take the^ : '&#13;
Very beet in c&lt;mnectio¥ with thei*&#13;
Ever needful local paper, The&#13;
News—THE DETROIT BVENtNOKBVr&amp;-&#13;
b an indefatigable newagatherer.&#13;
Now ie the accepted time* NOiye&#13;
us your subscription.&#13;
Nothing gained by waiting. The&#13;
Evening New*—10 cente a week. If yea&#13;
Want further infonnation,&#13;
Seek ft of our agent in your own town.&#13;
•vwr.&#13;
y 0&#13;
HJXMBBJ) SVE*T 7UVM*BAV KOMtUe BT&#13;
FRANK L.. A N D R E W S&#13;
JFdjfar and t*r*prM«r.&#13;
Bttbacrlptloa Fric« f 1 l a Advance&#13;
Entered at the Fo«toflU&gt;e at Piacltnty, Micbl&lt;aa,&#13;
a* Mcoad-claat mattar.&#13;
AdTflrtialag n t a t made koowo oa applicatloa.&#13;
BaalAaM Cards, $4.00 par year.&#13;
Deatb aad marriage uutic«» publlabtd traa.&#13;
Aaaoaacaataau of aotertainoiente may be paid&#13;
for, 11 desired, by preaeatlng tae offlca wlta tickete&#13;
of adailaaioa. l a caae ticket* are aot brongat&#13;
to tba ofllca, regular ratea will be caarged,&#13;
AU matter la local notice column will be chare&#13;
ed at 6 ceate per line or fraction thereof, for each&#13;
insertion, where no time ie epertnad. aUnofkae&#13;
S p e c i a l BargeABi&#13;
fwm *A»&gt;;&#13;
0 C t M S _&#13;
QUICK,&#13;
PrfceJIoo.&#13;
t Spaelal :&#13;
I Price af ,&#13;
a a l b e j&#13;
tha&#13;
eftlwrzata&#13;
wftt&#13;
)B3I&#13;
THE . VILLAGE , DIRECTORY.&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICER8.&#13;
PxEsmajR^ M«»^&lt;. Claud* L. Sigler.&#13;
Taurraaa, 6eofB«&gt;eon Jr. •#. £ . Murphy, f. u.&#13;
Jaskaon, f. J.IVright, S. B. Brown, C L, Uriuae.&#13;
CLIBK - , . B . H. Teepla.&#13;
Tajueuasa. - ~ J A. OadveU.&#13;
AaeaMoa ,~ D. W. altuta&#13;
SvaaaT Cojuusnoaaa A. Hooka&#13;
IfAaaAHl. ~ P. Monroe.&#13;
HaAXTH ornoaa Dr. H. F.blgler.&#13;
ArroBVKY....^. ~*....~~ W. A. Carr.&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
MaTHUDlST EPISCOPAL cuuacu.&#13;
Bev. M. H. MoMthon paetor. Services every&#13;
bundny morning at l0:iJu, and every Sonday&#13;
evening at 7 :QD o'clock, Prayar tuaetlnie Thiuaday&#13;
evenings. Sunday school at cloee of moreh(&#13;
tearvice- Mrs. Estella Urabun, bao^rlntendt.&#13;
CONbEaOAriONAL CHUKCU&#13;
(J. H. Jones, pastor. He.&#13;
Sunday morning at 10:30, and en&#13;
evenias; at 7:0C o'clock. Prayer meeting Thornday&#13;
evenings. Sunday school st clone of morning&#13;
service. I. J. Coak.Hupt. b. T. Cirlmee, Sec.&#13;
¾ce every&#13;
' ttanday&#13;
ST. MAtt^a 'JATUOLtC cuuacH.&#13;
Bev. M. i, Commerford, Pastor. 8ervl&#13;
•very third Sunday. L o w mass ai 7:30 o'clock,&#13;
high mass with sermon at 9:3Ga.m. Catechiaai&#13;
at 8:00 p. m., veeperssna benediction at 7:80 p. sn.&#13;
SOCIETIES.&#13;
The A. O. H. boclatv of this place, meets every&#13;
third Sunday la tae Vt. Matthew Hall,&#13;
/oas MeGuiness, County Delegala.&#13;
finckney Y. P. 8. C. E. Meeting* held every&#13;
Sunday evening In Cong'l church at Cc30 o'clock.&#13;
oaly&#13;
{ iattlMlt'W&#13;
IM*O hot* ot&#13;
nm»atdttf J;oid&#13;
acatutr.&#13;
haVNo-3&#13;
Bocheater&#13;
and WlcV&#13;
withattotr&#13;
ahandaome&#13;
alnhcandfaaooarYU P \ epraonpanr Msh&lt;a*dt«en&#13;
endabnadnrStrUaretttold&#13;
aniw&#13;
A. M. ROTHSCHILD &amp; C6.&#13;
State, Van f^ a rWe*H OtoC tJEaScAkLaBoa. -ata, Mention fbl* paper.&#13;
wvwv*%**9&amp;*taM*mmmm*mm*vw*^Am PATENTS Oareaai aad Trad* Haxfea obtained a&amp;4&#13;
est buatness condncted for Madarate Paaa.&#13;
Seadnodeltdrawtngorphoto. waadviae&#13;
pelenUbU tree of charge. OnrfaanatdaaslUt&#13;
patentisasenred. A Pan*]*let "How taOVf&#13;
tain Patoats." with cost of aamala tha U. - r&#13;
and foreign ooontrieaaeai free. Addxaav&#13;
. C A. SNOW A CO. e#a ^O%P»*%. »P»&gt;»a»if%(sr&lt;r% O&lt;m»^«a*&lt;. a^a%W»%a»a»m%s»M%T&lt;O^%we. jaO&gt;a.^ C&lt;ej&lt;w&#13;
Ballepsy eared hy Dr. Milaa*&#13;
EPWOBTH LEAGUE. Meets every Sunday&#13;
evening at 6.-00 oclock in tha M. E. Cburch. A&#13;
cordial invitation Is extended toeveryoue, especially&#13;
young people. Mis* Jennie Baa*, Pre*.&#13;
Junior Bpworth League Meats ever? Sunday&#13;
afternoon at 8:00 o'osaek, at M. £ church. All&#13;
cordially Invited. «*&#13;
Miss Alice Mellahon Snperiatendent.&#13;
and P. Society of this plaee t meat&#13;
very third Satnraay avealng in the ft. Mat*&#13;
Hall. Joan Doaohue, F naldaBi.&#13;
I T NIGHTS OF MACC A B B E S .&#13;
JDLMaatevarr Friday evening on or before fuU&#13;
of tha moon at their hall in The Swarthoat U d c&#13;
VisiOn* brothers are cordlaliv Invited. ^ ^&#13;
C X A S . UanFBJXL, Sir JCnicht OomjBaadar&#13;
Ii' M n g s t o n Lodge,'.&#13;
C«&#13;
fnB of the moon.&#13;
Co.7*, F A A . M. Kert^ar&#13;
ay^vaovng, o a ar before&#13;
H. r. Slgler, W. M.&#13;
SlMBMB^BMBk&#13;
^&#13;
sa*pajafs-a%i&#13;
"NotWfl£ else Hke It"&#13;
h Themoft Hashing **4 fplwant SSp fcr Aedsjn;&#13;
s&#13;
ed up to taking the wheat and j&#13;
leerint it tiaerer^He waa given&#13;
tisae to leave the neighborhood&#13;
ai4 he Wt^SkiA. .&#13;
feertaefwswy&#13;
ZQ t a g BMKX1&#13;
by t h ^ ' j H a ^ O^uik jBaUwayj j t ssr«rw*wafes*s«- -&#13;
\MA incladishg July £ &amp;%*&amp;*&#13;
MDRB OF EASTER* STAR neat* each month&#13;
tha Friday evening following the regular F .&#13;
tenting, Mae. C. EuJUt RKBuane, W J g ,&#13;
T A J H E S O F T H E MACOABEJC8. 'Meet every&#13;
J j 1st and 3rd aatardayof each month at t'M&#13;
oclock at the aL «). T. M. halL Viattiag sisaaja&#13;
cordially invited. J c i x a Biauas, Lady Coaa.&#13;
\l&#13;
eARLI5L€&#13;
THE WHEEL OF WHEELS.&#13;
THE PERFECT&#13;
% &amp; WHEEL.&#13;
Dool bwy a wheel traffl yosj&#13;
THE CARLISLE aad get oar prion.&#13;
THE CARLISLE MFG. CO.&#13;
Stmdebmkerl&#13;
BmJkfjsjs. i&#13;
KNIGHTS or n i LOTAX GfiAB#&#13;
meet wSery sonoad wedaaaday&#13;
eveaiag of every month In the K. fit]&#13;
T. MuMall at 1Mo'elaek. AU rkatiatf i&#13;
Goarda weaaaaaa. *&#13;
F. fi. AKDarws, Cant. Genu OniUfBRUl!&#13;
Aot em a&#13;
; . * • ' { &gt; !&#13;
%&#13;
'&lt;i&#13;
- . - 1 , - i. •&#13;
.^-¾&#13;
^¾&#13;
t&#13;
'&lt;*i&#13;
'.*.»'.''VJ&#13;
^, in&#13;
':4-&#13;
}wm%m&amp;M:-asm&#13;
^(vr*,"', TPBa*Wl'*1l-*,lll,*W^ «*»• •Wuwtel ryy^iam ^Srlft^Rek--:. - ¾ ¾ ^ ¾ 1&#13;
" • • [ • y ' W « .*.&#13;
B;S'V&#13;
; ' ( &gt; . . v ,&gt;;;&#13;
...a./r*;,-, i.*H|r&lt; ... ... . .. _., ^ ^ •IllllllwmilHII&#13;
&amp; / • &gt; . , &lt; &amp; &gt; '&#13;
V&gt;"V&#13;
&lt;*&gt;&#13;
•&gt;TV $5f 9¾&#13;
^ / , . - ; &gt; ; •&#13;
^ , «-f-'l&#13;
&amp; ' « : • • . . ' • ' ' .&#13;
ftfip^^&#13;
:-^¾^. ;' M-''A:.l ',&#13;
. v ;: •" *&#13;
: 1 ^ ¾ 1 . •••••'&#13;
•rl&#13;
?^'&#13;
•?'v ^&#13;
$ • &amp;&#13;
X&#13;
3fcW-:&#13;
• • * - • . " . ? : • &gt; • •&#13;
i.&#13;
t&amp;&gt;*:&#13;
y,:r,v&#13;
;»'«J\&#13;
&amp;&#13;
aw PIHOKMBT, ""» i&amp; tteiftffn&#13;
Even-chn^h foeri'rid© ljp.thVT^j&#13;
wuto S d n d ^ stfaet qu* i t f e j S « n * |&#13;
. oftaatt^ ••;*;' . ... ..;,. -&#13;
6 p m - /all because several JC&amp;pame*&#13;
W S l H WleJ1ft Cuti* riffi'.tffyjt&#13;
• * ^ r-rnlnbdw wedding" j i , toe. ,toj&#13;
0 a * of the Moat&#13;
treei—When H* •!. _&#13;
FUled—A Wll I t Wete&#13;
J « r 4 , ^ a w J -lett a t 4 1 M pliraee e«mpUpjintiaf&#13;
h l p t ' Mr. Read wa« un*Mt A/&#13;
_. ^ , to cojitaln Wnaeelf, an&lt;J tiki tajiM :&#13;
a^iMfcJaflf . * « t f i * haa&#13;
V- " * * &lt;&#13;
^••^(rftiat ^-:»vwrvf '^'&#13;
which ttra bride wear«'whUve alfd her&#13;
*ntidi wear^dwoR ot S o r t e d cojora^&#13;
TftV*tiToe4A^wen1(h«ldoa^ appear, to)&#13;
*ft a a y w r e wh*te&gt;erVu v'" " ' " .&#13;
H ^ t h f . l H a n o r a&#13;
bJe* Olwup:&#13;
J454£'febj|»rB0flf6n^&#13;
dUtrlftt'orSDagourl,&#13;
house there is not&#13;
only ;a tiuorum, but&#13;
usUalty every seat&#13;
meaibera eneeonoe&#13;
• •••'••' v themaetTe* "• «omfortably&#13;
la their roomy chairs, a smile&#13;
Tmiw*. «f .1»^^. •«•« t»,u *««nfrv o f «&gt;»»i*cwiey settles on their taoes,&#13;
^ ^ J l ^ i ^ J ^ i ^ l ? ? ^ ? • » prepay to Mtugh", and'tKey are not&#13;
a Kentucreeided&#13;
many&#13;
l.b..s .; &lt;1WM44 ,1,i«.A.(XA»* tlvb ..; .XMW«5 , tHi .0A^^0M54i yeaw hi the state of hia adoption. Ife u ft B , ^ , ^ ^ 8 p e &lt; S imeU of manhood,&#13;
^ r t 3 p r W n t yterf'^'te beef aa iol- SLSSSSI!?^ ^Efc'iSk-te&#13;
J t f j P l S 0 f 4,980,81? m.;mt, U85,- ^ ¾ ° ^ w h S rail&#13;
IWtllai:; 1888. S6&amp;82 Iba; 1888. 888%376 * t o n b y b l r t h ' b u t ^ 8 m l&#13;
lbs,; 188«, 18,671,108 lbs.&#13;
* *rher« Is a heart broken,'boy in 6hio.&#13;
He tlfrow a stone at a playmate. Thi&#13;
•tone struck the carotid artery and the&#13;
playmate is dead. All the boys should&#13;
reflect upon' this. It is remarkable&#13;
that with all the stone throwing by&#13;
boys there are not more fatalities.&#13;
They seem to forjp£ that it was but a&#13;
•ton* that killed the mighty giant Goliath.&#13;
;: • : '.u..^_i.._i_i'x?. ' »- v&#13;
*• One W t h e moeVlirterestiag feature*&#13;
of the present cotton situation, viewed&#13;
from a commercial standpoint, is the&#13;
growing impdrtanee of Egypt as a n expertiag&#13;
country, I n 1878, the; flrst&#13;
yeiir for- which there are omcial'fttaiSs*&#13;
^ \ ' Uca a s t o t h e quantity of cotton shl'&#13;
belag fully aix feet tall, well propor&#13;
; |iOAfta\ a decided blonde, and clean&#13;
shaven,, IjUaamalU steely blue eyes&#13;
generally have a droll, sleepy look, yet&#13;
when he makes one of h i s witty sallies,&#13;
they dance and laugh in sympathy with&#13;
his words, although his countenance&#13;
is immobile. This characteristic&#13;
adds materially to the enjoyment of his&#13;
hearera, His mouth is whimsical in&#13;
the extreme, yet there Is n o weakness.&#13;
It is a firm, determined mouth, despite&#13;
the whimsical expression. It is impossible&#13;
to convey In cold print an idea&#13;
of his brilliant, humor. His whole&#13;
manner ia breezy and in accord- with&#13;
4.&#13;
pad from tffypt, the total1&#13;
ware returned at 276,460118 fotfadat&#13;
whereas* In tm. the tatS* year for&#13;
wfclefc we have flgvrat; the exportattons&#13;
amounted to 63(1,487,468 pounds,&#13;
or nearly double* the* quantity shipped&#13;
*\W. - - ^ • -^--^-^ ^&#13;
. 'kn Importimt experiment has been&#13;
made on the New York 4k New England&#13;
railroad, which seems to eaublish the&#13;
faittTdaCtfains jfropelled by eTectriclty&#13;
eaU ba nan oh thf tracks used for steam&#13;
Uns/'wtthfiut^terfererfeeWlthr the&#13;
UT traffkj. ^.n eiectrreal tram was&#13;
between Berlin and HartfordT a&#13;
dtita^c* of thirteen miles,.0¾ a regular&#13;
eenednle, between two trains drawn by&#13;
steam tocorairtiveeiri the ordinary way.&#13;
The; po^er was conveyed by the nee of&#13;
a' third; rail to the center of the track,&#13;
and no intermediate feeders were used.&#13;
Th^ distance waa covered in eighteen&#13;
saWntea.&#13;
43tn4^r of questions pertaining to the&#13;
ttfttft lead* to the conclusion that there&#13;
ia no eaat and weaC np north and no&#13;
«&lt;toU, i n the sen** of half a centnjy&#13;
^&#13;
^ Ih ^ period preceding the war&#13;
east,was the. manufacturing' aep&lt;&gt;&#13;
jdoj^ the west WJM the producer.of agrtcnltcral&#13;
product*, and the south&#13;
y^ied.little but the crop* peculiar to&#13;
tftatf" secUon. But; conditions have&#13;
eh^u»ged&gt; 8onae of the greateet manufaatorlng&#13;
concern* are. in the west and&#13;
to tbe apoth. The varied Industrie* of&#13;
a great nation are more evenly distributed&#13;
than the/ were. The Ideal&#13;
tariff of the future will be made to&#13;
recognition of the .fact that aectional&#13;
latareata are of much leas account&#13;
than to the past Beside being of importance&#13;
to maker* of tariff schedule*,&#13;
tfcjg toct should be a matter of aaQF&#13;
ta all elUcena of the republic&#13;
imn "f"11!!' 3SP*S=5S5!SP&#13;
„HAD GIVES WB&amp;&lt;U*i,,&#13;
Jtoaa paa of Ml*. FtofcWu^VXdsjrtm*&#13;
«r&#13;
y t k'.i ^ A . ^ . ^&#13;
^QwW^WVH^I&#13;
st^a^lft^^alure,&#13;
t h &gt; U g M k h^cV hi*.^li-&#13;
, j^fer ttn hinoL-ihe afeaor ot&#13;
^epretentfrig h*. il^genV id .congress.&#13;
^r/Oiark's^omeatle aflUiartbn* are pe-|&#13;
c ^ l i a ^ . k a ^ ^ , ^ a wife being proudi&#13;
"of ner distlngulahed husband, and their)&#13;
little soa^Beanett, 'who 'Inherits hlsi&#13;
father's " drelleryk » almost atf vwell[&#13;
known on 4he floor of the house aa m&#13;
hto father.. Few men enjoy a grea'ter&#13;
popularity' at home or In Washi&amp;gtoh&#13;
than the* "wit of (he house"— the Hon*&#13;
orable Champ Clark, of Missouri;&#13;
BEAT A OREA/TJMVAL.&#13;
HaiVUle ^. Stoae* Mmn»tfr ef ttim' As*&#13;
•o«U««d Pre*** •&#13;
MelviUe E. Stone, general manager&#13;
of the Associated Press, Is one of the&#13;
most remarkable a* well as one 6f the&#13;
most sueeessful newspaper m e n w h o&#13;
ever handled news. H e wsa born in&#13;
Hudson, 111., forty-eight years ago, and&#13;
since then has been proprietor of a&#13;
foundry and machine shop, a reporter,&#13;
editor; newspaper owner and the most&#13;
successful manager of a great newsgathering&#13;
agency that ever held such&#13;
a position. His latest great work waa&#13;
to winning the long fought and bltterly&#13;
contested/war with the late United&#13;
Pre**. With Victor F. Lawson,, Ifr.&#13;
Stone went in to win. They wiped&#13;
. .. ... .JT;V&#13;
If they grow Aabb£ And wfueo to bold the&#13;
place, there, j i butane remedy, and that ia to *&#13;
their fibres a**TtW##'the cords back into their,&#13;
condition, thus righting the position of the vromb,&#13;
~lokham's Vegetable Cowpoussa ia "&#13;
•e'-w^^ffi^;&#13;
t » e uterine e y s t e m . a ^ g W n l n J u&#13;
nmytvmah w ^ % e U a c U ^ d i 4 ^ t ^ i f o ^ b l t&#13;
T^*smdr.a«g.-will'*how?U%a[ mtiifaf'm^^'''--&#13;
v knver abdomen,irrltobil^M^tlflWaWntfd&#13;
&gt;fffe^ faUguo in 'vrwmn^tm^mtBMinu^^&#13;
pr^nmtly. commence -the* osji ofc^Lydla: ¢ .&#13;
y e g ^ W o Ctompou^i If .#*$ oaup ia. stubborn,&#13;
|Ira,3pnkham, I^y»»« Maaa^jtot,tnp»4re4sy&lt;ejl ^ 4 ^&#13;
or charge. All Jettersaw readjand-aoewi&#13;
ifeh only, ^ e T o l I o ^ r i ^ M t o jwatoa to.&#13;
uautvlly severe c^e' ol'msptoeemipi o i hbi w^ia^&#13;
Which waa cure4-*y to^lPtokhanr VemedtoC 8a|»Jjf&#13;
it is convincing:&#13;
4'LydiaE.Pinkham'aVegetable ,&#13;
aM !&lt;Uc4lP«^aa»^cttreA lot) w l a ¥&#13;
toverliad given m e n ? ! hadapetft V«tt*&#13;
' drede of dollars searching for a eww, but found U|»&#13;
_ ^ tie or no relief until I bege^al»ttB*b*Are4e*aie*y&#13;
^ P Ihadfallingaed di»pla42ementof theWomb so badly Wiaa&#13;
- Vfor two yeara I could not walk across the floe*. I aJ—^Md ttofnae&#13;
menatruatkm, kidney silver, and stomaoh'trtx&gt;We. qThe €evtolw said my&#13;
ease waa hopeless. l o a d taken only four bottle*of the V^g^1?la^rap^md&#13;
and one of the Blood Purifier when I felt like a new person. .I ato nd^faiecl,&#13;
" v a i l gave me up to die&gt;' Kew'saaan^&#13;
:-*-!tiM. ,',l&#13;
. ; • . * * • &lt; •&#13;
. X J.&#13;
-&gt;\&#13;
much to the surprise of toy friend*, for t h e . .. s , _ ,, .&#13;
of my lady friends are using' Lydia &amp; Plnkham'a Vegetable Compomad throwg»&#13;
a y recommendatian; and are regaining health. It has also cured my little eon&#13;
of kidney trouble. I would advise every suffering woman to the land to write&#13;
taM^PinkJwanfQraiaV^M^&#13;
U P P&#13;
B M O K I W b n r y »o W*IU On* Kor«L&#13;
The amount of labor that goes' to&#13;
tire making of a good historical novel&#13;
is rattier ietarre.nt tb t^a wr^er'ojrjflction&#13;
who is used to turning out regularly&#13;
two novels a /ear. It is*o much,&#13;
earner to make ower again, with a ltnN&#13;
imagination, the caartcter* and towdent*&#13;
that one has picked up to" the&#13;
ordtoaif cbiirae of life anil travel.&#13;
Thackeray somewhere tells of the tremendous&#13;
amount oi.romdtec' that went&#13;
into th* ealdrpn"before Esmond*'' waa' • brew^: ':*&amp; fc m:*t^:jL#'£&#13;
aged librarian related hi* slpprlie at'&#13;
the reaearch the great novelist carried&#13;
on, month after month, to Ilia accumulation&#13;
of historical details. A whole ffi&amp;tHi&#13;
r :••&gt;•-•&#13;
i-' \-A&#13;
&gt; * -**&#13;
•nis- heelfh wiaklnf&#13;
ave'^toctiiaew; 'to &gt;&lt;B1MI&#13;
Rootbeer. The prepa*&#13;
ration ofthis great teas*&#13;
perance dtink is ao eveot&#13;
•• n - \ \&#13;
well regoistea&#13;
i&gt;-'&#13;
HON. CHAMP CfiARK.&#13;
&gt;. a&#13;
every word uttered. He is ara}udent&#13;
of human natiire,, and often quo^ea.the&#13;
fun.a*4 pathos of negr^ aayingV fpm&#13;
whom he^lalmj we can. all learn mugh.&#13;
He ia 'a devoted lover of his adopted&#13;
aUto and decants ably 6h its reaourcea^&#13;
the rival organisation off the -field.&#13;
Melville E,J«£n^t* first of all a fight*&#13;
er. He never knows when he is defeated.&#13;
Thi* is said by hia maay&#13;
frienda Xo he hee*auaa he&#13;
•Tlpt electricity to rapidly auppUatteg&#13;
steam is evidenced by a report from&#13;
HarttoeA ^njaeetlcui, anoer data of&#13;
Hay » . It says: The new third rail&#13;
eiejtf*4to«,****** Xew BaUato and&#13;
HestaayaV waa aoeeed for publk trafito&#13;
yeataoHg. Two ^raino were put on or&#13;
way of a hegtonlnk one atatttotg from&#13;
asm the eftsw trash Hew Bel-,&#13;
tela atouUtaawooaW. There were no&#13;
oat&#13;
to*^4iMl»egtoAtog of&#13;
aateev&#13;
inter, howexer,&#13;
is ware naM wotk w«y«,&#13;
ia tea naiiea, eavd the tame&#13;
Tkfe Will he rcdasei&#13;
afcortly, H ia aaia, to sUteaa/ minutea.&#13;
reatarn track o f the New&#13;
aetweeav New Brttato *&#13;
is attU devoted to the&#13;
lor the easetrte&#13;
raaathatf&#13;
tsualsejt Where (he north-bound trato&#13;
Ser the aomth-boand to pass. Aa&#13;
resV wfcfcb earrtes the electee&#13;
Mr. Clark first won national fame at&#13;
the Tammany Hah celebration held to&#13;
New York city July 4, lfc&gt;i, on which&#13;
occasion he was one of the apeakera.&#13;
He is a graduate of two coUegea,an ekpreatdeht&#13;
of another, and la In tohch&#13;
with the event* of the day, hence hi*&#13;
iaa*naf* to always good^ii* ^brds welt&#13;
choaen, and hia wit. while cauatic, never&#13;
descends to the coarse or commonpsaeel'&#13;
Hie sarcasm is as pnngent aa&#13;
paerteo and m exhilarating as old port&#13;
At the time of hia fiaiTraa Tammany&#13;
speech Mr. Clark, although he had been&#13;
heard several times to the hoase, waa&#13;
Kjesaerati rely new to eonauas. Thi*&#13;
spiieidid esTurt, *c%erbr, eleVatea^faim&#13;
at ewoa to a eonspicaeaa place among&#13;
the atoat briflauit e* hto colleague*.&#13;
The sawseh wid Interpolated with pithy&#13;
aaecdotes, eliciting round after roemd&#13;
of applaaas. A* an orator Mr. Clark&#13;
ia etotaeat, logical, humorous, at times&#13;
pathetic, aad^atways augaette. • Hie&#13;
droUery ia trreatatlato, and meepr of hia&#13;
telling illaatratkma are drawa&#13;
••' At the&#13;
theBsMe. Aa&#13;
of the traok ; tojiadaaat ocearred a dew&#13;
or""&#13;
ago.&#13;
thai peaaea the whole •* viiiUaali ncaanrlnnl toaat4n the aridet'&#13;
of «ae gea^ott carroot which propela - &lt;* • * » * » i a ^ i a f s | l a f c a a a chair**&#13;
the oara. Preatseat &lt;aarH amd today ** ^ ^ J ^ * ! ™* «»**+« 1&#13;
that the Mew stogtoad aaihoai oooi- b j r&#13;
A r^Iwieeat earn tor d«rteg the fifpaay&#13;
M4sjatl«^aatiaaad with the test. ? " ! ^ ^ ^ ^ f S T l l ^ * ^ p m l d J , L f c&#13;
a a d that t h e santom asi moat aooa m t***t •ar*»»* ^^tat oworom ooaatmu*&#13;
r*ZL — ^ - ^ ^ - T ^ tog wll! form the oaraor atone of the&#13;
•»y»i*ewv is» aaesssi w e ^ 1 ^ i speaker** career." At this eaoaaaat Mc&#13;
J Clark's time exptoad. and the&#13;
nrr ^^••'..p^&#13;
• fc.&#13;
5=F *****&#13;
gone into any battle with the totantioa&#13;
of dotog. anythieg but get what&#13;
he was a^ter, aad no compxomtoe. He&#13;
aoique.&#13;
\-*&#13;
'A *•' "•&#13;
Coloaet Vaaaoa, the&#13;
e r T n Crete, la aaid t o be of&#13;
jgrto origin. H U taapjtfsthar oaacediMa&#13;
•word to Greece ^ the 4 * y s sd the war&#13;
of todepehdenoa* a a d /bacame one o f t h e&#13;
chief lieutenants o j Karaiakurt t h e&#13;
gaeat Greek leader/ H e thea earned&#13;
t h e surname of "the Teaajcsoaa,'; aad&#13;
recent eveato have' proved that t h e old&#13;
man'a leadtoff -WaU^r h a s heap 'Aillr&#13;
tahorttod by hi* graj^ana.&#13;
chapter could 1,&#13;
eeveted te verli&#13;
tnrne ^ the tjfrt, i# an; anttqur phraae.&#13;
Moreover, the rhiatorieal novelist realikda&#13;
that h i w taking this trem^nd&lt;piu&#13;
a m o a n t ot palna for a^s^rf^few^peo*&#13;
pie; that hardly one in1 a thodsand of'&#13;
skW wHh w k a f e . ^ t e i l ^ t a * qrto^y.j&#13;
Bat that cne is the man w h o Wnrtell&#13;
that, the wbpok is wpjth p / e ^ w i n ^ -&#13;
Ladieft' Hennadoumal. .-.- ..y.n- i .i . • -.-&#13;
- ; ' &gt; • ' • v , j ' - • , % , . ; • ; &gt; » • • ' • " * ' • : , ' - ; ; - : % - " " ' ' £ * '&#13;
DBDPSY treated Irem. by Drw H. H.&#13;
Greeof* fi«««,M^f AU«eta* «sw Th^&#13;
rreate^t 'Mftps#^[^^ft«in t»H world&#13;
Read their advertisement to another&#13;
cojnaaoof thispapert' "-•'.,- •-—/&#13;
. ^ ¾ ^ ^ ¾ ^ ^ ^ -»«-&#13;
EveQ^eatarrh, that oUmad breeder of&#13;
eooaumpUoQ. snpgusabft io Aiut he Aim ft&#13;
in fiaeoees of Thomas' BdectricOfl. '&#13;
*&#13;
*&gt;-«;&#13;
J O I&#13;
'&lt;i$\&#13;
m&#13;
i,eCt»a rrteearr *sa ovt«a .t hat a wbalemigbt Jive to be&#13;
- t ' ; « l n i I i H i l ' l i&#13;
w .ijcan^Candjr C&#13;
i refaad. moaer&#13;
I. i i ' B&#13;
'Bl^ii.,-.''&#13;
Ro^otlpf&gt;t&gt;r&#13;
it fait of good healthv&#13;
^ns-^sa^^ar/TWa)&#13;
*eroe up WoW 'aad&#13;
have it ready #o pirn&#13;
down whenever ycVse&#13;
sWracpwW'^ '3i-f\&gt; t^&#13;
Made onto ay Tap&#13;
Cbarlea B. R k o C»./&#13;
Phitodelpbi*. A^aaaV&#13;
'•+** ***** * 8P&lt;Usja »&#13;
r,s aow ej^ery waere&gt; ^ IT KILLS&#13;
•apje, •• c&#13;
Ul But llijMMttM M4 All ronMo/uMaatMte,&#13;
Cray Mineral Ash&#13;
&gt; teKy w»ri#Ka* a t * * 4JraeM«ar «•• M&#13;
ror*«ii'Uttl«u8wcSaak.M I U M « M » &gt; f e ksttMMl Pistola*J mmm\C*., ~&#13;
&gt; n W ia itoeir WM l«a*Si« wi&#13;
head&#13;
treat meat&#13;
DaiMARDSwed"&#13;
flzrar4B&#13;
Wifeseliiafl* still common Taftuftsii. "'&#13;
Our Columbia 5 per cevt&#13;
iqw i^l W arty&#13;
Bk&gt;«lcs-sbow$ about sijfak.jj^„frfa&#13;
square inch. Yet Coiumfata Patent Rush Josat&#13;
eMH*aeiBMawewemSHHMHaeaMMeMMMM*a&#13;
even tbao o * r . « f c | w ^&#13;
- *a ' MMfotaWdw*^&#13;
^...^fJpffffoa^HVi&#13;
pMOf «0# 4hT&lt;&#13;
c " - , « 1 ,v-&gt;&lt;' ; "&#13;
Jwiwtt&#13;
v&#13;
+ - • $ - -&#13;
3KVVJ&#13;
rs,.' s&#13;
FOPE MFG. CXXVYW^&#13;
* '• ''"'• '' ' " ^ e * » # e i a w a w a ^ ^&#13;
*.*r&#13;
&amp; * •&#13;
H&gt;*&#13;
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r» ^ : -&#13;
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s^ifti; [ip^^^Pfy^J^ippiw^^'ip 'V... II, n tnni |ii|i|ii^ipif^ppi&#13;
'jfr. •*&gt; 1 '&#13;
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• « . , -.' • * ' r'O&#13;
::-¾.: w»&#13;
# • . » J '« / V&#13;
^ i&gt; • H -&#13;
•-. !.'W- I-,&#13;
^&#13;
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w •' ' V&#13;
• r ' w v - &gt;^ ^ T j " - ^ - ^ - . • • • • • • • ••&lt;• : * • • • . • • • • • • • •&#13;
..•• \ v : ' C J i ' '.J.* " » ' ( '•J'* ( ; • ' , * , . » • ' . . - &gt; &gt; ' &lt; • ' . - ' ' / , ' 1 9 ^ " ! * " " " • . " - . .•'•.,,' &gt; . &gt; , &gt; • • ' • ' • * •''•'&#13;
, • • : • • ' " ; ^ J ' : . . V - * v - &gt; ' V ' l •-'•%. " - - - - • '•••* •••'••••*::.'&lt;..:&gt; „ • • ' . . ; ; • • • •''•'.••-'i'^ ,• •&#13;
• '»»V&#13;
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, i t »&#13;
? &gt; * " &lt; * * ! i i ^ i&#13;
;*.&#13;
* # • • :&#13;
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!^.o- f^| &lt;*ooii4te 6W 4octet, to*** tho yo^ar tie. Why?&#13;
l^Mtto 70« 4*«t waaf ft' o t o H , J0JW Itfr lft&lt;l»tj»BrtfBcj»^&#13;
.'&#13;
i,fl&#13;
r»j &lt;&#13;
fttftdt. Troe, (He:; joftAf doctor ^ ^ be ejferjtacett.&#13;
toc-OM doctor j««ijtbc&gt; Top Ukc w rt«Ka wtt '-K ^ * J ^ %&#13;
wbtn Dr. «^tb« ^i U retclu jhMW^^tfc meemottit ^ m '&#13;
medicine rai^tit - tiie Jooftrled remedy&gt;h*i yoc^ cOflfldogpee*&#13;
Top profcr-exporteace to eiperimeftt—irbe» yo« eroeoaeenNeV&#13;
lie new «medy mar•"»» food—b«t let iwnebodj .eMo preje;,&#13;
it The old tanedy m**t bo rood—Jodfed pn 1U record o/ ;&#13;
esres; Jut ose more reeew for cbooelnf AYBRfft Svf*' »:!&#13;
•trWftlft bjreterence to eny other. It Mei been, the itioderl /&#13;
!wu«hoId etr»e&gt;trUia for hetr e,ceotoryt i u mctfi ioeptret *&#13;
&lt;^&lt;taM~W_7*dr*^eur**. tf othm'i^lw f*od&gt;^&#13;
Xyci^ Sw^i^Jtla jpoot &gt;o. YPU,t*Jte no ch#nees •»«» yoi^-&#13;
teke AY^^Itretperlll*. , v, )t .&gt;*S;&gt; ,&gt;y ^ . ;&#13;
a BE&#13;
INTCftNAtiONAL PMESS ASSOC|ATI9Hi&#13;
t-''»&#13;
W o n Cfeioftgw vis • the North*Western&#13;
Lino (CMo»tfO/ ft North-Weetera E»UW*&#13;
yH^V iJMOPW VOnUfornio 4 0 3 , 0 ^ ^&#13;
RottVvJtt*« 3* to Jttlj &amp; IpoiiuiTe, on&#13;
f t o T n A t e e . w m be m a ^ ©wtbonud.&#13;
JorfuirInformation opply to ticket&#13;
• g e n t t &lt; 2 . * N &gt; W . Rr.&#13;
TbegreOtee^ of a l l religion* problema&#13;
continnee t b b e l i o w besf to'Ves^h&#13;
the ri— « T people w|»o **nOftirfO't9&#13;
«bn*eo.'w l ' , ^- *^-^ptlf&#13;
^ b e e t l e of Dr. WoodV Norway Pine&#13;
Syrtrp-4^ tbie house e^T.ee doctors' bills,&#13;
•eves trouble, and rbbv often sares&#13;
previous llqes. Gipta jUmos&gt; i n s ^ o t&#13;
BoblftgftrsoU; 4 M atheist, aaya the&#13;
M e t M U M r O M t t t r s are the hardest&#13;
woAfjdm^t.rofyeetpaid ot-tny dejtominaiion.&#13;
De^&gt;3ronwserateh'.aBd scrateh, end&#13;
wotiew* twhar'aShe maMer? Qaa|k&gt;Oint-&#13;
•eftnOf wiii instA«t*y i-eUeyaae|id per-&#13;
*' ot the&#13;
idlng.&#13;
f.&#13;
^&#13;
Jk#l said/': jnsstf rday&#13;
»ce"was&#13;
Miss&#13;
T h e a s s ret of h M p | o e s £ "Keepl^onr&#13;
llTajM^feT, ftwdoek BlMd B i t t e n is&#13;
natue*ssejnedv for, eoolaiCaintS'sVJlfte&#13;
lirer or bowels. ., . .&#13;
The flrst setbwdr in jiMnj a Man's&#13;
lifs-eeonrrad a t athool when Jha. was&#13;
sot hock among the girls.&#13;
A* - i v • ' • • U K ' i n u j ) i, •'&#13;
Candr Ostksrtlc, cure&#13;
Kfc iTC a C fail, acu«iAta**foaA&#13;
U$a*oa5r«Ter.&#13;
• n »» •r-"^&#13;
The resolution of a moment, with&#13;
some men has been the t u n i n g point&#13;
of IsJalta,issues to the wot^*%. , , ,&#13;
Frinoetoa nnfve|nsitf h a s , eoftferred&#13;
the honorary.degree of Ll± Bs upon&#13;
e»&gt; President Olereland,. i U.U,&#13;
The watch carried bjr the average&#13;
man is oompossd of 98 pieces aud its&#13;
manofaetttee einbraees more than 2,000&#13;
dmtioot aid, separate operations, •&#13;
. j Obabe lata ffsar Onoss&#13;
Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder for the&#13;
feelL. I t enres painful, swollen, smart*&#13;
i ^ faefcAod instantly takes the sting&#13;
out of neorns and- bunlonsr ft is t h e Sreatest comfort discovery of the age.&#13;
lien's ffDoVEase makes tight-fitting&#13;
of now shoes-feel easy. It '&amp; a certain&#13;
cure for sweating, callous ami' hot,&#13;
tired, aching feet Try it today. Sold&#13;
b y a J U r w U t 4 ^ »Iioe stores. B y&#13;
mail for 35c in stomps.. Trial psclcs.?e&#13;
PEfife: AdaresTAllen ^. Olmsted; Le&#13;
Eoy, N. Y.&#13;
rrne dsjee ot • Anhajbt. Qtrmirij, celebrate*&#13;
Ms birthday recently by estabflsbing * decoration&#13;
for worklTtrnen. Erery laborer in&#13;
his dominions whonas been myears is the&#13;
employ of thejajoe person o^ firm wUi receive&#13;
a silTcr medal.&#13;
i . Caswstt Tby Xfmtuf ••&#13;
r«Rfo]&#13;
m, and JgOjuX t s a d * jUouk at: the Ogorea&#13;
San Francisco, n fftSM&#13;
Salt LakeCltr...... . ... ....tt.tk*&#13;
^AY«rj^I^eblo.&lt; n ,,.,v /i ,.....ii4ii&#13;
Sioux City..&gt; , . . . . , . . , . 9.n&#13;
: &gt;Ohwbaand€6«a&lt;ilBhiKs..... 7.»&#13;
..liansae City^...,.-•...........mr,..»TJw -&#13;
*na other Dotnum proportion. ^ ,&#13;
nesesrffve^c**s4ft%te*mafe fbr m e # «&amp;,?«!;»; ^3^:&#13;
ions dates i For furthne Jr uinlyl oartmtna XMd^gau s^t. '. i . * ^ v&#13;
est eonpW ttefcet agetttor •&#13;
ae-srjB.'4esObr«, O. *&gt;• A.&#13;
BsJltray.pblcaRo.lil.^ ^&#13;
pbtr tfcket ageM or c jrtonorjiddreas&#13;
1.- ;r&#13;
**Sow can there be such a thing as a whole&#13;
dtry, y o u ltaow/4wns»df'i^!Odyv^*whe¥li&#13;
JJ r.;&#13;
IS a&gt;ootf e^pottonity to en^nire abpot&#13;
tffarming lands in 9s&gt;Mh'j DaluB^imly bae ?H-. r T d e from Cbicaao. BmuiU/ul crops&#13;
•if 3P"**1' CornTBarley and Flax re ward l i e&#13;
UlwroTtaVioiL Asastoc% and dairy eSuntry&#13;
South Pskota iaadaalt4bs;wisrtd/lltat&#13;
^^^¾^^¾.°¾.¾.¾^^^ wards j s e r acre; and this i s the time to in&#13;
v e s t For farther parttaaJara write toOeb&#13;
H. lieafford, Oeaeril Passenger Agent. Chi&#13;
It is the way in which we employ odd mlnutas&#13;
that eeaats for or agaiavt ae In the ead.&#13;
TJMre Is aswaes vurtssity t o know how&#13;
much man who taJDe « » t h e collection cootrtbnte&#13;
themselves.&#13;
tset^^t^H^tet&#13;
«i; Choriea si •eeTms«f af lfj&#13;
^ I W B y ^ ^ ^ J m ^ s m ,&#13;
back, atop ltt An acaing^back,&#13;
moirtrr • Do yon want to know howTXiet&#13;
hs hjli j p n l I P U M irot pkwin, n p i n . k g&#13;
torkt yonnetf of pais without knowing.&#13;
T%0&#13;
•bto to * c*r*&lt;pl&#13;
to— S»*ltpiSfar&#13;
•rMaStdtSmlltfk Kt&#13;
tmttn • • — &lt; S&#13;
* r * » » * - * ^ I * ^ J N&#13;
tend T O W M I Mia wtthout k o o v i o c „Ore»«Chinn»rt « x , u c « p l i u e « I » U U&#13;
«• / ^ . f c ; € ^ ^ " r &gt; » - ! 2 ^ ¢ £ 1 ¾ .b. •. a' E,i.,i-Ti« ^.&#13;
f?'&#13;
y womv she vigne weaoon, ajuo its anies,&#13;
jwtnsL i o g*» ngnt-oxrwn t o it. oaca*&#13;
• p y pmced there b y natureT nsten t o his&#13;
wsnwnge awi take&gt;np,tiM&gt; irespen. strlko&#13;
bejpw disease i a reinforced with allies^&#13;
that cab hot b e voUted o y hand o f nmn.&#13;
endh t o Bright's disease. Let no introduce&#13;
ftefotf^fcttw«wpmr? ^Let u s prove its eu&#13;
M e « jBfhemi^ H e m i» a blow k&#13;
fUave&#13;
, CLH KM sad resides at l t t Ten&#13;
tteM Jackson, Mfch. Be-says:&#13;
ive suffered./or a long time from a&#13;
y awd/Ma&lt;Werd%ord^ whjch has at&#13;
f n ^ t o l f o r ^ n e m S s m t&#13;
an|s&gt;dk«warg&gt;4 from,;there *s*cured, nut&#13;
dhe est* cosapWnt has mvariaWy^come&#13;
teak hcete. Some time ego I heard of&#13;
f W f . &amp; t j i j a s f Pithy and f^egnnt&#13;
m M m n y &gt; a which bneJmeed me&#13;
f .wu! J A if .yT^T-ifflrrT?^ TT&#13;
J-WKO very snnon impw^en,asmTSB&#13;
i s f i i i f mrasyisim e i o ta&lt;w%&#13;
IF general eondMson k piwohim*&#13;
I would oot like to be wtthowt&#13;
a Kidney PIUs.1 think umieieknwni&#13;
% s ^ M W H i r n ^ Bufaio,&#13;
S^ omttrts forthe.U. a&#13;
•^em^w memnswmwa •eisv^^gOwO est&#13;
waa&#13;
«!»«•.&#13;
•p';.&#13;
WTO Wmutm •tJWI&#13;
liSwpSi&#13;
i»s.irdV"&#13;
Ml»im«Clilmwt.&#13;
saysi&#13;
must have deducted her til EhMewtttce&#13;
' • • w*^r—^pa • • &lt; - »&#13;
wOalTes^weofa^aadtmesBtDsm'U&#13;
To qnit tobaccoeasyy andtorevee be mag-&#13;
Sac. the wonder worker, flr&#13;
That was ail. Solomon itAj&amp;merod&#13;
through, the words in horror, whilo Mr.&#13;
Itopralnn lietened in genuine astonishm&#13;
e n t&#13;
&lt; ''There, meenJaterV' exclaimed Solomon,&#13;
indignantly. "Did I no' tell ye?&#13;
It's a scandal, an outragel Keep the&#13;
— ^ , ^balrn, indeed, and a woman-balm!&#13;
On the doo/stane, did you ]^Absurd notionP&#13;
"Hush, ftoloiron," interposed the&#13;
minister solemn'*&gt;''I begin to see the&#13;
hsnd o' God in thlsX&#13;
Opening the bedclothes, h e placed&#13;
the infant in a oozy spot, and arranged&#13;
the blankets tenderly areond it.&#13;
"Look, Solomon! Is she not bonny?"&#13;
Solomon gave a grunt of doubtful&#13;
approval.&#13;
"Good nigbt, Solomon," continued&#13;
the minister.&#13;
A wort of protest was o n the sexton's&#13;
tongue, but he checked it in time;&#13;
then with one last stare of amassment,&#13;
perplexity and surprise he left the&#13;
room*.&#13;
OKACTBB H—fOownwosp.) ,&#13;
The eyee of : t h e two old men mot;&#13;
the minister fkished slightly, while&#13;
Soloapn's dry lips aesumed the shape&#13;
generally taken when one is about to&#13;
give a prolonged whistle; but no sound&#13;
followed. .&#13;
"Whaur did your reyerenee find the&#13;
brtrn?&#13;
•ayT't,, j&#13;
The minister nodded. Thereupon&#13;
Solomon walked over t ? the chair, put&#13;
on a pair of brass-rimmed spectacles,&#13;
and inspected the child much as hie&#13;
master had done, but with prolonged&#13;
and dubious shakos of the head.&#13;
"Lrfrd preserve us a'!" h e muttered.&#13;
"Solomon/' cried Mr. Lorraine impatiently,&#13;
"what's to be done?"&#13;
Solomon scratched hie head, then&#13;
Me face lightened with sudden inspiration,&#13;
a s he answered:&#13;
"Put the thing whaur y e found him,&#13;
on the doorstane. Lee/ him there—&#13;
he*e nane o' oora. Maybe the mlther&#13;
will come back and take him a w s \ "&#13;
The- mlnister'B face flushed indignantly.&#13;
"On srch a night as this! Solomon&#13;
Mucklebacklt, if you have no more&#13;
Christian advice than that to offer,&#13;
you can go baek to bed."&#13;
Solomon was astonished. Seldom&#13;
had he seen his master exhibit such&#13;
authority, tempered with indignation.&#13;
Not knowing how to reply, he effected&#13;
a diversion..&#13;
"See, sir" he said, still Inspecting the&#13;
child as if it were some curious species&#13;
of fish, "the crater's wrtngtn' watT/&#13;
Such was the fact/ thoufh.it had 'tm&#13;
caned the minister's • agitated scrutiny.&#13;
The shawl and under-dress of the infant&#13;
were soaked with rain or m e | U d&#13;
'snow. ,;' •*»•: •yrr&#13;
"Bless my soulT' cried Lorraine,&#13;
&gt; bending down by Solomon's side; " a n *&#13;
rts UtUe body is,&lt;omitje cold^, Fetnh&#13;
Mysle Slnrbewtf a^oeieV" —^: '&#13;
: "?U&amp;&amp;tMm*&amp;' one thlbgv to bo&#13;
,dcne,"/1etiew&lt;wlr. Lorraine, w4tn oudden&#13;
decision. "We must undress t h e&#13;
ichiid at once and put him flp bod, andH ., ••-&#13;
in the morning we c*»^st4d« h ^ * * * ! *h\» right&#13;
"The warl'^ comln' to an en',** ho&#13;
muttered, as he ascended the stairs t o&#13;
his room. "A woman-bairn in oor&#13;
house!—* lassie In tho minister's s i n&#13;
bed! W e d , weel, weel!"&#13;
Meantime, Mr. Lorraine sat by t h e&#13;
bedside, looking at the child, who had&#13;
almost Immediately fallen asleep.&#13;
Presently~,he reached out his arm and&#13;
took one* pf bar little hands into h i s&#13;
own, and his eyes were dim and h i s&#13;
soul was traveling back to the past!&#13;
Hours peeped tho£ and he still sat in&#13;
a^rwsm.* •• i&#13;
"Matjorte, my bonny d o o r ho murmured&#13;
alone} again. "Is this indeed •&#13;
gift from Ood—snd y o u r&#13;
an4 9)M0^.^^'S^M^ one, w s A ^ l j m 7 a ; e letter, wno a U n d -&#13;
i n s on tier fiajWehold witlL m orowny&#13;
tUxti having put thrown opem t h e&#13;
4oor; and o a ftieetWrning him V**frai*&gt;-&#13;
ralne gained ftie t r e t and only lOeoe&#13;
of informetioav A woman, strange t o&#13;
tko plaee, h a f .eefeiwd ^ ina o v o f /&#13;
night, carrying * a Jnfant undsmsptltv&#13;
her shawl, and aaked for a 4 a s s &gt; e f&#13;
milk, which she had drung hastily a a 4&#13;
flitted away—like a g h o s t Her faoo&#13;
woo partially hidden, but Jock wae&#13;
certain thst she wag a stranger. S t a / 1&#13;
yep, there wae something inore. fl|e&#13;
had iaoulred for,CM mouse, anA ^ | o&#13;
inn-keeper had pointed out the direetion&#13;
of the ohurch ami the minister's&#13;
^lythwr'ino.uirief up and J m | k p&#13;
tillage elicited no further Information.&#13;
Perplexed and weary, the sood m e n&#13;
trotted, baek t o the manse. Jiersv i n&#13;
the mdely-furn^hed kitchen, he tooa4&#13;
a bright fire Darning, his breairtaet&#13;
ready, and Myele seated by the iapleslde&#13;
with the child in her lap. in&#13;
voluble conversation with the old Okx-&#13;
* • * . ' . • • ;*i ....-&#13;
^&#13;
The wretched, mother, whoever y h #&#13;
was, had indeed chosen wisely when&#13;
she had t resolved, while determining&#13;
to abandon her Infant, to leave » At&#13;
the gentle mialster's door. Dnye&#13;
passed, and in spite of Solomon's protestations,&#13;
i t was still an inmaM of&#13;
C P A P T B R I I L&#13;
T FIVE o'clock the&#13;
n ' e x t m o r n i n g ,&#13;
w h e n S o l o m o n&#13;
MucUebaektt, candle&#13;
in hand, descended&#13;
the stairs,&#13;
he- found the minister&#13;
sitting by the&#13;
with km g#ay head&#13;
resting; em t h e side&#13;
of the pillow, and&#13;
outstretched over the&#13;
a c t If we leave him like this he w 4 # j counterpane aSove the etlli slaasberdle&#13;
of cold."&#13;
"Put him to bed!" echoed Solomon.&#13;
"Whaur?" ' •-.&#13;
"In my room, Solomon, Jtaieas you&#13;
would like to take him wltX&#13;
lng child. At the sound of Solo;&#13;
entrance, however, Mr. Lorraine awoke&#13;
at onee, rubbed his eyes, and looked&#13;
In -a dazed way around him; then his&#13;
eyes feir upon the infant and his&#13;
"Bless me, meeaister! Hae ye&#13;
waCcntng here a' nicht?**&#13;
"I Wl to sleep,"&#13;
"Wl' me! I'm no used wi» beifwapiface grew bright a s sunshine.&#13;
I eouldna sleep a wink!" • . '&#13;
"Then he shall atay with me. Look,&#13;
Solomon, how pretty h o Is* how bright&#13;
his eyes are! Fetch me a blanket at&#13;
onee, and warm it by the fire."*&#13;
Solomon left the room. Th^jsdpJ*-&#13;
ter lifted the burden In his arms, and&#13;
sat down by the hearth. Then.&#13;
nervously and awkwardly, he endid&#13;
the shawl and put it aside; loosened&#13;
the baby's outer garments, which were&#13;
ojnftcrtwet, and drew them gently off.&#13;
the good man was indeed&#13;
* picture t o&#13;
th love and&#13;
-hat soft eyes&#13;
faoo puzzled and troubled, U s Httlel&#13;
plump hands at work with clumsy&#13;
kindness.&#13;
Solomon entered with a blanket,&#13;
warmed i f for a minute at the are, and&#13;
then placed it softly 4mder the child,&#13;
which now lay awthefvpaked—as&#13;
ewost and bright a Tfctte 0&gt;er«b a s&#13;
ever .draw mother's mfik. ' -' •&#13;
the reply, "and&#13;
I was dreaming, Solomon, saeh'bonny&#13;
dreams! I thought that I waa up yonder&#13;
among.the angeia, and that owe&#13;
of them came to me with a face I w e l l .&#13;
remember—ah, s o bright!—and p a t a&#13;
little balm—this bairn—into s t y arms;&#13;
aad the*, s i I held the pretty one. a.&#13;
thousand voices sang an old Scotch&#13;
song, the *Land o* the Leal/ Dear me!&#13;
—and It im « ^ r i y d*&#13;
the manse. Mysle Simpson understood&#13;
the roaring process well, and&#13;
since the child, as she had surmised,&#13;
aael never known the breast, K throve&#13;
well upon "the bottle." The sslnUtet&#13;
went and cam* lightly, as If tap burden&#13;
of twenty years had beeev taken&#13;
from his shoulders; had it indeed been&#13;
kle o w n offspring a s could not have&#13;
been more anxious or nsorp tender,&#13;
And Solomon MuckJebackit desplU hjs&#13;
asaumpiioa e f stemnees aad indignation,&#13;
was secretly sympathetic. &lt; Ha,&#13;
too, had a tender corner i p . h i s heart,&#13;
which the child'* laaoosat beaaty did&#13;
aot fall,to. touch.&#13;
One motaiag, aoaws.'aevea or eight&#13;
days, after the mtjal of t h o infant,&#13;
when thp, storms had blown ,„&#13;
hoarse* and a dtpil bmek thaw&#13;
eaeded j h e faUimji » 4 «riftjag&#13;
news eaaw t o Jhe nmnsa that too body&#13;
of a woman hap bosa p&gt;am| l y t e s o a&#13;
taw Briak of the Annan, iust wha«e « •&#13;
watera meet the wide saada^ .of tJhe&#13;
Solway, and mimjlo with tho sail&#13;
etream of the ocean Ude. Qreatly atftatea,&#13;
Mr. Larralae mountai a w poay.&#13;
and at oaeo rode alonei the lonely higisway&#13;
which winds through the flat&#13;
reaches of i k e Mesa.. Arrtvmej d o s e&#13;
to the great sands, he was directed t o&#13;
a disused outbuilding or bara, belonging&#13;
to a large sea-facing, and steading&#13;
some hundred yards above&#13;
mark. A group of famermei&#13;
ant men and voasca were clustered at&#13;
the door; at his approach the mea 11ftesT&#13;
their hara respectfully, aad the&#13;
womea eourtesAed.&#13;
On staking lnquriea, the ndamter&#13;
learned that t h e body katf been dlscaceie&#13;
is taken iaUmalry. Viw£?tfe.&#13;
• ' ' —' ^"•Vi*,*1 *'—&#13;
Eleven bundeed Jamieese teunr men have'j&#13;
..Bif«ss* r use Is it to etseover the;&#13;
* . e a * s i e « u r e j WeM*&#13;
.yvs's:&#13;
ts ail* Kwutt a saaa-&#13;
Ohiid ava! Ufa a wee laaster&#13;
eft. Lorraine started, trpmbled aad&#13;
luawjift droOT&gt;e4 bis l &lt; ^ ; ^ k | ^ &gt;»ahfuBy,&#13;
and teaierjy. n e / w r e p i a p t h e&#13;
: - L a * e^kwaae,^ he aatd. - t h e Lord&#13;
has l e g t f z ^ o m r kaepflmrT'&#13;
'£k^ua| ( StooptaA e» cba heertavrug, twlomoa&#13;
lifted froat Jt a j g p y eaeauao which&#13;
appro, ami eremiaed it with&#13;
boktbr. fluddealy h i e&#13;
peroeived eoaaethiag whieA. aad eewhat&#13;
.ierstssseaey*&#13;
Two botUes of Flse\Oaee far&#13;
Uon cured me of s bad Inee t m&#13;
NlcaofiTgrtaoetoa, leavJaarsb&#13;
Jits that both bats ss&#13;
rtectly la brigatauseisjiaV&#13;
lo&#13;
btsa&#13;
iMes ?eitawatptsemjs&gt;taaaeaaW&#13;
a^fju&gt; leea m a&#13;
a l e a a a&#13;
- T o Mr. Lorraine By the time y o u&#13;
Chla. the writer will at tyiag&#13;
aad oaei la Aaaan Water, TOM 4&#13;
and a clergyman.&#13;
of ood. aom oa yam use&#13;
pose?"&#13;
Solomon dtd not reply tn words, but,&#13;
pulling up the blind, showed the outer&#13;
world still dark, but trembling to the&#13;
first dim, rays of wintry dawn, while&#13;
snow was thiexly falling, and d i e garden&#13;
was covered with a sheet of virgia&#13;
white The. minister rose shlrering,&#13;
for the air w a s bitter cold; his limbo,&#13;
top, were stiff and ehillyv '&#13;
"What's to be dona a o w ? " asked&#13;
Soiomoa. gloomily. *? maaa awa* aa'&#13;
feeniah the grave, bat Myate will be&#13;
here at six.'"&#13;
"I will watch until Mysie comes,"&#13;
amvwered Mr. Lorrarne^tkea, bsadi#hl&#13;
o v a r t b a b e ^ h o f f e i r t n a e d : lSeet,So|s&gt;&#13;
men, my man, bx&gt; w soaadiy she sleeps,&#13;
and how pretty she)&#13;
Soioman grunted aad moved toward&#13;
the door.&#13;
"Will I put o a the parrltch mysel'r'&#13;
he demanded. "Ye maaa be wantiag&#13;
somethlag attar ate a a i g k t "&#13;
"Nothing, aotalag. Go o a t o the&#13;
ktrkyard."&#13;
A a hoar later*&#13;
sat&#13;
key at the hack door, aba waa a t&#13;
of the&#13;
by otd habit&#13;
ami being of kindly&#13;
duajoawtsay a a d t h e mother of a&#13;
se a t&#13;
without taaattnnlng,&#13;
duties a s aaroo. The child haeiag&#13;
« * * » § L * * 0 : t o a k j t up m h e r | e d ejsar aad&#13;
it soon beeamoTatin; then.&#13;
lag to the. kitchen, s h e&#13;
aew milk, a a d fad it with a&#13;
B y this taste day had&#13;
wbea he h a t seen the cafW&#13;
ably eared for. the miajete? put em eeo&#13;
cloak and&#13;
covered at daybreak by some&#13;
rhea netting the river at the&#13;
tide. They had at oaeo glvsa&#13;
the alarm, aad carried "it" up t o the&#13;
ffltpM^t^i b a m where it waa thee&#13;
iyimi. " . .&#13;
The hara w a s without n door, ami&#13;
partially roofless. Day aad night tab&#13;
salt spray of the oceaa waa blowa upe&#13;
a It, taerustlag its&#13;
species of filmy salt; aad from the&#13;
rafters aad down&#13;
clung sUsay weeds aad&#13;
o^eMMt peak of sea-gulls&#13;
the broken waus&#13;
T h e stinister took off hie hat aad entered&#13;
m bare headed.&#13;
auretohed apoa the earthen&#13;
what seemed at first rather a&#13;
mass than a hamsm form; a&#13;
coarse tarpaulin waa placed over my&#13;
tt Irene head to foot. Oeatzy:&#13;
Mr. Lorraine arear'.&#13;
of the tarpaulinssad taw'&#13;
vaaleaV ewt Ties* the dlaflgarai • amea- -&#13;
sma^adav tmsadumh ,mk .aaaaaWsa^aab r^*&#13;
face; b a t though the fintssjiun&#13;
* ^ r &gt; ^ ^ and unre'iognliaate^&#13;
' 'ere&#13;
iagitrba, aad thai&#13;
hldaen by foulness, t h e ,&#13;
set in a woman's&#13;
With the horror&#13;
&amp;m&#13;
: ^ - " « a&#13;
'- v.: M&#13;
•&lt;Am&#13;
-i fm&#13;
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Bt&#13;
PARSHAtUIUU.&#13;
Tom MoCtoei* raised a Urge&#13;
barn lwt W^beBday.&#13;
Mi« White of Milford visited&#13;
friends her© the past week.&#13;
"Will Wolverton and wite attended&#13;
the wedding of a relative in&#13;
Owosaa the past week.&#13;
Mrs, Baldwin of Fcwlerville,&#13;
county president of the WCTU&#13;
*pent last week with friends here.&#13;
Martain Iiamb of New Jersey&#13;
filled the pulpit" at the 'BaptiBi&#13;
ohuich last Sunday morning and&#13;
evening. *&#13;
Bev. J. L. Walker and daughter&#13;
attended the wedding of his son,&#13;
Frank and Miss Lillian Dickerson&#13;
last Friday near Howell.&#13;
^ • •&#13;
CHAPEL ITEMS.&#13;
Cecil Wood is very sick.&#13;
• Mrs. J. W. Sheets is on the&#13;
sick list&#13;
Mrs. Rockwood reports a fine&#13;
—girl baby- at Frank Pond's.&#13;
Robert Caskey and wife visited&#13;
friends near Saginaw last week. .&#13;
Wirt Watson of Jackson visited&#13;
his parents in this place on Sunday&#13;
last&#13;
P. Wright and wife entertained&#13;
friends from Mason a few days&#13;
last week.&#13;
W, J. Bull has been extending&#13;
his barn, we think this means&#13;
more cows.&#13;
Miss Maggie Grieve of Pinckney&#13;
has been in this vicinity visiting&#13;
her many friends.&#13;
Hats are taking any amount of&#13;
young poultry this year, hardly&#13;
leaving enough to divide with&#13;
poultry theives this fall.&#13;
Miss Helen Caskey closed a&#13;
very successful term of school on&#13;
Friday last at the Monsel school&#13;
house, and she is to teach the fall&#13;
term.&#13;
r&#13;
PETTEYSVILL6&#13;
Miss Etta Shehan of the State&#13;
Normal is home.&#13;
Miss Ella Melvin returned from&#13;
Ann Arbor Saturday.&#13;
J. W. Placeway and daughter,&#13;
Ivah attended the commencement&#13;
exercises of the Ann Arbor high&#13;
school last Friday.&#13;
&lt;\&gt; a i a = E i i | « H 1» "&#13;
. * , - ' • • • •&#13;
MisaNiua D*vfc vitj^d relatives&#13;
^•Oceola last week t ^ - - ::' : -&#13;
' S. G, Teejple and family spent&#13;
Sunday at Charjea Switsefs.&#13;
L. M. Teeple and wife visited&#13;
at Wilt Ferguson's in Marion&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
The depot at this place was&#13;
moved to the Junction on Sunday&#13;
last&#13;
• R G. Carpenter and wife attended&#13;
the Oriental banquet at&#13;
Finckney Saturday night.&#13;
Claude Randall and mother of&#13;
Bancroft visited at P. W. Coniways&#13;
the last of last week.&#13;
The Fanner's Club held a very&#13;
interesting meeting at the home&#13;
of G. P. Lambertson last Saturday.&#13;
A very large crowd attended&#13;
the S. S. convention at the North&#13;
Hamburg church; the singing by&#13;
the Emerson Quartette and the&#13;
solo by Miss Olive Smith were&#13;
fine and much enjoyed by all&#13;
present.&#13;
fit:— - ANDERSON.&#13;
A. L. Glover, our genial milkdrawer,&#13;
drives a new wagon. •&#13;
~ Chas. Hinchey made a trip to&#13;
Jackson on his wheel last week.&#13;
--.&#13;
BOB&#13;
SPECIAL SALE&#13;
ON&#13;
CAN GOODS AND COFFEE&#13;
To close out&#13;
FOR&#13;
Saturday, July 3,1897.&#13;
I WILL SELL:&#13;
i Cans String Beans&#13;
' 4 Cans June Peas&#13;
2 C a w Pineapple&#13;
^iQaas Strawberries&#13;
4 }0c Ceas Baked Beans&#13;
2¾&#13;
25c&#13;
25c&#13;
Poor Blood&#13;
is starved blood It shows itself&#13;
in pale cheeks, white lips, weak&#13;
digestion, no appetite, exhaustion,&#13;
lack of nerve force, soft&#13;
muscles, and, chief of all, weak&#13;
muscles* Your doctor calls it&#13;
Anaemia. He will tell you that&#13;
the weakening weather of summer&#13;
often brings it on.&#13;
of Cod-liver Oil with Hypophosphites,&#13;
will make poor blood&#13;
rich. It is a food for over-taxed&#13;
and weak digestion, so prepared&#13;
that it can easily be taken in&#13;
summer when Cod-liver Oil or&#13;
even ordinary foods might repel&#13;
SCOTT &amp;BOWNB; Jk New York&#13;
For tale atjoc and $1.0» by all drugguu.&#13;
^ Miss Kitg* Hoff spent Sunday,&#13;
J. L &lt;&amp;oob» was home from&#13;
Jackson over Sunday. ', ^ ^&#13;
Miss £lv» Hoff d! FowlerviUe&#13;
spent Sunday with her parents»&#13;
MissLelaXJoleman of Gregory&#13;
spent Saaday with her parents.&#13;
Mrs. D. 0. Walters of Howell&#13;
was in this place last week looking&#13;
after the interests of the farm.&#13;
Mrs. Jaa Hoff and daughter,&#13;
Minnie were in Howell Saturday.&#13;
G. W. Black and wife were in&#13;
Webberville Saturday .and Sunday.&#13;
C. L. Bennett and wife of Howell&#13;
were at this place on Thursday&#13;
last&#13;
A. G. Wilson and son, Sammie&#13;
took in the races at Jackson last&#13;
week.&#13;
David Smith and wife visited&#13;
relatives in Ann Arbor the last of&#13;
the week.&#13;
Mrs. John Dunbar and Jessie&#13;
Birnie of Unadilla were callers at&#13;
Anderson on Sunday.&#13;
Miss Myrtie Rockwood of Iosco&#13;
was the guest of Miss Nora . Durkee&#13;
tfae first of the week.&#13;
Lyle and Villa Martin^ attended&#13;
the S. S. convention at the North&#13;
Hamburg church Sunday.&#13;
A team belonging to Will Daley&#13;
ran away, one day last week ana&#13;
threw Mr. Collins from the wagon&#13;
hurting him some but not seriously-&#13;
Mrs. E. W. Martin, who has&#13;
been spending several weeks with&#13;
her daughter, Mrs. B. H. Teeple&#13;
of Pinckney, returned home one&#13;
day last week.&#13;
Mrs. Chas. Hdlmes and Miss&#13;
Florence Marble of Lansing were&#13;
the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jas.&#13;
Marble last week, having come to&#13;
attend the funeral of their grandfather,&#13;
J. R. Dunning.&#13;
Quite an excitement prevailed&#13;
by the disappearance of Mrs. John&#13;
Birnie on Saturday last, who&#13;
strolled to the rear of the farm&#13;
and was taken with a congestive&#13;
chi\L She was found two hours&#13;
later in a critical condition. Dr's.&#13;
Sigler and Sigler and Win. Watts&#13;
attended^ her.&#13;
SAT. JUNE 26.&#13;
wo^jjwf^rr*™ » &gt;' L' V'fr!&#13;
Miss Dor* Plimpton J* vUHin* a&#13;
fitter at Jrooklytu _ _,r^ v , • ^:- v&#13;
¢. L. Bowmui Woujrbt a a»t Ijl at&#13;
fresii ftsa to »*rWtht first of ths&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. J. Clark of Hilford&#13;
wars ffuasii of 0. J. Tatpls sod wife&#13;
tat past weak.&#13;
Mrs. J. A. Oadwsll and ion, Basl&#13;
sptat part of tas past wsok with relstives&#13;
at Leoai and Chalsia.&#13;
Mrs. JBufrene Mann and. Miss Lulu&#13;
Hooker made a trip to Dexter on their&#13;
wheels iast Friday. They report rather&#13;
heavy roads.&#13;
Bpeoialmufio will ho rendered at&#13;
the Oong'l oburch next 8on(Uv. Subject&#13;
for the morning servioe "Best in&#13;
•Christ," eveosog "Obristian Citizenship."&#13;
Everybody invited.&#13;
With the exception of the noted&#13;
World's Fair number of the Cosmopolitan,&#13;
whioh reached a price of five&#13;
dollars a copy after the last edition&#13;
had been exhausted, no stronger number&#13;
of this magazine has ever been issued&#13;
than that for July, 1897. The&#13;
report of Julian Hawthorne, the&#13;
speoial commissioner sent by The Cosmopolitan&#13;
to India to investigate the&#13;
horrors of the plague and famine is of&#13;
an extraordinary character and will&#13;
open the eyes of the world to conditions&#13;
which were scarcely suspected.&#13;
The same nnmber contains what i*&#13;
probably the greatest poem of this&#13;
¾aarter of the nineteenth century.&#13;
'hiR new rendering of Omar Khayyam's&#13;
Bubaiyat which departs entirely&#13;
from Fitzgerald's occupies four&#13;
pages, amelie Rives reappears as a&#13;
•w*" mmmmmmmmm&#13;
day with Munjth fri.aos. - ¾ • \ , ;?:+;£&amp;% . » ' • *&#13;
If yon are going anywhere to, enjoy&#13;
the v \V: ,.u. ,&#13;
t .*'•;&#13;
:,.V'-^.«&#13;
Agoodnmsil&#13;
Ana Arbor expects to do herjti|4*&#13;
proud in a celebratioa on Saturday /&#13;
next. When the UaiversAty city amr1 .,'. •&#13;
dertakes anything of tM» k«j4 thsy aj. v; V«4 ways succeed. \ .":•... -:-^::\,KH&#13;
Today the bill permitting the print-&#13;
ing and use of private matHng cards ^1&#13;
with a one cent stamp affixed wilt g o , • ^" '•&#13;
intoefleet.v The progressive b u s i n e s s " :&#13;
man will hats his own •advsftUameat,^^; •"&#13;
conspicuously displayed and the prinV / /&#13;
ina of millions of eaHs wilj be a featr : . . ;.&#13;
ure of business. The bUJ U approVed ,, V .&#13;
by the post office departau»t ss Tt ^&lt; ; '&#13;
tends to popularize postal oardi,,he&gt;&#13;
sides affecting a saving to the goffrn&gt;&#13;
ment of the difference betwaen tjhe&#13;
cost of cards and the stamps. }rp &gt;j*-\&#13;
N - * i&#13;
$8FyiCUTIUHWIAe£D(iC tjs UKM,&#13;
$7 FMI mm ft IACHIAC arf UTUU&#13;
|6 tm MTMIT ft liCSnTaC lei IIWW.&#13;
The above speoial tourist rates will&#13;
be put into effect, June 90« via Detroit&#13;
&amp; Cleland Steam Navigation Co's.&#13;
new mammoth steel passenger steam*&#13;
ers. The round trip from Cleveland&#13;
including meals and births, costs $16,&#13;
from Toledo fl*, from Detroit HI.50.&#13;
Heat 2 cents for illuitrated pamphlet.&#13;
Address, A. A.SCBAITTZ, G,i?. AI, •&#13;
Detroit, Mich.&#13;
• *?;.&lt;&gt;* r^&#13;
A.&#13;
..•I-&#13;
'',''•*' v%&#13;
Ton may bunt the world ovetv and&#13;
!«^i». » » » . » » . . « &lt; , . ^ K K V . . . ^ » . y o u will not Hnd another medicine&#13;
story-teller tor the first time since her equal toChaml/erlain's Colic, Cholers&#13;
marriage with Prince Troubetskoy.&#13;
One ot the oleverest stories yet from&#13;
the pen of Robert VV. Chambers is&#13;
given. The remarkable story of the&#13;
War of the Martians, Wy Wells, whioh&#13;
is attracting the attention both of the&#13;
scientific and the non-scientific goodstory-&#13;
loving pablic ii continued and&#13;
there is a fourth story bv a 'Becket&#13;
elaborately illustrated by the bsmor&#13;
of Peter Newell. The &gt; eedauuecaa tional&#13;
discussion—this time by Professor&#13;
Peck of Columbia—the story of "The&#13;
Every-Day Life of a Sister of Charity"&#13;
elaborately illustrated; uTue Genesis&#13;
of a Comic Opera" given by Reginald&#13;
de Koven: President Oilman of the&#13;
John Hopkie's University on "The&#13;
Bankruptcy of Science" and an interesting&#13;
story by the Greek who conceived&#13;
and brought into existence "The&#13;
Streets of Cairo at the World's Fair"&#13;
these are some of the contents of this&#13;
tea-cent inairaxine.&#13;
and Diarhoea Remedy for powell complaint*.&#13;
It is pleasant safe and reliable.&#13;
For sale hi F. A. Sigler.&#13;
WEAK MEM NUDE VIMW6US.&#13;
• f 1 •*•-&#13;
* % • A&#13;
'%'&#13;
«&#13;
Sold by F. A Sigler.&#13;
Reasons Why Caasiaerlaia's Cellc&#13;
Cholera aai Olarrheea Remedy&#13;
Is tke keet.&#13;
1. Because it affords almost instant&#13;
relief in the case of pain in the stomach,&#13;
colic and cholera morbus.&#13;
2. Because it is the only remedy&#13;
that never fails in the most severe&#13;
cases of dysentery and diarrhoea.&#13;
3. Because it is the only remedy | ^&#13;
that will cure chronic diarrhoea.&#13;
4. Because it is the only remedy&#13;
that will prevent bilious colic.&#13;
5. Because i t is the only remedy&#13;
that will cure epidemical dysentery.&#13;
6. Because it is only remedy that&#13;
can be depended upon in cases of&#13;
ghnlera infantum&#13;
I PLUG PRUNE JUICE&#13;
TOBACCO for&#13;
16CENTS&#13;
ALSO&#13;
A Feet of Tobacco for&#13;
8 cents.&#13;
26c&#13;
26e&#13;
&lt;\; 250 Caiasax Sieve Polish 10c site 2forl0e&#13;
2 } 1 * gto&amp;QcA*&#13;
2&#13;
25c&#13;
25c&#13;
X • % • . i^THET&#13;
WRIGHT Store - . • • • • • - -• • •'•' * , : t , . • '&#13;
2SeCaAee&#13;
27cCofee&#13;
dOeGoiee&#13;
X X X X Coffee&#13;
fleeley *s lAc Jtaung; for&#13;
Seeley'e tic Bluing- for&#13;
ate&#13;
25c&#13;
3c&#13;
AfiCJothaasr ia 8snts 15 per essZto IsOTT 9. ~&#13;
Cheiee&#13;
Choios&#13;
Bsars IS&#13;
AS&#13;
3 OSJSS PlasaK • .&#13;
6 pkgi.Waahiaf Itow* -25&#13;
I Thee* sakasnost be CASH.&#13;
f f f w S I sip V I _ • PeWPs&#13;
7. Because it is the most prompt&#13;
and most reliable medicine in use for&#13;
bowel complaints. —&#13;
8. Because it produces no bad results.&#13;
9. Because it pleasant and safe to&#13;
take.&#13;
10. Because it has saved the Ifvee of&#13;
more people than any other medicine&#13;
is the world.&#13;
The 25 and 50c eizes for sale by F.&#13;
A. Sigler.&#13;
MSISITCACE s a x c&#13;
DefMH SaTieg b m jauie 1B tbe oo»«tiw&#13;
&lt;A * certain moitges* (wlwt*fcy thf pover of Mis&#13;
tberela oontaiaed to MU hts beoome optsttiv)&#13;
mftoeby XlcbMi L*r*j waA Jennie Lvroj. tala&#13;
irkU of Che towaablp of Dexter, Washtenaw&#13;
oooaty. XkUc«B to WiUfeea Otertc of toe ptaee&#13;
tfoNHM M 4 etjted Neroh A\ 18S7 end reoor«e4&#13;
ia the oelce of the Be«taMr of Dcoet for the&#13;
Oftontf of LirinxetOB otete of Mkli%at on the&#13;
tut d«r of March lSS7iatt*«r us rf marlmie mi&#13;
peje lSfi ehereof, oa wkleh mortfae* there is&#13;
daitnedtobedoeat the date of tafe aotiee the&#13;
•am of four hoadred aad tftf^ne doUaM aad&#13;
•txty^ght oaote (1*31.01) and BO rait or proewdtam&#13;
at law or ia eqaitjr karing bsea&#13;
cage or mj pact thoreof: Taerefon notice ie&#13;
noMbs &lt;lve« that oa Fddar ehe aehk daj of July&#13;
A.a. sewat&#13;
est iraat door of the&#13;
I the vi&amp;ate of EoweH ia oaM ooaatf {that atJa«&#13;
the plaoe 0(, holding &lt;ao&#13;
OMeitjr ia wMch the&#13;
)4he eald aaortgage odO to Oteeloeed hy&#13;
1&#13;
(4) «ad aoa H) ia&#13;
a»a fdet aad oaroay et&#13;
THE BUSY BEE HIVE&#13;
The CITIZEN'S LEGAL CELEBRATION k&#13;
will be held in Jaeksoii July 5, and you&#13;
are invited to come and niake your head-&#13;
- - — — — ( _ _ . . - . . . . ^ • * . • qoaiten at the BUST BEE HIVE aad&#13;
Si&#13;
look over oar line of goods while yo« rest.&#13;
No troabie to show good* whether joii&#13;
oar&#13;
•^vet&#13;
«H checked IKES.. yijy&gt;&#13;
*i&lt;ir-&#13;
T«SMS l i s * siifaUf, * ' 5 X.H.FIELL&gt;&#13;
P M I ,&#13;
tf *':&#13;
i. Jr i ^4. . . ^ , « 4 * - \&#13;
'\ 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 01, 1897</text>
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                <text>July 01, 1897 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>No Copyright - United States</text>
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                <text>1897-07-01</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="5493">
                <text>Frank L. Andrews</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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      <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>YQ£.;*V, PINO^ENEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MIOH., THUBSDAY, JULY 8, 1897. j .&#13;
SPECIALS&#13;
FOB&#13;
Thursday, Friday\pid Saturday&#13;
Apron Check Gingham&#13;
Lawn&#13;
10c quality Tennis Flannel&#13;
10c quality Linen Crash&#13;
Fancy Sateens&#13;
Men's Cottonade Pants&#13;
Men's $1.00 Percale Shirts&#13;
4%c&#13;
4c&#13;
7%c&#13;
7c&#13;
6%c&#13;
69c&#13;
79c&#13;
Grand Day of 8porta.&#13;
THE FIHfiT MEET OF THE PIHCKSET&#13;
DBITIHe CLUB A HUCCE8S,&#13;
JEOTaf regular review on Friday&#13;
evening of this week.&#13;
Geo, Syke* and wife of Detroit are&#13;
the guests of his parent*, Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Samuel Sykes.&#13;
Win, Thompson Jr., who has been&#13;
quite sick is able to be at work. Hi8&#13;
daughter Leah is some better.&#13;
Miss Emily Stephens, who hies been&#13;
visiting friends in this vicinity for&#13;
several weeks, returned to her home&#13;
in Deerfield Wednesday.&#13;
Business PointQrs^&#13;
FOUND.&#13;
On the road west of Pinckney a&#13;
couple of gents coats. Owners call at&#13;
this offioe tad prove property.&#13;
KEEP COOL BY TAMJXa A&#13;
LAKE TUP.&#13;
Visit—Pieta* •eiwewf^^^^w&#13;
island of cool breezes. Trayel via the&#13;
D. a C, Coast Line. Send 2 cents for&#13;
Illustrated pamphlet Address&#13;
A. A. Secants, G. P. A. Detroit, Mich.&#13;
On Sunday last a black, silk cape&#13;
between B. W. Lake's and Mr. Sopp's.&#13;
binder return to this office md receive&#13;
reward.&#13;
All kinds of Job Printing done at&#13;
this office. Gall and get prices..&#13;
Hetke.&#13;
Cuban giant fodder&#13;
•ale at 60c per bu&#13;
seed corn for&#13;
J0H5 W. HABBI8.&#13;
Program Cards, School Cards, Envelope*&#13;
Letter Heads,, Note Hen*.&#13;
Auction Bilk, etc. Call and get&#13;
Bepair Shops— Bracing&#13;
a&gt;«i&gt;«ii«g Bicyclea. Engines,&#13;
both&#13;
L o c a l D i s p a t c h e s .&#13;
Wm. Monks of Stockbridge spent&#13;
the 4th with his parents.&#13;
Wanted;—Small fruit on subscription&#13;
at this office. Speak quick.&#13;
Mrs. H. E. Campbell returned from&#13;
her visit to Detroit the past week.&#13;
Mies Lizzie Thompson of Detroit is&#13;
the guest of Miss Nina Younglove.&#13;
L. F. Bote and family of Bay City&#13;
were the guests of his mother over&#13;
the 4th.&#13;
Lyle Younglove spent Saturday and&#13;
Sunday under the parental roof in&#13;
Marion.&#13;
Fifty years ago—in July, 1847—&#13;
Uncle Sam issued his first postage&#13;
stamps.&#13;
Miss Lizzie Oeraghty of Stockbridge&#13;
was the guest of Miss Mame Sigler&#13;
the past week.&#13;
Louie Tupper of Howell, spent several&#13;
days the pact week as the guest&#13;
of relatives here. r&#13;
Mrs. S. P. Young and daughter,&#13;
Grace, of Detroit are visiting friends&#13;
and relatives here.&#13;
V7. C. Devereaux, who has been&#13;
teaching the past year in the Upper&#13;
Peninsula, returned home the past&#13;
week for a vacation.&#13;
A. T. Mann and family of Bay City&#13;
spent Saturday and Sunday with his&#13;
mother and sister her.&#13;
Stephen Jeffrey, little son of .John&#13;
Jeffrey, had the misfortune to fall and&#13;
injure an arm quite badly one day&#13;
the past week.&#13;
The past week has been a good one&#13;
for ha?, and many hundreds of tons&#13;
The day of sports given by the driving&#13;
club on Saturday last was one to&#13;
be remembered by all who attended,&#13;
as everything passed off smoothly and&#13;
all were satisfied with the sports and&#13;
the club are to. be congratulated on&#13;
the success of their first mw\. People&#13;
began to arrive early in the morning&#13;
and by afternoon fully 1,500 people&#13;
were on the grounds.&#13;
The first on the program was the&#13;
ball game Pinckney vs Hamburg in&#13;
which Jtbe home team was victorious&#13;
doing up the visiting club by a score&#13;
of 15. to 7. This game was called in&#13;
the forenoon and was very interest*&#13;
ing. The second game was called at&#13;
3:30 and was continued until 6 o'clock&#13;
the weather being too warm to play&#13;
ball fast. Tbe score stood 9 to 6 in&#13;
favor ot Stockbridge but for a long&#13;
time it was hard to tell which one&#13;
would win tbe prize. Tbe track was&#13;
too heavy, having just been completed&#13;
to do good work on, and the heats&#13;
were for only f mile. There were&#13;
three races and the following were&#13;
tbe winners:&#13;
Free tor all—Beat time 1:21¼&#13;
1st priae Doc WhMler, owned by Goo. Praafcer&#13;
2nd prize Gipey M., oirned bj F. Beeman&#13;
8rd price John Caee horae&#13;
Three miaute race—Beet time 1:80&#13;
let prize EvaS, owned by Joan Speexe&#13;
ted prize Meade. W„ owned by Geo, White.&#13;
3rd prize Wagner, owned by John Tnomey&#13;
Banning race-Beet time 5»&#13;
let prize VlndictiTe, owned by Bob Kelly&#13;
2nd prize 'Molly B., owned by Ed. Spears.&#13;
The track while heavy now, will be&#13;
in fine shape after a good rain or two&#13;
to settle the earth and a grand stand&#13;
will be erected for the guests, which&#13;
will give to Pinckney as good a race&#13;
course as any in the surrounding country.&#13;
The club will hold another meet&#13;
in the near future and the success of&#13;
field day will insure a large attendance&#13;
at their future meets.&#13;
IN * TEN&#13;
D O E S N O T&#13;
Trade With&#13;
. . . . US&#13;
We're After That Man!&#13;
About one man in ten dosen't know&#13;
that his neighbors are saving money on&#13;
every deal, because they trade with us,&#13;
We're After That Man!&#13;
About one man in ten oaa'tbe expected&#13;
to know that we are headquarters for&#13;
And we expect to get his trade&#13;
Hiss Gertrude Dolan, formerly of&#13;
this place but now of Detroit, is the&#13;
guest of friends and relatives here. '&#13;
The annual school meeting of this&#13;
district will be held at the school&#13;
building on Monday evening next,&#13;
July 12.&#13;
G, A. Sigler had his steamboat on&#13;
Portage lake Monday aad the craft&#13;
worked nicely. All on the BlunVtrereJ&#13;
treated to a ride and were very much&#13;
pleased.&#13;
Several picnic parties enjoyed themselves&#13;
at Portage lake on Monday.&#13;
What with rowing, sailing, steaming&#13;
and a good dinner the day passed very&#13;
pleasantly.&#13;
A. B. Green and family attended&#13;
the commencement exercises at the U.&#13;
of M., last Thursday where A. B. Jr.,&#13;
received his diploma from the dental&#13;
department of the institute.&#13;
A. B. Green has finished his course&#13;
at the U. of M , dental department&#13;
and received his diploma. He has&#13;
fitted up an office over F. A. Sigler's&#13;
drug store and for two days in the&#13;
week, Thursday and Friday, will be&#13;
prepared to do denta^ work. Bert is&#13;
well known here and all who have&#13;
have bean secured in excellent condi-«had dental work done by him speak&#13;
mowers and other repairing&#13;
Bikes and Sundries,&#13;
J n r u A COLBMAX.&#13;
tie*. The crop is a big one in this I&#13;
part of the state.&#13;
The following corps of teachers&#13;
have bean engaged for the Pinckney&#13;
schoolrtfce coming yearr Principal,&#13;
OILS! OttS!&#13;
AH kinda and grade* of mac&amp;&#13;
iMcdk to be aold cheeper than&#13;
ureal ItwiB be to your advantage&#13;
to otil on TOW?"&#13;
Stephen Doris*: Grammar Dept, C.&#13;
L. Grimes; Intermediate Dept, Miss&#13;
Nina J ones; Primary Dept, Miss Jessie&#13;
Gream.&#13;
Through tbe compliments of A. B.&#13;
I Qordley, we are ia receipt o/ an agri&#13;
* I'V&#13;
cultural bulletin for June from the&#13;
Oregon Agricultural Experiment&#13;
Static*, treating on praam Twentyeight&#13;
pages oi tbe book is in regard&#13;
to Inesnte of the prunes by oar former&#13;
tewnamaa, A. B. Oortky, who a now&#13;
aProtmtheoolleaa,&#13;
ARE YOU THE TENTH MAN?&#13;
WE'RE AFTER YOU!&#13;
F. A. SIGLER,&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICH.&#13;
W E A R E&#13;
Always,&#13;
Everlastingly,&#13;
Continuously,&#13;
Persistently,&#13;
Effectively&#13;
Seeking Trade.&#13;
W E S E L L&#13;
Oil Stoves,&#13;
Gasoline Stoves,&#13;
Wood Stoves,&#13;
Lawn Mowers,&#13;
Bicycles,&#13;
Farming Implements, etc&#13;
W E W I L L&#13;
Gladly,&#13;
Politely,&#13;
Carefully,&#13;
Promptly&#13;
—Wait Upon You.&#13;
* . *«i&#13;
Respectfully Yours,&#13;
TEEPLE 4» CADWELL.&#13;
SPECIALS&#13;
FOB&#13;
Saturday July 10, and continuing&#13;
one week.&#13;
/•&#13;
in the highest praise of it We wish&#13;
him sucoees both here and at his main&#13;
office which will be in Stockbridge.&#13;
Word has been received here that&#13;
J. J. Teeple'i lady Huron, 2:21$, in&#13;
training at Jackson has gone lame.&#13;
This is bad news as Lady Huron&#13;
prom*&#13;
iaad to be a good roadater, however&#13;
she will BOW be bred to tbe oelebrated&#13;
pteug tUlUon, Hkl Dillerd, 2KM|.|&#13;
U«l Dilltrd WM bred by Mtj. Camp- {&#13;
20 per cent off on all Summer Underwear.&#13;
25 per cent an alt Dress Goods.&#13;
One let of Ladies' Serge Gators&#13;
to close" at l i t&#13;
One lot of Children* Slippers to close at 37c&#13;
bell Brown, Spring Hill, Ten*, foal&#13;
ed in 1887,1200 pounds, and now has&#13;
nine colts in the list J. L. Bocae&#13;
will hereafter drive H. H. Swarthoat's&#13;
neeer, Go Some, in races bat the hone&#13;
will he in training and naoar the care&#13;
of Wet. Wilcox.&#13;
All package coffee at 13c per pound.&#13;
Eemember tbe dates. Produce »srj&#13;
'vA&#13;
BABNABD at* CAMPBELL. ,-;::!&#13;
; , • ; • &lt; # !&#13;
kW" 1 «&#13;
^ • - » — * |&#13;
V ,&#13;
Ini.ilii! l - A i ^ ^ - ^ - ^ ^ ^&#13;
&lt; , . * ' • , • . * . . .&#13;
MM *i 1 aMMJMWpjW|MJf«JHB»!WllRPJ^iaK^Mm&#13;
:aW.rffc:'#»qi:&gt;W &lt;U. i^^^'^; i *^&#13;
• - • » ; • ,'-'.J V • :i&gt;: . ' » ' • ' . '.-P*. •''• V ' ••&#13;
'; -^.^'.'Kl'V'V.V*./'^; /-^ ': •••- '-&#13;
:J£&#13;
' V '' '&#13;
l &gt; . '•'•'•&#13;
By: .:'V&#13;
&amp; * •&#13;
Iki-&#13;
f. •&#13;
( d V *&#13;
*&#13;
TWEEN THE LAKES. » i j . .&#13;
T " •*?«•&#13;
MICHIOAN NEWS BttlBPLY TOLD&#13;
FOR Ml0*410 A N D E H *&#13;
.&lt;&gt; J Y&#13;
•Vcesnlnent Agricultural College Students&#13;
Confess Safe Crooking ond Bobbery&#13;
—Deputy OU Inspector* Appointed&#13;
^rrrnJ^ds^lalKultu* at South; 9 e " U&#13;
•Usdents Stele the ML A, C. funds.&#13;
The mystery surrounding the rob-&#13;
Wng nod blowing up of the vault in&#13;
the office of Seoretary Butterfleld, of&#13;
(ha Michigan Agricultural college, on&#13;
e h e n t g h t o f April 6, has been solved,&#13;
aaadwGlifttea ,D. lluttorfleid* aged 19,&#13;
youngest eon of Secretary I. H. But-&#13;
Inrfleid, of the state board of agriculture*&#13;
and Q. DeTere Milder, aged 20,&#13;
•bn of Dr. Carroll E. Miller, of Cadllfas*&#13;
bosh students at the college have&#13;
confessed the crime.&#13;
The fathers of the boys were wellttlgWtorttehed&#13;
by the confession b f then*&#13;
eons, but bete • aided the officers in&#13;
twery possible way to pet at the truth&#13;
e£ the matter. This done, they figured&#13;
tip t h e loss to the state and government,&#13;
and arranged to make it good.&#13;
Tjhe amouet taken frem -the' vault was&#13;
about $3,300. It is under stood that&#13;
fTOO was returned by young Butterfleld&#13;
£d 1800 by Miller. The balance they&#13;
d spent. Butterfleld had got away&#13;
with the larger sum, it being his ex-,&#13;
fcaragant expenditures which led to&#13;
fits detection and the up raveling of the&#13;
•uystery.&#13;
Miller and Butterfleld Have been before&#13;
the U. &amp; commissioners and given&#13;
nail/for their appearance at the fall&#13;
terni of the diatriot court&#13;
Mlonlgan's Deputy OU Inspectors. .&#13;
State Oil Inspector T. R. Smith, of&#13;
Ltwton, has appointed his deputies for&#13;
ttie various districts of the etate with ti exception of three—the Ninth,&#13;
irteenth and Fourteenth—as follows:&#13;
First and Second districts— W. P. T.&#13;
Burtdft; # t d Cha|C Hinckley, of Detroit*&#13;
Thtrd*-F. J. Temple, of Tecuraseh.&#13;
,., Coujxth—A. Hoover, of- Coldwater.&#13;
Fifth—P. IT. Burke, of Kalamazoo.&#13;
Sixth—A. D. Young, of Wlea. y&#13;
Seventh—a W.Edison. Gran^Bapi&lt;f».&#13;
Eighth H. A. Wolff, of Muskegon*&#13;
Tenth—a W. La Due, of Corunna.&#13;
Eleventh—A. W. Wilkinson, Chelsea,&#13;
Twelfth—Arthur Carry, o f Oteneso.&#13;
Fifteenth—W. E. BeferCoi^lpenav&#13;
Sixteenth—L. Astrirp, of MJtaominee.&#13;
• Seventeenth—H. 8. Qoode 11.Hough ton&#13;
i Eighteenth—F. B&gt; Withey, Manistee.&#13;
' Nineteenth—F.L.Baldwin,Menislng.&#13;
'• Twentieth—C A. Ingeraon, Grayling.&#13;
Twentyiirst — F\Fred#rieks, Trav-&#13;
•eCity. °&#13;
Twenty-second—B. R Brazil, Iron-&#13;
A Mlchlgmn Ulrfs&#13;
Mrs. Gertrude Alien ? W.hitt*ker,&#13;
- -daughter of Capt M. Allen, of Portland,&#13;
was arrested at Lanulng on a warrant&#13;
from Denver,, Cola, where for several&#13;
years she has been prominent in politics,&#13;
having been employed in one of&#13;
the city departments. It is alleged&#13;
that she is implicated in an election&#13;
fraud, and on this the warrant is&#13;
based. Miss Allen was clerk of her preoinot&#13;
and handled the ballot .boxes.&#13;
It is discovered that they were tampered&#13;
with, but she denies all knowledge&#13;
of how it happened. She was&#13;
notified of the discovery several weeks&#13;
ago, and' immediately wrote offering to&#13;
return voluntarily and help straighten&#13;
matters out if wanted. She will be&#13;
taken to Denver as sqon as officers arrive&#13;
from there.' ...;-.&#13;
Nine years ago Mrsj..SyhHtake*,w,enl&#13;
to Lansing from Portland,,.and cashed&#13;
a draft for «3,000 at the Lansing National&#13;
bank, which afterwards,, it was&#13;
alleged, proved to be forgery. About&#13;
the same time she went to Colorado&#13;
with her cousin, Frank M. Allen. She&#13;
was caught two years later, brought&#13;
back and tried for alleged complicity'&#13;
in forgery, but the first jury disagreed,&#13;
and the case was nolle pressed. Mrs.&#13;
WhiUaker obtain a divorce from her&#13;
husband and went back to Colorado.&#13;
The third annual picnic of the Ingham,&#13;
Raton and Clinton county pioneer&#13;
society was held at Leadley's park,&#13;
Lansing. Some 600 persons were&#13;
present.&#13;
Floyd EUicott, aged. 15, displaced his&#13;
shoulder blade by taking a header&#13;
from his wheei near Teoumseht but he&#13;
bravely mounted the machine again&#13;
and rode a mile to a doctor.&#13;
The large dry goods store of M. Es&gt;&#13;
therson at Sturgis was totally, destroyed&#13;
by a fire, the cause of which is&#13;
unknown. The loss * on stock and .#&#13;
building is «16,500; fully insured. A&#13;
ITEMS OF NEWS.&#13;
I M M P Q R T A ^ T . A ^ P i^TBB^TrNq&#13;
M A T T E R S lN^BRlSF.&#13;
r iU.&#13;
• I ! J V--.- Kndoavor Cxounlont on th«&#13;
Stat* Bar Association.&#13;
The eighth annual convention of the&#13;
Michigan State Bar association was&#13;
held at Port Huron. President O'Brien&#13;
J. Atkinson, in his annual address,&#13;
gave a history of the association and&#13;
recommended the reading of biographies&#13;
of leading members of the bar at&#13;
future meetings of the association.&#13;
An animated discussion was had on the&#13;
new law which admits graduates of&#13;
the U. of M. law school and of the Detroit&#13;
College of Law to practice upon&#13;
the strength of their diplomas. The&#13;
general trend of the discussion was in&#13;
opposition to the law. There were&#13;
a rmmber of other interesting and important&#13;
matters debated and papers&#13;
read. The entertainment of the lawyers&#13;
included a trip on the river to&#13;
Stag island and a banquet at the Harrington&#13;
hotel.&#13;
r a t a l Knotting BosnlU Front n Job*.&#13;
Samuel Ketehum, of Kalamazoo, was&#13;
^&#13;
ot by his nephew, Bertie Haines, a^&#13;
tuth Haven, and died in five minutee.&#13;
The men were staying in a cottage&#13;
owned by T. E. Thompson, and had&#13;
been playing jokes on one another,&#13;
and someone was throwing water into S*-house. Samuel Ketchum laughly&#13;
remarked, "I will put on an old&#13;
4Uat, and don't eare- whether"! get wet&#13;
JnVMPtfc " jftfet aa he, stepped outside&#13;
&amp; e house, the shot was fired, striking&#13;
U m in the shoulder and cutting an&#13;
artery. He bled to death before&#13;
Melp could arrive. Bertie. Haines said&#13;
he thought Ketchum was a tramp,&#13;
Mihea h e fired. The coroner's jury&#13;
Mnale Teaehsr* Moat nt Detroit*&#13;
The twelfth annual convention of&#13;
the Michigan Music Teachers', association&#13;
was held at Detroit Mayor May-&#13;
J bury made a happy speech of welcome&#13;
and offered to sing a song for the&#13;
teachers, but the police refused permission&#13;
for fear of a riot The program&#13;
of the convention included several&#13;
concerts and interesting and important&#13;
papers and addresses upon&#13;
subjects near the heart of music lovers&#13;
and teachers, one of the most pleasing&#13;
entertainments being a program rendered&#13;
by the celebrated pianist, Leopold&#13;
Godowsky. Mrs. Ida Norton, of&#13;
Detroit, was elected president and F.&#13;
L. Abel, of Detroit, secretary-treasurer,&#13;
for the ensuing year.&#13;
»&#13;
Mother pied for Her Little Ones.&#13;
Lightning struck the house of Geo.&#13;
Copeland during a storm at Stanwood&#13;
and burned it to the ground a t 3 a. m.&#13;
The grown people escaped from the&#13;
burning structure without trouble, but&#13;
Mrs. Baudoin, Copeland's sister-in-law,&#13;
discovered that her two little children&#13;
were still in the flames and she rushed&#13;
in to save them. She succeeded in carrying&#13;
out her little boy, although he&#13;
was so badly burned that he may die.&#13;
and then she returned for her little&#13;
girL Neither mother nor child reached&#13;
the open air again, but both perished.&#13;
rendered a verdict of accidental and&#13;
unintentional shooting.&#13;
Too Mneh Hypnotism&#13;
The Adrian high school picnic at&#13;
Hand lake was spoiled by an incident&#13;
Mot on the program. Frank Boyd gave&#13;
* display of hU power by hypnotising&#13;
several of the boya. Miss Mary Chauffer,&#13;
daughter of Be v. &lt;X H* Channer,&#13;
deaired Boyd to put her under hypnotic&#13;
hUUrnee aud he did so effectually.&#13;
When he. brought her t o consciousness&#13;
4he fainted, and it was a half hour before&#13;
she could be brought to her sensea.&#13;
The tainting continued all the way&#13;
h^n|e,*ai&gt;d serious reeulte are feared.&#13;
•""^•^are many, aaoateur hypnotists « * am nag, the t U g h .eubooi student*, and&#13;
their ardor for the&#13;
crane. ....i&#13;
About midnight Sheriff LacDberaon&#13;
eight deputies, awaoped .down&#13;
upon South Haven and made a raid&#13;
Mfxm the illegal whisky shops, four&#13;
&lt;*W*\ 'ti#*&lt;» Ending SStfitfe&#13;
fcplei* Barnesand Geo. Croas'. Four&#13;
Aeruons were captured l a on one o f&#13;
mm places is an ingenious device,&#13;
Jffrich |s fitted as a. Farris wheeL , The&#13;
eaoney U ptaeed la one oTffie&#13;
Itestasd tp bring whatever the fancy&#13;
4e«M»*fefSjiB&gt;rtor-afterwards boose u&#13;
Maid to appear without anyone knowing&#13;
free* where or bow. ui# tr ^ ^&#13;
to Kntor the C. P.&#13;
Arbor railway has bought&#13;
eno Chieajpo Lumber Co. railroad.&#13;
Manning from Maatsttquc to within six&#13;
^dies/Mf Munisingand will put in a oar&#13;
sftip at hlasUetktne. It w i l l also oom-&#13;
A e t o the liae t o Mnnising, with a&#13;
branch to Kegaunee. The whole line&#13;
&lt;o be 63 miles long. Boats will run all&#13;
Winter to Jaanieuan*, a # d n apeoial&#13;
boat will eontlnsje nn t b a o l d ronae to&#13;
Menominee.&#13;
MICHIGAN NEWS ITEMS.&#13;
The Baptist church at fteed City has&#13;
celebrated its Uventy^fifthanniversary. \ prosecution:—&#13;
Over 10,000 Maccabees from northern&#13;
Michigan will attend a big picnic at&#13;
Petoskey, July 14.&#13;
Ontonagon Methodists will build a&#13;
ehurch in place of the one destroyed by&#13;
the big fire last year.&#13;
About a dozen Scandinavian societies&#13;
celebrated midsummer day at Menominee&#13;
with a parade and picnic.&#13;
An unusual birthday celebration was&#13;
that of Henry Orth and Mrs. Maria&#13;
Fulda, twins, aged 90, at Detroit&#13;
Fred Welsh, an old soldier, and quite&#13;
wealthy, committed suicide at Oscoda,&#13;
by cutting his throat with a penknife.&#13;
hVe bnd been ill for esnw tiineV&#13;
Uncle Sam has notified - Mayor&#13;
Onaintance, of Petoskejr, that free&#13;
mail delivery will be inaugurated&#13;
there within the next fiscal year.&#13;
In the jnstiee court at Manistee the&#13;
captain and lieutenant of the Salvation&#13;
Army were fined for - holding nofoy&#13;
meetings on a prominent street corner.&#13;
Mrs. Dnrius Stone, aged 70, fell into&#13;
a cistern a* Muir and receivedprobahly&#13;
fatal injuries. The water was above&#13;
andTahe was saved wiitth dhttcnlty;&#13;
A Paris cable says that the recent&#13;
terrible holocaust at the charities&#13;
barer, a* Paris, when 100 of the lending&#13;
people of France lost thelrtieea,&#13;
is now believed to have been caused by&#13;
anarchists.&#13;
J. D. S. Hanson, editor of the Hart&#13;
Journal, was oriving with his wife&#13;
and two daughters-, when the team become&#13;
unmanageable. Hanson and the&#13;
girls jumped out, but Mrs. Hanson&#13;
stayed in for nearly a mile, when she&#13;
jumped, striking upon her head and&#13;
shoulders, and reeelving such injuries&#13;
that she may die.&#13;
the 19th U. S. infantry, stationed at&#13;
F t Wayne* Detroit, was drowned in&#13;
the Clinton river in Macomb county,&#13;
pear where his company was engaged&#13;
ha target practice.&#13;
Jackson has extended an invitation&#13;
to the Trl-State Band association to&#13;
hold its annual convention in Jackson&#13;
next August % The invitation was accepted&#13;
by President Smith, of the association,&#13;
who states that 60 bands&#13;
will be there. '&#13;
Samuel Pryor, aged 70, was killed by&#13;
a Michigan Central. train at Albion.&#13;
Pryor was deaf and partially blind,&#13;
and was walking in the middle of the&#13;
track. About 15 years, ago at the same&#13;
place Pryor was struck by a train and&#13;
had one leg cut off.&#13;
Charles Tuttle, an employe of the&#13;
Upton works, at Port Huron, attempted&#13;
to commit suicide by the laudanum&#13;
route, after spending his week's&#13;
wages on drink. He is not expected&#13;
t o recover. Later—Tuttle died from&#13;
the poison. He leaves a large family.&#13;
While returning home from a neighbor's&#13;
house, Mrs. James G. Lake, who&#13;
lives in the outskirts of Sault Ste.&#13;
Marie, was terribly gored by a cpw&#13;
and may die from the injuries received.&#13;
'Mrs. Lake had shut the cow's calf away&#13;
from her iust before going to the&#13;
neighbor's.&#13;
Bertha Winkler has been sentenced&#13;
at East Jordan to 90 days at the Detroit&#13;
house of correction for stealing&#13;
goods from the East Jordan Lumber&#13;
Co.'s store. She hid in the store until&#13;
after It was closed. Her parents are&#13;
respectable farmers and the girl is&#13;
only 16 years old and bore a good reputation.&#13;
A young man believed to be&#13;
her accomplice has escaped.&#13;
The tillage of Stevensyille was terrorized.&#13;
by a gang of 300 tramps who&#13;
burglarized houses and stole chickens,&#13;
pigs and calves which they roasted.&#13;
One of the hoboes was arrested and the&#13;
gang broke into the jail and released&#13;
him. Another one was locked up later,&#13;
and when an attempt was made to rescue&#13;
him the citizens backed up t h e village&#13;
marshal with revolvers and landed&#13;
the fellow in the county jail.&#13;
The Saylor Hoop Co., which was es^&#13;
tabllshed at Gladwin several years ago&#13;
by the bonus process', has given n mortgage&#13;
to New York creditors in the sum&#13;
of $10,000, leaving many local creditors&#13;
out in the cold. For several years the&#13;
capital of the hoop basmess was really&#13;
supplied by the local tradesmen, who&#13;
accepted the orders in trade, then took&#13;
60 and 90-day paper. Local creditors&#13;
have attached everything in s i g h t&#13;
Two prominent citizens of Manistee&#13;
were caught red-handed in the act&#13;
of drawing nets, under the dam upon&#13;
the Little Manistee river. They had&#13;
their nets strung upon a wire, operating&#13;
an inch below the surface of the&#13;
watert, and strung so that not a fish&#13;
could come down through the chute&#13;
without getting caught They had&#13;
over a thousand trout in their poaaeoaion&#13;
when caught Attorney-General&#13;
liaynard will personally conduct the&#13;
Christian&#13;
We/ to nan FrnocUeo Wreaked nod&#13;
Flvo Persons Killed—Venesaeln Has&#13;
nn Exciting Cabinet Crisis.&#13;
Christian Endeavor Trains Wrecked*&#13;
^ , . . The great international Christian En-&#13;
Private Vasbaw, a recent recruit J% deavor convention at San Frapclso and&#13;
the low rates made by the railroads attracted&#13;
many hundreds of excursionbits&#13;
and the dates tor, the starting of&#13;
the trains drew such crowds into Chicago&#13;
that the railroads had hard work&#13;
to handle them. One large excursion&#13;
train was sent out .from Chicago on the&#13;
Chicago &amp; Northwestern in nine sections&#13;
carrying about 0,000, and when&#13;
about 30 miles out a collision occurred&#13;
between sebtions 4 and, 5 wfclih had&#13;
Started 15 minutes a^aVt ^Set^jpn' r5&#13;
came up behind at great speed and the&#13;
shock of the collision was terrific. The&#13;
passengers in the two rear sleepers of&#13;
section 4 were all in their berths.&#13;
They received "no warning and those&#13;
not killed outright awoke to find themselves&#13;
jammed in the wreckage. Passengers&#13;
on both trains hastened to the&#13;
spot and began the work of rescue. One&#13;
of the first of the injured taken out&#13;
was Engineer Charles Courtney, of section&#13;
5. He had struck to his post like&#13;
a hero and is so seriously injured that&#13;
he cannot live. The body of an unidentified&#13;
man, supposed to be a tramp,&#13;
was found between a baggage oar and&#13;
the engine crushed to death. Three&#13;
persons were found to be killed outright&#13;
and about 90 or 30 persons injured.&#13;
The dead are: Mrs. John Gooding,&#13;
and Mrs. R. Shipman, both of Apple&#13;
ton, Wis., add the unknown tramp,&#13;
who was riding between engine, and&#13;
baggage can.&#13;
Train 11, on the Vandalia railroad,&#13;
which left Indianapolis with a large&#13;
number of Christian Endeavorers, collided&#13;
with train 6, bound east from S t&#13;
Louis, near Vandalia, Ind. Two trainmen&#13;
were killed and two fatally injured,&#13;
as follows: Killed—B. T. Sherman,&#13;
mailcler4c.No.&lt;6f of JndUnapolis,&#13;
and W. P. Coop, baggageman, of Indianapolis,&#13;
on No. iL, FataUy injured&#13;
—Samuel Parkinson, mail clerk;,, of&#13;
Columbus, 0.,crushed in the wreck,&#13;
Frank Ownes, fireman, of Ter re Haute,&#13;
mangled under the engine. None of&#13;
the passengers were seriously injured.&#13;
More Crneainf by nUeetrlelty.&#13;
Burglars resorted to a novel scheme&#13;
t o open a bank safe at Chagrin Falls,&#13;
O. They entered the bank of Rogers&#13;
A S o n , ' after having attached&#13;
a wire to the trolley line of the electric&#13;
railway. This wire was'run over a&#13;
transom and to tfre safe. Another wire&#13;
was attached t o the rail of the street carf&#13;
track. At the ends of these wires were&#13;
carbon points, and with these an attempt&#13;
was made with the arc light&#13;
thus formed to melt the* know of the&#13;
combination. The experiment worked&#13;
all right and the knob had been nearly&#13;
melted away when t h e current was&#13;
shut off at the street railway power&#13;
house shortly after midnight The&#13;
burglars then gave up the task. The&#13;
job was planned scientifically and&#13;
would have proven successful within a&#13;
few minutes.&#13;
T H n 6 5 T H CONQRKS8 AT WOfiK&#13;
,6WUxsVr-X4Jh dajt.-rPwUMt to rapid&#13;
pttafrwmhdjcduriiir tt&gt;4 4 » * r 4 spite&#13;
of stubborn contests ou a number of&#13;
paragraphs the Sep ate completed the&#13;
W^raoneuule? the smn&gt;**&gt;edule and&#13;
the tobacco schedule of the tariff bill,&#13;
ftnH) wt^'lhls8facconiplhCbed] the tariff&#13;
loader^ bad «)re . *4tiaJadtiQn of&#13;
knowing' ' that '&gt;-nil '(h/o' schedules&#13;
of the bill and the ; free T^at&#13;
had been gone' over once.**'Tnere&#13;
dow remains only to go through&#13;
the bill a second time, passing oh item*&#13;
passed over.' These are very numerous&#13;
and important&#13;
SKNXTK—75th day—An abrupt and&#13;
startling halt in the Jtariff debate occurred&#13;
when*, in the midst o f * speech,&#13;
Senator Pettigremt, silver,. Republican*&#13;
of South Dakota, was atrlcken . with&#13;
paralysis of the vocal cords which&#13;
brought his vehement speech .to a ejose.&#13;
with aaentenoe.ha.if uttered. The Senator&#13;
was not physically incapacitated,&#13;
except in the augden loss of his voice.&#13;
Although he took, his seat unaided,&#13;
bis associates felt that grave possibilities&#13;
were involved in such an attack.&#13;
They were quickly by his side and he&#13;
was ministered to with as little confusion&#13;
as possible. He left the chamber&#13;
soon after and was taken home by&#13;
bis friends. The debate proceeded,&#13;
but no further progress on the tarijf&#13;
bill was made, and the a we-like feeling&#13;
occasioned by this incident led to an&#13;
early adjournment Later in the day&#13;
Mr. Pettlgrew was reported to be rap-&#13;
Jdly&lt;recovering. , ...I'x&#13;
&gt;(&#13;
SEWATE.—76th day.—Good- progress&#13;
was made on the tariff-J&gt;ill, d isposing&#13;
of the paragraphs relating to hides&#13;
which have been ,the source of mneh&#13;
controversy. The discission was protracted,&#13;
drifting into a general debate&#13;
on trusts, and to a severe arraignment&#13;
of the sugar'trust by Messrs. Caffery&#13;
and Lindsay, and a general discussion&#13;
of means to deal with trusts by Mr.&#13;
Hoar.&#13;
SINAT^.—77tb day.—After tedious&#13;
consideration of the tariff bill throughout&#13;
the day—the lead paragraphs being&#13;
disposed of—the*'Senate wound up&#13;
with a half hour of lively and amusing&#13;
colloquy between Senators Tillman, of&#13;
South Carolina, and Chandler, of New&#13;
Hampshire. The former had proposed&#13;
an amendment to the tariff bill, providing&#13;
a 1100 a head tax on immigrants,&#13;
and a restriction against all those not&#13;
coming to the United States to become&#13;
cfiiaens. Mr. Tillman made an earnest&#13;
speech on the depressed condition&#13;
of labor, but was diverted from his&#13;
theme by Mr. Chandler. T h e latter,&#13;
adopting a stye* of mocfc&gt;gravityv directed&#13;
the discussion toward Mr. Cleveland's&#13;
administration. This brought&#13;
from Mr. Tillman a vehement criticism&#13;
of %he late President, while Mr, Chandler&#13;
drolly protested against these assaults&#13;
on Mr. Cleveland by a member&#13;
of his own party. The Tillman amendments&#13;
were'finally defeated. •&#13;
Cabinet Crisis In Venesnela.&#13;
Dispatches from Caracas, Venezuela,&#13;
state that the cabinet has rcslguedowing&#13;
to differences over ^he. British&#13;
Guiana boundary question. President&#13;
Secretary of State Gardner reports&#13;
that the cost of maintaining jails the&#13;
past year was $142,261, of which 9123.-&#13;
477 went for board. Traveling and&#13;
other expenses connected with taking&#13;
prisoners to jail aggregate 929,910; to&#13;
prisons 913,206. The total expense of&#13;
arresting and detaining prisoners was&#13;
9167.910. The number of prisoners received&#13;
during the year was 16,432, of&#13;
whom 1,099 were women. To Jackson&#13;
prison were sent 290-, Ionia, 312; Detroit&#13;
house*©* ^orrecUon, 1474; boys',&#13;
reform school, 177; girls' school 40.&#13;
Probate judges are receiving circulars&#13;
from the state authorities relative&#13;
to the new law which gives them . the&#13;
power to issue marriage, license* and&#13;
solemnize marriages, under certain circumstances:&#13;
'When the woman I s with&#13;
child; when the woman haa lived with&#13;
the man as his wife, and for reasons&#13;
deemed sufficient by the judge, JTor&#13;
the first two reasons only can' licenses&#13;
be issued to female* unde* 16 years.&#13;
The strictest secrecy is to be maintamed&#13;
by t h e court ana attachee,&#13;
and the newspapers are enjoined&#13;
under penalty of a fine from mentioning-&#13;
each marriages.&#13;
The anti-bishop faction of S t Stanislaus*&#13;
Polish Catholic church a t Bay&#13;
City have begun to despair of a an*&#13;
preme court decision in their favor,&#13;
and some of the leaders talk strongly&#13;
of leaving the Catholic church&#13;
Crespo was unable to harmonize the&#13;
differences in the official-family over&#13;
the boundary arbitration treaty, the&#13;
element that contended that the provisions&#13;
of that agreement ignored the&#13;
sovereignty of Venezuela in stipulating&#13;
that Great Britain and the United&#13;
States only, and not Venezuela also,&#13;
name the members of the tribunal of&#13;
steamer Went Down—#9 14vos&#13;
The missing steamer Aden, which&#13;
left Yokahama on April 28, for London&#13;
via Aden, Arabia, is a total lam, having&#13;
been dashed to pieces off the island&#13;
qt Soco.tra». *&amp; the. eastern extremity of&#13;
Africa, on June 9. The unfortunate&#13;
steamer carried 34 passenger from&#13;
Japan besides the crew. The steamer&#13;
Mayo, which went lb search of the&#13;
missing vessel, saved nine of the Aden's&#13;
crew. In all it is thought that 69.persons&#13;
lost their lives in the disaster by&#13;
being swept overboard one by one ^during&#13;
the storm. The Mayo saved nine&#13;
of the Aden's passengers and three of&#13;
f h n wrhrttt mnA ft* M tlw&gt; n » H w » « nt t h f t&#13;
steamer's crew. All&#13;
were rescued just •&#13;
breaking up.&#13;
of these persons&#13;
B the Aden&#13;
*fcree Killed by a Boiler&#13;
The boiler of an engine attached to&#13;
a threshing machine, exploded near&#13;
AdairetdUe.Ga., killing three tt)e* ia-&#13;
Rtantly and fatally woundung four&#13;
others, while sttU another ™*i fcfi his&#13;
legs mangled so badly tbat ^they bud&#13;
church, which was organised a few&#13;
months ago at Scran ton. Pa. The new&#13;
church retains the forms and ritual of&#13;
Catholicism bnt is run on ehe congregational&#13;
basis. Many of these Bay&#13;
City Poles have been worshiping&#13;
in the African M. £). church, white&#13;
still more have been attending no&#13;
ehurch at all.&#13;
arbitration, having continued Implace-1 J? *• * f « ? ^ ^ ¾ „ ^ w m t e f a ,&#13;
ble. T h e « s i g n a U o n o f t h e s e m e m b e r t l J h e * X J * 0 8 * o n i All of th«&gt;dea* end^nof&#13;
the cabinet and the consequent&#13;
crisis caused great excitement A new&#13;
cabinet has been formed, however.&#13;
8eys 16 to 1 Can't Win.&#13;
"For one, I do not believe i t possible&#13;
to succeed upon a phvttotm that demands&#13;
the unqualified coinage of silver&#13;
on the ratio of 16 to 1 with gold. We&#13;
have fought that battte and it i s l o s t&#13;
We can never fight it over under cb&gt;&#13;
eumstances more favorable to ourselves.&#13;
If w e hope to succeed, we&#13;
avtat abendon this extreme demand."&#13;
i n these weeds ^Horace Boies, former&#13;
jured were white except one.&#13;
T H E M A R K E T S .&#13;
LIVE STOCK.&#13;
Few fork—Cattle Sheep&#13;
BestKradC8...H 7.^5 00 t i n&#13;
Lower grades, t 7odi to J l SO&#13;
Chicago—&#13;
Best grades....4 7oa5 00 4 00&#13;
Lower grades.. 2 Q0O4 00 t tt&#13;
Detroit—&#13;
Best grades....4 0004 &amp;&gt; . J »&#13;
Lower grades. .2 83$4 00 2 00&#13;
tonftaio-"-' • ' ; K&#13;
! Beetejrades...AQQQ* St *' t n V&#13;
Lower grades.SOOdS^N t ^&#13;
Cincinnati—&#13;
Lambs&#13;
a i w&#13;
4 n&#13;
governor of Iowa and erstwhile'Demo- Besfrraaes... 4 oo*4 st&#13;
eratte presidential aspirant, tadroseps Lower ri&#13;
the voters of the United States who&#13;
demsnd the free coinage o f silver, in a&#13;
letter te-GoL D. M. Fox of Des Meinea.&#13;
sat&#13;
475&#13;
SbO&#13;
A dyn&#13;
• * by&#13;
dynamite explosion in South&#13;
Scranton, Pa., blew up the business&#13;
block of Leon OlchofakL a double&#13;
'grades&#13;
Cleveland—&#13;
PMtsbnrg—&#13;
Best grades... .4 6*fc6 00&#13;
Lower grades, .f 4*9)1»&#13;
s*sd40^o ri nt iv• ' . 4t0ti*&#13;
.ML&#13;
ISO&#13;
t M&#13;
600&#13;
140&#13;
4S5&#13;
t i e&#13;
J*&#13;
: «&#13;
!5&#13;
* »x:&#13;
O a t s&#13;
Vo.s watte&#13;
^_ mmmnm dwelling owned by him and the nearby&#13;
joining the new Polish fndVprnilent I h &lt; w n g ^ Mltinsel^xrBnra: ThT business&#13;
block was torn to pieces, and 80&#13;
other houses had all the windows&#13;
blown out and plaster torn from the&#13;
walls. The shot % was felt all over the&#13;
city. Olchofski was fatally injured in&#13;
saving his wife. He alleges that the&#13;
explosion was the work of enemies he&#13;
made daring political and church dieiputes.&#13;
OKAxW, ETC&#13;
* • Wheat,' • -•&gt; Corn,&#13;
t NuJUrea . JXo * mix&#13;
Now York 77 %tn 10 4&gt;Jtyf&#13;
•Dotrost n 9» 96&#13;
Totode ' 8t &amp;l% u OSSH&#13;
ClnoUnetl SO ^80 y &amp;*&amp;&#13;
4Aevolnnd 89 ^83 a «UO&#13;
Pistsberg 81 QSi 9 Ot&amp;)4&#13;
Ueftufte , a&gt; Vi) ,#*%*&#13;
Po•ptaettoreosl,t -nHeway s, oNuot.h 1e rUnm, o$1th nre, rHbOn M: poeldr .t Mona. fLoiwvels .P 8ocu;l trtuy rksepyrsi,n g1 0&lt;c;* idckuecnkas,. Slise. ^5 a¾a¾Z spterri cltbl:y cfrreeashmVelr y&gt;c * p?e- r des. -^^*uwV-^. ws soimryy, lmmmi&#13;
m&#13;
n'&#13;
*&#13;
to&#13;
/&#13;
:!«..• W^..V--**-«»»&#13;
' 4 :/".'V;^- '7-V'.-«'vvX'' •:-'!• ':is-.&gt;?'• ¢-.^/^/--,. , • ' ^ v ^ ' — ^ ' ' ' ' v ' ' ' ; : r ' ! / ' • ' • :*' •" '..'•'*•• &lt;•"."'•'/ -• • '.'-,,',-": ;U. '*•...•••'• .•'"• • "v. :/•" *•••.•• 'i&lt; •' L ••••• ' "•••'• '. •'•'&#13;
» . ' * • •&#13;
:•*•'• :9&amp;&#13;
•f1 }tr.,*fa&#13;
trie*'&#13;
aard&#13;
school,&#13;
bench.&#13;
F&#13;
SI 8MUAS SOHKOW.&#13;
Wenda.i.irtwa,, , » «&#13;
ami , * ! S M t f c r&#13;
the*, couldn't be.&#13;
We was raited togather&#13;
In the same&#13;
tannin' section, an'&#13;
what Utile larnia'&#13;
we had w u s g o t n u t&#13;
o' the same books.&#13;
In the same dees*&#13;
an' on the tame&#13;
In fee' w e had&#13;
kinder grown up under the same Influences&#13;
an' waa more like brothers&#13;
tban some real brothers are.&#13;
In moet ways 81 wasn't like other&#13;
boys-v l tte Wat^ e V b j i l e t a a J oleVfaabloned&#13;
like tbat.be never teemed like&#13;
a boy at all, an' n * girl could er bin&#13;
more gentle an*'latin' than he was.&#13;
He was jest o n e e &gt; them ehapa thatt&#13;
other bo** are alway* pokin' fun at&#13;
an* then go to fer advice an' sympathy&#13;
when they get in trubMe, an' one 2ey*d flfcbt t-&gt;r $ukABer*n their oWn&#13;
£•» ' '": • " - '&#13;
, Wlft^me anr 81 growed up to manhood'jest&#13;
as weM bib in our chlldliood-&#13;
i&amp;e confldln'est o' friends; an'&#13;
0 ½ Wtberfl used ter laugh at us In&#13;
that pleated sort o* way good mothers&#13;
l e v « a r ' * m us we'd better get&#13;
the domlnte, to marry us, so a s&#13;
ie make o u r p a r t n e r s h i p a l i t -&#13;
jgn . i p o T e b l n d l n * . We waz alw&#13;
a y s i o g e t h e r , when we wazn't at_&#13;
it abou.t our fathers' farinfl, an*1 If&#13;
» _.&lt;.'_ '_' lero waz a b' Lu. sLk^ i'nU ** ' bKeAe&gt;, omr&gt; *aO asp rieall l1l1nn*&#13;
•school, or a alngln\ class in the deestric*&#13;
.ybu'il never find one of us tbare&#13;
Jf, the other wazn't.&#13;
^Of,course, beia/joung men, an' purt&#13;
y scrumptious lookin*' ones at that, we&#13;
,,waz m l g h t r . j c # J a r ( . w } t h the, j$lrls&#13;
thereabouts, an' used ter see 'em home&#13;
from pray'f meetin's, an' slch like; but,&#13;
^ t b l n ^ e r j o u a x a m e of it tllj we got;&#13;
jto qo^tln* ,'Ll*a Hawkins, which waz&#13;
my sweetheart, an' Sally Turner, which&#13;
Wat SI'S*.. ,, l \. .,» , «t\ • &lt; &gt; •&#13;
.. They war' the nicest an' purtlest&#13;
girls you ever set eyes on, though,,\o&#13;
be sure I thort 'Liza waa the charmin'eat&#13;
an' Si had the same opinyu.n.o'&#13;
Sally, which waz nat'ral.enoagfr, con-^&#13;
aiderin' that a men ought ter think&#13;
more of hit own t; sweetheart than o'&#13;
t i m e one else's. . ,.&#13;
3 L-jteomm some folks would say we&#13;
a*a*;a little vU» i-womenlsh,- but any&#13;
hojrvm*-*nt.aUitise4 ler her long talks&#13;
about our feelin's towards the girls,&#13;
eji* i * e uaahot of K waz that 1 owned&#13;
u p t e M' that-1- was heels over bed in&#13;
leve with 'Lma*an' •he^eonfeaeed to me&#13;
that ha wan jest as deep in love with&#13;
feaHy. "Per' dhe *whoie summer an'&#13;
winter wet kept on sparkHT the two&#13;
girls, an' every day we'd talk it all&#13;
over fdr* the hundredctt 'time* betwixt&#13;
ourselves, wonderln' if they-lorW us&#13;
an'-ff we'd betteT ask* *em to marryr us.&#13;
an' all that sort of thing: but somehow&#13;
•ailed me o u t The mlnit I saw him&#13;
afore. Hit fate was at white as a&#13;
sheet, an* it Jest made my hear( ache&#13;
Jer see that look o' tufferln' an' agony&#13;
in bit deep-sunken eyes. I started to&#13;
say somethln'—to inquire what had&#13;
happened—but he raised his hand with&#13;
a sort of deenairln' motion an' tec. In&#13;
a hoarse, choked voice:&#13;
"Don't Josh—donrt speak yet far&#13;
awhtler&#13;
We walked slowly down the lane,&#13;
neither of us speakln', an' neither of&#13;
ua seemlh* to know whare we waz go-&#13;
In*. Bimeby we got as far as the&#13;
barnyard gate an' stopped an' leaned&#13;
on the bars in a sort o* unspoken&#13;
misery—fer Si's misery made me mis-&#13;
'erabie, too.&#13;
"Wal, Josh," sed he after awhile,&#13;
without lookin' up, an* speakln1 In a&#13;
onnafral sort o' vpice* "it'tall over!",&#13;
'"vyhatf* set I guessln'' wbajt. ne:&#13;
jnean^'VHas Snlly refused yehj?"&#13;
' "Wuss!*; sez H% tryln' to force back&#13;
jv groan.&#13;
"What could be wusser'n that. SIT"&#13;
I asked.&#13;
"She, told me,*; sed be..,je^t, above a&#13;
w'iaper. "that she is goln' to marry&#13;
Z^b Ward next month. I didn't put&#13;
the question to her—it's well I didn't.&#13;
£be invited me to the weddin'. It&#13;
nigh killed me. Josh!"&#13;
"Wal, consarn the " I began, as&#13;
mad as fury at what seemed her flirtin'&#13;
ways, but Si raised his hand an'&#13;
stopped me.&#13;
"Don't—not a word agin, her Josh!"&#13;
He sed, narW up. "RemembeTT I love&#13;
her"'&#13;
It wazn't in ma to hurt his feelin's,&#13;
an' I asked, lonsid'ably cooled down:&#13;
"Does she know yer feelin's, Si?"&#13;
He shook his head. "I' didn't tell&#13;
h*r—I couldn't She Jest looked on me&#13;
aa a friend. I reckon. She must never&#13;
know, JoBh. It might sp'lle her happiness,"&#13;
he sed; an' then neither of us&#13;
could^ find anything to say for a long&#13;
timer jest stood there, a-lookin' at the&#13;
stars 'Way off 'raongst tho flyin' clouds&#13;
an' tryin' ter swaller a big lump that&#13;
kept rlsin* in our throats. Somehow&#13;
81" never had seemed Quite so near and&#13;
d«ar to nib l* h e d l d r a them silent moments&#13;
o'^rtfmoal misery. I edged up&#13;
closer tofbim an1' he' to me an' our&#13;
hands got1 together in a tight, warm&#13;
grasp that sed more than all the words&#13;
we could hev'spoken In a lifetime.&#13;
" It n i u s t ^ e v been mighty" nig*'mid-,&#13;
night afore we left the barnyard gate,&#13;
sho'U be io/ed as well by Zeb as she&#13;
is by we." That waz about all the&#13;
talkln' that Waz done till we parted *~***v**~ **&#13;
at hlJ gate. Then I sed:&#13;
"Come over an' see me termorrow.&#13;
81."&#13;
A HYDRAULIC U»» C 3 0 A T&#13;
N O T « 1&#13;
BnUt ta SacU(«4&gt;&#13;
Within a month the Que**, a new&#13;
hydraulic lifeboat built for the Royal&#13;
"I reckon/' ted b«. after holdln' my , JWlonal Lifeboat UxsUtutlon. Will be&#13;
hand Quite a spell, "you'd better come ready for service, stationed at Liveran'&#13;
see me. Joth. I don't seem ter be pool, says the London Dally Mail. A&#13;
very strong o' late, an' the walk makes representative called at Church wberf&#13;
me tired like." j and the manager of the works gave&#13;
"All right," sed I a t cheery as 1 a i m fun a n &lt; i laleresting partkmlart of&#13;
conld: T i l come." t h 6 M V vestel. From these It will be&#13;
Yes; I went over to Si's the nex* day. Mtn that the old traditional appeal of&#13;
words.. We jes( -stood there a - b ^ i n '&#13;
onto ea/3h other&gt; «andA,*n', t]ciw,%/o&#13;
think, ^ut always losin' our reckonln'&#13;
4n the* heavy clouds o' sorrow that&#13;
hung pver uty7 . .,«..)o. , . :J ,r . .. , j&#13;
"Don*,tt take, it too much ter heart.&#13;
Si. Try ter be brave—try tor o».»k£&#13;
J h a beejtoC Ul'' I eed^te.hlm a t w e&#13;
(pwted&gt;,, M± 41dn't answer, me. -., -,,||e&gt;&#13;
triod to, but all of a suddintt be gave&#13;
my hajad a, powerful wrench aad. bur-!&#13;
fled away with » pitiful &lt;k»k * ' * * -&#13;
neither Si or me had theSfpunk to pop gulsb 0¾ bis white face&#13;
the question we were just nyln' to net&#13;
settled. I don't know jestlhow it wax,&#13;
but though, we'd be very b^ave an* determined&#13;
when We waz dlstfussln' the&#13;
matter on the woodpile or i n the barn,&#13;
at hit home or mibe, Wb^b ^e*d get to&#13;
llRMflaiBBR, I LOVE HBR.&#13;
tocfcln' 1A flail IT'S an' Lizas bright&#13;
enet ««*d 3ot3 our courage (or our&#13;
i) aef come away a t much in&#13;
At m t t Chough, while eeeia' Lisa&#13;
heme (roan amgm'-school one rainy&#13;
nigbt, an* wbiie I waa holdln' her close&#13;
to me 4» lsenf&gt; her under my utebrei',&#13;
1 screwiM any pluck up t o the top&#13;
notch, an* e e i somethln'—I ' never&#13;
taw»^ Jest.wbatlt was—bat 'Lit* un-&#13;
4ereUo4 wm*t X m e a n t an' what the&#13;
ted to m e made me the happiest an'&#13;
proudest man yon ever saw in all yer&#13;
born days. - 81 teemed almost at glad&#13;
MM I waz, w h t c 1 told him about It&#13;
nest day, wm* I tree/sure he'd take&#13;
conrage by mi success an' ask Sally&#13;
'the- very nexi time be went to spark&#13;
b*r, trat he d i d u t He kept puttln' it&#13;
off. iett at ha'i oeen doin' all along,&#13;
tttu' about his ondecided&#13;
fate Ull be actually got pale an'&#13;
holler«yea aver i t I kkiaer think&#13;
that it t hadn't loved Urn t o a*Wired&#13;
much, I'd got vexed at #H fer his dttly-&#13;
^ i a ^ i h ' ; bstf one e&gt;^vtoge&gt;tn|B' ,hap-&#13;
^enea that took all them thortt out o'&#13;
rgar.JlyB4.tj - 1 , -•'.&#13;
I can never forget that day, or,&#13;
It was Quite early In the mornln* an'&#13;
I was sent fer by his father an'&#13;
mother. 81 had calkerlated exactly&#13;
right; he waz not able to visit me.&#13;
The* had found him in his bed a few&#13;
.minutes before—dead; an' the dectori&#13;
who arrived about the time I did; sea;&#13;
he had died from heart trouble o'-some&#13;
sort . . , - . 1&#13;
So he had—a heart trouble whicr&#13;
dea.h alone could cure.—The Owl,&#13;
although we hadn't sedmore'n.a doaen ^ 9 ' \ ' ^ WPV*™* &amp; • * • • *&#13;
I didn't see Quite t o much-or Si after&#13;
that a t afore. ' Every two- &lt;rr tfarw&#13;
daye, though, he'd com* to the house&#13;
an* It v deemed ter • me that be always&#13;
looked e r n e «t* thmner an' mora 4espairin'&#13;
every time we m e t We didn't&#13;
often apeak o' bit sorrow, but we'd sit&#13;
sometimes fer hours a-holdfo* bands&#13;
an' lookin* In each other's faces an* understanding&#13;
each other's feelin's better,&#13;
I reckon, than" if weM tried ter&#13;
pnk trar tbots Interwords. One day.&#13;
after we'd been slttin' In this fashion&#13;
fei quite a spell, 81 binder rented blmself&#13;
np an* ted:&#13;
"Sally lft» 7M ate tgrJbe marrlcAJfir^&#13;
morrow."&#13;
"Yes," sed I, wonderin' why he'd&#13;
spoke of it.&#13;
' "OcitnVl tTposer* be added.&#13;
'1 reckon so," /sed I.&#13;
"Then we'll go together," eed be, an'&#13;
a look o* sharpest sufferln* eame in&#13;
iin&#13;
tuocettful aursing.&#13;
3 j , .&#13;
It is only by watchlpg the child&#13;
carefully and striving to anpreclgte&#13;
the changes which are taking place la&#13;
its -sensitive organism that the attempt&#13;
t o forestall serious disturbance&#13;
of the alimentary canal will be made&#13;
successful. It is neediest t o say that&#13;
the giving of modified milk i» only&#13;
hfs pale face, which hart m e more*n I one &lt;of t h e many measures which arc&#13;
* know how ter tejt *'•••m ' - ———*••• ——«—&#13;
D'ye think it's best Sir* I atked,&#13;
at gent|e nt I. conid.&#13;
'Yes," be answered, heavin' a sigh.&#13;
She might think it Queer if I staid&#13;
away; betides. I'd like to wish her an'&#13;
Zeb a happy life." +&#13;
I didn't tay any snore. It would hev&#13;
done no good, an' maybe 'twould her&#13;
hurt&#13;
so the&#13;
little&#13;
we bad done in oar boyhood days,&#13;
wactY we used ter go to Sunday scsvoal.&#13;
the name -pew .too, where era « t e d ter&#13;
tit years an* y e a n ago, an* I thort ae&#13;
I looked now an* then at Si's thin,&#13;
white face an' drooplil* figger that I'd&#13;
never teen blm look quite to miserable&#13;
an' hopeless like at he did that day. ,&#13;
Wal, after the cer'mony was over&#13;
81 was one o* the first ter push hit way&#13;
through the' crowd so's to reach the&#13;
bride t and groom an* offer hit good&#13;
wlthet. There was, I noticsaTaTqueer.&#13;
oitaat'ral sort of look in his sunken&#13;
eyes an' a feverish flush on his bag&#13;
to keep on his legs.&#13;
"I hope they'll be happy. Jeeb." b«&#13;
sed several times' as we weT* walkin&#13;
rather that night; for it was late i s the j »lo*ly ««n«- » ' ° n c e n « •«*. w s r low&#13;
•renin' when be came to the bouse eaf j nn* In a kinder choked Totae: - I hope&#13;
MODIFIED MILK.&#13;
The approach of hot weather is re&#13;
garded with dread by many a weary&#13;
mother who understands the Increased&#13;
perils which surround the lift ot&#13;
her little one at that time of the year,&#13;
especially if it is so unfortunate aji&#13;
to fte found "nursing the bottle."&#13;
In the,summer the child's nervoue&#13;
system, always easily influenced, is so&#13;
mwih at the mei'cy of the beat that&#13;
any deviation from the natural orde.v&#13;
of ihlngt It__aure to result unfavorably.&#13;
The cause of many a serious digestive&#13;
disturbance will be found to lie&#13;
ouinlde of any suspected change In the&#13;
cbaructer of the milk. The milk may&#13;
be sterilized and mixed with various&#13;
IngTedienta to render it more eaiity&#13;
digested; according to the best know a&#13;
fbinaiilae, knd it still remains to modify&#13;
It to sttit the immediate wants ot&gt;&#13;
the individual case.&#13;
/ I f the milk is too rich, that is to,&#13;
say, if it has too much fat in it, the&#13;
little stomach will be unable to digest&#13;
it fully. This failure wil} cause a&#13;
looseness of the bowels, and if the!&#13;
case, although so simple, is misunderstood&#13;
and therefore improperly treat-;&#13;
eq, exhaustion and,even collapse may&#13;
eventually be the result—a literal, lnsxanoe&#13;
of "starving In the midst of&#13;
the bowels in a continual, state of ir*&#13;
rl^ationu . ' .. . .. ,,,&#13;
On the other haod«i if too • much&#13;
srugaT le,present lb the milk, the opposite&#13;
effect Is produced and the child&#13;
suffers ,«eacly, as.muoh. 4rpm the re*&#13;
^entiou tp,the system of matter wfcieb&#13;
should have been, eliminated; • The&#13;
tfhfM usually becomes excessively&#13;
nervous, and fussy, and no treatment&#13;
t* of. avail until the bowels are regmmted.&#13;
•&#13;
As might be expected, It is impossible&#13;
to "play off" these two facts one&#13;
against the other. And this is what&#13;
is* meant by modified milk. H it i t&#13;
suspected that there Is too much' fat&#13;
in the milk ft may not only be diluted&#13;
until the desired proportion it reached,&#13;
but more sugar1'may' bfe lidded to&#13;
Insure the speedy recovery of the little&#13;
patient. In the same way the milk may&#13;
be -made richer, if occasion seems to&#13;
require It, by the addition of a UtUe&#13;
rream&gt;—1_&#13;
That^tbe English language it much&#13;
copious than it was in the days&#13;
of Josmton is evident from the fact&#13;
that€ne)&lt;eompHert of the new and meneamntst&#13;
Qftford dictionary bave gathered&#13;
• » , » ! word*, beginning with the&#13;
b i m j f I argued against bit fete*: ^ ^ v o r d a ra^T^babet of&#13;
e next day m o a n ' 81 went to tbe -.^^ m m ^ ^ ^ § , „ 1 ^&#13;
&gt;eetin'.honse together, jeat n * ! ^ ^ w d l &gt; w l t t t W W tne^W&#13;
comblsmtloAs explained under main&#13;
aSn ^thi or^tf^nl ^in dthmem ^damyt.^ Wa e/ statn In U^ « ^» Wfiu«t ••^•• W^ W ^ob^to leWtei &gt; radnf td wJWHtutd&#13;
ert have not improved greatly upon&#13;
Shakespeare, Milton or even Johnson,&#13;
and many others of an earlier era.&#13;
Deal Tebaceo Spit and Sateke Year Lite Away.&#13;
To quit tobacco easily and forever, s* magnuSsz&#13;
t&amp;ssr&amp;s&amp;s ftterUag aemedy Oa, (Aleaco or Hefi&#13;
__Tb« a n t vbrtaa u to restrain the&#13;
HO approaches nearest to the so _&#13;
kaowsbow to be aUaat eves though be is&#13;
the right&#13;
'»•&#13;
Be that has never known m-fertawe&#13;
never known hlmseif or his virtue.&#13;
"man the lifeboat," that hat been to&#13;
often responded to on our coasts by&#13;
ready volunteers, i t likely to be replaced&#13;
by the more prosaic order of&#13;
"stoke the lifeboat," and tfie hydraulic&#13;
Tbachraery, driven by steam, will need&#13;
btrf the services' of half a doaen hands&#13;
all told.. "In the Queen we have introduced&#13;
an arrangement for feeding&#13;
the furnace with oil so at to economise&#13;
coal after steam hat been got up," said&#13;
the manager. "The boat carries four&#13;
tons of coa! and two, tanks of oil, and&#13;
the laiter, sprayed into the flres„ will&#13;
last the tame length of time that the&#13;
coal allowance will. The dimensions&#13;
of the new vessel, which is built entirely&#13;
of steel, are fifty-five feet in&#13;
length and sixteen feet in breadth at&#13;
the deck. When loaded and carrying&#13;
thirty passengers she displaces about&#13;
thirty ions and has a water draught of&#13;
three feet three inches. The hull cont&#13;
r t i s eighteen water-tight compartneuts.&#13;
The engines and boHer occupy&#13;
two and the coal bunkers another two.&#13;
-Toe sea water ie scooped u p by open&#13;
!ii(.uth8 in the side of the boat amid-&#13;
!-flips, and shot out stemward by means&#13;
of a centrifugal pump through a tube&#13;
&lt;m each side of the'vessel with great&#13;
force, and the impact of these columns&#13;
w'*h the surrounding body of the&#13;
oc&lt;uan drives the lifeboat ahead at a&#13;
ar-^d oi nine or ten knots an hour.&#13;
3t*jtm is supplied at a pressure of 145&#13;
po'inds per square inch, and the eng&amp;&#13;
es develop, about 260-horse power&#13;
There is no reversing gear,&#13;
means of two other tubes turned toward&#13;
the bow the water may cut off&#13;
4u&lt;1 shot forward and the boat can be&#13;
brought to a stop from full speed ln$&#13;
'even seconds. Again, the beat can be&#13;
•uraed more readily than If she had&#13;
'win screws by directing, say, the star-&#13;
^nurd water column astern and port&#13;
^head. This is owing to the control-&#13;
Mn? power being amidships in place Of&#13;
istern, where the leverage Is more dlf-&#13;
3ciilt The steersman directs the two&#13;
-vsfter snoots as be thinks proper by&#13;
leans cf two handwheels near the&#13;
teerlng wheel aft. The rudder la of&#13;
the Urge, else necessary for deep-sea&#13;
working and projects below the boat's&#13;
V^el^ but by means of bandy mechan-&#13;
&gt;m, it can be raised for sailing in&#13;
^hallow water. The boat carries a lug-&#13;
^all and staysail for use when necessary.&#13;
The absecca of a screw It a&#13;
Treat advantage, especially when approaching&#13;
a wreck at sea, when there&#13;
is a possibility of the propeller being&#13;
nught in floating masts and rigging,&#13;
md you are free from the dangerous&#13;
rre'ng of the screw so perilous to a&#13;
beat in rough, choppy waters. We are&#13;
^1 so enabled to reach this lifeboat&#13;
without any fear of Injuring the machinery—&#13;
an impossible matter with a&#13;
- rejecting screw. In the tests made&#13;
4t speed trials a lifebuoy was thrown&#13;
overboard while the vessel was go-&#13;
!ng full sf«amvahead. The,jet* were&#13;
Hrected bowwatd s o as to stop the way&#13;
ob and drive the boat astern, and the&#13;
'•imy TVIIII innhrrrt In nnr mtnwta Tn&#13;
: — - &gt; . ' tj&#13;
To Caro CoMttfawUa*)&#13;
^JTake Cascareta Candy Cathartic ttcortjf&#13;
t f o aLcG f faaiill?f ttoo c cuurrce.rddcc^^tSKKUUttaa r reeffuunndd money&#13;
. • * &lt;&#13;
"How can there be saeb a taiag at sr wHtm&#13;
daVv/ou know," mused 9wedd&gt;, "wbJBi 1»&#13;
bweaM evewy mawntagr*&#13;
coWnsei dsehro huoldw nite wveilrl baed vaicscee, put i&#13;
Olive with wolves and yca'Ug« earn to hoajft&gt;&#13;
«es,.we ami&#13;
PROM LOWELL, MAM.&#13;
TtwHomcof HexKl'a 9mtm*fo-&#13;
. A Wortd#rf wl Cmr*. A ,&#13;
«A. swelling s t big at a larg* maxble&#13;
came under my tongne, physicians said %&#13;
operated upon. I feltlooaldaetstandtW&#13;
and at sprmg easne began U take nx&gt;&#13;
favoriU spring tonic, Hood's 8aratparilla,&#13;
The bunch gradually decreased and flnel»&#13;
eUsappeared. • I bave had no sign oftlttta*.&#13;
tarn. IsmgUul topralseHood^Baraaptr&#13;
rilla." Mat, H. K . Ooauaut, 8 Vnkm-01*&#13;
l^weC, Mate. 0*,BOOV%&#13;
' H o o d ' t ••IHa enra tick&#13;
PATEOTSS™£~*&#13;
r i D t f &gt; D O V NEW DISCOVERY;&#13;
emte*. Head tor book of UnUimonW* »nd l O d a y l *&#13;
treatment&#13;
t*tn * *»*. E^raiT* tint o~f. twty vtl&#13;
P. t)Bl«£.B C. U&amp;WWK* H » r v e y , III.&#13;
•icaWsa&#13;
PATENTS, •«^gs £&amp;e^ m a n m ^ i OWAttatUU a SOJK W&gt;iftaSJln«. 9f Oix&#13;
D R U N K l l ^&#13;
* * « 2 s i f * / y ^ C/*/C*4 tfd C A T A L T C V C l » R E i&#13;
IT KILLS&#13;
Cabbaaje)&#13;
•ad «11 forma of inacct life H*rml+—tm&#13;
WUl awC iajani OM BHMI d&lt;lk*t» pUau.&#13;
Gray M Inoml Afth&#13;
IpfaVy w»7raatcd I W I dlirwtloM ar* foUavtd. *&#13;
tet9arHttU"Bu*Boak.» Itawr e»»a r«!•«•,•«lata&#13;
aattteal Mia(«f aat mmH C« . BeNavw^ Hd.&#13;
turted fa rtoek br an Imdimg whnl—!• V&#13;
HALL S . .,&#13;
Vegetable Sicilian&#13;
HAIR RENEWER&#13;
Beautifies and restores Gray&#13;
Hair to its original color and&#13;
vitality; prevents bald n e s t ;&#13;
cures itching and dandruff,&#13;
A fine hair dressing.&#13;
wmmmmmmmmmmmm&#13;
fhus going astern the steering waa effected&#13;
by the Jets only* The same teat -&#13;
was repeated, and the beat waa steered&#13;
so as t o describe a circle, returning to&#13;
where t h e float lay, and the mtAeuver&#13;
o«upied precisely the same time. This'&#13;
new lifeboat i t not only capable of&#13;
propelling Itself, but can take two or&#13;
three ordinary lifeboats to a marine&#13;
disaster or tow a veasei of 200 to 250&#13;
tbat burden Into port'f&#13;
WILL PAY aiOQ FOR( ANY C A S «&#13;
Of&#13;
W a a i Wfca Walk WelU&#13;
A writer in the Boston Woman's&#13;
Jowrsai sayt: "In my limited espertenee&#13;
with queest I bave sever teen&#13;
ome walk eo well a t deet the stately&#13;
working womtm o£ Abmedabevd. This&#13;
it partly due to the tact tbat the latter&#13;
weara only a thort skirt and a tann,&#13;
with aometimet a loose naif-bodice.&#13;
Ease i n attire It not, however, the&#13;
main raaton for the free gait and lofty&#13;
carriage t o consp'euous here; yet the&#13;
secret i t so simple that it it strange&#13;
no. fathlonable .hoarding school baa&#13;
caught K and advartiaedto.inrn.iMtt&#13;
American girjt that can waikv Let any&#13;
young woman try this receipt: Put a&#13;
wad of cloth or straw on the bead and&#13;
balarcs oa this A amall jug or pail,&#13;
walking around i n . t h e position enforced&#13;
b y the balance. I think an&#13;
hour*t e«erci»e daily of chit sort m&#13;
prefer to go there for treat ittat. If gati&#13;
•wrrmSEft n m u r a u w ^ ^ a a r e -&#13;
lar;oy/tf *&#13;
bank to&#13;
esTeteT&#13;
Kentuckiaa—"Well, sir, bave you&#13;
canvasaed our town pretty thoroughly&#13;
la order to secure the viewt of oui&#13;
cltitent a t ta the tnoeees of your an. .,.,,.-.,.,, r-TTrrrtr^r ^_n — - ^&#13;
t ^ i a e T - T ! a p T t a « i b ^ ZJ^Su™"****''&#13;
called upon about ail of your protntoent *£7J£Z J n J ° S I £ ^ ! ^&#13;
business men." K e n t u c k t o - . - H . v c ^ l n * ^ ! ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ " ^ j&#13;
gard- face, an* when we at latt '.tartedfyon talked with Col. Potts yet?- «»pi. ^ ** ?**£* f ^ ?* "*»* *****&#13;
fer home poor SI wax to treniblyan* ttilat-**i&gt;otby? No; I d o n t beHeVe 1 °* n e r ^ ° ^ 6 6 ciluaXt&#13;
onneryed that he bad tar take my arm bave met him.** » Keatuckim&gt;^MToi] i&#13;
ought to see CoL Pottt by all means f Aatheatie inforaMtioew&#13;
Ue*a one of our most influential citi- Maude—"Miriam is trying to keep&#13;
tena.** Capltalltt—*'I gnett I'd battel **r engagement a secret.** Martha—]&#13;
la Haa Th»r&#13;
Vail 'to Cora.;'&#13;
An Omaha Company places for me* frag,&#13;
timebelore the puttie a aUeioai, Taawr&gt;&#13;
MttT for the cure of Lost VitaUrT nttnuta&#13;
and Sexual We&amp;kneei, and ReetirataoatT&#13;
Life -Force iiTm\2&amp; yoaflginab^mV&#13;
werBH&gt;a« French remedy; eontelae as&gt;&#13;
Fhoapboras or other barsafeaenrage. uE&#13;
a Woa-DtarcL TaaATiuxr meakal ia. isa&#13;
emmis-posttive la Its core, r * - ^ ^ ^ ^&#13;
who art seaTeriag from a wi&#13;
blights their Ule, caamaglbat _&#13;
tood^ooUwriteiiiotbe b T A f t ]&#13;
O0MPAH7, Chaaha,Meb.,smi abtT vfif&#13;
mad yoo abaoietety FBJUL a vtaaabia&#13;
t aper on these mv MU ey aa^poetttTeproonV&#13;
eithert,rmijUA9u^T»MAtmT. ^ a t e ?&#13;
aade of men, who bare Jeai. aM b e p e S a&#13;
cure, are bemg re.edre«&lt;ysheBS&gt;V i V&#13;
feotoeaditioa. * *?•&#13;
Tbit MaeiCAL Taaaraawr amy be amke*&#13;
at bonwuBder their^rsstatwij,pr tbew pettj&#13;
pay' rattroai fare aa^bomTbOtlto^wba&#13;
»«»«. •»»«•••«&#13;
amrmnBJ*t+ -&#13;
hunt him up. What street is CAI "HOW do you know?" "She told&#13;
Potts' saloon on T"—New York World , *«."—ToBjert Sutetman.&#13;
^¾.&#13;
M&#13;
—mm V m*&#13;
• . ! • ' "&#13;
*'.&#13;
•--?,:'&#13;
&gt;:&gt;;'* &gt;i&#13;
I'M. '&#13;
r," :.£&#13;
: $ • * &gt;&#13;
(gbuhuq gto*ttk&lt;&#13;
F. L. ANDREWS, EDITOR.&#13;
THURSDAY, JULY 8, 1897.&#13;
Inttrtstlng Items.&#13;
J. D. Ragers found a swarm of&#13;
bees in the Baptist church one&#13;
day last week. A swarm is also&#13;
reported to be working in the&#13;
attic of Carrol Stephens' residence.—&#13;
Stookbridge Brief.&#13;
The bail for costs in the case of&#13;
Thomas "W, Brewer vs George&#13;
Barnes and the case of Thomas&#13;
W. Brewer vs Almon L. Chase&#13;
was fixed at $75 for each case,&#13;
The bonds have been given in&#13;
both cases.-r-Herald.&#13;
Peter Morgan of Howell slipped&#13;
on a banana peeling while coming&#13;
out of the postoffice last Wednesday&#13;
evening and fell striking his&#13;
4eft hand on the point of a fender&#13;
on the window tearing it badly.&#13;
"Pete" is well known in this vicinity.&#13;
Some men think that the gratification&#13;
of curiosity is the end of&#13;
knowledge; some the love of fame;&#13;
sonie the pleasure of dispute;&#13;
some the necessity of supporting&#13;
themselves by their knowledge is&#13;
this, that we should dedicate that&#13;
reason which was given us by God&#13;
to the use and advantage of man.&#13;
Ralph Carr is the possessor of&#13;
fifteen consecutive "Honorary&#13;
Cards" from the Powlerville&#13;
Union school, which meanB that&#13;
he has been neither absent or&#13;
tardy for the last five years. He&#13;
liveB nearly a mile and a half from&#13;
the school. It is a retord any&#13;
boy may well feel proud of.—&#13;
Beview.&#13;
Parties have been looking over&#13;
the ground for an electric railroad&#13;
from Jackson to Howell via&#13;
Dansville.—Williamston Enterprise.&#13;
An electric road from Detroit&#13;
to Lansing has its advocatesalso.&#13;
Electric roads are destined&#13;
to thread our country like net&#13;
work of a wire sieve.—Herald.&#13;
Bight you are Bro. Brewer.&#13;
A huge bowlder makes a simple&#13;
but imposing monument. One&#13;
weighing 45 tons has been placed&#13;
on the southern shore of Long&#13;
Island, where Nathan Hale afterexecuted&#13;
as a spy was captured&#13;
by British soldiers.—The bowlder&#13;
bears three tablets with inscriptions&#13;
bearing his famous&#13;
sentence: "I only regret that I&#13;
have but one life to give mv&#13;
country."&#13;
Men who use the newspapers&#13;
more or less will be interested in&#13;
knowing about the rates charged&#13;
by some of the publications in this&#13;
country. The last page of Munsey's&#13;
Magazine has been sold for&#13;
one year to four advertisers each&#13;
of whom occupy a quarter of a&#13;
page and pay $6,000 making a&#13;
total of $24,000 for the page. One&#13;
line in the Youth's Companion&#13;
costs 15 a time while a page in&#13;
the Ladies' Home Journal costs&#13;
¢4,000 an issue.&#13;
'*Tou are not tbe only —."&#13;
That is about all one hears nowadays&#13;
and it is interesting to learn&#13;
that he is not the only —. The&#13;
dash xepveaeoto an individual of&#13;
almost every conceivable species&#13;
It is gratifying to learn that you&#13;
are not the only pebble on the&#13;
beach, tbe only button in the&#13;
contribution box, the only flea on&#13;
the dog, Une only can on the dump,&#13;
the oly dog in the pond, the only&#13;
oyster in the stew, the only poster&#13;
o» the fence, the only skirt in the&#13;
window, the only «eed in the&#13;
poaipkifi, the only ekwd in the&#13;
nfcjr, tbe only clerk in *fa»ntoM.&#13;
The merchant who prints his&#13;
business card with a rubber stamp&#13;
seldom makes a good impression.&#13;
Indulge in procrastination and&#13;
in time you will come to this,&#13;
that because a thing ought to be&#13;
done, therefore you can t do i t&#13;
Man, in society, is like a flower&#13;
blown in its native bud. It is&#13;
there only that his faculties, expanded&#13;
in full bloom, shine out,&#13;
there only reach their proper&#13;
use.&#13;
Stowe Bros, and Mark Smith of&#13;
Iosco delivered to £. A. Stowe&#13;
last Thursday three-quarters of a&#13;
car of wool in three loads, the&#13;
largest load weighing 3,185 lbs&#13;
which was probably the largest&#13;
load ever drawn to Howell,—Democrat&#13;
A western writer say a that&#13;
shearing sheep by hand is fast&#13;
dissapearing. At Casper, Wyoming&#13;
he saw thirty-six men shearing&#13;
sheep by the aid of a gasoline&#13;
engine and making better time&#13;
and getting more wool than by the&#13;
old method. It is stated by the&#13;
best judges that at least a pound&#13;
more wool is taken from each&#13;
sheep by the machine method&#13;
than by hand and the cut is much&#13;
smoother, while at the same time&#13;
two men can turn out as much&#13;
work with steam as three could&#13;
by hand.&#13;
The law making it a duty of&#13;
judges of probate to issue marriage&#13;
licenses and perform ceremonies&#13;
of marriage in certain&#13;
oases will take effect August 29,&#13;
and the secretary of state has issued&#13;
a circular calling the attention&#13;
of the probate judges to the&#13;
law. The statute is intended for&#13;
the protection of the reputation&#13;
of certain females. Special attention&#13;
is called to the provisision of&#13;
the law requiring strict secrecy to&#13;
be observed concerning marriages&#13;
of this class. They are not__to be&#13;
talked about by the judges, their&#13;
deputies or assistants, or by the&#13;
physician indorsing the application.&#13;
A penalty is provided for&#13;
the publishers of newspapers who&#13;
publicity to such marriages. What&#13;
a legislature the one of 1897 of&#13;
Michigan was anyway.—Democrat.&#13;
The Coast Line to MACKINAC&#13;
•«—TAKB T H « — •&#13;
^&#13;
MACKINAC&#13;
DETROIT&#13;
PETOSKEY&#13;
CHICAGO&#13;
New Steel Passenger Steamers&#13;
The Oreetsst Perfecties) yet attained la&#13;
Beat Coastiwctlee—Uwifkw Bqartpaatat.&#13;
Artistic Paratafciajr, DecoreUeei end Efficlent&#13;
Service, insuring tbe highest degree of&#13;
COMFORT, SPEED AND SAFETY&#13;
FOUR TRIPS *t* Wux Between&#13;
Toledo, Detroit and Mackinac&#13;
PCTOtKEV, "THE 800," MARQUETTE&#13;
AND DULUTM.&#13;
LOW RATES to Pictures*** Mackinac and&#13;
R e t f , l a d n i i f fWais and Berths. Prom&#13;
Cleveland, * * S | frets Teiede, ***; treat&#13;
Detreet, §13.90.&#13;
DAY AND NKIHT SEftVtCC.&#13;
Between Detroit and Cleveland&#13;
Connecting at Cleveland with Sarli«st&#13;
Trains for all points East, South and Southwest&#13;
and at Detroit for all points North and&#13;
Northwest.&#13;
Sunday Trio* JMM, July, Aaoaat and Sept Only&#13;
EVERY DAY BETWEEN&#13;
Clevetand^ut-in-Bay/Toledo&#13;
Send for Illustrated Pamphlet. Address&#13;
A . A. • O M A M T J C , « . » , a.. DtrmoiT. SUCH.&#13;
T h e l e f r a l t fc f i r v r l M i d **~•-» Hew f a&#13;
• TaUaaM* Wfrnertptlmm.&#13;
Editor Morrison, of tbe Wortfciaf*&#13;
ton, Xnd, 80 D writes: **you bare a •*!-&#13;
He who thinks his place below&#13;
him will certainly be below his&#13;
place.&#13;
The Power of Saying No.&#13;
Somebody has said that to give&#13;
a young man power to say no is a&#13;
grander gift than giving him a&#13;
thousand pounds. There is a&#13;
large family of Pliables in existence—&#13;
folks born with back bones.&#13;
I like a youth who can look one&#13;
in the face and if a thing is a lie&#13;
say so and if it is true, hold to it&#13;
though all the world is against&#13;
him. You will get such boys as&#13;
these from bands of hope, for if&#13;
they say no in connection with&#13;
drink they can say no in connection&#13;
with other things.&#13;
A little fellow who had been&#13;
brought up a staunch teetotaler&#13;
was about to be apprenticed. The&#13;
foreman offered him a glass of&#13;
beer. The little fellow said, "I&#13;
dou't touch that stuff."&#13;
"Halloo youngster" replied the&#13;
foreman "we have no teetotalers&#13;
here."&#13;
"If you have me, you will have&#13;
one" returned the boy.&#13;
The foreman was irritated and&#13;
holding up the glass of beer he&#13;
said "Now, my boy, there is only&#13;
one master; you'll either have&#13;
this inside or outside."&#13;
The little fellow said: "Well&#13;
you can please yourself. I brought&#13;
my clean jacket with me and a&#13;
good character. You may spoil&#13;
my jacket but you shan't spoil'my&#13;
character."&#13;
With the fund left by Benjamin&#13;
Franklin to the Boston printing&#13;
trade, amounting now to some&#13;
1400,000, it is proposed to erect a&#13;
labor temple.&#13;
"Last bummer one of our grand'&#13;
children was sick with a severe bowel&#13;
trouble" said Mrs. E. G. Gregory of&#13;
Fredrickstown, Mo. "Our doctor's&#13;
remedies had failed, then we tried&#13;
Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera ana Diarihoea&#13;
Remedy, which gave very&#13;
speedy relief." For sale by F. A.&#13;
Stcfler.&#13;
Wanted-An Idea 2S8&#13;
Dr. Ktnejs New Discovery fe&gt;r €)•«-&#13;
sumption.&#13;
This is the best medicine in the&#13;
world for all forms of Cou&amp;hfi and&#13;
Colds and for Consumption. Every&#13;
bottle is guaranteei. It will cure and&#13;
not dibsapoint, It has no equal for&#13;
whooping cough, asthma, hay fever,&#13;
pneumonia, bronchitis, la grippe,&#13;
cnldin tbe bead and consumption. It&#13;
is safe for all ages' pleasant to take&#13;
and above all. a sure cure. It is always&#13;
well to take Dr. Kings New&#13;
Discovery in connection with Dr.&#13;
King's New Life Pills as they regulate&#13;
and tone tbe stomach and bowels.&#13;
We guarantee peitect satisfaction or&#13;
return money. Free trial bottles at&#13;
F. A. Sigler's drug store.&#13;
Subscribe for the DISPITGH.&#13;
JOS TUTXlIJfGt&#13;
I n all Its branohea, a specialty. Ws hart all kind*&#13;
H:I &gt; the latest styles of Type, etc., which enables&#13;
u. to execute all kindt of work, auch as Books,&#13;
PumpletB, Posters, Programmes, BUI Heads, Nota&#13;
H-11(18, Statement*, Cards, Auction Billa.ste., In&#13;
ei perior styles, upon the shortest notice. PricesM&#13;
tc v as good work can be aons.&#13;
„LL BILLS PAT4.BLK FI89T OJT BVKBY MONTH.&#13;
Railroad Gukiq.&#13;
tfrud Triak Kallwar 871(01.&#13;
Arrival and Departure of Trains at Plnnkney.&#13;
InEffect June 14,1OT.&#13;
wistaouMP.&#13;
LT, A B ,&#13;
Jackson and Interm'dte Bts. 14.44 i m « « * &gt; p »&#13;
«' 1*&lt;*Pn t ? . » a m&#13;
maSTBOUMP&#13;
Pontlao Detrolt-Gd. Rapid* A \&#13;
andlDtermadUtoBU t 6 9 0 p a t*.44aa%&#13;
Pontlao Lenox Detroit and&#13;
intermediate BU. f?M*vx t 4 J » P »&#13;
Mloh. Air Use Dlv. testes &lt; . ^M laave Poatiao at t*.S0am t M O p p&#13;
for Romeo Lenox and Int. stft.&#13;
D. &amp; M DIVISION LaUVE PONTIAC&#13;
wssrmouHP Lv. .&#13;
ta«a*A&#13;
t i M S p a&#13;
•«.07 a m&#13;
TiaMam&#13;
TS.tfpp&#13;
TSJffipm&#13;
17.05 a m&#13;
CURES IN THE RIGHT WAY. BY REGULATING THE UVElV&#13;
AND KIDNEYS, AND PURIPYINO THE BLOOD.&#13;
It is a positive care for Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Dyspepsia, Sick and&#13;
'Nervous Headache, Fever and Ague, Chills, and all diseases arising from*&#13;
'a diseased liver or the kidneys, or impure blood.&#13;
;YOUR MONEY BACK &amp;MM«UUsr!L*tttti; you have had your money's worth, send us back the guarantee, which foe wW find in tba&#13;
• box, and we will send you a check for tx.oo by return mail.&#13;
It Is put up in two forma, powder and tablets. The tablets are the easier to take, reqnir-&#13;
&gt; tag no mixing. Price $xxo for t8o doses of either kind. Sent post oald upon receipt of &lt;&#13;
price. Send io cents for ten days* treatment and copy of Nature's Guide to Health.&#13;
&gt;A. H, LEWIS MEDICINE GO., - Bolivar, Mo.&#13;
* : ; : • . } .&#13;
usble prescription in Beetric Ifctteri,&#13;
and I can cheerfully raeosftmend it for&#13;
constipation and sick headache, and as&#13;
a general system tonic it fete no equal.&#13;
Mrs. Annie Stenle, 282ftCotttft Grove&#13;
Ave., Chicago, was all run down,&#13;
conld not eat nor dijpeet food, bad a&#13;
backache that never left bar aad felt&#13;
tired and weary, bwt sts wattiat 4&#13;
Electric Bitters restertd ber km&#13;
aad renewed her stcamjrta. Prices M&#13;
ce**s«d*1.00. GetasottkatrA.&#13;
ftistlav^drttf store.&#13;
naw Gd Banlda and Od HSTWJ&#13;
Rapida Od Haven Chicago&#13;
lnawUdKaptda Milwaukee&#13;
iesgo and Intermediate ita.&#13;
Qd Rapida Moskngon&#13;
XiUBOUND&#13;
Detroit Eaat and Canada&#13;
Detroit East and Canada&#13;
Detroit and South&#13;
Detroit Eaat snd Canada&#13;
Detroit Suburban&#13;
Leave Detroit via Windsor&#13;
•ABTBOUMD&#13;
Buffalo—New York A Boston *7.45 a »&#13;
Toronto Montreal New York *12. noon&#13;
London Express f6.40 p m&#13;
Buffalo New York A East *U.2S P m&#13;
7.45 a m tartn baa aleeping oars Detroit to New&#13;
York and Boa ton. 19.00 noon train has parlor&#13;
car to Hamilton—Sleeping car to Buffalo and New&#13;
York 11.26 train has sleeping car to New York&#13;
fDally except Sunday. 'Daily.&#13;
W. J. BLAOX, Agent, Plnckney Mlcb, •&#13;
W. IT DAVIS E. H. HUOHKS&#13;
O. P, * T. Agen*. A. O. PJ A T Agt.&#13;
Montreal, Que. Chicago, 111.&#13;
BKM PUTCBBB, Trav. Pass. Agt., Detroit Kloh.&#13;
TOLEDO&#13;
1NARB0&#13;
AND&#13;
.^TH MICH&#13;
RAILWAY. £&gt;&#13;
Popular route for Ann Arbor, Toledo&#13;
and points East, Sooth and for&#13;
Howeil, Owosce, .Alma, Mt Pleasant,&#13;
Cadillac, Manistee, Traverse City and&#13;
points in Northwestern Michigan. '&#13;
W. H. BKNKKTT,&#13;
G. P. A., Toledo.&#13;
-i- u r n - ' -.: ,L, ' .?. , ..ass&#13;
TRAOI MARK* oaa»OHa»&#13;
OOPVRIOHTa SbO.&#13;
quAienayjoyn aes eseerntdettna*.f rae aakte wtohhe athaed* A aeas elratwsesto-*a" i&#13;
I„n— A„m ertoa. OWldees ht aavseen eay WrparsaheoinergttsoenT oVe—se—e. spPecaitaeln ntso tticaek «lan thtber oa«h Mann A Co- receive&#13;
84HENTIFIS MERIGAN,&#13;
heanitsllfiaeUlayS jUJt&amp;aertnraatle. dw. eUehnvr.e vsts nciumSiMlat laosns eorft - latxo nTr nPr~AtlTfBS tmS pseeenbtn fernee .e ocAAdedaraensdsH AMn&#13;
MUMN A CC&#13;
• a i Bre*4wai, Mew&#13;
SPECIFIC&#13;
FOR Sciwuut 'Since childhood, 1 have been&#13;
aftHcted with scrofulous boils and&#13;
sores, which caused uie terrible&#13;
sulteriug. Physiuians were unable&#13;
to helpjne, aud 1 only grew worse&#13;
untier their care.&#13;
At 1 ugth, I begyja&#13;
totals j&gt;~'JL*-r&gt;L &lt;. 'S&#13;
Sar.saparilla, and&#13;
vftry Jioou grew better.&#13;
After using&#13;
half a dozen bottles&#13;
I was completely&#13;
cured, »o that I have not had a boil&#13;
or pimple on any part of my l&gt;ody&#13;
for the • last twelve year*.—L-^aacordially&#13;
recommend Ajer's Srtrsapurilla&#13;
;w the very l&gt;est blood^piufiftar&#13;
in existence." — U. T. HLINUART,&#13;
f A » lar» apariUa&#13;
Mr ^-^&#13;
V. v. V) .&#13;
in*&#13;
k ^ -&#13;
' A J • - , .&#13;
)&#13;
Wanted-An I d e a ^ g g o a weaUfc.&#13;
E&#13;
V*^p^sfld/Startlia«»K*4 UVTH&amp;MU.&#13;
rio uT HuE tHrE RMinIT' S mREMED Ym » an invaluable retnsdy (or all affection*&#13;
oi the THROAT and LUNOS. Contain*&#13;
no opium or other Injurious Drugs*&#13;
1 It Kill* COUQHS und COLDS.&#13;
Keep a Bottle in lite Hease,&#13;
ll»£ SAVE YOUR LIFE.&#13;
1MIICE, OS G e n t s .&#13;
Wo can (five employment permanent and&#13;
11lei.itivo to a g o o d a g e n t iu thissection. F o r&#13;
purtiedlarB cull on publisher of this paper.&#13;
' JAMES W. FOSTER CO., M'i»o DHUQCWTS,&#13;
PATH, N. H.&#13;
'H 'N 'KiVQ " 0 0 U 3 X 8 0 i 'M 83r&gt;vr&#13;
&lt; &amp;&#13;
CO&#13;
'•anaeipnwits—stnssoi&#13;
*iua*qi{tnigiun3 '&lt;unqang&#13;
•MUOM£ • M X »AOUJ»JI - a r n o&#13;
QSr SIOUHB «11« IBX SIXTH •UOqOd"'&#13;
j » » n | w JOU oiq^sliujaq^aiai^aoo^&#13;
] S ^ '8NIVXX.10H 3XIHM »«0&#13;
*^?C-MOJS puna; ituwi»gVV^^&#13;
i n a i j a p s u i / w *&#13;
•uoixSTdmoo sm JOJ&#13;
&gt;...- : . ' ( « &gt; t r u i c t N a i v e .&#13;
THr'tV-r .^Mivr- in "tlie world for&#13;
„'Dts, l&gt;rn'••'.&lt;!, -ofc.'s, nlcers, salt rheum,&#13;
feVnr sorts, »,.-t&lt;vr*chupped Lands,chill&#13;
Ha*n«. f i. . . ;i:i l nil skin eruptions&#13;
inrt i o i' v (y i:me8 piles or no pav&#13;
req-in^d. It is sradranteed to ariv"*&#13;
perlbct saM-Tnction or money refund&#13;
ed. Prifv 25 cent* per box. For an!&#13;
!w f\ A. 81 Mar.&#13;
Michigan ~ People.&#13;
LOCATED&#13;
Directly Opposite M. C R'y Depot&#13;
Two Blocks from Union Depot&#13;
Three Blocks from Steamer Docks.&#13;
la the Center of the Wholesale District.&#13;
Three Minutes by Electric Cars to Retail&#13;
Center and all Places ol Amusement.&#13;
zoo Rooms with Steam Heat&#13;
fao.ooo (4 New improvements.&#13;
Cuisine Unsurpassed&#13;
American PUn&#13;
Rales, $2 and 12.50 per Day.&#13;
Booms, with Bata.13. Single meals. 60c.&#13;
WASHINGTON LETTER.&#13;
Thfirft \n nothing to—prevent&#13;
Lilfaokalani standing on the&#13;
coaching tines and making a noise.&#13;
Lieut. Peary has left Washington&#13;
for his trip to the ArVjfcrc teas.&#13;
We trust it may not prove to be a&#13;
fool's errand.&#13;
11 must be conceeded that the&#13;
Fourth of July orator had plenty&#13;
of material for screeching purposes&#13;
this year.&#13;
The determined fight for the interests&#13;
of the Western Wool grower,&#13;
made in the Senate bv Senators&#13;
Thurston, Teller, Foraker,&#13;
Carter and others resulted in a&#13;
viotory for the sheep raiser.&#13;
Mv. Foraker did not attend the&#13;
convention of the Ohio Republicans,&#13;
He remained in Washington&#13;
to sit up with the tariff bMl.&#13;
In the autumn he will go to Ohio&#13;
to sit up with Mr. Hanna.&#13;
General Lee, our Consul General&#13;
at Cuba, has forwarded a letter&#13;
to the State Department, stating&#13;
that there are 13300 American&#13;
citizens who are now receiving&#13;
assistance from this government&#13;
from the appropriation recently&#13;
made by Congress.&#13;
Mark Hanna as a business man&#13;
is one thing; Mark Hanna as a&#13;
politician is quite another. As a&#13;
business man, Mr. Hanna wants&#13;
the duty on coal reduced to 40&#13;
cents a ton; as a politician he will&#13;
vote for the 60 cents a ton duty&#13;
provided in the new tariff bill.&#13;
Hon, William H. Fleming, of&#13;
Augusta, Ga., is one of the new&#13;
members from the South who is&#13;
unfettered by party prejudice and&#13;
whose broad patriotism enables&#13;
him to rise above the d e l a t e s o f&#13;
party creed. He believes the dietates&#13;
of party leaders should be&#13;
ignored if necessary to bring industrial&#13;
happiness.&#13;
The child tauiglrtto believe any&#13;
occurence a gqod or evil omen, or&#13;
! any day of ^h&amp;_w_eek lucky* hath a&#13;
wide inroad made upon the soundness&#13;
of his understanding.&#13;
John Wolverton plowed out&#13;
nine blue racers last week, the&#13;
longest being njne feet and the&#13;
shortest six feet They were all&#13;
killed. One loving fellow coiled&#13;
around one of John's limbs and&#13;
we are safe in saying he made&#13;
so me lively moves to dislodge bis&#13;
snakeship,—Dansville Eagle.&#13;
Pat McCabe is the owner of&#13;
what may be properly designated&#13;
"a happy family." The members&#13;
of it form a very unique collection&#13;
and consist of two great-horned&#13;
owls, a long-eared owl, a crow&#13;
and a game rooster, all of which&#13;
live together in the happiest manner&#13;
in a cage about four by six&#13;
feet in dimensions.—Dexter Leader.&#13;
Five years ago a man named&#13;
Viogt stole a ride on a railroad in&#13;
Colorado. Recently he became&#13;
a Christian and was smiten with&#13;
remorse to such an extent that he&#13;
sent a jsritten confession to the&#13;
company, inclosing 81,65, being&#13;
his fare at the rate of three cents&#13;
a mile with interest adied. As a&#13;
matter of fact, the fare at that&#13;
time was four cents a mile and&#13;
the company has sent the man a&#13;
demand for 52 cents in addition.—&#13;
Ex. Railroads always get what&#13;
they demand even of legislatures.&#13;
The reports of the sheriffs of&#13;
the state for the last fiscal year&#13;
show that 16,889 prisoners, of&#13;
whom 1,099 were women, occupied&#13;
the different county jails. Of&#13;
these prisoners ~80 were sentenced&#13;
to states prison, 312 to the&#13;
state house of correction, 1,174 to&#13;
the industrial school for boys and&#13;
40. to the industrial school for&#13;
girls. There were 31 escapes during&#13;
the year. The cost of maintaining&#13;
tne jails for the year and&#13;
arresting and conveying prisoners&#13;
to penal institutions was $187,&#13;
908.71.&#13;
"Bloomer socials" are becoming&#13;
very popularHhroughout the state&#13;
but anyone wliVgoes to one with&#13;
the expectation of seeing any unusual&#13;
display of hosiery will get&#13;
left The "bloomers" are not that&#13;
kind but cut flowers in full bloom.&#13;
The editor of a juvenile publication&#13;
recently received the following:&#13;
Mister editor:&#13;
deer s u i ,&#13;
please stop yore paper,&#13;
sister Annie died on Monday aftur redeing&#13;
your last weeks number.&#13;
—At last accounts the papeL was&#13;
THE MASON ARTIFICIAL STONE W A T E R T A N K . A wonderfbl&#13;
Invention e n d a m a t boon t o farmers.&#13;
Beat or cold do not effect them, and they will last&#13;
amies* destroyed by an eartbqaake while the earth&#13;
lasts. We Invite your inspection. They will not&#13;
rot. rust o r wear ont. Warranted for five years.&#13;
For farther particulars call o r write t o&#13;
WILL EVEBS,&#13;
Agent and manufacturer, S tockbridge, Mich&#13;
7\ GOOD SADDLE******&#13;
^ fa the most noticeable and&#13;
taking point on a Bi cycle. •* •**&#13;
tSUKJNS SADDLE.&#13;
Oat a&#13;
aV|l OB* 1WB a m * .&#13;
&gt;"'&gt;; &lt;u.*' \.*vr *lyfk j*? ::ib&#13;
©uu» fr*ru* y r •*&#13;
tfCfJBfeft MFG. CO.,&#13;
i.&#13;
W W M W W W &gt;&#13;
still going, thouglrits subscript&#13;
tion list was shorter by one name.&#13;
Does the time at which the&#13;
sleep is obtained, provided it is&#13;
sufficient in amount, make any&#13;
change iu the result? In brief,&#13;
is there any truth iu the old adage&#13;
that an hour before midnight is&#13;
worth two after midnight? I had&#13;
an opportunity to make some&#13;
study of this subject in my naval&#13;
service during the late war. On&#13;
shipboad, as is undoubtedly known&#13;
to most of you, the ship's company—&#13;
officers and men alike—&#13;
stand four-hour watches day and&#13;
night, and to get the required&#13;
amount of rest are obliged to get&#13;
their sleep irregularly; to so arrange&#13;
it so that the same man&#13;
shall not be obliged to take early&#13;
or late watches continuously the&#13;
"dog watch" of two hours is interpolated,&#13;
thus adding to the irregularity.&#13;
I n watching the results&#13;
The Evening News,&#13;
"THE BEAT DAILY Of MGTOUN."&#13;
The Greatest Advertising Medium&#13;
into* State U THE DETROIT EVENING NEWS. Why*&#13;
Because it has by far the largest circulation. Why S T&#13;
It? Because It Is the best daily newaMjer. M you wait&#13;
the best, TAKE THE EVEN!&#13;
Tw0 tuts a copy. Ten cents i week&#13;
(OCUVCRKD).&#13;
$1.25 far 3 Mutts&#13;
(BY MAIL).&#13;
AQEHTS IN EVERY TOWN IN MIOHIQAN.&#13;
The Evening News, Detroit.&#13;
m finrtntji §wpiitch.ij Special Bargain&#13;
PPUUBBLLIISSHHEEDD SSVVEEHRTT TTHHUUKRSSDDAAYY MU lRJRSilfKJO.N O BBYV ] \ ^ ^ § *&#13;
FRANK 1.. ANDREWS&#13;
Editor and Proprietor.&#13;
Subscription Price f 1 in Advance&#13;
Entered at tbe i'ostoflke at Piackney, Michi^&amp;n,&#13;
no second-class matter.&#13;
Advertising rates tuado known un apt&gt;lR;Uiou.&#13;
Buelneea L'arda, $4.00 per yasr.&#13;
Lieiitu aud marriage uoticee published free.&#13;
Announcements uf entertainments may UB ^ai*!&#13;
for, if dtsirtd, by presenting tue uCice with tickets&#13;
of 4dmtSBion. In case tickets mn not brou^ut&#13;
to the oflice, rtj^'ilsr rates will \&gt;e eunrned, •&#13;
A l l matter in local notice cvlumn"will be cnar^&#13;
ed at"6 cents per line or fraction tnereof, for eacu&#13;
insertion. Wnere no tima is s^eciiieil, all notice*&#13;
will be inserted until ordered aiacontinued, and&#13;
will 1M charged fur accordingly. ^ d f A l i cnan^es&#13;
Of advertisements MUST reach tbis o d k e as early&#13;
s s T U E S D A Y morniut to insure an insertion the&#13;
s a m e week. i&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIRECTORY.&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
P R E S I D E N T . . . . . . Claude L. isigler.&#13;
T R U S T E E S , Cieu. Keaaon Jr., W. E . Murphv, r. 4&gt;.&#13;
Jackson, F. J. Wright, E . fi. Brown, C. L. Grimes.&#13;
C L B B K K. H. Teeple.&#13;
T B E A S U B K B J A. C a d v e l l .&#13;
A S S E S S O R D. W. Mnrta&#13;
STHEKI' COUJUSBIOKJCB A. M o n k s&#13;
M A B S A H L P. Monroe.&#13;
H B A I . T U U P F I C B B Dr. H. F. » i « l e r .&#13;
A T T O B S K Y . . . . W. A. Curr.&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
JRJfK&#13;
QL'iCK.&#13;
I'Kict 55.00.&#13;
t'ricc a s&#13;
ionsj a s t b e y&#13;
-ist, t o e&#13;
0.^-4 e s t b a r -&#13;
•J u n e v e r&#13;
)if-*red,&#13;
!•;-•'. o u t 1!V&gt;-&#13;
.•','..- b o o k of&#13;
; •.• IOJ" s a v -&#13;
.::.: and&#13;
-• •••)". ^aulft&#13;
••:•&gt; srniile.&#13;
• •' n:.' for it.&#13;
Lamp,&#13;
F i a i s a e d i n&#13;
"Efrild&#13;
l a c q u e r .&#13;
h i i * N o . •:&#13;
Kocbestt-r&#13;
( himnf-y&#13;
a n d Wick.&#13;
wi* h e i t h e r&#13;
a liaiuiri jii.e&#13;
14-inch&#13;
shade or &gt;0-&#13;
inch fancy&#13;
croi..- tib*':&gt;»&#13;
parser .iliiiit'*&#13;
or fan y&#13;
ha.'i'l pair.te&#13;
»i haiique'&#13;
&lt;iob-\ wltu&#13;
?ol«i trinimlnas,&#13;
all for&#13;
7&#13;
A. M. ROTHSCHILD &amp; € ) J&#13;
WHOLE 5A 1/-:. &lt;&#13;
j;; -»tr, Van Bjren t o Jar.t. SMI-SU.( CiiiCtqc t&#13;
V.^r.A .1. r f i •. ;. !:&gt;.&gt;r. I&#13;
GRUMMOND'S&#13;
DETROIT n i CLE7ELAND&#13;
LINE OF STEAMERS&#13;
25?; TO&#13;
CLEVELAND&#13;
A DELIGHTFUL&#13;
Moonlight Trip Across Late Eric&#13;
LOCAL TIME. DAILY.&#13;
Lv. Detroit, 11:00?. M.&#13;
BICYCLES CARRIED FREE.&#13;
U. G. GRUMM0ND&#13;
GEN'L MGR.,&#13;
TEL, NO- 162- OFFICE &amp; DOCK, FOOT FIRST ST.&#13;
^ • t x o i t , THT««&gt;i&#13;
over two years I could never dls^&#13;
cover that t h e watch officers and&#13;
the men were not as fully refreshed&#13;
by their sleep as were the medical&#13;
and pay officii*, who stand no&#13;
watch, and have hours «s regular&#13;
as those of any hou*»Wder,--dDr.&#13;
£ . P . Colby, in the New Engiao^&#13;
Medical Gasetto.&#13;
A A A ^ ^ &gt; M ^ ^ S &gt; ^ ^ S &gt; 1&#13;
"Nothing else like it^&#13;
The most refreshing and&#13;
pleasant Soap for the skku&#13;
1&#13;
a&#13;
It lasts twice as long as others.&#13;
A V i a l w i ) l c o n v i n c e y o u of i t s srrcat&#13;
merit. W i U rl^..-;o lie m o s t fUsti4ious.&#13;
CHARLES F.MILLtR,&#13;
Mfr- «f r x b ' N w h M U . L t : 0 YOH-.t-T %•&#13;
/ ^ " - ^ S O A P S A\T&gt; PBRFUA-.'j.kV. L&#13;
Lancaster, Petii^ A&#13;
R 8 T A H L 1 W H K 1 ) , I R 4 9 . f&#13;
ME T H O D I S T E P I S C O P A L OHLKCH. '&#13;
Kev. M. H.McMahuii pastor. .'Services nv^ty 1&#13;
Sunday m o r n i n g at li»:;io, and everv Sunday |&#13;
evening at 7:00 o'clock, i'rayt-r meetini; T h u r s - t&#13;
day e v e n i n g s , bunday HC;.O&lt;&gt;] at ciose of m o r n - i&#13;
n g s e r v i c e . Mrs. £stella Oratiam, ^uuerintend't. j&#13;
CO X O f l E G A f l O N A L CIIL'KCII.&#13;
U. S. Jones, pastor. Service every&#13;
Sunday morning st 10:;ii&gt;, and every Sunday&#13;
evening at T:oC o'clock. Praver me^-tin^ Tliured&#13;
a y - e v e n l n g e . s a a i a y ecSrool at cIoeroTmofn-"&#13;
inif service. I. J. Co»k, bupi. Jj. T. Grimes, Sec.&#13;
ST. M A l i l ' S CATHOLIC CHL'KCH.&#13;
Ilev. M . J . ConiiusTiord. Pastor. Services&#13;
every third Sunday. L o w mass st 7:30 o clock,&#13;
high mass with sermoa at y ;?.h a. m. Catecbism&#13;
at 3:00 p. in., vespers ami benediction st T:^u p . m .&#13;
Caveats and Trade Marks obtained and a l l Patent&#13;
business rozi'l'Vtod for /tloderate F e « s .&#13;
Bend model, dr:L\H:i g or pho to. We ad vise i f&#13;
patentable frc^ &lt;&gt;£ charge. Oar fee n o t d u e till&#13;
patent i s sec i:r1 1. A ' P a m p h l e t "How t o Obtain&#13;
Patcms." ^vltb. copt or s a m e i n t h e U. 8.&#13;
and foreign countries s e n t free. Address*&#13;
C. A . SE^OW &amp; CO.&#13;
Qrw. pATtWT O r r i c c , W A S H I N G T O N , D . C .&#13;
fcipiiepejr cared b r Dr. M i i e r Nerrta*.&#13;
SOCIETIES.&#13;
m n e A. O. II. Society of this u'ace, meets ever*7&#13;
X third Sunday i n tne Fr. Matthew Hall.&#13;
John Jlcciuiness, County Delegate.&#13;
M&#13;
liuckney Y. P . S. C. E. Meetings held every&#13;
Sunday evening in Cong'l church at 6:"JJ o'clock.&#13;
EPWOKTH LEAGUE. Meets every Sunday&#13;
evening at e:u0o&lt;lock in the M. E. Church. A&#13;
cordial invitation is extended to everyone, t^fecially&#13;
young people. Miss Jennie Haze. Pre?.&#13;
Junior Upirorth Leagut Meets every Sunday&#13;
afterno«# at 3:uu o'clo&lt;-k. at M. E clu'avb. Ail&#13;
cordially irj(Tited.&#13;
S H B S AWdfi ——r '—i —&#13;
^ P V L I 5 L €&#13;
THE WHEIIL OF WHEELS.&#13;
Trip C T I and B. Society of this u l s c e r x i w r "&#13;
every third Saturaay eve'nins; in the Fr. Mat- ,&#13;
thew Hail. John Donohue, Presiaent. \&#13;
KN I G H T S OF MACCABEES. \&#13;
Meet every Friday evening o n or before full i&#13;
of t h e moon at their hall in "th.-? Swartuout bldg.&#13;
Visiting brothers are cordiallv invited.&#13;
CHAS. OiKPBiLL, Sir Knittbt Commander Livingston Lod«e, No.7«, F A A . M. K e y . ' s r&#13;
Communication Tuesday evening, on or talore&#13;
the full of tbe moon. H. F. Sigler, W. M. j&#13;
OR D E R OF EASTERN S T A R meets each month I&#13;
the Friday evening following the regular F . :&#13;
AA.M. meeting, iftss. C. ELLEJ* RJCHAEDS, WM,&#13;
A D I E S O F T H E MACCABEKS. Meet every [&#13;
1st and 3rd Saturday of each month at 8:80 :&#13;
o'clock at the K. o . T. M. hall. Viaiting sisters |&#13;
cordially invited. J t ' U i Sxei-sa, Lady Cotn. j&#13;
HE PERFECT&#13;
^»¾ £.;*$ WHEEL.&#13;
Dca't fcuy a rrheel until yo« see&#13;
TKH CARLISLE and get our prices.&#13;
THE CARLISLE MFG. CO.&#13;
ancAoa&#13;
\ .&#13;
KNIGHTS o r T H E L O J A L GUARD i&#13;
ine*-t every second \Wdneeaay )&#13;
f renin8 of every mouth in itie K. O. |&#13;
T. M. Hall at 7:80o'clock. All visiting&#13;
Guards w«leome.&#13;
F, L. A&gt;UK±:WS, Oapt. Gen. isncursnta?&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
H. F. SIGLER M. D- C. L, S»GLER M, D&#13;
DRS. SIGLEK &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
Physicians and Sur^eur,!". All calls jrouiptly j&#13;
a t t e a d e d t e i a y o r toight. Office o n Main street&#13;
Pinckney J l i . S o l d b y F t A . S i a l e r ^&#13;
mm^rmw m m v&#13;
RIDE? : W&#13;
Nearly everyone rides;&#13;
aud t o ride with ease use&#13;
pedal t h a t ' s r i g h t .&#13;
JIOCIHESTER ~&#13;
PEDALS&#13;
ARE RI6HT&#13;
and every pair is ^mar&#13;
aateed. Two style*,&#13;
'i^ \-it&#13;
- VM&#13;
m&#13;
' vA&#13;
• 4&#13;
. /.&#13;
!f&#13;
-v.::.s&#13;
•fci&#13;
* &gt; M M W M A i y r '**&lt;&#13;
v •&#13;
# . &gt; • • • •&#13;
i-!"'&#13;
*•&#13;
* *&#13;
Is?&#13;
.**'&#13;
&amp;&#13;
«4"&#13;
8-'&#13;
, • ? • &gt; ; • • &gt;&#13;
a:#&#13;
8 *&#13;
s&amp;-&#13;
fcf-L&#13;
^ - ,&#13;
» 1 O'lin —&#13;
FBAITX L. fcoaxws^ Publisher*&#13;
SK&#13;
TALMAGE'S SEBMON.&#13;
A TR1BUTR TO , LAWYERS IN&#13;
LAST 8UNOAV8DI8COURSB.&#13;
AfciOutKJ&#13;
slrsh&#13;
air.*&#13;
about tft^aieat an&#13;
ted hyobinjpftased&#13;
this, r i "ifl;&#13;
'ryw"- o »' &gt;ej .-/1/.&#13;
/ # H f * l n . * ^ o w whojue. bean&#13;
pens/oned because he hae^eigfcty-Bevon&#13;
Uvinf children-may, with pronriety, be&#13;
called h**&amp;^frer*. y&gt;'. ,¾ ^.,;&#13;
Senator ^Um*n keeps rttht bh | a V&#13;
bins the%ufarltlM^irf^^ipltoh!ork&#13;
and there li no use try1ag«t# disgusts&#13;
the fact that the people like it.&#13;
Who can answer the Denver Post,&#13;
which asks. • "What can be more ridiculous&#13;
than a pair of checked bloomem&#13;
on a pair of beanpole lege?" We&#13;
fire It up.&#13;
•Yom the Te*it "Bring S«aes taa l*w-&#13;
*•*"•—Titos Chapter *, V»rs« 18—&#13;
Trials. Temptations and Trlqinphs of&#13;
th« Profession,&#13;
A young woman who is under hypnotic&#13;
control in Mount Ciemens,Mlch.,&#13;
"sings in a language she doesn't understand."&#13;
She may be fitting herself&#13;
for an operatic career.&#13;
The Philadelphia Press notes that&#13;
"Lansing, Mich., attributes the falling&#13;
off in its number of saloons to the bicycles."&#13;
It is also true that saloons&#13;
have caused a falling off of bicycles.&#13;
In his account of the Sharkey-Maher&#13;
fight Oorbett neglected to state that&#13;
he wished the police or somebody had&#13;
stopped another fight in the same&#13;
roind that was made the last in the&#13;
New York mill.&#13;
That's a pretty story that was told&#13;
to the Sunday-school children at the&#13;
recent celebration of the bicentennis*&#13;
at Trinity church In New York. A little&#13;
chambermaid applied to the bishop&#13;
for. confirmation, and being asked on&#13;
what grounds..she based her request&#13;
she said^ that fhe always swept under&#13;
the rugs.&#13;
According to information received at&#13;
Washington, D. C., an egg famine hatresulted&#13;
In Cubs from the war. and&#13;
United States Vice Consul Hyatt at&#13;
Santiago suggests that there Is an ex&#13;
cellent market there for a American*&#13;
eggs. The eggs sell in Cuba for about&#13;
4* cents, a dozen. The duties amount te&#13;
about 10 cents a dozen.&#13;
Evidence that the world moves war&#13;
to have been expected from the Universal&#13;
Postal Congress in Washington.&#13;
Perhaps the most striking bit of testimony&#13;
was the decision of Korea to&#13;
come into the postal union. It is only&#13;
a few years since Korea was known&#13;
throughout the civilised world as the&#13;
"hermit kingdom," but there is nothing&#13;
hermit-like in this desire of the&#13;
Koreans.&#13;
Curse cards are being used in&#13;
Switzerland and Germany to check&#13;
profanity. People go about with&#13;
the cards in their pockets, and whenever&#13;
they hear bad language present&#13;
one to the swearer to sign. The card&#13;
Las printed on it a pledge to abstain&#13;
from swearing; for a specified time or&#13;
to pay a pfenning; an oath to some&#13;
charity. Nearly 40,900 • cards have&#13;
been distributed * in Switzerland,&#13;
where there are three language* to&#13;
swear In.&#13;
Deming, New Mexico, dispatches say:&#13;
trions time has there heenactivity&#13;
in the Mex'can cattle&#13;
trade en now. In the first four months&#13;
of the year 82S cars have been loaded&#13;
and shipped fjom the Deming yards*&#13;
containing a total of 82,000 head. In&#13;
Match l f t m head were shipped out of&#13;
Mexico at this point For April the&#13;
Mexican cattle shipments from here&#13;
amount to about 21,000 head. From&#13;
the state of Chihuahua the figures are&#13;
tar greater. The increase has been&#13;
tremendous. Daring April of ISM tt&gt;&#13;
tM head of beef cattle warn shipped&#13;
from Chihuahua to the United States.&#13;
white tirt April shipments for this&#13;
year have reached as nigh an 71044,&#13;
and thU U 72*000 bead la excess of the&#13;
shipments for the preceding month.&#13;
HE profession of&#13;
the law la here introduced,&#13;
and within&#13;
two days in the&#13;
capital city SOB&#13;
young men joined&#13;
it, and at this season&#13;
' in • various&#13;
parts of the land&#13;
other hundreds are&#13;
taking their diplomas&#13;
for an illustrious&#13;
profession, and is it not appropriate&#13;
that I address such young men&#13;
from a moral and religious standpoint,&#13;
as upon them are now rolling the responsibilities&#13;
of that calling represented&#13;
in the text by Zenas the lawyer.&#13;
! We all admire the heroic and rigorous&#13;
side of Paul's nature, as when he&#13;
stands coolly deliberate on the deck of&#13;
the corn ship while the jock-tars of&#13;
the Mediterranean are cowering in the&#13;
cyclone; as when he stands undaunted&#13;
amid the marbles of the palace, before&#13;
thick-necked Nero,, surrounded with&#13;
his twelve cruel lictors; as when we&#13;
find him earning his livelihood with&#13;
his own needle, sewing hair-cloth, and&#13;
preaching the gospel in the interstices;&#13;
as when we find him able to take the&#13;
thirty-nine lashes, every stroke of&#13;
which fetched the blood, yet continuing&#13;
in his missionary work; as when&#13;
we find him, regardless of the consequence&#13;
to himself, delivering a temperance&#13;
lecture to Felix, the government&#13;
inebriate. But sometimes we&#13;
catch a glimpse of the mild and genial&#13;
side of Paul's nature. It seems that he&#13;
had a friend who was a barrister by&#13;
profession. His name was Zenas, and&#13;
he wanted to see him. Perhaps he had&#13;
formed the acquaintance of this lawyer&#13;
in the court-room. Perhaps, sometimes,&#13;
when he wanted to ask some&#13;
question in regard to Roman law, lie&#13;
west to this Zenas, the lawyer. At&#13;
any rate, he had a warm attachment&#13;
for the man; and he provides for his&#13;
comfortable escort and entertainment&#13;
as he writes to Titus: "Bring Zenas&#13;
the lawyer."&#13;
This man of my text belonged to a&#13;
profession In which are many ardent&#13;
supporters of Christ and the Gospel.&#13;
Among them, Blackstone, the great&#13;
commentator on English law; and Wllberforce,&#13;
the emancipator; and the late&#13;
Benjamin F. Butler, attorney general&#13;
of New York; and the late Charles&#13;
Chauncey, the leader of the Philadelphia&#13;
bar; and Chief Justices Marshall,&#13;
and Tenterden, and Campbell, and Sir&#13;
Thomas More, who died for the truth&#13;
on the scaffold, saying to his aghast&#13;
executioner: "Pluck up courage, man.&#13;
and do your duty; my neck Is very&#13;
short; be careful, therefore, and do not&#13;
strike awry."&#13;
Among the mightiest pleas that ever&#13;
have been made by tongue of barrister,&#13;
have been pleas in behalf of the Bible&#13;
and Christianity—as when Daniel&#13;
Webster stood in the supreme court at&#13;
Washington, pleading in the famous&#13;
Girard will case, denouncing any attempt&#13;
to educate the people without&#13;
giving them at the eame time moral&#13;
sentiment, as "low, ribald and vulgar&#13;
deism and Infidelity;" as when Santue}&#13;
L. Southard, of New Jersey, the leader&#13;
of the forum ht-hiiu^ay, tttnnA nn tl&gt;»&#13;
According to the official statistics of&#13;
commerce the first consignments&#13;
nt Egyptian cotton coming directly to&#13;
thevtyOted States were received during&#13;
m»e. fiscal year 18S4, and amosmtad to&#13;
174,146 pounds. From this, email beginning&#13;
our direct imports sapialy increased&#13;
until in the fiscal year ISM&#13;
tihey had reached no lens a figure than&#13;
MJ^m^pm?^ With the exeeptfesVf*&#13;
JBiTit. the only cotton-producing&#13;
coem&amp;z from which the United&#13;
ooasiderame&#13;
cotton,&#13;
Qke the Egyptian, owee its use in this&#13;
country to certain peculiarities of Quality&#13;
that make it better fitted for some&#13;
owp varieties,&#13;
but neither the Peruvian nor the&#13;
Egyptian can properly be said to come&#13;
idto direct competition with our native&#13;
cottons. As compared with the&#13;
Egyptian, however, the quantity of&#13;
Peruvian cotton Imported Is tery&#13;
•mail. The largest importation over&#13;
recorded, that for the fiscal year 1st*,&#13;
•mnuntsd to only 8,41l,«2f&#13;
platform at Princeton College commencement,&#13;
advocating the literary excellence&#13;
of the Scriptures; as when Edmund&#13;
Burke, in the famous trial of&#13;
Warren Hastings, not only in behalf&#13;
of the English government, but in behalf&#13;
of elevated morals, closed his&#13;
speech in the midst of the most august&#13;
assemblage ever gathered in Westminster&#13;
Hall, by saying: "I impeach&#13;
Warren Hastings In the name of the&#13;
house of commons, whose national&#13;
character he has dishonored; I impeach&#13;
him in the name of the people of India,&#13;
whose rights and liberties he has&#13;
subverted; I impeach him in the name&#13;
of human nature, which he has disgraced;&#13;
in the name of both sexes, and&#13;
of every rank, and of every station,&#13;
and of every situation in the world, I&#13;
impeach Warren Hastings."&#13;
• • •&#13;
No other profession more needs the&#13;
grace of God to deliver them in their&#13;
temptations, to comfort them In their&#13;
trials, to sustain them It the diaohacge&#13;
of their duty. While X would have you&#13;
bring the merchant to Christ, and&#13;
while I would have you bring the farmdress&#13;
you now in the words of Paul&#13;
to Titus: "Bring Zenas the lawyer."&#13;
By no much as his duties are delicate,&#13;
and great, by so much does he need&#13;
Christian stimulus and safeguard. We&#13;
all become clients. I do not supose&#13;
there is a man fifty years&#13;
has been in active life, who has net&#13;
been afflicted with a lawsuit. Your&#13;
name Is assaulted, and you .must have&#13;
legal protection. Your boundary line&#13;
is invaded, and the courts must reestablish&#13;
rt Yonr patent is infringed&#13;
upon, and you must make the offending&#13;
manufactui-er pay the penalty.&#13;
Tow treasures are taken, and the thief&#13;
must be apprehended. You wane to&#13;
make your will, and you do pot want&#13;
follow. t&amp;B aiampTi of those who;&#13;
for the sake of saving $100 from an attorney,&#13;
imperil $250,000, and keep the&#13;
generation, following for twenty years&#13;
quarreling about the estate, until it is&#13;
all exhausted. You are struck at by an&#13;
assassin, and you must Invoke for him&#13;
the penitentiary. All classes of persons&#13;
in course of time become clients,&#13;
and therefore they are all interested in&#13;
the morality of the Christian integrity&#13;
of the legal profession. "Bring Zenas&#13;
the lawyer."&#13;
But how is an attorney decide as to&#13;
what are the principles by which he&#13;
should conduct himself In regard to his&#13;
clients? On one extreme, Lord brougham&#13;
will appear, saying: "The Innocence&#13;
or guilt of your client is nothing&#13;
to you. You are to save your client&#13;
regardless of the torment, the suffering,&#13;
the destruction of others. You are&#13;
to know but one man, in the world—&#13;
your client. You are to save him&#13;
though you should .bring your country&#13;
into confusion. At all hazzards you&#13;
must .save your client/;. So says Lord&#13;
Brougham. But no right-minded lawyer&#13;
could adopt that sentiment. On the&#13;
other extreme, Cicero will come to you&#13;
and say: "You must never plead the&#13;
cause Of a bad man," forgetful of the&#13;
fact that the greatest villain on earth&#13;
ought to have a fair trial and that an&#13;
attorney cannot be Judge and advocate&#13;
at the same time. It was grand when&#13;
Lord Erskine sacrificed his attorneygeneralship&#13;
for the sake of defending&#13;
Thomas Paine in his publication of his&#13;
book catted: "The Bights of Man,"&#13;
while, at the same time, he, the advocate,&#13;
abhorred Thomas Paine's irreligious&#13;
sentiments. Between these two&#13;
opposite theories of what is right* what&#13;
shall, the attorney do? God alone can&#13;
direct him. To that chancery he must&#13;
be. appellant and he will get an answer&#13;
In an hour. Blessed is that attorney&#13;
between whose office and. the&#13;
throne of God there is perpetual, reverential,&#13;
and prayerful communication.&#13;
That attorney will never make an irreparable&#13;
mistake. True to the habits&#13;
of your profession, you Bay: "Cite us&#13;
some authority on the subject.". Well,'&#13;
I quote to you the decision of the supreme&#13;
court of heaven: "If any lack&#13;
wisdom,let him ask of God, who'glveth&#13;
to all men liberally, and hpbraideth&#13;
not, and it shall be given him."&#13;
There are two or three form's of&#13;
temptation' to which the legal profession&#13;
is especially subject The first of&#13;
all is scepticism. Controversy Is the&#13;
Ufetisatt business of tftaf occupation.&#13;
Controversy mar be incidental or accidental&#13;
with USH but WUn^yOu it tt perpetual;&#13;
You get so useeVto -pushing the&#13;
sharp question "Why?" and making&#13;
unaided reason superior to, the emotions,&#13;
that the religion.of Jeatte.Chriet,!&#13;
•Vhieh .is n?slmple matter of fajtb, and&#13;
above human reason', although not con- i&#13;
tracy to it, has but little chance with !&#13;
some of you, A brilliant orator wrote&#13;
a.hook,' oh the first.page of wklch he&#13;
announced this sentiment:. "An honest&#13;
God; la the noblest work of man!"&#13;
Scepticism is the mightiest temptation&#13;
of the legal profjassfpn, and that nian&#13;
who can stand in that profession, resisting&#13;
all solicitations to Infidelity,&#13;
and can be' as brave as George Briggs,&#13;
of Massachusetts, who stepped from the&#13;
gubernatorial chair to the missionary&#13;
convention, to plead the cause of a dying&#13;
race; then on his way home from&#13;
the convention, ^» a cold day, took off&#13;
his warm cloak and threw it oyer the&#13;
shoulders of a thinly clad missionary,&#13;
saytngi "Take that and wear it, k will&#13;
do you more good than It will me;" or-,&#13;
«yta«r the Wen&#13;
»w&#13;
t-ofsacred&#13;
day. My Intimate anw^amemted^ - g W Q »»LV-tgW&#13;
friend, the late Judge Ncljiop, In-his * - '''' - ' « * *&#13;
interesting remlnisceaegs/ tJT HUTU*&#13;
Choate, says that durinr the J i l t $mr&#13;
that gentleman- tried in Nam Tirk, taooourt&#13;
adjqurnhdi • frpiB^'Krlday. until&#13;
Monday, on account of the 411ness of&#13;
Mr, Ghoate; but the chronicler says&#13;
that ©a'the' Intervening Sabath he saw&#13;
Mr. Choate in the old "Brick Church," &gt;&#13;
listening &gt;«•,*. thoti Rem, Dr. Gardiner&#13;
Spring. I do not know whether, on&#13;
the following,-day, B4tfuA,,OhaaiA wan&#13;
his cause or lost It; but I do know that&#13;
his Sabbatic rest did not do him any&#13;
i harm. Every lawyer la entitled to one&#13;
day's rest out of seven. If he surrenders&#13;
that, he robs three—God, his own&#13;
soul, and his client. Lord Castlereagh&#13;
and Sir Thomas Romllly were the leaders&#13;
of the bar In their day. They both&#13;
died suicides. Wilberforce accounts for&#13;
their aberration of intellect on the&#13;
ground that they were unlntermittent&#13;
in their work, and'they never rested on&#13;
Sunday. "Poor fellow!" said..Wilberforce,&#13;
In regard to Castlemaghi "Poor&#13;
feLLowJ it was nonrpbservanoe of the&#13;
Sabbath.'' Chief Justice Hale says:&#13;
"When I do not properly keep the'&#13;
Lord's day,r all the rest of the week&#13;
Is unhappy and unsuccessful., in my&#13;
worldly employment." 1 quote to-day&#13;
from the highest statute book in the&#13;
universe: "Remember the Sabbath day&#13;
to keep it holy." The legal gentleman&#13;
who breaks that statute may seem for&#13;
awhile to be advantaged; but in the&#13;
long run, the men who observe this law&#13;
of God will have larger retainers, vaster&#13;
Influence, greater professional success&#13;
than those men who break the&#13;
statute. Observance of the law of God&#13;
pays not only spiritually and eternally,&#13;
but it pays in hard dollars, br bank&#13;
bills,-&#13;
Another powerful temptation of the&#13;
legal profession is to artificial stimulus.&#13;
No brifc except those who have&#13;
addressed audiences knows about the&#13;
nervous exhaustion that sometimes&#13;
tomes afterward. The temptation to&#13;
strong drfnk approaches the legal profession&#13;
at that very point. Then a&#13;
trial is coming on. . Through the illventilated&#13;
court room, the barrister's&#13;
health has been depressed for days and&#13;
for weeks. He wants to raUy his energy.&#13;
He is tempted to presort to-artificial&#13;
stimulus.. It Is either, to get. himself&#13;
up, or let .himself dawn, that khis&#13;
temptation comes upon him-' The&#13;
flower of the American bar, ruined in&#13;
reputation and ruined in estate, said&#13;
in his last moments: "This Is the end.&#13;
I am dying on a borrowed bed, covered&#13;
\Yi#i a hprrow.e£ sheej, in a^house built&#13;
by public charity. Bury me under&#13;
that treX ir&gt; the mWdle of "the field,&#13;
th/»t f may hot be crowded;'T always&#13;
like Judge John McLean, who can step&#13;
from the supreme court room of the&#13;
United "States on to the" auulvemaiy&#13;
platform. of the American Sunday&#13;
School Union, Ks most powerful orator—&#13;
deserves congratulations and encomium.&#13;
Oh, men of the legal profession,&#13;
let me beg of you to quit asking&#13;
questions in regard to religion, and begin&#13;
believing. The mighty men of your&#13;
profession. Story, and Keht, and Mansfield,&#13;
became Christians, not through&#13;
their .heads, but through their hearts.&#13;
"Except ye become as a little child, ye&#13;
shall In no wise enter the kingdom of&#13;
God.** If you do not become a Christian,&#13;
Oh, man of the legal profession,&#13;
until you can reason this whole thing&#13;
out in regard to God and Christ and&#13;
the immortality of the soul, yon will&#13;
never become a Christian at all. Only&#13;
believe. "Bring Senas the lawyer."&#13;
Another mighty temptation for the&#13;
legal profession is Sabbath breaking.&#13;
The trial has been going on for ten or&#13;
fifteen days. The oriOnee is all in.&#13;
It is tatnrdny night The Judge's gavel&#13;
fails on the 4eskv and he says:,&#13;
"Crier, adjourn the court until' tan&#13;
o'clock Monday morning." On Monday&#13;
morning the counsellor Is to sum up&#13;
er to Chrift. and while I would have I the case. Thousands of dollars, yea,&#13;
you bring the mechanic to Christ, l a d tne reputation and life of his client&#13;
may depend upon the success of his&#13;
plea. How will he spend the intervening&#13;
Sunday? There Is not one lawyer&#13;
out of a hundred that can withstand&#13;
the temptation to break the Lord's day&#13;
under such circumstances. And yet, if&#13;
he hurts his own soul. WTmiy&#13;
my brother, you cannot do before&#13;
twelve o'clock Saturday night, or after&#13;
twelve o'clock Sunday night, God does&#13;
not want you to do at all. Besides&#13;
that, you want the twenty-four hours&#13;
of Sabbath rest to give you that electrical&#13;
and magnetic force which will be&#13;
worth more to you before tne jury than&#13;
all the elaboration of your case on the&#13;
have been prpwded."&#13;
Xnbthef powerfuf temptation of the&#13;
legal profession is to allow the absorbing&#13;
duties .of the profession to shut&#13;
out thought* orlne great "future. Vou&#13;
know veVy ^eW*thaf you whd^ have it&#13;
dftetV tried others, will aft*** a while&#13;
be out oh trial yourselves. Death Wilt&#13;
serve o n t o u a writ of- ejectment, and&#13;
yW» win be pur off these earthly premises.&#13;
On that* day; all the affairs of&#13;
your fife will be presented in a "bill of&#13;
particulars." No&#13;
s ^ g p ^ 1 .w||i'Conv«n»&#13;
mjiy^pn pvtnwpfot an* of&#13;
differences, qm men, esneeiaUy 0¾those&#13;
,Tf^o were candidates xpr P%ces on the&#13;
state ticket It was a rreeisilver convcn^&#13;
on-thcpusfhopV. .^very candidate&#13;
whose name was presented was announced&#13;
as orthodox in stiver doctrine&#13;
as the cardinal principle for his favorable'&#13;
consideration. While there wanno&#13;
place on' the "State ticket "accorded&#13;
to eitherthe- silver) fie publicans or t o&#13;
the Populists, yet representatives of&#13;
both those elements co-operated In the&#13;
oquventloo..:Thesilver Republicans and&#13;
the Populists&lt;are ihcuiselyes, responsible&#13;
for having, no ,representatives on&#13;
the ticket as they \vquid nofc ask 11.404&#13;
stated that they jvere more interested&#13;
1¾ the pjatfprjn. .&lt;ihan in theofflpes.&#13;
The convention wa* organised with&#13;
the temporary officers — Chairman,&#13;
Ulrlc Sloane; secretary,'W. A. Taylor&#13;
—l&gt;e}ng made permanent The, great*&#13;
est demonstration of the convention&#13;
followed that part of'Chairman Sloane's&#13;
speech in which he referred to Win. J.&#13;
Bryan as the leader of the silver cause&#13;
for 1900. A large gold cross' Wis' carried&#13;
into the hall and ' caused an immense&#13;
display of enthusiasm. J It had&#13;
ah orriaments the crown of1 tnorhsand&#13;
a clock indicating- 16 minutes to 1&#13;
o'clock. :'' ;'; &lt;•''•' ''&#13;
When the honiinatfdnfs' for candidates&#13;
for governor were called for the names&#13;
of Paul J. Sorg-, Allen D. gmalltftf&#13;
Allen W. Thurman, D. D. Donovin, S.&#13;
T. Hough, Horace lu. Ohapmaot,-i tt^d*.,&#13;
Hunter, I. M. VanMeter, A. VV.Patrick&#13;
and Jas. A. Rice were presented-. It&#13;
had been clearly 'ev.ideneCil in tbe^pb^&#13;
liminaries that the forces of John E.&#13;
McLean, of -Cincinnati,. had control of&#13;
the convention and while it had been&#13;
generally believedijthat, J-udge. Hough*&#13;
of Highland county, would be the Mc-&#13;
Lean candidate circumstances arose&#13;
which caused them to take U£ Chapman&#13;
instead. On"the first ballot, however,&#13;
the McLean votes were carefully&#13;
scattered to prevent making sv too&#13;
Sjiddep display. pf J W :rtrcns^fa, but&#13;
on the second, ballot they threw ejjough&#13;
votes to Chapman to g-ivq, a nice pajority.&#13;
His nomination was then" mj&amp;de&#13;
unanimous and, although there 'vfSf a&#13;
large field of Candidates for eachrofflcev&#13;
the ticket wan" conrpVttsd v?fVnbu^inu^n&#13;
•t,rJo™uKblxle» "" ao'st f*oAillOlAw^s«VV I*tlif»HWrAttwnaafbt*^i #ttAVVVr .&#13;
e*nor, Melvifte '•' T*. "hh/Lvt-, supreme&#13;
Judge, J. P. Bprig^s; attorhey-g^ueral,&#13;
W. H. Borer state treasurer, 3eme£ft&#13;
Wilson; board" 6t public'«w*»rk*, Peter&#13;
n. Degoant sehoef commissioner, Byron&#13;
H. Hard, - • -&#13;
The pUtfonn adopted if for free silver&#13;
and nothing else. It simply reaffirms&#13;
Che Chicago platform and repeats&#13;
the language of thofinanciai plankonly.&#13;
higher court, for * this h&gt;'the bighes:&#13;
court. The day when Lord Exeter was&#13;
tried for high' treasoni the day when&#13;
the house ofccommons moved for the&#13;
impeachment of Lord Lovat; the days&#13;
when Charles I anA ,Queen -Caroline&#13;
were put upon trial; the day when&#13;
Robert Emmet was arraigned as an insurgent;&#13;
the day. when Blennerjfca?set&#13;
was brought into the court room becauac&#13;
he had tried to overthrow thf&#13;
The silver Republicans held a conference&#13;
after the convention and expsessed&#13;
much indignation. They said&#13;
it was true they hadaonenneed that&#13;
certiorari from ^a they did not want,a pUo**% the state&#13;
United State* government, and all the&#13;
other greit .trials of the' world ar&lt;&lt;&#13;
nothing compared witA the greiat trial&#13;
in which you and 1 shall appear sum&#13;
nioned before the Judge of quick and&#13;
dead. There will be no pleading th*re&#13;
"the statute of ltmiUflonsV** «0 "turning&#13;
state's evidence,* tryWg to get 0«&#13;
yourselves, while others : suffer: no&#13;
"moving for a nonsuit." The case will&#13;
come on inexorably, and we shall he&#13;
tried. You, my brother, who hare sc?&#13;
often been advocate for others, will&#13;
then need an advocate for yourself.&#13;
Have yo» selected him? The Lord&#13;
chancellor of the universe. If any&#13;
man sin, we have, an Advocate—Jesus&#13;
Christ the rlghmqus. It,is uncertain&#13;
when your case will be called on. "Be&#13;
ye also ready.-'&#13;
D«swpr ao4 th« Hootebi&#13;
Scotchmen do not like to be reminded&#13;
of the saving that it requires a sur- _&#13;
gical operation to make them see Maodtnost r c ^ ^ t e ^&#13;
joke, and, as a matter pf fact, thejr are k •'-&#13;
as susceptible tp the influence of most&#13;
good stories as anybody else. Jbr. Depew,&#13;
however, seems hardly to believe&#13;
this, though he has many warm friends&#13;
among' Scotchmen, Including Ian Maclaren&#13;
himself. Once at a Scotch dinner&#13;
the doctor said that if the. jokes&#13;
uttered by him that evening were not&#13;
Instantly appreciated they surety would&#13;
be by the time the next annual 4mner&#13;
was held. * \ .&#13;
"I don't think that's a very funny&#13;
thing to say," was the growling com-&#13;
ment of a handsome old S6 cot sitting&#13;
near by.&#13;
"On," said Depew, "that* all right&#13;
You'll see the fun of it a year from&#13;
now.**—Exchange.&#13;
The proportion of people in Norway&#13;
who speak English is larger than in&#13;
any other country of the world.&#13;
ticket, but only after'tfiky'were told&#13;
they could not have i i ' . ' They appointed&#13;
a state committal to call a&#13;
convention. 'to nominatersv separate&#13;
ticket. The Pftpu)iste alilP^nnonnecd&#13;
that they wc^l^ hold a stajo^anvention&#13;
and have"%, ^separate tickev The&#13;
Prohibitionists wtll have two separate&#13;
tickets so that ffteVe will be a J, least&#13;
six state tickets In' the field in Ohio&#13;
this fall&#13;
K i g M Kflaea te • Skeefctttlr'WrtMk.&#13;
The St. Lonisexrpress on the Wabash&#13;
railway plunged through a trestle at&#13;
"Missouri City, Mo., carryitigr down the&#13;
entire train with the ^xceptian-Zrf the&#13;
rearnar.a Pull man: -1 'The&gt; gorfte^wliich&#13;
a &lt;ewxho««s prdvic^ly^sn^psactiually&#13;
empty, had become a raging- torrent&#13;
because "of* Sremeadons jdownppur of&#13;
rain and :tAye^lie structure wetalfejied,&#13;
Seven persons were killed outright,&#13;
including five postal clerkSra baggageman&#13;
and a brakemaa. The conductor&#13;
was laid out with the dead,but was later&#13;
discovered to be alive and was teoipved&#13;
to a hospital. He can scarcely recover&#13;
from- bis injuries, however. Twenty&#13;
passengers were injured., but none&#13;
fatally. ,kf&#13;
Kfclffkte of St. Jot*.&#13;
The nineteenth annual International&#13;
convention of the Knights of St. John&#13;
at'Erie, Pa., proved one of tfce largest&#13;
and most interesting ^ ^ ^ ¾ ^ -Th*&#13;
otfeers elected werer ^prfeme 8pirttuai&#13;
adrUer, B t Rev. John &amp; Foley, bishop&#13;
of Detroit; supreme preeid&lt;mVHenry&#13;
J. Worst, of Wapakoneta, O.; first supreme&#13;
vice-president, George M.&#13;
Geiger, of BelWrne, Ky.; aeeond on&gt;&#13;
pre me vloe-president WJUiam &amp;&#13;
Horan, of Denver; supreme secsesaxy,&#13;
M. J. Kane, Buffalo; supreme treasurer,&#13;
Lewis' N. Werner, of tinnduakyr&#13;
O.; supreme trustees, John F„ Oedy, 0&#13;
Peoria, ILL; John Todeobier, of Detroit.&#13;
' ' i ' ^ 1 * - 1 : T " " T — T T « — ^ 0 ^ •'&lt;•&#13;
N€WSy g O N O E N S A p ^ N S ,&#13;
Spain says she will send 20,000 additional&#13;
troops to Cuba In Oe'tobe'r/&#13;
A Lotidoti 'cable' placed the expensea&#13;
of Uie Queen's jubilee at 823,000,000.&#13;
' The authorities of UeadvlHei »CoW.,&#13;
have broken up all of the ganrblhrg establishments,&#13;
which have nourished&#13;
there since 1671). Over «10,000 worth&#13;
id tables and apparatus was destroyed.&#13;
.V*:1&#13;
/ • " . ",^.&#13;
• ^ » w « a » — a ^ a ^ a ^ a i a ^ i i '.J' , . . 1 . Jl"! ,'JWU.W'Bffm :L'..T&#13;
••• ^ - . - ' &gt; ' - . - * T . - f t - ' : . - • • i&gt;';W&#13;
' 4-. 4« 'xri,&#13;
:!;.') INTERNATIONAL PRESS ASSOCIATION. • J » •»&#13;
., CHAPTER m,—(CpKTisyap.)&#13;
The day following there was a simple&#13;
funeral, in a solitary burial-place,&#13;
seldom need, and lying within a short&#13;
distance of the spot where the body&#13;
was found. Mr., Lorraine defrayed the&#13;
expenses out of hie own pocket, saw&#13;
that everything was dccsntty, though&#13;
•imply arranged/ and himself read the&#13;
•beautiful burial serviee over the coffin.&#13;
He had now no doubt In his mind that&#13;
the drowned woman was the mother of&#13;
the infant left under his care, and that&#13;
by destroying herself she had simply&#13;
carried but her desperate determination,&#13;
AJ1 attempts to identify her, however/&#13;
continued without avail. Inquiries&#13;
were made on every side, advertisements&#13;
inserted in the local&#13;
newspapers, without the slightest result;&#13;
no one came forward to give any&#13;
Information, But by this time the&#13;
ministers mind was Quite made up.&#13;
He would keep the child, and, with&#13;
God's blessing, rear her as his own;&#13;
he • would justify the unhappy mother's&#13;
dependence on bis charity and loving&#13;
kindness.&#13;
86 it came to pass that late In the&#13;
gloaming of the old bachelor's life the&#13;
cry of a child was heard in the lonely&#13;
house; and somehow or other, despite&#13;
Solomon Mtacklebacklt's prognostications,&#13;
the house became brighter and&#13;
merrier tor the sound. Solomon him*&#13;
self soon fell under the spell, and when&#13;
a little warm with whisky he would allude&#13;
to the child, with a comic sense&#13;
of possession,'as "oor bairn."&#13;
At last, one day, there was a quiet&#13;
christening in the old kirk, where Mr.&#13;
Lorraine • had officiated so many years,&#13;
llysie held the infant in her arm*;&#13;
while Solomon stood at hand, blinking&#13;
through his horn spectacles, and the&#13;
minister performed the simple cere-&#13;
Affcer l^ng and Under deliberation&#13;
th^ minister had .4*e4 upon a name,&#13;
which he now gave to the poor little&#13;
castaway, who. had neither father nor&#13;
mother, nor any kinsfolk in the worJLd&#13;
afjtex whom she could, be called. , •&#13;
He christened her Marjorle Annan.&#13;
Marjoritv after that other beloved&#13;
Marjorle, who haa long before, Joined&#13;
—or «» he dreamed—the bright celestial&#13;
band; Annan, after that troubled&#13;
water wherein the miserable mother&#13;
had plunged and died.&#13;
-Bag*, jt&#13;
CHAPTER IT.&#13;
N A B R I G H T&#13;
morning of early&#13;
s p r i n g , between&#13;
sixteen and' seventeen&#13;
years after&#13;
t h e e v e nts described&#13;
In the first&#13;
Chapters of this&#13;
story, ' a goldenhaired&#13;
young girl&#13;
/might have been&#13;
seen tripping down&#13;
the High street of the market town of&#13;
Dumfries. Her dress was prettily if&#13;
net over fsshjonshly cut, a straw hat&#13;
"No, Marjorle. My time was short,&#13;
and most of my spare time was spent&#13;
among, the pictures; but when I saw&#13;
^hem. thousands upon thousands of&#13;
masterpieces, it made me despair of&#13;
ever becoming a painter. I thought to&#13;
ntyself, maybe it would be better, after&#13;
all, to bide at homeland stick to weaving&#13;
like my father."&#13;
' As he spoke, Marjorle paused at the&#13;
corner of a quiet street, and t held out&#13;
her hah*.1 &lt;&#13;
"I must go to my leaaen. Ooodby."&#13;
"How are you going down? By the&#13;
wagonette?"&#13;
"Yes: Johnnie."&#13;
"So am I; we can go together. Good*&#13;
by till thenr '&#13;
Aad with a warm squeese of the&#13;
hand the young man walked away.&#13;
Marjorle stood looking after him for&#13;
a moment with a pleasant smile; then&#13;
Bhe turned and walked down the&#13;
atreet. She had not many yards to go&#13;
before she paused before a dlngy-lookiug&#13;
house, on the door of which was&#13;
a brass plate with the inscription:&#13;
M. LEON CAfUSSIDIERE,&#13;
, Professor of Languages.&#13;
She rang the bell, and the door was&#13;
opened almost immediately by a&#13;
Scotch servant in petticoat and short&#13;
gown, who greeted her with a familiar&#13;
smile. Answering the smile with a&#13;
friendly nod, Marjorle tripped along&#13;
the lobby and knocked at an inner&#13;
door, which stood ajar. A clear, musical&#13;
voice, with an unmistakable foreign&#13;
accent, cried, "Come in," and she&#13;
entered.&#13;
The room was a plainly furnished&#13;
parlor, at the center-table of which a&#13;
| young man sat writing. The table was&#13;
littered with' writing material*, books,&#13;
and journals, and in the window recess&#13;
was another table, also strewn&#13;
with books.&#13;
The young man, who was smoking a&#13;
cigarette, looked up as Majorle entered.&#13;
"Ah, is it you, Mademoiselle Marjorle!"&#13;
he exclaimed, smiling pleasantly.&#13;
"I dtd not expect you so early, and&#13;
I was just smoking my cigarette. You&#13;
do not mind the smoke? No? Then,&#13;
with your permission, I will smoke&#13;
9.»/' :-:..- ,,.. . . . . . . ....&#13;
He spoke English fluently, though&#13;
bis. accent was unmistakable, and his&#13;
pronunciation of certain, words pecur&#13;
liar- Personally, he was tall and handsome,&#13;
with bbuch.hair wornvery Jong,&#13;
black mustache, , sad ciean«shaven&#13;
chin. His forehead was high and&#13;
thoughtful,.his jeyesj; bright but sunken,&#13;
his complexion awartby, lie was&#13;
dressed shabbily, but somewhat show- „ , „ . , . J t i , ^ „ ^&#13;
ily, in a coat of brown velvet, s b i r * ^ ^ % ' ! ? d W ; U U **"**"&#13;
shaded .her bright blue eyes, and her&#13;
boots and gloves were those of a lady.&#13;
-Under her arm she—carried several&#13;
books—school books, to all intents and&#13;
By her aide, talking to her, eagerly,&#13;
was a. young man about three years her&#13;
senior.&#13;
From time to time as she tripped&#13;
along with her companion she had to&#13;
stop and exchange words with passersby&#13;
who greeted her by name; aad from&#13;
many of the shop doors aad windows&#13;
friendly heads nodded and bright&#13;
faces beamed. It was dear that she&#13;
was well known in the little town, and&#13;
a general favorite. Indeed, there were&#13;
few of the residents within a radius&#13;
of tea miles round Dumfries who did&#13;
not know something of. Major!e Annan,&#13;
the foster-child and adopted&#13;
daoghter of Mr. Lorraine.&#13;
Her companion, John Sutherland,&#13;
ws* fajr, foojnpjexioned and rtry p&gt;le.&#13;
B o pea pialaly.yciad In a suit of dark&#13;
twraedi aad, jwore a wide-awake hat.&#13;
His ^ Whole aspect .betokened delicate&#13;
health, and there waa a sad light in his&#13;
Mae eyes which told of a thoughtful&#13;
spirit &gt; sodcm* within. His manners&#13;
mere. gentle aad retiring in the ex-&#13;
MWhea did yoa come hack?" Marjorte&#13;
had asked, after some previous&#13;
«•«Li ast night, by the express from&#13;
London,'* aaswered the young man.&#13;
"I'm going down to see the old folk&#13;
tonight Shall yon he at the maaseT"&#13;
Marjorle nodded, mailing gayly.&#13;
"And how did yon like London?" she&#13;
demanded. "DM you see the queen?&#13;
aad Westminster Abbey? sad did you&#13;
sja, to the great tabernacle to hear&#13;
not want to get "*t.pJKHk|| brtlliant&#13;
st7ain . the converaauonproceeded,&#13;
Marjorle stumbling over the construction&#13;
of her sentences and getting very&#13;
pusxled over the other's voluble answers&#13;
when thsy extended to any&#13;
length. But .hi left the lesion was&#13;
over, and the teacher expressed himself&#13;
well pleased.&#13;
"And now," he said, with a smile,&#13;
"we wUl talk the English e*aia before&#13;
you 10, WiU you tell m* something&#13;
about yourself, mademplaelle^ I have&#13;
seen you to often, and yet I know ao&#13;
little. For myself, I am almost a recluse,&#13;
and go about not at all. Tell me,&#13;
then, about yourself, your guardian,&#13;
your home/'&#13;
"I don't know what to tell ycu,&#13;
monsieur," answered Marjorle.&#13;
"Call me not 'monsieur,' but -Monsieur&#13;
Leon.' 'Monsieur' is so formal—&#13;
so cold."&#13;
"Monsieur Leon."&#13;
''That is better. Now answer me, if&#13;
you please. You have no father, no&#13;
mother?"&#13;
. The girl's eyes filled with tears.&#13;
"No, monsieur "&#13;
"Monsieur Leon."&#13;
"No, Monsieur Leon,"&#13;
"Ah, that is sad—sad to be an orphan,&#13;
alone in the world! I myself&#13;
have no father, but I have a mother&#13;
whom I adore. And you live with your&#13;
guardian always?"&#13;
"Yes, monfieur—rMonaieur Leon. He&#13;
is my guardian and my foster-father;&#13;
and Solomon is my foster-father, too."&#13;
"Solomon V&#13;
"Solomon is our clark and sexton.&#13;
He lives in the manse, tie was Hying&#13;
there when the minister found me,&#13;
I nearly seventeen years ago."&#13;
The young Frenchman had arisen&#13;
and stood facing Marjorle Annan.&#13;
"Ah, yes, I have heard," he said.&#13;
"And you have dwelt all these years,&#13;
miguonne, alone with those two old&#13;
men?"&#13;
"Yes, Monsieur Leon."&#13;
"It is terrible—it is not right! You,&#13;
who are so young and pretty; they,&#13;
who are so old and dreary! And you&#13;
have never seen the world—never traveled&#13;
from your native land! tierer!&#13;
You have* lived in a desert, you ha ye&#13;
never known what it is to live! But&#13;
you are a child, and it la not too late.&#13;
You will see the world some day, will&#13;
you not? You will find some one to&#13;
love you, to care for you, and you will&#13;
bid adieu to this triste Scotland, once&#13;
and forever!"&#13;
As he spoke very volubly, he Dent&#13;
his face close to hers, smiling eagerly,&#13;
while his breath touched her cheek.&#13;
She blushed slightly, and drooped her&#13;
eyes for a momuat; them she looked up&#13;
quite steadily, and said:&#13;
"I should not care to leaewmy home.&#13;
Mr. Lorraine toe* me to Edinburgh&#13;
once, but I soon wearied, aad was glad&#13;
to come back to Annandale."&#13;
"Edinburgh!" cried Monsieur Leon,&#13;
With a contemptuous gesture, "A city&#13;
where the sun never shines, and it rains&#13;
six days out of seven, what you call a&#13;
Scotch mist! You should see my country,&#13;
la belle France, and Paris, the&#13;
queen of cities of the world! There&#13;
WHY SO MANY EKGULAB PHYSICIANS J!AIL&#13;
Vo Cure Female Hie—Somo True Reason* W h y&#13;
Mrs. Pinkham Is Mora IvUjpc^eafui Th*o&#13;
t h e Family Doctor*&#13;
with turn-down collar loose at the&#13;
throat, and a crimson tie shapen like&#13;
a true lover's knot. He carried a pincenez,&#13;
secured to his person by a piece&#13;
of elastic, disused while writing or&#13;
reading, but fixed on the nose at other&#13;
times. Through this pince-nez he now&#13;
regarded Marjorle with a very decided&#13;
look of admiration.&#13;
—"I came early, monsieur/* laid Marjorie,&#13;
"because I cannot come in the&#13;
afternoon. I am going* home, and I&#13;
shall not be back in Dumfries till Monday.&#13;
Can you give me my lesson now,&#13;
please?" . . . .,-&#13;
"Certainly,", aaswered the Frenchman;&#13;
"I was only writing my French&#13;
correspondence, but I can finish that&#13;
when you are gone. Will you sit ther***,&#13;
mademoiselle, in the arm-chair? No?&#13;
Then in this other? We will begin at&#13;
once."&#13;
Marjorle aat down and opened her&#13;
books. The Frenchman, taking the&#13;
arm-chair she had refused, regarded&#13;
her quietly and keenly.&#13;
"Now read, if you please," he said.&#13;
with a wave of the head. "Begin—&#13;
where you left off yesterday."&#13;
Marjorle obeyed and read aloud in&#13;
a clear voice from an easy French&#13;
reading-book. From time to time the&#13;
teacher interrupted her; con acting her&#13;
pronunciation.&#13;
^You advance, mademoiselle,'' he&#13;
said presently. "Ah, yes; yon are i s&#13;
quick, so Intelligent Now translate."&#13;
In this portion of her task also the&#13;
girl acquitted herself wall, and when&#13;
she had finished, the young maa nodded&#13;
approvingly.&#13;
"Now let us converse—la French, if&#13;
you please."&#13;
Bat here Marjorle was at a tost, not&#13;
knowing what to talk about Bhe&#13;
anally took the weather as s topic, aad&#13;
advanced the proposition that it was&#13;
a ?ery fine day. hut that there wosrffr&#13;
soon be rain. Her master responded,&#13;
aad, urged to higher flights of imagination.&#13;
Marjorle hoped that It would&#13;
not rain till she reached home, as the&#13;
public wagonette in which she was to&#13;
travel was an open one, aad she aid&#13;
earth. Would you not like to see Purls,&#13;
Mademoislle Marjorle V&#13;
"Yes, monsieur, maybe I should/' replied&#13;
Marjorle; "but I'm not caring&#13;
much for the town. But I was forgetting&#13;
something, though," ahe added.&#13;
"Mr. Lorraine told me to give you&#13;
this.M&#13;
So saying, she drew forth a small&#13;
silk purse, and drawing thenre two anv-&#13;
• * • »&#13;
A woman is sick; some disease peculiar toner&#13;
sea ja feat developing in her system. She goes&#13;
to her family physician and tells him a&#13;
story, but notibe whole story.&#13;
She holds something back, loses her need,&#13;
becomes agitated, forgets what she wants&#13;
to say, and finally conceals what aba&#13;
ought to have told, and thus completely&#13;
mystifies the doctor.&#13;
Is it s a y wonder, therefore, the*&#13;
the doctor falls to cure the disease?&#13;
StUl, we cannot blame the w o&#13;
mess, iorit is very embarrassing&#13;
to detail some of the eyinjK&#13;
teens of her suffering, even to&#13;
hev naraily physician.&#13;
ItxWas for this reason that&#13;
years ago Mrs, Lydia B. Pinkham,&#13;
at Lynn, Mass., determined to step In and help her sex. HavmghadeonsieV&#13;
erable experience in treating female ills with her Vegetable Compound, sad tm*&#13;
eouraged the women of America to write to her for advice in regard to their&#13;
complaints, and, being a woman, it was easy for her ailing sisters to pour info'&#13;
her ears every detail of their suffering.&#13;
In this way she was sble to do for them what the physicians were unable&#13;
to do, simply because she had the proper mfonastion to work upon, and&#13;
from the little group of women who sought her advice years ago a great&#13;
army of her fellow-beings are to-day constantly applying for advice sad re~&#13;
lief, and the,,fact that more than one hundred thousand'of them have been&#13;
successfully treated by Mrs. Pinkham during the last year is indicative of&#13;
the grand results which are produced by her unequaled experience aad&#13;
training.&#13;
No physician in the world has had such a training, or has such an amount&#13;
of information at hand to assist in the treatment of all kinds of female ills,&#13;
from the simplest local irritation to the most complicated diseases of the womb.&#13;
This, therefore, is the reason why Mrs. Pinkham, in her laboratory at&#13;
Lynn, Maim., is able to do more for the ailing women of America than the&#13;
family physician. Any woman, therefore, is responsible for her own suffering&#13;
who will not take the trouble to write to Mrs. Pinkham for adviee*&#13;
The testimonials which we are constantly publishing from grateful women&#13;
establish beyond a doubt the power of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Cossr&#13;
pound to conquer female diseases.&#13;
"Another dress. It takes a good&#13;
deal of money to keep you in clothes,&#13;
Mary." " A m i not your wife?" "You&#13;
are—my dear wife."&#13;
No one is useless in this world who&#13;
lightens the burden of it for another.&#13;
The Harder a • woman's heart-works,&#13;
the less liable it is to go on a strike.&#13;
8h»ka lttto Toar 8ko«s&#13;
Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder for the&#13;
feet. It cures painful, swollen, smarting&#13;
feet and instantly takes the sting&#13;
out of corns and bunions. It is the&#13;
greatest comfort discovery of the age,&#13;
Allen's Foot-Ease makes tight-fitting&#13;
or new shoes feel easy. It is a certain&#13;
cure for sweating, callous and hot,&#13;
tired, aching- feet Try it loday. Sold&#13;
by all druggists and shoe stores. By&#13;
mail for 35c in stamps. Trial package&#13;
F£EE Addfess Allen 6. Olmsted, Le&#13;
Bov, N. Y.&#13;
thIet sIus aa,n t ool bde p sruorvee rwbi llt bnaott rheea cwhh iot , ablamt s haits aorbrjoewct woni lla f lleyv heilg whietrh thhaimn sife lfh. e aimed at an&#13;
IsT ah veo fnanstge Dstu sbhloinr thgaenndtl emwrainte, rG ineo trhgee wBournld* bary. He can write 2M) words in a minute.&#13;
Hall's Catarrh Care&#13;
Is a confttitutteusd core. Price, Tbc.&#13;
saMlarinyi stthearns wsohuol sa rnee vmero rge etc otnhcee rBneibdl ea wboiduet open for anybody when they preach.&#13;
hiTs hbeir dthudkae yo tr eAcennhtalylt .b Gy eersmtaabnlyis,h cienlgeb ar adteecd- ohrisa tdioonm finorio wnso rwkhlnog nmaes nb. eeEnv e«r5y y elaabrso rIne rt hies cemeivpelo ay s oilfv tehre m saemdael . person or arm will re-&#13;
orTohmooseti owo haon d" ajodivna nthceem cehnutr crhar"e lfyo rd esvoeclioapl into exemplary Christian*.&#13;
I S A *&#13;
Tb/e woman with a horse and buggy&#13;
never acts quite as her neighbors&#13;
would like to have her.&#13;
Try Grala-O.&#13;
Ask your grocer today to show yoti&#13;
a package of GUAIN-O, the new food&#13;
drink that takes the place of coffee.&#13;
The children may drink it without&#13;
injury as well as the adult. All who&#13;
t i y i t l i k e i t GEAIN-O has that rich&#13;
seal brown of Mocha or Java, but it is&#13;
made from pure grains, and the moot&#13;
delicate stomach receives it without&#13;
distress. H the price of coffee.&#13;
15 cents and 25 cents per package.&#13;
Sold by all grocers. Tastes J ike coffee.&#13;
Looks like coffee.&#13;
There are some mortals who are&#13;
never happy save when they have some&#13;
hurt feelings to enjoy.&#13;
ereigns, placed them on the table.&#13;
"Put them back into your purse, if&#13;
yon pleased&#13;
But I hare not paid you anything,&#13;
and I owe you for ten lessons."&#13;
"Never mind that, mademoiselle,"&#13;
answered the Frenchman. "Some other&#13;
time, if you insist, but not today. It&#13;
is reward enough for me to have such&#13;
a pupil Take the money and hay&#13;
yourself a keepsake to remind you of&#13;
me."&#13;
But Marjorle shook her Uttle head&#13;
firmly aad answered:&#13;
"Please do not ask me, Monsieur&#13;
My guardian would he very&#13;
and he seat me the money to&#13;
pay Fou.&#13;
•The Frenchman shrugged his &amp;hou&gt;&#13;
"Well, as you please, only I would&#13;
not have yon think that I teach you&#13;
for the money's sake—ah, no. you&#13;
have brought light aad sunshine to my&#13;
heart in my exile; when pea came I&#13;
forget my sorrows, sad when yea go&#13;
away I am full of gloom. Ah. yoa&#13;
smile, but It Is true."&#13;
"Good-bye. now. Monsieur Lena."&#13;
said Marjorle, moving toward the doer,&#13;
for erne felt embairissil aad&#13;
frightened by the ernes* sooaa of&#13;
teacher.&#13;
"Good-bye. Ton will come&#13;
Monday, will you nott**&#13;
"Tea, Monsieur Leon."&#13;
And Marjorle left the&#13;
psaeed oat into the sunny street,&#13;
(to as oonTUuan.)&#13;
Gum chewing is not a modem habit&#13;
Way back ia the time of the Veins the&#13;
Hindoo maidens chewed gum. But&#13;
then, they were uaeJvlttsna&#13;
"Burdock .Blood Bitters entirely&#13;
caned, me of a terrible breaking out all&#13;
over say body. It is a wonderful medi"&#13;
in«.*» M i M J u l i a fclhridye. lfa»t S5.&#13;
West Corn well, Conn.&#13;
FITS P*nua«aU7Cmr*4. I*© fit* *r a i m&#13;
irrt^Ajr'a »M of Or. Klin*'* tir«U Vwf ,&#13;
Svad for V B B B §S.OO trial b*ttl« aad&#13;
Da, a H. au»B7Ud..ttl i n k St., PaUadslpUa,&#13;
K O - T O - B M f o * r i t t y C m t *&#13;
mGenu asrtraonntege,d b ltooobda cpcuor he.a bsOitc c.fui.r eA.mlladkruesji wgiesatski&#13;
mTuhche aM« oah balwakd e Ionf dgiraannss wtoi llg rnowot uaplloonw thaoe graves oi their dead friends.&#13;
&gt;•»&lt;• Ctumphmr ! « • w»**» « l r «&#13;
Cure* Chapped Haudo and Face, TaaSar or Sora Fast&#13;
CailbhOiM. Kite*. Ac C O. Clark Co.. Saw Havaa. C*.&#13;
ac"c&lt;oirodlfMin gi st op trhoep eerdlyit orpiraoln oauunthceodri t"yg oowfa tTh,"e London Dally News.&#13;
biHaMe oelnf lyia h hailsf sdoiness. who leaves an image of&#13;
Beware of little expanse*; a small Ua*&#13;
will sink a big ship&#13;
Be careful how yon handle a woman's name&#13;
Some wiah they did, but no man disbelieves&#13;
When all else is lost the future remains.&#13;
dSmiHIWN&#13;
Ceald Met Weaken taeh Testlmeay&#13;
' &lt; • #&#13;
fiivft t/» m a n •&gt;&gt;«» mfg-t pt tfr" Hanawa.&#13;
and he doesn't care&#13;
kills somebody else.&#13;
if the skin of- it&#13;
Have you earache, toothache, sore&#13;
three.t&gt; pains or swel lings of any sort?&#13;
A few applications of Dr. Thomas' Eclectric&#13;
Oil will bring relief almost instantly.&#13;
Expect every man to do his duty,&#13;
and with all your expectations expect&#13;
to be disappointed.&#13;
Itching Piles,night's horrid plague,&#13;
is instantly relieved and peramnently&#13;
coxed by Dean's Ointment Your&#13;
dealer ought to keep it.&#13;
. . M I - — *m • f j i a &lt; » . - mm l •••— —&#13;
Tyranny—That domestic law which&#13;
forbids a day's hebiu£ to the small boy&#13;
when it rains..&#13;
Even chronic diarrhoea suocumb«&#13;
quickly to Dr. Fowler's Ext of Wild&#13;
Strawberry, nature's own specific for&#13;
all bowel complaints.&#13;
When S girl is hissed she closes her&#13;
•yea, thus a kiss is considered out of&#13;
sight •&#13;
•SmesSe T a v Bowafts W i t h C a tea rata.&#13;
Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever.&#13;
10c u C C C fail, druggists refund money.&#13;
The one who has suffered has a key that&#13;
can unlock many nearts.&#13;
Nothing snakes us richer that does not&#13;
make us more thankful.&#13;
GPodis-ose'sn dC utore m teo.r-W Cmon.s au milpotCiolncu ahna.s Cbheeesnte ra,&#13;
Florida, Sept 17, MB&amp;&gt;&#13;
mTanhe l odoakys b aetc othme edso lcokn.g er every time a lasy&#13;
The mere you love yourself the tens you&#13;
will beloved by others. *&#13;
Many think aright bat tew execute their&#13;
slana when matured.&#13;
- A T T B * *&#13;
C*V—i tt« JGefawiiaao Thla»way4&gt;&gt;&#13;
—The following statement is one uf gieel&#13;
interest to many a citizen of g*1*lrrn^\&#13;
and a man as well known as Mr. Wallace&#13;
should carry more than ordinary weight&#13;
with our readers. Here it Is as taken&#13;
down by our representative:&#13;
" My same is John A Wallace. I am&#13;
a member of the firm of J. A Wallace 4s&#13;
Co., doing business as dinners, etc.. at 104&#13;
Eleanor Street, Kalamazoo, in which city I&#13;
also reside. For the past nine or tea months&#13;
I have been having attacks of kidney complaint,&#13;
the pain in my heck over say nine&#13;
was very severe at tamest my utinery system&#13;
was also in a bad state of decange-.&#13;
meat, sometimes the urine irni •rnnfjr ami&#13;
then again the amount would he ejawempe.&#13;
and a difficulty of passage always ejdeted.&#13;
I heard of Doans Kidney P i a t t ' s * * »&#13;
when I felt that I was gois* bs WmosV&#13;
but their use warded off an attscst. and I&#13;
am now feeling very much better; the&#13;
urinary organism has regained a a&#13;
condition, and the tcrrinc pain in my t&#13;
is much reduced in severity,' while itV i *£•?&amp; Wi»MSVSK with positive feeling that they wttemset&#13;
on me a permanent and speedy case. I&#13;
have imbefiiidod onoJndeaee » &gt; frana&#13;
Kidney Pills as a remedy for an tiduey&#13;
ailments; have good reason to be, as they&#13;
have done so muoh for ne.tf:&#13;
Can you ask any more then that! Doan'a&#13;
Kidney Pills ire suileril{gmos*becKs*r&#13;
tbe burdeas they ease been famed lo bear&#13;
thsoughehe kktoeya than all ether meaus&#13;
devised, and. better ettU, they ere dowg&#13;
this right hesem Michigan. Ask say one&#13;
• a&#13;
-•3&#13;
.tti&#13;
~Ui&#13;
*&amp;?••':&amp;&#13;
•'$1&#13;
' «&#13;
?&#13;
* *..-&#13;
*&amp;&#13;
whlsay&#13;
Oesn'e Kidney PUa f or sate by aB&#13;
MOhure Co,, fiu&amp;Oo. M. T.. sote&#13;
for the C. a Remember the name,&#13;
aad take no other- "-&#13;
W. N. U. — P E T R O I T — M Q J I 7 .&#13;
• a&#13;
/&#13;
T^r&#13;
"•fck .f*'Si&amp; (tt- b'*: \• '&#13;
. • • . ' • • ' ' ' ' • • • ' • ' . • . " , , » — , " ; •• , . % , •• ; • . • • ' • X - . - •' J • • - . ! " . . ' • . / ' ' • • • • " •• , \ ' ' ' ( • ' : - . : , ' &lt; % , • ' / ' ' 0 ' -&#13;
"'••' A";''&#13;
^.^(^.(pinuMHMHI&#13;
• &lt; ' v &lt;&#13;
SI?' •••••••&#13;
4'. &gt;&#13;
si&#13;
¥'•'&#13;
'&gt;'.';:&#13;
; &amp; • :&#13;
t«&#13;
3fe-&#13;
S*-/-:&#13;
*#u&#13;
I'rj.'r&#13;
h-i'h.&#13;
CHAPEL ITEMS.&#13;
Will Miller is at Howell attend&#13;
ing the summer normal.&#13;
Mr. O. X. Rockwood visited&#13;
friends at Williamston a few days&#13;
last week.&#13;
Mrs. Geo. Bland visited her parents,&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. A. Farrington&#13;
last week&gt;&#13;
We are having fine weather for&#13;
corn. The thermometor is 99 degrees&#13;
in the shade.&#13;
There will be an jce cream and&#13;
lawn social at the home of Mrs.&#13;
A. M. Rockwood on Friday evening&#13;
July 16. The worsted quilt&#13;
will also be disposed of. Everyone&#13;
invited.&#13;
PETTEYBVILUi&#13;
6. G. Teeple was in Howell last&#13;
Thursday.&#13;
School closed in the Cordley&#13;
district last Friday.&#13;
Kiss Ella Mercer visited in&#13;
Dexter the last of last week.&#13;
Miss Mattie and Fannie Larkin&#13;
Bpent last week in Ann Arbor.&#13;
Miss Jessie McQuillan of Jackson&#13;
is visiting at Thcs. Shehan's.&#13;
A stranger from Toledo was&#13;
drowned in Silver lake last Friday.&#13;
Steve VanHora and wife visited&#13;
in Owosso from Saturday until&#13;
Monday.&#13;
Wirt Carpenter and wife of&#13;
Hudson visited at W*n. Hookers&#13;
over Sunday.&#13;
David Yan Horn of New Jersey&#13;
is visiting old friends and relatives&#13;
at this place.&#13;
Gene Wines and wife of Ann&#13;
Arbor visited Mrs. Wines parents&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Blades over&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Conrad Schneider of Webberville,&#13;
who has been spending the&#13;
summer at his son-in-law's, Henry&#13;
BohrgasB, returned there Monday&#13;
to attend the wedding of his son&#13;
and two of his daughters which&#13;
takes place there this week.&#13;
GREGORY.&#13;
Gregory is quiet and very dry.J&#13;
A few spent their 4th at Fowlerville.&#13;
Geo. Clintcn spent Sunday in&#13;
Jackson.&#13;
-—Quito a number went to Piaek.&#13;
Hey on their wheels the 3rd.&#13;
Work has been begun on Albert&#13;
Reason's new residence.&#13;
Excursion to Toledo.&#13;
Sunday Only 18, the Ann Arbor R.&#13;
R. will give another of its popular&#13;
excursions at popular rates to Toledo&#13;
and return. Train leaves Hamburg&#13;
at 9:47 a. m. Fare- for round trip&#13;
only 75c, The entertainment to be&#13;
given at Lake Erie Park and Casino&#13;
will be one of the best of the season.&#13;
• « • » • » «&#13;
$8 m i CLiriliM W IACUNAC ud muR.&#13;
$7 FUI MIM TO lAGKINiC ui UTDBK.&#13;
$6 FfiOI 9RRQ1T TO lACMAC ud RlfDBH.&#13;
The above special tourist rates will&#13;
be put into effect June 20, via Detroit&#13;
&amp; Cleland Steam Navigation Co's.&#13;
new mammoth steel passenger steamers.&#13;
The round trip from Cleveland&#13;
including meals and births, costs f 16,&#13;
from Toledo |14, from Detroit $11.50.&#13;
Sent 2 cents for illustrated pamphlet.&#13;
Address, A. A. SCHANTZ, G. P. A.,&#13;
Detroit, Mich.&#13;
Eltctlon for Pottmaettr.&#13;
Notice is hereby given of an election&#13;
to be bold at the Town Hall at&#13;
Pinckney, Michigan, on Saturday,&#13;
J uly 10th, 1897, from 1 to 10 P. M.&#13;
for the purpose of eleoting a Postmaster&#13;
for this office. All patrons of said&#13;
office, who are qualified electors are&#13;
entitled to participate. The usual&#13;
mode of ballot will be used, of which&#13;
the following is a copy:&#13;
THOSE LOYAL GUARDS.&#13;
All 0. K. la Pinckney and the&#13;
Division Growing.&#13;
Two Married&#13;
"Way do you inaJet upon taking&#13;
Sour wife out for such long walks In&#13;
Ma rough weather?"&#13;
"The doctor has told her that she&#13;
smust be very careful not to talk wfcee&#13;
•he is outln the cold air."&#13;
"Say, who's your doctor?"—Cleveland&#13;
Leader.&#13;
Cecil Wood, son of Wm. Wood&#13;
died July 5 of brain trouble.&#13;
Some of the young people went&#13;
to Pleasant Lake Saturday.&#13;
Only one person from Gregory&#13;
went on Monday's excursion.&#13;
Mrs. Geo. Cone and daughter&#13;
Cora spent a few days in Pinckmey.&#13;
Bev. Ellis, pastor of the Baptist&#13;
church, has taken up his residence&#13;
in Gregory.&#13;
Josie Fick just returned from&#13;
the Normal Conservatory has a&#13;
number of scholars.&#13;
. Come to Gregory evenings to&#13;
see fun. Plenty of sport, bike&#13;
racing and trick riding.&#13;
^Stanley Marsh went to Ypsitan-&#13;
U from there to Howell and then&#13;
to. vjsit his cousin at New Lothrop.&#13;
He is to travel for Geary's Business&#13;
College this summer.&#13;
S&#13;
Second&#13;
Summer&#13;
is the time that tries all the c^re&#13;
of the mother and all the skill of&#13;
•maternal management. Baby&#13;
comfort comes from fat; fat&#13;
babies have nothing to do but&#13;
to sleep and grow.&#13;
If your baby does not seem&#13;
to prosper, if he does not gain&#13;
In weight, you must get more&#13;
fat there. A few drops of&#13;
each day will put on plumpness;&#13;
fat outside, life inside,&#13;
baby and mother both happy.&#13;
Your baby can take and relish&#13;
Scott's Emulsion as much&#13;
In summer as in any other&#13;
season.&#13;
1 for sale by an 4ragsi*U*t jeft and $&amp;«»&#13;
uaaa~m&#13;
We will sell&#13;
1&#13;
Mdttkwjl Local.&#13;
Toe PfiS alumni held their annual&#13;
meeting and banquet at the home of&#13;
Prof. Sprout last evening.&#13;
' Mrs. Jerome Peterson and son, Ivan&#13;
and daughter of New Orleans are the&#13;
guest* of relatives in this place.&#13;
Feed Fiajh,,*)* **i* Detroit learoing&#13;
t be tefltsii trade, spent a sew&#13;
days the past week under toe parental&#13;
mot. ~&#13;
PLUG PRUNE JUICE&#13;
TOBACCO for&#13;
16 CENTS&#13;
ALSO&#13;
A Foot of Tobacco for&#13;
8 cents.&#13;
25c Cofiee " 18c&#13;
27c Coffee 20c&#13;
30c Cofiee 25c&#13;
XXXX Coffee * 15c&#13;
Seeley's 10c Bluing for 5c&#13;
Seeley's 5c Bluing for 8c&#13;
Climax Stove Polish 5c site, 2 for 5&#13;
Climax Stove Polish 10c size 2 for 10c&#13;
All Clothing in Suite 15 per cent off&#13;
Choice canned Pears JLi&#13;
Choice canned grapes&#13;
3 Cans Plumbs . .&#13;
6 pkgs. Wash ing Pow.&#13;
.15&#13;
.25&#13;
.25&#13;
These sales most be CASH.&#13;
JIUIIMT IMS.&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
8&#13;
O&#13;
&gt;&#13;
•&#13;
p&#13;
a&#13;
H&#13;
wW&#13;
•&#13;
m&#13;
•&#13;
• o&#13;
oo o&#13;
H&#13;
*&#13;
•&#13;
H&#13;
oa H&#13;
o&#13;
o&#13;
o&#13;
o&#13;
o SB&#13;
&lt;&#13;
f t&#13;
B&#13;
&lt;3&gt;&#13;
The Loyal Guards at this plaoe are&#13;
still growing in numbers and interest.&#13;
On Wednesday night of last week five&#13;
more new members were obligated&#13;
and they are still ooming. There&#13;
were nine applications in the even*&#13;
ing whioh makes the number 22 that&#13;
have been accepted since the low&#13;
rates began.&#13;
On that evening, word was received&#13;
that the time for low rates had&#13;
been extended to Aug, 1, so there is&#13;
8till a chance for those who desire to&#13;
join to do so by the cheap rates. All&#13;
it costs is $1.25 and one advance assessment&#13;
according to age and our&#13;
quarter's division dues of 25 cents&#13;
eaob. No one should be without some&#13;
life insurance especially when the&#13;
rate is so low.&#13;
Remember that ladies can join the&#13;
society and get their lives insured at&#13;
the same rate as the men with the ex*&#13;
ception that it costs $1 a year less.&#13;
Ask some member about it and send&#13;
in your application.&#13;
8on, the former managers of the mill&#13;
through wiio4e negligenoe, it is asserted,&#13;
the mill was destroyed through&#13;
not properly taking precautions&#13;
against the flood of waters that poured&#13;
through the broken dam.—William*&#13;
Bton Enterprise, June 30, Bro. Andrews&#13;
must hare taken a nap for a few&#13;
weeks. The Pinckney Flouring mill&#13;
never was swept away, and the suit&#13;
for rent was settled June 14. We&#13;
hope our exchanges will take note of&#13;
this a* the item of the suit has. been&#13;
running ever sinoe day it was commenced,&#13;
Mate Tilford, formerly of this place&#13;
but now of Ypsilanti left Wednesday&#13;
for California with a vie w of making&#13;
that state her fnture home.&#13;
An order has been issued forbidding&#13;
the presence of women in camp dur*&#13;
ing the annual encampment at Island&#13;
Lake this year. This would look as&#13;
though there were chances for a roar*&#13;
ing state drunk.—Democrat. There&#13;
will be no ladies' to be insulted as&#13;
usual, though, Bro. Ryan.&#13;
Our farmer friends are finding the&#13;
columns of the DISPATCH valuable in&#13;
tbeir business. A few lines in the&#13;
"Business Pointers" sells many a&#13;
fancy cow, sheep or hog, also seed&#13;
grain, hay, etc. If you don't believe&#13;
our columns are a good thing, try&#13;
them.&#13;
Thomas Birkett of Dexter owner of&#13;
the flouring mill swept away at Pinckney&#13;
in the spring, has commenced&#13;
suit to recover rent from Klemm &amp;&#13;
Reasons Why Chamberlain's Collo&#13;
Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy&#13;
Is the beat.&#13;
1. Because it affords almost instant&#13;
relief in the case of pain in the stomach,&#13;
oolic and cholera morbus.&#13;
2. Because it is the only remedy&#13;
that never fails in the most severe&#13;
oases of dysentery and diarrhoea,&#13;
3. Because it is the only remedy&#13;
that will cure chronic diarrhoea.&#13;
4. Because it is the only remedy&#13;
that will prevent bilious colic.&#13;
5. Because it is the only remedy&#13;
that will cure epidemical dysentery.&#13;
6. Because it is only remedy that&#13;
can be depended upon in cases of&#13;
cholera infantum.&#13;
7. Because it is the most prompt&#13;
and most reliable medicine in use for&#13;
bowel complaints.&#13;
8. Because it produces no bad results.&#13;
9. Because it pleasant and safe to&#13;
take.&#13;
10. Because it has saved the lives of&#13;
more pernio than any other medicine&#13;
in the-world.&#13;
The 25 and 50c sizes for sale by F.&#13;
A. Sigler.&#13;
You may hunt the world over and&#13;
you will not find another medicine&#13;
equal to Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera&#13;
and Diarhoea Remedy for boweil complaints.&#13;
It is pleasant safe and reliable.&#13;
For sale by P. A. Sigler.&#13;
RoYAtfuiSf nus&#13;
Sold by!F. A. Sigler.&#13;
Positions on ticket were decided by&#13;
lot, and the several contestants earnestly&#13;
desire a^ harmonious, friendly&#13;
contest, and that the people may take&#13;
an interest in having as large a vote&#13;
as possible.&#13;
By ordei of Com.&#13;
n O B T G A G E SAX.fi.&#13;
Default having been made in the condition&#13;
oi a certain mortgage (whertBy tbe power Of Bait!&#13;
therein contained to sell lite become operative)&#13;
made by Mlcb&amp;el Lavey and Jennie Lavey, "hii&#13;
•wife of the township of Dexter, Washtenaw&#13;
county, Michigan to William Clark of the place&#13;
aforesaid and dated March 19, 1887 and recorded&#13;
in the office of the Register of Deeds for the&#13;
county of Livingston state of Michigan on the&#13;
21et day of March 1667 in liber 59 of mortgagee on&#13;
page 166 thereof, on which mortgage there is&#13;
claimed to be due at the date of this notice the&#13;
eum of fonr hundred and fifty-one dollars and&#13;
eixty-eight cent* ($461.66) and no suit or proceedings&#13;
at law or in equity having been com&#13;
menced to recover the debt secured by said mortgage&#13;
or any part thereof: Therefore netice is&#13;
hereby given that on Friday the 16th day of July&#13;
A. D. 1897 at one o'clock in the afternoon of said&#13;
day at the west front door of the court house&#13;
it the village of Howell in said county (that being&#13;
the place of holding the circuit court for the&#13;
county in which the mortgaged premises axe situated)&#13;
the said mortgage will be foreclosed by&#13;
sale at public vendue to the highest bidder of&#13;
the premises described in said mortgage or so&#13;
much thereof as may be necessary to satisfy the&#13;
amount due on said mortgage with interest and&#13;
legal costs, that is to esy: All those certain pieces&#13;
or parcels of land situate in the village of Pinca&gt;&#13;
ney, Livingston county, Michigan and described&#13;
as follows to wit; Lots four (4) and five (0) in&#13;
Black four W according to a plat and survey of&#13;
said village ae recorded in the office of Register of&#13;
Deeds of said Livingston county.&#13;
Dated Howell April 19 A. 0.1897.&#13;
WILLIAM CLARK,&#13;
t28 Mortgagee.&#13;
fofsoe A. Stowe, Attorney for Mortgagee.&#13;
A GBEAT OPPORTUNITY&#13;
to visit the Seashore in Jnly.&#13;
Tbe Grand Trunk Railway System&#13;
will inn an exearakm to Portland. Me&#13;
Saturday Jul/ 10th. at the rate of $12&#13;
from Pinckney. Tickets will be good&#13;
for return journey to and including&#13;
J nly 21 st The very low rate for this&#13;
occasion afrotUd be as iftdaoement to&#13;
tbe traveling public to vi Jit tbe Seashore.&#13;
For particulars apply to&#13;
Local Agent.&#13;
-V&#13;
mf'&#13;
THE BUSY BEE HIVE.&#13;
The 4th is over and the&#13;
weather ia boiling hot. Everything&#13;
is in order at the Busy Bee&#13;
Hive and summer goods are selling&#13;
at&#13;
BQILED DOH PRICES.&#13;
When in Jackson visit oar&#13;
store, whether you wish to purchase&#13;
or not. You will be&#13;
welcome and it 4a—&gt; pleasure to&#13;
show goods.&#13;
Yomrs Respectfully, L. H. FIELD.&#13;
r*.'</text>
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              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="5494">
                <text>Pinckney Dispatch July 08, 1897</text>
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                <text>July 08, 1897 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="5499">
                <text>1897-07-08</text>
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                <text>Frank L. Andrews</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>VOL. XV. PINOKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MICH,, THURSDAY, JULY 15, 1897. No. 28 -)l:&#13;
SPECIALS&#13;
FOR&#13;
POSTMASTER ELECTED.&#13;
W. 8. 8warthout, tht Successful&#13;
Contestant.&#13;
AN EXCITING CONTEST l^PINCKNET)&#13;
880 BALLOTS CAST.&#13;
• : ) ' • :&#13;
*&#13;
/&#13;
Thurpday, Friday a n ^ Saturday&#13;
JHr Gents 50c Straw Hats 35c&#13;
- Our Gents 75c Straw Hats 50c&#13;
'Our Gents $1.00 Straw Hats 75c&#13;
Our Gents $1.00 Fedora Hats at 75c&#13;
Our Gents $1.50 Fedora Hats at 1.00&#13;
Our Gents $2.50 Fedora Hats at 1.98&#13;
Our Ladies'50c Shirt Waists at 38c&#13;
Our Ladies' 75c Shirt Waists at 59c&#13;
Our Ladies' $ 1.00 Shirt Waists^ 82c&#13;
Our Ladies'$1.75 Shirt Waists at 1.25&#13;
F l&#13;
Business Pointers.&#13;
KEEP COOL BfTAKIlW* A&#13;
LAKE TftlP.&#13;
.Visit Picturesque Mackinac,, the&#13;
island of cool breezes. Trayel via the&#13;
D. &amp; C Coast Line. Send 2 cents for&#13;
illustrated pamphlet, Address&#13;
A. A. Scbantz, G. P. A. Detroit, Mich.&#13;
For Male.&#13;
A good family or work horse, 6&#13;
years old. Enquire of T. Grimes. t29&#13;
All kinds of Job Printing done at&#13;
this office. Call and get prices.&#13;
Program Cards, School Cards, Envelopes,&#13;
Letter Heads, Note Heads,&#13;
Auction bills, etc. Call and get&#13;
samples.&#13;
Anderson Repair Shofcs—Brazing&#13;
unci finamri^g Thrifts. Engines.&#13;
and&#13;
wood an iron.&#13;
other repairing both&#13;
"BDceTanJ Sundries.&#13;
JKFFRY &amp; COLEMAN.&#13;
L o c a l D i s p a t c h e s .&#13;
Master Buel Cad well is entertain&#13;
mg a cousin from Chelsea this week.&#13;
M. E. Fohey and family visited at&#13;
Mrs. Fohey's mothers Sunday.&#13;
B C. Young of Detroit spent the&#13;
past week among old associates here.&#13;
Mrs. Floyd Reason entertained&#13;
friends from Chicago the first of the&#13;
week.&#13;
Bay Thomas of Jackson was in this&#13;
place the first of the week. He made&#13;
the trip awheel.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Crofoot gave a&#13;
tea party to several of their friends on&#13;
Friday evening last&#13;
Bey. Frank Bloomfield of Dexter&#13;
filled the pulpit at the Corig'l church&#13;
last Sunday morning.&#13;
John Commiskey, who has been&#13;
practicing law in this county for several&#13;
years and is well known here, has&#13;
gone to Escanaba where he will open&#13;
a law office.&#13;
The DISPATCH office force have had&#13;
their hands full of jyb wink again the&#13;
U&#13;
way much longer we will have to engage&#13;
more help. Correct prices and&#13;
good work tells in a long run.&#13;
We have an Item Box on our front&#13;
door where our patrons may put any&#13;
items that would be of interest to us.&#13;
Always remember and sign your&#13;
S. K. Haase and wife were called to n a m e w w e m a y k n o w fclfat t n e n e w s&#13;
is authenic. Of course we do not want&#13;
the name for publication.&#13;
Mrs. Delina Wilson asks the village&#13;
Williamston last Sunday to attend&#13;
the funeral of her sister, Mrs. E. J.&#13;
Bentley.&#13;
Mr. C. 0. LeCount of New Fork&#13;
City will deliver a lecture at the M.&#13;
E. church Sunday morning July 18—&#13;
Subject "Asbury."&#13;
S i Mary's society took in $28.50 at&#13;
their ice cream social at the opera&#13;
house Saturday evening. They hold&#13;
another, one week from Saturday.&#13;
^lnJy.2«L&#13;
At the school meeting on Monday&#13;
evening there was a large attendance&#13;
and the following trustees were elected&#13;
to take the places of J. J. Teeple&#13;
and J. A. Cad well, whose time had&#13;
expired: C. L. Campbell and D. W.&#13;
Murta.&#13;
Be^L. P. Davis, Presiding Elder&#13;
of Adrian district, died at Bay View&#13;
July 12 after an illness of only a lew&#13;
hours. Mr. Davis is well knownWe.&#13;
The funeral was held at the Central&#13;
church, Detroit Wednesday afternoon&#13;
at two o'clock. &amp;ev. if. fl. afcMaoon&#13;
attended from have*&#13;
of Williamston to give her $10,000&#13;
damages on account of injuries sustained&#13;
by falling on a defective sidewalk.&#13;
There are some defective sidewalks&#13;
in this village that should be&#13;
looked after before we have a like&#13;
suit.&#13;
J. Ashley Cooper of Fowlerville and&#13;
Miss Lydia Wines were married at&#13;
the home of the bride's parents, Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. P. B. Wines on Wednesday&#13;
afternoon July 7, Rev. 11 W. Gifford&#13;
officiating.—Liv. Herald. Both par'&#13;
ties are well known here and have the&#13;
best wishes of all for a successful&#13;
life.&#13;
The summer exodus of campwrs for&#13;
As announced in the- DisrATCH last&#13;
week, an election was held in this&#13;
place on Saturday last from one until&#13;
ten p. na. to decide the postmastership&#13;
of this village. There were rive&#13;
candidates in the field and^he ground&#13;
ha(f been thoroughly canvassed by&#13;
them-so there was considerable interest&#13;
taken as was shown by the large number&#13;
of ballots cast—330.&#13;
It was decided to hold the election&#13;
from one until ten p. m. as so many&#13;
of the farmer patrons could not be&#13;
present until evening and all wanted&#13;
a chance to vote for their favorite.&#13;
The arrangements for the election&#13;
was done by the candidates themselves&#13;
anxievery^Mjpg was agreed upon,&#13;
so ther«^ssinr&lt;^hance for, nor should&#13;
there be, any hard feeling. The polls&#13;
were opened at one oclock and were in&#13;
chargeHjfCtarM. Wood of Anderson,&#13;
Jas. VanHorn of Petteysville and Laverne&#13;
Brokaw of Howell, three disinterested&#13;
persons, who conducted the&#13;
affairs in a way that was satisfactory&#13;
and pleasing to all.&#13;
From the time the polls were&#13;
opened until they closed for sapper at&#13;
5:30, only 80 ballots were cast, but&#13;
from then on the town swarmed with&#13;
people until the time for closing and&#13;
there were 330 balloTs cast. It required&#13;
oaly 45 minutes to canvass the ballot&#13;
to determine the lucky one. For a&#13;
time Crofoot had the lead, then Teeple&#13;
took a start but before they "were&#13;
half through Swarthout began to&#13;
come to the front in a manner tha(&#13;
showed plainly he would be the successful&#13;
man. When the canvass was&#13;
completed the result was as follows:&#13;
ABOUT «&#13;
ONE MAN IN '?':&#13;
V)&#13;
DOE© N O T&#13;
.. Trade With . .&#13;
• • • . • \J KJ • • • • - •&#13;
Were After That Man!&#13;
About one man in ten dosen't know&#13;
that his neighbors are saving money on&#13;
every deal, because they irade with us,&#13;
We're After That Man!&#13;
About one man in ten can't be expected&#13;
to know that we are headquarters for&#13;
M&#13;
)1&#13;
C. J. Teeple&#13;
Estell Graham&#13;
C. P. Sykes&#13;
fl. W. Crofoot&#13;
W. S. Swarthout&#13;
78&#13;
19&#13;
45&#13;
51&#13;
137&#13;
Total, 330&#13;
Swarthout's Plurality 59&#13;
Monday morning the defeated candidates&#13;
signed and had sent in the following&#13;
petition:&#13;
Hon. S. W. Smith,&#13;
Washington, D. C.&#13;
We the undersigned, having&#13;
thing, continue this | g g i ^ g g g ^ . J ^th,e^ .el.e^ct^io.n. ^h,e,ld^ ^a^l&#13;
this place tor ^ostmailer, do hereby&#13;
certify that said election resulted in&#13;
the election of W. S. Swarthout and&#13;
we respectfully request that he be appointed&#13;
to said office.&#13;
It only remains now for Mr. Swarthout&#13;
to receive bis commission which&#13;
should come within the next week or&#13;
two, when the office will change hands.&#13;
Mr. Swarthout has been in business&#13;
for several years and has the respect&#13;
of all who know him.&#13;
The election was contested fairly&#13;
and squarely and although any one of&#13;
the defeated candidates would have&#13;
made a good postmaster, Mr. Swarthout&#13;
was the successful one and . is to&#13;
be congratulated.&#13;
And we expect to get his trade.&#13;
ARE YOU THE TENTH MAN?&#13;
WE'RE AFTER YOU!&#13;
F. A. SIGLER,&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICK&#13;
9B9&#13;
W E A R E&#13;
Always,&#13;
Everlastingly,&#13;
Continuously,&#13;
Persistently,&#13;
Effectively&#13;
Seeking Trade.&#13;
W E SELL ' •(.&#13;
Oil Stoves,&#13;
Gasoline Stoves,&#13;
Wood Stoves,&#13;
Lawn Mowers,&#13;
Bicycles,&#13;
Farming Implements, etc.&#13;
W E WILL&#13;
Gladlv,&#13;
Polite'ly,&#13;
Carefully,&#13;
Prom ptly&#13;
Wait Upon You. ™&#13;
Respectfully JYours,&#13;
TEEPLE P CADWELL.&#13;
m » •&#13;
the kisses of oool breeies from the&#13;
beautiful lakes that surround us, is&#13;
now a popular fad. The family of fl.&#13;
H. Swarthout left this week for the&#13;
Bluff section of Portage Lake where&#13;
they will domicile the next month or&#13;
so and dream big fish stories and bask&#13;
in the dear waters of the beach.&#13;
C. S. Jones was in Lansing several&#13;
days the past week.&#13;
Do not forget our Item Box when&#13;
you have any news. It is on the&#13;
front door of our office.&#13;
Mrs. Geo. W. Anderson and son,&#13;
Sirley of Jackson were guests of R.&#13;
E. Finch and wife the past week.&#13;
Come to the Pinckney flonring mills&#13;
From&#13;
to&#13;
WE WILL 6ELL:&#13;
and deposit your wheat and get one&#13;
of those "deposit blanks'1 we issued&#13;
for Erwin &amp; Son.&#13;
Mrs. S. P. Young and son B. C,&#13;
who have been visiting friends here&#13;
for several days, returned to their&#13;
hoaee in Detro&#13;
All Dark Prints at 43&amp; pr. yd.&#13;
AJ1 Light Prints for S%c pr. y&lt;L&#13;
All package coffee at 13c per pound-&#13;
Remember the datea. ' Produce&#13;
BARNAKD ^ CAMPBELL.&#13;
M*MiM^^^^*x^*&amp;*-:M&#13;
. * • • &lt;&gt;.&#13;
NPP^ffff^&#13;
. r *'.' ,M&#13;
;.'V*///V:-.&#13;
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Vv* •»...; *• .•/* &amp;.-V-V. */C a* ^-*/••'.. -, ,^-,^ •; /••*;,.. :- ,,. v . / / , / v ^ - ^V;!&gt; ,:-1-:-/. • ' -••//,, -..-^:1^-^-&#13;
. • • " ' • • • • • . ; • ' - ' : - : ' . ' / • " ' : ' " " • ' . ' , \ i ! : : : ' ' • - ' : • ,''• : - " . - ' • " . • / • ^ • . / • • " V - ' ^ ' ' . . • . • . . ' • - i * / 1 * ' • / / : / , ' . / / : : ' • • •&#13;
..', • * •&#13;
L'.: Iv, -£.&#13;
*: &gt;• u -.&gt;\&#13;
J*'&#13;
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ri-jr.T.!-&#13;
2&#13;
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&gt; / • /*" ,v&#13;
-,^,:: ',-&#13;
.•V'&#13;
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• ' * - • ' / '&#13;
WITHIN uuu WALLS.&#13;
, I • I I I * . . .&#13;
MERB MENTION OF MICHIGAN&#13;
M A t t E R S .&#13;
~—7^-v- ;'&#13;
VIM Destroys the Town, of Lake Ana,&#13;
Rendering Several Hundred People&#13;
UomtlMi and Without Food—Death*&#13;
Ososed by 't he Hot Weather,&#13;
•Is Kttled In a Bridge Disable*&#13;
i Car'No, tot the Interurban electrlo&#13;
railway, b l i n d south from Bay City&#13;
to S*gh!r*W with elghipuasenifeVa and&#13;
three employe* of the railroad on&#13;
board, ran off into aa open draw span&#13;
1ft th6"lnt»rtrban bridge, about six&#13;
•attee ttortftof Sngfnaw, and sfx liveB&#13;
Werb loit'aa*J fiv* p^rton6fbaQly iri-&#13;
|ured*—tfeo fatal Vy.&#13;
Thecal* waft in charge of Votorman&#13;
Herbert B««y ftW* Oendtldfcp?jiJohn'&#13;
O'Brien,'ef Saginaw, and was going at&#13;
a good rate of speed. The swing was&#13;
dpen, but the motorman evidently&#13;
thought be oould stop In time. There&#13;
was semeefeing the matter with the&#13;
•machinery, .however, and the car&#13;
plunged Into the river, 20 feet from&#13;
the abutment , Jlra. W,IHH McOiellah,&#13;
aged *5, of Bay City;'Mrs. David Canipbell/&#13;
aged 28« aatl hdr Uiree little girU,&#13;
Battle, Lena and Eva, aged 7. 5 and 3&#13;
respectively, of Metsmora; J. W. ilaw-&#13;
Idns, 8r„ aged 77. of South Bay City,&#13;
all lost their lives. T. P. Klumpf, of&#13;
Geneva, O., a traveling man, was so&#13;
badly Injured that he cannot recover,&#13;
and Joseph/ Mayhew, of Essezville,&#13;
will probably die. Edward Girkins, of&#13;
B e / City, assistant general freight&#13;
agent of the Michigan Central railroad,&#13;
was oadly cut and bruised, and Motorman&#13;
. Riley, Conductor O'Brien and&#13;
Bxtra Motorman Michael McDonald,&#13;
of Bay City, were also injured.&#13;
Another account •&lt; the disaster says&#13;
Chat the electric car was racing with&#13;
an F. ft P. M. train, which road is a&#13;
Competitor of the Interuban for the&#13;
(raftte between Bay City and Saginaw,&#13;
and tojths: excitenaant (he motorman&#13;
did no* nojfce, Aha,;aignale and eovld&#13;
' n o t stop the-car afUr Uie swing, had&#13;
etarted \o turn.&#13;
The conductor and motorman have&#13;
tt0Mted*to talk of the disaster/on the&#13;
advice, of their employers, i t is said&#13;
the luUrfnrban cars attain a speed of&#13;
80 mfleaan hour.between the twocUiea&#13;
U is fortunate that the affair"occurred&#13;
at en hour when the passenger traffic&#13;
fa the lightest, had it,happened two&#13;
houri later the death list might have&#13;
coo tainted between 30 and $0 names.&#13;
The road is owned by Saginaw parties,&#13;
and the bride was built last year&#13;
a t a coat of #54,000.&#13;
VUa»ge e&gt;f take i n s m « d Oat.&#13;
Lake Ann, a village of 800 inhabitants&#13;
on the Manistee A Northeastern&#13;
railroad. I t miles south of Traverse&#13;
City, was almost wiped out of existence&#13;
by fire. 8eventy&gt;five families are&#13;
homeless and as ewery store in the&#13;
town was destroyed there was not food&#13;
enough for even one meal for half of&#13;
them.' The fire broke at 1 p. m. in the&#13;
sflUUjI'Wjn* Uabbier, presumably from&#13;
'«Ke ewgfcoe aeoaa..- The high wind&#13;
Mowteg from the southwest spread&#13;
tsaroBgh the main portion&#13;
ejery swiftejb--.'The buatrf^&#13;
art was cleaned «^k.4B an hour,&#13;
Inelading ail stocks of «roobs. The&#13;
amw miU, .atave factory, cooperage&#13;
flheda, warehOBsea and the^ large stock&#13;
Of lumber of Wm. Hahbler, were a total&#13;
lees. Traverse City was asked for help,&#13;
and an engine and crew were sent by&#13;
epeciai train, but it was almost too&#13;
late. The additional help saved about&#13;
hall a million feet of luniUr. the coopearage&#13;
factory and a dozen small dwellings&#13;
on the outskirts. The burning of&#13;
ffce 'SalUs and factories throws the&#13;
snain aorttoa of the males out of em-&#13;
^loyaaeei • Tbe heavieet lose was sustained&#13;
* y Wm. Babbler, who wiU lose&#13;
Pntoaan 4k Burnett lose&#13;
Other losses oh stbrea,&#13;
and dwellings and&#13;
faraitare range $150 up and brings the&#13;
total to ebon* 11*6,000. Babbler has&#13;
•»,500 iaaaraoee, Patnaes A BaraeU&#13;
t£,Oftt&gt; f ndscattffi »wg mhoat«,O00 more.&#13;
, 'lira. MwWca agadJaQi w*scBemated.&#13;
She eecajaea ence jsom- ahe &lt;• ibnrning&#13;
divel4ng. hot retaraed for valuablea,&#13;
when the building collapsed and all&#13;
efforts to rescue her were unavailing.&#13;
aavea rataUUee rroee Heat jfe JPeeaest.&#13;
8eveo deaths on account of heat&#13;
occurred In Detroit and vicinity, Mrs.&#13;
Cowafskiof Portland, Mich/ Who Was&#13;
ti&amp;eltiaff at e t t Willis avenue east, died&#13;
from beat proatratien. Mr* Catherine&#13;
Chr, of 8M S t Aubm avenue, died from&#13;
4he e#aet#^o&lt; ejqaosun^ a%e worked&#13;
aeverai aoers in the broil ing enn duri&#13;
n g the day, and f requen tly took ieeeoid&#13;
eViaha Bobert Plath, of 34 Seott&#13;
etreet; fUmrf, i a a g . .who died in a hay&#13;
field near Wyeadatte; Bridget Leonard.&#13;
aged iM; Otta Biereaap. ayed 24.&#13;
QrAsngiins, aged eX, were other&#13;
of R e h e a t The nhyakiians&#13;
ceported Jt&amp;. tq J 0 eases of.prostration&#13;
Crom eunatroke, aooe of which were&#13;
•km*.&#13;
MtCHlQAN NBW8 IT EM 3 ,&#13;
,Chas Doyle died from the effects of a&#13;
sunstroke, near Pontiao.&#13;
Pontiac is now eonaeoted "With Detroit&#13;
by an electric railway,&#13;
1 Michael U'ooSe, afrcd TO, of Niles, is&#13;
dangerously iM from the h e a t&#13;
Bush &amp; Everest's basket factory&#13;
burned at Qobleville; loss 98,000.&#13;
Mi's. Lewis Jones, an aged lady, was&#13;
burned,to death in a fire at Ooekatna.&#13;
.Mrs. J. V, Xkedinan, of Sault Ste.&#13;
Marie, has given birth to three healthy&#13;
boys. .&#13;
i rEsra OrinnelLaged 80, a well-known&#13;
pioneer of Eaton county, died from the&#13;
effects of the heat&#13;
Sunstroke caused the death of Miss&#13;
Amelia' Wagner; of Solo township,&#13;
Washtenaw centoty. &lt;i&#13;
Oeorge Funk, an aged farmer near&#13;
Kiles, fell under his mower and was&#13;
^eiirr^ eut to piece*: v ••"' • jr&#13;
Ilerman Nelfert, aged 43, succumbed&#13;
to the heat while working in his potato&#13;
patch at Flat Rock.&#13;
'ft Den Welch, aged 60, a well-to-do&#13;
farmer near Flint, fell from a load of&#13;
hay and broke his neck.&#13;
Walter Hewitt, aged 10, was accidentia&#13;
shot over the left eye by hie 13-&#13;
year-old brother Robert&#13;
Milo Rich, aged 35, of Quincy, was&#13;
killed by », train while dri?ing across&#13;
the track» near Cold water.&#13;
Irving Guilford, aged 59, of Grand&#13;
Ledge, was killed by a Michigan Central&#13;
train near Pi neon n ing.&#13;
The summer school at the U. of M.&#13;
has opened in all departments with a&#13;
total registration of about 350.&#13;
Herbert Townsend, a farmer near&#13;
Perrinton, was kicked In the pit of the&#13;
stomach by a horse and he may die.&#13;
Owing to ill health and despondency,&#13;
John Koonsman, a popular young&#13;
farmer of Fremont, hanged hiurself.&#13;
John Rowe, ajred 18, was drowned&#13;
while swimming in the mill pood near&#13;
the Wolverine mine location at Calumet&#13;
Benton Harbor reports a dozen prostrations&#13;
from beat, but only one waa&#13;
fatal—Ed Greenland being .the viotim.&#13;
E. F. Hamilton, of Mayville, was&#13;
killed by falUug from an F. &lt;fe P. M.&#13;
train at Port Huron, breaking his neck.&#13;
Mrs. Ernest Maurer, of Niles, accidentally&#13;
cut an artery in her arm and&#13;
bled to death before the doctor arrived.&#13;
John Fallahay, a farmer near Milling&#13;
ton, set Are to his barn and was~&#13;
burned to death, while temporarily insane.&#13;
Joe. Kroff, aged 65, committed suicide&#13;
at S t Joseph by jumping i n t o the&#13;
canal while crazed by the excessive&#13;
h e a t&#13;
John Anderson, a log scaler, stepped&#13;
off a trolley backwards, at Manistee.&#13;
He fell and hie hands were cw* edT*J(r&lt;&#13;
the wheels. , i ^ •?&amp;«$:&#13;
A portable boiler used try. Kennedy&#13;
&amp; Campbell, pavement contractors, exploded&#13;
at Bay Citv, bat ne e o e w a s&#13;
near enough to get h u r t&#13;
The general store of Wiiliard Smith,&#13;
at Yates, a country poetoffice near&#13;
Copemish, was struck by lightning and&#13;
burned down. Loss $1,70^&#13;
C. Leroye eight-year-old son of&#13;
Rochester, was kicked in the forehead&#13;
by a visions horse and his skull creaked&#13;
beyond hope of his eecoverv.&#13;
Clayton Cooley, aged 36, living three&#13;
miles north of Weidman, was instantly&#13;
killed by a team ratming away and a^&#13;
load of lumber passing over him.&#13;
Wm. W. Dickersoo, the oldest employe&#13;
of the Michigan Central railroad,&#13;
and for many years a passenger conductor&#13;
died al his home at Detroit&#13;
James McGinn, of Maple Rapids, has&#13;
been sentenced to Ionia for six years&#13;
for attempting to eriminaHy assault&#13;
the 11-jeer-oki daughter of Geo. Float&#13;
The Dryden roller mills aod elevator&#13;
burned down. Loss. 913.500; la*&#13;
surawee/ iBitaii J. A 4 . a * e v e f imk*r&#13;
City, was the owner. Cause of fire not&#13;
known.&#13;
The'F. Wl Wheeler shipyards a t Bay&#13;
City have a contract to build the largest&#13;
steel tug in the world for nee on&#13;
the Guff of Mexico. It will be 156 feet&#13;
in'length'.1- • ' " - / — " " _;•- »••&#13;
Thomas Hall was kicked so severely 1&#13;
in a fight Joseph Bryant, at Dowagiac,&#13;
that he died, and Bryant Is locked up&#13;
on a charge of manslaughter/ Both&#13;
are colored:&#13;
The apportionment, of the 9400,000&#13;
made by congjres* to provide arms and&#13;
eqnipment for the militia of the various&#13;
states makes Michigan's share a little&#13;
over $13,000.&#13;
Milton „Bajfcersc»oj, aged ^¾ waa&#13;
drowned by. bathing . in Ken von lake,&#13;
near Sherwood. His 15-year-old com-&#13;
Mrs. Maud Thurston, of Akron,&#13;
Mich., while witnessing a fireworks&#13;
display at Detroit was struck in the&#13;
face by , a ba^l from a Unman candle&#13;
and her eyesijfht probably destroyed.&#13;
Roy McDonald, a^aeitor of Port&#13;
Huron, was killed, by. a.G4»Jid Iru^k&#13;
train in Sarnla. Several yef rs ago he&#13;
jumped from a ferry boat and saved a&#13;
woman, receiving a medal from President&#13;
Cleveland.&#13;
Burglars entered the residence of M.&#13;
L. Howell at Cassopolis and ransacked&#13;
the house from top to bottom, carrying&#13;
away all the articles of value, including&#13;
several, pieces of silverware and&#13;
about 96 in money. .&#13;
The body of Carl Muoha, a Saginaw&#13;
piano tuner, was found la a field io&#13;
the suburbs of Bay City. Beside him&#13;
was a message telling the coroner not&#13;
to bother his relatives hut to sell his&#13;
tools and bury him with the proceeds.&#13;
Reports from several sections say&#13;
that with the hot weather and the&#13;
lack of ruin fruit prospects are very&#13;
slim, Raspberries and gooseberries&#13;
were baked on the vines. Green peas&#13;
are dried up, and potatoes dying in the&#13;
hill.&#13;
Ambrose Keating, a poultry breeder&#13;
at Adrian, lost 1,300 fowls by some&#13;
mysterious disease. They died so rapidly&#13;
that it was with difficulty he&#13;
could care for the carcasses. Similar&#13;
reports come from others who raise&#13;
poultry.&#13;
W lile a lot of youug men were in&#13;
sw.owning at Averill, Leonard Pawling,&#13;
aged 33, and Al Christie, aged 30, were&#13;
drowned. The other boys tried hard&#13;
to save them, but i t was of no avail.&#13;
Christie was drowned while trying to&#13;
save Pawlinsr.&#13;
Mrs. Gil Darling and her 4-year-old&#13;
child were fatally burned by the explosion&#13;
of a gasoline stove at Hastings.&#13;
The child'died a few hours after the&#13;
accident Mrs. Darling was filling the&#13;
gasoline stove, which was close to a&#13;
hot wood stove.&#13;
Mrs. Rose Selleck, divorced wife of&#13;
James B. Selleck, one of the proprietors&#13;
of the Selleck grist mill at Clayton,&#13;
was lodged in jail at&#13;
charged with setting the fire&#13;
stroyed the mill about April&#13;
says it spite work.&#13;
Geo. Hill, aged 60, a wealthy farmer,&#13;
three miles northeast of Northville,&#13;
put a horse in the wrong stall and in&#13;
trying to get it out kicked i t T h e&#13;
horse then kicked Hill in the cheat and&#13;
injured him so severely as to cause his&#13;
death before the next morning.&#13;
Maj. Evans, a notorious tough from&#13;
Cassopolia, recently released . from&#13;
Jackson prison., was arrested at Niles&#13;
for drawing a revolver on an American&#13;
Express messenger on the Michigan&#13;
Central. When-searched, Evaas poekete&#13;
were found to be full ot stolen goods.&#13;
John Boles* en, old-time job printer,&#13;
who has lately been running a secondclass&#13;
hotel at Grand Rapids was missing,&#13;
for several days when his body was&#13;
found in the Clarendon hotel, where he&#13;
had registered and taken a room, A&#13;
bottle of morphine found in the room&#13;
told the story of his death.&#13;
At its next -meeting, tbe state board'&#13;
of agriculture will appoint an inspector,&#13;
as provided for in a new law to&#13;
prevent the spread of San Joee scale&#13;
among fruit toeee. The disease hae&#13;
been reported from 20 counties. The&#13;
inepector will have the power to prosecute&#13;
negligent growers and to destroy&#13;
afflicted tree*.&#13;
The Moo tcalm county poorhouae near&#13;
Greenville was .entirely destroyed with&#13;
the exception of the barns. The 51&#13;
inmates escaped uninjured and were&#13;
safely quartered in the barns. Mana-&#13;
AFFAIRS IN GENERAL,&#13;
B R I i r MENTION OF BV.BNTS O F&#13;
t.0&#13;
Coal Miners In Vhre etates Iftrlke foe&#13;
WC**&gt; Xaeegh- te Keep from Htarv»&#13;
log—-Torrid Heat €au»M Muob Distress&#13;
and afavjr Deaths.&#13;
» » * •&#13;
Na|es oa the Hl**rp\$lg Jtrlke.&#13;
The receivers of the W. &amp; L . i&amp; rail-,&#13;
road have secured an orfler from Judge&#13;
Taft, of the U. S. circuit court at Cincinnati,&#13;
directing the IT. S. marshal to&#13;
protect miners in the, company'e em-,&#13;
ploy while at work and to prevent unlawful&#13;
Interference with their railway&#13;
operations on the part of strikers.&#13;
The marshal and his deputies are&#13;
directed to arrest and detain any persons&#13;
destroying property or threaten-&#13;
T H I 5 5 T H CONQRBS8&#13;
— j —&#13;
AT WORK&#13;
SWATB—«Otb day^RecrpWtetttf and&#13;
retaliation were the two p h a s e s ^ the&#13;
tariff bill to occupy latteution 4 e the&#13;
e a e T j } ^ c &lt; % o r t f ^ u b j e c t # i h o&#13;
provitl nt were agreed to. The reoipw&#13;
T t h ^ ^ O v ^ a l o ^ c o ^ n ^ ^&#13;
Senate to4 mak#n rec^Wc4ty hceatiet&#13;
giviag 3 0 ; per cent retluotlon in&#13;
duties on designate^ articles^ or&#13;
?lacing articles' on the1 free list&#13;
he retaliatory elauae provides | h a t&#13;
whenever any country bestows alt export&#13;
bounty on any article, there shall&#13;
be levied, In addition to tbe duties provided&#13;
by the* a c t an additional duty&#13;
equal to the'amoent of the' bouniy\&#13;
e\KNATK.~91et day.-r~&gt;The prospecU&#13;
of an early finish up of the tariff bill&#13;
were knocked in the head wbchiMr.&#13;
Allisotr^reported•» a new'^ametubnent&#13;
from the finance, coimnlttee giving a&#13;
bounty of one-quarter cent a pound on&#13;
beet sugar made from beets grown in&#13;
rag or doing violence t» any' p e r s oW the - United States; •$*&gt; Jones» ggt Ar-&#13;
Adrian,&#13;
that de-&#13;
1. She&#13;
Nicholas Spang, a traveling agent&#13;
fyr the L. Wolff Co., of Cliieago, oom-&#13;
/enitted suicide in hie room a t &lt;ttes'&#13;
hotel, Detroit, by shooting himself.&#13;
ale had evidently ontkeiy aaeUeaeed&#13;
aad stood before a mirror to fire the&#13;
Ux : shot. ,&#13;
paakra wa» so frightened that he did&#13;
not call for help.&#13;
RapseU Moaher, aged 14, of Maniatiqae,&#13;
lost his eyesight by the expiowhich&#13;
became ignited whUe he was&#13;
firing a toy cannon.&#13;
Well borers in the outskirts of Bay&#13;
City have discovered quite extensive&#13;
coal deposits, and considerable property&#13;
is being leased preparatory to&#13;
probable mining operations. •&#13;
The Bechtoid &amp; Richards woodenware&#13;
factory was destroyed by fire.&#13;
Loss 915,000 partially insured. Se /enty&#13;
men a**e thrown out of employment,&#13;
but th(» plant will b« rebnllt at once.&#13;
ger Wood rescued three women from&#13;
an upper room and had scarcely reached&#13;
the ground when the walls fell. The&#13;
loss is about 910,000.&#13;
A double wedding, the sequel of a&#13;
double elopement occurred at tbe M.&#13;
E. church at Eau Claire, near Miles.&#13;
J net as the two cop pies emerged from&#13;
the church two angry men dashed np&#13;
the place. They proved to be the fathers&#13;
of tbe brides, but as they arrived&#13;
too late they gracefully accepted the&#13;
situation and added their blessings.&#13;
The contracting parties in the affair&#13;
Oliver Machana and, Miss Effie Swope,&#13;
H. E. Wlnbigler and Miss Maggie Hendrix,&#13;
all f rom Indianapolis.&#13;
On the 38th of July the weekly newspaper&#13;
publishers of Ohio who compose&#13;
tbe Buckeye : Press asaoeiaUoo will&#13;
lock the office towels in the safe, tarn&#13;
the office cat out to pasture and leave&#13;
the "devil" to raise well, ail the&#13;
disturbance he can in getting out one&#13;
Issue of tbe paper while the "old man1'&#13;
takes .his wife or best girl, or some&#13;
'cfcher fellows best girl, and goes to Detroit&#13;
for an outing. The ceowd will&#13;
1 * under the&#13;
Marvin, tbe president aad manager of&#13;
the association.&#13;
j £ n e s L. Hubbell and Lewis Fitohettjoi&#13;
Creswell. were brought to Trayin&#13;
the employ of the receivers, for the&#13;
purpose of preventing them from con"&#13;
tlnuiog In their employ.&#13;
President Ratchford, of the Mine&#13;
Workers' association,)% greatly pleased&#13;
with the sneeeas of the present strike&#13;
thus far and regards the outlook-as~&#13;
exceedingly bright He says tt is the&#13;
first time the regulation of miners'&#13;
wages has given any concern to national&#13;
legislators, and that now the&#13;
press, pulpit and tbe people are with&#13;
the miners. Much encouragement has&#13;
been received from labor organisations&#13;
all over the country,&#13;
Of the 31,000 miners in the Pittsburg&#13;
district 18,000 are out and the others&#13;
are expected to follow soon, . The&#13;
West Virginia miners are not organized&#13;
and are slow in coming o u t&#13;
A; Brenholz, who manages tbe home&#13;
office for the General Hocking Coal Co.,&#13;
at Columbus, says there is at least&#13;
150,000 tons of coal ift storage in the&#13;
northwest- He estimates that this&#13;
will supply . all demands for at l e a s t&#13;
four months, no matter how generalthe&#13;
miners' strike becomes, »&#13;
President Ratchford, of the Mine&#13;
Workers' association,&#13;
strong telegrams of&#13;
promise of support at the proper time&#13;
from President Samuel Gompers, of&#13;
the American Federation* of'Labor, a a i&#13;
President Garland, of the Amalgamated&#13;
Association of Iron and Steel workers.&#13;
Mr. Ratchford intimates t b a t s e y m p o&#13;
the tic strike of nearly 1,000,000 workmen&#13;
in all .lines may occur. At a n y&#13;
rate the, boycott will be used and&#13;
strongly pushed against all consumers&#13;
of non-union coal.&#13;
DEATH IN T H E TORRID WAVE&#13;
CentoU M 4 ttaetera States Seerchod M 6&#13;
Befced te a Term.&#13;
After one of the coolest springs ever&#13;
known a torrid summer broke in upon&#13;
the central and southern&#13;
kansas, speaking for .t^he miuority,took&#13;
occasion to,say that no vote coulcl be&#13;
reached on the bill in the near futpre,&#13;
in view of this bounty amendment&#13;
lie intimated alsqj U»ft&gt; ,tb#: debate&#13;
woiild be very protracted from this&#13;
time forward. Mr. Teller, of ColoraHp,'&#13;
supplemented this view. As it ha^&#13;
became apparent that she ^bounty provision&#13;
might cause serious delays, Mrf&#13;
Thurston, of Nebraska, one of the&#13;
prime movers, withdrew the amendment,&#13;
saying his action was inspired&#13;
by patriotic motives and for t h | purpose&#13;
of removing all obstacles to the&#13;
passage of the bill. His colleague,&#13;
Mr, Alien, immediately renewed the&#13;
bounty proposition so that the complication&#13;
was the same as before. During&#13;
the day the bill was brought £ o a&#13;
state of pructical completion on the&#13;
first reading, the only remaining&#13;
items being the new propositions submitted&#13;
by the committees and individual&#13;
senators. All of the administrative&#13;
sections of the bill and that' repealing&#13;
the Wilson act were disposed&#13;
,of during the day and' the paragraph&#13;
proposing a tax oh beer Was'withhas&#13;
received:f-drawn by the committee. Besides the&#13;
sympathy aod bounty amendment, Mr/ Allison proposed&#13;
earlier in th* day slltfmendmeVt&#13;
for taxing bonds, etc., which went&#13;
over/ Mr. Mills, of Texas, brought&#13;
forward a new amendment for a tax&#13;
of 30. cents a pack on playing cards,&#13;
which was agreed to by unanimous&#13;
vote, amid much amusement&#13;
SnxATK.—82d day—Mr. Allison, in&#13;
charge of the tariff bill made another&#13;
f u tile effort to have a ti me fixed for ,e&#13;
vote on the otll, "add then declared that&#13;
on the following evening he would ask&#13;
the Senate to remain in session* a t&#13;
least until the bill was reported from&#13;
committee of ihe whole. This. promises&#13;
a test of endurance unless t h e opposition&#13;
to the bill gave way. In some&#13;
respects the Senate made good progstates,&#13;
which ress, disposing of two important&#13;
in the first week of July became sim- \ amendments, that placing a stamp tax&#13;
ply intolerable. From Pittsburg to&#13;
Kansas City and from Chicago south&#13;
cloudless skies and the blazing sun left&#13;
a record of prostrations and death&#13;
which has seldom been equaled. Cincinnati&#13;
showed the highest death rate,&#13;
thirty-six deaths resulting within only&#13;
four days, but there were also many,&#13;
fatal cases at other poin ts. In Chicago&#13;
there were over 300 prostrations within&#13;
four days and a total of 31 deaths were,&#13;
recorded from effects of the h e a t&#13;
Cleveland reported four deaths; Pittsburg&#13;
three and other cities from one&#13;
to four, with scores of prostrations.&#13;
Detroit reported seven deaths from the&#13;
sweltering heat&#13;
The hot wave traveled eastward and&#13;
almost blistered the pavement* of .New&#13;
York, where' the" mercury Went up to&#13;
106 and caused a number of deaths&#13;
and scores of prostrations. .Boston&#13;
and Philadelphia and other eastern&#13;
cities were scorched by this breath&#13;
liken unto the air of the lower regions.&#13;
It even stretched as far north as Montreal&#13;
were several prostrations occurred.&#13;
Ktoe Killed fty a BoUer&#13;
Nine men were killed and five were&#13;
badly injured on the farm of W. A.&#13;
Allen, near Hartsville. Term., by the&#13;
explosion of the boiler of an engine of&#13;
a threshing outfit Mr. Allen and hit&#13;
men were just concluding the work of&#13;
threshing wheat and were preparing&#13;
to leave the field when the explosion&#13;
occurred.' Mr. Allen, who is a prominent&#13;
politician; was among the killed.&#13;
Some of the victims were mangled beyond&#13;
recognition and pieces of the&#13;
boiler were blown 700 yards.&#13;
erse City under arrest from Mackinac&#13;
island. Fitchett left Creewell followed&#13;
by Mrs. Hubbell and at Traverse City&#13;
they took out a license aod ware married,&#13;
she giving her naeae as Agnes&#13;
Cole. They left at once on the etaemer&#13;
Petoskey, followed by the sheriff of&#13;
Antrim county and her husband, W.&#13;
L. Hubbell, with warrants. Sheriff&#13;
Dole went along and they captured the&#13;
guilty pair at Mackinac. Mrs. H abbell&#13;
has three children, but Fitchett is&#13;
•ingle&#13;
NETW8Y Q O N D E N 8 A T J O N * .&#13;
Ten of Pittsburg's big breweries will&#13;
combine, wifrh 910,000,000 capital.&#13;
, 8 0 0 0 ¾ Jfeod* in tbe soath of France&#13;
guardiasahip oT IT. H. | did damage estimated a t over fio.ooo,-&#13;
000andeaused s l o e s of over 300 lives.&#13;
President McKinley has again honored&#13;
Michigan by naming W. K. An-&#13;
A w ^ i , A*fu*»M*t jf 1r^sisni at g a a -&#13;
over, Germany, and James Shepard,&#13;
of Cassopolis, U. 8. consul at Hamilton,&#13;
Out&#13;
A Christian Endeavor train from&#13;
Oregon came very near plunging into&#13;
a ravine near Cottonwood, CaL, while&#13;
on the way to their San Francisco convention.&#13;
A farmer named chas. Broadhurst&#13;
discovered that a treeUe w a s&#13;
burned and flagged the train so that it&#13;
stopped within a few feet of the&#13;
chasm.&#13;
on bonds, stocks, etc., being agreed to&#13;
with little or no opposition/and without&#13;
the formality of a vote, while the.&#13;
Spooner amendment proposing a tariff&#13;
investigation, was withdrawn after a&#13;
protracted struggle.&#13;
SEW AT*.—83d day.—An agreement&#13;
was assented to by all parties a t the&#13;
close of the day's debate on the tariff&#13;
bill to remain in session on the foHow-&#13;
^&#13;
g day until a -rote should be taken,&#13;
urine; the day Jthe antitrust question&#13;
was debated at length, and PettuV&#13;
amendment on the subject was defeated&#13;
33 to 36.&#13;
SEJTATK.— 84th day.—By the decisive&#13;
vote of 38 to 28 the tariff bill was&#13;
passed in the Senate in the presence&#13;
of crowded gaiferlea The male haterest&#13;
ceaasaai lu the final tote, and astds&#13;
from thkfcrthere w s * little of • dramatic&#13;
character in t h e debate. The&#13;
early part of the day was spent on&#13;
amendmeBts of £&lt;^P£f*tiveiv minor&#13;
importance, $he"dfetjafti ^raSffirajf^nto&#13;
financial and ''anti-trust channels. An&#13;
analysis of tbV fhfUl 'votrsHcrtvs that&#13;
the afV native was cast by £5 a^epevbeicans,&#13;
two silver Republicans, Jones, of'&#13;
Nevada, and Mantle, of Montana, and&#13;
one Democrat, MeEuery of IxmisiasU.&#13;
Total, 38. The negative vdfe w a ^ e a s t '&#13;
by 25 Democrats, t w o Populists', aad&#13;
one silver ; JB&amp;pj;blteaji. X»oiwn, 9 of&#13;
iJtoh. Total, 28. One of the most ia&gt;.&#13;
portant new provisions added by Seaate&#13;
is that placing a stamp' tax oa&#13;
hoods, debentures and cei^fieates of '&#13;
stockv' Aside from these mere import* -&#13;
ant changes the bill' as it goes back to&#13;
the House has 874 amendments, of&#13;
various, degrees of,, imptK^ance, The&#13;
hill now gpes to tb^; cenfer^poe eomf., ;&#13;
mittee of both houses. The Seaase- -&#13;
conferrees on the tariff bill are eight--1&#13;
in number and are as fohows: Allison,"&#13;
Aldrich, Burrows^ Piatt (Conn.), Jones&#13;
^Nev.). Jones &lt;Ark.^ Vest and i V n i t o /&#13;
The conferrees of t h e House will be&#13;
Chairman Diogiey, Messrs. j F a y n ^ , , ^&#13;
New York;. DaUe^LL of PcAUsyUaaia;v,&#13;
Hopkins,.of Illinois, and Grosveaor* of'&#13;
Ohio, Republicans, and Messrs. Bailey,&#13;
4*&#13;
of Tex&gt;s; afcMifli^ of ITenneesee,&#13;
Wheeler, of Alabama, Democrats.&#13;
The grand lodge of the Order of Elks&#13;
was held at Minneapolis. The reports&#13;
showed an increase of 7,000 members&#13;
during the past year, and a surplus of&#13;
«10.000 is Jo the treasury.&#13;
While the central and eastern states&#13;
have been melting aad evaporting&#13;
wider the torrid auu, over a a keehof&#13;
snow fell a t Leadvllta, Osonmon,&#13;
Creed* and other Colorado poketa&#13;
S&#13;
/&#13;
* v — ^^'liiifiiri'-i'iriliiiTTiisjfTl '±fa±*ti£i±t^^^^^^^M&#13;
, . « •*•&#13;
^ • ; * . ;Stf.$&#13;
'"vml '"Tji&#13;
- * •&#13;
FLOOD THAT HELPED. S^JKLK.^lK^afiK&#13;
JTJ&gt;&#13;
.v&#13;
L &gt; - , t Sweetness and&#13;
M l&#13;
, ( ] « i&#13;
&gt;!&lt;.•»• i&#13;
^ » W ^ 0 ^ ^ f y o * ™ t p r n c t i o a i&#13;
^iPJCT^Mrig.l/M', the physical man;? the* put the&#13;
&gt;.pill in the pillory if it does not practise what it&#13;
'-. presence. There's a whole crospei &lt;ia Aper'a&#13;
Sugar Coated Pills; fv i " cospol of sweetness&#13;
and light." People uoofl. to value their physio,&#13;
as they did their rellgiott^by Its bitterness.&#13;
,,The moco bitter the doao tho bettor the dootor.&#13;
.&gt; We've got.over that. "WfeiaJte "sugar in oursH—&#13;
goapeLor physio—now-a-dayo. It's possible to&#13;
' please %&amp;$ to purge at the same time, There&#13;
,,, ,nifty b§ power in a pleasant pill. That is the&#13;
gospel of&#13;
Ayer's Cathartic Pills.&#13;
Bore prit particulars (a AVer's (furebook, 100 pages.&#13;
' Seutfre*. J. p. Ajrer Co., Lowell, Mas*.&#13;
to the lktie autc.r Fred r a n t o the enpboard&#13;
and began fllllnfl his arms with&#13;
- R A K D M O T H B R d»»h«» of food, while Polly in her sxi..&#13;
ki.&#13;
B e a man's vocation what it may, hU&#13;
Tele should be to do his duties perfectly,&#13;
to dp the best be can, and thn*&#13;
t o make perpetual progress In his a r t&#13;
Try Omln-O.&#13;
Ask'your grocer today to show you&#13;
a package of GRAJN-O, the new food&#13;
drink'that takes the place of coffee.&#13;
The. children taay drink it without&#13;
injury as well as the adult All who&#13;
try It like i t GRA1N-0 baa .that riob&gt;&#13;
seal orowa of Mocha or Java, but it is&#13;
made, from,pure grains, and #1? most&#13;
delicate stomach receives it without&#13;
distress. M the price of coffee,&#13;
1ft cents and 25 cents per package.&#13;
Sold by all grocers. Tastes like coffee.&#13;
Look* like coffee.&#13;
14 doesn't take long for1 the World to&#13;
discover that a fellow baa changed his&#13;
residence, from IJard-Juok. alley to Prosperity&#13;
avenue, oi; vice versa.&#13;
Shake late Yvmt Sh&lt;&#13;
AJlen^ fr ppt-fca^, a.pwwdar tor tfc*.&#13;
f e e t It cures painful, bwwUen, saartr,&#13;
lng feet and instantly takes tan sting,&#13;
out of corns and bunions. It is the Xrealest comfort discovery of the e&lt;jf$,&#13;
lien's Foot-Base makes tiffhfc-itt&amp;g&#13;
or new shoes feel easy* ; *t H *v certain&#13;
core for sweatings cations s a d hot,&#13;
tired, acbfcpfffeel.. TJrw i Med ay. 6old&#13;
by all drairgiajfcs..»ad, shoe stores. By&#13;
matl'tor 85c in s t e m j ^ J f r F s l w » k a ? e&#13;
F l f E f A J W ^ A E a ^ O l ^ t e d , I * |&#13;
Boy,'?i. Y.&#13;
Neither aooept an oa^niea, «©T except&#13;
atfminat ti, merely on the score of&#13;
ItM novelty; ail that is new is mot true;&#13;
ant maeh the* laotd is false.&#13;
l « * ' &lt; " » » ' , » ~ i i.&#13;
"Oar little girl had d4«rVtveea lira&#13;
very bad form. We tried everything&#13;
m9pomi4.ikmk.pt bet rfitboa* / * e c j f Tfjgn, IfBHTffT&#13;
BDU! we got Or. Fowler'* jj^rt o f Wild&#13;
Strawberry, which helped her rig-ht&#13;
sway." Mrs. Aaa Bergman, "Verban,&#13;
BaaiiaeCo.., Mich.&#13;
Tho Fork Is S00 Years OlcV&#13;
It Is just about 900 years ago since&#13;
the fork made Its appearance in Europe.&#13;
In 995 A. D. a son of the Doge,&#13;
pletro Orsolo, had wedded la Venice&#13;
the Brlzzantlne Princess Arglla, who&#13;
produced at the wedding breakfast a&#13;
silver fork and gold spoon. Then the&#13;
high Venetian families followed suit,&#13;
and these martyrs to fashion pricked&#13;
their lips with the new instrument&#13;
The fork prospered, however, and&#13;
spread over Italy. In 1379 It had traveled&#13;
an far as Prance, and fy 1*08 a&#13;
traveler took it direct to England.&#13;
Untimely.&#13;
"Do you know what you are trying&#13;
to say," asked the chronic faultfinder,&#13;
"when you speak of a man going to an&#13;
untimely grave a t the age of 80?"&#13;
«1 do," said the undaunted obituarist&#13;
- T h e old villain ought to have gone&#13;
there forty years ago."—Cincinnati Amv&#13;
qulrer.&#13;
- • • * 1 . » y • !•• if i * f -m^ i.-r .J n i l&#13;
Store ducks are raised and eaten la&#13;
Chin* than in any other country in the&#13;
World.-' •-'&gt;•'•&#13;
Many religious people in England are&#13;
criticising Dr. Nansen's book because&#13;
there is no recognition of God In i t&#13;
, Every Japanese barrack has a gymnasium&#13;
and the Japanese, kolaiers rank&#13;
among the best gymnast* in die'world!&#13;
Captain Franks Margin, of.,Detrei»V&#13;
Who has Just celebrated bis nlaetyceveath&#13;
birthday, waa prsaent-at Che&#13;
funeral of Napoleon.&#13;
BEAUTY IS BLOOD DEEf.&#13;
BLOOD MCASS BCXVTircL&#13;
co«rtcxio.v&#13;
"Wbeo ie a fellow lying low?"&#13;
"When he ie whispering soft nothings&#13;
latotSMearof the summer girt."&#13;
Bicycle riders, football flayers and&#13;
athletes geuerslly, nad- a sovereign&#13;
roemedy ^or tho serai&amp;aeAdbnriees and&#13;
eats to, w h M i , , t * ^ j . Are vonstaajay&#13;
Uabfe, im Br. TliovBas^ ^electric Oil,;&#13;
Yaehtlag glomes are the 'latest fad.&#13;
They are worq chiefly , \&gt;y people who&#13;
ean't afford to keep a y a c h t&#13;
LOflKKG BAUWM " t t e fteek-i A&#13;
gtralM. ft Oeestaat g m i e U e r&#13;
Feaitlatt B r l a g s&#13;
tmm) .jf^JT&#13;
hegies teaohe Chat ttassveraraiag provided&#13;
by eateie i e tall yea Chat the kidaeys&#13;
#j» a^l^era^voeupeiry Tos#ia*e&#13;
i eevere fall, yea strain pucsetf *ftk»gor&#13;
perUans yoa are compelled seeseasiaafl a&#13;
Sluiaf or stdofiteg position far long later,&#13;
emketa time, your back hagjas to ache.&#13;
tfcea yeur head, yoa become Baisss, tired&#13;
and weary, but do you witeratend the;&#13;
teal eaeset We think not, else yea would&#13;
aoteseplefpVnead hnioieatea dm back, eaadera&#13;
tot«ptl*a«J M|crotSea rotaoa tfc» S1o*« Wk«a 4k«&#13;
B^wct** Are C*aatl»ate4, Drive Thcai, 0«t&#13;
Sjr MSlitai the liver Uvely.&#13;
"Beauty Is akin deep.1' That is wrong.&#13;
Beauty is blood deep.&#13;
A person constipated, wita a lazy liver,&#13;
bilious blobd, dyspeptic stomach, has pimples&#13;
and liver spots and a sole leather coav(&#13;
plexioa.&#13;
' No •one "with a furred toagae, a badr&#13;
breath, a janndfeed eye, caa be beautif oijao&#13;
matter how perfect are form and features.&#13;
To be beautiful, to become beautiful, or&#13;
remain beautiful, the blood must be kept&#13;
pure and free from bile, microbes,.diseasegerms&#13;
hnd other Imparities,..&#13;
Cascaret Candy Cathartic will do it for&#13;
, yon qnfrrklyj surely, aatsunaily. They uyvei&#13;
grip nor gripe, but' make the liver lively,&#13;
prevent sour stomach, kill disease germs,&#13;
tone up the bowels, purify the Mood, and&#13;
make all things right, as they should be.&#13;
Then beauty comes of iteeit, aad to stay,&#13;
Buy and try Cascarets today. It's what&#13;
they do, not what we say they do, that will&#13;
please you. All druggists, loe, 25c or 50c,&#13;
Or mailed for price. Bend for booklet and&#13;
free sample. Address Sterling Remedy Co.,&#13;
Chicago, Montreal, Can., or New Terk.&#13;
Mefeca lighted the&#13;
kitchen lamp and&#13;
set it in the middle&#13;
of the table.&#13;
"We might as&#13;
well have supper,'.*&#13;
she said. "Your&#13;
f a t h e r . prob'ly&#13;
won't be back till&#13;
late/'&#13;
. Fred and Polly&#13;
1 drew up their chairs, and Grandmother&#13;
Melton brought a steaming bowl of&#13;
mush from the stove and dished it t&amp;to&#13;
two smaller bowls.&#13;
'Tm hungry as a bear," observed&#13;
Fred, between mouthfuls* "I think&#13;
tt's a shame we have to go so far to&#13;
school. There isn't a single boy or&#13;
girl in Springvllle that has to go half&#13;
so far as we do."&#13;
"I don't see why father doesn't moye&#13;
down there," complained Polly, pouring&#13;
more of the rich yellow milk over&#13;
her mush; "he could get to his work&#13;
just as well, and It would be ever so&#13;
much pleasanter than this lonesome&#13;
place."&#13;
"You must remember that your&#13;
father isn't a rich matt," answered&#13;
Grandmother Melton, gently. "He&#13;
owns this cottage, and if he moved he&#13;
would have to reut another home, and&#13;
perhaps he couldn't sell this one."&#13;
The Meltons had only been in their&#13;
new home since the summer before.&#13;
Both Fred and Polly bad enjoyed It&#13;
very much Indeed during the pleasant&#13;
warm weather o f August and September.&#13;
Then the wide, swift Mississippi&#13;
had gleamed through the willows and&#13;
there had been unlimited boating and&#13;
swimming and fishing. But with the&#13;
coming of winter the roads choked&#13;
full of snow and ice, and the winds&#13;
swept up the river sharp and cold, and&#13;
It was a dreary, lonesome walk of four&#13;
miles to school at Springvllle. As the&#13;
winter progressed they bad complained&#13;
more and more, and now' for a week,&#13;
owing to the spring freshets, Polly had&#13;
been unable to go at alii and Fred was&#13;
compelled to make a long detour oyer&#13;
the bluffs to avoid the lagoons In the&#13;
river bottoms. '&#13;
"They'll ail get ahead of me," Polly&#13;
had sobbed; "and rtan't pass my examinations."&#13;
That morning Father Melton had&#13;
gone up the river to 'help watch the&#13;
levees. Reports had been coming fMm&#13;
St. Paul, ^t. X,oul8, Cairo and otfter&#13;
points farther up the great river that&#13;
the water was rising rapidly'. The&#13;
levees must be watched' night and day&#13;
to prevent breaks. On leaving his&#13;
home that morning Mr. Melton had&#13;
told Fred that he would be back before&#13;
darlt, aad. that there was no danger&#13;
to fear from the water. All his&#13;
neighbors had told him that his cottage&#13;
waa high enough to be safe, even&#13;
in the greatest goods, - • •&#13;
"It's after 9 o'clock now," said petty,&#13;
as she arose from the table; "I wonder&#13;
where father is."&#13;
"I'd go out aad watch for him ti it&#13;
wasn't raining BO hard," said Fired,&#13;
and then he Looked around toward the&#13;
doorway, anxiously.&#13;
He caught his breath suddenly. Then&#13;
he half rose from the table and pointed&#13;
at the floor.- Grandmother Melton&#13;
dropped her fori noisily on her plate&#13;
and her eyes followed the direction indicated&#13;
by Fred's finger. Polly sat still&#13;
and gazed at the other two, wondering&#13;
what it all meant&#13;
There on the floor, crawling from&#13;
the arses: under the doer, was a dark&#13;
wriggling ohjftfit At first Fred had&#13;
dtement seized the first t h i s * that&#13;
came ^ 0 band—grandmothex'p rockingchair—&#13;
and struggled up; the stairs&#13;
with it.&#13;
"We'll need clothing more'n anything&#13;
else," called Grandmother Melton.&#13;
Fred ran back. The floor of the cottage&#13;
was now entirely covered with'&#13;
water. He splashed1 through it and&#13;
seised all the clothing, coats and Jackets&#13;
be could carry. Polly bravely&#13;
wiped away her teartvand when &lt;P*sti&#13;
brought the loads to the stairway she&#13;
ran with them to the bedroom where&#13;
Grandmother Melton was sitting.&#13;
B F this time the building bed begun&#13;
to shake and quiver as the waU»tbaat&#13;
against It&#13;
"She's going soon," shouted Fred.&#13;
"I'm afraid the water will reach v*&#13;
bp here," suggested Grandmother Melton.&#13;
Fred looked up. The celling was low,&#13;
and just above him there had bedn an&#13;
old trap-door, now nailed up. Instantly&#13;
Fred seized the ax and burst&#13;
it open. Above they could see the dark&#13;
sky and the rain coming down in steady&#13;
torrents. Fred piled a trunk on top of&#13;
the table and climbed out on the roof.&#13;
He couldn't see far, but he conld&#13;
hear the roaring of th« water from&#13;
every direction. His heart sunk; he felt&#13;
sure that they all would be drawled.&#13;
Suddenly something thumped heavily&#13;
against the side of the build log. and&#13;
the next instant the front end of tho&#13;
room went up and grandmother and&#13;
Polly slipped down toward the rear&#13;
end. Fred narrowly escaped be lag&#13;
hurled off the roof. ?&gt;&#13;
"We're going! , We're going!"&#13;
screamed Polly.&#13;
"We're just on* the foundation,"&#13;
answered Fred, as bravely as he could.&#13;
Then ha swung back down into the&#13;
bedroom and helped Grandmother&#13;
Melton and1 Polly up through the trapdoor&#13;
to the roof. He covered them up&#13;
as well as he could' and told them to&#13;
cling to the ridgepole whatever might&#13;
happen. Then he ran down for a coil&#13;
of clothesline. This he tied firmly to&#13;
the window at one end of the bedroom,&#13;
carried the other end up through the&#13;
trap-door, along the roof and dropped&#13;
it over the eaves. Down he went&#13;
again and fastened It to the other window&#13;
frame. It would do to hold to.&#13;
Hardly had he finished his work when&#13;
Jolt St came to a stanrtartH, l h * j&#13;
could hear the Umbers strain and creak&#13;
and the current of the s i r e n&#13;
about I t bat It did s e t ffcove,&#13;
"Well, we're anchored.- eel&#13;
"I suppose we're out somewhere en a&#13;
sandbar 1a'the' Mississippi.'*&#13;
"Do yen think we have reached&#13;
M e m p h u r asked Polly, anxiously.&#13;
! To Polly it .seemed as 1{ fhey had&#13;
been drifting1 for hours.&#13;
' For a long time they remained elmoat&#13;
still. Qocaaionally they ..joined&#13;
their voices in a g r t a t about, buvthere&#13;
was no answer. Fred said the wajer&#13;
roared, so loud $be&gt;np pa^ could hear&#13;
It, anyway, bat it eased their spirits&#13;
to he doing something.&#13;
i M &amp;« M . W » &lt; i *«*&amp;&gt;Jtf» •&#13;
Jerk and a shiver* as if eome,oJ xfae&#13;
timbers of the building had given awnj,&#13;
They bumped on for what seamed an&#13;
endless time, and then, after scraping&#13;
^lpng,,for some,minu*ai. 7 t*sy again&#13;
stopped. By this time the rain had&#13;
ceased and the moon shone out Jalntly&#13;
through the clouds,&#13;
"There's lights," cried FpUy, Joyfeily,&#13;
Sure enough, on.the hill, not aucb a&#13;
great distance away, they could see&#13;
many lights gleaming out over thf&#13;
water. Nearer, there were other lights&#13;
moving sbput, as if la boats.&#13;
"It's Memphis." .said Polly,-and then&#13;
their all shouted at the top of their&#13;
voices.'&#13;
But no one heard them. The water&#13;
roared too loudly. 80 they sat Jof&#13;
hours gnd hours—it seemed to them—&#13;
until the gray light of morning began&#13;
to break in the east. - They strained&#13;
their eyes as it grew brighter and- looked&#13;
off acrosB the gray flood of water&#13;
with its scattering heaps of wreckage&#13;
to the town on the hill. ' r&lt;&#13;
"I thought Memphis waa a bigger&#13;
city than that," said Polly.&#13;
"It isn't Memphis,* said Fred, with&#13;
'a little joyful ring in 'his vote*' Chat&#13;
made Polly and her grandmother leob&#13;
around quickly; "it's SpringvUte.*&#13;
"Springvllle!" j '&#13;
And Springvllle it was. Theyvonld&#13;
s e e t h e little weathereeeien ebfcWb oa&#13;
the bNl, and-thered-bf**k sVAcotbteuse,&#13;
and Judge Carson's fcotteT «nd*«%reat&#13;
many other familiar places, although&#13;
some of the buildings th it had "ADOS'&#13;
near the river had disappeared: ; r&#13;
"Bat haven't we come only four&#13;
miles ?" said Grandmother r Melton,&#13;
loosing greatr** snrprUe^''' ' -,&#13;
Halt an houf^tater two boats ci^mt&#13;
alongside ami' thy castaways we^e^car-&#13;
"Hold on," shouted Fred.&#13;
The words were hardly out of: hie&#13;
month .wMa.bo found himself thrown&#13;
violently from his feet He caught a&#13;
glimpse of the water pouring up the&#13;
stairway and then the lamp was capwhich&#13;
only r4kv« but do ewtesach the&#13;
cause. If you. would Hi yourseef of the&#13;
pain and cure the root of the Uo«ble, at&#13;
the same time save many years of euffcrftog&#13;
and perhaps life Itself, you* wfM take a&#13;
WdDey ^ temedy that has been tried and&#13;
proven shot It wfll 'cure.&#13;
Mr. soba ftobseio of 061 Russell Street&#13;
Detroit iseys: " As a sesuk of exposarc&#13;
during.,the war I have suffered ever&#13;
Since with rheumatism and kidney ttouble.&#13;
Pains would start in my hip and go&#13;
•riue-dee^tedkWi^ydUorder. The pain&#13;
en my-4ktek wee of ten so bad I had to give&#13;
iup work uaaH the severity ef the attack&#13;
passed Sway. I hare used many liniments&#13;
serf ether thiags, hot received very UtUe&#13;
psHef. 8ome time age I atarced using&#13;
T*HMI'S Kkluevrilbaod Uieyhare worked&#13;
a wonderful change ie me. My back is&#13;
ail riant now sad 1 owe It all to the almost&#13;
soajrkMl Influence of Duan'a Kidney Pills."&#13;
Mr, rbrtjetaa was a member of the Fiftyirst&#13;
(finnob Hegtmmrt; wnWf served&#13;
through the w*r with Ufrnot ana dletinctkm.&#13;
Dnenb KHeev PIHe ere far tale by&#13;
nil dealnie- price. 59 oenta Mailed bv&#13;
J*tet*rMti*ami On., B«iffalo. N. Y.. 3nfe&#13;
nsyocsler tbetU- &amp; fJemsiaborUm name,&#13;
stsen'sj s s d Aase s o tifhsc&#13;
It Is believed the 17-year loeast srttl&#13;
finish their business and adjourn beiore&#13;
Congress does.&#13;
taken it to be one of the swamp rattlers&#13;
so common to the Mississippi bottoms,&#13;
I and his first impulse was U&gt; spring for&#13;
his father's rifle which stood in the&#13;
corner.&#13;
'its the flood," said Grandmother&#13;
Melton when she could get her breath.&#13;
By this time the blaek ribbon of&#13;
water eras spreading, slipping into the&#13;
cracks and creeping ont over the floor&#13;
toward the table. Polly broke into a&#13;
cry of terror. Even Grandmother Melton&#13;
seemed uncertain what to do.&#13;
Fred suddenly roused himself. He&#13;
remembered that he was the man ef the&#13;
honse, and that he must watch oner&#13;
WE'RE MGVTtfQ.&#13;
tk# best kidney a n d liver cure on earth,&#13;
ersU be delivered FREE to any angferac,&#13;
fcf written for promptly. PsauvLajra&#13;
Co., 396 5th S t , Cincinnati, O.&#13;
Russian peasant never touches&#13;
fond or drink without making the atga&#13;
of t e e ewes.&#13;
The only remedy in the world that&#13;
will n t a n e e stop itchneesof theekin in&#13;
A . ^+ • .J^Hat-^p^aTJaCgedsmSk^AiaMej^^&#13;
•Weed ^ f o , ^ ©e^er-failing, «s Doans GinU&#13;
H i e editor of this paper advisee Me uvmmB* *^» " • * » " « « w « " » ****&#13;
aders that a fme package of P«r««ian« f*4 protect it in his fathers absence.&#13;
0 0 he sprang from his seat and threw&#13;
open the doer, s e t without a throb of&#13;
fear. It waa dark outside, and the rain&#13;
cams down in torrents. Curling tip&#13;
ever the step they could see the muddy&#13;
water, and they could hear the sound&#13;
of It slapping against the house, it&#13;
stretched away Into the darkness in all&#13;
directions as far as Fred could see. He&#13;
knew that It already most be a foot or&#13;
lisorft high arxnand the honse.&#13;
"The levee's broken." said Polly/hi&#13;
a soared awed voice. "Do yon tnt»h&#13;
w e l l be washed awayf**&#13;
At that moment something bumped&#13;
against the side of the house with so&#13;
much force that the dishes rattled.&#13;
Fred ran to the side window, peered&#13;
•mt, and found tuet a big log Tiad&#13;
washed down against the building.&#13;
Grandmother Melton, who was usually&#13;
cool and brave under the most trying&#13;
circumstances, was wringing her&#13;
Lands in terror.&#13;
"Ren upstairs," shouted Tred, "and&#13;
Pelly and I'll bring all the atuC we can&#13;
with ua."&#13;
Grandmother Melton waited no longmen&#13;
t Get it from your dealer.&#13;
There are over SO languages and dialects&#13;
«pok©S by subjects of the Czar of&#13;
Russia.&#13;
Pare blood Is the secret of uealth.&#13;
Ilurdook Blood, BiUers meures THUS&#13;
blood.&#13;
A filar tu time Is Use to save the price of s&#13;
new tire.&#13;
. T« Care CoMttfwtUa*&#13;
Take CsMcareU Cans? Oataarttc. lite orJSe&#13;
If CCCfall* to cure.ar assists refund moumf&#13;
the building gave another great lurch., ried ashore. On the pauk Polly found&#13;
herself in the arms of her fa(her, crying'and&#13;
laughing all at once/ ^ t b e r&#13;
Melton looked old and worn and worried.&#13;
He had given up his lamlly par&#13;
lost, and he was bravely helping the&#13;
other people.in.the.work 4if rescue.&#13;
After the fleodi was . ssbelded the&#13;
Meltons went down to look over their&#13;
home. Father Melton hardly- knew&#13;
what to do* bet Polly spoke &lt;ep quite&#13;
promptly. •. ... 1 •&#13;
"1 tell you, father, let's leave it right&#13;
here and live In it; Fred and I won't&#13;
have so far to go to school/* -&#13;
And what do yoa thlnn? That is just&#13;
what Father. Melton did. Re straightened&#13;
the house around, built a new&#13;
foundation under It, and the Meltons&#13;
are slvisg there today, quit* happy and&#13;
contested- So you see the flood helped&#13;
two persons st least—Polly and Fred.&#13;
—Chicago Record.&#13;
Tarylag* Pow«»r of X-Raya,&#13;
At a recent meeting of the Royal s o -&#13;
ciety' in London a" deacrfption war&#13;
given of the change 'that occurs in {hf&#13;
penetrative power of the X-rays in&#13;
proportion as the air Is more and more*&#13;
completely ™rh»w»t»fl frn&gt;fl y^, T i r M ii|ii&#13;
Pine feathers never propaUatf a htcysls&#13;
enefoot&#13;
sized and went out Next he found&#13;
himself pounding about in the water.&#13;
"Fred! Fred!" came the agonised&#13;
voice of Polly.&#13;
"Here 1 am." splattered, Fred. In&#13;
j s U l n g be had naught the c*kae*f the&#13;
trapdoor and Polly helped him to the&#13;
roof.&#13;
"We had all we could do to hold en/'&#13;
gasped Grandmother Melton.&#13;
"We're moving," shouted Polly.&#13;
They rocked and sera pad sad bumped&#13;
along, with the water swirling and&#13;
crashing around them.&#13;
"It's our first voyage,' said Fred, with&#13;
an effort to laugh; "p'rape we'll* wind&#13;
up In the Gulf of Mexico."&#13;
But Polly dldnt laugh; neither did&#13;
Grandmother Melton.&#13;
A few minutes later they heard some&#13;
one shouting far ont on the stream and&#13;
they saw the glimmer of a' lantern.&#13;
They shouted In return, but there was&#13;
no answer, and presently the lantern&#13;
was swallowed dp in the darkness and&#13;
the three castaways were eves more&#13;
lonesome and terrified than before.&#13;
m t a a i snsAsntm l l r o / w T T T ^awftaMtaSrjysmvsJnaaflaslljsiUet t%fAt J UmJiSlJlB Jaw- gIIaIm sI—lUaj •r f—.&#13;
to, the rope and the ridgepole all the&#13;
ilme. for the honse was coatinuaiiy&#13;
bumping against obstructions in the&#13;
stream and careening and jolting like&#13;
a boat In a rough sea. Besides this,&#13;
they were wet to the skin aad shivering&#13;
with cold and fright Occasionally .&#13;
^iffB~fi^iff«.»nH&gt;d-iQM&gt;-ap B4&gt;a&gt; ttt#HP [ eeyonet,&#13;
and they would see the outline of trees&#13;
or buildings floating down the river.&#13;
They were momentarily afraid last&#13;
their boat should bump into aoznetbing&#13;
and be broken up. If this happened&#13;
hey knew they would have small hone&#13;
of escape.&#13;
Quite suddenly they felt the bnlldlng&#13;
grind on something, and then, with a&#13;
*&#13;
tube in which the rays are produced.&#13;
At a certain degree of exhaustion the&#13;
rays penetrate the flesh and Show the&#13;
bones of a hnman, hand r|arf shadow.&#13;
With a greater exhaustion ef s i r t h e&#13;
flesh becomes almQM.fwffecU|L,tt»asoareBt,&#13;
while the bones remais epa4he^&#13;
With a still higher degree of sxhasw&#13;
tkm the rsys begin to penetrate the&#13;
bones; Mod with the highest vacates&#13;
through which the electric eHseswrg*&#13;
will pass, the bones themselvee b e -&#13;
et me almost aa txansparasr-es the&#13;
4esh. Similar variations i n Senettntive&#13;
power can be produced by&#13;
lng or decreasing the sower "of&#13;
current, or by varying the eleetrleal&#13;
resistance of the tube. '&#13;
rUtmumm&#13;
Cant Gerard of the French arstg ssn&gt;&#13;
formed an expsrimestal ^^Trmsir ef&#13;
sixty men riding bicycles, and&#13;
ed for s fighting corns on&#13;
The captain ben incensed a^ sneCal&#13;
form of bicycle tor his ssen. The&#13;
cross-bar Is h&#13;
cbfne e»n be fiulded and carried on the&#13;
bach, when gree^-Impracticable fo«&#13;
wheeling has t e be crossed. K Is&#13;
thought t*»» companies trained t o&#13;
maneevre u* wheels may he vary esefal&#13;
la light stlrnrishing and Stontlng&#13;
Bach rider aarrtes a Lehel&#13;
Agnes—"I just heard aa swfui&#13;
about Count Baggen. By the way, dn&#13;
you happen to know him?"&#13;
"Umr&gt;ateit slightly) but sot&#13;
to break my engagement with a i m y e t&#13;
Do go on and tall me!"&#13;
•ay, Agnes kept silent)&#13;
' &lt; -tci&#13;
-vJi&#13;
:M&#13;
1&#13;
^&#13;
' • . &lt; ' •&#13;
' «.•?&#13;
% • # :&#13;
!'\f'&#13;
SflRJpswiRi&#13;
•t &gt; '&#13;
•jpsjaafss^sswi" wi,'. ,4 •*t l,'!" I! MflPP, ipjr^PJW|wp&gt;l&#13;
* ' . ^ v \ , „• •» . . ' • " • / • ' / . • • , % . ' • • • • • v l ; . . - . • ' . • • • - ' . • . • • . • : - + - •-•: . • • • , - • • • . . . .., : • ; , . • : ' • • • ' • . . - • , • . . • . • ; • . • • • . • . • ' ' .&#13;
M M&#13;
r . *•&#13;
u*&#13;
w '&#13;
•1 lift&#13;
I;&#13;
IC,;&#13;
» • ; • '&#13;
to sr »- -&#13;
C '••'-it.&#13;
m&#13;
&amp;*v*.&#13;
• v -&#13;
I.V-1i- .&#13;
.; h&#13;
/&#13;
V,&#13;
'•v i.&#13;
.V'Y "•'.-&gt;.&#13;
{'•.••VT»&#13;
; • * . : '&#13;
&gt; ' • ' '&#13;
fbubuf gifaakf(,&#13;
F. L. ANDREWS, EDITOR,&#13;
THUBSDAY, JULY 15, 1897.&#13;
Interesting Items.&#13;
T h e Maccabees of S t o c k b r i d g e&#13;
will b u i l d a new hall for t h e i r use.&#13;
P o t a t o e s will probably be worth&#13;
considerable t h i s season as already&#13;
vines are d y i n g from t h e d r o u t h&#13;
with t u b e r s only t h e size of small&#13;
eggs.&#13;
T h e motor line carried 1,000&#13;
passengers between Ann A r b o r&#13;
a n d Ypsilanti Saturday, t a k i n g as&#13;
h i g h as 111 on one t r i p in t h e big&#13;
car,—Ann A r b o r Courier.&#13;
Bro. G i l d a r t of S t o c k b r i d g e is • • * » *•!***••.&#13;
x i. v x l • Wnt Triaap—Aa' how do ye travel&#13;
w o r r y i n g a b o u t w h a t h e is g o ™ J ^ wiaeiir a w o t r ? • •&#13;
Second Tramp (haughtily)—I travel&#13;
on my shape.&#13;
First Tramp—Then ye dan't nave&#13;
coom far an' ye haven't far to fo.—&#13;
Exchange,&#13;
T h e Dansville E a g l e kicks b e -&#13;
cause it is such hot w e a t h e r to&#13;
gather news a n d fills t h e blank&#13;
space with his boot-jack. Never&#13;
m i n d Bro. Rogers, there are hotter&#13;
places t h a n Michigan.&#13;
Christian Ross, father of t h e&#13;
lost ( s t o l e n ) Charley E o s s at&#13;
P h i l a d e l p h i a twenty o d d years&#13;
ago, h a s recently died a poor,&#13;
b r o k e n hearted old man. H e gave&#13;
to eat 100 y e a r s from now,- a n d&#13;
what will become of paupers.&#13;
T h e depositors in t h e defunct&#13;
People's S a v i n g B a n k of L a n s i n g&#13;
will not receive more t h a n 50&#13;
cents o n t h e dollar. R e c e i v e r&#13;
F o s t e r h a s found t h a t a majority&#13;
of the stockholders a r e unable to&#13;
meet t h e assessment which was&#13;
recently declared valid by J u d g e&#13;
P o i s o n . — W i l l i a m s t o n E n t e r p r i s e .&#13;
T h a t is b e t t e r t h a n t h e y done in&#13;
this county w h e n a bank broke,&#13;
T h e depositors got 15 cents on a&#13;
dollar a n d t h e lawyers got t h e rest&#13;
—it took seven years-to settle affairs.&#13;
Council Proceedings.&#13;
Reassuring t h e "Ctytfa."&#13;
Mrs. Cohn—"Ikey, who Is dat In de&#13;
frond room mit papa?" Ikey—"A divinity&#13;
student vas looking for a furnished&#13;
room." Mrs. Cohn—"Ikey, go&#13;
oud py der hall undt vissle a hymn."—&#13;
Judge.&#13;
Excursion to Toledo.&#13;
Sunday July 18, the Ann Arbor R.&#13;
R. will ffive another of its popnlar&#13;
excursions at popular rates to Toledo'&#13;
and return. Train leaves Hamburg&#13;
at 9:47 a. in. Fare for round trip&#13;
only 75c. The entertainment to be&#13;
given at'Lake Erie Pavk and Casino&#13;
will he one of the hest of the season.&#13;
Take a Lake Toar to Island of&#13;
Owl Brewrea. "&#13;
G o to Mackinac I s l a n d ."$1(0)1.,&#13;
via t h e Coast L i n e . - T h e D . &amp; 'C.&#13;
new steel p a s s e n g e r s t e a m e r s&#13;
leave Toledo, M o n d a y s a n d S a t u r -&#13;
days 10:80 a, m. a n d T u e s d a y s&#13;
a n d T h u r s d a y s 4:30 p. jri. F r d m&#13;
Detroit, M o n d a y s : a u d S a t u r d a y s&#13;
11:00 p. m. W e d n e s d a y s a n d F t i - J a o k , o n a n a rnterm'dt^Uv••wXiu^fSSSn&#13;
d a y s 9 : 3 0 a . m . S e n d 2 c e n t s tor\ ^ - , ; ? _ J * * P ^ V &lt; 5 6 *&#13;
illustrated p a m p h l e t . A d d r e s s&#13;
A. A. S c h a n t z , G P A ,&#13;
D e t r o i t , Mich.&#13;
Railroad Guide. ....... . . . . • • • • «T-».--qi&#13;
tirand Truak fraUway Sjsten^. ,&#13;
Amy*! MQ4 I)«Mrtare o r T M i l i t f P l f t A ^ a&#13;
WI8TBUUNB.-&#13;
Lv. Aa.&#13;
Special. J u n e 30, '97.&#13;
Council convened and called to&#13;
order by pros, pro tern, C. L.&#13;
Grimes.&#13;
P r e s e n t , T r u s t e e s Reason, M u r -&#13;
phy, W r i g h t , B r o w n and Grimes.&#13;
Absent, T r u s t e e J a c k s o n and&#13;
P r e s , Sigler.&#13;
T h e following resolution was&#13;
p r e s e n t e d :&#13;
W h e r e a s : — B y reason of certain&#13;
celebrations a n d festivals which&#13;
u p a prosperous business "ami m f t &gt;' b© "e l &lt;l i n t h e village of !"••"*,• to revert u* - d.bt .eeuredii»7BaWmort.&#13;
r r r ' P ' 1 " 4 - 1 1 i l gage or &gt;any part thereof: Iherefore ^atice is&#13;
1 UlCKliej", It WOUKl a p p e a r t h a t neroby given that on Krhlay the Kith day of July&#13;
IVIOItTttAUK S A I . F .&#13;
Default liHviiis lit&gt;on inado in the condition&#13;
of &amp; certain &gt;nortKUne (whereby the power of sale&#13;
therein contniiu'd to eell his become operative)&#13;
made by Michael Lavey aud Jennie Lavey. his&#13;
wife of the township of Dexter, Washtenaw&#13;
county. Michigan to William Clark of the place&#13;
aforesaid uud'dated March 19, 1887 and recorded&#13;
in the office of the Register of Dteds for tho&#13;
county of Livingston state of Michigan ou the&#13;
SMst day of March 1K87 in liber 551 of mortgages on&#13;
page J fill thereol, on which mortgage there is&#13;
claimed to he due at the date of this notice the&#13;
Bumof four hundred and iiftyone dollars and&#13;
Bixty-eight cenlu (^451.6W) and no suit or pro.&#13;
feedings at law or in equity having been coin&#13;
You may hunt the world over and&#13;
you will not tind another medicine&#13;
' . i, . ' i .&#13;
equal to Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera&#13;
and Diarhoea Remedy for bowell complaints.&#13;
It is pleasant safe and reliable.&#13;
For sale hy b\ A. S i l l e r / ' '&#13;
The Coast Line to MACKINAC&#13;
«—TAKB T H 1 — »&#13;
a&#13;
auraoowD •A a&#13;
Pontiac DetroU—Gd.Ranidt • . n aud iptt»m«W*t^w* t i 2 0 p n i 7&#13;
l'outlao Lenox Detroit »ud&#13;
interibfdiata jfo. fT.M^ta' fiJ^J&#13;
Mioh. AirLine^DlV. tT»it» • ' • • . . ' . '&#13;
t**vef*onttw,V Hwraa t*J0na&#13;
for itonieo Lenox aud l a £ J U . . , 4 , . ' 1&#13;
D. A M. DIVISION LIS AVE CONIIAC .&#13;
Sagiuaw Qd Raplfr aitC'^d Haven*v' faj»»*m&#13;
.«•'&#13;
GdRapida Gd Hayftn egffagg&#13;
Sttftnaw GA Mautaa Mllwiaki&#13;
Chloago and Intermediate att.&#13;
GdRapide Muiifigon V **:;.&#13;
. IA8TBO*ND, u&#13;
Detroit K*»t and Canada&#13;
Detroit East and. Canada,-, ,.,&#13;
Detroit and South . - -.'&#13;
Detroit Kant aud Canada\ . . .,&#13;
Detroit Suburban ' ' k&#13;
Leuve Detroit v^•^,Wind¾o1f&#13;
Buffalo—New York 4 Boiton ''&#13;
Toronto Montreal New York&#13;
Jjondon Express&#13;
Buffalo New York A Kaat&#13;
s p e n t 150,000 in vain efforts to&#13;
find his boy. T h e boy was kidn&#13;
a p p e d in t h e hope of a large ransom.—&#13;
Ex.&#13;
Ann A r b o r has not only a novel&#13;
b u t an effective way of dealing&#13;
with t r a m p s . W h e n e v e r a t r a m p&#13;
a p p e a r s in t h e city, and asks ent&#13;
e r t a i n m e n t , h e is at once referred&#13;
to F r e d Sipley, foreman of t h e engine&#13;
house. Mr. Sipley always&#13;
h a s a b i g pile of unsawed wood&#13;
on hand, a n d each t r a m p is required&#13;
to saw wood and for his&#13;
labor is given a nienl and lodging&#13;
ticket.—Ex.&#13;
the village marshall would need&#13;
assistance. Therefore be it resolved&#13;
that t h e P r e s i d e n t by and with&#13;
the consent of t h e village council&#13;
appoint such a n u m b e r of special&#13;
policeman as may deem necessary&#13;
to serve on such special occasions.&#13;
Moved and carried t h a t t h e resolution&#13;
be adopted.&#13;
P r e s i d e n t appointed D. W . M u r -&#13;
ta and J o h n Jeffries.&#13;
Moved and carried t h a t the a p -&#13;
p o i n t m e n t be sustained.&#13;
Moved and carried that t h e policemen's&#13;
salary not exceed $2.0)&#13;
per day.&#13;
Council adjourned.&#13;
R. H. T E E P L E ,&#13;
Clerk.&#13;
An exchange snys that when a&#13;
cucumber is taken from t h e vine&#13;
let it be cut with a knife, leaving&#13;
about an e i g h t of an inch of the&#13;
c u c u m b e r on t h e stein; t h e n slit j You Hare Been Waiting: for this special&#13;
t h e stem w i t h a knife from its end Ten Day Excursion to Frankfort, Trnvto&#13;
the vine leaving a small portion j e r s e c , f y a u d J*««»Ia.&#13;
of the c u c u m b e r on each division, j T h u r s d a y , J u l y 22, t h e A n n&#13;
on each seperate slip there will A r b o r R a i l r o a d will sell excurgrow&#13;
a c u c u m b e r the sixe of t h e ! sion tickets to t h e above resorts&#13;
first one. T r y it. ' ! at ~M for the r o u n d trip. Train&#13;
r r , £ J • , I leaves H a m b u r g Jet. at 9:18 ar-&#13;
I lie o p e n i n g u p of a demand i . , . • - . , T- in&#13;
, . , l i r i i! rives lienzonia oAz. F r a n k f o r t&#13;
for potatoes peeled, sliced and&#13;
, . / ,., i . , 6:00, T r a v e r s e City 0:35^ Tickets&#13;
dried like apples, promises to i .,, , , „ J . •&#13;
A. 1). 1S97 at one o'clock in the afternoon nf said&#13;
day at the west front door of the court house&#13;
it the village of Howell in euirt county f i a t being&#13;
the place of holding the circuit court for the&#13;
county la which the mortgaged premises are situated;&#13;
the said mortgage will be foreclosed by&#13;
Bale at public vendue to the highest bidder of&#13;
the premises described in said mortgage or so&#13;
much thereof ae may be necessary to eatinl'y the&#13;
amount due on said mortgage with interest and&#13;
legal costs, that is to say: All those certain pieces&#13;
or parcels of land situate In the village of l'lnckney,&#13;
Livingston county, Michigan and described&#13;
as follows to wit: Lots four (1) and five (ft) in&#13;
Block four (4) according to a plat and survey of&#13;
said village as recorded in the ofllce of Register of&#13;
Deeds of said Livingston county.&#13;
Dated Unwell April 19 A. i). 1807.&#13;
WILLIAM CLARK,&#13;
t28 Mortgagee.&#13;
Eugene A. Stowe, Attorney for Mortgagee.&#13;
TO MACKINAC&#13;
D E T R O I T&#13;
PETOSKEY&#13;
CHICAGO&#13;
New Steel Passenger Steamers&#13;
The Orcateat Perfection yet attained In&#13;
Boat Construction—Luxurious Equipment,&#13;
Artistic Furnishing, Decoration and Efficient&#13;
Service, insuring the highest degree of&#13;
COMFORT, SPEED AND SAFETY&#13;
FOUR TRIPS PER WEEK BETWEEN&#13;
Toledo, Detroit and Mackinac&#13;
PETOSKEY, "THE SOO," MARQUETTE&#13;
AND DULUTH.&#13;
LOW RATES to Picturesque AW\inacanrt&#13;
Return, including rieals ana Hir ih«. Prom&#13;
Cl.'\t! nd, $iK; from lulcJ.!, f.15; troin&#13;
Letroit, $13:50.&#13;
DAY AND NIGHT 82RVIC'r.&#13;
Between Detroit and Cleveland&#13;
Connecting at Cleveland with Earliest&#13;
Trnins for rx!l points Ivast. South mul South&#13;
w s t nnd at Detroit for all points North aud&#13;
Northwest.&#13;
SunriayTrips June, July, August and Sept. Only&#13;
EVERY DAY BETWEEN&#13;
C!eveland.Put-in-Bay#Toledt)&#13;
&gt;Vn.( lor lllustrnterl Pamphlet. Address&#13;
A . A. S C H A N T Z , a. P . A., D E T R O I T , MICH. Tnc csiroif &amp; cisveiaqii sreani Mav. eo-&#13;
Reasons Why ClmiiibcrluitiN Colic&#13;
Cholera aud Diarrhoea RemeUy&#13;
IK the best.&#13;
1. I3ecau8e it affords almost instant&#13;
relief in the case ol pain in the stomach,&#13;
colic and cholera morbus.&#13;
2. Hecause it is thu only remedy&#13;
that never tails in the most severe&#13;
cases of dysentery and diarrhoea.&#13;
3. Because it is the only remedy&#13;
that will cure chronic diarrhoea. J&#13;
4. 2Jecau.se it is the only remedy&#13;
that will prevent bilious colic.&#13;
5. Because it is the only remedy&#13;
that will cure epidemical dysentery.&#13;
6. Because it 1« only remedy that&#13;
can be depended upon in&#13;
cholera infantum.&#13;
"Last summer one of our prrandchildren&#13;
was sick with a severe bowel&#13;
trouble"' saA's Mrs. E. G. Gregory of&#13;
Fredrick.stown, Mo "Our doctor's&#13;
remedies had failed, then -we tried&#13;
Chamberlain's Colic. Cholera ana Diarihoea&#13;
Remedy, which #ave very&#13;
speedy relief." For sale by F. A.&#13;
sSiyler.&#13;
(Wanted—An Idea ^&#13;
Cases 01 Protect your Ideas; th&#13;
Who can think&#13;
•ome almpl*&#13;
w&#13;
Write JOHN WEDliEKI&amp;RN * CO&#13;
give a fresh i m p e t u s to potato&#13;
cultivation, as decay will be prevented&#13;
and freight cost lessened.&#13;
T h e potatoes are peeled and sliced '&#13;
b y machinery, soaked 20 minutes&#13;
in s t r o n g brine, drained and dried&#13;
a t a t e m p e r a t u r e of about 194 degrees.&#13;
Before using the slices&#13;
are soaked from 12 to 15 hours&#13;
will be good for r e t u r n on any&#13;
i regular t r a i n u n t i l J u l y 31 inclusive.&#13;
Children u n d e r twelve y e a r s&#13;
of aae half the above rate.&#13;
thing to palest.&#13;
you wealth.&#13;
, „^w., .,««»,«,„„„„», m. ~~., * atent Attor*&#13;
. UTt, Washington, D. C, for their $1,800 prise offer&#13;
7. B e c a u s e it is t h e m o s t p r o m p t m d l u t o f t w o hundred lmrentlona wanted.&#13;
and most reliable medicine in use for&#13;
bowel compiaints. j Auj?. .1. Bojarel, the leading druggist&#13;
8. Because it produces no bad r e - ! o f sbreveport, La.,says: "Dr. King's&#13;
suits I&#13;
' 9. Because it pleasant and safe t o ! N e w Discovery is the only thing that&#13;
t,qke. |oura»' my cough, and it M the best sel&#13;
10. Because it has saved the lives of ; ler I have." .J. F. Campbell, merchant&#13;
At W h a t A g e I s Man Strouffost?&#13;
The muscles in common with all the&#13;
organs'of the hody have their stages of&#13;
development and decline; our physical&#13;
strength increases up to a certain&#13;
age and then decreases.. Tests of the&#13;
and t h e n have all t h e freshness strength of several thousands of people&#13;
have been made by means of a dynamometer&#13;
(strength measurer) and&#13;
the following are given as the average&#13;
and flavor of new potatoes.&#13;
E n g l i s h p a p e r s report that,&#13;
while a w o r k m a n was recently figures for the white race: The "lift-&#13;
•L ' i. l i iu ' n 8 power" of a youth of 17 years is&#13;
sawing a b e a m taken from the] m p o u n d s ; i n h i s m h y e a r ^ 3 ^&#13;
roof of W i n c h e s t e r Cathedral, ai creases to 320 pounds and ?n the 30th&#13;
nail 2 1-4 i n c h e s long was discov-J and 31st years it reaches Its heigbt--356&#13;
e r e d in t h e middle of t h e piece 1 p o u n d 8 " A t t h e e n d o f * • 2 l 8 t *™r&#13;
a b o u t 9 inches from t h e surface.&#13;
the strength begins to decline, very&#13;
slowly at first. By the 40th year it has&#13;
T h e conclusion d r a w n from a nail j decreased eight pounds and this diminin&#13;
that position is t h a t it • * « ' u t l o n c o r t l E u e s a t * ^™y increased&#13;
d r i v e n into t h e&#13;
was , rate until the 50th year is reached,&#13;
y o u n g oak a n d when the figure is 330 pounds. After&#13;
that, before t h e tree was c u t down&#13;
t h e wood bad gro»vn a r o u n d t h e&#13;
this period the strength fails more and&#13;
more rapidly until the weakness of old&#13;
age is reached. It is not possible to&#13;
nail, t h a t process likely occupying) give statistics of the decline of&#13;
a"co^le'6T~cc; nturies. I t is a s s u m&#13;
e d t h a t t h e benm was introduced&#13;
in t h e c o u r s e of t h e reparation of&#13;
W i n c h e s t e r C a t h e d r a l which was&#13;
u n d e r t a k e n b y B i s h o p Walkelyn&#13;
7rtf^ng^~aT^r'_niT"50Tfi~year, as it. variei&#13;
to a large extent in different individuals.-—&#13;
Strand Magazine.&#13;
ConrrMnman Slmpsou'a gllk Socka.&#13;
When Congressman "Jerry" Slmpson&#13;
appears in the extra session of&#13;
a n d carried o u t between 10 »9 and congress next month he will for the&#13;
1093, but it s h o u l d be remember-] first time in his life wear a tailor-made&#13;
ed t h a t s o m e of his *ucceseors had i ! ? V A l o t h ? / . . J ^ ' ^ l g y , ^ h l m&#13;
works* exe cut ed u p to the end of] aCth iTcaogpoc ktaa,i loKr,a an.n, l btyu ckeexdp raewssa yf roinm thae&#13;
t h e fourteenth c e n t u r y , when Wil-j bundle was a pair, of silk half hose,&#13;
liam of W v k e l i a m c o m m e n c e d h i s ! ! ! n t&#13;
a&#13;
w l t h t h e ^ r a ^ l i m e » t 8 o f * e * " /&#13;
-.. . . . . . . , or- Simpgon will wear these howe with&#13;
restoration. I t i« t h o u g h t - t h a t in I his new el, ties. He has also bought&#13;
a pair of tan leather shoes and a silk&#13;
hat of the latest block. He hat adorned&#13;
the latter with a half mourmuif baad.&#13;
msxy event t h e juail mudt have . r e -&#13;
fcaained concealed for n e a r l y 1,000&#13;
I&#13;
more people than any other medicine&#13;
in the world. *- '&#13;
The 25 and 50c sizes for sale by F.&#13;
A. S i g i e i&#13;
of Saflbrd, Ariz , writes: "Dr. King's&#13;
New Discovery is all that hclaimed for&#13;
it; it never fails, and is a sure cure for&#13;
(,'onsumption, Couphs and Colds. 1 cani&#13;
not sav enough for it's merits." Dr.&#13;
v\ *-• uE*le*c tric• Bitter*J.- • IA J j vK. ing,s" XNT ew nD iscovery ..t or .C, onsump- Electric Bitters is a medicine suited • . ,, , , n ,-, • .&#13;
^ - « — . -u » u , tion. Coughs and Colds is not an exp^rfor&#13;
any season,-bat perhaps more gen- t. , , . , , . . , * • *&#13;
„ _ n ^ „ J „ J u l L i -j t iment. it has been tried for aquater of&#13;
erally needed when the languid, ex- , . , , - , . ,&#13;
, j a century, and t o d a y stands at the&#13;
head. It never dissapoints. Free trial&#13;
hausted f'eelini? prevails, when&#13;
liver is torpid and sluggish and tba&#13;
need of a tonic and alternative is felt.&#13;
A prompt use of this medicine has often&#13;
averted long and perhaps fatal&#13;
bilious fevers. No medioine will act&#13;
more surely in counteracting and&#13;
I) ottles at, P. A . Siorler's Drug Store.&#13;
Subscribe for the DISPATCH&#13;
J OH rftJJYTrWG /&#13;
f r o o j n » tlia C n , » a m e*.„m •!,„ _ , . i - „ ; _ i I In all Its hranc^ee, a specialty. We hare all klnda&#13;
treeing the system from the malenal Rtld the lat^mtviea of Type, etc., which t-nabiea pDoOiissoonn , nHeeaauilaflceuheo , iinnraliigi/ePScTHinoinl . CrnOnn«Stlil-- "8 ;r&gt; exrciiif all kinds of work, such as Books, P)Ull l e t „ , P u s t e r B , proKrarames, BUI Head«,Not«&#13;
p a t i o n . d i z z i n e s s y i e l d t o E l e c t r i c B i t - »«*&lt;«. «tat«manta. Cards Auction Bills, el*.,in&#13;
PTit&gt;''rior Ht%-lf&gt;ii. uyKiii llii'shortebt noticfe. Fricesaa&#13;
ters, 50c and $1.00 per bottle at F. j ir*va»K&lt;&gt;™i work tan h^nonp.&#13;
A. Sigler's dru^ store.&#13;
~I.L BILLS PAy*Bt.E K[IIST OC KVKHV M^.VTH.&#13;
^ ^ ^ ¾ ^ ¾ 4Ea«E0Y&#13;
CVRES IN THE RIOHT WAY, BY REOULATINQ THE UVER&#13;
AND KIDNEYS, AND PURIPYINQ THE B I J O O D .&#13;
It is a positive cure for Rheumatism, Neuralgia* Dyspepsia, Sfck and&#13;
Nervous Headache, Fever and Ague. Chills, and all diseases arising Irom&#13;
'a diseased liver or the kidneys, or impure blood. : ;&#13;
!YOUR MONEY BACK ^SrrtSS^y^^i^^&#13;
»Doa^aadwewiUais^yottS«hsckierfix»byKtun)Bk»iL&#13;
^i«put^lntifs)foraw,pow(l«rsfldubkl«. Tbetatalettu«UM«Mlejraotaki.r«K)u«r-&#13;
A. R LEWIS MEWONE OO^ . Bolivar, Ma!&#13;
,V,tiSffp;!n&#13;
* • «.07 p m&#13;
• 8 J 8 p m «tU»a«&#13;
t•i4o,0if7i aa^mn KtU-Wfippmm&#13;
*T.45a m&#13;
•12. noon&#13;
ttJ.40pm&#13;
•11^6 Uim&#13;
to N«jw&#13;
j)»t&#13;
car to Hamllton-^Sleepiageartft Buffalo and New&#13;
».45 a ra t»r*4i has sU«jHn({cajB.Oetrolt Naw&#13;
York and Boston. fc»,&lt;M) noon train haa parldr&#13;
York 11.2S train haa sleeping car to New York&#13;
tDaily except Sunday. •Daily. *..«&#13;
W. J. IU.AI:K, Ag»Bt, Plnokney Mich, h *&#13;
V&amp;,E. DM'XB - • ' • E. H. HlfBjiJ?* - • - * •&#13;
O. P. AT. Awn*. A. U. P J A T A g t ,&#13;
Montreulf^ue. Chicago, 111.&#13;
BEN FUSTCHBK, Trav. Paes. Agt., Detroit Mioh.&#13;
.OLEDO rv,&#13;
NARBOIY •&#13;
~AND ff J 1&gt;&#13;
nTH MICHIG&#13;
RAILWAY. SivN? L-3&#13;
Popular route for Ann Arbor, Toledo&#13;
and points East, South and for&#13;
Howeil, Owosso, Alma, Mt Pleasant,&#13;
Cadillac, Manistee, Traverse City and&#13;
points in Northwestern Michigan.&#13;
W. H. BENNETT,&#13;
G. P. A., Toledo.&#13;
SO YIARS*&#13;
•XPKRIKNOI.&#13;
TRADC MARKS,&#13;
DESIGNS,&#13;
COPYRIGHTS A c .&#13;
Anyone sending a sketch and deacrlptlon may&#13;
probably patentable. Commimi^ntions strictly&#13;
confidential. Oldest agency torBecurlbg patents&#13;
In America. We have a Washington office.&#13;
Patents takpn through Munn &amp; Co. reoelre&#13;
gpaclal not ioe In the&#13;
SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN,&#13;
beautifully Illustrated, largest circulation at&#13;
any soientlfl "&#13;
SLsOaix mo&#13;
BOOK OK PATENTS sent free. Address&#13;
soientloo Journal, weekly, terms S3.00 a yt&#13;
tLflOaix months. Kpecimen copies and H.UTO&#13;
MUNN 4 C C ,&#13;
3 6 1 Broadway, N e w Yerk*&#13;
Weil i&gt;alii»iLii with&#13;
p r ' s Hair Vigor.&#13;
\ i i i i v forty years ago, after&#13;
».••;;:&gt;• uivks of sickness, my hair&#13;
i v "'I gray. 1 began using Ayer's&#13;
ir \':;;or, and was so Well satis-&#13;
;.;i wiiii t!it* results that I have&#13;
.i.'vcr fri' i'any Giber kind of dressing-.&#13;
Jtrequireao;»ryr&#13;
an occasional appli-&#13;
3at' n of&#13;
AYER'S&#13;
' Vlair \ i g o r to keep&#13;
my Iiair of good&#13;
color, to remoTS&#13;
gt&gt;yjfckJ^)B^a»"''&lt;itt'HJniff, to beat&#13;
itHiinj; liuniors. and prevent the&#13;
i\.i\v I'IOIII Lilliii^out. J never hesitate&#13;
to rei'tumuend Ayer's medicines&#13;
to my f riends."—Mrs. 11. M . H A K J H T ,&#13;
Avov&lt;;, Xehr.&#13;
Hair Vigor&#13;
r i f M i d w j f t a v J . C . AywfcCs&gt;.,LeyHt l&#13;
a^B AW» A—g^g^g^i^— .&#13;
t A a ^ ^ ^ ,^^a^½¾w^^&#13;
"XfTrrii&#13;
\:rri^*tmf\mmw^r*M»i,\a*te.&#13;
^ttfrj^^^ k^&amp;»L ii*taki''&#13;
ifiia *•&lt;&gt; ^'mrf*4 '&#13;
%&#13;
.(.»*&lt;?•&#13;
4^/- ,'•••'' ,&#13;
%• -^½ ?,**. *:?:&gt; ; '&#13;
!&lt;• V • • . ' » •&#13;
I'- .'" \ •&#13;
-?.&#13;
7*4 ^ :&#13;
\ t ,V.V.-;'&#13;
r*.&#13;
^&#13;
Wantecbto Idea £.f£g&#13;
*-*..-W T**^* •^•T&#13;
V • • . ' T . «' "•* . . # " . • * . - » &lt;*" - V ' 1 ^&#13;
p s j p * ! # | * &gt; 0 - ^ ^&#13;
rtwei MifcwIUinycifcildnttguu.&#13;
J-—u&#13;
THE HERMIT'S REMEDY m w m m rat » an Invaluable rfmady tor «U affections&#13;
«1 the THROAT andlUrVGS. C o a U l M&#13;
no opium or other inkirtou* Drugs.&#13;
It Kills COUOHS and COLDS.&#13;
Keep a Bottle in tne Haase,&#13;
*5R2 SAVE YOUR LIFE.&#13;
Fur&#13;
PHIOB,fl5Centa.&#13;
We can give employment permanent and&#13;
Sucratire to a good agent In this section,&#13;
particulars call o» publisher of this paper.&#13;
JAMES W. FOSTER CO.. M'*-o DRUGOJSTB,&#13;
BATH, N. H.&#13;
•H »N 'HXVQ '-oo aaisoi *M sawvr&#13;
(0&#13;
St&#13;
' / ^ a u m a W *»ouia r&lt;a«ssi|pnv(irf»-«inssagr,&#13;
niS)[igiuao •wnqoag&#13;
'topiauj'aixwAoaiag -avrio&#13;
&lt;tKT RlOONt Kill IBX B»VR •ucsiod"'&#13;
n?ia jon »(q•)«£•* utnpumranoQ^&#13;
- ^ 'iKITXNnOH 3XTHAV »1»&#13;
^^Vfosopiipoifanjam a o S a i y ^&#13;
V pas iumf)&#13;
Mir,&#13;
&gt; »&#13;
•noixsTrfuiOD 3tn J03&#13;
. P . I " ' *.»'•. .t r n i i u i S : \ l T O .&#13;
Thy ft^i -*Mi¥u in the world for&#13;
jQts, brit'«.-•«, tori's, ulcers, salt rheum,&#13;
fever fioivs, ri-ttt»r, happed hands,chill&#13;
fclaiiin.fO' ns. and Ml skin eruptions&#13;
and positively cures piles or no pay&#13;
required. It is guaranteed to give&#13;
perfect satisfaction or money refund&#13;
td. Price 25 eenti per box. For salt&#13;
or P, A. Si*ler.&#13;
AN ANBGDOTB Ol&gt; NBL80N.&#13;
m • • • • • I . ,&#13;
H o w B o Wrq«« » a a d t e a l e d a Lettei&#13;
AaaM V l j t e c S t e l l a ,&#13;
Captain aUfceB rslatee the tallowing&#13;
anecdote conoerning Lord Nelson's lettar&#13;
nropoaiaf a truce to the Crown&#13;
prince of Denmark, dispatched in the&#13;
mldat of hostilities: The deck* being&#13;
cleared of all partitions fore and aft,&#13;
and all ordinary conveniences removed,&#13;
Nelson wrote In full view of all on the&#13;
deck where he was, at the casing of the&#13;
} rudder head, standing; and as he wrote&#13;
an officer standing by took a copy. The&#13;
original, in his own hand, was put into&#13;
an envelope and sealed, with his arms.&#13;
The officer was about to use a wafer,&#13;
but Nelson said:&#13;
"No; send for sealing wax and candle."&#13;
Some delay followed, owing to the&#13;
man's having had his head taken off&#13;
by a balL "Send another messenger&#13;
for the wax." said the admiral, when&#13;
informed of this; and when, the wafers&#13;
were again suggested he simply reiterated&#13;
the order.&#13;
A large quantity of wax was used,&#13;
and extreme care taken that the impression&#13;
of the seal should be perfect. Col.&#13;
Stewart asked:&#13;
"Why, under so hot a fire and after&#13;
so lamentable an accident, have you&#13;
attached so much importance to a circumstance&#13;
apparently trifling?"&#13;
"Had I made use of a wafer," replied&#13;
Nelson, "the wafer would have been&#13;
still wet when the letter waa presented&#13;
to the crown prince; he would .have inferred&#13;
that the letter was sent off in a&#13;
hurry, and that we bad some very&#13;
pressing reasons for be"' •% In a hurry.&#13;
The wax told ne tales.'&#13;
It was the same sagacious regard to&#13;
effect which possibly dictated the byplay&#13;
of refusing to see Parker's signal&#13;
of recall.—The Century.&#13;
T.'&gt;- '•'"£ &gt; : ';*&#13;
No dinner tastes as good as lift***&#13;
In a cook book, and a woman ritver&#13;
looks as wel» «,« a *a«htou plate.&#13;
f***0 ?^.. »•**•»&#13;
Michigan - People. W0&amp;&#13;
L O C A T E D&#13;
Diaectly Opposite M. C R'y Depot&#13;
T w o Blocks from Union Depot,&#13;
Three Block* from Steamer Docks,&#13;
la the Center of the Wholesale District.&#13;
Three Minute* by Electjk Case to Retail&#13;
Center and all Places of Amusement.&#13;
aoo Rooms with Steam heat&#13;
$ao.ooo la New Improvements.&#13;
Cuisine Unsurpassed.&#13;
American Plan&#13;
Rates, $2 and $2.50 per Day,&#13;
loans, with Bats, S3. Singla amis, sec.&#13;
I A * * * * * * * * *&#13;
THE RUSSIAN .THISTLE.&#13;
BUI t o Check I t s G r o w t h H a s B e e n&#13;
Repealed.&#13;
The Nebraska legislature recently&#13;
repealed the bill passed twe&gt; years ago&#13;
placing a premium upon the destruction&#13;
of the Russian thistle, says the&#13;
San Francisco Chronicle. A few years&#13;
ago these thistles seemed to spring up&#13;
everywhere in defiance of all laws govg&#13;
other vegetation and many agriculturists&#13;
were alarmed lest the weed&#13;
should drive out more valuable but less&#13;
thrifty vegetation. legislation waa&#13;
advocated to check the growth of the&#13;
thistle and In many Btates laws similar&#13;
to the one In Nebraska were passed.&#13;
But despite all claims of the federal&#13;
agricultural department that the thistle&#13;
was something to be dreaded, and&#13;
that If not checked it would destroy&#13;
all the western part of the United States&#13;
as far as farming was concerned the&#13;
reverse has proved true. The rank&#13;
growth appeared to die in one or two&#13;
seasons as mysteriously as it came&#13;
and the surrounding vegetation suffered&#13;
little. Than in some sections the&#13;
dried weed was chopped up fine and&#13;
fed to cattle with satisfactory results&#13;
and In other seotions the farmers gathered&#13;
the thistles Into large piles and&#13;
burned the bunches for fuel ki their&#13;
homes. Then several thrifty farmers&#13;
made bales of thistles and sent them&#13;
to the nearest mills to be tried as fuel.&#13;
They were a great success and several&#13;
contracts were made by Nebraska mllla&#13;
for all that could be supplied.&#13;
Spotted f U s Fun.&#13;
Cora—That doctor aay8 a« \B I 0 j a f&#13;
to sue the trolley company for killing&#13;
his dog, He must have thought a great&#13;
deal of him, for he' seems broken-hearted&#13;
over the affair.&#13;
Merritt—Yes. You see he was fattening&#13;
him up for vivisection.—New&#13;
York Journal.&#13;
PROOF OF SINCERITY.&#13;
B o w am Army Oatoer Stood t h e Supreme)&#13;
Teat of Belief l a F a t a l i s m .&#13;
In the days of the "old army" on&#13;
the frontier, when military posts were&#13;
sometimes hundreds of miles from any&#13;
civilized place, there was little to do&#13;
In the way of amusement in the winter&#13;
time when the post was snowbound,&#13;
and it was then that the reputation the&#13;
army has for card playing and drinking&#13;
was gained, says the Cincinnati&#13;
Enquirer. And It is true that a great&#13;
deal of both was done at that time. It&#13;
was in these days that an event transpired&#13;
that showed that the principal&#13;
actor had the courage of his convictions,&#13;
and that he was most certainly&#13;
born under a lucky star. It was after&#13;
a very "wet" stag dinner party, and&#13;
all had partaken most freely of the&#13;
wine; and, strange as it may seem, the&#13;
subject that came up for discussion was&#13;
the Mohammedan religion. The Musselmans&#13;
believe in fate. To them a&#13;
man's fate is written above, and the&#13;
time of his death is set and nothing&#13;
can advance it. Well, this belief had&#13;
been discussed long and earnestly. The&#13;
proa and cons had been gone over at&#13;
length, till one officer* wanted to know&#13;
what use was reason, If every one was&#13;
born with a tag of destiny attached.&#13;
One officer finally arose and said there&#13;
was no use discussing the matter any&#13;
further—the only way was to make a&#13;
practical test of the question, and that&#13;
he would give himself up as a subject.&#13;
Could a man wilfully dispose of his&#13;
life when the fatal moment had been&#13;
chosen at his birth from above? He&#13;
could get no one to try the experiment&#13;
on him. Finally a wager was made.&#13;
"Who will pay you if I lose?" said the&#13;
subject, as he drew his pistol and&#13;
showed that it was loaded. He plaoed&#13;
the pistol against his temple and pulled&#13;
the trigger. The pistol missed fire.&#13;
"A joke!" yelled the crowd.&#13;
The fatalist smiled and, recocklng&#13;
the pistol, aimed it with a steady hand&#13;
at th° clock on the wall. He fired and&#13;
the bullet crashed through the canter&#13;
of the dial.&#13;
"Apologise to me now," he said. "I&#13;
have won the bet. I always believed&#13;
In fate."&#13;
Stirring Events&#13;
at hand. Yon win want the vet? late**&#13;
re—the moot accurate report* to fee ofc~&#13;
talaed. Then yoej want the&#13;
• • Detroit News.&#13;
It contain* all the MWI of Mlchif na, tne&#13;
United State* and too World, all tip to data.&#13;
GRUMMOND'S&#13;
DETROIT and. CLEVELAND&#13;
LINE OF STEAMERS&#13;
25?; TO&#13;
Queer F a c t s About Air.&#13;
The celebrated chemist of the sixteenth&#13;
century who argued that, it&#13;
would be Impossible for ua to live uu&#13;
the earth's surface if the atmosphere&#13;
shoujd suddenly increase to twice its&#13;
present thickness could not have been&#13;
far wrong after all—that is, if the experiments&#13;
of Dr. Arndtt are to be taken&#13;
as conclusive. In his observations on&#13;
M ..— - - - - * - . - . - - * • » . _ ^ I atmospheric pressure at the bottom of&#13;
T P " W A O O N A R T I F I C I A L , the deep mining shafts of Europe,&#13;
Prof. Arnott has found that the change&#13;
between the readings of a barometer&#13;
at the bottom of a 4,000 foot shart&#13;
and one at the surface is great enough&#13;
to warrant him in making the statement&#13;
that air at the bottom of a shaft&#13;
twenty miles deep would be as dense&#13;
as water. Figuring on the same ratio,&#13;
he finds thftt if a hole could be sunk&#13;
forty miles into the bowels of the&#13;
earth the density of the air at the bottom&#13;
would be as great as that of quicksilver.—&#13;
St Louis Republic.&#13;
I BTONE WATBB TAKK. A wonderfu'&#13;
J L larention and a great boon to farmers&#13;
Beat or oold do not elect tbem, and they will last&#13;
•nless destroyed by an earthquake while the earth&#13;
huts. We Invite your Inspection. They will not&#13;
rot. rust or wear oat. Warranted for n&gt;e years.&#13;
For further particulars call or write to&#13;
WILL EVERS,&#13;
Agent and manufacturer, stockbridge, Mic h&#13;
WHY NOT BUY THE BEST?]&#13;
71 GOOD SADDLED****&#13;
^ V h the most noticeable nod&#13;
Ukhkf point on a Bicycle. J*J*&#13;
Wnen btytmg insist on getting a&#13;
•HslWKJU^DS&#13;
era* acxt nrc. co.&#13;
W&amp;0m0*0i00im0*0i0i0i0i*»0m*0mmt!m0*m*%&#13;
W e l c o m e Money.&#13;
Money is very welcome in these days.&#13;
A man who had to leave his office and&#13;
waa expecting a caller to pay him&#13;
some money left this notice on the&#13;
doorr ~I liave gone out for half an&#13;
hour. Will be back soon. Have been&#13;
gone twenty minutes already."—Tit-&#13;
Bite.&#13;
cnaritj.&#13;
The conditions In which thousands&#13;
of our fellows live and die challenges&#13;
society to put away for awhile frivolity&#13;
and gayety. Our present duty is to&#13;
consider soberly how we can help tne&#13;
cause of the poor. Philanthropy _ „&#13;
will not sumce.«-ReY. G. R. Oebaur.&#13;
A DELIGHTFUL&#13;
Mooiiliilil Trill Acres!! Lalo Eric&#13;
LOCAL TIME. . . . . . DAILY.&#13;
Lv. Detroit, 11:00?. M.&#13;
BICYCLES CARRIED F R E E .&#13;
U. G. GRUMMOND&#13;
GEN'L MGE.,&#13;
TEL. NO. 162- OFRCE &amp; DOCK. FOOT FIRST ST.&#13;
X t o t x o i t , 2 £ l « 2 a -&#13;
•Ibe fitKbwjt IHspiitrh.&#13;
PUBLISHED KVKPTTH17SSD.AY HJHXlSO BY&#13;
FRANK L.. A N D R E W S&#13;
Editor and Proprietor.&#13;
Bubscrlptlon Price SI in Advance&#13;
Eaterea at the Postofllce at Pinckaey, Miiihl^sB,&#13;
ad aecoud-clssB matter.&#13;
Advertising rates made known on.applicatioo.&#13;
Business Cards, $4.00 per year.&#13;
l&gt;eath and marriage uutices published tree.&#13;
Announcements ol entertainments utay be paid&#13;
(or, if desired, by presenting (he ollice with tickets&#13;
uiadmission. In case tickets are nut brought&#13;
to tne office, regular rates will be charged.&#13;
All matter in local notice column will be chars&#13;
ed at 5 cents per line or fraction thereof, for each&#13;
insertion, where no time is specified, all notice*&#13;
will be inserted until ordered discontinued, and&#13;
will be charged for accordingly. «4T*All changes&#13;
of advertisements MUST reach this oiilce as early&#13;
as TUESDAY morning to insure an insertion the&#13;
tame week.&#13;
Special Barga'"&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PRBSIDINT.. Claade L. Sigltr:&#13;
TiiDSTeas, (ieo. Keaeon Jr., -V. U. Murphy, t. &lt;i.&#13;
Jaukson, F. J. Wright, £. R. Brown, C. L. Grimes.&#13;
ULlKK R. H. Teeple.&#13;
TBEABCJB«SI J A. Cadwell.&#13;
ASHBSSOB D. W. Murta&#13;
STRKKT COMMISSIONER..., A. Monk*&#13;
MABSAHL P. Monroe.&#13;
HEALTH U r n c a B . . . Dr. d. V. Slgler.&#13;
ATTOBSKV.* W. A. Carr.&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH*.&#13;
Rev. M. H.McMahon pastor. Services every&#13;
Sunday morning at 10:^, and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:00 o'clock. Prayer muetiu^ Thursday&#13;
evenings. Sunday acliool at close of mornn/&#13;
rservice. Sirs. E&amp;t^liti Graham, Suoerintend't.&#13;
•MtatH&#13;
QUO.&#13;
t i t u l a r&#13;
Price $5.00.&#13;
Special&#13;
Pi-ice a s "&#13;
iong a a t h e y&#13;
ast, t h e&#13;
biggestbar-&#13;
-iaici e v e r&#13;
offered,&#13;
$121&#13;
l ' ; i K E - *&#13;
Ju-v out l'&gt;2-&#13;
y,ii-- b o o k of r.uney iav-&#13;
; • ) i ! P R ' U &lt; '&#13;
&lt;y : ••:• / . i i ' i e .&#13;
V it. fur it,&#13;
Banquet&#13;
Lamp,&#13;
F i n i s a c i in&#13;
go A&#13;
1 acquev.&#13;
has Nu. 2&#13;
Rochester&#13;
l Mmney&#13;
and Wick.&#13;
W I ' J l f:!th!r'f a liruulsonx"'&#13;
14-incti&#13;
Bh.-irie or li)-&#13;
inch i.incv&#13;
cr«)n- tl?*si;e&#13;
parjer shad*&#13;
or faniy&#13;
hnnn rtlnteii&#13;
bavmie'&#13;
?li&gt;b", wlt&gt;i&#13;
7oUi t u m -&#13;
rr.lntfb, ^^&#13;
all for&#13;
~J' ,f)7&#13;
; 4 . M. ROTHSCHILD £ CO,&#13;
; Sfato, V&gt;n 8'jren ?.B /ark ',.;-st£., U n e a s e , i&#13;
% *-» -** V * - w - V . ^ „ ' v N ^ W w S-**s.&#13;
I CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH. i&#13;
O. S. Jones, prnstor. .Service every '&#13;
Sunday morning^at 10:30, and every Sunday &gt;'&#13;
evening at 7:0C oJclsck. Prayer meeting Thure-'&#13;
day evenings. Sunday school at cloee of morning&#13;
Service. I. .). Cu»t, SUut. S. T. Grimee, Sec.&#13;
ffk^'VX'WIA'W***'*'***'****'*'****'*'****^ PATENTS Caveats and Tsade Harks obtained and all Patent&#13;
business conducted for Moderate Fees.&#13;
Bend model, drawing or photo. Weadviself&#13;
patentnblo free of charge. Our fee ti ot dne till&#13;
patentissecured. A Pamphlet "How toObuia&#13;
Patents," with cost or same i n t h e U. *"&#13;
suuitOL-tfocrree:i gn coon trios sent free. Address,&#13;
A. S N OW &amp; C O .&#13;
ST. MAKE'S CATHOLIC CUL'RCU.&#13;
Rev. M. J. Coiumerfurd, i'aator. Services&#13;
•very third Sunday. Low mass at 7:30 o'clock,&#13;
high mass with eermon at a :¾ a. in. Catechiem&#13;
at 3:00 p. m., vespers ana benediction at 7:3u p.m.&#13;
S.pib pey cared by Dr. Mllem Nerrtae.&#13;
SOCIETIES.&#13;
rilhe A. O. H. Society of this place, m eta every&#13;
1 third Sunday in the Kr. Mattb^w UaJi.&#13;
John McGuineas, County Delegate.&#13;
--rtfnckney Y. I*. S. C. K. Meetings held every&#13;
.[Sunday evening in Con^'l church at 6:30 o'clock.&#13;
Mrs. H. W. Crofot, Pres. Kittle Grievd.Sec.&#13;
EPWORTH LEAGUE. Meet* every Sunday&#13;
evening st 6:00oclock in the M. E. Cnurch. A&#13;
cordial invitation is extended to everyone, especially&#13;
young people. .Miss Jennie Uazr, Pres.&#13;
Junior Epworth League Meets every Sunday&#13;
afternoon at 3:00 o'clock, at M. E church. All I&#13;
cordially invited.&#13;
Hies Alice , .&#13;
The C.T. A. and B. Society of this place, meet&#13;
every third Saturday evening in the Ft. Matthew&#13;
Hail. John Donohue, F resident.&#13;
KNIGHTS OP MACCABEES.&#13;
Meet every Friday evening on or before fail&#13;
of the moon at their hail in the Swarthout bldg.&#13;
Visiting brothers are cordiallv invited.&#13;
CHAS. UAMPBBIX, Sir Knitht Commander&#13;
Livingston Lodge, Nov7*? A A. M. Kegn'sr&#13;
Communication Tuesday evening, on or before&#13;
the full of the moon. R. K. Sigier, W. M. ,&#13;
RDfiR OF EASTERN STAR meets each month&#13;
the Friday evening following the regular F.&#13;
A. meeting, Mas. C..ELLEN RICMABOS, W.M, 0 AA.M&#13;
^ a a a Mh ^„aiisfcaawa—i^a^aw — ^_^_ f&#13;
"Nothing else like it^&#13;
T h e most refreshing and&#13;
pleasant Soap for the skin.&#13;
LADIES OF THE MACCABEES. Meet every&#13;
1st and 3rd Saturday of each month at 2:80&#13;
o'clock at the K. O. T. M. hall. Visiting sisters&#13;
cordially invited. JULIA SIOLKK, Lady Com.&#13;
•s Cottto QsMSfta.&#13;
Mm. XL L. iCUncer el •lhuauergue,&#13;
N. nt, to known ne the "Ontek Qnenm&#13;
•f New Meztoo.'* She&#13;
«MMH1 of onttto.&#13;
TaurYAMTRwnc rtm mt&#13;
TOiur NuiocRr^iAXM|&#13;
w PRICE 2 5 ^&#13;
t&#13;
It lasts twice as lone; as others*&#13;
I A trial will convince yoa of Its preat&#13;
merit. Will plea.,; Uie most fastidious.&#13;
CHARLES F.MILLER,&#13;
Mfr. «4 PRENCtt MtLLEO TOILET&#13;
T " ~ SOAPS AND PERFt.^WiY,&#13;
Lancaster, Peon*&#13;
R S T A B L i e H E D , t « A O .&#13;
^ L&#13;
KNIGHTS OF THUS LOYAL GUARD&#13;
meet every second Wednesday&#13;
evening of every month in the K. O.&#13;
Don't buy a wheel* until you see&#13;
THE CARLISLE and get our prices.&#13;
THE CARLISLE MFG. CO.&#13;
Wednesda:&#13;
vary m o n t h ii&#13;
T. M. H A U at 7^00'olock. All visiting&#13;
Guards welcome.&#13;
F, L. A K D R E W S , Cspt. Gen.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
H. F. SIGIER M. D- C, L. S*OLER M, D&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SJGLER,&#13;
Physicians and Surgeons All calls promptly&#13;
attended to day or night. Office on Main street&#13;
Pl.lBK H ' I t ,&#13;
XBniirMRn-nrt&#13;
Sold by F, A. Siqler.&#13;
• / , i&#13;
a«MLWWlLii&#13;
©iGg©le,&#13;
more points of mwit, than any&#13;
O-rada Bicycle.&#13;
PULL O P ORflGn&gt; A N D&#13;
Besqr Wneel Oaeaaansei. Sea* I ^ _&#13;
l|el«y Mf% Co., r^eedine;, l»«t,i&#13;
'• • * * -\4&#13;
'.'&#13;
m&#13;
&gt;;.&#13;
M&#13;
X&#13;
^&#13;
• • • . • ' •&#13;
:- •' - v +«&#13;
;&lt;;•'' ••'.'• v .&#13;
-' '*.&#13;
/ ' / Wr&#13;
^m-&#13;
;'. V , t t&#13;
* •n rJ" • l p&lt;&#13;
&lt;«&lt;WN»w**h« k&lt;atatar*rMJMip4*—-.ip •». ,..»„«..,.%-&lt;«•*..,«-....-*^»»^4* ....,.,,.&#13;
^ f ^ i j - , Jt .:,1^,^^¾^^ •&#13;
• i L. • ' . . • • ' • . . . • ' • _ • ' " - * h i t • • . • - ' J ' . . . • ••&#13;
-,M ••&#13;
1 M,fl"&#13;
-,^'&#13;
$ ' • • . • • • • • . • •&#13;
1&#13;
,&#13;
• '&#13;
'i'-v&#13;
m :,'K \&#13;
A*.'&#13;
;•&gt;{* ,&#13;
t'4&#13;
Wr:&#13;
'hi-&#13;
5 Or,.&#13;
^ -&#13;
i.:&lt;f''&#13;
»-&#13;
| . I t , '&#13;
gmcttiieg gi&amp;nkh.&#13;
$ • ' - .&#13;
.4 » '&#13;
F B A N ^ JET. A N D R E W * , P n b l i s h e h&#13;
PIHC&#13;
qte&#13;
MicniG4Ht&#13;
&gt;iq-&#13;
Hr«t «IM» T l j f i ^ t Grand Sapid*,&#13;
it filial oase; of sunstroke at&#13;
i l A o o o n r A d when t h e body&#13;
$*ftieret)f$, a' farmer, VTM&#13;
lo«i»%l3sWfroby**i^*aad»W« lust^outaide&#13;
»«4h«^ity, W i e r ^ f a / w a s amrelikni^&#13;
rn H s l d ^ n t of .Otla^H-county, and&#13;
had a W ^ family. Mrsi B e l i n d a Ao•.&#13;
d e r l f t , k ^ J8W * ^ a r « e V » ^ u i ^ fpu»&#13;
WajktrX^twwnshiB, cjtafcvto Use cityt&#13;
o ^jUltjcf lativea and afte&amp;|lphtlas? the&#13;
h e a t t i t v ' n i j r h t •**** 0 ^ ^ ¾ desperate&#13;
a n i | f c i i ^ t s # » i i i i ^ f k o r f ^ l i l B and v4ft&#13;
^ • f m f k j y v - " houry»(t^rfvard» . ^ * a |)&#13;
Jane'Hflffrtds, affed, 60, died of sun-&#13;
TALMAGE'S SEBMON.&#13;
» A V E T H E C I T I E S , T H E S U B -&#13;
J E C T O F L A 8 T S U N D A Y .&#13;
h t " "&#13;
Fr««n » ! • /Ts»«^Esakl4l.Ciai^t«v XXVII*&#13;
V W » ' 8 , a i Follows 1 'Hi Thorn Thai&#13;
Art »tmate a l tha Bntry o f ike Saa"&#13;
—Mot «4 Loproay th« Dostro/or.&#13;
3JW -S JiaWJtd&#13;
HIS Is ft part of an&#13;
impasslpii«d »oo8&lt;&#13;
trophe to the city of&#13;
Tyre. It w a s a beau*&#13;
tilui city —a « a j e a -&#13;
Uc city. At the&#13;
east end of the&#13;
Mediterranean it&#13;
sat With one- hand&#13;
beckoning the In*&#13;
land trade, and&#13;
t a wlta 4he -other the&#13;
^» JiompMJrce, of. &lt;oreiftt &gt;n!»tioms. It&#13;
A ^ l c J S ^ ^ ^ m a r ' k a b r e ^ 0 - ¾ ¾ V ^ S H ^ ' ^ ^ ^ ' "&#13;
com^ltt^J.tjy % bo5.*7 years old, oae*iV M r ^ r ^ ^ 0 ¾ 1&#13;
red near Birkefct, Washtenaw county.&#13;
The boy w a s t h e y o u n g e s t son of Emil&#13;
Starbler, a laborer. His t w o older&#13;
brothers, a s h e thought, imposed upon&#13;
him. and h e w e n t awuy, saying: "I'll&#13;
be dead.^h&amp;n^ y « u «ee me again," He&#13;
did not returci. T h e river was d r a g g e d&#13;
and the body w a s found in s i x f e e t of&#13;
water.&#13;
out foreign enemies,'&#13;
and t h e n s w u n g back that boom to let&#13;
ra its friends. The air of the desert&#13;
.was fragnust with the spices brought&#13;
by caravans tp hex fairs, a n d all seas&#13;
were cleft Into foam by (fee keel of her&#13;
laden merchantmen. Her markets were&#13;
rich w i t h horses and mules' and camel*&#13;
from Togarmah; with upholstery, and&#13;
ebony, and ivory i r o m Dedan; with&#13;
emeralds, and agate, and coral from&#13;
Syria! with wine from Helbon; with&#13;
finest needlework from Ashuf and'&#13;
Chilmad. Talk about the splendid&#13;
state rooms of your Cunard and Inman&#13;
and W h i t e Star lines of international&#13;
steamers—why, the benehes of the state&#13;
rooms i n those Tyrian ships were all&#13;
ivory, a n d instead of our coarse canvaa&#13;
on the masts of the shipping, they had"&#13;
the finest linen, quilted together and&#13;
Inwrought with embroideries almost&#13;
miraculous for beauty. Its columns&#13;
overshadowed all nations. Distant e m -&#13;
pires fe!t its heartbeat. Majestic city,&#13;
"situate at the entry of the sea."&#13;
But where n o w is the gleam of her*&#13;
towers, the roar of her chariots, the&#13;
meets o f h e r ihippln?? Let the fishermen&#13;
w h o dry their ne6s on t h e flJlacfe*-&#13;
where a h e once stood; let the sea that&#13;
dy of municipal g o v e r n m e n t T h i s It&#13;
seems to me now Is t h e chief point to bo&#13;
taken, &gt; f a k e t h e cities right, and the&#13;
nation w i l l be right I have noticed&#13;
that according t o their opportunities&#13;
t h e r e , h a a really been more corruption&#13;
in municipal governments 1n t h i s country&#13;
t h a n I n t h e state and' national legislatures.&#13;
N o w , is there no hopeT&#13;
WKh t h e mlgtittest agent in o u r land,&#13;
t e e glorious gospel of Jesus Christ,&#13;
aholl not ail our cities be reformed, a n *&#13;
purified, a n d redeemed? I believe the,&#13;
day will come. I a m In full sympathy&#13;
with t h o s e w h o are opposed to carrying&#13;
politics into religion; but our oltles will&#13;
never be reformed and purified until&#13;
we carry religion into politics, I look&#13;
over our cities and I see that all great&#13;
interests are to b t affected i n the future,&#13;
as (hey have been affected in t h e&#13;
past, by the character of those w h o in&#13;
the different departments rule over u s ,&#13;
and I propose to classify some of, those&#13;
interests:&#13;
In the first place I remark: Commercial&#13;
ethics are always affected by t h e&#13;
moral or immoral character of those&#13;
w h o have municipal supremacy. Officials&#13;
that wink at fraud, and that h a v e&#13;
neltber ceneure nor arraignment for&#13;
glittering dishonesties, ahrays weaken&#13;
the pulse of commercial honor. Every&#13;
shop, every store, every bazaar, every&#13;
factory in the cities feels the moral&#13;
character of t h e city hall. If in a n y&#13;
olty there be a dishonest mayoralty, or&#13;
a n unprincipled common council, or a&#13;
court susceptible t o bribes, In that city&#13;
there will be unlimited license for aH&#13;
kinds of trickery and s i n ; while, on the&#13;
other hand, if officials are faithful t o&#13;
their oath of office, if the taws are&#13;
promptly executed, if there is vigilance&#13;
in regard t o t h e outbranchinge of crime,&#13;
i * . i « ' .jr.,,. »iBr&#13;
St. Louts', Mo.—The grain-rate conference&#13;
of the trans-Missouri lines held&#13;
here h a s adjourned with the understanding&#13;
thajfc stqps would be taken at&#13;
once to restore or maintain the established&#13;
differentials on shipments&#13;
east bound.&#13;
Washington.—Dismissal from the&#13;
naval service is the penalty imposed by&#13;
the court which recently tried Commander&#13;
Dennis W. Mullan.&#13;
* Sibley, Iowa.—The Nc^tlwrestsrn&#13;
I c w a Veterans' association encamp*&#13;
meat at emeldon closed Thursday n i g h t&#13;
Sibley was sefected as the place for&#13;
holdjog, ne*t .year's e n c a m p m e n t D r .&#13;
Hirytrngftjeift ft £ » ] « * &lt;*as eleated&#13;
eomxnander..&#13;
ArbhU Cordon, ex-Constable Sellers&#13;
and E r n e s t W e s t were arrested a t .&#13;
Battle Creek, charged w i t h ^ n e p i r a o y f^8*6" » * » » t h e batrennass where she&#13;
t o bribe PiwecMjting-Attorney Lock- "once challenged t h e admiration of oil . counting rooms to th« eim&#13;
t o t i U h e ^ o s a p l a i m U n a c s s e - e * e i n s t n *t*°»«; »&lt;* the barbarians w h o b u i l t f S ^ J ^ L ! ? ? ? ! ? ! Z ^ T .¾ t h ! C ^&#13;
Wea^.,the circuit iudtfe, aherifiT a n d t n e l r n u t a o n the place where her palt&#13;
r- '+ ** *--'•• f l aces glittered, answer the question.&#13;
forever! S h e forgot God,&#13;
forgot-her. And white ttor&#13;
modern cities admire her glory, let&#13;
bargain making. A merchant m a y&#13;
stand in h i s sfore and say: "Now, I'll&#13;
haye nothing to do with city politics;&#13;
I will not soil my hands with the&#13;
slush;" -nevertheless t h e most Insignificant&#13;
trial In the police court will&#13;
affect that merchant directly or indirectly.&#13;
What style of clerk issues (he&#13;
writ; what s t y l e of constable, makes the&#13;
arrest; what style of attorney issues,&#13;
ithe plea; what style of Judge charge the,&#13;
Jury; what sjtyle of sheriff executes the&#13;
sentence—these are questions that&#13;
swamped the ship, instead of giving&#13;
s o much time to national politics, give&#13;
s o m e of your attention to municipal&#13;
g o v e r n m e n t -' • v&lt; •""] 1- •''',:&#13;
I take a step further k v t M r subjeotf&#13;
and ask all those w h o « s l r e v e In ibe&#13;
omnipotance of prayer, d a y b y s W / , saHr&#13;
every i ^ y v . p r e s e a t y eW cHy oSUH#s before&#13;
Goj* *&gt;v*Wesslop. I ^ j b w i i v 4 ' l n a&#13;
city presided over by a mayor, pray for&#13;
him, v T h e chief magistrate o f , a - c i t y&#13;
is l n l i poiltlon.-of |rrea* *esppnsft&gt;9lty.&#13;
Many of t h e kipga a n d q u * e u a » w d emperors&#13;
of other days have no such dominion.&#13;
W t t r t b w I b r a t t t r n f aVpeii He&#13;
m a y advance a beneficent institution&#13;
or balk a faflwny oonnscjiiticfi.. ^ ^ a p -&#13;
pointments he may bless or curse every&#13;
hearthstone ita tAeMty, If in'the^Jp|acopal&#13;
churches; by t h e authority of ftie&#13;
U t a n y , 1 and In o u r V non-Episcopate&#13;
churches, w e every Sabbath pr*^ for&#13;
the president of t h e UfcMetf ^tettes, why&#13;
not, then, be just a s trearty m OUI*'BUPptleattons&#13;
for the chief magistrates of&#13;
cities, for their g u i d a n c e , ' for4 tfleir&#13;
health, for their present and' everlasting&#13;
morality? "&#13;
My word now is t o a l t ' w h o may'tiome&#13;
t o bold any public position of trust in&#13;
a n y city. Y o a a r e O o d ' s -repVesenta*&#13;
tlves. Ged, the king a*d ruler 'and&#13;
judge, sets you in his place. Oh, be&#13;
faHhful in t h e discharge of a l l your&#13;
duties, s o t h a t when all o u r cities are&#13;
lii ashes, and the world Itself Is a red&#13;
scroll ot flame, you m a y be, in the&#13;
mercy and grace of Chrlst,rewarded for&#13;
your faltbfulnesg. It w a s that feeling&#13;
which gave such eminent qualifications&#13;
for office to N e a l Dow, mayor of Portland,&#13;
and to Judge McLean, of Ohio,&#13;
and to Benjamin-; F. Butler, attorneygeneral&#13;
of N e w Yprfc, .and t o George&#13;
Briggs, governor o t Massachusetts, and&#13;
there i s t h e highest protection for all to Theodore FreUnghuysen, senator of&#13;
othBT^o^fficers.&#13;
Wisw^fWy&#13;
was* struck&#13;
work- #min ^rfe^ste?&#13;
ter. You may1 not throw It off. In the.&#13;
city d f ' N e w Tortc, Cnris'tlan merchants&#13;
for a great while said: ''We'll h i v e '&#13;
n o t h i n g to do with., t h e m a n - ,the purification, the redemption of our&#13;
n e a r A MasshaU a a s V w s s&#13;
He Walked toto town a n 4 we*artfested . , w a * t t t * r o u n &lt; I e r o f » e Bret eity, f ^ ^ ^ ^ +^ A A A ^ , * , , _ _ „ f c 4 ^ , _ ,&#13;
vT*r:. m f ' and I suppose It took after Mm&lt; in mor*&#13;
Allowed" everything to g o at loose ends t h a t there are awHitudes1 g o i n g down&#13;
. . . . . . . . ... ., » . t Q r u ^ t ^ m p ^ p u ^ ¢ ^ eternal, dropping&#13;
for d r u n k e n n e s s and s e n t to jail for 10&#13;
days; Mt h e died In jail that u i ^ h t&#13;
Secretary of t h e Treasury Gagehstt&#13;
suggested to t h e S e n a t e , flnasise oommitfee&#13;
tBatia.tax tjf o n e c e n t a p o U n d&#13;
be pfaeed o n a l l refined' sirgaif made&#13;
from stock Imported prior to the passage'&#13;
of the pending' tariff bill. I,t is&#13;
the opinion of the customs officials of&#13;
the .treasury. ths&gt;t, tbjSvSfcsto svpeln increase&#13;
t h e g o v e r n m e n t r J f e n u e s by&#13;
sevevnl laUlioSB'of dollars.&#13;
Several ytosrs a g o Allegaa t o w a s h i p r&#13;
Allegan ^county, agitated the subject&#13;
of good roads, w i t h the result t h a t&#13;
there' £ r e n o w 30 miles of the beat&#13;
graded and graveled turnpikes, in plage&#13;
of w h a t were * once sandy wa&amp;tes.&#13;
Other t o w n s h i p s c a u g h t the feverVpeople&#13;
sabscribetl liberally, and in a very&#13;
f e w years AUegap cqunty will have&#13;
roa/ls a s good as ttioatf,^ Francs.&#13;
T H E MARKETS,&#13;
0 • , .,&#13;
LIVSJ STOCK.&#13;
Mew Terk—oattte&#13;
Be»tRrade8...a« #JA.» IQ&#13;
Lowergrades. .8 7.191 7i&#13;
cJu««a*o— ^..&#13;
Best grades... .'47 &gt;&amp;S 00&#13;
Lower grades.. 2 -UQl GO&#13;
Detroit—&#13;
Best gradee... .4 ssg&gt;| «1&#13;
Lower grades..2x44^4 &lt;*J&#13;
BaAU*—&#13;
cis«taa»tt—&#13;
Best grades....4 ts 4S9&#13;
Lowe^g^adec.Z &amp;&amp;4 &lt;w&#13;
Beat grades.... 4 t'At M&#13;
Lowef gra4es./t X&amp;i SO&#13;
Shee&#13;
beep L8patmlubnj HOK» 14 8&gt; S&gt; 7) f 1 11&#13;
als.. I t is a long while before a city&#13;
can ever get over the character o f Indie&#13;
w h o founded i t Were they*criminal&#13;
exiles, t h e filth, and t h e p r i s o n * , ' a n d&#13;
the debauchery are the sbadbws 61&#13;
such founders. N e w York will not for&#13;
tr:o or three hundred years-escape fr^lm'&#13;
the gor.d influences of its founders—the&#13;
pious settlers whose prayers went- up&#13;
f ^ m . the very streets where n o w banks&#13;
discount a n d brokers shave, and companies&#13;
declare dividends, and smugglers&#13;
swear custom house He*; e n d above the&#13;
roar of the drays and t h e crack of the&#13;
auctioneers' mallet* Id ifeard the'ascription,&#13;
"We worship thee, 0 thou almighty&#13;
dollar!" T h e church t h a t&#13;
once stood pn Wall s t still throws Ito&#13;
blessing over all the scene of traffic,&#13;
and upon the sips that fold their white&#13;
wings in the harbor. Originally m e n&#13;
gathered in cities from necessity. It&#13;
was to escape the incendiary's toreh&#13;
or the assassin's dagger. Only the&#13;
very poor lived in the country, those&#13;
who had nothing; i h a t could be stolen,&#13;
agement of' public affairs," and they&#13;
.fit -nearly •Ms.OOo.OOv.' T h e municipal&#13;
.government bedame a hissing and a byw&#13;
o r d to t h e who?e earth, ajid then t h e&#13;
Christian merchants s a w t h e i r folry,&#13;
, a n d t b e y * * e n t imd took possession of&#13;
the ballet 4K&gt;S*SV&lt; I w i s h all commerciai&#13;
men to nnderetand that they a r e&#13;
n o t independent of t h e moral character&#13;
jpf the men w h o rule over them, but&#13;
must be thoroughly, mightily affected&#13;
,b&gt; them.&#13;
, 8 e / rteo; of t h e educational interests&#13;
of a city. Do you know that there&#13;
are i n this country about seventy thousand&#13;
common schools, and that there&#13;
are over eight millions of pupils, and&#13;
that the majority ef these schools and&#13;
the majority of t h o s e pupils are in our&#13;
cities? N o w , this great multitude of&#13;
i children will be affected b y the intelligence&#13;
or ignorance, t h e virtite er the&#13;
vice, of boards of education and boards&#13;
of control; rfTfcsre a t e cities where e d u -&#13;
cational affairs are settled in the low&#13;
caucus i n y the abandoned parts of the&#13;
cities, by men . full of ignorance and&#13;
the United States, and to, W i l l i a m WIK&#13;
berforce, member of t h e British paratament.&#13;
You may make,the. rewards,of&#13;
eternity tbe emoluments of yourx»fflfe.&#13;
W h a t care you for adverse, political&#13;
criticism If you have G o d o n your, side?&#13;
T h e one, or the two, or the three y e a r s&#13;
of y o u r public truijt wll) pass away, and&#13;
all t h e years of your, earthly serylce,&#13;
and then the tribunal will be lifted,&#13;
before which you and I must appear.&#13;
May God m a k e you1 so falihful n o w that&#13;
the last scene shall be to your exhilaration&#13;
and rapture. 1^ wish now. to&#13;
exhort ail gobd pedjile, wnjetbej; t t e y&#13;
are the governors'or the governed, to&#13;
make o n e grand effort for the salvation,&#13;
Had No Appetite&#13;
iWft.Ylo4fti&#13;
Java « 4 « * Hour, MiotWAi.&#13;
Hood's Saraaperllla&#13;
H o o d ' a Pills ours siek hsadsehe. sse.&#13;
- Q u e e r case in eourV^hVinorainf,"&#13;
said the court reporter a s h e ^ u r s j d u |&#13;
his collar and closed t h M l i J o f i s j y i&#13;
'What w a s it?" u k e ^ ^ . j t o U p a 1 *&#13;
porter. „ ^&#13;
"A woman Was o n trl^l for counterfeiting.&#13;
She had been mark^nf down&#13;
| 2 0 bilU to I14J8.''—Indianapolis Jour*&#13;
n s i .&#13;
. . . : . . ' • • • • . " - — : 4 " • —&#13;
A Oiiagrooaela Onaaoqaonoo*&#13;
"You s a y y o u have to visit your r i a l&#13;
relatives. W h y ? Don't they trsaC yo«&#13;
, w , s l i r \ , - '• y: - . . 1 . -&#13;
"Oh, yes, they always do every m i n i&#13;
they can to make it pleasant lor. us,&#13;
but my wife never gets through eonv&#13;
plaining until about t w o weeks aftei&#13;
each visit because w e are n o t a s w f H o f&#13;
as thsy."—•Cleveland Leader. • ^&#13;
See What a Netad Oocsor **ya at Sjraaff&#13;
Pbiladelphiai Pat, NOT. M, ISM.&#13;
Pear Sir: ..!'. 1 ,----^-- - &gt;'• •&#13;
Your delicious -Sh«rry and Bort-*.hSTe&#13;
trletf and they seem to nie equal, If not superior.,&#13;
i o the KOhcaUed imported'&lt;•' Wines,&#13;
white the consciousness .ot their, puritV/inf&#13;
creases ones satlsrattion tn their use and la&#13;
recojamendlng them to others; . , a " t •&#13;
...4i\.- •*-* '• i i l ' 1 1 J. I 1 m o • t • ^.&#13;
It is easier to cMmb aiblU o a aMcjycIe&#13;
a,Kainst a head wfndthan to ride a furlong&#13;
on asphalt with S ffubcturedf tire. '- -*'&#13;
Spaaffs Braqdr farWanarlos to* D o l o r ' s&#13;
1' . . . . % - U a a w • ••.- ' H -:&#13;
Detroit Mtch., Dec tMSBft.&#13;
Alfred Speer, Esq.. Prest., ,&#13;
Passaic, NJf;&#13;
Bear S i r ; — „,,,.,,,-„. „r&lt; „**..•&gt;** y«. j&#13;
j, - f i n d vooroilmax Brandy is of excellent&#13;
quality, in fact so much so Ibat I nhall prescribe&#13;
It tp tbjwe cases where a stimulant of&#13;
that character Is required.&#13;
•i&#13;
American cities. Do y o u not know&#13;
2*0 Ali&#13;
3 71&#13;
i n&#13;
&amp;W0&#13;
' 5 40&#13;
*9)&#13;
4 7ft.&#13;
lot&#13;
3 W&#13;
S 45&#13;
83J&#13;
r5&#13;
:1ft ^ l € '&#13;
Best grades.. ..4 S « 6 0)&#13;
Lower grades. .8 A$i »&#13;
SfiO&#13;
sue&#13;
it*&#13;
4 00&#13;
5 10&#13;
603&#13;
6S0&#13;
485&#13;
OBAUf, B T C&#13;
Wheat. Oora* Oata.&#13;
No. 8 red Ho Ssalx N a t white&#13;
Teek 74*371* t8MS«H»&#13;
7^^74¾ t&gt; H%\ U %*%&#13;
•Datrolt 7« ¢76 Sf #)S*yt St &lt;&amp;t%&#13;
rt %rt s aw** * #u» n&gt; #7» ts a** mum n v* n %&amp; aw&#13;
rtttabaiv 77 «^1 »H9M U 9»&#13;
»a4Va»S 76 ^78 » &amp;6 V&gt; +ti&#13;
*D«troit-Hay,No. 1 tUnothr, ajQ0»j&gt;er eon.&#13;
•^*—* -^- ' viMithera. ajr rmr fcai nld tin&#13;
or vagabonds w h o wanted to be hear&#13;
their place of business^but since civilisation&#13;
and religion have m a d e it safe&#13;
for men to live almost anywhere, m e n&#13;
congregate In cities because of the&#13;
I g i opportunity for rapid gain. Cities are&#13;
not necessarily evils, a s h a s sometimes&#13;
Ixjen argued. They have been the&#13;
birthplace of civilization. In t h e m popular&#13;
liberty h a s lifted up its voice. W i t -&#13;
ness Genoa, and Pisa, and Venice. T h e&#13;
i, entrance of the representatives of the&#13;
cities i n t h e legislatures of Europe w a s&#13;
the death blow to feudal kingdoms.&#13;
Cities a r e the patronisers of art a n d i l t -&#13;
erafjiasj sresilieeture pointing-no *tts&#13;
Brttlsk museum m Lowdosi, &gt; a R o s « i&#13;
llorary to, Taxis, its Ma&lt;kan i a Bnsne,&#13;
Ctttefc 4&gt;csd She world's scepter. Af«|&#13;
889&#13;
«8&gt;&#13;
8r&amp;&#13;
saj&#13;
8 7i&#13;
3W&#13;
n vn ca wnsf $s£thage, Gxeejqg +m,****** $ &lt; political influence officials close&#13;
B n g l a s 4 i s I x ^ d o e , Ftasjeer-is Paris.&#13;
Italy i s Borne, amd tne, 4 ^ In which&#13;
God hsa\east our l o t wHl y e t decide t h e&#13;
deatinylM t h e Axoerican people, *'&#13;
A t tM* season: of t h e y e a r ^ h a v e&#13;
n r a n — i t ought not t o be s o ; but In \&#13;
m a n r e i t l e s It Is s a I hear t h e tramp&#13;
of coming generations. W h a t that&#13;
great multUude of youth shall be for&#13;
this world and the next will be affected&#13;
very much b y t h e character of your&#13;
public schools. You had better multiply&#13;
the moral and religious Influences&#13;
about the common schools rather than&#13;
abstract from them. Instead of driving&#13;
the Bible out, y o n had better drive the&#13;
Bible further in. May God defend our&#13;
glorious common school system, and&#13;
send into rou/ and confusion all Its&#13;
sworn anemia*.&#13;
I have abc *o say that the character&#13;
of oflteiat* 1-' a cKy affects t h e domestic&#13;
le. In 4 city where grogshops h a v e&#13;
ir o w n way, and gambling hells are&#13;
interfered with* and tor fear of l o s -&#13;
quicker than words from toy Hpi?&#13;
Grogshops swallow t h e m up. Gambling&#13;
hells devour them.' Houses of&#13;
s h a m e are damning them'. Oh, l e t ' u s&#13;
toil, and pray, and preach, a n d v o t e&#13;
until ail these wrongs are righted.&#13;
W h a t w e do w e must do quickly. With&#13;
our rulers, and on the s a m e platform,&#13;
we must at last coins: befose'the throne&#13;
of God t o answer for ,what&lt;&lt;we have&#13;
done tor the bettering of our great&#13;
towns. Alas! If o n tilt* day- H will be&#13;
found tha^your banq;fr*s been inie and&#13;
m y pulpit has been s i l e n t Oh,,** w h o&#13;
are pure and honest, a n d Christian,, g o&#13;
to work and help t o m a k e t h e cities&#13;
pure, and honest, and Christian.&#13;
Lest it m a y have been thought that&#13;
I a m addressing, only w h a t are called&#13;
the better classes, jay.^ final, wor^.fci to&#13;
( s o m e dissolute soul t o w h o m these&#13;
words may. come. Though, y o u m a y be&#13;
covered with all crimes, c &amp; p g h you.&#13;
m a y be smitten with a^l lepioeies,&#13;
though you m a y have g o o * through, the&#13;
whole catalogue of Iniquity, and may&#13;
not have1 been in church ' f p r i w e n t y&#13;
Very truly yours,&#13;
ft. C. O u s , sL D.&#13;
- ^ - i -&#13;
Tsy&amp;mejrwho rides 'his bicycle w i t * his&#13;
hfcad down will be followed by, a procassiea&#13;
• • • " • • - ' » • » • - • • • • ' ' ' t f - * ' "&#13;
tk /P"'ywss&gt;» «&gt;ri»S* end ^WM4V&#13;
, BiarilasSoa K^OJMS •MsatWAiT^iv'&#13;
A through Sleeping car.toCotoradonpnsgs&#13;
and Pueblo via. Denver Is attached to Bur-&#13;
Unatpn Roate d a i i r taaia leavingObicago&#13;
ij:fclK m. 9*»*'?$Clarl^Sl,, ,r -&#13;
Soman* the- front &gt;ewa nlay be'fonnd at&#13;
R e t a i l end of .lb* parade, &gt;••-&#13;
DM'irrtiaw ttH u4im*kt 1m Mtettny.&#13;
Bee the-w^ader wprjwr,. taai stakes weak&#13;
men Htrottc. All dxuggutK, AOc orll. Core&#13;
aSarameee. Bo^kielr^Mbfl sample free Ad&#13;
SlerllhK Remed^C^. ippibaap or New Yprk.&#13;
Dovrt blame others for getting rich on&#13;
what y e a throw sway, - t&#13;
&gt;. •&#13;
Bdocata Your Bowel* With Caa«y»r«ta.&#13;
Candy Cathartfc, cere confttlpatloo forever.&#13;
10c. If G G G fail. drugtfaU rafand muoe?.&#13;
Pride Often wears&#13;
dreMtsuit U'&gt;(&#13;
i mi il&#13;
sacxejotb under its&#13;
JBocautaa, aaw&#13;
Li^A f ^ a t r y ,&#13;
lo\^*. Set tor&#13;
ESBtt3as&amp;&amp;&amp;&#13;
their eyes to festering abominations—&#13;
B&gt; all those cities t h e h o m e interests&#13;
need t o make isnploratlon. T h e family&#13;
dlrclee of the city must inevitably be&#13;
wffected by the moral character or the&#13;
moral character of those w h o rule&#13;
er them.&#13;
itry, itpdag chicken*, l i e per lb;&#13;
keys. IJC; """ ~ ~&#13;
l*cper&#13;
per lb: cceasaery f *c.&#13;
strict^ 4jseaii, 4 *c&#13;
ducktt, 9c. " Eggai&#13;
dot Batte* dairyTTlc&#13;
• mmwimm am &lt; T B A I &gt; B .&#13;
Better weather has favorably affected the&#13;
eale of sea«oaaol« Kooda, parUcularlv clothing,&#13;
hats and ahocs, and the movement of&#13;
goods tor fill dcUvery has bt&amp;un. The inont&#13;
e^Mxmraalng'feature t» the couUnued and. la&#13;
some lastanoes. Increased conddeace of mercnaats&#13;
and maaufactureru that the autumn&#13;
wlU bring a Urjwr votasaC of bunlne*« at&#13;
higher prices. The least favorable feature&#13;
of the p**t week IK found in di«appulntment&#13;
at lack of desaand aaU reactiou in quota-&#13;
UOIIH for sosac varieties of lrotf and «teeL&#13;
l l i e idleneaa of 4» &gt;JtQ iron, steel and glass&#13;
workers and soft coat miner* U, except l a&#13;
the latter iattaaoe, due In part to the aeaaoo.&#13;
Large hopes are built on prospective deaaaad&#13;
after thesarlff Wil haasaased out the&#13;
preaauFe in the market of large Importing&#13;
tse removal of&#13;
ciUes—a'theme a s appropriate t o those&#13;
who a r e governed as the governors.&#13;
The m o r a l 4»a*A4*er of those w h o rule&#13;
* city hesiasttJoh to aw wUh the character&#13;
of t h e « * t y kself. Men, women and&#13;
children a r e all Interested in national&#13;
politics. ( W h e n the great presidential&#13;
e^eiKionJpsSiee, every patriot wants to&#13;
be found a t ballot box. We are all i n -&#13;
terested i n the discussion of national&#13;
debt, and w e read the&#13;
stocks may defer it, but&#13;
laws of congress, and w e ore wondering&#13;
who will s i t next in the presidential&#13;
chairT Now, that m a y be all very&#13;
well—is very well; but it is high time&#13;
that we .took some of the attention&#13;
which w e have been devoting to nar&#13;
oaoeruintv wui i s a a / case Isvorease baud- ( {Jcssei a f e l x a and brought it to the atu-&#13;
V I will g o further and s a y t h a t t h e religious&#13;
interests of a city are thus aftscted.&#13;
The church today h a s to c o n -&#13;
land with evils that the d r i l l a w o u g h t&#13;
smite; and while I would not have&#13;
e civil government fn a n y wise relax&#13;
energy in t h e arrest and punishment&#13;
crime, I would have a t h o u s a n d f o l d&#13;
*&gt;ore energy put forth to the drying&#13;
i t . of the fountains of iniquity. T h e&#13;
jjh,urch of God asks n o pecuniary aid&#13;
tram political power; bat does ask that&#13;
m addition to all the evils w e must&#13;
SaoesBarily contend against- we- shall&#13;
not have to fight also manicipal negli-&#13;
«ence. Oh, that i n all our cities Christian&#13;
people wouid rise up, and that&#13;
ther would put their hand o n ton helm&#13;
before piratical&#13;
years, you''may have ydur nature en&#13;
tlrely reconstructed, and upon your&#13;
brow, hot with infainotts practices and&#13;
besweated with exhausting indulgencies,&#13;
God will place the flashing coronr.&#13;
et of a S a v i o r s forgrvehess. "Ob, n o ! "&#13;
you say, "if you knew w h o I a m and&#13;
where I came from, you wouldn't say&#13;
t h a t t o me. I don't believe the Gospel&#13;
y o u are preaching speaks of my&#13;
case." Yes, It does, m y brother. And&#13;
then when you tell me that, I think of&#13;
w h a t 8 t Teresa s a i d w h e n reduced to&#13;
utter destitution, h a v i n g o n l y two&#13;
pieces of money left, she- jingled the&#13;
two pieces of money in her hand and&#13;
said: "St Teresa and t w o pieces of&#13;
m o n e y are nothing; b u t St. Teresa and&#13;
t w o pieces of money a n d God- a r e aH&#13;
things." A n d I tall..yon n o w that&#13;
while a s i n a n d a akmer a r e nothing, a&#13;
sin a n d a sinner and a n a l l forgiving&#13;
and all compassionate God are everything.&#13;
W h o la that that I s e e coming? I&#13;
k n o w h i s step. I know h i s rags. W h o&#13;
is i t ? A prodigal. Come, people of&#13;
&lt;3WH l e t u s g o o u t and meet him. Get&#13;
the beat robe you can find in ail t h e&#13;
wardrobe. Let the angels of God nil&#13;
their cnaJices and drink to h i s eternal&#13;
rescue. Come, people of God, let u s g o&#13;
o u t to meet him. T h e prodigal la c o m -&#13;
ing h o m e . The dead - i s alive a n s i n&#13;
a n d t h e lost Is found. . ^&#13;
Vlt*a*&amp; with the news, the saint beiosv&#13;
In songs their tongues employ:&#13;
Beyond the skies the tiainge«gO;&#13;
And heaven Is filled&#13;
..\&#13;
There is a&#13;
Class of People i&#13;
"Who are injured by t h e use&#13;
of coffee. R e c e n t l y t h e r e&#13;
h a s been p l a c e d , i n s l l t h e&#13;
: ~ - sTtpocry * t o r e a »~aew-p&lt;e*&#13;
,'... ' &gt; " » ? ? • ' ^ c§.ljed G.&amp;A1N O,&#13;
m a d e of pure g r a i n * t h a t&#13;
• t a k e s t h e p i e c e ©ffcoffe*.&#13;
i aTbessosi delicate s t o m a c h&#13;
r e c e i v e s It w i t h o u t distress*&#13;
and b w s f e w e a w t r t r l t frOta&#13;
eofleeV'It d o e s h o t c o s t o v e r&#13;
M aa much. Children m a y&#13;
' drtelt it wWT^res?tbwne«f&#13;
15 c e n t s a n d 2S c e n t s p e r&#13;
package. T r y i t Ask for&#13;
G B A I K - a&#13;
|Try Qrain-OI&#13;
fs#ttii#&gt;»ttiMMisr»ii#4&#13;
I •- n v -&gt;.-M iiW -»'iif.&#13;
"*W&#13;
twtl VswtSCUf&#13;
^aulaiUaaovoaaaad. ««4 flasMtor&#13;
Nor angels can their j o y cntkuiln..&#13;
But Jtlndle with new flmi^TSi! **.&#13;
"Tbe sinner lost la found," t h e y s|ng,&#13;
And strike the sounding lyre.&#13;
W h e n a man is easily influenced i t ! w . w . U.—OET^ofT—r»: 'v".I'r?'--«.wT'&#13;
Is generally by persons w i t h o u t mflt&gt; , -&#13;
ence ia t s e community. | ariaiiaa xaia&#13;
._/&#13;
'V&#13;
/&#13;
" &lt; ! . • • « ; •&#13;
• V ' if-&#13;
« i&#13;
• ; &amp; * • &lt;&#13;
* &lt; - :&#13;
* /&#13;
••&lt;ixr&#13;
Ki fi\t m .»;&lt;:&lt; te; ffy-i?&#13;
M&#13;
\ * f^&lt;l&#13;
fJsV&#13;
INTERNATIONAL PRC9S ASSOCIATION.&#13;
CHAPTBR V.., ..'&#13;
^K.pnbllo wagonette,&#13;
in whlcb,,^4arjtor^&#13;
e was to Jour-&#13;
W . bo»A ran daily&#13;
between^ Dumfries&#13;
and Annanmouth. a&#13;
small seaside village&#13;
much frequent*&#13;
ed in summer for&#13;
ita sea-bathing, and&#13;
paaaed within half&#13;
a mile of Sir. Lorraine'*&#13;
abode'; which " was just six&#13;
Bootch wiles away from Dumfries ltaolf.&#13;
The starting place was the Bonny Jean&#13;
Comatewui ton am establishment Raid&#13;
to hears been much patronized by the&#13;
poet Burns during his residence In the&#13;
couth of-Scotland; and hither Marjorle,&#13;
after leaving her tutor, proceeded without&#13;
delay. "'' "&#13;
Th»v.wagonette was about to start;&#13;
and Marjorle hastened to take her&#13;
place., The vehicle was drawn by two&#13;
powerful horses, and could accommodate&#13;
a dosea passengers Inside and one&#13;
more on the seat of the driver; but&#13;
today&lt; there were only a few goingthree.-&#13;
farmers and their wives, a sailor&#13;
on his way home from sea.^nd a couple [ »e r beautiful eyes as she replied:&#13;
She Jooked at blm steadfastly, while&#13;
his face trained scarlet.&#13;
"I know you love me, Johnnie, as if&#13;
you were my own brother," , .&#13;
"More than that, Marjorle—more, a&#13;
thousand tymes!" the young man con*&#13;
tinned passionately. "Ah! It has been&#13;
on my mind .a thousand times to tell&#13;
you how much. Ever since we were&#13;
little laaa and, Jad you've been the one&#13;
jthought,-and dream of my life; and if&#13;
I've striven hard and hoped to become&#13;
a painter, it has all been for love of&#13;
ypu. I know my folk are poor, and&#13;
that in joiner respects I'm.not a match&#13;
fQr you,, who have been brought up aa&#13;
a lady, but there will be neither peace&#13;
nor happiness for me In this world unless&#13;
you consent to become my wife."&#13;
As he continued to speak she had&#13;
become more and more surprised and&#13;
more surprised and startled. The&#13;
sudden revelation of what so&#13;
many people knew, but which she&#13;
herself had never suspected, came upon&#13;
her as a shock of sharp pain; so that&#13;
when he ceased, trembling and contused&#13;
by the vehemence of his own&#13;
confession, she was quite pale, and all&#13;
the light seemed to have gone out of&#13;
of female farm servants who had come&#13;
in to the spring "hiring." All these&#13;
had taken their seats; but John Sutherland'&#13;
stood by the trap welting to&#13;
Y hand Marjorle In. She stepped in and&#13;
took her place* and -tin*' young man&#13;
found a seat at net side, when the&#13;
-driver too* the 'teipfc and mounted to&#13;
his seat, and with waves and smiles&#13;
from the Misses Datrymple, who kept&#13;
the Bonny Jean Inn, and a cheer from&#13;
-a very small boy on the pavement away&#13;
they went.&#13;
At last the vehicle reached the&#13;
^cross-roads where John and -Merjorte&#13;
were to aligtyr. Ther leapt 9»t* aid&#13;
jmrsued their way on foot, the young&#13;
man carrying . a small &lt;s*md-val!se,&#13;
MarjorleaUlfcboldiae) her school books&#13;
underneath her arm. ' &lt; •&#13;
"It's many » leng &gt; year, "Marjorle,&#13;
since we first stood herd. I was a barefooted&#13;
callant, you ware a wean scarce&#13;
•able to run; and now I'm a man, and&#13;
you're almost a woman. Yet here's&#13;
the^ Annan beneath us, the same a«&#13;
•ever, and it will be the same when&#13;
we're both eld—always the same."&#13;
Marjorle turned her head away, and&#13;
&amp;er eyes were dim with tears.&#13;
"Come away," she said; "I, cannot&#13;
bear to look at It! Whenever I watch&#13;
the Annan I seem to see my mother's&#13;
browned face looking up at me oat of&#13;
the quiet water."&#13;
The young man drew closer to her,&#13;
and gently touched her hand.&#13;
"Don't greet,-MarJorteT'' he mur^f-ly,&#13;
mur^d, softly;- "year woor assihijiw at&#13;
peace with God,"&#13;
"Tee, Johnnie, I ken that," answered&#13;
the gtrl In a broken voice; "but It's&#13;
sad, sad, to have neither kith nor kin,&#13;
d and to remember the way my mother&#13;
"Don't talk like that! You're not&#13;
serious! Your wife! I shall be 'naebody'e&#13;
wife,' as I said, but surely, surely&#13;
net' yours."&#13;
"Why not mine, Marjorle?" he cried.&#13;
growing pale in turn. "I'll work day&#13;
and'night; I'll neither rest nor sleep&#13;
untH 1 have a home fit for you! You&#13;
shatf be a lady—O! Marjorle, tell me&#13;
you care for me, and will make me&#13;
happy!**&#13;
, "I do care foryou, Johimlo; I care&#13;
for yoVso fhjiich thajj.i can't bear to&#13;
hear you talk as you have done. You&#13;
have been like, my own brother*, and&#13;
now——" ( .v , .._.,* .., . - ... •&#13;
"And now I want to be something&#13;
nearer and dearer. Marjorle, apeak to&#13;
me; at least tell.me you're net angry!"&#13;
"Angry with you, Johnnie?" she replied,&#13;
smiling again, and giving him&#13;
both hands. "As if I could be! But&#13;
you must be very good, and not speak&#13;
of it again."&#13;
She disengaged herself and moved&#13;
slowly across the bridge. He lifted his&#13;
valise, and followed her anxiously.&#13;
"I know what it is," he said sadly,&#13;
as they went on side by side together.&#13;
You think I'm too poor, and you would&#13;
be ashamed of my folk."&#13;
She turned her head and gazed at him&#13;
In mild reproach.&#13;
"Oh, how can you think so hardly of&#13;
me? I love your mother and father as&#13;
if they were my own; and as for your&#13;
being poor, I shouldn't like you at all&#13;
if yon were rich. But," she added gent-&#13;
I like you'as miy brother best"&#13;
died—ey, § H n ^ even to b* Abie to&#13;
guess her name! Whiles I feel very&#13;
lonesome, when I think It all o'er."&#13;
"And no wonder! But you have&#13;
those that love you dearly, for all that.&#13;
Them's not a lady itf the country more&#13;
thoue^ Mthwh^onraefr, lamfirherever&#13;
your bonny face has come it ha»&#13;
brought comfort* " ? ' ' •»&#13;
As o« spoke he took her hand in his&#13;
o w ^ aad looked, at her *ar? fondly;&#13;
hut bar own cane was far away, followlntvber.&#13;
wtet/ul theughssv&#13;
"Yeju'ro ail yary ^foed- to-eae," she&#13;
•aid presently, "Mr. Lorraine, and SolonMrn/&#13;
ahdaJimy irtendaj b a i l o r all&#13;
that,^ miss.my awn kith and kin."&#13;
He bent his face close to hers^as he&#13;
returned: *"'**'&#13;
" M M day, Marjorle, you'll have a&#13;
J "If I could "be always even that I&#13;
should not mind; but no, Marjorle,&#13;
you're too bonny to bide alone, and if&#13;
any other man came and took you&#13;
from me, it would break n\y heart."&#13;
"What nonsense you talk!" she exclaimed,&#13;
smiling again. "As it any oth-&#13;
V- ——•&gt; *,v *' - r r&#13;
He* paused,' blushing, for her clear,&#13;
steadfast eyes were suddenly turned&#13;
tmi_jWi,^e»i»i» * v - « &gt; -&#13;
"what do you mean, Johnnie?"&#13;
"I eaeafi that y4*u'lh^arry;«ttd-^*&#13;
Brtgjbyaoea bcoke thro-ugh the cloud,&#13;
and Maxjoris smiled.&#13;
"MantT la fct ma? OtVehily la, the&#13;
day to^hiakjed, that, at seaegteonT"&#13;
"Other.; joaag iaaaas thine: of it; Marjorte,&#13;
'J&amp;I no must /oa. Our Afnes&#13;
married la* Martinmas, and, /he was&#13;
only a yeAr oider than yourself.&#13;
Marierie&#13;
aad again as her eyes&#13;
swered smtnerrawd.'stttr holding 'her f"&#13;
hand and pressing It fondly. -There'*&#13;
one that loves yon dearer than aayia&#13;
ail the world.- - \&gt;t&#13;
jtr man would care. If I were twenty,&#13;
It would be time enough to talk like&#13;
that; but at seventeen—oh, Johnnie,&#13;
you almost make me laugh!"&#13;
"Tell me one thing," he persisted;&#13;
ttell me you don't like any one better&#13;
jnan you like me." j&#13;
*]*\ don't like any one half ao well,&#13;
except, except—Mr. Lorraine."&#13;
•••"You are sure, Marjorle?"&#13;
','"Quite sure."&#13;
"Then I'll bide my time and wait."&#13;
-By Ibis time the village was In sight,&#13;
and they were soon walking along the&#13;
stain, street, which was as sleepy and&#13;
deserted as usual. Even at the tavern&#13;
deor&gt;not a soul was to be seen; but the f like that.&#13;
an elderly man, of g w s and somewhat&#13;
careworn aspect, we* b'taily weaving.&#13;
Seated oa a chair close, to him&#13;
was a girl of about fourteen, draesnd lathe&#13;
ordinary petticoat and. short gown,&#13;
and reading ekAtf from M hook. At the&#13;
other end of the room, where there was&#13;
an open ingle- and a nre; an elderly&#13;
matron was cooking.&#13;
Suddenly there was an exclamation&#13;
from the latter, who was the first to&#13;
perceive the entrance of the newcomers.&#13;
"Johnnie!H she cried, holding out her&#13;
arms; and in another moment she had&#13;
folded her son in her embrace, and was&#13;
kissing him fondly. ,&#13;
\ The young girl roee, smiling, book Is&#13;
band; the man teased his weaving, but&#13;
jemalhed quite1 still in his chair.&#13;
"Yes; here' I am, mother; antf I've&#13;
brought company, as you see!"&#13;
"Hoo's a' wi' ye, Marjorlefr cried the&#13;
matron, holding out her hand. "It's a&#13;
treat to see your bonny face. Sit ye&#13;
down by the fire!"&#13;
"Is that my son?" said the weaver,,&#13;
in a deep, musical voice, hut without&#13;
&gt; turning his head. His infirmity was&#13;
now apparent—he was stone blind.&#13;
John Sutherland walked across the&#13;
room, gave his slater a passing kies,&#13;
and placed his hand affectionately on&#13;
the old man's shoulder.&#13;
"It's yoursel', my lad! I ken you aoo.&#13;
I feel your breath about me! What&#13;
way did ye no write to tell us you were&#13;
on the road name?"&#13;
"I was not sure until the last mo*&#13;
ment that I could start so soon, but I&#13;
jumped into the train last night, and&#13;
down I came."&#13;
"Who's alang wl' you?" asked the&#13;
Weaver, smiling. "I'll wager it's Marjorle&#13;
Annan!"&#13;
"Yes, Mr. Sutherland," answered&#13;
Marjorle, crossing the room and joining&#13;
the little group. "I met Johnnie in&#13;
Dumfries, and we came home together."&#13;
The weaver nodded his head gently,&#13;
and the smile on his face lightened into&#13;
loving sweetness.&#13;
"Stand close, side by side," he said,&#13;
"while I tak' a long look at baith o'&#13;
ye."&#13;
"While you-look at us!" echoed Marjorle&#13;
in surprise.&#13;
"Ay, and what for no? DInna think,&#13;
because my bodily ©en are blind, that 1&#13;
canna see weel wl' the een o' iny soul!&#13;
Ay, there you stand, lass and lad—my&#13;
boy Whn and Marjorle Annan; baith&#13;
fair, baith wi' blue een; John prood and&#13;
glad, and Marjorle bjuahlng by/ hm&#13;
aide;, and I see what you .canna sea a&#13;
light all roand and abune,ye, coming&#13;
oot o' the golden gates, a' .Heaven!&#13;
Stand still a wee and hark! Do ye hear&#13;
nothing? Ay, but J can .hear! A&#13;
sound like kirk-bells ringing; tar ewa'."&#13;
As he spoke he sat with shining face,&#13;
as if he indeed gased on the sweet vision&#13;
he was describing- Marjorle grew&#13;
red as fire, and cast down her eyes;&#13;
for she was only too conscious of the&#13;
old man's meaning, and, remembering&#13;
what had taken place that day, she felt&#13;
constrained and almost annoyed. John&#13;
Sutherland shared her'uneasiness, and&#13;
to divert the conversation into another&#13;
channel, he spoke to his young sister,&#13;
who stood smiling close by.&#13;
Marjorle, uneasy lest the old man's&#13;
dreamy talk should again take an awkward&#13;
turn, was determined to make her&#13;
escape.&#13;
"Good-bye now. Mr. Sutherland/*&#13;
she said, taking his hand In hers, "I&#13;
must run home; Mr. Lorraine will be&#13;
expecting me."&#13;
And before any one could say a word&#13;
to detain her, she waa crossing IBe7&#13;
threshold of the cottage. Young Sutherland&#13;
followed her as far aa the garden&#13;
gate.&#13;
"Marjorle," he said, "I hope you're&#13;
not angry?"&#13;
"No, no." she replied; "but I wish&#13;
your father would not talk aa if we&#13;
were courting. Johnnie. It makes me&#13;
feel so awkward, and you know it la&#13;
not true."&#13;
"Old folk will talk," said John Sutherland,&#13;
"and father only speaks oot of&#13;
the fullness of his heart. He Is vary&#13;
fond of you, Marjorle!"&#13;
"I know that, and I of him—that at&#13;
why it troubles me to hear him talk&#13;
f''»'» * f y* Motherhood.&#13;
landlord'* face looked out from behind&#13;
tWe sjrindowTpane with a grim nod of&#13;
houafand kin of your, own,,and then -«seetin#. A few houses beyond i%3&#13;
Inn, Sutherland .paused close to a small,&#13;
c*e-atoried cottage, in front of which&#13;
was a tiny garden laid out in pansy&#13;
beds.&#13;
"Will you come in, Marjorle?" he&#13;
Miked doubtfully.&#13;
Marjorie ^stoddeeV and"—smiled, and&#13;
without another word he opened the&#13;
garden gate, crossed the walk, and led&#13;
the way-into the cottage.&#13;
CHAPTER VZ&#13;
8 they entered the&#13;
door a loud humming-&#13;
sound came&#13;
! upon their ears,&#13;
A mother who ts in good physical condition transmits&#13;
to tier obildaen the bleaelnfa of a good constitution? ~&#13;
. The fhild fairly drinks in health from its mother's&#13;
robust oenstUutiea before birth, and from a healthy&#13;
mother's milk after. , \&#13;
la not that an incentive to prepare for a health*,&#13;
maternity?&#13;
Do yon know the meaning of what&#13;
la popularly called those '* longings,"&#13;
or cravings, whiep beset so&#13;
many women during* prefiianqyf&#13;
There braometWay lacking In the&#13;
mother's blood. Nature ariea. out&#13;
and will be satisfied at all heaard*&#13;
One woman wants sour thingai&#13;
• another wants sweets, another&#13;
wants salt things, and so onT&#13;
. The real need all the time la to&#13;
enrich the blood so as to supply&#13;
nourishment for'another life, and&#13;
to build up the entire generative&#13;
system, so that the birth may be&#13;
possible and snooeasfnL&#13;
\ If expectant mothers would fort*&#13;
ify themselves with L'ydia E. Pinkham's&#13;
Vegetable i Compound, which&#13;
for twenty years has sustained&#13;
thousands of women in this condition, there would be fewer disappointment*&#13;
at birth, and they would not experience those annoying •» longing*'• '&#13;
In the following letter to Mrs. Pinkham, Mrs. Whitney demonstrates tha&#13;
power of the Compound in sneh eases. Shesaya:&#13;
- "From the time I waa sixteen years old till I was twenty-three, Z wag&#13;
troubled with weakness of the kidneys and terrible pains when my montMy&#13;
periods came on. I made np my mind to try Lydia B. PinkhanVs Vegetans*&#13;
Compound and was soon relieved* After I waa married, the doctor said I&#13;
would never be able to go my full time and have a living child, as I waa&#13;
constitutionally weak. I bad lost a baby at seven months and a half. The*&#13;
next time I commenced at oner and continued to take your Compound through&#13;
the period of pregnancy, and I said then, if I went my full time and the baby&#13;
lived to be three months old, I should send a letter to yon. My baby la now&#13;
aeven months old and is ss healthy and hearty as one could wish.&#13;
•• I am ao thankful that I used your medicine, for it gave mo the robust&#13;
health to transmit to my child. I cannot express my gratitude to youj I&#13;
never expected sneh a blessing. Praise God for Lydia E. Plnkham's Vegetable&#13;
Compound, and may others who are suffering do as I did and find relief, aad&#13;
may many homes be brightened aa mine has been."—Mas. L. Z. W s n s s t . t&#13;
Oeorjre St,, E, Somervilie. Mass.&#13;
On%of the best stories yet heard oa&#13;
'Gov. Atkinson was told by himself to&#13;
a party of admirers who were cbattiag&#13;
with him in the parlor of the hotel at&#13;
Cochran on his return 'from 'wlSTeeeat'&#13;
visit to the Chautauqua at Hawkinsville.&#13;
The story Is such a good one that&#13;
it is worth repeating:&#13;
"It was during my recent inspection&#13;
of the convict camps," said the governor."&#13;
Among other places I visited&#13;
were the coal mines, aad in order to&#13;
make A thorough Inspection it was necessary&#13;
pa gp down into the mines and&#13;
See the convicts at work. Two guards&#13;
aecomaaaiea-me down into the mines.&#13;
They showed me everything of interest,&#13;
and finally took me to where the&#13;
convicts were at work. As we approached&#13;
them one of the convicts&#13;
rushed over to me, crying: 'Oood Lord,&#13;
Bill Atkinson, as sure as I Hve! I&#13;
never expected to see you here. What&#13;
on earth, Bill, did they convict you of&#13;
doing?' I readily recognised the man&#13;
as bae whom I had known since my&#13;
boyhood."—Jackson, Ge,, Argus.&#13;
Hall's Catanii Car*&#13;
la taken internally. Friee, 73c.&#13;
Genie* sometimes seemit to be that sort of&#13;
gift which sains unmerited sympathy for&#13;
reckleswly 4egra41ec itself.&#13;
i t&#13;
NEW DISCOVERY; »*-.&#13;
qiliek rwttel ak t earw »M&#13;
tend lot book testiniORiaU u &lt; l O d a j&#13;
P EN8I0N8. MTBfTB^CUMl&#13;
ANTrJAGirp^B&#13;
• 70 *ao&#13;
'Wcetern 'Wheel 'Works&#13;
%JO*" MAKERS*-&lt;*-»&#13;
C/*/CAGO ftl/MO'S&#13;
( y i e « u k&#13;
MMOMMtftMlMMt. It Will&#13;
M\j«hlaS«lae. It to Always rtuJu*. T*y«v&#13;
The shortest way across on a wheel Is always&#13;
the loosest way around, when the&#13;
roads are not I mproved.&#13;
The appearance of a bicveie is not always&#13;
fdg-niflcant of the muscular ability of the&#13;
N»-T*-Bac f«r Titty C«oU.&#13;
Ouaranteed tobacco habit cure.makes weak&#13;
men stroojc, blood pure. aOctL /dtdkuKgists.&#13;
Don't set that a ram's horn handle bar&#13;
signifies a two-minute rider.&#13;
mtaaied-with the&#13;
sound of voloee.&#13;
Turning t o the&#13;
right, they found&#13;
themselves on the&#13;
threshold of s&#13;
room, half parlor,&#13;
bjdtJcttcham, atone&#13;
end of which was a large loom, where&#13;
There was a moments pause; then&#13;
Sutherland aadly held oat bis hand.&#13;
"Well, good-bye, Jaat now. I'M b*&gt;&#13;
looking ye up at the manse!"&#13;
"Gond-byei" she answered. "Ovate&#13;
soon! Mr. Lorraine will be ao glad&#13;
to see you."&#13;
So she hastened away, while Sutherland,&#13;
with a sigh, stood looking after&#13;
her. He had toyed bar so ioag and so&#13;
silently, aad now for the first time in&#13;
his life he began to dread that she&#13;
might not love him in retarm. To his*,&#13;
just then, it seemed as If all the world&#13;
was darkened, the blue ak/ "&#13;
all the sweet spring&#13;
with a wintry sense of fear.&#13;
(TO as osMTixoaa*)&#13;
4 G«H I&#13;
"I see from the war&#13;
Mrs. Snaggs, "that&#13;
have been captured."&#13;
"Tea," replied Mr. Snagga. 1&#13;
pose the object is to prevent the&#13;
Mora from Ailing their pages with&#13;
articles tor the next meaty-wee&#13;
—Pktaburg Chronici»Til sgreah&#13;
SAVE THE POTATOES&#13;
rrmsUsh— was — mtmt&#13;
PARIS CiEEH SPUNCXEM.&#13;
(SKAT'S ^Atmmr.&gt;&#13;
tetfaftS*&#13;
ME. C»•a*e«t•t acohMt. s*Mjs&gt;frab^&#13;
amnio* ruta PA IT KILLS&#13;
mil forma «&lt;iM«etUh. M«»«&gt;|«M t* i&#13;
WWmutlMiwtbmmm '&#13;
Cray Mineral Ash&#13;
t&gt;o• frm oS«Vr wu»n-irt» -a rac*d* •B&gt;o•o!k• ."«V irt«ea«M s t * frlTi MSJT •»»• yos VMB«C&#13;
HatiMal snahstsas CsWaf U&#13;
JssKs-ia&#13;
J know that mv life was saved br Plso's&#13;
Core for Ooosamption.—John A. Miller, An&#13;
Sable. Michigan. April 21. l*U.&#13;
A wrench left at home will not mend a&#13;
wheel broken on the road.&#13;
NEBRASKA:.&#13;
FARM&#13;
LANDS.&#13;
dry healthy&#13;
climate, f r e e&#13;
from malaria, aa&#13;
abundance of pare wa*er*e&#13;
soil which is anserpme^ed&#13;
for richness, and Is easily&#13;
cniMvate^yioMlBfaaT&#13;
varieties of crops. Than&#13;
is what Nebraska odEern&#13;
t o the homeaeeker. Lands are cheep&#13;
now. Send for a pamphlet deseriWajr,&#13;
Kehrsaka,.ineiled free on appliestVssi&#13;
to P. &amp; EcfTta. General&#13;
Agent, a , il « t * JR. B..&#13;
$100 To Any H a&#13;
WILL. PAY 9lOO FOR A N Y O A M&#13;
Ot Wmmkmmm la&#13;
r»u. «•-&#13;
Aa Omaha Compao/ pieces for the&#13;
time beforo the pahue a M««aOsA&gt; Taaas&gt;&#13;
Mavr f or the coraof Lost Vitality, Hervosa&#13;
aa4 Sexual Weakaem, aad B lets let issjsf&#13;
Life Force in old and lissm aaen. Ve&#13;
wera-oat French remedy: nnre las ae&#13;
Pbosptoras ©r otsjer^hetamMdfeeam Itis&#13;
fa-wn»i.&gt;ytni f - " « " ^ niisfnwT^t *1t&#13;
effee••—pesidv* ia its ease&#13;
ssfco are sosTstiag from a&#13;
bliapUs their ttte^ei&#13;
physical suffer.nc p i f l t s r so Lost Maa*&#13;
L&gt;od^o«id4STii4)to«b«a&gt;TATg MCMCAL&#13;
Ot»tt&gt;AJIY, Omeke. Met, and Ihey « 3&#13;
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prefer te aw there for traosmsut, if&#13;
teettre. They lertMot,iyj rrea.J abU&#13;
Free Kra^criptieaa. Free&#13;
Free aampW. or C. O. u. fake, l^ey&#13;
assoaai eafdial, and gwaraitee to&#13;
every cam they treat er refaad&#13;
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H, W. Crofoot was in Detroit W«d- ] PINCKKEY HIGH SCHOOL ALUMNL&#13;
nesday.&#13;
May Moran is the guest of relatives&#13;
PARSHAUVILLE.&#13;
Will Wolverton and wife spent&#13;
last week with friends iu Ypeilauti.&#13;
W. 'N. Phillips and wife of&#13;
Brighton spent Sunday with&#13;
friends here.&#13;
IVtrs.. Gleason is very low at&#13;
the home of her daughter, Mrs.&#13;
John Mnrphy.&#13;
Mra^A. C. Wakeman spent a&#13;
few days with friends near Ypsilanti&#13;
this week.&#13;
Miss Hattie Smith of Cleveland&#13;
has returned home bringing Harriett&#13;
Bancroft with her.&#13;
v Rev. J. L. Walker exchanged&#13;
pulpits with Rev. S. Graves of&#13;
Oak Grove last Sunday.&#13;
ANDERSON.&#13;
•Harvesting began in full blast&#13;
this week.&#13;
Charlie Hoff celebrated in&#13;
Grand* Ledge.&#13;
Charlie and Kittie Hon* were in&#13;
Fowlerville on Monday.&#13;
Valentine Dinkel lost a valuable&#13;
horse one day the past week.&#13;
Elton Jeffrey has improved the&#13;
look* of his house by a fresh coat&#13;
of paint&#13;
Fred Mackinder and Katie Williams&#13;
were in Stockbridge on&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs, H. D. Grieve of&#13;
Pinckney called on Anderson&#13;
friends on Sunday last.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Bennett of&#13;
Howell Was the guest of relatives&#13;
in this place over Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. B. H. Teeple of Pinckney&#13;
spent the past week with her&#13;
mother, Mrs. E. W. Martin.&#13;
Ed and Bird Mann of White&#13;
Oak called on their brother, Arthur&#13;
of this place on Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. J. R. Dunning of Pinckney&#13;
is the guest of her daughter,&#13;
Mrs. Jas. Marble for a few weeks.&#13;
Louis Howlett and wife of&#13;
Howell were the guests of A. G.&#13;
Wilson's family a few days last&#13;
week.&#13;
O. W. Kellog and wife and&#13;
Mrs. D. C. Walters of Howell&#13;
were in this place on business on&#13;
Thursday last&#13;
The Misses Stella and Mabel&#13;
Wood of Caro, Michigan are visiting&#13;
relatives and friends in Auderson&#13;
this week.&#13;
&gt;&#13;
•'M*. ".».-&#13;
Additional Local.&#13;
Miss Bessie Daley of Dexter is visitirig&#13;
friends here for a lew weeks.&#13;
Mi?? Grac? Reason is spending a&#13;
few weeks at Masou studying music.&#13;
H. G. BrigK* and wife are spending&#13;
a few days with relatives in Brighton.&#13;
Do not forget tbe C. E. society will&#13;
run an excursion to Detroit Sept let.&#13;
Be sure and go.&#13;
The Loyal Guards held their regular&#13;
meeting last evening and initiated&#13;
several candidates.&#13;
The Ladies aid of the M. E. church&#13;
will meet with Mrs. A. B. Green at&#13;
.,*yjB p. *n. Friday July 16.&#13;
^ 1 ¾ Th\% section was visited by a fine&#13;
rain Tuesday which made a change in&#13;
the atmosphere that was very acceptin&#13;
Howell.&#13;
Geo. Brown and daughter, Kate of&#13;
East Putnam are visiting relatives at&#13;
Oak Grove.&#13;
The C. E. society will furnish ice&#13;
cream at the opera house on Saturday&#13;
evening of this week.&#13;
Miss Grace Alley of Dexter spent&#13;
several days during the past week&#13;
visiting her grandmother, Mrs. F. GRose.&#13;
The members of St. Mary'6 parish&#13;
will hold another ice cream social in&#13;
the opera bouse on Saturday evening&#13;
July 24. Do not forget the date.&#13;
Mrs. A. B. Cordley and daughter,&#13;
Bessie of Ann Arbor are guests of H.&#13;
H. Swarthout. They are contemplating&#13;
making Pinckney their home.&#13;
Dr. H. F. Sigler and wife will leave&#13;
in a few days fyr- New York where he&#13;
will attend a course in the Post-graduate&#13;
Hospital. The Dr. will be absent&#13;
for about six weeks.&#13;
We issued several hundred "announcement"&#13;
books for A. G. Wilson&#13;
this week. Lucius will have charge&#13;
of the store at Anderson hereafter and&#13;
is going to push business with "printers&#13;
ink.1'&#13;
Scoffs&#13;
emulsion of Cod-liver Oil with Hypophosphites,&#13;
can be taken as easily in&#13;
summer as in winter* Unlike the&#13;
plain oil it is palatable, and the&#13;
hypophosphites that are in it aid in&#13;
digestion and at the same time tone&#13;
up the system.&#13;
For sickly* delicate children, and&#13;
for those whose lungs are affected,&#13;
it is a mistake to leave it off in the&#13;
summer months. The dose may be&#13;
reduced if necessary*&#13;
We recommend the small size&#13;
especially for summer use, and for&#13;
children, where a smaller dose is required.&#13;
It should be kept in a cool&#13;
place after it is once opened.&#13;
For tale by all drugfiatt at sec. and U-m&#13;
/"&#13;
—tTfttt* OF 1NTRRI8T,&#13;
.X'&#13;
r » *&#13;
Dr. A. B. Green goes to Stockbridge&#13;
on Thursday night of this week; bat&#13;
in tbe fatnre, he will be at his Pinck-&#13;
•ejfc'Ull!!^-Thursday and Friday of&#13;
SflT JULY 17,&#13;
We will sell&#13;
I PLUG PRUNE JUICE&#13;
TOBACCO for&#13;
16 CENTS&#13;
ALSO&#13;
A Foot of Tobacco for&#13;
8 cents.&#13;
The annual meeting of the Pinckney&#13;
High Sohool Alumni &amp;:et at the&#13;
pleasant home of Su$t. and Mrs. W.&#13;
A. Sprout Wednesday evening, July&#13;
7,1897.&#13;
In the absence of the Pres. and&#13;
vice pres., the meeting was called to&#13;
order by Supt. W. A. Sprout, and&#13;
|Miss Lucy Mannn was appointed&#13;
chairman of the evening.&#13;
A cordial welcome was extended to&#13;
to the Class of '97 and Miss Julia Benedict&#13;
responded to the greeting in a&#13;
fitting manner. The company then&#13;
listened to an instrumental solo by&#13;
Miss Benedict, whioh was followed by&#13;
the Alumni history given by Miss&#13;
Mollie E. Wilson. The business meeting&#13;
was then held and the following&#13;
officers were elected for tbe ensuing&#13;
year:&#13;
Pres. Lucius E. Wilson.&#13;
Vice Pres. Anna B. Miller.&#13;
Sec'y- Nella M. Lake.&#13;
Treas. Mrs. E. W. Mann.&#13;
Member of Executive Committee.&#13;
Supt. W. A. Sprout.&#13;
Poet, Kittie E. Hoff.&#13;
Orator, Norman D. Wilson.&#13;
After the business meeting the assembly&#13;
was favored by a select reading&#13;
by Miss Kittie Hoff. The oration&#13;
•'Kestlessness" by Lucius Wilson was&#13;
followed by the Alumni poem by&#13;
Miss Grace E. Young. A vocal solo&#13;
by Miss Lucy W. Mann was appreciated&#13;
by tbe audience and Mrs. E. J.&#13;
Briggs delivered a recitation in a&#13;
very effective manner. The program&#13;
was then closed with a vocal solo by&#13;
Lucius Wilson.&#13;
The assembly was then invited to&#13;
the dininp room where a delicious repast&#13;
was served, alter which the following&#13;
toasts were responded to:&#13;
Opportunities MISB Nina Vouuglove.&#13;
"Do tb* duty that lies newest thee.'7&#13;
The Br»T« '.,.. .Mies N««lla Lake.&#13;
"None but the Biave deserve the Fair.''&#13;
The Fair Richard D.Roche.&#13;
"Prosperity to tbe man that ventures&#13;
most to please her."&#13;
Knowledge ve Wisdom ..W. H. Padley.&#13;
"Knowledge conies, but Wisdom lingers.&#13;
The Bachelor Girls of \K2. Mies Grace Young.&#13;
"A form more fair, a face more aweet,&#13;
Ne'er hath it been my lot to meet.&#13;
*. * * * *&#13;
Ah, well! for us all, some eweet hope lies."'&#13;
Our Nation p«rt Green.&#13;
"One flag, one land, one heart, one hand.&#13;
"One nation evermore/'&#13;
Our Alumni Babies Supt. W. A. Sprout.&#13;
"A still small voice spake unto me.&#13;
The toasts were excellent and elicited&#13;
words of commendation and wellmerited&#13;
applause. The Alumni meeting&#13;
of '97 will long be remembered by&#13;
all present as one of the most edilying&#13;
and enjoyable meetings that has&#13;
yet been Jield., Much of the pleasure&#13;
of the evening was due to t e hospitable&#13;
manner in which the Supt. and&#13;
Mrs. W. A. Sprout entertained the&#13;
alumni and their friends.&#13;
When the time for departure came&#13;
all felt reluctant to leave the scene of&#13;
so much enjoyment and many were&#13;
the heart-felt expressions of praise in&#13;
regard to the royal manner in which&#13;
the assembly had been entertained.&#13;
25cCoflee&#13;
27c Coffee&#13;
30c Coffee&#13;
XXXX Coffee&#13;
18c&#13;
20c&#13;
25c&#13;
15c&#13;
The song of the nightingale can of&#13;
board at the distance of a mile.&#13;
Thirty colored men and one colored&#13;
woman are now practicing law In Chicago.&#13;
The largest atandlng army i» poeoessed&#13;
by Russia. Germany and France&#13;
come next.&#13;
The West Point Academy has this&#13;
year a class of 382 cadets, the largest In&#13;
the history of the institution.&#13;
Michael Faraday, the noted chemUt&#13;
and philosopher, began hie business&#13;
career, at the age of thirteen, as a&#13;
London newsboy.&#13;
In the Baltic Sea there are more&#13;
wrecks than in any other place in the&#13;
world. The average throughout the&#13;
year is one-pach day.&#13;
The late Mrs. Hicks-Lord, of this&#13;
City, so appreciated the faithfulness of&#13;
her colored maid, Maria, that she bequeathed&#13;
to her $400 a month for life.&#13;
Russia, with a population of 110,000,-&#13;
000, haa only 18,334 physicians. In the&#13;
United States, with a population' of&#13;
about 75,000,000, there are 120,000 physicians.&#13;
Paul Hogue, of St. Joseph, Mich.,&#13;
tried to kill a calf by striking it with&#13;
the butt of his gun. The gun was discharged&#13;
by the blow, causing the death&#13;
of Mr. Hogue.&#13;
The cultivation of sugar beets has&#13;
proved so profitable this year on Grand&#13;
Island, Nebraska, that farmers have&#13;
sold their crops for sums double the&#13;
value of the land on which they were&#13;
g/ovn.&#13;
The problem of cheap living has been&#13;
solved by the Rev. Miles Grant, of&#13;
Boston. His daily diet is graham bread,&#13;
milk, cheese and vegetables, and he&#13;
continues to maintain good health at&#13;
a cost of 87 ceats a week.&#13;
The eyeai«ft$ of a San Francisco cat&#13;
became defective, and the owner, Miss&#13;
Thompson, induced an oculist of that&#13;
city to make a pair of spectacles for&#13;
the animal. Now the cat can see a*&#13;
well as ever with their aid.&#13;
Stout canes in large numbers have&#13;
for some time been conveyed across the&#13;
Prussian border inte Russia. The&#13;
czar's officials at la*t examined the&#13;
canes, and found them stuffed with nihilistic&#13;
literature, printed on tissue&#13;
paper.&#13;
\ Columbia college Is to have a gymnasium&#13;
which will cost $600,000. There&#13;
will be a running track one-ninth of a&#13;
mile in circumference and 112 feet&#13;
wide. The main room will measure 86&#13;
feet high, 100 feet wide and 160 feet in&#13;
lend*.&#13;
* &amp; a wm w a r d heaven to co««&#13;
tnder the inauen^e of good people.&#13;
The man whe would he wise, wat$&#13;
at at the feet of tfepae who are wise.&#13;
Many ohildm go to the bad, mainly&#13;
because God is mtsutpreeentet to&#13;
•hem/&#13;
The devllt Jetua oaet out, alwaji&#13;
made the meet fuss Juit aa they were&#13;
going.&#13;
There are no emergencies with Oo&amp;&#13;
So surprises for which he Is not prepared.&#13;
How many fathers and mothers make&#13;
religion such a cruel thing that their&#13;
shildren hate It&#13;
The Christian should not become die-&#13;
•ouraged because the deril la aUtt&#13;
working at bis trade,—Ram't Born.&#13;
PHILANTHROPY.&#13;
Mayor Houghton of North Adama,&#13;
UaBs., gives his salary of $1,000 to the&#13;
ocal hospital.&#13;
By tfie will of Isaac H. Tuttle $4,000&#13;
are given to St. Luke's home for ialigent&#13;
Christian females, "New York.&#13;
The late James McMillan of Johnstown,&#13;
Pa., bequeathed $10,000 to the&#13;
endowment fund of Pennsylvania col*&#13;
ege.&#13;
The managers of the Episcopal hospital,&#13;
Philadelphia, have received from&#13;
the children of the late George L. Harrison&#13;
an addition to the endowment&#13;
fund of "the George L. Harrison Menorial&#13;
House" of $150,000.&#13;
President Seth Low of Columbia unirerslty,&#13;
has given the New York Kiniergarten&#13;
association the $5,000 received&#13;
by him as commissioner of&#13;
oapld transit. In a letter presenting&#13;
;he money to the kindergarten association,&#13;
Mr. Low writes: "The way to&#13;
nake the greatest New York is to begin&#13;
with the very little children, and to&#13;
lee that childhood from the beginning&#13;
s treated' as the sacred thing it la."&#13;
* :&#13;
WEAK MEi VIGOROUS,&#13;
i*&#13;
osths«ns rr-&#13;
» inditen.l Ua naq DQsrtleti&#13;
...... abutt or exmm&#13;
^infscaWniotyH »holedf lg&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler.&#13;
*&#13;
Seeley's 10c Bluing for&#13;
Seeiey^ 5e Bluing for&#13;
Climax Stove Polish 5c site,&#13;
8c&#13;
2 for 5&#13;
— 4ied leaving her jwitk&#13;
* Firman, Erie, and Jesse Bentley of&#13;
Climax Stove Polish 30c size 2 f or 10c&#13;
All Clothing in Suite IS per cent off&#13;
'•W&#13;
tteees %rta and FJota Hall of&#13;
East P»l»afsv* *«rt Tuesday to Bay&#13;
View.' fa tfte in the totansa and&#13;
•ebool a«^ to breatbe tf*'balmy ] Choicecannad grape*&#13;
b « ^ ^ . l ^ e M i c b J B a | t ^ ,&#13;
Tbe estffaty of Gtmttk « f e e r « will&#13;
eerae their iwAfaiy t*»4*i .the home&#13;
* f i i i « C a t e a i l M r t . ifcokaw, tts*&#13;
•eedav^.laJy » . AB are vniptfefly,&#13;
ismtad to come and hfrte a coot Usee&#13;
• • . \&#13;
A£0e4 rapper. I&#13;
Choice canned Pears&#13;
3 Cans Plumbs . .&#13;
•6 pkgs. Washing Pow.&#13;
.15&#13;
.15&#13;
.25&#13;
.23&#13;
These sales moat be CASH.&#13;
SIUIIIIT M&#13;
OBITUARY.&#13;
Esther J. Bentley was born in Steuben&#13;
Co., N. Y. July 25,1830 and died&#13;
at tbe home oi her daughter in Marshall&#13;
July 9, 1897. When but six&#13;
years of age, she moved with her parents&#13;
to Livingston Co., Mich., where&#13;
her mother still survives at the advanced&#13;
aga of 90 years. Nov. 1, 1848&#13;
she was united in marriage to Gordon&#13;
B. Bentley of the same place and settled&#13;
in the township of Marion.&#13;
fn 1856 she moved with her iamily&#13;
to Montcalm Co., and in 1859 they&#13;
both joined the Baptist church through&#13;
the efforts of Be7. Prescott in Oakbeld&#13;
township. In 1865 she move^d to Ingham&#13;
Co., and seven children were&#13;
born to them. In 1875 her husband&#13;
TWENTY Y E A R S&#13;
—OF—&#13;
RED MARKj SUCCESS.&#13;
this county and Sarah A. Noyes of&#13;
liarshaU, Mich. For eight years she&#13;
has been an invalid and four years a&#13;
but her faith in God&#13;
ON FRIDAY THE 9TH,&#13;
THE BUSY BEE HIVE&#13;
Commenced on a sale that is to be' E V E R Y T H I N G and oome and&#13;
never wavered and she trusted him to&#13;
the end. She has borne her cross nobly&#13;
endured the pain aad has now gone to&#13;
her reward. We would not wish her&#13;
back bnt let each one of ns take our&#13;
mothers God aa our teaober and prepare&#13;
to meet her heaven. At her re-&#13;
&lt;jaest tbe 23rd Peaim was read by the&#13;
pastor and the choir sang "God be&#13;
t with you tiil we meet again" at the&#13;
otoee of th/Psaita. V&#13;
Backed Up by more good, strong, get some of these trades,&#13;
wide-awake trades than any other. Particulars ^given in ' small Bed&#13;
We have Scoured Ail Markets for Printed bills. If you don't get&#13;
the biggest bargain that one Send For One.&#13;
MOtfEY. . WILL . . B U Y If you have to buy « dollars worth&#13;
Your money will go further than between now and S e p t 1 this is&#13;
on any former occasion. your time and the Bee H i w your&#13;
Will pay you to LEAVE p l * » .&#13;
Yours Respectfully,&#13;
L. H. FIELD&#13;
• &amp;&#13;
Do you think we would MAKE A S L I P now?&#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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          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="5501">
                <text>Pinckney Dispatch July 15, 1897</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="41">
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="5502">
                <text>July 15, 1897 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>Newspaper archives</text>
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          <element elementId="47">
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="5504">
                <text>No Copyright - United States</text>
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                <text>1897-07-15</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="5507">
                <text>Frank L. Andrews</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>VOL. XV. PINOKNEY, LIVINGSTON OO., MIOH., THURSDAY, JULY 22, 1897.&#13;
- *&#13;
No. 28&#13;
We shall commence doing business on onr SHORT TIME plan&#13;
oa Monday, July 26,1897. To emphasize the tact that this plan means a&#13;
saving of money, we call your attention to the following spot oash prides.&#13;
This is not a "special sale1' for "one day only" but is simply&#13;
what we can do six days in the week on tbe same terms. Call and see&#13;
tbe goods whether yon boy or not and get a little booklet explaining onr&#13;
plan in full. *&#13;
TEA.&#13;
We have some splendid bargains&#13;
in Tea. Quality is tbe first consideration&#13;
and price the last. We have&#13;
combined both good quality and low&#13;
price in this list:&#13;
The best new Japan Tea&#13;
market for&#13;
Old Crop 50c for&#13;
A fine grade 35c for&#13;
But the greatest bargain is&#13;
1 lb Leaf Tea worth 35c for&#13;
in the&#13;
50c&#13;
40c&#13;
30c&#13;
15c&#13;
TAPIOCA.&#13;
The market for rice is rising so&#13;
thai even the poor grades are above&#13;
the 5c mark. If you want something&#13;
better than rice at a less price, we&#13;
will sell the finest kind of&#13;
Pearl Tapioca at 5c per lb.&#13;
COFFEE.&#13;
In Coffee, we will, of course, sell&#13;
McLaughlin's XXXX at .12&#13;
Standard Bio at .12&#13;
Our 25c Coffee shall be better than&#13;
ever and our 30c shall be "Rood&#13;
enough for anybody."&#13;
f ^ | . I . . . ^ J W ^ _ W I L.l '1H • •- III I J — * ^ ^ — ^ _ _ l — ^ J — _ - • ! *&#13;
BAKING POWDER.&#13;
1 lb can WARRANTED 10c&#13;
MASON&#13;
1 qt. per doz.&#13;
2 qt. per doz.&#13;
JARS.&#13;
.45&#13;
.70&#13;
HATS.&#13;
To those, who wish to keep cool&#13;
(and we're a trifle late in thinking&#13;
about it) we will sell our 5Qo straw&#13;
hats at 30c.&#13;
This sale means SPOT CASH. We can grant no credit on&#13;
these prices. Eggs will be taken as Cash. Butter will NOT.&#13;
This is plain talk but it goes to the point. NOW IS THE&#13;
TIME TO SHUN DEBT. We will help you to do this. We will&#13;
sell so cheap FOB CASH that you won't want to run a store debt&#13;
A.G.WILSON,&#13;
ANDERSON, MICH.&#13;
Business Pointers.&#13;
Kottoe.&#13;
Sealed bids will be received from&#13;
now until Aug. 1, for the furnishing&#13;
of 20 tons of furnace coal for School&#13;
District No. two (2) to be deliyered in&#13;
tbe basement of th« School house on&#13;
or before Sept. 1.1897.&#13;
D. W. MtTBTA,&#13;
Director.&#13;
HmtUm.&#13;
Miss Georgia U Martin requests all&#13;
who owe her to call and settle at once.&#13;
She has a number of sailor hats to&#13;
close out at 50c&#13;
Anderson fiepair Saopfc—Brazing&#13;
and Enameling Bicycles. Engines,&#13;
mo were and other repairing both&#13;
wood an iron. Bikes and Sundries.&#13;
JETFBY &amp; COLEMAN.&#13;
L o c a l D i s p a t c h e s .&#13;
Bill Monks was in Ann Arbor on&#13;
business Wednesday.&#13;
ICias Alice McM&amp;hon is visiting&#13;
friends in Detroit this week.&#13;
, Mrs. B. W. Crofoot and Miss Kittie&#13;
Grieve visited relatives at Stockbridge&#13;
last Thursday.&#13;
Mrs.CL Grimes and son, Loyd,&#13;
spent a few days this week as tbe&#13;
guest of friends near Howell.&#13;
W. A. Carr has our thanks for a&#13;
cake, of very fine honey. We confess&#13;
that we have a sweet tooth yet nothing&#13;
k tweeter than honey.&#13;
~ Bev; MTH7 McMahon willattendi&#13;
the camp meeting at Orion this week&#13;
consequently there will be no preaching&#13;
at the M. E. church next Sunday.&#13;
Mr. And Mrs. F. L. Andrews and&#13;
daughter, f$M«n&lt;* spent the lMter|LakinJchool house at 2:90.&#13;
part of iMt^ejpattd the first of this&#13;
visiting friends end relatives at ParaballviDe.&#13;
F. L. returned by the way&#13;
of Detroit&#13;
Tbe first of a series of ball games&#13;
between tbe **ookhridge tad Pinckaey&#13;
teams will be jdayod on the fair&#13;
grounda at tbe former plaee on Friday&#13;
of this week, July 21 The DHPATOS&#13;
j o i n * "•&#13;
Jlrs. J. A. Cad well was in Chelsea&#13;
Monday.&#13;
Mrs. L. Colby and Mrs. W. Brower&#13;
were in Howell on business last Saturday.&#13;
There is a law which provides a fine&#13;
for letting obnoxious weeds go to&#13;
seed. Cut them down.&#13;
Otis Brown of Chicago, is the guest&#13;
of his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. G.&#13;
W. Brown of East Putnam.&#13;
C. L. Sigler and wife, Carl Sykes&#13;
and Miss Mabel Swarthout have' been&#13;
enjoying the cool breezes of Portage&#13;
lake the past* week.&#13;
The L. 0. T. M. are preparing to&#13;
celebrate their fifth anniversary next&#13;
Monday evening by having a good&#13;
time. Ice cream and cake will be the&#13;
refreshments for the evening.&#13;
John Bert whistle, who has been under&#13;
the doctor's care for the past three&#13;
months at the home of Warren Hofi,&#13;
his sickness being caused-by a stroke&#13;
of paralysis, returned to his home&#13;
near Pontdac last Monday. Warren&#13;
Hoff went with him.&#13;
We desire to say to those who have&#13;
been examined for tbe Loyal Guards&#13;
that they must report and be obligated&#13;
before August 1, to secure tbe reduced&#13;
rates. Call at this office; or on&#13;
G. A. Sigler for information. Do not&#13;
put the matter off but come at once.&#13;
F. L. ANDREWS,&#13;
Captain General.&#13;
Mr. C. 0. LeCount of New York&#13;
City has been spending a few days&#13;
with his friend, Bev. McMahon. Mr.&#13;
l&gt;Count eajoyed^turday on Portage&#13;
lake and on Sunday morning delivered&#13;
his lecture on Bishop Asbury to a&#13;
deeply interested congregation at the&#13;
M. E. church and preached at the&#13;
Now comvi that uge old dtlMn,&#13;
WhoM folbiM w* ail know,&#13;
To tell just bow hot it wu&#13;
To-day a year ago.&#13;
F. E. Wright sports a new delivery&#13;
wagon.&#13;
Geo. Reason Sr. is suffering with a&#13;
bad foot.&#13;
William Mclntyre was in Howell&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Eugene W. Mann was in Milford&#13;
one day last week.&#13;
Stephen Durfee of Fowlerville was&#13;
in town on business last Saturday.&#13;
Geo. Green and wife of Bowel]&#13;
spent Sunday with his parents here.&#13;
Mrs. H. D. Grieve and daughter&#13;
^spent Friday with Plainfield friends.&#13;
Will Curlett and family of Dexter&#13;
spent Sunday among relatives in this&#13;
place.&#13;
Gertrude and Margret Mann of Detroit&#13;
are spending a week with relatives&#13;
here.&#13;
I. J. Cook and family spent Sunday&#13;
in Brighton. Mrs. Cook will remain&#13;
a few weeks.&#13;
Miss Dora Plimpton returned last&#13;
Thursday from a few weeks visit with&#13;
her uncle at Jefferson.&#13;
Mrs. Samue] Walker and son, Murray&#13;
haye been the guest of relatives at&#13;
Detroit for the past two weeks,&#13;
Since the recent rains, the race&#13;
track has been rolled and is now in&#13;
fine condition for bicycling. Racing&#13;
is the order of the day among the&#13;
sprinters.&#13;
Mrs. W. H. O'Keefe and son, Royal&#13;
who have been spending tbe past&#13;
week with K. Roche and family-of&#13;
Marion returned to their-home in&#13;
Chicago Monday. e&#13;
The Misses Grace Young and Mame&#13;
Sigler visited relatives and friends in&#13;
Howell several days the past week.&#13;
Miss Grace returned to her home in&#13;
Detroit, Monday.&#13;
It has been decided to hold a state&#13;
fair this year after all. It will be at&#13;
Grand Rapids, Sept. 6 to 11, on the&#13;
grounds of the West Michigan society.&#13;
The premium list will be the same as&#13;
last year and there is to be a big list&#13;
of special attractions.&#13;
Ex-county School Commissioner&#13;
Stephen Durfee, who vacated the&#13;
office July 1, will superintend the&#13;
Pinckney school the coming year.&#13;
Steve has been a good commissioner&#13;
and we know he will make an excellent&#13;
principal. We regret the departure&#13;
of him and his estimable family&#13;
ABOUT&#13;
ONE MAN IN&#13;
DOES NOT&#13;
.. Trade With . .&#13;
• • • i U O » • • • •&#13;
We're After That Man!&#13;
About one man in ten dosen't know&#13;
that his neighbors are saving money on&#13;
every deal, because they trade with us,&#13;
We're After That Man!&#13;
About one man in ten can't be expect*&#13;
ed to know that we are headquarters for&#13;
&gt;i&#13;
And we expect to get his trade. . . ^ • , •&#13;
ARE YOU THE TENTH MAN?&#13;
WE'RE AFTER YOU!&#13;
F. A. SIGLER,&#13;
PINOKNEY, MICH.&#13;
• • • * •&#13;
W E A R E&#13;
bnt what is Fowierville's loss will be&#13;
Pinckney s gain.—Fowlerville. Observer.&#13;
Last week Wednesday, while W.&#13;
J. UlacJuJelggraph operator at this&#13;
place, was gone to dinner, the station&#13;
was broken into and things were&#13;
scattered promiscionsly. Nothing was&#13;
found missing bnt about 7 o'clock the&#13;
same evening Constable John Chalker&#13;
arrested a tramp near Hamburg Jet.,&#13;
and brought him here. A hearing was&#13;
held before J astiee Carr but no evidence&#13;
could be proven against him&#13;
and was discharged.&#13;
An eclipse of the aun, the last one&#13;
for, this year, is scheduled to occur&#13;
next Thursday July 89. It is an annual&#13;
eclipse, and will be visible in the&#13;
United States. It begins at 6*0 m&#13;
the moraine and «adt at lw o'clock in&#13;
the evening. Aocordiagt© reportait&#13;
will be followed by atettoapWk&#13;
turbauoos and eooornpaaiod by at&#13;
raine and tnuaojsratonna.&#13;
OBITUARY.&#13;
The following lines clipped from&#13;
one ot our exchanges will probably be&#13;
of interest to many of our people as&#13;
Mrs, Goste was formerly a resident at&#13;
this place also her ~aoar€r 15., who&#13;
taught school here not long ago:&#13;
Tryphena Goste died at the residence&#13;
of her son, G. E., at Faulkton,&#13;
South Dakota on Saturday, May 16,&#13;
)897 of hemorrhage, aged 64 years.&#13;
~Tbedeceased was bom i n New&#13;
York, Oct 21,1829 and was married&#13;
in Michigan in 1844, to Louis B. Goste&#13;
where she lived until oomimg to South&#13;
Dakota in 1890 locating at Faulkton&#13;
wish her husband and these soma.&#13;
She leaves a lamily of four sons,&#13;
Qtaa.&amp;,Loui8 On D. 0. M i A . L&#13;
Oeste, tbe three former veattnc at&#13;
that place and tk» latter in&#13;
Always,&#13;
Everlastingly,&#13;
Continuously,&#13;
Persistently,&#13;
Effectively&#13;
Seeking Trade.&#13;
W E S E L L&#13;
| Oil Stoves,&#13;
Gasoline Stoves,&#13;
Wood 8toves,&#13;
Lawn Mowers,&#13;
Bicycles,&#13;
Farming Implements, etc&#13;
W E W I L L&#13;
Gladlv,&#13;
Polite'lv,&#13;
Carefully,&#13;
Promptly&#13;
—Wait Upon Yon.&#13;
• • &amp; .&#13;
Eespectfully Yours,&#13;
TEEPLE #&gt; CAD WELL.&#13;
From&#13;
to&#13;
WE WILL 8CLL:&#13;
• '"&lt;H;.&#13;
»&#13;
AU Dork Prints at 4%e pr. yd.&#13;
AJ1 Light Prints tor 3%c pr. yd.&#13;
M&#13;
•••tr.&#13;
All package oatfee at 13c per pound&#13;
/&#13;
Remember tbe tabs**. .-Prodae*&#13;
:¾^ W&#13;
• ' ' ; : • &amp; :&#13;
i HABXASD * CAMFBBtfe&#13;
'•V::&#13;
^WEEN THE JiAKES.&#13;
f ,&#13;
• * * -&#13;
' v ; * ' •'."?&#13;
MICHIGAN NEWS BRIEFLY TOLD&#13;
FOR MICHJPANUERS.&#13;
rhe Naval Beterves Take Their Annual&#13;
Crata«—»Natlan»l Leases Q* Benvbllean&#13;
Clubf In Convention at Detroit&#13;
t-*tJa.«la Saw Remember* the H, N, G.&#13;
ItapabUcant From {Everywhere.&#13;
Detroit, the star convention city of&#13;
Uncle Sam's domains, has just entertained&#13;
another mighty throng. Over&#13;
9,000 visitors were attracted to the city&#13;
iby the annuel convention of the National&#13;
League 6f Republican clubs.&#13;
Of course the principal feature of the&#13;
convention was the speeches and the&#13;
election pn*cer«, hut . tjil* was enough&#13;
4 o maintain a lively interest. Gov.&#13;
tNagree delivered a rattling address of&#13;
'welcome in behalf of Michigan, the&#13;
*tate where the Republican party was&#13;
*Ort; CoL H. M. Duftleld welcomed&#13;
t h e delegates In behalf of the City of&#13;
4fce Straits; and E. N. Diugley, of Kalamaxoo,&#13;
offered a welcome iu the name&#13;
e f the Michigan League of Republican&#13;
«lubs, of which he is president. Then&#13;
President D. D. Woodmansee gave the&#13;
annual address to the league.. Other&#13;
speeches were made by Hon. Charles&#13;
Emery Smith, of the Philadelphia&#13;
Press; Hon. Webster Davis, assistant&#13;
secretary of interior, and ex-Senator&#13;
Arthur Brown of Utah.&#13;
The second day was considerably&#13;
more lively. The report of the ere*&#13;
dentlals committee showed two colored&#13;
delegations from Louisiana and a settlement&#13;
was not reached without considerable&#13;
excited oratory. The report&#13;
of the resolutions committee reaffirmed&#13;
the platform of the St. Louis Republican&#13;
convention, and extended sympathy&#13;
to Cuba and to the striking coal&#13;
miners and other laboring men of the&#13;
land in their peaceful struggles for&#13;
living wages. D. Augustus Straker,&#13;
•colored, a prominent Detroit lawyer,&#13;
snade a strong kick because there was&#13;
n o anti-lyhching resolution and raised&#13;
«uch a rumpus that the committee reported&#13;
such a resolution. The election&#13;
•of a president of the national league&#13;
was the next exciting event with six&#13;
•candidates as follows: A. M. Higgins,&#13;
•of Indiana; L. J. Crawford, ot Kentucky;&#13;
Grant Fellows, of Michigan;&#13;
Thos. McEwan, of New Jersey; JAred&#13;
IV. Fleitz, of Pennsylvania, and Marion*&#13;
PoUasky, of Illinois. The roll-call&#13;
proceeded without interruption until&#13;
s Illinois1 vote was ealled for and an attempt&#13;
was made to cast a solid vote&#13;
lor Fleitz. Then there was an exciting&#13;
scene, the vote was challenged&#13;
nod finally it was settled by calling&#13;
' the roll of delegates from that state.&#13;
As the vote proceeded through the&#13;
states it was seen that Crawford was&#13;
i n the lead and one state after another&#13;
changed their votes for him so that by&#13;
' the close of the roll-call he was practically&#13;
elected, but without waiting&#13;
for the vote to be announced&#13;
Fleitz, the Kentuckian's nearest opponent,&#13;
moved to declare "Hon. L. J.&#13;
Crawford, of Kentucky, the unanimous&#13;
Ohoice oi the convention," and it went&#13;
with a rush.&#13;
i t was no "job at all to elect a secretary&#13;
, although there were plenty of&#13;
would-be candidates for the position.&#13;
1C J. Dowling, of Minnesota, was reelected&#13;
with only Ohio to oppose him.&#13;
Prank J. Higgins, of New Jersey, was&#13;
•chosen treasurer by acclamation.&#13;
rflmsLh* wjtnyfrt the convention for&#13;
IT. Marquette'* Statue Unveiled.&#13;
A splendid brou*e rep ties of Trentanove's&#13;
statue of Fr, Marquette, the Jesuit&#13;
who was the first white man to set&#13;
foot on Michigan soil, was unveiled at&#13;
Marquette with interesting ceremonies&#13;
in the presence of 1,000 persons. At&#13;
suurise 45 guns were fired from the XT,&#13;
S. revenue cutter Greshara. At the unveiling&#13;
13 more were fired. Col. B. S.&#13;
' Kaufman, .officer of the day, led the&#13;
procession, a feature of whioh was 50&#13;
Chippewa Indians in war-paint and&#13;
riding horseback. The exeraises at&#13;
the statue opened with the singing of&#13;
"Columbia." Miss Beatrice Hanscom&#13;
read an original ode, and little Fannie&#13;
Jopling, granddaughter of Peter&#13;
White, pulled the cord which let the&#13;
canvas fall, and the statue of Fr., Mar*.&#13;
quette stood revealed, Peter. White&#13;
then presented it to t h e peoplfrof Marquette&#13;
in a few appropriate and mod*&#13;
est remarks. Mayor Sherman responded.&#13;
Don M. Dickinson, of Detroit,&#13;
as orator of the day, spoke of&#13;
the great Jesuit explorer and the work&#13;
accomplished by him.&#13;
— — » ^ — » &lt; — » n — — . ^ w ^&#13;
Hon. George Van Ness LoUbrep, on* &gt;&#13;
of the most prominent lawyers of the '&#13;
city and state, and ex-IP, &amp; minuter to \» liV ,ii&#13;
Russia* died at his horns a t &amp; t r o t f J , , ^ , ^ 8 ^ ¾ A&#13;
a t the. a ^ o f 79 years. V l (&#13;
Orangemen Celebrate at Port Huron*&#13;
The 207tu anniversary of the battle&#13;
of the Boy a e was celebrated at Port&#13;
Huron by Orangemen of Michigan and&#13;
western Ontario in an elaborate manner.&#13;
Over 30,000 visitors thronged the&#13;
streets and about 8,000 were in the&#13;
parade, which marched to Pine Grove&#13;
park where appropriate exercises were&#13;
held. W . J . H. Trayaor, of Detroit,&#13;
was marshal of the day and chairman&#13;
of the exercises which were opened by&#13;
Mayor Boynton with one of his characteristic&#13;
speeches of welcome. It&#13;
was responded to by State Grand Master&#13;
C. H. Lloyd. Other .speeches were&#13;
made by well-known Michigan and&#13;
Canadian Orangemen. After the speaking&#13;
athletic sports were the order of&#13;
the day, and were largely attended.&#13;
The celebration was conceded by all&#13;
present to be the largest ever held in&#13;
the state, and although the crowd was&#13;
large, there was no disturbances&#13;
whatever.&#13;
A Murder Near Ionia,&#13;
Moses Walker, a bachelor, who lived&#13;
two miles west of Ionia, opposite the&#13;
state house of correction, was shot and&#13;
instantly killed by Wesley Bennett,&#13;
a farm hand on an adjoining farm.&#13;
Bennett had been keeping company&#13;
with.Lydia Vivian, Walker's niece, and&#13;
they had just returned from the CU5.&#13;
The woman jumped out of the buggy&#13;
just as Walker came out into the road.&#13;
He ordered Bennett away, having previously&#13;
objected to his presence, and&#13;
is alleged that he threw a piece of&#13;
brick at the horse. Bennett refused&#13;
to go and drew a revolver from- which&#13;
he fired *hree shots at Walker, all of&#13;
which took effect, the third striking&#13;
the heart. Bennett skipped hojme and&#13;
was changing horses, apparently, ^for&#13;
flight, when the sheriff arrested him.&#13;
Bennett was promptly arraigned and&#13;
his examination was set for July 22,&#13;
the justice refusing to allow balL&#13;
MICHIGAN NEWS ITEMS.&#13;
.next year.&#13;
.mehlsan Naval Beeervee at Work.&#13;
'The Michigan Naval Reserves—comprising&#13;
86 officers and men—embarked&#13;
sspon the U. S. steamship Michigan at&#13;
4&gt;stroit for their annual cruise through&#13;
fjake Huron. Gov. Pingree, accompanied&#13;
by CoL Eli R. Sutton, Inspectorgeneral&#13;
Case and Adjt.-Gen. E. M.&#13;
Irian, OlMbis staff, also went on board&#13;
and was given a bugle salute, while&#13;
the entire crew stood at "attention."&#13;
T h e governor found it inconvenient to&#13;
Accoflspany the reserves farther than&#13;
Port Huron, however, and it was proba&#13;
b l y wnll for hfe appetite that he dis-&#13;
-embarked there, lor scarcely had the&#13;
Michigan steamed into Lake Huron&#13;
than it began to "rough up,'' and the&#13;
10 hours spent in getting to Mackinac&#13;
island was a time for serious contemplation&#13;
and study upon the frailty of&#13;
t h e elements on the part of a number&#13;
!&lt;rt the amateur tars who experienced&#13;
the rather unpleasant feelings of the&#13;
~*'mal de mer." The boys were put&#13;
-through a good "course of sprouts'*&#13;
including gun practice* deck scrubbing.&#13;
turass polishing, etc. Then to counterbalance&#13;
the hard work they were given&#13;
-shore leave and a dance was held in&#13;
'•thMr .honor At the Grand hotel at&#13;
:Msokinac island.&#13;
Kew*aps4les for the State Troops.&#13;
'Quartermaster • General White re*&#13;
&gt;oei**4 irons the war department for&#13;
t h e Mksbijgan National Guard two ceriosjflft^^&#13;
oT supplies, including caps,&#13;
blouses, overcoats, leggings;—tents, [&#13;
itkm, etc., 50,000 rounds of ball&#13;
being included. Each of the&#13;
1 sviu be embellished with&#13;
Is* ana the company and&#13;
regiment obsignation, made in one&#13;
pieoe-of g a n «setnL which will retain&#13;
i t s brightness. On ike 1Mb Inst. Quarterinaster-&#13;
Geaerai White and his as-&#13;
-detent* -Us**&gt;Coi 4tk*ltfc, will take »&#13;
in-oe of men to Inland Lake to prepare&#13;
Jphe camp for the hoys.&#13;
Port Huron citizehs have struck a&#13;
gas well and will now try for oil.&#13;
Carl Kasuber, near Utica, was fatally&#13;
injured by falling from a load of hay.&#13;
Howe &amp; Prevette's store at Stanton&#13;
has burned. Loss 93,000; insurance&#13;
»2,500.&#13;
The $35,000 street paving proposition&#13;
carried by a big majority at Owosso,&#13;
at the special election.&#13;
An infant child of Jamas Gibbons.&#13;
near Holland,fell into a tub of hot inilk&#13;
and was fatally scalded.&#13;
Ex-City Clerk Fred J. McMurtie was&#13;
arrested at Three Rivers on the charge&#13;
of embezzling city funds.&#13;
Police Justice Kelly fined Thomas&#13;
.Lade rack 830 for profanity at the circus&#13;
grounds at Bay City.&#13;
It is estimated at Houghton that the&#13;
profit on the 1897 output of copper will&#13;
not be short of 17,000,000.&#13;
Isaac Bisgar, aCasco,St. Clair county,&#13;
farmer, was kicked while currying a&#13;
horse, and cannot recover.&#13;
• Williard A. Field, a patient from&#13;
Muskegon, hanged himself at the&#13;
Traverse City asylum with a sheet.&#13;
Stanley Gnlereakl, aged 36, while&#13;
bathing in the river at Grand Rapids,&#13;
was taken with a cramp and drowned.&#13;
John Suttor, proprietor of the hotel&#13;
at Morrison lake, near Saranac, has&#13;
been arrested on a charge of selling&#13;
liquor on Sunday.&#13;
The Hotel Niles, at Niles, largest&#13;
hotel in southwestern Michigan, long&#13;
closed; ^*ifl 4*» opened b y E . 8.* Boswell,&#13;
of Keokuk, la.&#13;
Charges have been made against Revenue&#13;
Collector Michael C. Scully, of&#13;
the Lake Superior district, which may&#13;
result in his dismissal.&#13;
Quay's shingle mill at Cheboygan&#13;
was gutted by fire. Loss »3,500; no insurance.&#13;
Quite a number of men are&#13;
thrown-out.of employment&#13;
An Eaton county correspondent says;&#13;
Potatoes are fast being devoured by&#13;
bugs. Ripe strawberries baked by the&#13;
sun and alUrinds of berries are drying&#13;
on the bushes.&#13;
About 40 delegates attended the national&#13;
retail furniture dealers' convention&#13;
at Grand Rapids. Over 100 buyers&#13;
attended the exposition, mostly&#13;
from the west, and better orders&#13;
placed than at any time since 1*91.&#13;
M n r t i f t r n t i C r | i f , Wslor^, nearly&#13;
100 yeaW&amp;f ago\ o i Ionii, mistook a&#13;
cup of dlnrtiA carbolic acid lor drinking&#13;
water and drank- it, death . result*&#13;
ing within five minutes.&#13;
A can Of arsenic was mistaken for&#13;
baking powder by Mrs. Franklin, cook&#13;
at a Rondo lumber eamp, and the&#13;
whole crew was made very sick, but&#13;
ail are out of danger now.&#13;
While Henry Sponey and wife, of&#13;
Warren, were away from home their&#13;
children took some, matches and went&#13;
to the barn to play. The barn burned,&#13;
and the children had a narrow escape.&#13;
Robert Qamble, aged 9, was run over&#13;
by an electric car on Genesee, avenue,&#13;
Saginaw. - Both legs were so badly&#13;
crushed that amputation was necessary,&#13;
but he could not survive the operation.&#13;
Chasles Tolles, janitor in the high&#13;
school building at Ludingtoif? suicided&#13;
by shooting himself in the right temple.&#13;
A reduction of salary from »40 to&#13;
»10 a month for the summer was the&#13;
cause. ^&#13;
Labor Commissioner Cox says chairs&#13;
must be provided for women in stores&#13;
while they are not busy, and separate&#13;
lavoratories must be provided in factories&#13;
where men and women are employed.&#13;
Miss Myrta Scott, aged 31, of Kalamo,&#13;
who was soon to be married, ate&#13;
some cherries and cheese at the home&#13;
of a neighbor. Soon afterwards she&#13;
was taken sick and within an hour&#13;
was dead.&#13;
While painting the cupola of a large&#13;
barn at Big Beaver, John Groves fell&#13;
35 feet to the ground, badly lacerating&#13;
his head, breaking one arm and leg&#13;
and receiving internal injuries which&#13;
may prove fatal.&#13;
The Anti-Saloon league at Croswell&#13;
had seven saloon men arrested on a&#13;
charge of selling liquOr without legal&#13;
bondsmen. One of the signers of the&#13;
warrants has since lost a new office&#13;
building by fire.&#13;
Harry Bradley, aged 19, of Bay City,&#13;
wrestled with a companion while bathing&#13;
at the beach and a serious bowel&#13;
complaint followed. Later an operation&#13;
was performed for peritonitis, but&#13;
the young man died.&#13;
Ella Cushing, aged 18, took a dose&#13;
of morphine at Hamburg, but was discovered&#13;
and saved. The doctor had&#13;
scarcely gone, however, when she&#13;
swallowed some more of the poison&#13;
and was dead when found.&#13;
Miss Orpha Ingoldsby, a highly respected&#13;
young lady of Pontiac, committed&#13;
suicide 'by hanging herself with&#13;
a cloth fastened to the bed post, at her&#13;
home. She left a note saying she&#13;
feared she was going insane.&#13;
Tommy Cooper, of Detroit, established&#13;
a new world's record for a mile,&#13;
.flying start, at Detroit. He made the&#13;
mile in t h e remarkable time of 1:44 1-5,&#13;
chipping 4 4-5 seconds off his record&#13;
made at Racine, Wis., July 3.&#13;
Dr. E. A. Grange has resigned the&#13;
professorship of veterinary science at&#13;
the Michigan Agricultural college,&#13;
w h i s h h e held for 15 years, and will&#13;
become dean of the veterinary department&#13;
of the Detroit College of Medicine.&#13;
Avery &lt;fc CoJs planing mill at Saginaw&#13;
was gutted by fire which started&#13;
on the roof from an unknown cause&#13;
and spread rapidly to the upper floors&#13;
N&#13;
00*1 Vfc%«r« l e ' v i v e states Strike for&#13;
' %ag«s J m o n g a t o Keep from SUrv-&#13;
Uf—Turkey Stay Cause the fcaitera&#13;
to Break Oat Again.&#13;
of the building, a three-story^ brick&#13;
A portion of the upper walls fell out&#13;
on both sides. The loss will reach&#13;
»25,000, with an insurance of »13,500.&#13;
The New York and Buffalo prospectors&#13;
who have been at work near Silver&#13;
mountain, in Baraga county, since&#13;
spring are said to have taken out large&#13;
quantities of quartz, rich in gold and&#13;
silver. They are very close-mouthed.&#13;
Many years ago Indians found a silver&#13;
mine; several white men met untimely&#13;
deaths trying to learn the secret&#13;
B. C. Wright, a farmer eight miles&#13;
north of Coleman, was awakened by&#13;
bis dog and heard someone in the&#13;
chicken coop. His wife held a lamp&#13;
while he started to investigate, but&#13;
several shots were fired and Wright&#13;
and his wife went back into the house.&#13;
Mr. Wright then went out alone and&#13;
set the dog on the intruders, when suddenly&#13;
several more shots were fired&#13;
and Wright and the dog both fell dead.&#13;
The annual convention of the Tristate&#13;
Medical league (comprising Michigan,&#13;
Ohio and Indiana) was held a t&#13;
the Hotel Cadillac, Detroit. Although&#13;
the attendance was small the papers&#13;
read and discussed were o t much importsnoe&#13;
and interest The -officers&#13;
for the ensuing year are: President,&#13;
Hal C. Wyman, of Detroit; vice-president,&#13;
C. N. Smith, of Toledo; secretary,&#13;
H. P. Wood, of Angola, Ind.; treasurer,&#13;
F. C. Mason, of Hillsdale, Mich.&#13;
Some of the prominent dailies o i the&#13;
state tried to create a sensation by declaring&#13;
t^at the q u e a * ^ o &lt; p«&gt;vkling&#13;
lor a general revision o i the st^te constitution&#13;
would not be submitted t o&#13;
the people in 189» a s the recent legislature&#13;
took no notion upon the matter.&#13;
The constitution, however, provides&#13;
that the subject shall be submitted&#13;
every 1« years and as it was last&#13;
voted on in 1882 it will come before&#13;
the people in&#13;
action.&#13;
The Strikers Oalnlag.&#13;
The Pittsburg district was generally&#13;
conceded to he prlnclpaj battleground&#13;
for the coal miners' strlUel T h e operators&#13;
nad hopes of keeping-several&#13;
thousand men at work therej fait they&#13;
have been deeply disappointed. Only&#13;
one company the New York a^d Cleveland&#13;
Gas Coal Co. was able to continue&#13;
operations with about 1,500 saen and&#13;
the strike officers are preparing a plan&#13;
to bring them out.&#13;
The situation in Cleveland over the&#13;
coal strike is becoming desperate.&#13;
The railroads are growing bolder in&#13;
confiscating coal, and those who depend&#13;
upon a regular supply are becoming&#13;
anxious. The schooner B. W.&#13;
Parker, of Detroit, has been delayed&#13;
In Cleveland over a week owing to the&#13;
action of the Erie railway in taking&#13;
away over 30 cars of coal which the&#13;
vessel was about to load. Several fueling&#13;
firms have nearly exhausted their&#13;
supply and the Pennsylvania, &lt;fe Ohio&#13;
Fueling Co. has suspended business altogether&#13;
in Cleveland. There is considerable&#13;
fuel in the upper lakes, and&#13;
some of it may have to be brought&#13;
down. It is generally admitted now&#13;
that the coal dealers and mine operators&#13;
were very poorly prepared for a strike.&#13;
The great plant of the Cleveland Steel&#13;
Co. has closed owing to the lack of&#13;
fuel. A number of other plants are&#13;
preparing to shut down.&#13;
The strikers won a great victory in&#13;
the Wheeling «&amp; Lake/~Erie/district&#13;
Col. Myron T. Herrick, (the receiver for&#13;
the W. &amp; L. R„railwayK has been informed&#13;
that only one man went to&#13;
work at Dillon vale, where this railrotfd&#13;
people had decided to make a test, and&#13;
where they had secured a force of;U.S.&#13;
marshals to protect the miners; who&#13;
would go to work. The full force of&#13;
this intelligence can be appreciated&#13;
when it is stated that Cleveland manufacturers&#13;
and shippers expected that If&#13;
matters came to the very worst the&#13;
district covered by the W. &lt;fe L. E.&#13;
would supply whatever eoal was&#13;
needed. This means to Cleveland now&#13;
a practical tie-up.&#13;
Notes on the MInere' 91» Strike.&#13;
The first week of the coal miners'&#13;
strike closed with a total of 110,000 men&#13;
idle, divided as follows: Pennsylvania,&#13;
L6.0O0S Ohio,; £8,000( Indiana, 9.000;&#13;
Illinois, 27,000; West Virginia, V&gt;9P;&#13;
Other states 24.000. The loss .in wage*&#13;
for t h e week, figuring 70 cents per day&#13;
each, would be »462,000, These men&#13;
would have mined 924,000 tons and figuring&#13;
a profit of 25 per cent to the&#13;
mine owner he is a loser by »222,000.&#13;
The railroads transporting coal to the&#13;
lakes have lost, »000,000 worth of business.&#13;
Add to all this the loss in wages&#13;
to railroad men, dock men, vessel employes,&#13;
coal handlers, e t c , and the loss&#13;
to the country by the first week of the&#13;
strike is nearly »1,300,000.&#13;
Positive information has been received&#13;
that the Ohio roads have decided&#13;
to refuse to haul West Virginia&#13;
coaL These roads include the Baltimore&#13;
&lt;fe Ohio; the Cleveland, Lorain A&#13;
Wheeling; t h e Wheeling &amp; Lake Erie,&#13;
and the Cleveland, Canton &amp; Southern.&#13;
Eugene V. Debs, president of the&#13;
American Railway union, is at ^Columbus&#13;
to lend counsel and advice t o&#13;
President Ratchford, of the United&#13;
Mine Workers, in the present struggle;&#13;
to counsel Mr. Ratchfoffl, tell him the&#13;
rocks to avoid, the ones upon which&#13;
the A. R. U. drifted, and throw his influence&#13;
toward making the present&#13;
movement a success.&#13;
S * T 9S&#13;
Uncle Sam Will Keep Japan Off Hawaii.&#13;
A Washington telegram says: The&#13;
administration has taken steps to keep&#13;
its grip on Hawaii. Any aggressive&#13;
interference on the part of Japan will&#13;
result in the landing of marines and&#13;
the hoisting of the American flag with&#13;
or without the ratification of the pending&#13;
annexation treaty. Rear Admiral&#13;
Beardsley has been given instructions&#13;
empowering him to act at the first&#13;
aign pf aggression on the part of Japan&#13;
or trouble of any kind with which the&#13;
local authorities are not able to cope.&#13;
The Bennington, now on the California&#13;
(Coast, is being. fitted&#13;
place of the old&#13;
Honolulu.&#13;
- There is no uneasiness among the&#13;
friends of annexation in congress about&#13;
the Hawaiian situation. Neither the&#13;
attitude of Ja*pan nor the persistent&#13;
opposition of the sugar trust, i t is believed,&#13;
can weaken the position of the&#13;
administration, although It is not expected&#13;
that the annexation treaty will&#13;
be ratified at this session.&#13;
TELEGRAPHIC TICKINGS.&#13;
New York and Chicago oapiUhUata&#13;
have organised to spend $6,000,000 to&#13;
construct a large inland harbor a t the&#13;
southern extremity of JLake Michigan,&#13;
near Hammond, Ind,, and .build ,e city&#13;
with commercial advantages t o rival&#13;
1898 without legislative {Chicago. Work will begin in October&#13;
with 2,000 men.&#13;
THE 0 9 T H C O N O R S * * AT WORK&#13;
SXKATB—8Tth day—The,' tuners) str-&#13;
•fees Over «*e l a t e Senator Jshom O.&#13;
Harris, ot e)ann«s*je,. ware held I n the&#13;
roPIP* PJy&amp;roeJdwst McKlnley and&#13;
U^peftnet.^fenatbra and members o!&#13;
the House of Representatives, members&#13;
ot the diplomatic corps, and officials «&#13;
from all branches o / public tlfo, be*&#13;
•ides crowded galleries in whieh were&#13;
many ladies.&#13;
8B*ATX.--oath day. ^-A discussion of&#13;
Union Pacific railroad affairs occupied&#13;
the. day. . The defldenpr appropriation&#13;
bill was taken up and Mr! Morgan proposed&#13;
an amendment designed to prevent&#13;
the consummation of an agreement&#13;
made some time since for the&#13;
settlement of the government's claim*&#13;
against the road. Late in the day the&#13;
entire subject was disposed of b y the&#13;
withdrawal of the paragraph to which&#13;
Mr. Morgan had. offered his amendm&#13;
e n t Hduan.—On account of the&#13;
death of Senator Harris, aasoon-.aa.the .&#13;
journal had been read,, the House, as a&#13;
mark of respect to the memory of the&#13;
deceased Senator, suspended business&#13;
for the day. CONSBBJCJW*.—Thev tariff&#13;
conferees have struck. some snags.&#13;
The Sedate conferees have laid before&#13;
the House members the condition in&#13;
tire Senate where there is not an&#13;
actual majority of the Republicans&#13;
and where other than Republican&#13;
votes are necessary to pass the&#13;
bill or adopt a conference report&#13;
The members ot the House are standing&#13;
by the^r. ;bU_L. nevertheless,. rand&#13;
have told the Senators that tHey cannot&#13;
accept the Senate amendments' on&#13;
many important items. On sugar the&#13;
Senators are holding out especially for&#13;
the Senate schedule. The House i s&#13;
just as firm for its rates, and is also&#13;
standing stiffly for the House schedule -&#13;
on wool, contending that the Senate&#13;
rates would be most oppressive on*&#13;
manufacturers. Lumber has been in&#13;
dispute and the House conferees have&#13;
insisted that their rate of »2 on white&#13;
pine must be accepted and they have&#13;
been supported in this by Senator Burrows,&#13;
of Michigan. The Senators say&#13;
that if the House lumber rate Is restored&#13;
it will provoke a long discussion&#13;
in the Senate and that no one can tell&#13;
when the the bill would g e t oat again.&#13;
Stvnw matting, burlaps, cotton t|es&#13;
and, other items iwbteb were puteqjjT pn&#13;
the fr^e list by the Senate, nfeV with&#13;
great hostility from .the House, conferees,&#13;
and so f^r nothing in the way of a&#13;
(Mmntomise by t h e Senators b^a* been&#13;
accepted. The House conferees are&#13;
also insisting upon higher compensatory,&#13;
duties on manufactures of cotton,&#13;
on account of the duty,of 20 per cent&#13;
on raw cotton.. .&#13;
SENATE—»S9tli day—The price to be&#13;
pat» fot*hfco»-9lnt# tpr &gt;hr*e( new battleships&#13;
now K^course Of construction,&#13;
eaused extended and lively debate.&#13;
Finally an amendment to the deficiency&#13;
apprtoprtatldn bill w a V agVeed fo, re&#13;
strictTng^ha. price, of armor plate to&#13;
»300 per ton, * • ft25 less than the&#13;
amendment reported by the'Committee&#13;
end reeommended by the navy de partacceptable&#13;
Another&#13;
amendment inserted in the bill directs&#13;
the secretary of the nary to investigate&#13;
as to the establishment of a government&#13;
armor factory-and to report to&#13;
thj. next, session of congress. The defljlieifcytappropriation&#13;
bill" was then&#13;
passed. Mr. White, ^of California, seaared*&#13;
the'passage of a joint resolution&#13;
directing the secretary of war to proceed&#13;
with the construction of a breakwater&#13;
at San Pedro. CaL (&#13;
SENATE—90th day—The Senate- was&#13;
in a, deadlock for several hours jwith&#13;
ment as the n^intmum. rate&#13;
to the artoor cotftractfcrt!&#13;
as at a siaadjltttl" It wask. sddunce to&#13;
Up- secure sction on the resofMr.&#13;
Harris, of Kansas,^ deprevent&#13;
the disposal w ' the&#13;
government lien on the Union Pacific&#13;
railroad under the terms of n&amp;itUoged&#13;
"^Eae«m«nt.:.T There, were many rollcalls&#13;
on Mr. Harris'motion to consider&#13;
theTreaolAtion, ipiDrums appearing and&#13;
disappearing, and* from 12 to 5 o'clock&#13;
no final rote on.the',motion w a s secured,&#13;
and it finally went.^ojver. . T h e&#13;
committee on foreign retatvoni reported&#13;
a joint resolution empowering" the&#13;
President to mite such measure* as he&#13;
deemed necessary to secure the release&#13;
from Spanish prisons in Cuba of ^Ona&#13;
Melton, Alfr«d*«=-fce*orde and Win.&#13;
Gildea, Americans imprisoned as suspected&#13;
filibusters, . Also to^ restore the&#13;
schooner Competitor,' o n which they&#13;
were arrested, %0 her owner.* &gt;iTo %accomplish&#13;
this the President, is .authorized&#13;
and requested 4 p , ,e«qpJoj such&#13;
meaps or exercise such power as may&#13;
be necessary." HotrsB^Thesesiion w a s&#13;
* * . . , A. ***ef /*&gt;»• oirt*-«aw*tar of interest being&#13;
1. out to take the marTHtifi totnsrlnnrf Jev^MrT tfimocruiser&#13;
Marion nt I Z o i ^ Z l ^ r ^ ^ ^ ^ T r&#13;
^ t o appoint a comumtfe^W ^frve^W invnsfiffate&#13;
the s u e t f t n i s t . bKMIMWsoa&#13;
—•The e o n * reason t h e tariff bill are&#13;
apparently farther apart than they&#13;
were » t the beginning, ¢£2 "thero is no&#13;
immediate prospect of agreement and&#13;
more than one member stated t h a t the&#13;
entanglement was snch that the settlement&#13;
might be ^indefinitely prolonged.&#13;
From eji that can be learned&#13;
13iere~~has been a general, recession&#13;
from the partial agreements&#13;
the less important articles nntil sugar,&#13;
fraaL hides, e t a , can be d e i n i t e i y&#13;
feeftV »og**4e*tflltfce p r o p e l eonienteen..&#13;
I t Ss4MW*ooOddedby Senator&#13;
IuMte»Ujr &gt;*Mwt « • th» « n i t * « •&#13;
""PT&#13;
&gt;n&#13;
i t *&#13;
l p « i r t &gt;VlntN&gt; ttudvrs**—hf&#13;
Mr, Alfred Speer. v&#13;
Dear sir-ipeSJnn ate to.aav that I Jtavt ,&#13;
•»&lt;.', t., » *n &gt;'• * !&#13;
n &lt; i i &gt; n i i » i i , . ' m "&#13;
Um«*Sne&lt;&#13;
me^wlae.&#13;
« • • • * .&#13;
Zt would par someone to nuke* specialty&#13;
of raisiaic euA Kdwcatlnx family, fiorses--&#13;
horsee that are brainy, level-headed and&#13;
handsome,&#13;
If ahorse Is out of condition there la a&#13;
cause; find it. Has he been fed irregularly&#13;
or improperly, or are sis teeth sharp or&#13;
uneven* • •,.-&gt;, INTERNATIONAL PRESS ASSOCIATION.&#13;
Moved&#13;
• I , -&#13;
Detroit Doctor OB Spcers&#13;
lirandy,&#13;
DETROIT, Mich'., Nov. 17, ISM.&#13;
The Speer N. J, Wine Co., ^&#13;
Passaic. N,.J . . . ,&#13;
Gentlemen—Having tried your Port Grape&#13;
Wine and Climax Brandy I vtould say, •your&#13;
product ii O, K. You can, s^tmedowq as in&#13;
loriingit., Wishing you success, I remain,&#13;
• Yours Tr*ly. • '&#13;
E, B. $MimJfc.Dv&#13;
O. ur^ passsions aarree.. like convulsion&#13;
Which, tboug* they make us sttoni&#13;
" « «&#13;
*ime, leave us the. weaker •vena&#13;
iwipated men do not even have t:&#13;
epect&lt;oY their associates and lmftater&#13;
To Osfcsrado Spring-* an* rfesblo.&#13;
• Batltagtoa Haute via, Denver.&#13;
• through Bleejptag car to Colorado Springs&#13;
ngton Route daily&#13;
10:£&gt; p. «a Offloe^ll Clark St. SndP.u ,_. ,&#13;
dall&#13;
via. Denver 1« attached to Bur.&#13;
" train leaving Chicago&#13;
The real purpose of arbitration is to show&#13;
that the other fellow is wrong.&#13;
It it A » to receive orders that you need&#13;
not obey -unless you choose.&#13;
Work would soon become .popular if it&#13;
were i«rbidden by law.&#13;
OofllTohieeo Spit and Smoke Your Life Away.&#13;
To quit tobacco easily and torever, be magnetic/&#13;
full of life.nerve and vigor.take No*To-&#13;
Bac, the wonder worker, 4hat makes weak&#13;
men strong. AH druggists. 50c or II. Cure&#13;
guaranteed. Booklet and sample free. Ad.&#13;
Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York.&#13;
«.dPde8o spelae t ator ea maputs etmo eimnta gine that expense&#13;
Men who expect favors should first throw&#13;
around a few for seed,&#13;
Wo-To-Urnc ior Fifty Cents,,.,&#13;
Guaranteed tobacco habit cure,makes weak&#13;
men strong, blood pure. 60e.li. All druggists.&#13;
OriginallyJi chancellor was a doorkeeper.&#13;
%ee*8peed travels further than much brag.&#13;
Parlor was originally tWe talking place.&#13;
Gauze woe first manufactured at Gaza.&#13;
Baron once meant only a Btrong man.&#13;
Nervous Whelk Tfrwo\&#13;
Thousands srein&#13;
this whditfon.&#13;
They a w despondent and gloomy, cannot&#13;
sleep; have no appetite, no energy, no&#13;
ambition, Hood'rBarMparUksoOa brings&#13;
help foaunh people. It gives them pure,&#13;
rich blood, cure* nervotisneei, create* an&#13;
appetite, ' tones andr strengthens the&#13;
retomadh-and imparts new lite and inl&#13;
vigor to all the organs of the body.&#13;
|f ^ Sarsa-&#13;
9 parilla&#13;
Hi the One True Blood Purifier. Alt druggists; *L&#13;
~r-fr "i • rrr- H o o d * WUe cure all J J W 11,14, * cents.&#13;
' — fa ,i IT&#13;
.AM: en for—ifi&#13;
ww&#13;
PJU not lajui*th« mo*daueZupllau.&#13;
Cray Mineral Ash tfrt«dulry1 lwttUsmtaBaBtcfd B woohkt.*f** dUir—ect*iornwsn «yim* l*fo*ll«otwwe*dc. mS»ajn.d&#13;
Mitts ml Wsisi snS MHlfiHi fft BtBimof. M&lt;&#13;
flarrlad ID itoek by *i\ \mding w)tol«aala Aruggittt&#13;
" 1 T 5 •,,1'! H¥'i6'' "&#13;
'Weet.ern'Wheel "WorkB&#13;
. M &gt; M A K C « 5 s » 0 &gt; *&#13;
^Vf!^&#13;
Vm YOUItElf I&#13;
iOeowk «Br«taca •, infolUr mmmuotMto—n l, rrltotioM o» okorotiiai&#13;
fsinl—t, «tad not MtrieV&#13;
" gwterpoleeaew.&#13;
CHAPTER V n .&#13;
R. LORRAINE was&#13;
now long -past the&#13;
great jclimaterlc,&#13;
and breaking feat;&#13;
Indeed, so Infirm&#13;
had he become that&#13;
he had more than&#13;
once thought of retiring&#13;
from the&#13;
ministry altogether.&#13;
Though his&#13;
body was frail,&#13;
however, his Intellect, was as bright as&#13;
ever, and when Marjorie entered the&#13;
study he was busily engaged in reading&#13;
one of his favorite- books.&#13;
He looked up with his kindly smile&#13;
as his foster-daughter appeared.&#13;
"Is it you, my bairn?" he said, aa&#13;
he came over and kissed her. "Welcome&#13;
home again! Though you have&#13;
been scarcely a week away, I have&#13;
missed you sorely, and have been&#13;
counting the days till your return."&#13;
For some months past, I should now&#13;
explain, Marjorie had been accustomed&#13;
to stay at a ladles' school in the neighboring&#13;
town from Monday till Friday&#13;
of every week, returning each Friday&#13;
afternoon, ahd remaining till the following&#13;
Monday. ThiB arrangement had&#13;
been found necessary, a s it was impossible&#13;
for the girl to complete her&#13;
simple education at home, and a s the&#13;
distance was too great for tar to g o&#13;
to an&lt;l fro daily without inconvenience.&#13;
"And what news have you got from&#13;
the town?" continued the minister, as&#13;
Marjorie, holding his hand J» hers,&#13;
sank into a chair at his aide. "How is&#13;
M1&amp;3 Carruthers? and how do you get&#13;
along with your studies?"&#13;
"Miss Carruthers «exrds ber compliments,&#13;
and as she is-called away to&#13;
Edinburgh to see h*r # c k sister I am&#13;
to bide at home tor a week. A whole&#13;
week, Mr. Lorraine, and i n May-time!&#13;
Ob, I am so gladT&#13;
"So am I, my baton," said the minister,&#13;
"A week's rest will do me good,&#13;
too, I hope, tor I fcove been far from&#13;
well since you went .away. I had one&#13;
of my old attacks on Tuesday, and&#13;
have been obliged t o &gt;keep In the&#13;
houoe."&#13;
"You will be tetter mow," said Marforte.&#13;
"I will trarae yon!"&#13;
"Ay, ay&gt; and the eight of your face&#13;
raid the sound o f your voice will do&#13;
me more good than the 'doctor. By the&#13;
way, my bairn, I had one here today&#13;
Inquiring after you, and she will be&#13;
here again this evening."&#13;
"I know! Miss Hetherington, of the&#13;
C a s t l e r&#13;
"Yes, Mlsa Hetherington. It i s&#13;
ntrange, my baton, how much interest&#13;
the good lady tatees in you—she who&#13;
cares so little for any other living&#13;
thing; and yet, after all, it Is not&#13;
strange, for mjr Marjorie is a favorite&#13;
with high and low."&#13;
The girrs faoe grew troubled as she&#13;
answered:&#13;
"I hope, Mr. Lorraine, she won't be&#13;
asking me up t o the Castle; I feel so&#13;
lonely there, and she—she frightens&#13;
eel—She has eucn strange&#13;
ways, and the house is .an awful place."&#13;
"Well, well, ycoi must he carerul not&#13;
to offend her* l o r s h e ie a true&#13;
friend."&#13;
"I know she is very 'rich and good,&#13;
tno, bat for all that I cannot bear to be&#13;
alone in her coaapany. 1 wonder why&#13;
she likes to hare me! She aits in her&#13;
arm-chair looking at me for hours together,&#13;
till soatetisnes I feel as if I&#13;
could scream oat aad mm away!"&#13;
She is * strange woman," said the&#13;
minister, thoughtfully; "hut you have&#13;
no reason to fear her. fine takes a&#13;
great interest in yon, 4md i n .all that&#13;
concerns yon."&#13;
"I know that, but-'*&#13;
"Her eoeomtrlcities a*e emly jmt on,&#13;
I think, to conceai a heart ttiatds truly&#13;
kindly. Yoa must try to burner her,&#13;
my bairn. Not that I womld have you&#13;
shape your conduct toward aer toy any&#13;
sordid hope of future gala; no, no,&#13;
that would be unworthy; bat i t Is well,&#13;
after all to have so powerful a friend,&#13;
should anything happen to&#13;
ders. it's so hard to tell whether a&#13;
thing i s masculine or feminine, and 1&#13;
wonder how the French 'folks themselves&#13;
can tell. I'm afraid I'll never&#13;
learn the French rightly."&#13;
"I could never master It myself,&#13;
though, after fell, maybe, I never fairly&#13;
tried; it's a queer kind of tongue, like&#13;
the chirping of birds, I'm thinking.&#13;
What like is your teacher?"&#13;
"Monsieur Caussidlere? A handsome&#13;
gentleman; with black hair aad black&#13;
eyes."&#13;
"A young man* Marjorie?"&#13;
"Not old, but very grave and sad a s&#13;
if he had had much trouble; and I&#13;
think he has, for he is an exile and&#13;
cannot return to his native land."&#13;
"Has he not other scholars?" he&#13;
asked quietly.&#13;
"Only myself out of our school. I&#13;
go to his house for my lesson every&#13;
afternoon. And he is very, very kind!&#13;
He would scarcely take the fees. He&#13;
said "&#13;
But here Marjorie paused and blushed,&#13;
for she suddenly remembered&#13;
Caussidiere'B words and ardent looks&#13;
of admiration.&#13;
~Well, what did he say?"&#13;
"He said he was ashamed to take&#13;
money for teaching, and then—then&#13;
talked about France, and how he longed&#13;
to return, and how sad it was to be an&#13;
exile. That was all!"&#13;
Mr. Lorraine did not question any&#13;
further, but seemed plunged in fhought.&#13;
"By the way, Marjorie," he said, after&#13;
a pause, "you know that your school&#13;
fees are paid by Miss Hetherington?"&#13;
Marjorie nodded.&#13;
"It was her wish that you should be&#13;
taught French. For my own part, I&#13;
never thought much of either the language&#13;
or the people, but that may be&#13;
my prejudice. Miss Hetherington thinks&#13;
that, every young lady should learn&#13;
French. Curious, the Interest she takes&#13;
in you!"&#13;
There was a noise at the front door,&#13;
a sound of feet in the lobby.&#13;
Solomon entered abruptly.&#13;
"She's outside," he said. "Witt I&#13;
bring her in?"&#13;
"Who is outside, Solomon, my man?"&#13;
"Wha but Mistress Hetherington,&#13;
frae the Castle. The carriage is at the&#13;
door, and she's wrangling wi' t h e&#13;
driver."&#13;
Mr. Lorraine rose feebly from his&#13;
chair, while Marjorie nervously put&#13;
down her cup and saucer and prepared&#13;
to receive the visitor.&#13;
"This way, mem!" said Solomon"; and&#13;
immediately there entered the room a&#13;
woman of middle height, with snowwhite&#13;
hair, leaning upon a staff or&#13;
hand-erutch.&#13;
She had black piercing eyes, a complexion&#13;
like alabaster, aad her front&#13;
teeth projected slightly over her under&#13;
Up. Though she had the sir of a a old&#13;
woman and walked with a stoop, ner&#13;
face had scarcely a wrinkle, and her&#13;
voice was deep and powerful.&#13;
MarjoHe sprang up and stood trembling.&#13;
Without a word, Miss Hetherington&#13;
crossed the room and looked&#13;
fixedly in the young girl's face.&#13;
" W e e i r&#13;
"Be food enpngh to leave &amp; • room."&#13;
^P ^SJ^BF * VB^BI^BF OlQjB^VVS)9 ^aBjrt^BJ&lt;B ^^^Sb O V 4rSjSJ S^S^ BJBBBJB^pVV S^ ^B^BB)&#13;
defiance, but i t n m ^ i o ^ Y obeyed, Mkg&#13;
hetherington took a chair nloee to the&#13;
flreplaee, and sat i n it, leaning heavily&#13;
on n e r crutch.&#13;
"Nae fool like a n old f o o i r she B u t -&#13;
tered, looking at Mr. Lorraine, bat referring&#13;
to the refractory sexton,, "Between&#13;
the twa o' ye, you're spoiling&#13;
Marjorie Annan altogether."&#13;
"I hope not," returned the minister&#13;
mildly, resuming hie own s e a t "After&#13;
All, too, Solomon is quite right Johnnie&#13;
and Marjorie are old friends."&#13;
"All the parish ken* that," said the&#13;
lady of the Castle. "Come here, Marjorie,&#13;
and dinna be feared—I'll no eat&#13;
you! Look me in the face! Are yon&#13;
and Johnnie coarting?" v&#13;
Marjorie's face waa scarlet, and ahe&#13;
trembled violently.&#13;
"Oh, Miss Hetherington,4' she cried,&#13;
"what do you mean?"&#13;
And she held out her hand to Mr.&#13;
Lorraine, a s if beseeching him to take&#13;
her part&#13;
"Really, Miss Hetherington," he said,&#13;
"Marjorie is a child, aad I am sure such&#13;
nonsense as you speak of has never&#13;
entered her head."&#13;
"Nonsense, is It?" retorted the lady,&#13;
with the same low, harsh laugh as before.&#13;
"Weel, it's the nonsense to&#13;
which a' folk come early or late, gentle&#13;
and simple, and trust me to ken better&#13;
than either you or that Idiot Solomon&#13;
what young lasses are made o'.&#13;
Do you think Marjorie Annan's made&#13;
of stane or aim, and doesna ken a fair&#13;
favored lad from a rowan tree or a&#13;
milk coo?"&#13;
"I think she Is too young for lovemaking,"&#13;
returned the minister.&#13;
"Then you think wrang; it's never&#13;
o'er early for a lassie to begin. As for&#13;
Johnnie, I'll no say but what he's a&#13;
decent lad and a modest, and he has&#13;
talent as weel, the rogue, heaps o' talent,&#13;
though he's only a weaver's son—&#13;
eh, Marjorie. has he no?"&#13;
And as she looked at Marjorie there&#13;
was no anger in her stern black eyes;&#13;
rather a sort of. grim-humored sympathy.&#13;
.Seeing his foster-child's confusion*&#13;
Mr. Lorraine attempted to give&#13;
the conversation another turn.&#13;
"If young Sutherland has developed&#13;
natural gifts he has you to thank for&#13;
the opportunity. We all know how kind&#13;
you have .been to him."&#13;
"Because I bought two o' hiB pictures,"&#13;
she retorted, with her characteristic&#13;
and disagreeable laugh. "I gave&#13;
fifty pound apiece for them, the more&#13;
fool I. One was a view o' the Castle&#13;
fsae the south, wi' a cuddle eating&#13;
thistles in the. foreground—a cuddle as&#13;
big at a hippopotamus; and the other&#13;
was Marjorie hersel,' wi' her lap full&#13;
o* wild flowers, Bitting by the side o'&#13;
Annan water, and about as like her,&#13;
by that token, a s it was like Solomon&#13;
Mucklebackit"&#13;
"We always considered it an excellent&#13;
likeness," said Mr. Lorraine, goodhumoredly.&#13;
"So it was," cried Marjorie impulsively;&#13;
"everybody said so."&#13;
"And what everybody said must be&#13;
true?" demanded the lady, with a sneer.&#13;
"Weel, likeness or no likeness, the lad&#13;
has talent, as I said; and if he works&#13;
hard, maybe he'll be able some fine day&#13;
to paint a picture. So much for A&gt;hnslie&#13;
Sutherland. Now we'll come to the&#13;
business which brought me doon. I&#13;
want Marjorie to come to me tomorrow&#13;
and spend, the day."&#13;
The very proposal which Marjorie&#13;
dreaded! She opened her lips to give&#13;
a trembling refusal, to frame some&#13;
awkward oxouae, but before slie rnnlrt&#13;
'Oh, don't apeak like that!" « x -&#13;
_ claimed Marjorie, her eyea aUteg with&#13;
tears. "I cannot bear i t "&#13;
golomon hero interrupted the conversation&#13;
by bringing in the tea, '&#13;
Marjorie took oft her hat and shawl,&#13;
and, aitting at the table, began to pour&#13;
out the tea, while Mr. Lorraine, forgetting&#13;
his recent train of thought, questioned&#13;
her anew about her doings in&#13;
the town. Thus far they chatted cheerfully&#13;
together and shared the simple&#13;
mealt ~ i:_ _&#13;
"And how about the French, Marforier**&#13;
asked Mr. Lorraine presently.&#13;
"Are you coming o n ? '&#13;
"Very slowly;H Was her reply. - I&#13;
t find ft hard to pronounce, and the verbs&#13;
a r e - * drtndfnl troubie—and the gen-&#13;
"Weel, Marjorie Annan?" ahe said in&#13;
a strong Scotch accent&#13;
"How—how do you do. Miss Hetherington?"&#13;
"As you see—well enough not to&#13;
complain. Stand still and let me look&#13;
at ye! There, you may kiss me if you&#13;
like!"&#13;
Marjorie did hot like, bat she bent&#13;
forward and touched the lady's frosty&#13;
cheek. ^&#13;
"Did ye come doon in the wagonette?&#13;
Nae need to answer, for I ken,&#13;
and I ken who came along w f y e !&#13;
What's this between yoa and Johnnie&#13;
Sutherland ?»'&#13;
Had a bomb exploded under her Teet,&#13;
Marjorie could not have shown snore&#13;
consternation. She stammered, and&#13;
blushed, and cast an appealing glance&#13;
at Mr. Lorraine.&#13;
"How's this, Marjorie?" he said,&#13;
gently. "You did not tell me that&#13;
Johnnie had come back."&#13;
"I'll swear ahe didna," exclaimed&#13;
Miss Hetherington, with a low, harsh&#13;
laugh. "See hoo she blushes! The lad&#13;
A GREAT EXPENSE To (ferry • * an almost Helplflsntlfod,&#13;
- A t Last the f i g h t I i O v e t '&#13;
CfrwatteBattU CnekJfeo*,) .&#13;
Our representative called at 98 Battsw&#13;
Creek Avenue, the residence of 8 L Roebins,&#13;
and in an interview with him brought&#13;
out the following facta. Mr Bobbins tells,&#13;
of his wife's experience in a manner that&#13;
carries conviction with his words. B r&#13;
gars. " I am sorry my w i f e « n o t e * hneap&#13;
this P. M., but no one knows better thaja&#13;
I how she has Buffered during past yearn.&#13;
For twenty years she has been amictedf&#13;
with the various forms of kidney com- Slaint and an enlargement of the live*,&#13;
he WMoftentonflnedto her bed formoie/&#13;
than two weeks at a time sufleriag untold&#13;
agony. She'has doctored ~—*-«*»« *«•*&#13;
I |hnye paid out&#13;
alone as much as (&#13;
lief was only Buch that she would be abetto&#13;
he around for a spelL Some timeagb&gt;&#13;
she felt the symptoms of another attack&#13;
coming on, such as a pain in through taw&#13;
kidney* and back. I hardly know what&#13;
induced me to get a box of Dean's Kidney&#13;
Pills, instead of sending for the family&#13;
physician; however, I got some and she&#13;
commenced their use. It was a surprise&#13;
to us both to see their action; the attack&#13;
was warded off, and she continued taking&#13;
them with marked improvement each day&#13;
of their use. She is better now than she&#13;
has been in years, the pain in the back and&#13;
others in the kidpevs have entirely gone.&#13;
Hardly a day goes by that we do not mention&#13;
the great good Dean's Kidney M s&#13;
have done her. I was always opposed t o&#13;
patent medicines, but confess that&#13;
wife's experience with Dean's Kit&#13;
Pills has done much to change my oj&#13;
ions. If it were not for those pills shewould&#13;
not have been able to be oat Una&#13;
afternoon. ' ..&#13;
Dean's Kidney Pills for sale by all dealers—&#13;
price, SO cents. Mailed by Foster*&#13;
Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y., sole agents&#13;
for thtU. S. Remember the name, Doatfh,&#13;
and take no other.&#13;
V , , '''. '•&#13;
, • . ! • ' •&#13;
" &gt; " • • • .&#13;
' ' . " . .*• •"•'''•I&#13;
and ahe had a tryate i n Dumfries, and iioccame&#13;
down together."&#13;
H e n Solomon, who stood at the room&#13;
door looking on, thought i t his duty&#13;
to interfere.&#13;
"And what then? What if Johnnie&#13;
Sutherland did convey pur Marjorie&#13;
hame? There's nae halrm in that, I'm&#13;
thinking."&#13;
"Hold yon tongue, Solomon Moeklehaeftttt,"&#13;
said Miss Hetherington, with&#13;
n_jsharp rap of her cratch anon t h e&#13;
ground. "Mind yoar own business!"&#13;
"It i s my business," retorted Solomon,&#13;
doggedly. "Marjorie, dinna heed&#13;
herl"&#13;
"Solomon!" cried Mr. Lorraine, with&#13;
a certain authority.&#13;
say a word Mies Hetherington continued&#13;
with decision:&#13;
T U be expecting her early, say at&#13;
ten. She can walk the distance, unless&#13;
she's o'er idle; in that case, 111 send&#13;
the carriage to fetch her."&#13;
"I am very sorry," stammered Marjorie,&#13;
"but tommorrow—"&#13;
She paused, and glanced in supplication&#13;
at her foster-father.&#13;
"The fact is," said Mr. Lorraine, "we&#13;
had saade other arrangements for tomorrow.&#13;
Some other day, maybe."&#13;
Miss Hetherington's eyea flashed, and&#13;
her cratch was sharply struck upon the&#13;
floor.&#13;
"Tomorrow and n o other day will&#13;
suit me. I hae something to say to her&#13;
that will na keen. Do yoa hear that,&#13;
Marjorler&#13;
"Yes," answered Marjorie timidly;&#13;
"but I have only Just come home, and&#13;
[ would rather—*&#13;
"Come or stay," ahe exclaimed.&#13;
"Please yoareel', Marjorie Annan;&#13;
but if you stay at home the morn,&#13;
you'll wait lang for another invita-&#13;
The application of a little common&#13;
sense to a newspaper account of an occurrence&#13;
will frequently help one to an&gt;&#13;
almost certain conviction of its madeup&#13;
character. For example, if weread&#13;
that the King of Sweden on some*&#13;
occasion reproached his son for someact,&#13;
we may set it down at once|aaa&#13;
pure invention. Why? Because t h e&#13;
rebuke would not be administered publicly,&#13;
and neither the king nor the&#13;
prince would tell any one about i t i f&#13;
It had been given.&#13;
The fact that the guesses are neJC&#13;
contradicted goes for nothing, both&#13;
because some assertions could not be&#13;
contradicted without revealing tttat&#13;
which it is purposed to conceal, and&#13;
because the President would find tbnvt&#13;
for little else were he to undertake tue&gt;&#13;
contradiction of false rumors.&#13;
Lucky is the man who stands so well&#13;
among his fellows that they will 'accept&#13;
his conclusions without inquiring&#13;
into his reasons.&#13;
"I was troubled with that dreadful&#13;
disease called dropsy; swollen from&#13;
head to foot. Burdock Blood Bitters&#13;
has completely cured me. It is a most&#13;
wonderful medicine." Joseph HerioJp,&#13;
Lin wood, Ont&#13;
Some young men would g e t along&#13;
better if they had less point to their&#13;
shoes and more to their conversation^.&#13;
Anyone who suffers from that terrf—&#13;
ble plague, Itching Piles, will, appreciate&#13;
the immediate relief and perma* •&#13;
nent cure that comes through the use.*&#13;
of Doan's Ointment It never fails.&#13;
The best conversationalist is the one -&#13;
who can listen the longest without be- -&#13;
tray in g his annoyance.&#13;
—Hundreds of precious littfo ones owetheir&#13;
lives t o Dr. Thomas' Eclectric-&#13;
Oil, the sovereign cure for croup and*&#13;
all other throat or lung diseases.&#13;
One dose of Dr. Fowler's E x t of Wild&#13;
Strawberry will check any case of diarrhoea&#13;
if taken at the s t a r t&#13;
Singular that a man with no money&#13;
to trouble h im should have money&#13;
troubles.&#13;
Hall** Catarrh Care&#13;
Is a constitutional cure. Price, 75ft.&#13;
Eager not to give offense, Mr. Lor&#13;
raine now interposed.&#13;
"If you wish i t Marjorie shall come '&#13;
"Very well," said Mies Hetherington&#13;
sharply; then, turning to the girl, s*«e&#13;
added: "Will y o a walk, or shall x&#13;
send the carriage?**&#13;
"I—I—will walk," returned Marjorie&#13;
timidly, with the air of one doomed to&#13;
condign panistunent&#13;
"Then I'll expect yoa at ten, and nae&#13;
The trouble with most seta ernes is that&#13;
they are based upon theories Chat a r * aofc&#13;
practical.&#13;
idyOerod. Veflteeti&#13;
r% «ao of Dr. Kliao'e .&#13;
. ¾ F K B U B aa.00 trialbetsW BMI'&#13;
Enthusiasm is a thine: that is of no partSe*&#13;
ular use unless it is of the spontaneooskiBd&#13;
•daeas* Tour Bowels Wtttav&#13;
T a-l Jly* «tn "e *on*e w wnhoo h taasl kths em loesat satbioauhti ahlimsgseealfe. rlater.&#13;
Now, gte me your arm t o the&#13;
carriage."&#13;
Marjorie obeyed, and with a abort&#13;
"God-day" to the minister, Mies Hatherisgton&#13;
left the room.&#13;
afto no oosTLMuan*)&#13;
If a man of wealth wants a horse he will&#13;
pay a long price to secure what suit* him.&#13;
&gt;wttn«Hr&lt;&#13;
C«FW "&#13;
C.O.C*U*OOM*.&#13;
Piso's Cure for Consumption has been .a&gt;&#13;
family medicine with us since 1S85.-J. JL&#13;
Meissen, flw» eM ATt.7Chicago, Ilia —^~&#13;
Imn T soo mgiev em heeaasrutrfee,l tm parkaiinseg t tohe nmoh oiuearc ©dWesSkLs~i s*a&#13;
OsoMUir BAY Lnz—AsMries's Sac* ssstsjr 1 wash&#13;
-»•/•4&#13;
"'VtJ&#13;
M&#13;
. &lt; ; •&#13;
(- .&#13;
. &lt; •&#13;
: &amp; m&#13;
' « £ . &lt; J&#13;
rM&#13;
io~ -1 • • $&#13;
"A.;^.&#13;
'••"?$&#13;
.;?*!&#13;
-• * &lt;&#13;
.}'&#13;
1 •:*•. : v - \ ;&#13;
&amp;.&#13;
"•'Vvf*.' r'J"&lt;; &gt;:&#13;
, y vj, v i-,&#13;
&gt;lH.--- l v,\, * .&#13;
4 « ; • &gt; ' " • ; • •&gt;' •*''••- • •. • • ' ' » - . " v ' t l h ' -&#13;
I ' .-'' &gt; -• - , , • • ' - '. . ,'" V . ' ' ' ' v * ; ^ ' ' &gt; ' V * ! ' ' V T :.'"v«" ^ \ ' . : * • ""&#13;
.¾&#13;
. *"' V&#13;
' . . . . - . ' ' ' , . ' ;; '•• ' * ) . . . ; • • . • ! ' " • . * '&#13;
• y •-.&lt;„." • * . • ? - : . ' . • ' • . . • ' .'. '.,. . • .'. A" .»,-v:r&#13;
% s ••• \ - ,, •* ' ,-'J • '•* K. „ • - + • •••'fv. .- ' . -&#13;
- f *:•... M &lt; :-: ,;,:.; *\.:.,V ^-,-, v. . r ....&#13;
.'*:&#13;
' • • * • .&#13;
dMM#h&#13;
« «&#13;
&amp; - •&#13;
?&gt;&lt;;-'&#13;
l(*r"&#13;
!•*?'&#13;
jfbuhuq jQj$ft*kH*&#13;
F. L. ANDREWS, EDITOR.&#13;
THURSDAY, JULY 22, 1897.&#13;
Interesting Items.&#13;
It snowed in Denver, Col.,&#13;
July 4 It dideu't here. It&#13;
diden't do a thing.&#13;
Several oases of sun stroke were&#13;
reported from different parts of&#13;
Livingston county during thepast&#13;
two weeks, only one of which terminated&#13;
fatally.&#13;
The Stockbridge Brief was one&#13;
year old last Thursday. It is a&#13;
neat little paper and Bro. Morgan&#13;
has our wish for another year of&#13;
success as well as the past&#13;
A good many Republican editors&#13;
have signified their willingness&#13;
to slip from printing offices&#13;
into postoffices. Such devotion to&#13;
public interests is commendable.&#13;
Mr City Ways—Have you heard&#13;
of those horseless carriages down&#13;
in New York, farmer?&#13;
Farmer—No; but I've heard of&#13;
the cowless milk down thar.—Ex.&#13;
The inmates of the prison celebrated&#13;
the Fourth Monday, July&#13;
5. They had a program of sports&#13;
and a big dinner. Co. H; gave an&#13;
exhibition drill which was greatly&#13;
enjoyed by the men, who had the&#13;
freedom of the yard and drank&#13;
barrels of lemonade.—Star.&#13;
herswellest friends who nodded&#13;
pleasantly at her.&#13;
r- "Fare, please" sf»4 the conductor.&#13;
She opened her pocket book&#13;
and took out what she supposed&#13;
was a five cent piece. The conductor&#13;
looked at it sharply then&#13;
at Mrs. McSwatters,&#13;
"No, madam" he said with a&#13;
polite smile.&#13;
"It is not good on this line."&#13;
"Why, what do you mean?" she&#13;
asked haughtily.&#13;
"I mean that I cannot take this&#13;
care fare" replied the conductor&#13;
firmly.&#13;
"Is it not a five cent piece?"&#13;
"No, madam."&#13;
She hunted for her glasses&#13;
could not find them.&#13;
"Will you kindly tell me&#13;
it says?"&#13;
"Reilly's— Good for #ne beer&#13;
—New York World.&#13;
Eugene Taylor, linotype operator&#13;
on the Denver Times, in 8&#13;
hours made a record of 101,800&#13;
ems. The previous record, 85,000&#13;
was held by Baker of Seattle.&#13;
Taylor's record was made during&#13;
the ordinary course of a day's&#13;
newspaper work and the average&#13;
copy that is furnished during a&#13;
day.—Press and Printer.&#13;
It is now proposed to authorize&#13;
postmasters and deputies to open&#13;
letters on which no postage stamps&#13;
have been placed, to learn the&#13;
name of the writer and avoid sending&#13;
them to the dead letter office.&#13;
If all who write would have their&#13;
names and address printed on the&#13;
envelopes they use, as the postoffice&#13;
department requires, no&#13;
such/trouble will occur.—Democrat.&#13;
In view of the numerous&#13;
ings to farmers this year&#13;
warnfrom&#13;
wheat buyers, to cut the rye out&#13;
of their wheat, with the alternative&#13;
of accepting a much lower&#13;
price for the latter crop, the following&#13;
related by an Ingham&#13;
county farmer will be of interest:&#13;
"In the good old days of dollar&#13;
wheat I solved this rye question.&#13;
I heeded the injunction of holy&#13;
writ and let wheat and tares grow&#13;
together until the harvest time,&#13;
and followed it no further but&#13;
bound the grain altogether in&#13;
bundles. Then at threshing time&#13;
I had two extra men with broad&#13;
ax and block, who cut off the&#13;
heads of the rye, which always&#13;
extend a foot or two above the&#13;
wheat, before threshing. I thus&#13;
saved rye enough to pay for the&#13;
extra men, and had an article of&#13;
wheat so nearly free of rye as to&#13;
sell for the highest price."—Lansing&#13;
Review.&#13;
It W*Mf a Mckel.&#13;
Mr. McSwatters was tired of&#13;
having his wife go through his&#13;
pocket* while he slept, and so it&#13;
was that the following came aboat&#13;
one afternoon:&#13;
Mrs. McSwatters was nearsighted&#13;
otherwise the trick would&#13;
have fallen through with.&#13;
She had been shopping that&#13;
afternoon and the ear sbe got into&#13;
Dodger TS Newspaper.&#13;
Few business men realize how&#13;
many people read the newspapers&#13;
in which their advertisement appears.&#13;
They sometimes print&#13;
1,000 dodge re and although it&#13;
costs them more money than the&#13;
same amount of space in a newspaper,&#13;
they imagine it to be cheaper.&#13;
I n the first place they do not&#13;
consider how many oopies of a&#13;
paper there are that go into the&#13;
homes of the people they desire to&#13;
reach. The dodgers are printed&#13;
and placed in the hands of small&#13;
boys whose only desire is to get&#13;
rid of them and draw their pay&#13;
for distributing them. They will&#13;
pass down the street and poke one&#13;
Continued on page 5.&#13;
Take a Lake Tear to Island tf&#13;
Coal Brasses.&#13;
G o t o Mackinac Island, Mich.,&#13;
via the Coast Line. The D . A C.&#13;
new steel passenger steamers&#13;
leave Toledo. Mondays and Saturdays&#13;
10:80 a. m. and Tuesdays&#13;
and Thursdays 4:30 p. m. From&#13;
Detroit, Mondays and Saturdays&#13;
11:00 p. m. Wednesdays and Fridays&#13;
9:80 a. m. Send 2 cents for&#13;
illustrated pamphlet. Address&#13;
A. A.Sehantz, GPA,&#13;
Detroit, Mich.&#13;
wmam&#13;
Council Proceedings.&#13;
Special. July 9, '97.&#13;
Council convened and called to&#13;
order by pres. Sigler.&#13;
Present, Trustees - Murphy,&#13;
Wright, Brown and Grimes.&#13;
Absent, Reason and Jackson.&#13;
Minutes of previous meeting\ has done so&#13;
read and approved.&#13;
Bills presented on Contingent&#13;
fund:&#13;
Francis Carr June lighting lamps ¢7.65&#13;
H F Sigler 14 maple treea 3.50&#13;
F L Andrews printing 4.50&#13;
P Monroe June Mar shall services 0.25&#13;
J Jeffries 1 da special policeman 2.00&#13;
O W Murta 1 da special policeman 2.00&#13;
Total, S2B.W&#13;
Moved and carried that bills&#13;
as presented be paid.&#13;
Street Comr's report presented:&#13;
A Monks self and team labor $28 38&#13;
fl Clark self and team labor 2,50&#13;
G A Siller labor 1.25&#13;
E R Brown Jabor 1.25&#13;
G W Teeple labor 1.25&#13;
C L Sigler labor 1.25&#13;
Homer Heason labor 125&#13;
Sherd Swartbout labor 1.25&#13;
J Monks self and team labor 5.38&#13;
C Bowman labor 1.25&#13;
W A Carr labor 1.25&#13;
Gene Mann 2.50&#13;
F D Johnson self and team labor 4.50&#13;
H Buen labor 1.00&#13;
H F Sigler labor 1.25&#13;
J Mortenson labor 2.50&#13;
E Campbell labor 1 25&#13;
W J Black la*)or 1.25&#13;
T Tamer labor 4.99&#13;
Ed Farnan labor 1.25&#13;
J Fitz6tmmons labor 1.25&#13;
L Colby self and team labor 2.50&#13;
J Smith labor 1.25&#13;
T H E G R A N D E S T REDEIWY,&#13;
Mr. R. B. Greeve, merchant of Chilbowie,&#13;
Va., certifies that he hud consumption,&#13;
was given up to die, sought&#13;
all medical treatment that money&#13;
could procure, tried all cough remedies&#13;
he could hear of, but got no relief;&#13;
spent many nights sitting up in a&#13;
chair; was induced to try Dr. King's&#13;
New Discovery, arKi was cured by the&#13;
use of two bottles. For past three&#13;
years has been attending to business&#13;
and says Dr. King's New Discovery is&#13;
the grandest remedy ever made, as it&#13;
much for him and also&#13;
for others in bis community. Dr.&#13;
King's New Discovery is guaranteed&#13;
for Coughs, Colds and Consumption.&#13;
It don't fail. Trial bottles free at&#13;
F. A. Sitfiers drug store.&#13;
mm&#13;
G E N T L E M E N 5 A N D&#13;
CHILDREN* 5 H 0 E 5&#13;
HAHC$S% PATENT LEATHER.&#13;
PRICE 2 5 ^&#13;
OA aRU-Sft/fiG,&#13;
ROESSNERHF&amp;.CO.&#13;
WINOHA.MINN.U5A&#13;
IT SHINE*}&#13;
FOR A L L .&#13;
TBI IEWXST&#13;
• 5 0 BEST&#13;
OIL****&#13;
SHOE&#13;
POLISH&#13;
la Colon*&#13;
BLACK. TAN,&#13;
GBEEN and&#13;
OX BLOOD.&#13;
Thi« U truly a&#13;
"ONCK A WEEK."&#13;
tkos polish, u it&#13;
You may hunt the world over and&#13;
you will not tind another medicine&#13;
aqual to Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera&#13;
and Diarhoea Remedy for bowell complaints.&#13;
It is pleasant safe and reliable.&#13;
For sale by b\ A. Sigler.&#13;
will bold a thine for a week, api rain or toow&#13;
will not spoil U. A Liquid P^lltk. put up in&#13;
large bottles,encased in neat caftooa, and makes&#13;
a good ahow in the package and on the shoe.&#13;
Tbe nicest thing on the market for LAMBS'&#13;
AND OENTLBMEN'd P1NB 5H0B5 AND&#13;
PATENT LEATHER. Easily applied. Requires&#13;
no rubbing. Will not freeze.&#13;
Ask yoor local dealer for H.&#13;
Roessner's "Oia a Week" Sitae 9kot Polish&#13;
" * ~ BQESSIEI NFL 00., WiMtt, MilL&#13;
The Coast Line to MACKINAC&#13;
*—TAKB THB—*&#13;
Subscribe for the DISPITCH.&#13;
S Grimes labor&#13;
I J Cook labor&#13;
Geo Reason Jr labor&#13;
M Wilson labor&#13;
H Cobb labor&#13;
C Moran labor&#13;
.31&#13;
125&#13;
1.25&#13;
1.25&#13;
1.25&#13;
.62&#13;
Total. $77.63&#13;
Moved and carried that bills be&#13;
excepted and paid.&#13;
Bids for marskall service received:&#13;
S Brogan 1 year $35.00&#13;
P Monroe per mo 4 0 0&#13;
Moved and carried that the bid&#13;
of P. Monroe be accepted and&#13;
that he be appointed as marshall&#13;
for balance of the year.&#13;
Receipts of Clerk:&#13;
Hay sale $3.00&#13;
Licenses 1.00&#13;
14.00&#13;
Council adjourned.&#13;
R. H. TEEPLE, Clerk.&#13;
Treas. reported:&#13;
Taxes collected* 199.77&#13;
Previously on baud 97.95&#13;
Total, 1197.72&#13;
Be careful and not let your&#13;
Canada thistles go to seed and on&#13;
the 27 day of August be sure and&#13;
cut them below tbe surface of the&#13;
earth and they will trouble yon&#13;
no more. It 1« the old of the moon&#13;
*p g o home contained several of J in ± t t g o « 4 then.&#13;
Ton Have Been Waiting for this special&#13;
Ten Day Excursion to Frankfort, Trav*&#13;
erse City and fienzonia.&#13;
Thursday, July 22, the Ann&#13;
Arbor Railroad will sell excursion&#13;
tickets to the above resorts&#13;
at $4 for the round trip. Train&#13;
leaves Hamburg Jet. at 9:18 arrives&#13;
Benzonia 5:42. Frankfort&#13;
6:00, Traverse City 6:35. Tickets&#13;
will be good for return on any&#13;
regular train until July 31 inclusive.&#13;
Children under twelve years&#13;
of age half the above rate.&#13;
Seasons Why Chamberlain's Colic&#13;
Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy&#13;
Is the best*&#13;
1. Because it affords almost instant&#13;
relief in tbe case of pain in tbe stomach,&#13;
colie and cholera morbus.&#13;
2. Because it is tbe only remedy&#13;
that never fails in the most severe&#13;
cases of dysentery and diarrhoea.&#13;
3. Because it is tbe only remedy&#13;
that will cure chronic diarrhoea.&#13;
4. Because it is the only remedy&#13;
that will prevent bilious colic.&#13;
5. Because it is tbe only remedy&#13;
that will cure epidemical dvsentery.&#13;
6. Because it is only remedy that&#13;
can be depended upon in cases of&#13;
eholera infantum.&#13;
7. Because it is the most prompt&#13;
and most reliable medicine in use for&#13;
bowel compiaints.&#13;
8. Because it produces no bad results.&#13;
9. Because it pleasant and safe to&#13;
take.&#13;
10. Because it has saved tbe liveB of&#13;
more people than any other medicine&#13;
in the world.&#13;
Tbe 25 and 50c sizes for sale by F.&#13;
A. Sigler.&#13;
TO MACKINAC&#13;
D E T R O I T&#13;
PETOSKEY&#13;
CHICAGO&#13;
New Steel Passenger Steamers&#13;
The Oreateit Perfection yet attained In&#13;
Boat Construction—Luxurious Equipment,&#13;
Artistic Furnishing, Decoration and lltt.clent&#13;
S«n*ice, Insuring the highest degree of&#13;
COMFORT, SPEED AND SAFETY&#13;
Foufl TMP» PER WCHK BETWEEN&#13;
Toledo, Detroit and Mackinac&#13;
PETOSKEY. "THE SOO," MAAQUETTE&#13;
AND DULUTH.&#13;
LOW RATPSt'iPictur.sguc Mackinac and&#13;
Return, I eluding; 'Ua's anJ ttert'.is. Frutn&#13;
Cleveland. fi&gt;; from TctcJo, $15; from&#13;
Detroit, $13 50.&#13;
DAY AND NIGHT SERVICE.&#13;
Between Detroit and Cleveland&#13;
Connecting st Oevelaud with Earl'.est&#13;
Trains (or all points Eist. South and ^outh&#13;
w«**t PTVI at Detroit for all points North auJ&#13;
Northwest. t&#13;
SundsyTrips June, July, August and Sept. Only&#13;
EV?RY DAY BETWEEN&#13;
Cleveland,Put-in-Bay/ToIedo&#13;
Bend for Illustrated rarnphlrt. AdJivss&#13;
A. A . S C H A N T 2 , a . * . ' » . , OSTBOIT. MICH Tft8EBirBll&amp;C!sve!aaf;fagqHav.^.&#13;
"Last summer .one of oar grandchildren&#13;
was sick with a severe bowel&#13;
trouble" sa£3 Mrs. E. G. Gregory of&#13;
Fredrickstown, Mo. "Our doctor's&#13;
remedies had failed, then we tried&#13;
Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarihoea&#13;
Remedy, which gave very&#13;
speedy relief." For sale by F. A.&#13;
fierier.&#13;
Railroad Guicie.&#13;
tfrand Trurt Railway System.&#13;
Arrival and Departure of Train* at Ptaeknav,&#13;
la Effect Juoe 14,1OT. T '&#13;
1&#13;
A * , trfri.a.»oapmm Jackaon and Interm'dto 8ta.&#13;
&lt;&gt; M it&#13;
WMTBOCND.&#13;
LT. tS.Uam&#13;
•Aaxaotnro&#13;
Pontlao Detroit—Qd. Banlda&#13;
and IntermodlMoBU faJOpn t * . « « i »&#13;
Pontlao Lenox Detroit and&#13;
intermedlata 8ta. fT.Wnn fUBpm&#13;
Mlob. Air Liae Dlr. ferttaa&#13;
leave Pontiae at {«.00 4 m t8JQ,pm&#13;
for Romeo Lenox and int. at*. I&#13;
D.AM. DIVISION LHAVEPONTIAC&#13;
wseraoTOD&#13;
Saginaw Gd Banlda and Gd Baron&#13;
Gd Rapids Gd Ha&#13;
Safhtaw Ud KapU&#13;
(Jnioago and Intermediate it a.&#13;
Ucago&#13;
wank*&#13;
Gd Rapids Muskflgon&#13;
KA8TB0UNO&#13;
Detroit East and Canada&#13;
Detroit East and Canada ¾troit and South&#13;
troit East and^Canada&#13;
Detroit Suburban&#13;
Leave Detroit via Windsor&#13;
KA8TB0UXD&#13;
Buffalo—New York &amp; Boston&#13;
Toronto Moutreal New York&#13;
London Express&#13;
Buffalo New York A East&#13;
Lv.&#13;
t8.0Sam&#13;
tl»J8&gt;m&#13;
ti.07 P a&#13;
*tSJ)8pm&#13;
•12.151 m&#13;
•6.07 a m&#13;
|ioj» a m&#13;
1T7&amp;.05J *ca&gt;. ma&#13;
•7.43 a m&#13;
•12. noon&#13;
t e . « p m&#13;
n i . » P m&#13;
7.45 a m tarln bsB sleeping cars Detroit to New&#13;
York and Boston. 18.00 noon train aw parlor&#13;
car to Hamilton—Sleeping car to Buffalo and New&#13;
York U.2S train lias sleeping ear to New York&#13;
tDally except tiuadar. •Dally,&#13;
W. J. BLACK, Agent, Pincknejr Mlcb.&#13;
W. E. DAVIS E. H. Hr/OHKs&#13;
G. P. A T. Agen*. A. G. PJ k T Agt.&#13;
Montreal, Que. Chicago. 111.&#13;
BEN PLITCBIB, Trav. Pass. Agt., Detroit Mich.&#13;
1OLEDO p .&#13;
NARBOjl&#13;
AND f p&#13;
.r;THH MIvIrClCHHI-GIGJA iT&#13;
RAILWAY. l~S &gt;&#13;
Popular too** for Ann Arbor, To*&#13;
ledo and point* -Erot, South and for&#13;
Howeil, Owosco, \Alraa. Mt. Pleasant,&#13;
Cadillac, Manistee", Traverse City and&#13;
points in Northwestern Michigan.&#13;
W. H. BENNETT,&#13;
G. P. A., Toledo,&#13;
•O YIAUt*&#13;
IxptmmoC&#13;
TRAD! MARKS*&#13;
O t t l O N t ,&#13;
CQRYWIOHTa A c&#13;
Wanted-A n Idea &amp; ~ | |&#13;
aanedn . liWst aoaf htlwacot ohnu,n Dd.r Ced. ifnovre tnhteioirn as l.w80a0n tperdje. e&#13;
In all its branotaee, a specialty. We hare all kinds&#13;
and the latest styles of Type, etc., which enables&#13;
us to execute all kinds of work, such as Booka,&#13;
Psmplete, Posters, Programmes, Bill Heads, Note&#13;
rieads, Statements, v/ards, 'Anetion BUnveto.,in&#13;
superior styles, upon tbe shortest notice. Prices as&#13;
ic*v as good work can be aone.&#13;
*LL BILLS PATABLE FIRST OF IVJCBT MOUTH.&#13;
CURBS IN THB RIOHT WAY, BY REOJLATINa THE UVER4&#13;
AND KIDNEYS, AND PURIPYINO THB BL0OO.&#13;
It It m pocMve care lar Bhrmmaihrn, Neoralgk, Dyspeptia, Sick end'&#13;
'a dbeatad liver or the kidoeyt, or impure blood.&#13;
; YOUR MONEY JACK ^ 8 ^ 3 ¾ ^ . ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ]&#13;
prtea, aModwceouiereBadayrtM&#13;
A- R LEWIS I 3 » X » | OCX, - Bottvirf Ha&#13;
j a u / v a i v ervABMAaajas sa&gt; eMs&gt;Vt/vu t j i m m.ww.'S a a v ^ a v u asuasau qpnrolehkaloyl ya spoaettetanltna,b flree. e,C wohmemthuenr iacant iiounTse nsttlrOiQctl fya&gt; Ieno oAfldmenertUicLa. OWldee sht aasrree naoy W toar ssheicnugrtionng pomatceen.t * apPeaeltaeln ntso ttleaek einn thther ough Muna A Co. recelr* 80IENTSFIG AMERICAN, baennraatettfe oniltyu eU Jlnosatrrnaatle,d w, eleakrlgye, stet rmcisricaoOlaOt laoare aarti fUOalx months. Specimen oopies and HJUCB&#13;
BOOK ev PATCVTS sent free. Address&#13;
MUNN A CC..&#13;
361 Breadway, Hew Yark*&#13;
A Sufferer Cared&#13;
"Every season, from the time 1&#13;
was two years old, I suffered dread*&#13;
fully faom erysipelas, which kept&#13;
growing worse until my hands were&#13;
almost useless. The bones softened&#13;
so that they would bend, and several&#13;
of my lingers are now crooked from&#13;
this rause. On my&#13;
hand I carry large&#13;
scars, which, but for&#13;
AYER'S&#13;
|LKJ sores; provide^ I&#13;
was alive and ableto&#13;
carry anything.&#13;
Eight bottles of&#13;
Ayer's Sarsaparilla cured me, so&#13;
that I have had no return of the&#13;
disease for more lhan twenty years.&#13;
The first bottle seemed to reach thespot&#13;
and a persistent use of it has&#13;
perfected the cure."—O. C^DAViay&#13;
. Wautoma, ^1457&#13;
w*m ! 8arsapar4sHa&#13;
' r.&#13;
y&#13;
ATEB'8 PZXXS Promete «oe4&#13;
/&#13;
%&#13;
/&#13;
m% ^:^,-:.., ~ ^ J £ ^ * * * J ^ ^ M ^ ^ , . * * + * ^ &gt; . A - . ^ s ^ . ; : ^ - ^ ; ,.,: . •iiiiiif i tutg\M*m*ambteiJ2*mmMmmM*&#13;
•p-fi.' . • '*r'' • ' : , - &gt; • ; . , „ - , , ' . • • • &lt; .• •••• &gt;: •*.'.&lt; - . 7 . ' '•- -=^ •• '""i ;':•.?.' ' • ' &lt; • ' " . . • • • * i , ' . ' N.. • - i - * uV^J&amp;Z .V.'.?»v . • • v . - , * , . , . , * : " J f ? V ; ••••»! £*•&#13;
C'J^ . ?„ ."' - . , &gt; '. .. . ••&gt;'•',••.: ••-. ;' • " • ' . . j f T V * * '. -i.&gt;^&gt;&#13;
r : " • ) ••'•"'• " - ' '•'' •• • • • ' ' ' ' •*••'• . - - ' , ' ' ' ' • • ' ' ' » ' - . . * * * - *&#13;
1* •P r.T&gt; TJ'-'V&#13;
/ \&#13;
' &lt; * &gt; • : . •&#13;
• . * • ' * . &gt; * &lt; • .&#13;
!#l* '#.f.c a*&#13;
'••"r i-K-jf...... .:&#13;
•A."?'&#13;
&amp; f -: •&gt;. V&#13;
. - • &gt; - * ' ;&#13;
' . i :&#13;
.^&#13;
#1&#13;
. * * • * . * - . ^ , , - . •-£&#13;
l i v&#13;
/£&#13;
« • ! » • « • • « BtMtttag IteM MJ&gt;raggUM.&#13;
T H E HERMIT'S REMEDY&#13;
SPRUCB OUM. Iffi Uf II E0I1 IIS i an Invaluable remedy for a*J tflectlon*&#13;
•I the THROAT and LUNQS. Contain*&#13;
no opium or other Injurious. Drugs.&#13;
it Kills COUOMS and COLDS.&#13;
Keep a Bottle in tiie Haase, ll£g SAVE YOUR LIFE.&#13;
PRICE. »5 Cents.&#13;
We can give employment permanent and&#13;
lucrative to a good agent iu this section. For&#13;
particulars can on publisher of this paper,&#13;
JAMES W. FOSTER CO.. M** Dsuoorrs,&#13;
BATH, N. H.&#13;
•H 'N '""a ''00 MiASOd *M 83WVP&#13;
•stt^Nfc w *Xu**o St 'Motad \ r-at»»n&gt;gpt»U» *™**«S&#13;
[IftgMins tuaqtng&#13;
a»r Hxooat jiisi sax SSSVK twfod^&#13;
P K V pn* ,u:uD ./¾^&#13;
Coatlnaedfrotu pafe4.&#13;
M I I c k t e n ' s A r n i c a S a l v e .&#13;
The liest Salve in the world for&#13;
&lt;nt8, brui&gt;&lt;^, sores, nlcers, salt rhenm,&#13;
fiver sores, tetter, tapped bands,chill&#13;
Hams, corns, and alt skin eruptions:&#13;
ind positively cures piles or no pay&#13;
required. It is guaranteed to givr&#13;
perfect satisfaction or money refund&#13;
ed. Prico 25 oeats per box. For sal&#13;
i&gt;v F. A. Siller.&#13;
&lt;H* ^ ° ^ ^ *»•**•«&#13;
Michigan * People. 8»&#13;
L O C A T E D&#13;
Directly Opposite M. C R'y Depot.&#13;
T w o Blocks from Union Depot.&#13;
Three Blocks iron* Steamer Docks.&#13;
In the Center of the Wholesale District.&#13;
Three Minutes by Electric Cars to Retail&#13;
Center and all Places of Amusement.&#13;
l o o R o o m s w i t h S t e a m Heat&#13;
Sao.ooo In New Improvements.&#13;
Cutohie Unsurpassed^:&#13;
American Plan.&#13;
Rates, $2 and $2.50 per Day.&#13;
Rooms.wita Bath, 13. Sinfie steals, 50c.&#13;
* * 4&#13;
under tfce arm of each person they&#13;
meet, no matter if that individual&#13;
already has a half a doaen of&#13;
them. The boy passes on and&#13;
the man throws the dodger down&#13;
and that is the last of it. The&#13;
streets are soon covered with them&#13;
and they are trampled into the&#13;
dirt unread.&#13;
A newspaper is taken into the&#13;
home. Every member of the family&#13;
reads it and then it is loaned&#13;
all over the neighborhood to people&#13;
who are either too poor or too&#13;
stingy to take the paper. One subscriber&#13;
said recently that he did&#13;
wish something could be done to&#13;
prevent people from borrowing&#13;
his newspaper. He said his Sunday&#13;
paper was not at home long&#13;
enough for him to scarcely look it&#13;
over. Before night four different&#13;
families had borrowed his paper&#13;
and each member of each family&#13;
had read it through. He said of&#13;
course he could not refuse to loan&#13;
them the paper, but he did wish&#13;
people would subscribe and pay&#13;
for their own paper. If this case&#13;
is a sample it will be seen that instead&#13;
of 1,000 readers for this paper&#13;
we have 6,030. In what cheaper&#13;
way can an advertiser reach so&#13;
many people? Many wide-awake&#13;
business men have taken advantage&#13;
of this method, and they&#13;
have found that it has paid them&#13;
many times the amount of the&#13;
cost of advertisement. I t will be&#13;
well for those who have not tried&#13;
it to give I t a test,—Press and&#13;
Printer.&#13;
T H E Y O U N G HOUSEKEEPER.&#13;
An uncomnion"accident bereu u s u&gt;&#13;
tie daughter of Washington McKlnny,&#13;
at Apart*, Ohio. She was coming from&#13;
school, holding a pencil in her hand,&#13;
when ahe stumbled and fell. The pencil&#13;
penetrated her chest, touched the&#13;
heart, and caused death.&#13;
f b e N e w Woi&#13;
The new woman Is representative of&#13;
a renaissance, of a universal awakening&#13;
among women. I am going to advance&#13;
and try to support the theory&#13;
that the new woman movement, represented&#13;
by the new woman, is an indication&#13;
that the modern world woman&#13;
is losing ground, and that this is&#13;
a pathetic, vigorous, sometimes frantic,&#13;
effort on the part of woman for&#13;
self-preservation.—M. M. Mangaaarian.&#13;
Why H e W a s Indignant.&#13;
"Is it true that Goldy's son eloped&#13;
w.th the old gentleman's typewriter?"&#13;
' Yes; they skipped out two weeks&#13;
ago.'*&#13;
"1 wesume Goldy is just pawing the&#13;
air."&#13;
"Naturally. He has engaged to the&#13;
girl himself."—Detroit Free Press.&#13;
DuU i n PunopktnTUlo.&#13;
Hodge—Hello, old man, what's goin'&#13;
on in Pumpkinville?&#13;
Podge—Nuthin'. W'y, it's got jest so&#13;
blamed dull house rent has stopped an'&#13;
the interest on what a feller owes has&#13;
plum quit—Atlanta Evening Journal.&#13;
^MiMiHiHHiHiimimmniwiiiniHtnii&#13;
The Evening News^&#13;
- H I OEAT WET Of tKBAOL"&#13;
k MICHIGAN NEWSPAPER FOR MICHIGAN PEOPLE.&#13;
TUB D8TROIT EVBNINO NEWS ha* aver 1000 special sscfatssssinU who are&#13;
ever oa taw asset tar Haass ef saws which selglrt Istfetsst Ststo rasters*&#13;
H yosi weald have all the gasersl sews ef the esy» try It far a i&#13;
Two cuts i copy, Tu etits I ffMk&#13;
(OBUVBRID).&#13;
JI.HftfJllltU&#13;
(sv uaiO.&#13;
£E AGENTS IN tSVERY TOWN IN MIOHIQAN. =•&#13;
The Evening News, Detroit. §&#13;
•this&#13;
T h e Crisis.&#13;
"Gentleman," said the orator,&#13;
crisis will soon be at an end."&#13;
"Thank heaven," murmured an auditor;&#13;
"he's going to stop talking."—&#13;
Golden Penny.&#13;
3^HEMA80N ARTIFICIAL STONE WATEE TA3K. A wonderful&#13;
t iBTeotion and s n e a t boon to farmers,&#13;
or eold do not effect them, aad they wiU last&#13;
Bakes destroyed by an earthquake while the earth&#13;
lasts. We inrlte your lnspeeuoa. They will not&#13;
rot.ru st or wear out. Warranted for fire years.&#13;
For farther particulars call or write to&#13;
WILL EVER8,&#13;
Agent and manufacturer, Stocsb ridge, Mich&#13;
Mem Often D o e s She K n o w H o w t o Set&#13;
a Table?&#13;
"I know wixen a thing looks wrong,"&#13;
exclaimed a very young housekeeper,&#13;
despairingly, "but I cannot tell what&#13;
makes It right." That necessity is the&#13;
best teacher seems to be an article ot&#13;
faith with the great majority of American&#13;
mothers, who seldom teaeh their&#13;
daughters even the rudiments ot&#13;
housekeeping, says the New York Tribune.&#13;
This Is hardly the fault of either&#13;
mother or daughter—life is so fertl nowadays—&#13;
and the time of both parent&#13;
and child Is so crowded with occupation&#13;
that neither the one nor the other has&#13;
the leisure either to learn or to teach.&#13;
When the girl marries the man of her&#13;
choice, especially if he is a poor man&#13;
and they have to begin life simply, she&#13;
finds herself more ignorant than she&#13;
would have believed possible about the&#13;
A, B, C of domestic arrangements; and&#13;
how to train the inexperienced maid&#13;
she has engaged to take charge of her&#13;
little apartment is a veritable puzzle.&#13;
To set out an attsactlve, well-cared-for&#13;
looking tabl9 Is by no means as easy&#13;
as it seems to be In a well-ordered&#13;
household. Any Inexperienced person&#13;
— S O M E T H I N G T O K \ O W .&#13;
It may be worth something to know&#13;
that the very best medicine for restor&#13;
ing the tired out nervous system to a&#13;
healthy vigof is Electric Bitters. This&#13;
medicine is purely vegetable, acts by&#13;
giving tone to the nerve centers in the&#13;
stomach, gently stimulates the Liver&#13;
and Kidneys, and aids these organs in&#13;
throwing off in:purities in the bloed&#13;
Electric Bitters improves the appetite,&#13;
aids digestion, and is pronounced&#13;
by those who have tried it as the&#13;
very best blood purifier and nerve&#13;
tonic. Try it. Sold for 50c or $1.00&#13;
per bottle at F. A. Sigler's drugstore.&#13;
DR. A. B. GREEN.&#13;
DENTIST—Every Thursday sod Friday.&#13;
Office over Sigler'e Drug Store.&#13;
PUBLISHED EVKST THURSO* Y X J B N I X G BY&#13;
FRANK 1,. A N D R E W S&#13;
Editor and Proprietor.&#13;
Subscription fries $1 In Advance.&#13;
Entered st tbe Poetomce at Piuckaey, Mi^bl^an,&#13;
as second-class matter.&#13;
Advertising rates made known on application.&#13;
Business Card*, $4.00 per year.&#13;
Death and marriage notices published tree.&#13;
Announcements of entertainments may be paid&#13;
tor, If desired, by presenting the office with tickete&#13;
of admission. In case tickets are not brought&#13;
to tne office, regular rates will be charged,&#13;
All matter in local notice column will be chare&#13;
ed at 5 cents per line or fraction thereof, for each&#13;
Insertion. Where no time is specified, all notices&#13;
will be inserted until ordered discontinued, and&#13;
will be chaiged for accordingly. £JBVA11 changes&#13;
of advertisements JiUbT reach this office as early&#13;
as TUESDAY morning to insure an insertion the&#13;
same week.&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIRECTORY.&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PRESIDENT....— Claude L. SIgler.&#13;
TitusTEBS, Geo. Reason Jr., # . E. Murony, F. Cf.&#13;
Jackson, F. J. Wright. E. K. Brown, 0. L. Grimes,&#13;
CLIKK R. H. Teeple.&#13;
TBEASUSBB J A. Cariwell.&#13;
A s s s s s o a . . . . . D. W. Unrta&#13;
STBEET COMMISSIONER A. Monks&#13;
MASSAHL P. Monroe.&#13;
HEALTH u r r i c s a Dr.H. F. Sigler.&#13;
ATTORNEY W. A. Carr.&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
Special Bargain&#13;
QUICK.&#13;
Price SOLOO.&#13;
S o c i a l&#13;
&gt; p . ice a s&#13;
) ioa&amp;i as t h e y&#13;
&gt; aat, t h e&#13;
? b a s e s t bar-&#13;
. .ram e v e r&#13;
offered,&#13;
y O U l V $1 .97&#13;
• ' K « B -&#13;
! Ju^t out 112-&#13;
. J : . ? J bO.Oli of •i viey savi'IT&#13;
and&#13;
; .v.;Resale&#13;
' •ir-tue ?!iide.&#13;
'Vrito for .•-&#13;
M s * i * erffcer. /Oat * Bscse&#13;
sttra*u t; -&#13;
CTCL8 tkkt HPG. CO,&#13;
&lt;srsss4 Rsfaia, fUsk.&#13;
will easily find this out n sne tries tne&#13;
experiment. "I soon learned that I had&#13;
no idea which side the glasses went on,"&#13;
said a young wife, telling of her nrat&#13;
experience In coaching a raw servant.&#13;
"I did not know whether the forks were&#13;
turned up or down. When the table&#13;
was set everything looked hlggletyplgglety&#13;
and awry, and I could not tell&#13;
for the life of me what was the matter."&#13;
A well known writer on domestic&#13;
economy says that there are three&#13;
graces which should preside at the&#13;
table—cleanliness, order and good&#13;
taste. Everything should be arranged&#13;
with geometrical correctness. The taste&#13;
should be In the exact center of the&#13;
room, with the sides perfectly parallel&#13;
with the walls. The white canton flannel&#13;
undercloth sheuld be kept taut by&#13;
means at each corner of buttons aad&#13;
eyelet holes. The cloth must have the&#13;
folds absolutely straight with the table.&#13;
The forks should be on the left&#13;
and the knives on the right of the&#13;
plate; forks and spoons sheuld be&#13;
turned up, not down; tumblers and&#13;
wine glasses are at the right and above&#13;
each plate. S*Tt ceUsj^ with the spoon&#13;
by them, not la them, and pepper and&#13;
mustard cruets are arranged in the&#13;
corner of the table a lit Je beyond the&#13;
plates. The napkin should be laid on&#13;
the plate with a roll or piece of bread&#13;
within Its folds. Individ oel taste may&#13;
gsvem the rest of the arrangement,&#13;
but to have every article laid on with&#13;
the most absolute precision and simllarlty&#13;
shoaM be the first principle to&#13;
lnatttl into the mind ot &amp; sew servant&#13;
Any deviation is sure to spoil the looks&#13;
tf a table. The rules here given axe&#13;
absurdly simple, bat it Is astonishing&#13;
nerw few servants understand how So&#13;
net a table and hew many mlstrsssts&#13;
ttesre are who are tnftantbie of&#13;
snea new&#13;
GRUMMGND'S&#13;
DETROIT and CLEVELAND&#13;
LINE OF STEALERS&#13;
25?; TO&#13;
CLEVELAND&#13;
A DELIGHTFUL&#13;
Moonlit Trip Across Lake Erie&#13;
LOCAL T I M E . . . . . . D A I L Y .&#13;
Lv. Detroit, 11KX)?. M.&#13;
BICYCLES CARRIED FREE.&#13;
U. G. GRUMMOND&#13;
GEN'L MGR.,&#13;
TEL. NO. 162- OFFICE L DOCK, FOOT FIRST ST.&#13;
Sertxolt, ^fflaOa,&#13;
=&#13;
a . i e * iSfc A ^ b M S a e U ^ A A&#13;
"Nothing else like i t "&#13;
The*most reircshing and&#13;
pleasant Soap (or the skin*&#13;
Whoever has a good temaer witt hi \ ,&#13;
smre to hews many other good thins*.&#13;
MSTHOD1ST EPISCOPAL ClICRCH.&#13;
Rev. M. H.McMabon pastor. Services every&#13;
Sunday morning at 10:&amp;J, and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:00 o'clock. Prayer meeting Thursday&#13;
evenings. Sunday scuool at close of morn&#13;
n« service. Mrs. £&amp;iella Graham, Suoerintend't.&#13;
Banquet&#13;
Lamp*&#13;
Finis aed in&#13;
gold&#13;
lacquer,&#13;
ha* No. 2&#13;
Rochester&#13;
Chimney&#13;
and Wicii.&#13;
with either&#13;
a Uandsome&#13;
14-inch&#13;
shade or 16-&#13;
lach lanc.v&#13;
crepe tissue&#13;
paper siiude&#13;
or t an'.'y&#13;
hand r&gt;»ir«teti&#13;
bavfjne*&#13;
globe, with&#13;
rol&lt;i trlnimlnes,&#13;
all for&#13;
$1.97&#13;
A. M. ROTHSCHILD S CO.&#13;
•.VUOLR5AL,'-:.&#13;
~&gt;tato, W , Earen to Ja.~.'..!•;&lt;t*$t$., v.aicjO.&#13;
&gt;i'''.Ul :it t h i * V i Tf?r.&#13;
:&#13;
CONGREGATIONAL CHUHCH.&#13;
C. 8. Jones, paafor. Service every&#13;
Sunday morning at 10:30, and every Sunday&#13;
evening st 7:0C o'clock. Prayer meeting; Thursday&#13;
evenings. Sanday school st close of lnorntngr&#13;
service. I. J. Coek, Supt. S. T. Grimes, Sec.&#13;
ST. MAliV'S CATHOLIC CHURCH.&#13;
Rev. M. J. Commerford, Pastor. Services&#13;
evsry third Sunday. Low mass at 7:30 o'clock,&#13;
nigh mass with sermon at 9:30 a. m. Catechism&#13;
at 3:00 p. in., veapere and benediction at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
SOCIETIES;&#13;
The A. Oa H. Society of this place, meets every&#13;
third Sunday in tne Pr. Matthew Hall.&#13;
Joan McGttioess, County Delegate,&#13;
every&#13;
'clock.&#13;
i y%sj»&gt;»&gt;%&gt;t&gt;»»*&lt;a**&gt;a&lt;**&lt;****'**i»%«****«j***y PATENTS ICareats and Trade Marks obtained and all fcat*&#13;
entbusineBS conducted for Moderate «}««••&#13;
Bend model, drawing or photo. We ad rise it&#13;
patentable free of charge. Our fee n o t due till;&#13;
patent la secured. A Pamphlet "How to Obtain&#13;
Patenta," with cost of same In the U.&#13;
p.r&gt;A foreign countiiea seat free. Addxeaa,&#13;
C. A. SNOW &amp; CO.&#13;
PP. PATKNT Ornct. WasHlHOTOM. D . C .&#13;
Spilepsy cored bjr Dr. Mile** ^errtna.&#13;
EPWORTH LEAGUE. Meets every Sunday&#13;
evening at 6:00 oclock in the M. E. Cnurch. A&#13;
cordial invitation is extended to everyone, especially&#13;
young people. Miss Jennie Haze, Pre*.&#13;
Junior Epworth League. -Meeu every Sunday&#13;
afternoon at 3:00 o'clock, at M. E church. All&#13;
cordially invited.&#13;
Mies Alice • • .• i • i i • i .&#13;
The C. T. A. and B. Society of this place, meet&#13;
every third Sataraay evening in the Fr. Matthew&#13;
Hall. John Donohue, F resident.&#13;
NIGHTS OF MACCABEES. ~&#13;
Meet every Friday evening, on or before fail&#13;
of the moon at their hall in the Swarthout bldg.&#13;
Visiting brothers are cordlallv invited.&#13;
CUAS. CaaPBELL, Sir Knight Commander&#13;
Livingston Lodge, No. 7«, F &amp; A. M. Regular&#13;
Communication Tuesdav evening, on or before&#13;
the full of the moon. H. r*. Sigler, W. M.&#13;
ORDER OF EASTERN STAR meets each month&#13;
the Friday evening following the regular F.&#13;
4A.M. meetiag, Mas. C. ELLXN RicBsans, W.M,&#13;
f ADIES OF THE MACCABEKS. Meet every&#13;
J j 1st and 3rd Saturday of each month at a :30&#13;
o'clock at the K. O. T. M. hall. Visiting sisters&#13;
cordially Invited, JULIA SieLsa, Lady Com.&#13;
eApisM&#13;
THE WHEEL OF WHEELS.&#13;
il KNIGHTS OF THE LOYAL GUARD&#13;
meet every second Wednesday&#13;
evening of erery month in the sL O.&#13;
T. M. Hall at 7:80 o'clock. All visiting&#13;
.Gaards welcome.&#13;
F. L. AxDBKWs,Capt. Gen.&#13;
I .&#13;
It lasts twice *s Ions; as otliers.&#13;
A trial will coavince you o f i t s great&#13;
oerit. WiU please the moat fastidious.&#13;
CHARLES F.MILLER,&#13;
fffjr. of P!«BNCM MSLLES) TOSLET&#13;
~ ~ SOdsPS ANs&gt;i*BRfDMCRV.&#13;
E S T T A B L I 8 H K D , l f t * 9 L&#13;
ss*ss^P^s^swss**ss^p^s^sas• es^s^s^&#13;
BUSINESS CARPS.&#13;
H. F. SIGLER M. 0- C L, SJGLER M, D&#13;
DRS. SIGLER •&amp; SIGLER,&#13;
Physicians and Surgeons- All calls promptly&#13;
attended today or night. Omoe on Main street&#13;
i i ,&#13;
THE PCRFCCT&#13;
% % W H E E L ,&#13;
D o n l buy a wheel until y o u see&#13;
T H E CARLISLE aad get our price*.&#13;
THE CARLISLE MFG. CO.&#13;
I S ^ e r } ^ M k r ^ ^&#13;
fsHHUTOIsUtf&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler.&#13;
'*.m&#13;
^elag&#13;
Have more points ot merit, than any other High&#13;
Grade Bicycle.&#13;
-M PULL OP ORftOR A N D BEflUTYe&#13;
ffclab e/HTfl C#e, l^eadiii«9#«L&#13;
m&#13;
VMS&#13;
&lt; * •&#13;
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srfrt*'&#13;
tMt't -^ f -ito^:-+i&amp;:&lt;Viwmta^'.v&#13;
?.:;5:,» y\ I* itt"W1. 1^ • ' « , '&#13;
Fw.&#13;
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•CTT A . ¢ - . ^ - ) ^&#13;
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• * • . \ -&#13;
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#*•**. L. ATOBRwaj ^Publisher,&#13;
PINCKNgY, ,-, * - ^ 0 ¾ ¾ ¾&#13;
The SUrkey-Mahee hght was woa by&#13;
the police in the seventh .Junto&#13;
i • • i » I I ; n i I I . . I I •' i -•&#13;
If the Japanese are spoiling for a&#13;
figbV perhaps they can be aocommotated.&#13;
' OUWRENT N O T E S *&gt;F DISCOVERY&#13;
A N D INVENTION.&#13;
Ownty/'the postal dbg, ii now dead&#13;
tor the thtrd time. Three times and&#13;
ant for Owhey. '&#13;
Calling a mfh a. pessimist never did&#13;
and never will elotfe'the eyes of the&#13;
people to an unpleasant situalioou&#13;
The town-ctf WusWfcf^ri, Pa., has a&#13;
baonei&amp;K' «*•*•• •*•&#13;
V T*+&#13;
The treasury department figures Indicates&#13;
a decrease of one hundred thousand&#13;
l a the immigration of the year.&#13;
Not a tear will be shed, over this "loss."&#13;
It may/hf correct t o apeak of the&#13;
Turk aft the "sick man of the east,"&#13;
but the .unfortunate Greeks have reason&#13;
to know that he is not so consumptive&#13;
ae-Jie looks.&#13;
SCIENTIFIC PO0TEKS.&#13;
4 Hew Idee la Double*Bottom Pane for&#13;
iiua flakes, Ete.~wiU Hot Bars.&#13;
Scorch or Stick—Wood That WIU Mot&#13;
Bori • - * it. £&#13;
"Founder" Bradley has popularised&#13;
Asbury ;fark by erecting what ho&#13;
calls ji trysyn* tower for loyers. Here&#13;
Cup# *Ul,&lt;hold high, carnival, and a&#13;
generation of ypurig jsaen and maidens&#13;
wiH rise up td call the name of Bradley&#13;
blessed. This fills a long-felt want&#13;
in almost every thickly settled community.&#13;
Rev. William H. Noyes hae resigned&#13;
as a missionary in Japan of. the American&#13;
board, on tfce ground.that h e i s&#13;
uncertain whether he believes some of&#13;
the doctrines inculcated by the board.&#13;
It was bis avowal of a belief in probation&#13;
after death that brought about&#13;
the famous controversy over that question&#13;
in the board some years ago.&#13;
rr -TSt.&#13;
Petersburg's population Is&#13;
023, accorfcifcr &amp; f h l fctsirfah teiWus&#13;
tak«n t&amp;i spring:;. thM #f iM^eeow is&#13;
988,610, of Warsaw -114,782, and of&#13;
Odessa 404,661. Out of a total Russian&#13;
population oX 129,21000 Overs * r e&#13;
«4,616,820 men. Ari Sinexpected dieoovery&#13;
is that of an Increase in the population&#13;
of the new provinces in central&#13;
Asia.&#13;
As bearing upon the present l m -&#13;
pre^ed. methods of gold mining the&#13;
statement in the annual report of one&#13;
of the largest mines in Colorado&#13;
ahowlhg that since the organization of&#13;
the company the average cost of producing&#13;
$1 worth of gold has been 37&#13;
cenis, is interesting. The extent to&#13;
which hew methods can be applied to&#13;
old mines even ie just coming to be&#13;
realised.&#13;
The welcome reception of the Harvard&#13;
University crew's coach at the&#13;
headquarters of the Tale oarsmen, and&#13;
the Invitation extended to him to inspect&#13;
the Tale crew at their practice,&#13;
may be regarded as the final blow to&#13;
the system of spying.upon the secret&#13;
practice of crews msiched for cbmpetition.&#13;
This time-honored feature of&#13;
the training period has savored too&#13;
steonglyof professionalism to be a fit&#13;
adjunct of euliege spoil.&#13;
• The official Austrian crop estimates.&#13;
adbordtef to Beerbohm, are 34,000,000&#13;
t« M.OOOyOOO metric hundred weights of&#13;
wijeat, against 38,000,000 metric hundredweights&#13;
in 1896. The rye crop is&#13;
estimated at 11.090,000 to 12,000,000 metUc&#13;
hundredweights, against 12,900,000&#13;
metric hundredweights in 1896. Barley,&#13;
10,000,000 to 11,000,000 metric buadhedweights,&#13;
against 12,000,000 metric&#13;
hundredweights in 1896. If favorable&#13;
weather continues these estimates&#13;
may be isargely improved.&#13;
The best thing John CalUcott, uhe&#13;
celo«ed eod^of-the-wortd prophet of&#13;
Lafayette, lad., can do now is to g o&#13;
out of the prophesying business without&#13;
deter. Mr. Csdlleott has been telling&#13;
a s for fifteen years that the end&#13;
was earning at certain times, and every&#13;
time be has disappointed a whole lot&#13;
of people. John is said to be an excellent&#13;
plasterer, and we would advise&#13;
a i m t o stick to his business hereafter&#13;
and refrain from attempting t o scare&#13;
rjrooa Thai wiu ;k&gt;i Jtap. ,&#13;
.Hi?: j ^ n c e b f&#13;
Wales was present&#13;
at a test whieh has&#13;
recently been furnished&#13;
to the office&#13;
of works, in London,&#13;
of a non-inflammable&#13;
wood. A&#13;
number of distinguished,&#13;
people were&#13;
also present. Two&#13;
oottaftes, thirty&#13;
feet in height, had been built, similar&#13;
in all respecU save one, the wood of&#13;
tbe edifice nearest to the royal pavilion&#13;
having been treated with a fluid said&#13;
to render it proof against the fiercest&#13;
flames. Piled up against these two little&#13;
houses, on all sides, were heaps of&#13;
billets of wood and shavings,&#13;
while the odor of petroleum showed&#13;
clearly enough that the company&#13;
furnishing the test had no fear&#13;
of submitting their product to a severe&#13;
trial. After the prince had inspected&#13;
the two buildings the torch was applied.&#13;
A strong wind swept across the&#13;
wide open space, and the flames danced&#13;
and crackled in a way that would&#13;
have made any one but an enthusiast&#13;
step back. In twenty minutes the&#13;
house that had not been treated was&#13;
enveloped in flames mounting high&#13;
In the air, and formed a fine subject&#13;
for the cameras leveled upon it from&#13;
all polnls. The other structure was&#13;
charred, and the window panes in It&#13;
melted like.i so much pewter, but that&#13;
was all.' A mass of inflammable materials&#13;
in the inside had not even&#13;
caught light Ten minutes more and&#13;
the unprotected cottage fell In. Then&#13;
the prince essayed to enter the building&#13;
which had withstood so severe a&#13;
test. The dojar was opened and he&#13;
walked up the steps. At this moment&#13;
a gust of wind drove a cloud of smoke&#13;
and a sheet, of the flame: still lapping&#13;
the ootslde df the structure In hls^face.&#13;
The prince beat a hasty retreat, amid&#13;
laughter, but a moment later tried&#13;
again, with better success. Then the&#13;
heap of combustibles inside the coftage&#13;
was set alight. In the middle Qf&#13;
this pile was a box made-wi£h nonflammable&#13;
wood containing souvenirs.&#13;
Smoke and flames poured up the&#13;
chimney, but when the mass had burned&#13;
itself out the box -was recovered",&#13;
charred, but unharmed, from the.&#13;
ashes, and the contents were distributed.&#13;
The treatment of timber to make ft&#13;
fire proof consists of removing the air&#13;
and natural juices from the pores and&#13;
cells and impregnating these with a&#13;
solution of flre-resistlag salts and&#13;
other chemicals. The operation is&#13;
carried out under great pressure,&#13;
steam being first used to open the&#13;
cellB. By means of this new process&#13;
wood of all kinds can be rendered absolutely&#13;
non-flammable. The process&#13;
is net limited to timber of any particular&#13;
size—boards, planks, joists, wood&#13;
of all dimensions and of any shapa it&#13;
can ae prepared with equal stfecess.&#13;
Although It is soarcely two years sliace&#13;
the wood thus specially prepared has&#13;
been offered to the public in the United&#13;
fltfltA* it h u already been adopted by&#13;
the navy department of that country&#13;
for exclusive use in all its ships of&#13;
every description, and it is also being&#13;
largely used for public buildings.&#13;
» &gt; ' * t i k » '&#13;
A Cuiooa Boa*. ,&#13;
A curious boat, which goes equally&#13;
well on land} water* ice andyjiiowM has&#13;
been designed by Mr. Rasmus Anderson.&#13;
The machine was originally invented&#13;
for Arctic exploration, as a&#13;
substitute for boats and sledges, but&#13;
ean also be built as a life boat and a&#13;
yacht and ocean steamer. This boat,&#13;
it Is said, cannot sink or capsize under&#13;
any condition, aad it eaa be prapelled&#13;
by the hands or feet Aft a lifeboat&#13;
it would be very practical, MM it&#13;
could be launched-from dry land, and&#13;
also run up on any beach without injury.&#13;
As a lifeboat on board ship it&#13;
can he run off the deck with the smallpoured&#13;
tick into the dish again, filling&#13;
in "trough the perforations. Now&#13;
blotting paper has superseded this old*&#13;
time affair and has become an enor-v&#13;
mous article of manufacture and sale.&#13;
The bent blotting paper is made of&#13;
cotton rags, lower grades are made of&#13;
wood pulp -mixed with some sort of&#13;
absorbent clay. Clear white blotting&#13;
paper is by far the best, as dyes injure&#13;
the absorbent qualities. T h e&#13;
trade in white blotting paper is nearly&#13;
fifteen, ^aVes as much as that in all&#13;
high colors'put together. A great&#13;
dealr of bloating .paper. is used for advertising&#13;
purposes, which is a most&#13;
convenient way of getting one's name&#13;
before the public. One use for blotting&#13;
paper, aside from absorbing Ink&#13;
^t in making huge ruils for calendering&#13;
cloth. The paper is rolled and pressed&#13;
until it is quite firm, then heated by&#13;
mesne of pipes passing through i t&#13;
Ksploimtlon In the Antarctic&#13;
It is stated authoritatively in London&#13;
that the council of the Ifoyal Geographical&#13;
society has determined to&#13;
take upon itself the responsibility of&#13;
oiganising a private expedition to the&#13;
Antarctic, and for this purpose an appeal&#13;
will very shortly be made for&#13;
funds to equip an expedition on a sufficiently&#13;
large scale. The British admiralty&#13;
has promised to assist such an&#13;
expedition by the loan of instruments&#13;
and by advice, and it is extremely&#13;
probable that, although unable to undertake&#13;
the, whole responsibility of&#13;
the expedition, the government will&#13;
make a grant towards the cost of what&#13;
would undoubtedly be a national enterprise.&#13;
Latest Doable-Bottom Oake Pan.&#13;
The latest cake or pie pan is made&#13;
with a double bottom. The pan itself&#13;
13 all in one piece of pressed tin, while&#13;
the extra bottom Is removable. The&#13;
use of the double bottom forms a vacuum&#13;
which keeps the bottom and&#13;
sides of the cake or pie free so there&#13;
Is no use of U3lng grease or paper, nor&#13;
is a knife necessary to remove it from&#13;
the pan after baking. It is.therefore&#13;
a nonstlcker. It will not burn or&#13;
scorch or break the cake to remove It&#13;
from the pan. There is a simple arrangement&#13;
for removal which, is not&#13;
found in any other pan ever made, and&#13;
that is by an upright wire handle fastened&#13;
into the center of the upper disk.&#13;
By gently lifting by this handle the&#13;
cake easily detaches from the side of&#13;
the pan and is lifted out whole. It can&#13;
then be cut right on-the disk as desired&#13;
without disturbing the eake. The&#13;
Same Arrangement can be had in a pie&#13;
pan, which makes it s n improvement&#13;
over any other pan on the market.&#13;
OUR BUDGET OF FUN.&#13;
II il I T&#13;
SOME GOOD J O K M , OftlOfNAL&#13;
' A N D SELECTED.&#13;
The. Xeude««y Toward t»e Cnsasl* la&#13;
Our Fabllo School*—A Prescription&#13;
That Made the Boy Wall M Soon M&#13;
Ha Heard 1». r&#13;
* "*r&#13;
um-&#13;
The New Umbrella. '&#13;
H, ELLA!&#13;
With her first&#13;
brsUsl&#13;
She walked abroad&#13;
lHce any queen,&#13;
fine held it proudly&#13;
for display,&#13;
Admired , its handle,&#13;
stroked its sheen.&#13;
And never little&#13;
girt more gay.&#13;
Dear 2Hlal&#13;
Such a wee umbrella!&#13;
One day upon the&#13;
market-place&#13;
X met her; dripping were her euais.&#13;
She looked, deaplte her sunny face,&#13;
The most forlorn of little girts.&#13;
"Why, Ella!&#13;
Where** your new umbrella?"&#13;
Bald I; "the storm has drenched your&#13;
hair!&#13;
Just see your frock! just see your hat I&#13;
And what Is this you hug with caret—&#13;
A broom, a fiddle, or a cat?"&#13;
Oh, Ella!&#13;
With her first umbrella!&#13;
She looked at me and shyly spoke.&#13;
The rain-drops f*ltlng on her yet;&#13;
"I have It here beneath my cloak.&#13;
Because, you see, it might get wett"&#13;
—Agnes Lee In S t Nicholas.&#13;
Knew&#13;
/&#13;
Even the removable bottom pans,&#13;
while convenient In removing cake or&#13;
pte, are not safe from scorching and&#13;
burning, while/custards often leak&#13;
through, especially after they have been&#13;
used for a time and become somewhat&#13;
warped frx&gt;m being placed in too hot&#13;
nn nvnn/ Thrrc 1« »« pna*]fr'« chan&lt;»«&#13;
of burning in these now double-bottom&#13;
pans/ and the removal of the food&#13;
without trouble by the wire handle is&#13;
far ahead of old styles of- tube pans.&#13;
The derelopments of modern warfare&#13;
are as* encourngiag to skulkers. Hiding&#13;
behind a tree will be useless in t h s&#13;
next war, according to a surgeon who&#13;
has bean taking- notes in Cuba. The&#13;
hnlkit trtsn a msneffr rifle goes through&#13;
a large tree with ease. It also Is said&#13;
that a teUet often passes through the&#13;
hunma body without disabling a combatant,&#13;
t h e wound ot~exlt not exceeding&#13;
in stas-tnat of anxranoe. The ether&#13;
firtarms of the Cubans are said to be&#13;
far more destructive than the modem&#13;
Mies of the Spanish troops.when they&#13;
strike a person, hut they have not the&#13;
abiUtjr to Wore taroagh truas to. get a t&#13;
smear rlctlras.&#13;
eat possible trouble. The paddles can,&#13;
of course, be taken oft and easily mflxad.&#13;
, :&#13;
Manufacture* revel*&#13;
The question of cheap fuel is a most&#13;
important and vital' one to all persons&#13;
Qf moderate means, as well as to&#13;
large consumers. To be able to use&#13;
what has heretofore been waste material&#13;
is the object of a great deal of&#13;
.scientific study and research. Already&#13;
a number of sorts of fuel have been&#13;
prepared, and in countries where coal&#13;
Is high and scarce this prepared material&#13;
is unite extensively used and&#13;
gives very good satisfaction. The processes&#13;
have become so scientific that&#13;
It is guaranteed to contain a certain&#13;
percentage of heat-producing elements&#13;
and waste. The coal i s washed and&#13;
cleaned from all slate and other impurities&#13;
and t h e available combustible&#13;
material is increased as much as&#13;
possible. The importance of the concentration&#13;
of valuable qualities Is of&#13;
great ssoment where the fuel must be&#13;
.transported and handled. T h e extent&#13;
which the fuel Is manufactured&#13;
and used may be seen from&#13;
the following statistics for the year&#13;
189J: France, 1,75©,*» l e a s ; Belgium&#13;
Tfce modern Blotter.&#13;
Half a century ago the business man&#13;
who had not patience to wait for the&#13;
ink to dry, blotted his letters with fine&#13;
sand, the sand box being part of the&#13;
equipment of every desk and counting&#13;
room. The sand box had a perforated&#13;
sifter and the sand was scattered on the&#13;
writing, absorbing the surplus ink.&#13;
Then the.sand was gathered vp and&#13;
School Visitor (after. the teacher's&#13;
prize pupil, little Johnny, has recited&#13;
at race horse speed, his favorite piece&#13;
beginning: "Atminnlght Innes.Bearded&#13;
tentthe Stupkwas dreamnof thourwen&#13;
Greaserknee nsuppliance bentshd tremblat&#13;
spower!")—An upusually bright&#13;
scholar, Miss Rushem; yes, Indeed, it&#13;
is a pleasure to hear him. I didn't&#13;
know you taught the.ancient Gaelic to&#13;
this school, but I am pleased to see&#13;
that you do, and that your pupils sre&#13;
making such rapid progress in i t —&#13;
Truth.&#13;
A Chance la ftla Queen.&#13;
A captain in a regiment stations)! at&#13;
Natal; when paying his company, one&#13;
day, chanced to give a man a Transvaal&#13;
tmlf-croWrt, which, as one&lt;;would&#13;
naturally expect, tfcearr "the image andsubscription"&#13;
of President Kruger.&#13;
' The man brought It back to the pay&#13;
table and said to the captain: "Please,&#13;
sir, you've given me a bad halfcrown."&#13;
The officer took the cotn, and. without&#13;
looking at It, rung it on the table,&#13;
and then remarked: "It sounds all&#13;
right, Bagster. What's wrong with&#13;
it?"&#13;
"You luke at it, sir," wss the reply.&#13;
The captain glanced at the coin,&#13;
saying: "It's all right, man; It will&#13;
pass in the canteen."&#13;
This apparently satisfied Bagster,&#13;
who walked off making the remark:&#13;
"If you say it's a* right, sir, It Is a'&#13;
right; but it's the first time I've seen&#13;
the queen wi* whiekers onI"—•Answers.&#13;
OVER ag.OOU ENUEAVORER8.&#13;
Tfce International Convention of We » ,&#13;
P, H. O. B. at Sea vraaelseo*&#13;
A„. C b r ^ e * . .army, of. o,ver 35,,000&#13;
A'Strange Peellns.&#13;
"Iphigenia," exclaimed ths Infatuated&#13;
man with a trembling voice, "a&#13;
strange, wonderful feeling comes over&#13;
me that we have gone through this experience&#13;
before. Can the doctrine of&#13;
the transmigration of souls be true?&#13;
Are we merely reincarnations, of beings&#13;
that lived ages ago? If not, how is&#13;
this to be explained? Oh, Iphigenia,&#13;
does not this marvelous consciousness&#13;
Impress itself upon you? Do you not&#13;
remember now that far back in the dim&#13;
and misty past I told you of my love,&#13;
even as I am doing now, and yon listened&#13;
favorably to my "&#13;
"Why, surely, Roger,** interrupted&#13;
the lovely Iphigenia, "have you forgotten&#13;
that we were married and divorced&#13;
ten years ago? I was your fourth, you&#13;
know."—Exchange.&#13;
We Shoald Think So.&#13;
Austria, 260,000 tons; Germany, 1.230,-&#13;
000 tons; Italy, 660,000 tons; Spain, 100,-&#13;
400; Russia and Sweden, »0.000 tons;&#13;
United Slates, 100/000 tons; Chinac. India&#13;
and Canada, 160,000.&#13;
"What a tough face that young fellow&#13;
has! Don't you think so?"&#13;
"Think so? I know I t X triad to&#13;
totalc i t once.&gt;-€lnWaamti Bnquirar.&#13;
M. IV {to anxioas ~ mother* Your&#13;
son's case is a very simple one; wa will&#13;
open his hack, take out his spina aad&#13;
lay his langa and heart hare, inject his&#13;
liver with an acid, and insert a server&#13;
wire a t tbe base of ens thorax. We&#13;
wiU than sew him up jaeattyran4 FasfH&#13;
, be surprised at the caaa#a i f l maka!—&#13;
JTruth.-&#13;
'VvaaecV i»an;r&#13;
v o r t » ' P a c i f i c coast,&#13;
you h'jr pe&#13;
the me&#13;
under the banners- and the purple and&#13;
gold of the Young. People'* Society of&#13;
Christian Endeavor and took possession&#13;
of the city in theinaine qf'-Christ&#13;
and the Church." There were men,&#13;
maidens and matrons from every&#13;
quarter of the globe, nearly every&#13;
nation bein* represented, Two of the&#13;
Wirest buildiuffs in the cUy, Mechanics'&#13;
and•&lt;• Wc*d,\vard*aT' fsmuons were&#13;
utilised for the .convention meetings,&#13;
but were riotnearjy largelenoujrh. The&#13;
formal opening* was bj^ &gt;Rqv. ^&lt;P. •.•JB.&#13;
Clarke, founder and president of tne&#13;
great Ch ristian " Endeavor^ n&amp;veSnefcft.&#13;
The flrbt J,v&gt;o days wee* devoted, to&#13;
praise services, reading -0^4 discussing&#13;
of papers on interesting/H#d ^nportant&#13;
topics and listening to addresses b y&#13;
prominent Endsavorers.&#13;
The state rallies, which are always&#13;
a feature, Of the C. E. conventions,&#13;
were of .great Interest and pleasure.&#13;
Never before hoe the California climate&#13;
received so effective an advertisement,&#13;
for, as though ordered for convention&#13;
week, the weather was. perfect every&#13;
day. The first business transacted&#13;
was to select Nashville s$' the place of&#13;
meeting in 1608 and London In 1000.&#13;
It is the ambition of President Clark&#13;
and his millions of followers po show&#13;
the old world something of the&#13;
strength of their orgahisatloW and this&#13;
will be the opportunity.&#13;
With the end of the convention jtne&#13;
thousands of visitors, delegates and&#13;
others took advantage of the opportunity&#13;
and the cheap rates' to&gt;vlsit the&#13;
many places of interest, throughput&#13;
the state. Arrangements were, made&#13;
for excursions to Los Apgeles/ Monterey,&#13;
Mt. Hamilton. YosSmite, Santa&#13;
Clara mountains, Stanford university&#13;
and other interesting places, even taking&#13;
in the southern country as pertj of&#13;
their journev., • '&#13;
J: J a -&#13;
Reeerrolr Burst—Nme DrowaoSL '&#13;
Melzingah - reservoir in Fishfcill&#13;
mountains, near MatteSwan,' N.' Y.,&#13;
burst at 3 a. m. The* Water rah- lto'to&#13;
the creek and two miles below, near&#13;
Duchess Junction'r wasWedn w a y brick*&#13;
yard buildings, including a bosrdlnghotrse&#13;
occupied by laborers without a&#13;
moment's' -warning, and nine persons&#13;
were' ftrowned. Two hundred yards&#13;
of the Hudson River railroad track at&#13;
Puchess Junction were washed'a^ay.&#13;
Tons of earth and Rand; were washed&#13;
down in the flood, and trains 'ifere&#13;
§taUe4 all the way from Fishkill t o&#13;
t'oughkeepsie. One of "these" was a&#13;
Cook excursion train, the passengers&#13;
on which expected to sail from New&#13;
York, for Europe the next day.&#13;
NEWSY&#13;
The&#13;
C O N D E N 8 ATtON Si&#13;
Spaniards have- tJestroyed M&gt;&#13;
butahertof «HsasV forts In the interior&#13;
of Cuba because they cannot spare men&#13;
bo garrison them.&#13;
The Spanish mail steamer" which&#13;
left Havana July 12* carried n.OOO sick&#13;
soldiers, many of whom will die on the&#13;
way home. Eleven thousand atek&#13;
soldiers have been s e n t to 6pain since&#13;
Jan. 1.&#13;
Z. T. Lewis, the'famous bond forger,&#13;
pleaded guilty at' Urbane, 0., aad was&#13;
sentenced to eight gears in the penitentiary.&#13;
His fradolent operations in&#13;
bonds are said to1 have amounted to&#13;
$250,000.&#13;
Owing to the pressure of offioeseekers&#13;
on Senator M. A. Hanna, of Ohio,&#13;
President McKinley has invited Mr,&#13;
Hanna to leave the Arlington hotel&#13;
and H*e at the White House until the&#13;
newtirtW M eohgrofia ia n^r. Mr. H a n n a&#13;
fcas accepted.&#13;
Operations have been resumed a t&#13;
No. 1 shaft of Queen mine, at Ndgaune'e,&#13;
and loo additional men will be&#13;
hired, making a'total force of 850,&#13;
vrhtdf tvtll probably be increased to&#13;
500 within the next three weeks. The&#13;
mines of the Marquette range are shipping&#13;
more ore now, than at'any previous&#13;
time this year. ; ' ^&#13;
T H E MARKETS. *&#13;
L I V E STOCS.&#13;
BeNste gwr aYdoersk —uC aatstlfei m /S- asereapL ^lamm mbs Hiioeni turner grades. .2 a &amp; A) 8 oa&gt; 6 00 S «9&#13;
Chteaco—&#13;
Best grades....&#13;
Lower grades.&#13;
Detroit—&#13;
Best trades...&#13;
Lrowergxades.&#13;
BaffaJe—&#13;
LBoewste grr gardaedse.s...&#13;
isrrs&#13;
S«5$S8»&#13;
«0* ^aaanjanni w w ^&#13;
wjta&#13;
tSS 8*5&#13;
8 96 im&#13;
tSS 810&#13;
4 » '«00&#13;
803 175&#13;
Best grades.... 4 0SA4 40&#13;
JJUoweraTaa^^«*sw M&#13;
860&#13;
880 6 »&#13;
87»&#13;
880&#13;
840&#13;
860&#13;
840&#13;
868&#13;
880&#13;
848&#13;
8 80&#13;
' « § §&#13;
840&#13;
Best grades.... 4 MQft 00&#13;
Lower grades. 2 «*&amp; X&#13;
441&#13;
89»&#13;
-too&#13;
4 »&#13;
8 «&#13;
810&#13;
URAIH, ETC&#13;
Wheat, Corn,&#13;
Wo. 8 red N a t mix.&#13;
Oats.&#13;
No. 8 white&#13;
oatoar*&#13;
77»i#78&#13;
JO Q70K&#13;
74 &amp;4%&#13;
7« «i78&#13;
Clttrianaat 77*te7S&#13;
Clevetaad 74 «74&#13;
PfttalMiV 78 978&#13;
78 ®78&#13;
80 980½&#13;
» QMH&#13;
88 ®m&#13;
86 a***&#13;
87 087 as am&#13;
96 986¼&#13;
a&#13;
84&#13;
.40 * p&#13;
so mx&#13;
*t o&gt;ai4&#13;
*Betreit-Hav.lNo. 1 ttmdHy.ataoo ^er ton&#13;
PotatoesAU^^authevntal.oo per baiand, 80c.&#13;
iMr^sSB%#8m.% •"•,,B&#13;
strictly fresh, 10c per des. - •- • -&#13;
perlb; creamery, 14c&#13;
1¾¾&#13;
&lt; \&#13;
y&#13;
/ . /&#13;
/&#13;
V:-fot »* }••:•. wmmmm,&#13;
i/^5v!'Tr&#13;
"r^^*~"n™™*^^**""~"'' mWiliiviH liuMmi »• K ^ . X&#13;
FOK BOYS AN^) GIKLS.&#13;
Bow Ore*dfW Dotted the S f g»—The&#13;
aHal et: Ale a Day aad What Came&#13;
eVi*-*f Can* I Wilt—Some latere***&#13;
little ak«tflbM*&#13;
Little BfiM Platen.&#13;
AP, tap, tap! X beard&#13;
at tit* door, i&#13;
Just ilk*- 4 little&#13;
fair/ knock.&#13;
I'd heard it once or&#13;
• twice, before&#13;
X went to lift the&#13;
.... heavy look,&#13;
then there came the&#13;
funniest tfclnei •. • '&#13;
X looked right out&#13;
Into the open air—&#13;
It" really gave me&#13;
quits a start—&#13;
' 'ftV thought at flrst there was noinmg&#13;
,-,. there.. ,, ...&#13;
But I found Mies Pigeon had come to calL&#13;
« e l said, "Mtoe Phreon, how do you dot&#13;
C wasn't esneoting you at all&#13;
, And 'tie really very kind of .you!"&#13;
But little Htea Pigeon said nothing to me;&#13;
She wheeled around and teetered out;&#13;
And J of ten wonder what It could be&#13;
That Uttle Miss Pigeon came about!&#13;
—Tudor Jenlcs.&#13;
How Grandpa Boiled the Kggs.&#13;
"It la half-past eleven," aald grandpa,&#13;
"and the maaon wUl not have the chimney&#13;
fixed before three o'clock."&#13;
"Then I suppose we must get along&#13;
with a cold lunch," aaid grandma.&#13;
"Well," aald grandpa, after a moment,&#13;
"perhaps I can boil some ega. I&#13;
witf try i t "&#13;
"ftut isn't it too windy to make a&#13;
fife out-of-dor*?" asked grandma.&#13;
"I shall not need a fire," aaid grandpa.&#13;
"That sounds like a joke," aaid&#13;
Edith.'&#13;
"No Joke at all," aald grandpa. "Come&#13;
out and aee. .And bring the eggs," he&#13;
added, "and a can with a tight cover."&#13;
When, a few momenta after, gradv&#13;
ma and Edith went out in the.back&#13;
yard, grandpa waa putting some freah&#13;
lime, Spft. juLiMvpaU,,^&#13;
He took the can of egga thoy brought&#13;
and filled it nearly full of cold water.&#13;
Then fitting the lid on carefully, he&#13;
aet it In a hollow place, he. made In&#13;
th^f lime. Edith watched him curiooaly*^&#13;
' ^ i l i ' t h e . l i m e burn?" she asked&#13;
"Hhalll bring the matchegf'&#13;
^ T o a forget/', aaid grandpa, *T"wa«&#13;
Aot, to use any fire. fae'll start it with&#13;
•cold water."&#13;
"Now I know you're Joking!" aaid&#13;
Edith:"' . " \" **• ""•&#13;
"Wait a moment," aaid grandpa,&#13;
"and you'U aee."&#13;
He poured in t h e water and put a&#13;
tkoard ever the pall. " -&#13;
"Oh!" cried Edith, when a very abort&#13;
-time It began to bubble and steam aa&#13;
If a hot fire were burning under the&#13;
pail—and "Oh!" she cried a great deal&#13;
louder, "when a white,, creamy maja&#13;
o n e pouring over the top and down&#13;
the aldea of the nail.&#13;
It, did not last long. In afz minutes&#13;
the bubbling had almost stopped, ao&#13;
.grandpa took a long iron dipper and&#13;
gently, lifted out the can, all coated&#13;
with the lime.&#13;
He rinaed it off, {hen opened it and&#13;
took out the nice white egga; and when&#13;
they broke them at lunch they found&#13;
them cooked Just exactly right&#13;
gbort L « H M In Natural History.&#13;
Our leaaon this morning ia about one&#13;
of the moat gorgeously dreseed, and&#13;
handsomest of all parrots, the) Blue&#13;
MuunUUm Lory, wnich lnhabita the&#13;
great plains in New South, Wales, It&#13;
Uvea principally upon the pollen and&#13;
nectar of the gum trees of thai country&#13;
among the branxb.ee of which It&#13;
llvea, rarely d/reenrt.lng, t » the ground.&#13;
When there la a scarcity of the pollen&#13;
and nectar, it wUl, eat grass seeds and&#13;
insects, and it Is for the lack oj these&#13;
natural foods that it frequently dies&#13;
in captivity.&#13;
The first pair of these birds importthough&#13;
they are no beautiful, they are&#13;
jMt a very deeirahes bird to keep, at&#13;
they require so much care, y o * need&#13;
*ever be surprised to find them dead,&#13;
A btod fancier aaysa on this subject that&#13;
any one whoae aasoeittbk nature&#13;
moald sw**ockei by the a«ddea&gt; death&#13;
the ewattr ,ef « *tt»J Vsegsumia&#13;
otoe at aa exstlbi-&#13;
Bm. Its&#13;
mate had died suddenly a few days&#13;
before, and it aeemed ao aad and melantholgviftnd&#13;
at* « o Jittit, rihat i t waa&#13;
thought l^wpf^^dfa of gfiat Besides&#13;
being pretty they ..are a very graceful&#13;
and active bird, and have amusing&#13;
ways-, which make'them very Interesting.&#13;
'&#13;
"l Can* I W » V&#13;
A professor of mathematics in one&#13;
of our largest colleges, whoae reputation&#13;
aa a mathematician la very high,&#13;
began his career under the inspiration&#13;
of "I can and I will." A Writer in an&#13;
exchange.telle the story:&#13;
"I knew a boy who waa ^preparing&#13;
to enter the Junior class of the New&#13;
Tork unlveraity. He* waa etudying&#13;
trlgpnometry, and I gave him. three&#13;
examples for his next lesson. The following&#13;
day he came into my room to&#13;
demonstrate his problem*. Two of&#13;
them he understood, but the third—a&#13;
very difficult one—he had not performed.&#13;
Tsaid to him. "Shall I help you?"&#13;
"No, air; f can and will do it if you&#13;
give me time."&#13;
"I said, 'I will give you all the time&#13;
you wish.'"&#13;
The next day he came into my room&#13;
to recite another leaaon in the same&#13;
study.&#13;
"Well, Simon, have you worked that&#13;
example?"&#13;
"No, sir," he amiwered; "but I will&#13;
do It if you will give me a little more&#13;
time."&#13;
"Certainly; you shall have all the&#13;
time you desire."&#13;
I always like those boys who are determined&#13;
to do their own work, for&#13;
they make our best scholars and men,&#13;
too. The third morning you should&#13;
have aeen Simon enter my room. I&#13;
knew he Had tt, for his whole face&#13;
told the story of his stweeaa.&#13;
Yes-, he had*4t^ notwithstanding It&#13;
had;coat him many nours of hard work.&#13;
N M orrty had he solved the problem,&#13;
but what waa of much greater importance,&#13;
he-had&gt; begun to develop mathematical&#13;
power.&#13;
T h e P i n t off A l e J o h n .&#13;
ft » a difficult matter to' one accustomed&#13;
to email dally indulgencea to&#13;
realize the expenae thus incurred.&#13;
A Manchester (England) calico&#13;
printer waa aaked on his wedding day&#13;
by hla shrewd wife to allow her two&#13;
half pints of ale a day aa her share of&#13;
home comforts. John made the bargain&#13;
cheerfully, feeling it hardly became&#13;
htm to do otherwise, Inasmuch&#13;
as be drank two or three quarts a day.&#13;
The wife kept the home tidy, and all&#13;
went well with them, but as she took&#13;
the small allowance each week for&#13;
household expenses, she never forgot&#13;
the "pint of ale, John.",,.&#13;
When the first Anniversary of their&#13;
wedding, name, and John looked around&#13;
on his neat home and comely wife, a&#13;
senging c to do/something to celebrate&#13;
she dan took poeaeesloa of him. ,&#13;
"Mary, we've had no holiday since&#13;
we were wed, and only that I haven't&#13;
a penny kn the world, we'd take a&#13;
Jaunt to the village and aee the mother."&#13;
"Would thee like to go, John?" she&#13;
aaked.&#13;
There waa a tear with her smile, for&#13;
it touched her heart to hear him apeak&#13;
tenderly, aa In the olden times.&#13;
"If thee'd like to go, John, I'll stand&#13;
treat."&#13;
"Thou stand treat, Mary! Hast got&#13;
a fortln left thee?"&#13;
"Nay, but I've got the pint of ale."&#13;
aald ahe.&#13;
"Got what! wife?"&#13;
"The pint of ale," ahe replied.&#13;
Whereupon ahe went to the hearth t&#13;
and from beneath one of the atone&#13;
flags, drew out a stocking, from which&#13;
ahe poured upon i£e table, the sum oT&#13;
three hundred and sixty-five threepencea&#13;
(122.81), exclaiming:&#13;
"See, John, thee can have the holiday."&#13;
"What la this?" he asked in amaze.&#13;
"It la my daily pint of ale, John."&#13;
He waa conscience stricken aa well&#13;
an Amazed and charmed.&#13;
"Mary, hasn't thee had thy share?&#13;
Then I'll have no more from thia day."&#13;
And he wag aa good aa hla word.&#13;
They had the holiday with the old&#13;
mother, and Mary's little capital, aaved&#13;
from "the pint of ale," waa the seed&#13;
from which, aa the yearn rolled on,&#13;
grew ahop, factory, warehouse, country&#13;
sea* and carriage with health, happiness,&#13;
peace and^ honor.—Selected.&#13;
F o r Hi» O w a O e e d .&#13;
A Maaeachuaetta man recently tried&#13;
to get a divorce from his wife because&#13;
ahe called him "a fool," "an idiot,'&#13;
and."* brute," and told him he "hadn't&#13;
sense enough to know when he waa insuited.**&#13;
The court held, however, t h a t&#13;
though the hnsband waa affected inthe&#13;
jpife waa moved in part **by what&#13;
seemed to\ner.good sptfve and by a&#13;
deaireaer.%em&lt;»esBlsiiifalM&#13;
Mr. Qeor+t W: m o n e , r Burlington,&#13;
I o w ^ commission saerchant. l&gt;ecam« a&#13;
rich man In almost a minute's time. He&#13;
was the •Uosiastsfl Wide* for the unknown&#13;
aaeets of tfce Burlington IAOUTance&#13;
Company, whkm recently tatted.&#13;
The uaJcnowm assets -*e*e ottered tor&#13;
Ssi one lump. It wee bid off Vy&#13;
|6. The assets have now boas&#13;
ilswrvurosT t o l&gt;e wejttfi eWPMii.&#13;
Be mendful of every Mad ol vMwa.&#13;
An El«|Mt Trip Wkere Comfort aad&#13;
B«aaj3fjBl Voesiery Abouada.&#13;
There U a route" Vriown as thoT&lt;n&#13;
Thousand Island Route, travereeer&gt;y&#13;
the steamers Cambria and Carmonia,&#13;
of The WIndaor, Detroit &amp; Soo Line,&#13;
where the oomfora lover oaa view, aa&#13;
the steamers glide along, some scenery&#13;
aa magnificent as the world contain a,&#13;
These boat* leave Detroit and Windsor&#13;
taking a week for the round trip, the&#13;
terminal point* being Sault Ste. Marie&#13;
and Detroit One who haa not&#13;
seen; the beauties of Georgian Bay'haa&#13;
missed some rare sights.&#13;
The steamers plying over thia route&#13;
are comfortable and the rate of ,speed&#13;
ia aet for comfor^ rather than epeed aa&#13;
the line doea a passenger business almost&#13;
exclusively and one going on a&#13;
pleasure trip sees and enjoye mbrei&#13;
when not flying over the cool waters,&#13;
but* going at a leisurely pace, stopping&#13;
here and there, with scenes of beauty&#13;
almost always in view. The pasaen- Ser can atop at numerous places where&#13;
sh abound and where the angler&#13;
would find a paradise. For those who&#13;
prefer other sport* and amusements&#13;
the opportunities are simply too numerous&#13;
to mention. .&#13;
The meals are well served and tickets&#13;
include meals and a berth. Stop&#13;
over privileg.es are readily granted so&#13;
that one can simply take his own time&#13;
to make the round trip, the price for&#13;
which is only S17. It ia even delight*&#13;
ful to contemplate such a voyage during&#13;
these sweltering days, but the real&#13;
enjoyment and rest it affords are beyond&#13;
words, and the price is within&#13;
the means of alL General information&#13;
and circulars may be obtained of&#13;
George W. Brown, Windsor, Ont&#13;
1 • •x&#13;
Real friendship is a real grower, and&#13;
never thrives unless grafted upon a&#13;
stock of known and reciprocal merit&#13;
Remember to make a difference between&#13;
companions and friends.&#13;
Try Orain-O.&#13;
Ask your grocer today to show yon&#13;
a package of GRAIN-O, the new food&#13;
drink that takes the place of coffee.&#13;
The children may drink it without&#13;
injury as well as the adult All who&#13;
try it like i t GRAIN-O has that rieh&#13;
seal brown of Mocha or Java, but it ia&#13;
made from pure grains, and the most&#13;
delicate stomach receives it without&#13;
distress. H the price of coffee.&#13;
15 cents and 25 cents per. package.&#13;
Sold by all grocers. 'Tasteslike cdffee.&#13;
Looks like coffee.&#13;
No man should trust himself alone&#13;
with a girl who talks about affinity,&#13;
and her need of daily companionahip&#13;
with a kindred soul.&#13;
8bake Into Yow Shoes&#13;
Allen's Foot-Eaae, a powde r for tfcefeet.&#13;
It cures painful, swollen,, smarting&#13;
feet and instantly takes the sting&#13;
ont of corns and bunions. It is the&#13;
greatest comfort discovery, of the age.&#13;
Allen's Foot-Ease makes tight-fit ting&#13;
or new shoes feel easy. It Is a certain&#13;
cure for sweating, callous and hot,&#13;
tired, aching feet Try it today. Sold&#13;
by all druggist* and shoe stores. By&#13;
mail for 25c in stamps. Trial package&#13;
FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le&#13;
Rov, N. Y.&#13;
A man may love a woman enough to five np smoking when she asks him to&#13;
o it for heiwsakei buV he will never&#13;
love ao much again.&#13;
'AN INCIDENT AT THE CITY HOSPITAL&#13;
A W o m a n ' a Life Boj?ai^asvvod b y a OrUsotU O p ^ r a t i o » - H # * *?ss»ttli&#13;
•-.. :. r •; D e a t r o y e d . '"&#13;
• * i. ..&#13;
There waa a hurry call for the ambulance of ttu» City Hospital la tlpf&#13;
edurae of an hour a very 0» s&gt;&#13;
stretcher. She waa pale&#13;
There waa a hasty exam&#13;
alck young woman was brought fn&#13;
aa death and evidently Buffering keen \&#13;
inartion and a consultation. I n less thanj&#13;
quarter of an hour the poor craa*&#13;
tnre waaontheoperaWng tabid ts&gt;&#13;
. ^ undergo the ^operation caOed&#13;
ovariotomy. ^ *r&#13;
There waa no time for the nauaj&#13;
preparation. Her left ovary w a a o o&#13;
the point of burattngj when i t wae r*r&#13;
moved, it literally disintegrated. If i*&#13;
^ h a d buret before removal, ahe&#13;
. would have died almost inatantly\&#13;
i i j ^ i i y a s j n g wQjnan&#13;
had had warninga enough in the terrible pains*&#13;
the burning sensation, the eWellintf lpw down&#13;
on her left side. No one advised her, ao ahe&#13;
Buffered tortures and nearly lost her life., I&#13;
wish I had met her months before, so X could!&#13;
have told her of the virtnes of Xydia E.&#13;
Pinkhem's Vegetable Compound. Aa it&#13;
ia now, ahe la a wreck of a woman.&#13;
Oh, my sisters, if yon will not tell a&#13;
doctor your troubles, do tell them to a woman w h o&#13;
atanda ever ready to relieve you! Write to Mrs,&#13;
Pinkham at Lynn, Maaa., confide freely to her all&#13;
your troubles, and ahe will advise yon free of&#13;
charge; and if you have any of the above symptoms&#13;
take the advice of Miss Agnes Tracy, who&#13;
speaks from experience and aaya:&#13;
" For three years I had suffered with inflammation&#13;
of the left ovary, which caused dreadful pains.&#13;
I waa so badly affected that I had to sleep with&#13;
pillows under my side, and then the pain waa ao&#13;
great it was impossible to r e s t&#13;
" Every month I was in bed for two or three days.&#13;
I took seven bottles of Lydia E. PinkhanVs Vegetable&#13;
Compound, and am entirely cured. I t h i n k&#13;
there is no medicine to be compared with the Compound&#13;
for female diseases. Every woman who suffers from any form of female&#13;
weakness should try i t a t once." Mis* Aosrsa TBACT, BOX 433, Valley City, N. D.&#13;
vr#i8H&#13;
:^r^%&#13;
i?&#13;
, « • •&#13;
.-'.Vi&#13;
• J %&#13;
i T i , e&#13;
* • ' , "&#13;
• i if&#13;
J "&#13;
*•• v'ii&#13;
Two. of the beat Lawn Sprinklers&#13;
made are the Twin Comet &amp; stationary&#13;
one, $5.00, and the Little Giant a traveler,&#13;
IU.0Q. They sprinkle foar times&#13;
greater area than any others, and are&#13;
sent prepaid on five days' trial. Write&#13;
the manufacturers, E. Stebbins Mfg.&#13;
Co., Brightwood, Mass., for circulars.&#13;
A man sentenced to be hanged aaked&#13;
for a suspension of public opinion in&#13;
it* stead.&#13;
To enre caaatipegoa iFoxevoc:&#13;
Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or t5c&#13;
If CC.C.f*Ustocure,drugglstsrefund money&#13;
That which makes people diesatisaed with&#13;
their condition is the chimerical idea they&#13;
form of the happiness of others.&#13;
Xil&#13;
N E W P R I C E&#13;
ON&#13;
THE STANDARD OF THE WORLD&#13;
7 C O L U M B I A 8&#13;
The Beat Bicycles Made,&#13;
B O O C O L U M B I A 8&#13;
Second Only to 1607 Models,&#13;
I 0 $ ? 7 H A R T F O R D 8&#13;
Equal to Moat BIcyctea,&#13;
H A R T P O R D 8&#13;
V*«tte&gt;rn a,&#13;
H A R T P O R D 8&#13;
¥*mttmm U&#13;
H A R T P O R D 8&#13;
F»»tt«»rr»a» SJt mnd &lt;St&#13;
Reduced to&#13;
Reduced to&#13;
Reduced to&#13;
Reduced to&#13;
Reduced to&#13;
Reduced to&#13;
S 7 «&#13;
6 0&#13;
0 0&#13;
4 5&#13;
4 0&#13;
3 0&#13;
Nothing In t h e m a r k e t epproacrted t h e v a l u e of trreee btc olea a t&#13;
t h e former prlcee; w h a t »r^ they n o w ?&#13;
POPE MFG. CO., Hartford, COBD.&#13;
C a t a l o g u e free from any C o l u m b i a dealer; by mail for a 2-o. a l a m o .&#13;
DROPSY MWI Send for b«ok of&#13;
HEWMSCOVEtY;*^&#13;
qaftek raitef «ad cmtvm worst&#13;
(otiinoalaU and 1 0 &lt;l*js*&#13;
«te. GaNCEH £&amp;£&amp;&amp;&amp;&#13;
PATENTS, TRADE MARKS t&#13;
Saod for *Iav*«ton' Qold*. or Hov to Goto&#13;
OTAA8JXL A SOV. W u U i r t e , 0. &amp;&#13;
WOMEN H-i CROCHET e*a n n «ood w+f#t wortdiks for u* at home &lt; city or&#13;
oonntry). Writ* m. ^Wfcjt« &amp; Co.Ait St««* St. Chicago AN OPEN LETTER&#13;
To MOTHERS. WIAfiC ASSntTIMG IK THE COURTS OUR RIGHT TO TBI&#13;
KXCLUSTVB USB OF THE WORD "CASTOBIA." AND&#13;
" K T C H E B « OASTOBLa,- AS OUR TRADE MARX.&#13;
HALL'S&#13;
Vegetable Sicilian&#13;
HAIR RENEWER&#13;
Beautifies and restores Gray&#13;
Hair, to its original color and&#13;
vitality; prevents bald^es*;&#13;
cures itching and dandruff.&#13;
A fine hair dressing.&#13;
&amp; P. Hail &amp; Co„ Props.. Naskaa* K B .&#13;
Sold bran J ^&#13;
• - .• •&#13;
WILL PAY SlOO FOR A N Y C A S E&#13;
Of W la U • • TSMJT&#13;
F a U « e Oi&#13;
X DR. SAMUEL PITCHER, of HyunnU, Mouochu****. A | A A T I 1 1&#13;
was the originator of "PITCHER'S CASTOR I A/' the same X 111 I f l I f l V I M I&#13;
that has borne a»d d^ j ^ ^ ^ g y ^ ^ ^ emry ^^^ ' V " " I *****&#13;
bear the facsimile signature of ^a^/f^T&amp;^cJUU wrapper.&#13;
This is the original "PITCHER'S CASTORIA/' which has been&#13;
used in the home* of the mothers of America for over thirty&#13;
years. LOOK CAREFULLY at the wrapper and see that it is&#13;
the kind you have always bought fjj? ss*A JT^ on the&#13;
and has the signature of (£*4f&amp;*y*&amp;***£ wrapper,&#13;
/fa one has authority from me to use nay name except&#13;
The Csmtaur Company of which Chns. R. Mteteker is&#13;
President. *&#13;
March 8, 1897: Qtf*.. *.*.*€ &amp;J&amp;J&amp;* *H.J&gt;.&#13;
\ ,&#13;
i ',&#13;
J -. ' P-&#13;
• &lt; : . •&#13;
,'.--&#13;
v.'-' * # * &lt;m- . . *"!•-'.&#13;
t «i*'. •**•&#13;
- * , V •'.&#13;
.&lt;'-'.. &lt;» /.;&#13;
^^-' ^'' •kf,^.&#13;
* : t ^ . : '&#13;
Aa Omaha Company placea far tjae grst&#13;
time before the public %M.*GICAI. TBJUTMSXT&#13;
for the core of Lost vitality, Nervous&#13;
aad Sexual Weakness, aad Bcetoiratlssi of&#13;
: Life Force in old asid Tf^Tg saea. Ho&#13;
^worn-out French remedy; "retatai ao&#13;
. Fhoaphorna or other haraafal druare. It is&#13;
- a Woxoaaroi. Taaawajtv staalrat la its&#13;
effects—positive ia its eore. JJ1 reader*,&#13;
• • • - . •&#13;
Do not&#13;
wokfti&#13;
- o t v i t ^&#13;
Do Not Be Deceived.&#13;
_ _ t t a e tee o f y o w child by accepting a cbcap substitute&#13;
" 8 8 * * y y ^ f 7&lt;* (booMne be nakea a few more pennioi&#13;
_± a_,_^ . . jxx\simr.&#13;
v»nd You Have Always Bought&#13;
1 « * » tUsTr*st**MtLE SWHATU«£ OF&#13;
-J&#13;
Uwlt&#13;
I That&#13;
• a t « « M « M « .&#13;
blights their life, ceasing that mental aad&#13;
Physical vafferine; eeesisar «6 Lost MaahoedtaaeiaM&#13;
writ* to the STATE MEDICAL&#13;
(X&gt;M&gt;AWY, Omaha. Neh., and they wQl&#13;
aead yea abeelately FRBK, a valttehle&#13;
paper ea these difceaaea, aad positive^proofs&#13;
U thsissnil; BaeKiLTaaaVMsav. Them&gt;&#13;
whe have hwt ail hopeof a&#13;
tared by^ them to a aerfeeteomditkm.&#13;
Tana MAeKax TBaaTMBirr amy be^&#13;
at home aader their directkma. er they wBI&#13;
pmrxvnroaxt tare ana noaei mua «o attwam&#13;
fcefer to go there for treatmeaV if they&#13;
fail to care. They " ""&#13;
have ao Free Freaortatmea,&#13;
Free 8ample, or C. O. D. fake.&#13;
•880,000 capital, ami jpsenftateo t o&#13;
every ease they treat or refaad steri&#13;
lex; or their charges may bodeavmsnttaa&#13;
' to he aeid to them -' '&#13;
fr»Ke&lt;sr»» *odai&#13;
f*l,y •&#13;
• ' \- "• " v " "3&#13;
... f ,-- - -9» •&#13;
» ' ' » i n - i&#13;
* • ' , - ,&#13;
w. N. u—osTsvorr—«a *•&#13;
•fsr&#13;
-1* • &amp;&#13;
(.4.--1 f ' , . &gt; , -•&#13;
, . " . ? ' . * ! • . , ' *&#13;
• V , ' ; w -' ' •&#13;
^. ,-Y.V •&#13;
.'•v.\V&#13;
' • t ' - t ..*•.&#13;
&gt; . • , . *&gt; •&#13;
-'/A-, ,- -&#13;
Gtl , r .&#13;
?&gt;v .'•*:•&#13;
PVAINFISLA&#13;
C. N. Mould and Caddie Webb&#13;
were married last week.&#13;
Osgar Cook and Miss Minnie&#13;
Ketohen were quietly married at&#13;
the home of E. N. Braley last&#13;
"Wednesday evening.&#13;
The Misses Hazel and Geneview&#13;
StUnpeon returned to their&#13;
home at Ann Arbor after spending&#13;
2 weeks with relatives here.&#13;
itix *.'..&#13;
} • ' &lt; ' • -&#13;
IK&#13;
'•i- -v&#13;
* * * ' •&#13;
CHAPEL ITEMSJames&#13;
Foster is recovering&#13;
from the measles.&#13;
Haying is nearly over. Harvesting&#13;
is progressing finely.&#13;
Mrs. Greer and Miss Mabel&#13;
Decker of Piuckney visited last&#13;
week with Mrs. J. D. Sheets.&#13;
Theron Cooper of Dansville is&#13;
spending his vacation with his&#13;
sister, Mrs. E. P. VanBuren.&#13;
The ice cream and lawn social&#13;
at Mrs. A. M. Rockwobd's was&#13;
well attended and a fine program&#13;
was rendered Receipts of the&#13;
evening $17.05.&#13;
Octave Girard of Toledo is visiting&#13;
at C. J. Gardner's.&#13;
Fred Jarvis and family visited&#13;
relatives in South Lvon over Sunday.&#13;
Miss Barbara Homing of&#13;
Adrian is the guest of her sister,&#13;
Mrs, C. J. Gardner.&#13;
Ed Mercer of Toledo was the&#13;
guest of his parents, Wm. Mercer&#13;
and wife the first of the week.&#13;
at&#13;
ANDERSON.&#13;
Have you fallen in line yet?&#13;
Got your hair cut.&#13;
Mrs. Jas. Burden of Gregory&#13;
visited at Elton Jeffreys Friday.&#13;
The Misses Belle and Maggie&#13;
Birnie spent Sunday at William&#13;
Sayles.&#13;
Miss Bessie Daley of Gregory&#13;
is the guest of Miss Nettie Coleman&#13;
for a few days.&#13;
The Ladies Aid society will&#13;
meet with Mrs. Jas. Purkee on&#13;
Thursday afternoon July 29.&#13;
Miss Elva Hoff, who has been&#13;
in Fowlerville for a number of&#13;
weeks, returned home last week.&#13;
r&#13;
'•"•&lt; •&#13;
K'&#13;
..' Q' U ^m t&#13;
EAST PUTNAM.&#13;
Miss Alice Brown is spending a&#13;
few weeks with her sister at Hamburg.&#13;
Alvah Cummings and wife of&#13;
Mason Sundayed at W. H. Placeway's.&#13;
Mrs. Nelson Burgess and daughter,&#13;
Laura of Anderson spent Sundap&#13;
at Geo. Hicks.&#13;
The Misses Nella and Grace&#13;
Lake are visiting relatives at St.&#13;
Louis, Ithaca and Forest Hill.&#13;
—^Otis4Srown-Ql£ryca^_iB spending&#13;
the week with his grandpaFefata,&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Brown.&#13;
E. T. Winter, wife and daughter&#13;
Alice of Fenton spent the first&#13;
of the week with E. G. Fish and&#13;
family.&#13;
Mabel Wines and son, Clatence&#13;
who have been spending the past&#13;
month at R. W. Lake's returned&#13;
to Lawton Tuesday.&#13;
GREGORY.&#13;
Bazar has closed&#13;
Merrit Perrey spent Sunday in&#13;
Munith.&#13;
The bean pickers are having a&#13;
vacation.&#13;
Miss Pierce has been visiting&#13;
£"&amp;•&#13;
»"&amp;.:*&#13;
kt:&#13;
Myra Bird&#13;
Stanley Marsh was home for a&#13;
lew days last week.&#13;
M. Topping had a run away in&#13;
town Monday morning.&#13;
Howlett Bros, are having a&#13;
large sale of machinery.&#13;
Frank Voegte is fixing up the&#13;
rooms over his shop for his own&#13;
use in the near future.&#13;
Hormer Moore and his granddaughter,&#13;
Dot, returned to Detroit&#13;
after a* visit of a week.&#13;
Rev. Ellis has began a course&#13;
of lectures en "The Beginning of&#13;
the Christian Church" for Sunday&#13;
evenings.&#13;
Keep Up Your&#13;
Scott's Emulsion&#13;
in Summer-time&#13;
•*&gt;What are your resources&#13;
for the summer? Have vou&#13;
an abundance of health stowed&#13;
away for the long, hot, depleting&#13;
days, or does summer find&#13;
you low in vitality, run down,&#13;
losing flesh, and weak? Scott's&#13;
Emulsion of Cod-liver Oil will&#13;
give you the proper reserve&#13;
force, because it builds up the&#13;
system on a solidfoundation.&#13;
A tonic may stimulate; Scott's&#13;
Emulsion not only "boosts,"&#13;
it sustains.&#13;
It k a wiK precaution alw&amp;yt t» have at&#13;
least a nnifi fottk of Scotft UmAirm In&#13;
tfachowe. Unopened, it will kup fodefiotety.&#13;
Tiffctly coriccd, after xmkap kept In&#13;
&amp; cool place, it will remain sweet tor weeks.&#13;
TheOE'i served ioe ore am&#13;
the store Saturday evening.&#13;
Rose Van Keuren and Mrs. Bay&#13;
of Plainneld were in this place&#13;
Friday.&#13;
Mrs. Fick and daughter, Josie&#13;
(»f Gregory were callers at Anderson&#13;
Tuesday.&#13;
Michael Rocbe and Hoy Placeway&#13;
of Howell spent Sunday with&#13;
their parents.&#13;
A number from this place attended&#13;
the social at 0. Book wood's&#13;
Friday evening.&#13;
Frank Webb of Battle Creek&#13;
made a business trip to Anderson?&#13;
on Wednesday last&#13;
Mrs. L. Chalker and Mrs. Tripp&#13;
of Unadilla visited at A. G. Wilson's&#13;
one day last week.&#13;
PARSHALLVILLE.&#13;
John Avery is very poorly at&#13;
this writing.&#13;
Sam Tomion of Lindon and&#13;
best girl spent Sunday with friends&#13;
here.&#13;
The hot weather of a week ago&#13;
literally cooked much small fruit&#13;
on the bushes.&#13;
Delia Chambers of Chicago was&#13;
the guest of her cousin, Miss&#13;
Myrta Kirk the past week.&#13;
Mrs. A. J. Beebe of Fenton and&#13;
Delia Chambers of Chicago visited&#13;
at Frank Kirks the past week.&#13;
Walter Van Camp of Fenton&#13;
has been here the past week looking&#13;
after his haying and harvest.&#13;
Z. E. Chambers of Chicago, a&#13;
former resident of Hartland is&#13;
calling on old friends in this vicinity.&#13;
The last quarterly meeting for&#13;
this Conference year will be held&#13;
at the Tyrone M. E. church next&#13;
Sunday morning.&#13;
F. L. Andrews and family of&#13;
Pinr.fcnfty wor&lt;v guests of his&#13;
For tale by all drarjfk* at&#13;
.50 • • • * | U 0&#13;
SAT. JULY 24,&#13;
We will sell&#13;
I PLUG PRUNE JUICE&#13;
TOBACCO for&#13;
16 CENTS&#13;
KTTEYSV1LL*&#13;
" Rube Blade and Lou Flintoff of&#13;
Toledo were home Sunday.&#13;
MnkGeo. Hornung of Howell&#13;
rioted at Mr. Weigands last Wed-&#13;
&gt;.r- fiL G. Teeple and family visited&#13;
«t Will Dunning's in Unadilla on&#13;
Witt Menoer and wife at Pinck-.&#13;
ney visited at his father's OMj*I&gt;kg6.W*6faiati»ow.&#13;
day last week.&#13;
Mrs. V. Weigand entertained a&#13;
company of lad/ inejM|| at Jaer&#13;
home ose."&#13;
*f'^&#13;
ALSO&#13;
A Foot of Tobacco&#13;
8 cents.&#13;
2ScCofiee&#13;
27c Coffee&#13;
30c Coffee&#13;
XXXX Coffee&#13;
Seedey's 10c Bluing for&#13;
Seeley'8 5c Bluing for&#13;
Climax Stove Polish 5c sice,&#13;
for&#13;
• 18c&#13;
20c&#13;
25c&#13;
15c&#13;
5c&#13;
&amp;&#13;
2 for 5&#13;
father here the past week, and&#13;
shaking hands With old associates.&#13;
1L G. Andrews and wife of&#13;
Owosso arrived here last Saurday&#13;
and will spend a week or two visiting&#13;
their parents and other&#13;
friends.&#13;
A large swarm of bees came&#13;
and made their home in an old&#13;
hive at the home of F. Kirk one&#13;
day last week and are working in&#13;
fine shape.&#13;
A very heavy rain storm visited&#13;
this sectkffri^st week. At Oak&#13;
Grove corn was nearly ruined by&#13;
hail and wind. Hundreds of dollars&#13;
of damage was done to crops&#13;
xftnd fruit. —&#13;
AMttkttil Local.&#13;
Frank Daaiavy and wife spent£u&amp;*&#13;
day in Webster.&#13;
Rev. Fr. Comerford was in Detroit&#13;
several days this week.&#13;
E. D. Roche of Howell was in this&#13;
plaoe on business the, first of the week.&#13;
£. A. Mann and ton, Earl, who have&#13;
been spending oonple of months in&#13;
the Western states, returned home&#13;
Monday evening.&#13;
• BUSINESS CHANGE.&#13;
i We learn just as we go to press that&#13;
Wm. A&gt; Sprout of Anderson, former&#13;
principal of the school here, has purabased&#13;
the bouse, Btore and stock of A.&#13;
£ , Wilson at the above plaoe. Mr.&#13;
Wilson has successfully conducted&#13;
business there for several years and&#13;
the change will be a surprise to a&#13;
great many of our readers.&#13;
Wm. A. Sprout needs no introduction&#13;
to the people as he has been in&#13;
their midst so long and is well known.&#13;
With his sterling character, integrity&#13;
and business ability, we speak for and&#13;
wish him unbounded success in his&#13;
new venture.&#13;
rU38 AND THISTLES.&#13;
Do all you can find to do Cor the Lord&#13;
at home, and you will eoon believe In&#13;
foreign missions.&#13;
God has declared that the man who&#13;
firings wicked-devices to pass, w.111 soon&#13;
be out of that business.&#13;
Every good man is a lamp which&#13;
God spares from heaven for awhile, to&#13;
Help give light to the world.&#13;
The man has a hard place who ha* so&#13;
oiuch religious work on hand, he never&#13;
has time to pray in secret&#13;
No' matter what happens, the Chrle*&#13;
tian should insist on believing that&#13;
3od is doing aJTtfclngs well.&#13;
If you are poor, it znajr be that the&#13;
Lord wants to show you how rich ho&#13;
san make you without money.&#13;
The devil has never been able to&#13;
make any man dissatisfied with hie&#13;
lot, who had perfect trust in Christ&#13;
The time is flying this way on rapid&#13;
fringe, when the only thing that can&#13;
prosper in this world is righteousneaa^&#13;
One reason why the world gains!&#13;
knowledge so slowly, is that every child&#13;
must find out for itaell tha* fire_is_&#13;
SUctrtoftl MelpneaS of a Wonhl*&#13;
•one lntaroettnc details of the eleotrteal&#13;
equipment of a modem Britl*&#13;
katUeahlp have boon given in a recent&#13;
deecripttom In the liftoe«r of K&#13;
M. S. Prince George, there are, II&#13;
appears six search lights and 930 glowlamps&#13;
for the Interior lighting, oaothlrd&#13;
of which are of fifty candle power&#13;
and the remainder of ton. The&#13;
current Is supplied by throe 600-aav&#13;
pere dynamos and there are Cweatynlne&#13;
miles of electric light cable am&#13;
board. Electricity Is also employe*&#13;
as an auxiliary In training the fow&#13;
twelve-lneh-wlre guns, hut apparently&#13;
Is not used for the purpose of. hoisting&#13;
ammunition or of driving the ventilators.&#13;
What to c*u it.&#13;
"It strikes me that gewn Is too iona&#13;
for Sunday. I suppose It's what than&#13;
would call a symphony In color?"&#13;
The ether man in the last pew but&#13;
one laughed a low laugh, suggestive Of&#13;
the vague borderland between mirth&#13;
and sorrow.&#13;
"Symphony?" he repeated. "Mate&#13;
likely a sacred concert"—Detroit Journal&#13;
BeU la tk« CoatrttetUa Be*.&#13;
Aiice Morse Earle tells In the Atlantic&#13;
of one church where the contribution&#13;
box used contained a small bell&#13;
concealed in it, which would ring omit&#13;
when a contribution was made. The&#13;
collection was usually taken during the&#13;
sermon and no stingy churchgoer could&#13;
fail of detection.&#13;
tot&#13;
Secret SocieelM 1B Brngland.&#13;
The Ancient Order of Foresters&#13;
a membership of 888,090 in Bngl*n4;&#13;
the membership of the United fjriai&#13;
of Odd Fellows is 256,000, amd the Mamcheater&#13;
Unity of Odd Fellows has H V&#13;
000 members.&#13;
VISMOUt.&#13;
Sold by F. A. SigUt.&#13;
ITTEITIBI EVERBODfl&#13;
This Will Interest You.&#13;
THE RED MARK SALE&#13;
struck. HOT WAVE&#13;
But it makes&#13;
Hot Business&#13;
Just the same&#13;
Climax Stove Polish 10c eke 2 for 10c&#13;
All Clothing in Suits 15 per costs off&#13;
Choice canned Pears&#13;
Cboiee cammed grapes&#13;
15&#13;
.15&#13;
.25&#13;
A popular and successful business of&#13;
our town and one that is a credit to&#13;
our village is that carried on by Mr.&#13;
Thomas Clinton, Pinckney's leading&#13;
harness maker. Mr. Clinton is among&#13;
the longest established of our business&#13;
men, having founded his business over&#13;
a century ago. The suooess he has&#13;
met with is the results of careful management&#13;
and straight forward dealing&#13;
and the deserved popularity the&#13;
business has acquired has been secured&#13;
by turning out a superior class of&#13;
work and offering to the public all&#13;
the advantages possible. The shop is&#13;
known for the osoellemoe of too work&#13;
don*, and for prices it is not undersold&#13;
in the county. All kinds of&#13;
machine and harness oil, to be sold&#13;
lower than oaa be purchased in Livingston&#13;
cotanty, and a complete stock&#13;
of everything fomrnd in a irst-elass&#13;
harness shop is om hand, such as&#13;
whips, combs, brashes, robes; also&#13;
trtnke, valises, etc Imoomsoetiom is&#13;
also a~1wot~&#13;
Enthusiasm Buns High&#13;
over&#13;
;• • 5 - - 3 • ' » • » .&#13;
Theme males moat be GASH. pnuiiMt&#13;
25c Leather Belts at 9c each&#13;
50c Fancy Ribbon at 15c a yard&#13;
Ladies' Full Regular Made Fast&#13;
Black at 12f&#13;
12Jc, a yard wide, Percale at 7^a&#13;
Handsome Challiee, Red Mark 3fc&#13;
Extra large size Gingh'm Apron 10c&#13;
10c to 25c Japanese Fans at 5c each&#13;
Ladies' White Foot Black Hose at 10c&#13;
Ladies1 extra good 25c Summer vests 14c&#13;
10c Tennis Flannels, Red Mark 5c&#13;
8c and 10c Dimities, Red Mark oje&#13;
4-button White Kid Gloves Black Stitchiag&#13;
Red Mark 79c&#13;
The Red Mark is to close out&#13;
Oceans of Dry Goods marked chomp for&#13;
QuickSalesr&#13;
where custom work m manufacturing&#13;
and repairing is SVHM. HO carries&#13;
a stock of mMdiramoa tor nam and&#13;
beast, aa4 pomltry, wmioh is the best&#13;
in the world. At att ttsnes yoa cam&#13;
got the bifmott cask prioo for hides,&#13;
peits, etc., *tfc« sham. 29t32 ,&#13;
If you want Dry Goods&#13;
Buy NOW.&#13;
Yomrs ReapectfnUy, L. H FIEL&amp;&#13;
:w • / ' • '&#13;
/ v ' ' ^&#13;
:Y'. •• A •',••&gt;&#13;
&lt; \</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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              <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="5508">
                <text>Pinckney Dispatch July 22, 1897</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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                <text>July 22, 1897 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>No Copyright - United States</text>
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                <text>1897-07-22</text>
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                <text>Frank L. Andrews</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>VOL. XV. PINOKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MIOH., THURSDAY, JULY 29, 1897. No. 30&#13;
We ihall commence doing business on oar SHORT TIME plan&#13;
en Monday, July 26,1897. To emphasize the fact that this plan means a&#13;
airing of money* we call your attention to the following spot cash prices.&#13;
This is not a "special sale" for "one day only" bat is simply&#13;
what we can do six days in the week on the same terms. Call and. see&#13;
the goods whether yon bny or not and get a little booklet explaining onr&#13;
plan in fall.&#13;
, — , * —&#13;
W We hare some'splendid bargains&#13;
in Tea. Quality is the first consideration&#13;
and 'pr i c e t n e l a s t W e h a v e&#13;
combined both good quality and low&#13;
price in this list:&#13;
The best new Japan Tea&#13;
market for&#13;
Old Crop 50c for&#13;
A fine grade 35c for&#13;
Bat the greatest bargain is&#13;
1 lb Leaf Tea worth 35c for&#13;
in the&#13;
50c&#13;
40c&#13;
30c&#13;
15c&#13;
TAPIOCA.&#13;
The market for rice is rising so&#13;
that even the poor grades are above&#13;
the 5c mark. If you want something&#13;
better than rice at a less price, we&#13;
will sell the finest kind of&#13;
Pearl Tapioca at 5c per lb.&#13;
COFFEE.&#13;
In Coffee, we will, of coarse, sell&#13;
McLaughlin's XXXX at .12&#13;
Standard Bio at .12&#13;
Our 25c Coffee shall be better than&#13;
ever and our 30c shall be "good&#13;
enough for anybody/'&#13;
BAKING POWDER.&#13;
1 lb can WARRANTED 10c&#13;
MASON&#13;
1 qt. per doz,&#13;
2 qt. per doz.&#13;
JARS.&#13;
.45&#13;
.70&#13;
HATS.&#13;
To those, who wish to keep cool&#13;
(and we're a trifle late in thinking&#13;
about it) we will sell our 50c straw&#13;
hats at 30c.&#13;
This sale means SPOT CASH. We can grant no credit on&#13;
these prices. Eggs will be taken as Cash. Butter will NOT.&#13;
This is plain talk but it goes to the point. NOW IS THE&#13;
TIME TO SHUN DEBT. We will help you to do this. We will&#13;
sell so cheap FOR CASH that you won't want to run a store debt.&#13;
A. G. WILSON,&#13;
ANDERSON, MICH.&#13;
Business Pointers.&#13;
Stark&#13;
Aug. 4.&#13;
gives&#13;
Xotlee.&#13;
his $4 photos fox 12&#13;
N*ticc.&#13;
All the members of the Pinckney&#13;
Driving Ciub are requested to be&#13;
present at a meeting to be held at&#13;
the town ball on Friday evening&#13;
JalydOat 7:30 sbarp.&#13;
L o c a l D i s p a t c h e s .&#13;
The heaviest rain for many years&#13;
visited this section Monday.&#13;
There will be service as usual at&#13;
the M. £ church next Sunday.&#13;
A party of Anderson young people&#13;
enjoyed a day at Portage last week.&#13;
Mrs. Nichols of Stock bridge, who&#13;
has been visiting her mother, Mrs. E.&#13;
Brown, retained home Monday.&#13;
The Howell milk factory paid the&#13;
farmers of this county $13,830 for&#13;
milk received last month. Their pay&#13;
roll amounts to $725 per week for&#13;
help.&#13;
Rev's. Crane and Jones and I. J.&#13;
Cook caught 27 fine frogs on Monday&#13;
last. Yes, they got wet bat enjoyed&#13;
the sport just the same and had a&#13;
good meal.&#13;
The DISPATCH Job Department has&#13;
been busy the past week issuing bills&#13;
aad potters for the C. E. excursion to&#13;
Detroit Sept 1st The bills will be in&#13;
circulation next week. Watch for&#13;
Several neighboring villages have&#13;
already had mad-doe scares.&#13;
H. 6. Briggs and wife spent the&#13;
last of last week and the first of this&#13;
with relatives in Oceola.&#13;
Mrs. Geo. Reason Sr. and daughter,&#13;
Josie, who have been spending several&#13;
weeks in California, returned home&#13;
the last of last week.&#13;
The Pinekney base ball team met in&#13;
this office last Monday evening and&#13;
elected as Manager, F. H. Smith;&#13;
Treas., Geo. Reason Jr; Captain&#13;
Earnest Carr. The team is now in&#13;
good shape and would like to hear&#13;
from any amatuer team' in the state.&#13;
The Pinckney correspondent to the&#13;
Livingston Republican must have had&#13;
a wheel in his head. Intone item he&#13;
said F. L. Andrews and wife were at&#13;
Parshallville and in another they&#13;
were at Bay View. Well we will&#13;
forgive him this time as he has been&#13;
keeping bachelors hall and is somewhat&#13;
mixed.&#13;
OBITUARY.&#13;
On Tuesday morning. July 27,1897&#13;
about 7:30 o'clock, occured the death&#13;
of one of the most-respected and es*&#13;
teemed residents of oar little village,&#13;
Thompson Grimes. Mr. Grimes has&#13;
been in-poor health since his sickness&#13;
about six years, ago, which was caused&#13;
by a stroke of paralysis. On Monday&#13;
evening last, about 11 o'clock, he was&#13;
stricken again, this time fatally, and&#13;
was unconscious for nearly five hoars&#13;
before he was summoned to that&#13;
eternal home.&#13;
The deceased was born in Cortland&#13;
acounty, N. Y., November 10, 1824 be.&#13;
ing at his death aged 72 years, 8&#13;
months and 17 days. In the year of&#13;
1846, he moved to Michigan, locating&#13;
soon after in the village of Pinckney&#13;
where be has been a resident ever&#13;
since, doing much to help build up&#13;
the town. For several years he was&#13;
engaged in carriage making, after&#13;
which he entered the mercantile trade&#13;
working at this for nearly twentyfive&#13;
years. In 1878 be was elected asrepresentative&#13;
from Livingston county&#13;
and served the state well in 1879-80.&#13;
He was married to Emilie M. Mann&#13;
Jan. 1, 1850. after which they began&#13;
housekeeping in the boose where be&#13;
has always lived. October 21. 1892&#13;
she died, after a short illness, leaving&#13;
a loving husband to mourn her loss.&#13;
He was married for the second time&#13;
to Flora L. Barbour, Aug. 30, 1893,&#13;
and they continued life's journey together,&#13;
sharing each others joys and&#13;
bearing each others burdens till at&#13;
last the death angel took him from us&#13;
and bore his soul to rest among the&#13;
angels foreverraore.&#13;
Mr. Grimes has held several offices&#13;
both village and township, and had&#13;
just vacated the office of vtikg* president&#13;
about four months proceeding&#13;
his death. For the past few years he&#13;
bas not been engaged in any business&#13;
in particular, bat has enjoyed a wellearned&#13;
vacation from work.&#13;
Mr. Grimes was a man of strong&#13;
mind and wonderful memory. He&#13;
has handled and possessed at different&#13;
times large amounts of property, but&#13;
being too prone to charities, too liberal,&#13;
too generous to his friends, he lived&#13;
loving his neighbors as himself and&#13;
striving to do good unto all men, an J&#13;
believing that if he did what lay in&#13;
his power, that the God who created&#13;
him, would take care of him, wherefore&#13;
he has now left us and gone to&#13;
receive his Crown of Glory, and to&#13;
m r p y t.ha nnbrmndod hi^singa nf o&#13;
ABOUT&#13;
ONE MAN IN&#13;
DOES NOT&#13;
. . Trade With . .&#13;
• • • • U 9 • • • • •&#13;
We're A f t e r That Man!&#13;
About one man in ten dosen't know&#13;
that his neighbors are saving money on&#13;
every deal, because they trade with us,&#13;
We're After That Man!&#13;
About one man in ten can't be expected&#13;
to know that we are headquarters for&#13;
And we expect to get his trade.&#13;
ARE YOU THE TENTH MAN?&#13;
WE'RE AFTER YOU!&#13;
F. fl.SIGLER,&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICE&#13;
9S&#13;
W E ARE&#13;
Always,&#13;
Everlastingly,&#13;
Continuously,&#13;
Persistently,&#13;
Effectively&#13;
Seeking Trade.&#13;
WE SELL&#13;
Oil Stoves,&#13;
Gasoline Stove*,&#13;
Wood Stoves,&#13;
Lawn Mowers,&#13;
Bicycles,&#13;
Farming Implements, etc.&#13;
J* eaipeciifta with mn \t*m whifth&#13;
appeared in ear ooinmns a few weeks&#13;
ago, we are requested to publish the&#13;
following: "While Miss Grace Reason&#13;
who k visiting in another county, is&#13;
Ukiag-advaatage of an excellent opportunity&#13;
to keep, up her study in&#13;
mask, that no injustice, directly or&#13;
indirectly, may result toward her&#13;
testate that she has neither&#13;
changed aor thought of ehangif inalradhoM&#13;
in annua. Hiss Clark's in-&#13;
P1KCKH£T vs STOCKBRIDGE.&#13;
On Friday of last week, the Pinckney&#13;
Base Ball team went to Stockbridge&#13;
to play ball, not expecting to&#13;
defeat this team, but for the purpose&#13;
of exhibiting tjheir strength and ability&#13;
against one of the most crack&#13;
amatuer teams in Michigan. The&#13;
score will show that our boys must&#13;
have played ball as they held their&#13;
opponents down to ten runs, seven of&#13;
which were made in the first inning.&#13;
After that they began to get their&#13;
nerve np and Pinckney played a&#13;
ceepeot, aad aiflfctyr afO)rec«.ted by&#13;
game of ball that has, not been surpassed&#13;
by a teem from this place for&#13;
many years back. Tfce boys found no&#13;
fault in the way they were treated as&#13;
everthing was done to make the time&#13;
pass pleasantly and they may be sure&#13;
that the boys will be need in the best&#13;
manner possible when they visit this&#13;
place to play the next&#13;
which will probably be Aug. 19. The&#13;
following is the score:&#13;
1 2 S 4 S&#13;
home not made bv hands.&#13;
The funeral will be held at the late&#13;
residence Friday, July 30,1897, at&#13;
2:00 p. m., Rev. K. fl. Crane and C. S.&#13;
Jones officiating. The ceremony will&#13;
be conducted by Masonic services, of&#13;
which organization he has been a&#13;
member for many years.&#13;
Mrs. Jennings of Detroit is the&#13;
guest of the Jackson families,&#13;
St. Mary's society took in 128.05 at&#13;
their social Saturday evening.&#13;
Peter Morgan of Howell was the&#13;
gnest of relatives here Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. C. E. Reynolds spent the past&#13;
week with her parents at Detroit&#13;
&lt;?&#13;
™o en)oyou a mess o* &amp;ne green&#13;
corn from the garden of fl. G. Briggs&#13;
last Friday.&#13;
— Miss-Bessie Daley of Mizaii~ spent&#13;
the past week with her friend, Miss&#13;
W E W I L L&#13;
Gladlv,&#13;
Politely,&#13;
Carefully,&#13;
Promptly&#13;
Wait Up on Yon.&#13;
Respectfully Yours,&#13;
TEEPLE tf» CADWELL.&#13;
family of&#13;
Dolan and&#13;
Mary Roche.&#13;
Lament Nowlan and&#13;
Mason were guests of M.&#13;
family over Sunday.&#13;
The Misses Laura Dolan and Mae&#13;
Tuoiney of Detroit are fuents of relahereu&#13;
. _—^_&#13;
T. P. McClear and (aaily will&#13;
We received a card from E. L.&#13;
Glover, formerly of this place, which&#13;
located him at Reading, Mich.&#13;
Whortleberries are in the market&#13;
and are extra fine this year. They&#13;
started out at eight cents per quart.&#13;
Campers are thick at Portage lake,&#13;
so are mosquitoes. Both seem to enjoy&#13;
the beautiful scenery around the&#13;
lake, however.&#13;
The crop of wheat and rye have&#13;
been harvested and oats are rapidly&#13;
ripening. The oat crop bids fair to&#13;
be a large one..&#13;
~ DrTtjaTMnrHT^BwiiBr started^&#13;
Thursday last for New York for a&#13;
stay of about six weeks. They visited&#13;
Pontiac and Detroit friends on the&#13;
way.&#13;
The Misses Edith Vaughn and Kittie&#13;
Grieve have been spending, the&#13;
past week neaping on what is called&#13;
flnwaks lake, or better known as&#13;
aide in the apple dryer while he is«t&#13;
work on the parsonage.&#13;
ft. CHaton, who is working tor the&#13;
MeCoonkk Jtnehi&amp;e On. spent Jtatt*.&#13;
Cordley's like,&#13;
Work is being poshed on the d *&#13;
ferent blocks in this village, aad the*&#13;
will aeon he' ready for&#13;
Thiajp *&gt; ssoee in&#13;
The IOOF of Stockbridge will run&#13;
their annual excnraion to Detroit oa&#13;
Thursday August i. Train will leave&#13;
Pinckney at 8:10 a. m; returning;&#13;
leave Detroit 9:00 p. m. Fare front&#13;
Pinckney, $1.00.&#13;
The Lyceum Theatre Co. played&#13;
"Only a Tramp" at the opera house oa&#13;
Monday evening. This troupe&#13;
here in the earlier part of the&#13;
and gave seven nights of entertain*&#13;
ment. The DiaPAica office issued bills&#13;
for the troupe.&#13;
F. L Andrews and family left Men*&#13;
day evening for Detroit to meet his&#13;
sister, Mrs. C. E. Cole aad family of&#13;
Owosso. Before returning, F. L and&#13;
family expect to spend several days&#13;
on the lakes, where he hopes to gain&#13;
his illness&#13;
The Maecabee Supreme Tent in sea*&#13;
sioa at Port Huron last week, reelect&#13;
44 Boa. D. P. Markey as Suprasee&#13;
Commander and N. S. Boyatoa W~&#13;
Supreme record keeper. The 8aflive&#13;
also in&#13;
M. Hollister,&#13;
Or and Bin* B. West as&#13;
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WITHIN OUB WALLS.&#13;
MERE MENTION OF MICHIGAN&#13;
! M ATTffi]f!ttV&#13;
The Knights and Ufi'vieoiliNp Held&#13;
Their Bl-Bnulel Supreme Convention&#13;
at Port HttMM-*Mlehlf»a Crop* ere&#13;
Helped by showers.&#13;
K* O. *. ML Bl-Ennlsl Review.&#13;
The seventh bi-ennlai review of the&#13;
supreme tent, R. O. T. M.( was held at&#13;
Port Huron. Reports of office CB&#13;
•bowed that during the past two years&#13;
1,800 new tonta were instituted with a&#13;
Charter membership of S3,180, In that&#13;
time there were 1,05» deaths, the aver*&#13;
age amount paid beneficiaries being&#13;
91,685.10, a total of 81,703,435.12. For&#13;
total and permanent disability 851,548&#13;
has been paid. There were 20,902 life&#13;
beneficiary , certificates annulled by&#13;
reason of suspension. There is a total&#13;
of $50,064.63 io the general fund, and&#13;
«3,268,081.03 in the life benefit fund,&#13;
a grand total of 82,310,046.56. The&#13;
number of certificates in force is 118,-&#13;
467, representing death benefits&#13;
amounting to $162,710,500, an average&#13;
6* $1,534.65. The total membership of&#13;
the K. O. T. M. and the L. O. T. M.&#13;
now aggregates 278,181.&#13;
The report of the lady supreme com*&#13;
tnander of the L. 0. T. M. shows that&#13;
•during the year ending Dec. 31, 1896,&#13;
903 new hives were organized, and&#13;
that on July 1, 1807, there were 618&#13;
hives in good standing, with a total&#13;
&lt;cnembership of 28,005. The income of&#13;
the order from assessments is $163,035&#13;
xwr year and from other sources $31,-&#13;
•303. The amount of life benefits is&#13;
Stated as $15,314,500. The report of&#13;
the supreme medical examiner shows&#13;
that 18,705 applications were received&#13;
elnee the last review.&#13;
The celebration of "Maccabee day"&#13;
which was to Include a big street parade&#13;
was somewhat interfered with by&#13;
rain, but quite a large number turned&#13;
out just the same.1" The play of "Judas&#13;
Maccabeus" by Port Huron Maccabees&#13;
eras also an event&#13;
The election'of officers of the BL O.&#13;
"T. M. resulted: Supreme commander,&#13;
ft 4». Markey, of Port Huron; lieutenant&#13;
commander, J. B. McDannell, of&#13;
Mew York; supreme record keeper, N.&#13;
8. Boynton, of Port Huron; supreme&#13;
finance keeper, C. D. Thompson, of&#13;
Port Huron; supreme medical examiner,&#13;
B&gt; B. Moss, of New York; supreme&#13;
chaplain, Geo. H. Terpany, of Indiana.&#13;
The supreme hive L. O. T. M. elected&#13;
officers: 8upreme commander, Lillian&#13;
M. Holllster, of Detroit; lieutenant&#13;
commander, Elizabeth E. Brown, of&#13;
Pennsylvania; supreme record keeper,&#13;
Bina M. West, of Port Huron; supreme&#13;
finance keeper, Kittle C. Warner, of&#13;
Flint; supreme chaplain, E. Irene&#13;
Eaub, of Bradford, Pa; supreme medical&#13;
examiner, M. M Danforth, of Port&#13;
Huron.&#13;
• * • • " mm I 'I .!W' as&#13;
MICHIGAN N I W 8 ITEMS.&#13;
O r e w U * Crop*.&#13;
Weather Observer Schneider's report&#13;
aays: "The general weather conditions&#13;
iiave been favorable to all growing&#13;
crops and to harvest work. Wheat&#13;
harvest has progressed rapidly and&#13;
Attach of the crop has been secured.&#13;
Crashers are beginning work in the&#13;
southern counties and report a fair&#13;
yield of fine crop; rye that is yet standing&#13;
Is in fine condition. Haying has&#13;
also been rapidly pushed. The nearly&#13;
normal temperatures and rery beneficial,&#13;
although unevenly distributed.&#13;
•turners have given corn a splendid&#13;
growth, greatly improved the condition&#13;
ooff npoott atoes, beans and garden truck&#13;
andhh ave headed out oats very fast.&#13;
The showers have been insufficient in&#13;
fiie northerly eeetien of the state, and&#13;
Caere i s eaneiaViiahlii complaint from&#13;
there that the weather is still too dry&#13;
lor data; potatoes and pastures. In&#13;
those s«e*sjsn there is also much complaint&#13;
of-the ravage* of the grasshopper&#13;
and the potato bug. Apples continaa&#13;
to elfaa ha#j»j * t other fruit*&#13;
except yeaehes are fairly promising.&#13;
Berries e l ett Haas ere plentiful The&#13;
very not dry weather of the early&#13;
pert of the month has burnt out much&#13;
young clover."&#13;
Richmond wants an $8,000 electric&#13;
light plant. «.-'&gt;v,-&#13;
Robt. Smith, aged 80} w a s drowned&#13;
iwhile bathing in t h e JUfie river at&#13;
Ernest Mills, aged JL7, w a s drowned&#13;
in Crystal Lake, near Benzonia, while&#13;
bathing.&#13;
An independent telephone line has&#13;
been built between Benton Harbor and&#13;
StevensvUle.&#13;
The Richmond mine near Palmer has&#13;
started up with 25 men, after being&#13;
idle for a year.&#13;
, Frank Solan, aged 17, w a s drowned&#13;
at Port Huron. He w a s fishing and&#13;
fell into the river.&#13;
Frank Morton, an old resident of Ottawa&#13;
county, is dead a t Hart from an&#13;
overdose of morphine.&#13;
The Groton, N. Y., Bridge Co., will&#13;
build a bridge across Black river at&#13;
Port Huron to cost $20,000.&#13;
Sam Humphrey, living near Reading,&#13;
fell from the beam in his barn and&#13;
broke three ribs and one leg.&#13;
The directors of the Dowagiac Union&#13;
Fair association have decided to hold a&#13;
four days' fair commencing Sept. 27.&#13;
Henry Reid, a Kalamo farmer, aged&#13;
40, is under arrest at Charlotte for carnally&#13;
knowing a girl under 16 years.&#13;
Bertram Moore, aged 70, a contractor&#13;
of Bay City, jumped from a scaffolding&#13;
and fell on an upright rusty nail. He&#13;
may die.&#13;
While camping at Lyon lake, near&#13;
Marshall, Chas. Swineford, aged 16, accidentally&#13;
shot Carl Wagner, aged 14,&#13;
killing him instantly.&#13;
Elmer Benjamin, of the Grand Rapids&#13;
firm of Benjamin, Leonard &lt;fc Son,&#13;
clothiers, fell off the dock at Macatawa&#13;
park, at Holland, and was drowned.&#13;
Bay county supervisors say that the&#13;
county books are in an unsatisfactory&#13;
condition and an expert will probably&#13;
be employed to straighten them out.&#13;
Nine boys, ranging In years from 13&#13;
to 18, were found in a drunken stupor&#13;
at Lansing. The person w h o sold&#13;
them a k e g of beer will be prosecuted.&#13;
A large barn on the Thomas Foster&#13;
farm, 10 miles west of Flint, w a s destroyed&#13;
by fire, together with its con*&#13;
tents. Loss $2,000, with little insurance.&#13;
Frank Phllcosky, has just arrived at&#13;
Baroda from Alaska with over $90,000&#13;
in gold. He is a Berrien county man&#13;
and left Baroda a year ago for the gold&#13;
fields.&#13;
Edward Grigware, a well • known&#13;
Saginaw shoe dealer, has been granted&#13;
a pension, which, with arrears&#13;
amounts to $1,080. He filed his claim&#13;
in June, 1891.&#13;
Niels Petersen, of Decatur, has completed&#13;
the largest peppermint distilery&#13;
in the world. Eight tubs are used and&#13;
the distilery will have a capacity of&#13;
500 pounds of oil per day.&#13;
Albert Harrington w a s convicted in&#13;
the Genesee circuit court for selling&#13;
liquor at Fen ton without a license,&#13;
and was sentenced to pay a fine of $200&#13;
or g o to jail for six months.&#13;
Peter Manard and Geo. Bradford,&#13;
aged 17, while fishing in White's lake,&#13;
near Kalamazoo, accidentally overturned&#13;
their boat and were thrown out&#13;
and drowned before help arrived.&#13;
Mrs. McKlnley, wife of the President,&#13;
is stopping at the Battle Creek sanitarium,&#13;
where she was quietly taken two&#13;
weeks ago. - She is improving under&#13;
the treatment and is enjoying a quiet&#13;
rest.&#13;
Miss Mamie Vuylsteke, of Benton&#13;
Harbor, w h o was already worth $200,-&#13;
About 80 patients, nurses and physicians,&#13;
were poisoned a t the U. of M.&#13;
hospital, a n d a few of the patients&#13;
aeemed likely to die. S u n t Clark&#13;
traced the poison to a milk can which,&#13;
lie found, nasi been left standing in&#13;
the s a e for four days and then filled,&#13;
without being scalded.&#13;
Tfc* Gevecaer to&#13;
Gov. Pingree was a t McBaln investig&#13;
a t i n g some, charges made acainat&#13;
•ease of the county officials and alio&#13;
taeestigating the action of the A n a&#13;
Arbor railway in refusing t o grant&#13;
proper street crossings over their line.&#13;
to KUl Hie Wife.&#13;
Anthony Drach, of Honton H^rWr,&#13;
with an ax.&#13;
to&#13;
tor trying to kill his wife&#13;
his wrath by&#13;
neighbors house until&#13;
» * " • • " ''f*''.&#13;
Philip Oofanea, of Allen township,&#13;
Hillsdale county, conunittod suicide by&#13;
4aootk&gt;g atastolf twice after taking&#13;
amnaaunm. Domestic Infelicity was&#13;
•fee "ouble.&#13;
Ouu in her own name, has received the&#13;
information that she has been left&#13;
$750,000 by the death of an uncle in&#13;
Paris.&#13;
While catching in a game of baseball&#13;
at Muskegon, Charles Ryder was struck&#13;
in the back of the neck by a pitched&#13;
ball. He finished the game, then&#13;
fainted and is now in a precarious condition.&#13;
Thirty-five brickmakers in the employ&#13;
of the Grand Rapids brick yards,&#13;
and 30 employed in the Collins yard&#13;
struck at Grand Rapids. They have&#13;
been getting $1.12½ per day, and ask&#13;
for $1.50.&#13;
Saginaw's street railway system was&#13;
completely tied up by the authorities&#13;
because the company refused to pay&#13;
certain special improvement taxes, for&#13;
which reason the frapti&amp;ise. has been&#13;
declared forfeited.&#13;
In his annual report to. Atty.-Gen.&#13;
Maynard, Prosecutor Cummina, of Ingham&#13;
county, says the officer* of that&#13;
county make a business of arresting&#13;
tramps by the score and then mulct&#13;
the county for fees.&#13;
Ely Chapman, a young farmer,&#13;
struck by lightning and instantly&#13;
killed. The stack ignited and the&#13;
body was reaoaed fnani the blazing1 .bay&#13;
with great difacnlty. &lt; '&#13;
James Sullivan, a farmer&#13;
Lenox, had a valuable pair of norees&#13;
killed by lightning. OU son and&#13;
driven them under a large tree to&#13;
shelter them from the etortn.&#13;
boy was only slightly iajnrod,&#13;
Quartermaster-General White, of the&#13;
M. N. G., moved upon Inland Lake and&#13;
established -permanent headquartera,&#13;
which will be maintained until camp&#13;
closes on Aug. 10. He will prepam&#13;
the grounds for the encampment. v ,&#13;
Movoncy Cornelius, aged 80, a Polish&#13;
women, has been an inmate of the Allegan&#13;
county . poor house since 1805,&#13;
and waa a county charge before then.&#13;
She is now insane. Who she is qp&#13;
where she originally come from is a&#13;
mystery. ^&#13;
Lee Groner and Roy Brooks were&#13;
bathingCn Knickerbocker lake near&#13;
Decatur, when Groner began to sink,&#13;
Brooks attempt to rescue the drowning&#13;
man, but was unable to hold him up,&#13;
and barely reached the shore, Groner&#13;
was drowned.&#13;
Dr. James M, Mttrtin, surgeon in the&#13;
U, of M. hospital, is in ill-health, and&#13;
will spend next year in the Sandwich&#13;
islands. The doctor suffered from blood1&#13;
poison two years ago as the result of a&#13;
needle prick and recently suffered&#13;
from a sunstroke.&#13;
Arnold Verhulst, of Holland, was&#13;
taken to the asylum at Kalama&#13;
John Verhulst, a brother, was grea&#13;
affected by his brother's condltl&#13;
and is missing, lie had threaten&#13;
drown himself, fearing that&#13;
might become insane. /&#13;
More than one-half of the^JlTof peppermint,&#13;
spearmint, tansy, wormwood,&#13;
etc., of the entire world is produced&#13;
and distilled in southwestern Michigan,&#13;
mostly in St. Joseph, Van Buren and&#13;
Allegan counties. There are several&#13;
hundred distilleries in that region.&#13;
Merritt M. Goodspeed, Muskegon's&#13;
raessiah says his divine gifts are yet&#13;
in their Infancy. He says that now he&#13;
is only a healer but soon will be employed&#13;
by the Holy Ghost with the&#13;
strength of prophecy, and, declares&#13;
that he will live to be 200 years old.&#13;
The Epworth League resort at Ludington&#13;
is opening up in excellent shape&#13;
this season. No other year since it&#13;
was instituted has there been so many&#13;
people in attendance so early. Several&#13;
cottages hare been jDuijLt since last season&#13;
and several mdwrare under way.&#13;
Roy Nunn, aged 17, of Gladwin, has&#13;
been arrested on suspicion of being&#13;
the person who assassinated Curtis&#13;
Wright, a farmer near there a week&#13;
ago. The boy has served a term in&#13;
the industrial school. There has been&#13;
bad blood between the two families.&#13;
Bruno Westphal, of Detroit, was run&#13;
over by a freight train on the Michigan&#13;
Central at Albion. One leg was&#13;
cut off close to the hip and the other&#13;
was badly mangled. Westphal was attempting&#13;
to board the train when he&#13;
slipped and was thrown between the&#13;
cars.&#13;
The large barn of W. W. Crapo&#13;
burned at Fostoria, with about 100 tons&#13;
of hay. The wind blew strong towards&#13;
town. One dwelling 40 rods away&#13;
caught fire 'several times, but was&#13;
saved. Trees were ignited nearly half&#13;
a mile away. Loss $2,000; little insurance.&#13;
Mrs. Chris. Wick, aged 38, living&#13;
near Northvilie, was standing on a&#13;
chair fixing some paper on the wall&#13;
when she fell and a pair of shears were&#13;
forced Into her leg, severing an artery.&#13;
She bled to death in a few momenta.&#13;
She leaves a husband and seven&#13;
children.&#13;
The blueberry crop promises to be&#13;
an excellent one in the upper peninsula&#13;
this season, and the first berries&#13;
are already in the market. In Marquette,&#13;
Delta, Alger and- Luce counties&#13;
perhaps 2,000 persons will be engaged,&#13;
in picking them. The blueberry&#13;
crop will be worth $60,000 to&#13;
$75,000 this year.&#13;
Bertha Cunningham, of Dundee, and&#13;
Selma Rxanzuh, of Blissfield, have&#13;
been arrested at Dundee on a charge&#13;
of rifling letters belonging to a traveling&#13;
man named Cunningham. The&#13;
girls admitted that they called for the&#13;
THE TELEGRAPH.&#13;
letters at the postoffice and tore them&#13;
up. The pieces were found in the&#13;
street, with fragments of a $50 draft.&#13;
A big gang of tramps caused a riot&#13;
at StevensvUle in which they used&#13;
razors, knives and revolvers and severval&#13;
tramps and citizens were badly&#13;
wounded before the sheriff and a posse&#13;
could arrive and quell the disturbance.&#13;
Three of the leaders of the hoboes&#13;
were placed in the Jail which they se&#13;
fire to, and they came very near being&#13;
cremated.&#13;
Lightning struck the grain barn of&#13;
C. J. Walters, near Centerville, while&#13;
he waa drawing in wheat The hired&#13;
man was unloading when the bolt&#13;
struck the barn, killing one of the&#13;
horses and setting fire to the building.&#13;
The man was thrown about 10 feet,&#13;
but was not seriously injured. The&#13;
barn and its contents were completely&#13;
destroyed. Loss $1,500.&#13;
Such enormous quantities of black*&#13;
berries are being gathered In southwestern&#13;
Michigan this season that the&#13;
prices received for them in the Chicago&#13;
market fail to net the snipper the coat&#13;
of the packages alone. Many growers&#13;
have devised inexpensive evaporating&#13;
plants to dispose of the aurplna berries&#13;
and it is estimated that over one-half&#13;
of the crop will find a market as dried&#13;
fruits.&#13;
Kittle M. Wads worth, a beautiful&#13;
woman of 25, whose home is at Big&#13;
Rapids, was fatally shot and stabbed in&#13;
a Chicago saloon by Frank W. Phelan,&#13;
of St Louis, with whom she bad lived&#13;
for about a year. Phelan and the woman&#13;
had quarreled for come time, when&#13;
Phelan suddenly drew a knife and&#13;
stabbed her in the throat, eevering the&#13;
wind pipe. He then shot her twice in&#13;
the head, and turning the gan on himself&#13;
blew his brains o a t&#13;
INTBRK8TINQ ^ND iMPVRT^NT&#13;
NEW* idATT^Jit &gt; *&#13;
—; L_^;, \i&#13;
toa«t«ow«H a , and Vlcialty euMred&#13;
Heavy Damage from a Cloudburst&#13;
—Messages by Carrier Pigeons Say&#13;
Andre* Discovered the North Pole.&#13;
The North Pole Discovered.&#13;
A special dispatch, from Copenhagen&#13;
says that a carrier pigeon has just been&#13;
caught in the vicinity of Tromsoe&#13;
Island, near the north point of Norway,&#13;
from which place Andree sailed in his&#13;
balloon north pole expedition, with&#13;
the following stamped upon its wing:&#13;
"North pole passed; fifteenth." Another&#13;
pigeon caught at Sovede, in&#13;
Rifylke, carried the message, "North&#13;
pole, 142 w 14:62," on its wings and is&#13;
thought to be one of Andree's pigeons.&#13;
London: A keen interest is felt in&#13;
geographical circles here as to the result&#13;
of Andree's.expedition and this is&#13;
greatly increased by the arrival of the&#13;
pigeons at Soevde and at Tromsoe island,&#13;
though there is some doubt as to&#13;
whether either bird came from Andree.&#13;
I. Scott Keltie, secretary of the Royal&#13;
Geographical society, says: "It is certain&#13;
that if the wind were southerly&#13;
when he ascended Andree would&#13;
cross the polar basin and come out&#13;
near the Bering straits. '142 w' means&#13;
the coast of North America and if such&#13;
a wind prevailed, under the most favorable&#13;
circumstances Andree would arrive&#13;
there. If the inscription means&#13;
this, it means also that Andree has&#13;
passed right across the pole. There is&#13;
no especial anxiety felt here as to&#13;
Andree's fate, because even If the balloon&#13;
comes to grief Andree will be no&#13;
worse off than Nansen was after leaving&#13;
the Frim."&#13;
Stockholm: Dr. Ekhola, who was associated&#13;
with Andree in the projected&#13;
balloon expedition of last year, does&#13;
not believe that the carrier pigeons&#13;
captnred are from Andree.&#13;
Cloudburst mt Youngstowrn, O.&#13;
A tremendous cloudburst struck the&#13;
Mahoning valley near Youngstown,&#13;
and Crab creek, a stream ordinarily 20&#13;
feet wide, became a rushing torrent&#13;
2,000 feet in width, flooding the entire&#13;
valley and causing great damage, both&#13;
in the city and along the railway lines.&#13;
Several people are supposed to have&#13;
been drowned. The entire county cast&#13;
and weat for 20 miles was flooded and&#13;
the damage will be enormous, the railroads&#13;
being the heaviest losers. Many&#13;
residences at Youngstown were flooded&#13;
the occupants being taken away by the&#13;
police and fire departmente. The Mahoning&#13;
Valley electric lines were flooded&#13;
out and all the bridgea washed away.&#13;
The Catholic church at Nlles waa struck&#13;
by lightning and nearly destroyed by&#13;
fire, while business houses and manufacturing&#13;
concerns were flooded out&#13;
Henry Myers, while standing in front&#13;
of his residence, was struck by lightning&#13;
and killed. Railroads were forced&#13;
to completely suspend operations.&#13;
Mlehlama Q. A. B. la Good ahepev&#13;
Col. C. V. R. Pond in his semi-annual&#13;
report as assistant adjutant-general&#13;
and assistant quartet master-general of&#13;
the Michigan G. A. Jt. says there are&#13;
no delinquent posts i n the department.&#13;
The gain in members during the term&#13;
ending June 30 last, was 903. The&#13;
losses: By death, f.77; by honorable&#13;
discharge, 36; by transfer, 133; by suspension,&#13;
572; by surrender of charter,&#13;
three, posts and 43 members, making a&#13;
total lose of 061 members.—This leaves&#13;
the showing for the department at the&#13;
present time, 383 posts, 16,038 members.&#13;
Col. Pond reports the inquiries being&#13;
made as to the national encampment&#13;
at Buffalo in August, as a very&#13;
good reason for anticipating the largest&#13;
turnout of Michigan veterans since&#13;
the DetroiLeathering in 1801.&#13;
Killed la Winchester Arm Paeteiy.&#13;
Four women and two men were&#13;
killed by an explosion in the leading&#13;
department at the armory of the Winchester&#13;
Repeating Arms Co., at New&#13;
Haven, Conn. Five others were&#13;
badly injured. Forty feet of the side&#13;
of tiie building was blown out and&#13;
hurled In pieces many feet, and fragments&#13;
of human bodies were scattered&#13;
about&#13;
TELEGRAPHIC TlCklNOS.&#13;
A Berlin cable aays the czar of Buaaia&#13;
has demanded that Turkey at once&#13;
evacuate Thesaaly, and threatens that&#13;
unless this is done Rnsaian troops will&#13;
invade Turkey. It Is stated that all of&#13;
the powen e uept Great Britan&#13;
agreed to this course. ,&#13;
Mis* Bene Williams was found&#13;
brutally outraged and murdered In the&#13;
woods near Weat Point, Tenn. Antony&#13;
Williams, colored, was caught and&#13;
made to conies* the crime after. which&#13;
he waa stamped to death by 500 men,&#13;
and the body riddled with bullet* and&#13;
then cremated.&#13;
The Columbus, 0., Buggy Co., which&#13;
assigned over a year ago with an indebtedneaa&#13;
of $1,000,000, arranged with&#13;
creditors so that operations amy again&#13;
be resumed. Over 800 men are employed&#13;
at the outaet and the number&#13;
will he gradually increased until the&#13;
full force of 1,000 men are at&#13;
TJHli EfiTH CONQMfiVS- AT WORK&#13;
SnwAxav—03d day. —Senator Morgan,&#13;
led «o*t of the day&#13;
A *. asfib' df?%he&#13;
government in tht ro*d. ^&gt;K**BKNOX,&#13;
~Wh^jh«.R|^u^io^n e^f.erreea'.on&#13;
the tariff bill adjourned the announcement&#13;
was made, that they,bad agreed&#13;
upon all the items of the bill and that&#13;
the result of the partisan conference&#13;
would-ber»uba&gt;itted to the Democratic&#13;
members of the conference.at the next&#13;
meeting. It is learned that while the&#13;
majority of the Senate* amendments&#13;
were agreed to the House conferees&#13;
were successful in carrying their points&#13;
on the more important ite^na, Senator&#13;
Jones, silver Republican^ of JJeyada,'&#13;
holding as he did praotioally the balance&#13;
of power both in the Senftti^and in&#13;
committee, was. enabled to seojire&#13;
many concessions for western interests,&#13;
and he succeeded in securing a degree&#13;
of protection fotv beet sugar greater&#13;
than was given lo*either house. The&#13;
bill as agreed upon will present an entirely&#13;
new sugar schedule, at least in&#13;
the main item of duty on raw and refined&#13;
sugar, but favors the House&#13;
schedule. Wool is also a compromise.&#13;
It !B estimated that the changes in the&#13;
sugar schedule will raise about $2,000,-&#13;
000 additional revenue. White pine&#13;
lumber was restored to the House&#13;
classification of $2. The House made&#13;
a strong fight to have hides restored&#13;
to the free list, but they were&#13;
compelled to submit to the Senate.&#13;
The reciprocity clause has been transformed&#13;
into a modification of both&#13;
schedules. One of the biggest victories&#13;
won by the House was in the restoration&#13;
to the dutiable list of burlaps,&#13;
jute and cotton bagging, cotton ties,&#13;
floor matting, e t c , which the Senate&#13;
had placed on the free list However,&#13;
the rates are lower th,an they have&#13;
ever been on this class of articles.&#13;
Another victory of the House was the&#13;
elimination of the Senate stamp tax on&#13;
bonds and stocks. It was decided&#13;
that the machinery of collection waa&#13;
too cumbersome'. Raw cotton is restored&#13;
to the free list "as originally&#13;
fixed by the House.&#13;
SKNATK.—04th day.-—The day was&#13;
principally devoted to a discussion of&#13;
Mr. Harris'resolution relating to the&#13;
Union Pacific railroad. House.—The&#13;
conference report on the tariff bill waa&#13;
adopted by a vote of 185 to 118. This&#13;
eclipses all previous records. The re-&#13;
Suit was accomplished after 12 hour*&#13;
of continuous debate. But twb&#13;
speeches were made by the Republicans,&#13;
one by Mr. Dingiey in opening&#13;
the debate, and one by Mr. Payne, of&#13;
New York, in closing i t The Democrat*&#13;
made 10 speeches and the Populist*&#13;
ope. The sugar schedule was the&#13;
main point of assault, bnt the moat interesting&#13;
feature of the debate occurred&#13;
when Mr. Bailey and Mr. MoMiilln,&#13;
the two rival Democratic leader*,&#13;
crossed swords on the question of&#13;
orthodoxy of the free raw material&#13;
doctrine, the former opposing and the&#13;
latter championing i t The galleriee&#13;
were crowded up to the' time the vote&#13;
was taken, many distinguished people&#13;
being present An analysis of the vote&#13;
ahow* that 180 Republicans and Ave&#13;
Democrats voted for the report and 10$&#13;
Democrats and 12 Populists against i t&#13;
In his opening speech Mr. Dingiey&#13;
spoke of the revenue to be raised by&#13;
the bill and pointed out the difficulty&#13;
resulting from the large anticipatory&#13;
Importations. The bill next year, he&#13;
calculated, would raise $225,000,000, or&#13;
$75,000,000 more than the present law.&#13;
Over $40,000,000 had been lost in this&#13;
year's revenues by the importations of&#13;
wool and sugar and other things the&#13;
duty on which was raised in the bill, so&#13;
that he calculated that the bill this&#13;
year would raise $165,000,000. Mr.&#13;
Dingiey declared that there was no&#13;
doubt that the revenue produced by&#13;
the bill would not only be ample to&#13;
meet the expenditures of the government&#13;
but allow a Republican administration&#13;
to begin again to pay off the&#13;
principal of the public debt Ja concluding&#13;
Mr. Dingiey received round&#13;
after round of applause from his Republican&#13;
colleagues by predicting as a&#13;
result of the enactment of this bill a&#13;
rise of prices and a restoration of prosperity.&#13;
The final conference rcpoet&#13;
on the general deficiency, appropriation&#13;
biU WM aiso adopted.&#13;
, SENATE.—05th day.—The tariff conference&#13;
report was presented* bnt little&#13;
progress was made on it beyond the&#13;
formal reading of about two-thirds of&#13;
i t Mr. Tillman, of South Carolina,&#13;
openly threatened to filibuster until&#13;
next December if cotton bagging and&#13;
cotton ties were not restored to the&#13;
free l i s t . The sugar snrodnteAts occasioned&#13;
a long debate. The lushes&#13;
amendment also brought out aniaiatnd&#13;
criticism. Mr. Teller declared thajtit&#13;
was conceived in the interest of a few&#13;
mill men of Michigan, Minnesota and&#13;
Wisconsin, by which they would be&#13;
enabled to raise the price of pine $3 to&#13;
$4 per thousand. Mr. Pettigrew, of&#13;
South Dakota, severely criticised the&#13;
conference amendment making p*raonal&#13;
references to thi y ^ h i y ^ - B .&#13;
ater*. Earty In the day the Senate,&#13;
paased a joint resolution authorising&#13;
and requesting the President to take&#13;
aU necessary steps for the release of&#13;
the Competitor prisoners from prison&#13;
at Havana.&#13;
«h|&#13;
H&#13;
pS' ,;&#13;
/ *. • • . , &lt; •&#13;
^.^J^JM^J^t^^LSS,^,&#13;
R H.W&#13;
• * • • • &gt; - •&#13;
' M-. &amp; ; • « '&#13;
1.1 urn iiiiii^^^^-miM IPPJLI. qspwjsnwsi&#13;
» . &lt; • ; • :&#13;
' ; ' / ^ . . * •'"•-&lt; -&#13;
',--••. "V"' \ ' . '&#13;
• * • - • : " .&#13;
i&gt;&#13;
mwAs^&#13;
INTERNATIONAL PRESS ASSOCIATION*&#13;
CHAPTER V m .&#13;
ARLY in the morning&#13;
after Mini&#13;
Hetherington'a visit,&#13;
Marjorie prepared&#13;
to aet out for&#13;
the Castle. She&#13;
would gladly have&#13;
made some excuse&#13;
to stay at home,&#13;
but Mr. Lorraine&#13;
would not hear of&#13;
it, and at his earnest&#13;
request she consented.&#13;
"She is your best friend," said the&#13;
minister, "and you must not offend&#13;
her."&#13;
, "Very well, I will go," answered&#13;
Marjorie; "but I shall come home early&#13;
in the afternoon. She'll never ask me&#13;
t o stay all night? If she does, X can't&#13;
do *t!"&#13;
•'Why not, Marjorie?"&#13;
•'The Castle's eerie enough at daytime,&#13;
but at night it's dreadful, and&#13;
Miss Hetherington creeps about like&#13;
a ghost. I'd sooner elqpp out in the&#13;
kirkyard."&#13;
At a quarter before nine she started,&#13;
tor she had three miles to walk, and&#13;
she wished to linger dn the road,&#13;
which lay through pleasant country&#13;
pastures and among green, lanes. The&#13;
morning was bright and clear, though&#13;
there were clouds to seaward which&#13;
spoke of coming rain. Passing up&#13;
through the village, the way she had&#13;
come the previous day,' she saw young&#13;
Sutherland standing at the gate of the&#13;
weaver's cottage.&#13;
•'Good-morning, Marjorie. Where&#13;
are you going to so early?"&#13;
"Up to Miss Hetherington's at the&#13;
Castle," she replied.&#13;
"Are you going to walk?"&#13;
"Yes."&#13;
'Then may I come with you a piece&#13;
of the road?"&#13;
"Not today, Johnnie," she said,&#13;
nervously. «Tm late, and must hurry&#13;
on." .,&#13;
The young man sighed, but did not&#13;
. preae his request Troubled and vexed&#13;
at the meeting, Marjorie walked ejulckly&#13;
away.&#13;
She followed the townward highway&#13;
till she came to the fcnws-road* where&#13;
she had alighted from the wagonette.&#13;
Close to the cross-road there was a&#13;
stile, and she was about to step over,&#13;
when she heard a voice behind her.&#13;
Turning quickly she saw to her astonishment&#13;
the French teacher from&#13;
Dumfries.&#13;
He was clad in a dark walking-suit,&#13;
with broad-brimmed, wide-awake hat,&#13;
and was smoking a cigar. He looked&#13;
at her smilingly, and raised his hat.&#13;
She thought he had never looked so&#13;
handsome, as he stood there In tbe&#13;
sunshine, with his pale lace smiling&#13;
and his bright black er^ Ased eagerly&#13;
upon her.&#13;
"Monsieur Caussldisre!" she cried in&#13;
astonishment&#13;
"Yes, it is I!" he replied i n his sad,&#13;
musical voice. "I have walked from&#13;
UK town, and was going dow-u to see&#13;
you."&#13;
"To see me!" she echoed.&#13;
"Yes, mademoiselle, and the good&#13;
man your guardian, You have spoken&#13;
of him so often that I longed to make&#13;
his acquaintance, and, having two idle&#13;
days before me, I came here, a s you&#13;
behold."&#13;
Marjorie did not know erieet t o say&#13;
or do, the encounter was so smexpected.&#13;
ghe stood trembling and fclashiag in&#13;
aoeh obvious embarrassment that the&#13;
Frenchman came to her relief.&#13;
•"Do not let me detain roe. if you&#13;
have an appointment Or stay! perhaps'you&#13;
wfl! permit me to walk a&#13;
little way In your company?"&#13;
And before she quite understood&#13;
what was taking place, he had lightly&#13;
leaped the stile and was hae-din* her&#13;
over with great politeness. They&#13;
strolled along the foot-path fide by&#13;
aide, (suddenly Marjorie paused.&#13;
**I ant going up to the Castle,*' she&#13;
a*W, "and I shall hot be back till the&#13;
afternoon; Do not let me take yoa out&#13;
of your way."&#13;
T h e T i e w f t m a n smiled and snntgged&#13;
his shouideta.&#13;
"Oh! one way is to me as good us&#13;
another." he exclaimed.&#13;
"But you said yon wished to see Mr.&#13;
Lorraine?**&#13;
"Precisely; but I prefer your oompaay,&#13;
my child."&#13;
**He is at home now, and will be so&#13;
glad of sosae one to talk to."&#13;
**I see you want to get rid of me,&#13;
"If 1 g o will you promise to return&#13;
toon? Remember, I ahall not depart&#13;
until yom do return.** -&#13;
-Yes, I will promise.*' answered Marjorie.&#13;
" W would ratbar jrau did not&#13;
"And wherefore, my child? Is my&#13;
company so disagreeable?"&#13;
"No, monsieur; but the folk in this&#13;
place are aye talking, and if they saw&#13;
me walking with a strange gentleman&#13;
it would be all over the parish before&#13;
night, and then Miss Hetherington&#13;
would hear of it, and I should get no&#13;
peace."&#13;
And as she spoke she looked round&#13;
nervously, as if dreading an eye-witness.&#13;
"Miss Hetherington! Pray, who is&#13;
she?"&#13;
"The lady I am going to see. She&#13;
has eyes everywhere—nothing happens&#13;
but she kens."&#13;
"But surely there Is nothing to conceal,"&#13;
persisted the Frenchman. "It&#13;
is very natural that, having met you,&#13;
I should offer to escort you."&#13;
"In France, maybe, but not here in&#13;
Annandale. Down here, monsieur,&#13;
when two folk are seen out walking in&#13;
the fields together, all the world believes&#13;
them to be courting."&#13;
She had spoken without reflection,&#13;
and her face now grew crimson as she&#13;
met her companion's eyes and realized&#13;
the significance of her own words.&#13;
"I see," cried Lhe Frechman, laughing.&#13;
"They would take me for your&#13;
lover."&#13;
Marjorie did not reply, but turned&#13;
her face away and began to walk on&#13;
rapidly. But the Frenchman kept by&#13;
her side.&#13;
"Ah, my child," he continued, "I am&#13;
more fit to be your father than your&#13;
lover. I am not so frivolous and vain&#13;
as to presume to think of one so young&#13;
and pretty. You must not mind me!&#13;
I am your teacher, your friend—that is&#13;
ail!" '&#13;
She was touched by the tone in&#13;
which he spoke, but after a moment's&#13;
hesitation she paused again, and looked&#13;
him full in the face.&#13;
"What you say is quite true, monsieur,"&#13;
she said; "but, oh! do not follow&#13;
me any further. See, that is the&#13;
Castle, and who knows but Miss Hetherington&#13;
herself Is watching us from&#13;
the tower?"&#13;
She pointed across the fields toward&#13;
a dark belt of woodland, over which&#13;
two old-fashioned towers were indeed&#13;
visible, about a mile and a half -away.&#13;
"Well, I will do as you desire, my&#13;
child," answered Caussldiere, after a&#13;
moment's hesitation;' "I will go and&#13;
make the acquaintance of your guardian.&#13;
Au re voir!"&#13;
He took her hand, lifted tt to his lips,&#13;
and kissed it; then, with an air of respectful&#13;
gallantry, he swept off his hat&#13;
and bowed. She cquld not help smiling;&#13;
he looked so fantastic to her simple&#13;
sight, and yet so handsome!&#13;
She walked on thoughtfully. At the&#13;
next stile she turned and looked back.&#13;
He was still stationary la the pathway,&#13;
gazing after her; but the moment she&#13;
looked back he kissed hie hand.&#13;
Marjorie turned again and walked&#13;
on, with no little fluttering of the&#13;
heart&#13;
When she reached the Castle, an&#13;
OIHAHV man-gprvant ted her Into the&#13;
lobby, a dark and dreary, passage hung&#13;
with oil paintings and antique maps&#13;
and prints; thence into a large apartment,&#13;
divided by an open folding-door&#13;
into two portions.&#13;
Here he left her to announce her arrival&#13;
to bis mistress.&#13;
Presently the room door opened, and&#13;
the mistress of the house appeared.&#13;
She was dressed in an old-fashioned&#13;
robe of stiff black silk, and wore a cap,&#13;
like t h a t of a widow, aver her •nowwhite&#13;
hair. She eame in leaning on&#13;
her crutch, and nodded grimly to her&#13;
guest&#13;
"Sit ye doon," she said, pointing to a&#13;
seat, and herself dropping into an Armchair&#13;
before the fire. Then, drawing&#13;
out a man's gold hunting-watch and&#13;
opening it, she continued: "Twentyfive&#13;
minutes after ten. You're late in&#13;
coming, Marjorie Annan. I doubt you&#13;
were lingering on the way."&#13;
CHAPTER IX.&#13;
8 the spoke, and&#13;
closed her watch&#13;
sharply. Miss Hethington&#13;
fixes aer&#13;
blaok eyes keenly&#13;
on Marjorie, who,&#13;
remembering her&#13;
recent encounter&#13;
with Caussldiere,&#13;
flushed and trembled.&#13;
A curious&#13;
smile gpew upon&#13;
the stern woman's bloodless face as&#13;
she continued:&#13;
"Ay. ay, yon were 11¾&#13;
be poo had pleasant company. Who&#13;
was yon you parted with out there&#13;
among the green fields?*&#13;
Marjorie started in consternation.&#13;
Her fears, then, were right, and it was&#13;
to conceal anything from Mies&#13;
Hetherington, who was like a witch,&#13;
and had wm and ears everywhere,&#13;
"Oh, Miss Hetherington," she exclaimed,&#13;
"did you see us together?"&#13;
ul was up on ,tbe tower with my spy*&#13;
Ing-glasi, and I saw far awa' a lassie,&#13;
that looked like Marjorie Annan, and&#13;
a lad I took at first for Johnnie Sutherland,&#13;
till he began booing and kissing&#13;
his hand, and then I saw it could na be&#13;
Johnnie."&#13;
Marjorie now perceived that all concealment&#13;
was useless, and at once told&#13;
her hostess of the meeting with her&#13;
French teacher. She did not think it&#13;
expedient, however, to describe with&#13;
exactness the Frenchman's conversation;&#13;
but even as it was, Miss Hetherington's&#13;
brow darkened, and her eyes&#13;
flashed with a light like that of anger.&#13;
"Braw doings!" she muttered. "Draw&#13;
doings for young growing lassie o' seventeen&#13;
! Your French teacher, say you?&#13;
What's his name, Marjorie?"&#13;
"Monsieur Caussldiere."&#13;
"And what's the man doing down&#13;
here instead of teaching his classes in&#13;
the town?"&#13;
"Indeed, I can't tell," returned Marjorie.&#13;
"I met him quite by accident on&#13;
my way to see you."&#13;
"Humph! What like is he? Is he&#13;
young?"&#13;
"Not very young."&#13;
"Weel favored?"&#13;
"Yes, and very clever."&#13;
"Worse and worse," said Miss Hetherington.&#13;
"Now, Marjorie, listen to&#13;
me!"&#13;
"Yes, Miss Hetherington." ,&#13;
"Look me in the face while you answer.&#13;
Do you think this French scoundrel—&#13;
he is a scoundrel, tak' it for&#13;
granted—has come down here in pursuit&#13;
o' his pupil? Dinna be feared to&#13;
answer. Is he fond o* you, Marjorie?"&#13;
"I—I think he likes me."&#13;
"Has he said as muckle?"&#13;
"YeB, Miss Hetherington," answered&#13;
Marjorie, who was incapable of a falsehood.&#13;
"And you? What think ye of him?"&#13;
"I like him very much, Miss Hetherington.&#13;
He has been very kind and patient&#13;
with me." -&#13;
"But do you love him?—tell me that;&#13;
or is It Johnnie Sutherland that has&#13;
won your silly heart? Out with it,&#13;
Marjorie Annan, ' Frank confession's&#13;
good for the soul, and I'm your friend."&#13;
Marjorie blushed, but kept her frank&#13;
blue eyes fixed on her questioner's face.&#13;
"I don't love anybody, Miss Hetherington—&#13;
not in the way you mean."&#13;
"Are you sure o' that?"&#13;
"Quite sure."&#13;
"Then you're a wise lassie," cried the&#13;
lady, rising to her feet "Men are kittle&#13;
cattle, and safer at a distance. Look&#13;
at that pleture," she continued, suddenly&#13;
pointing to a portrait over the&#13;
mantelpiece. "You ken who is it?"&#13;
"Yes; your brother, Mr. Hugh."&#13;
"Hugh Hetherington, God rest his&#13;
soul! and the best brother woman ever&#13;
had. Folk thought that he was bad,&#13;
and he had my father's temper; but he&#13;
guarded his sister like a watch-dog;&#13;
and I wish you had a brother to guard&#13;
you half as weel. Look underneath my&#13;
een, on my right cheek! You see that&#13;
mark? I shall carry it to my grave.&#13;
Hugh gave it to me when I was a young&#13;
lass. He struck me in the face wi' his&#13;
fist, because he thought I was hiding&#13;
something from him, and coortlng wi'&#13;
one I needna name."&#13;
The lady's face grew full of a wild,&#13;
fierce light as she spoke, and she&#13;
laughed strangely to herself., Marjorie&#13;
gased at her in dread.&#13;
"It was a lie, but Hugh was right&#13;
he loved his sister. He kenned what&#13;
man w#n». he knew their black hearts.&#13;
Claret, Sfearv* and 8t«ttrM W U N From&#13;
Speeds Vineyard, '&#13;
1ST. Alfred Speer, Prest, „ •»&#13;
Passaic, N. J.&#13;
Deer -Slr—I can say emphatically that I&#13;
Uke your wines far bettor than any of the&#13;
impoited wines. Your Claret, Sherry and&#13;
Sauterne are very Aae and agreeable; the&#13;
latter la my favorite wine. J am.&#13;
Yours truly,&#13;
8. F. HOWLAWD,&#13;
28 West e n d S t , New York.&#13;
_ * It 1» said that surgical instruments are&#13;
now made of wood, which 1B afterward com- eletely covered with a layer of nickel, elecrically&#13;
deposited. P i l l I M H I I ! • • M » ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ — ^ - ^&#13;
A Noted Physician Praises Sneer's Brandy&#13;
and Port Wine.&#13;
The Speer N. J. Wine Co.,&#13;
Passaic, N. J.&#13;
Dear Sirs—Your Brandy is of very fine&#13;
quality and I shall order if when needed for&#13;
my patients in the future. Your Port I&#13;
have ordered quite often the past five years&#13;
for my patients and found if an excellent&#13;
tonic. Respectfully your a&#13;
C. W. EVAWS, M. D, Treaont, Pa.&#13;
A German bad been granted a patent on a&#13;
sewing a needle made with the center and&#13;
eye end flat the rest of tbe needle being&#13;
round.&#13;
Turning a mad dog loose is a trifling thing,&#13;
compared to what the devil can do with a&#13;
gossiping tonrue.&#13;
Dsn'tTobaoeo Spit and Smoke Your Life Away.&#13;
To quit tobacco easily and forever, be maguetic.&#13;
Tull of life.nerve and vlgor.take No-To-&#13;
Bac, the wonder worker, that makes weak&#13;
men strong. All druggists, fiOc or II. Cure&#13;
guaranteed. Booklet and sample free. Ad.&#13;
Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York.&#13;
ON HER FACE&#13;
Sores Also Broke Out on Her Arme—&#13;
TIM Remedy end Result*&#13;
B L p Q K U ^ A L f i , MK&amp;.~-«I had&#13;
sores break out on my face and arms.&#13;
and one around one of my eyes. I tried&#13;
various remedies without benefit, until a&#13;
friend reoomnisnded Hood's, 8ert*parlila&#13;
and I have taken four bottles. I now have&#13;
a good appetite, tbe sores are healed a n d l&#13;
am in better health. Hood's Sarsaperitta&#13;
is an excellent blood purifier." BMMA&#13;
NxonasoN, Box 173. l a k e only Hood's.&#13;
H o o d ' s Pills sure stok headache. ss«7&#13;
The public man who thinks he&#13;
get along without a stage manager&#13;
generally plays to empty houses before&#13;
he learns that hi* season is ojoatd.&#13;
"I am an old soldier of the BcoelUouw&#13;
A year ago I was in bed all winter&#13;
with chronic rheumatism. Three doctors&#13;
failed to give me relief. Two hot*&#13;
ties of Burdock Blood Bitters put mo&#13;
on my feet. It is worth its weight in&#13;
gold.7' W. B. Knapp, Litchfield, Hillsdale&#13;
Co., Mich.&#13;
Money is one of the levers that moves the&#13;
world, and it always moves it in the right&#13;
direction when a godly man controls i t&#13;
They're a' bad, or mostly a'. Tak'&#13;
warnffeg. Marjorie Annan, and hearken&#13;
to me! Let aae man come to you in&#13;
secret wl' words o' love; hide naething&#13;
from them that care for you—from Mr.&#13;
Lorraine or from me. Trust the auld&#13;
heads, Marjorie; they ken what is right&#13;
God has made you bonny; may He keep&#13;
you pure and happy till the end!"&#13;
Her tone was "flanged to one of deep&#13;
earnestness, eten of pathos. She&#13;
walked up and down the room in agitation,&#13;
pausing now and again, and&#13;
leaning upon her crutch.&#13;
"No that I would hae you lead a lonely&#13;
life!" she exclaimed after a pause.&#13;
"Look at me! I*m no that old in years,&#13;
but I'm gray, gray wi' loneliness and&#13;
trouble. I might hae had one to care&#13;
for me; I might hae had bairns; bnt&#13;
it was na to be. Tm a rich woman, bat&#13;
I hae neither kith nor kin. Lord forbid&#13;
you -should ever be the same! But&#13;
when you marry—and marry yon will&#13;
some day—you must choose a true&#13;
man—ay, true and honest whether he&#13;
be rich or poor;. and if you canna&#13;
choose, let the anal folk that care for&#13;
you, and that ken the world ehocee for&#13;
you. Trust their earn, n o your ain!&#13;
Never deceive them; keep aae secrets&#13;
from them. Mind that. Marjorie Aanaai"&#13;
,&#13;
(TO as coNTnros*.}&#13;
Hall's Catarrh Core&#13;
Is taken internally. Price, 7tk\&#13;
There is a house in Paris occupied by over&#13;
50 tenants who for 20 years have never paid&#13;
any rent, the landlord being unknown.&#13;
Those who devote all the present t o&#13;
building for the future .generally die&#13;
before reaching what they consider a&#13;
satisfactory, condition of things.&#13;
"I was troubled with qninSy&amp;r fivo Kears, Thomas* Electric Oil cured me.&#13;
ly wife and child had diphtheria.&#13;
Thomas' Eclectric Oil cured them. 1&#13;
would not be without it in the house&#13;
for any consideration." Bev. £ . Wi&#13;
Crane, Dunkirk, N. Y.&#13;
For chilMdrresn. tWMtlhnlnslgo,sWonus MSo toheth ciunftgu .SnydrauoMp nuitlOD^lUyi ptin, caret wind eeuc. *6 cent* m bottle.&#13;
A man isn't likely to enjoy hearing his&#13;
wife talk with a with a woman who remembers&#13;
him when he was a boy.&#13;
Xo-po-Bae for Fifty Cents.&#13;
Guaranteed tobacco habit cure.makes weak&#13;
men strong, blood pure. 60c. II. All druggists.&#13;
About three hundred species of turtles&#13;
and tortoises are known. Some of these&#13;
attain a very large size.&#13;
People who tell the public of thejt&#13;
intentions generally get no further oav&#13;
the road to accomplishment.&#13;
"Dr. Fowler's E x t of Wild Strawberry&#13;
is considered a necessity in our&#13;
hoase. It is an excellent remedy for&#13;
summer complaints, especially with&#13;
children." Wm. BeidV so College S t ,&#13;
Buffalo, N. Y.&#13;
istlMoidMtBiCidoboM's* .C oIta wffihu bnek up •.eoldjseJeker tb*n anything elac. It la always ir eniue. ~Tr y S"t .&#13;
.When a man says that nobody cares&#13;
whether he lives or dies, be isn't advertising&#13;
himself very welL&#13;
GsokfiUff BAT LIM—America's fin««t oeUng 1 Weak&#13;
117. For folden Storeiwon'i dock, foot HaBdolpa St.,&#13;
or 101 Woodward AT*., Detroit, or any O- T. By.&#13;
There is a projeet on foot for supplying&#13;
Lyons, France, with electricity by damming&#13;
the Rhone at Jonage.&#13;
One of the sure roads to success Ja»&#13;
always to consider your own business&#13;
of paramount importance.&#13;
'.. . -, i 9 Eczema of the sealp or Scald B e a d ,&#13;
even in its most severe form is never*&#13;
failingly cured by Dean's QinJunenV&#13;
the surest specific for all itchiness off&#13;
the skin.&#13;
• i. • — - i i • • • » • i i | I I M H i i i »1&#13;
Pew things are more pitiable than a Joker&#13;
with a joke he has to explain.&#13;
To Care CoaetSpwtlo* Vorovev.&#13;
Take Gascarets Catuly cathartic lOeor&#13;
if GC-CLf ailsto cure.drogglaurefand&#13;
We are rich,'not in what we have, bnt la&#13;
what we cannot lose.&#13;
THE "GB0WN-TJP" DAUGHTER'S DUTY TO HER&#13;
MOTHER.&#13;
You can only have one mother; therefore, when her step is growing; s l o w&#13;
and her mind gloomy with foreboding*, and you can see that her whole*&#13;
nervous system is upset, it is your filial&#13;
duty and privilege to attend to her in&gt;&#13;
time I Mother is. approaching tbe m o s t&#13;
critical period of her life.&#13;
The change of life, that is what mother&#13;
is dreading, and no wonder, for it is fall&#13;
of peril to all hut the stnmfess&#13;
women.&#13;
There are some special and rerj&#13;
wearing symptoms from which&#13;
mother suffers, but she will notspeak&#13;
of them to any one. Help*&#13;
out; she doesn't know what to doherself!&#13;
Shall I advise you ? First, send to-,&#13;
the nearest drugstore and get a bottle*&#13;
of Lydia E. Pinkhani's Vegetable Compound,&#13;
and see that mother takes i s -&#13;
regularly, then write to Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass., giving all the symptoms&#13;
and you will receive a prompt reply telling mother what to do for her*&#13;
m+u Tn *y~ «ttren»i»tc the Vegetable Compound will make life much e a s i e r&#13;
for her. It tones up the nervous system, invigorates&#13;
the body, and the 4i bines*' vanish before it as darkness&#13;
flees from the sunlight. You can g e t it at any&#13;
reliable druggist's,&#13;
Mrs. LOCMST^OKO, Harris HilUErieCo.,N.Y.,seys: "I&#13;
have been troubled with falling of the womb for years,&#13;
was advised to take Lydia E, Pinkham's Vegetable&#13;
Compound. I took thirteen bottles and received great&#13;
benefit. When the time for change of life came I suffered&#13;
a great deal with, faiataiess and palpitation of&#13;
the heart I g o t one bottle of the Vegetable Compound&#13;
and one of Blood Purifier and was relieved agaisv I&#13;
enabled to passtswonfb that serious period very comfortably."&#13;
A man -who f u bitten by a rattlesnake&#13;
drank a quart of whisky as a&#13;
T O a w v w / * aTS*3 %iw*«r*i eWs^^nV •Jamw^ssVws^sBnl^sssm "^saine&#13;
the coroner's jury brought ha this&#13;
diet: "The deceased came to ate '&#13;
either from the snake or the w_&#13;
the yary being unosrtala which,&#13;
the local physician being " —&#13;
fnaeral of one of his&#13;
with;&#13;
ClJGEISggd£»a?&#13;
on a sweltering hot&#13;
day is highly essential&#13;
to commit and £2?* .££?• ** DROPSY&#13;
blood, reduces your 2 t » \ s f t e r f c e 2 e ? i&#13;
»1 WI&#13;
HIRES Root beer&#13;
be in every&#13;
h o m e , i n e v e r y&#13;
office, in every work*&#13;
At&lt;&#13;
HarmtExeiifsiois! AH. 3 AH 17,&#13;
more&#13;
than k e&#13;
sag m 7AM2I,&#13;
To the&#13;
of me West&#13;
weaj&#13;
tan k e water, • # * C A M (Q ahse sold on1 SdTatae,sW T*9&amp;&#13;
delightful end ° * l a * " * • »•• tk»s an* at sksaw&#13;
satisfyiinWg tthLa.n I T . Keeeseepoiataat ebout half ***. seeSawS) ease. Stop over aUowoa on safes&#13;
^AWsk tvteTesrJ loMcaLl iswceInftm foara MpaSrtSicKu lar's&#13;
m- *«*»€.&#13;
W.M.&#13;
J.- &gt;&#13;
mtuto* m»mwiijw&#13;
vi&#13;
. . • ' ' • " . . . • . ' ' • • ' • • : . ' ' • . , ' . ' - : • • • • • ' • , . • ' : : ' ' ' • ' . ' ' " " • • . .... . • .V ' 7 v'j • " . . . T . v - " ;• • . ' - ' ' ' ^ - • . . ' . ' • • . • . ^&#13;
$j'&lt;:.•'*•&#13;
•• J-A1^&#13;
tyr: •&#13;
m*.&#13;
w&#13;
m&#13;
' s:..&#13;
- 0 -&#13;
&amp;&#13;
?^&gt;.&#13;
~$1&#13;
it&#13;
• &gt; . -&#13;
&amp;&#13;
V&#13;
gbuhtteg f£t$y*td(&lt;&#13;
F. L. A N D R E W S , EDITOR.&#13;
T H U R S D A Y , . I I L Y 2 9 , 1897.&#13;
Interesting Items.&#13;
The Cong'1 church at Dexter is&#13;
being re-painted and decorated.&#13;
Tramps are scarce at Ann Arbor—&#13;
they have to work before&#13;
they can get a meal or lodging.&#13;
A man took a city paper because&#13;
he could get more reading matter&#13;
t h a u in his county paper and read&#13;
&amp;n advertisement of a pocket tire&#13;
escape. H e sent on a dollar and&#13;
in a few days received a New&#13;
Testament.—Ex.&#13;
Dexter Germans will celebrate&#13;
German Day August 12.&#13;
The Dexter mills are now run&#13;
by a largo gasoline engine.&#13;
A serious dispute has arisen between&#13;
Livingston and Ingham&#13;
counties but it will not end in a&#13;
bloodshed. I t is all about one&#13;
Mr. Patrick to which county he&#13;
belongs. He is now in the Livingston&#13;
county poor house.- Republican.&#13;
P. 1\ ]3a_rnu!u once said: "If&#13;
you have ten dollars to put in&#13;
good use, put up one dollar for&#13;
the article and the other nine for&#13;
advertising. I enn out-talk any&#13;
man but a printer. The man that&#13;
can stick type and the next morning&#13;
talk to a thousand people&#13;
while I am talking to one is the&#13;
man I am afraid of ami I want&#13;
h i m for my friend.&#13;
Telephone poles are now made&#13;
of compressed paper. They are&#13;
said to be ' more difrable thau&#13;
those of wood.&#13;
The editor of one of our ex-&#13;
Tftke a Lake Tour to IsUml of&#13;
Cool Breeies.&#13;
G o t o Mackinac Island, Mich.,&#13;
via the Coast Line. The D. &amp; C.&#13;
new &amp;eel passenger steamers&#13;
changes says he wrote a strong I leave Toledo. Mondays and Saturarticle&#13;
on patronizing home in- days 10:30 a. m. and Tuesdays&#13;
dustries and home merchants and and Thursdays 4:30 p. m. From&#13;
received a letter from one of the j Detroit, Mondays and Saturdays&#13;
merchants thanking him for his j U:00 p. m. Wednesdays and Friarticlebut&#13;
the merchant's letter days 9:30 a. in. Send 2 cents for&#13;
head was printed in Chicago. ! illustrated pamphlet. • Address&#13;
A. A. Sehantz, G P A ,&#13;
AR.&#13;
If the new law passed by the&#13;
last legislature was enforced and&#13;
all men were prosecuted who used&#13;
"obscene, profane oi insulting a theory that a large number of&#13;
Arrangements have been completed&#13;
by which all who wish to&#13;
attend the performances of Ringling&#13;
Bros. World's Greatest Shows&#13;
in Howell, Friday Aug. 5, can secure&#13;
special excursion rates on all&#13;
lines of travel. This will be the&#13;
only point in this vicinity where&#13;
the great show will exhibit during&#13;
the present season, and those who&#13;
fail to see it will miss the grand-&#13;
Detroit, Mich.&#13;
est amusement event of the year.&#13;
Two Washington doctors have j g i n c e ] f t s t ,o f t S O U Ringling Bros.&#13;
famous exhibition has been doubled&#13;
in size and is now beyond all&#13;
question or doubt the largest and PfAOV FOf* CA5*.&#13;
/?£01///?{J /TO GUBB/NO&#13;
Oft BRUSMfriO.&#13;
ROESSNERHflLCO&#13;
WlNONA.MINN.U5A&#13;
language on the streets" there the suicides just at this time of&#13;
would be less of a crowd on some the year are caused by eating&#13;
parts of the streets nights than is strawberries, which they say pro- Ibest combined circus, menagerie&#13;
often the case.—Dexter Leader. duces melanchola. Next we s u p - ' a n d hippodrome in the United I&#13;
A £ i.i -i £. pose scientists will tell us that it States. The performance is given i&#13;
A few years ago the city or i f O L f t l pr**« . ,&#13;
Tn«ei«t»nlB n tfi,irm.ninuVum i« is unhealthy to sleep or pay up by over 300 high salaried special-; win hold a shine for a week, and rain or snow&#13;
i j a n s i n g p l a n t e a U L i m a i i c a i p m the village ists, in three rings on two stages, ' "Ui ** «f&gt;U *• A Liquid Po.iab, put up in&#13;
t h e e a s t S i d e p a r k l a k e , a n d n o w J * rt J»ia, *" ""n" b » larw bottles, encased m neat cmoria, and makes&#13;
paper. In fact the latter idea in mid-air and upon a huge qua'r- a good show in the package and on the shoe,&#13;
seems to be held by certain peo-iter mile hippodrome track. The . I N D ^ N I I I B M S N S ' P I N I T V ^ ^ A N D&#13;
pie already. ' grand free street parade which PATENT LEATHER. EaaiiyappUed. Requires&#13;
G E N T L E M E N 5 A N D&#13;
CHILDREN* 5H0ES&#13;
HARNESS^ RAUNT LEATHER.&#13;
PRICE 2 5 *&#13;
IT SHINE8&#13;
FOR ALL.&#13;
THE NEWEST&#13;
AHO BEST&#13;
0IL&lt;*&lt;*&#13;
SHOE&#13;
POLISH&#13;
l a Colon,&#13;
BLACK, TAN,&#13;
GREEN and&#13;
OX BLOOD.&#13;
This is truly a&#13;
"ONCB A WEKK."&#13;
shoe polish, aa it&#13;
Railroad Guide.&#13;
ttrutul Trunk Rathvav System.&#13;
Amvul uud Departure of rrtUu* at Pinckuty. •&#13;
Ift Effect June U, IW,\&#13;
Vi-JC»TUu(.'sj,.&#13;
Lv.&#13;
Jftokiao Hid rnteruvdte 8ta. f9.44 am&#13;
•* t-».s» |&gt; m&#13;
I'ontlao PeUroit— Q4. lUpldt '•&#13;
jttid Intermediate8ta f5.20ptu +8.44 * «&#13;
Pontine I.BUOX Detroit and&#13;
intei mediate Sta. t?.-*5 » » t ^ p o o&#13;
Mioh. Air Up* I'iv, trains ,&#13;
)eavt&gt; Pontiac at fd.50 a m f i J 9 p m&#13;
fur Kotuen Lenox and Int. eta. •&#13;
D. A M. 1&gt;1 VIRION LMAVfj: POtfTUC}&#13;
\VK»:BOU&gt;D&#13;
fr.^am&#13;
titsai.aoajpa mm&#13;
H.O? p m&#13;
**.t» p ro&#13;
m,\)» m&#13;
*«.07 a m&#13;
fiu.Ma m&#13;
T^.J'Tp m&#13;
t*.*»S p oi&#13;
17.^5 a m&#13;
The Grand Army of this place&#13;
and citizens in general have made&#13;
arrangements to have a ear placed : ™o s t magnificient display&#13;
it is said the question of extermination&#13;
is under discussion. They&#13;
have become so numerous that&#13;
they keep the water roiled in&#13;
moving about and have become a&#13;
nuisance.—Ex.&#13;
The government dredge, Frontenac,&#13;
working at Sackett's harbor,&#13;
recently brought up a cannon&#13;
of ancient design, five feet long,&#13;
20-inch butt and 16 inch muzzle&#13;
with 9 inch bore. I t is re-inforced&#13;
with iron bands and weighed&#13;
1,500 pounds. I t is believed to&#13;
be a relic of the war of 1812.&#13;
Oltl soldiers throughout the&#13;
country are warned to be on the&#13;
lookout for a smooth tongued&#13;
swindler who represents himself&#13;
to be the agent for a soldiers paper&#13;
published in Toledo. He approaches&#13;
old vetrans of the late&#13;
war, and in order to get them to&#13;
subscribe, he offers them as a premiu-&#13;
m-a set of silver spoons or a&#13;
pair of spectacles. There is no&#13;
such paper published and the old&#13;
vetrans should be on their guard&#13;
against this rank fraud. E v e r y m a n w i n b e e x p e c t ( . ( 1 t o&#13;
E. S. Andrews, Deputy Grand wear a standing collar and white&#13;
Master of the I. O. O. F. of Mich- shirt with a neat tie.—Citizen&#13;
igan, and H. A. Thompson have&#13;
Saginaw Gd Rapid** and Gd Haven&#13;
(id llapids Ud UuYKn Chicago&#13;
Saginaw Ud KapUta Milwaukee&#13;
Chicago and [uivrincUiate *ta.&#13;
Gd Ka|dde Aluekt^ou&#13;
K X H T H O l N I )&#13;
Detroit Fast andi'anuda&#13;
Detroit Euot aud L'unuda&#13;
Detroit and Soutii&#13;
L"otroit i'.uttl HII*1 t'unatlii&#13;
Detroit ^iihuvii.ui&#13;
Liuivf Ik'trrdt via Windsor&#13;
t A &gt; i BOUND&#13;
Buffalo—New Vuik \ Boston&#13;
Turufitu Monrreal Now Vork *12, noon&#13;
London Kxpn&gt;* iti.AU p ru&#13;
iiuffalo New York- Jt East *U.ii p m&#13;
7.43 u in taHu" hus slrieiiinjjOHra Detroit to N«w&#13;
York and Boston. f-'OU noun t a i n has uarlor&#13;
car to Httrnilton—Slet?|»ingcar to uffalo anlNewr&#13;
York 11.25 train hab sleeping car to New York&#13;
fDaily except Sunday. *Dailjr.&#13;
W. J. BLACK, Agent, Pinckney Mich.&#13;
W. K. DAVIS E. H. HvtiUK*&#13;
G. f, * T. A»*u*. A. G. PJ * T ARt.&#13;
Montreal, C|ue. L'tilcugp, III.&#13;
BKN FLETCUEU, Trav. raag. Agt , Detroit.Mich.&#13;
•7.43 a m&#13;
OLEDO&#13;
I \ N ARBOR _&#13;
AND&#13;
t a k M , , U « * a t 10 o'clock on the . - - ¾ ^ } ^ ¾&#13;
morning of the exhibition is the&#13;
ever&#13;
on the track of the D., G. II. &amp;&#13;
W. early August 23rd, for the&#13;
purpose of going to the national&#13;
encampment to be held at Butfalo.&#13;
Round trip ticket $6" with ^0&#13;
day limit. All persons intending&#13;
to take in this trip, whether Grand&#13;
Army men or citizens, are requested&#13;
to report to R. E. Parshall at&#13;
Howell as soon as possible.—Liv.&#13;
Democrat.&#13;
Tlve Grand Trunk railway authorities&#13;
have decided upon a new&#13;
regulation uniform for the passenger&#13;
train crews. The uniforms&#13;
will be the same color as at the&#13;
present, but the coate will be cut&#13;
alike, sack shape, with a close fitting&#13;
collar. The brass buttons&#13;
will be done away, being substituted&#13;
by white metal. On each&#13;
lapel of the coat will be printed&#13;
the uame of the road in gold lace.&#13;
seen. Don't miss it.&#13;
purchased of the hefnrof the late&#13;
Geo. M. Dewey, of Owosso, the&#13;
subocription liot, good—will and&#13;
business of the Michigan Odd&#13;
Fellow and will hereafter conduct&#13;
the business at this place. The&#13;
Odd Fellow has a large subscription&#13;
list in Michigan and other&#13;
states combined and the new enterprise&#13;
here will add a large&#13;
amount of business to the Williamston&#13;
postoffice.—Enterprise.&#13;
Bro. Andrews is no relative of&#13;
ours but he is a hustler just the&#13;
same.&#13;
I was driving through the&#13;
o t h e r day with E. L. Buchanan, a&#13;
local druggist and a man who believes&#13;
in advertising in newspapers,&#13;
writes W. B Powell, of the&#13;
Lacon (111.) Journal. I asked&#13;
why his name never appeared on&#13;
D i d Y o u E v e r&#13;
Try Electrio Bitters as a remedy for&#13;
your troubles? If not, get a bottle&#13;
now and get relief. TPhis medicine&#13;
has been found lo Im peculiarly adapt&#13;
ed to the relief ar&gt;l are of all femalt&#13;
complaints, exerti:: / ;i wonderful di&#13;
rect influence in ^ vinar strength an-1&#13;
tone to tfie orga«&gt; If you have lo&#13;
of appetite, con-' ntion, headael:&#13;
i'ainting spells, or : : nervous, sleej&#13;
less, expitable, me: holy or troubles&#13;
with dizzy FpelU, Ili'vtric Bitters i&#13;
ihe medicine you need. Health an«1&#13;
strength are guaranteed by 'its use&#13;
Large bottles only fifty centy cents ai&#13;
P. A. Sigler'fi drug store.&#13;
You moy hunt, U&gt;e world over and&#13;
you will not tind another medicine&#13;
oqual to Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera&#13;
and Diarhoca Remedy for ho well complaints.&#13;
It is pleasant safe and reliable.&#13;
For sale I'v F. A. Siller.&#13;
Subscribe lor the DISPATCH.&#13;
Boessner's "Once a Veek"9tiu Shoe rolisb&#13;
" * - BOESSHEfi MFC. DO., llama, Minn.&#13;
The Coast Line t o MACKINAC&#13;
«—TAKB T H S — •&#13;
TO&#13;
The distance from one end of&#13;
the proposed Nicarauga canal to&#13;
the other end, by the way of Cape&#13;
Horn, io 10/H10 miles The dis- I relief in the case ot pain in the stoiu&#13;
tance from ocean to ocean through I a c !i' c.o!lc H.Ild ^oiera morbus.&#13;
Reasons Why Miamlierlalu's Colie&#13;
Cholera aud Diarrhoea Remedy&#13;
is the best.&#13;
1. Because it afford* almost instant&#13;
MACKINAC&#13;
D E T R O I T&#13;
P E T 0 6 K E Y&#13;
CHICAGO&#13;
New Steel Passenger Steamers&#13;
The Greatest Perfection yet attained In&#13;
Boat Construction Luxurious Equipment,&#13;
ArtUtic l:urni*hln&gt;r, Decnr.itinn ana hidelent&#13;
Service, insuring the highest 'leyrc** y(&#13;
COMFORT, SPHBO AND S \Fd7Y&#13;
FOUR TRIPS PER .VELK BETWEEN&#13;
Toledo, Detroit rndMackiaac&#13;
PETOSKCY, "THE SOO," MARQUETTE&#13;
AND DU-UTH.&#13;
LOW RATHS to Picturesque Mackinac and&#13;
Return, ji ICTL--*:rig Hea'sai : l*&lt;rt'-.f. Fr&lt;;»;i&#13;
Clevel-nd. | i 1 ' ; icoai I O I ^ J J , $i£i trum&#13;
Detroit. $17. ,ro.&#13;
DAV AND N # H T SERVICE.&#13;
Between Detroit and Cleveland&#13;
Connecting nt Cleveland with Eirliest&#13;
Trains for all points East. South and South&#13;
w*"st and at Detroit for all poinU North aud&#13;
Northwest.&#13;
Sunday Trips June, July, August and Sspt. Only&#13;
EVt^V D\Y C!ITWEEN&#13;
Cle ve!an d, Pi11A n - B ay.:$ To!edo&#13;
feeud for i l l u B | r a t t ' d P a m p h l e t . * A d j . y » 9&#13;
A . A . 8 C H A P K T Z O . ^ J ^ - * . , DOT» JIT. MICH.&#13;
He C8in)li i fe'iani m^ Nay. Go.&#13;
-4aa#--£eBce anti-dead walk through J than any, oilier niMi, and in all&#13;
the-reentry, wherr I know i h a t -a&#13;
druggist can have his name put&#13;
to the patent medicine posters&#13;
and paint posters and other advertising&#13;
matter with no cost to&#13;
himself. ^ ^ thisjray'l^flidJie&#13;
notice that over&#13;
that canal is less than 20'J miles&#13;
and the passage by the canal&#13;
could be made in 24 hours. I t&#13;
will be economy and wisdom to&#13;
get Hawaii, build the canal and&#13;
lay a cable to Asia. All are peacemeasures,&#13;
and will cost not more&#13;
than one-tenth of that which we&#13;
would spend in even the brief&#13;
war which these enterprises may&#13;
prevent.—Ex.&#13;
Each year every local paper&#13;
gives from ¢500 to «5,000 in free&#13;
lines for the benefit of the eommunity&#13;
in which it is located. No&#13;
other agency can or will do this.&#13;
The editor, in proportion to his&#13;
means, does_ more for his town&#13;
—"L«H ,&lt;ummr.i—OTTB—of our inlandchildren&#13;
was sick witb a severe bowel&#13;
fairness, «*au with man, he ought&#13;
to be supported—not because you&#13;
happen to like him or admire his&#13;
writings, but because a local paper&#13;
is the best advertisement a&#13;
cammnnity can—make. -It&#13;
not be crowded with great&#13;
thoughts, but financially it is&#13;
more of a benefit than both&#13;
"c[id~you ever&#13;
three-fourths of the names of t lie&#13;
firms yon see on fences and on&#13;
posters pasted on the barns are teacher and preacher. Today&#13;
firms that have failed or gone out! editors of local papers do more&#13;
of business? I do not\ want to be work for lews pay than any man&#13;
*fr&#13;
classed with them, A stranger&#13;
opuld not pick out the, quick or&#13;
4 e dead."&#13;
on earth. Patronize your local&#13;
paper, not as a charity hut m an&#13;
investment—Ex.&#13;
G. Gregory of&#13;
"Our doctor's&#13;
then we tried&#13;
CiiainUeHaiii's Colir, Cholera ana Diar-&#13;
: Injea Remedy, which gave very&#13;
5. Because it is the onlv remedy i s i ^ d r re]iet'.,; For sale by P. A.&#13;
fcisjier.&#13;
2. BecauVe it is the only remedy&#13;
that never fails in tbe most severe : tumble" *aA~s Mrs E&#13;
ca^sotdysenterv and diarrhoea. Fredrick-Mown, Mo.&#13;
&lt;3. JJecau&gt;e it i* the only remedy ; ,. , , , ., ,&#13;
that will cuNeuronic diarrhoea. * j r e m p a ' ^ h ; i d f t t »'&lt;&#13;
4. Because it is the only remedy&#13;
that will prevent hilious eol'ic.&#13;
, , ... , * • i srveedv rejiei. r or&#13;
that will cure epidemical dysentery, i&#13;
6. Because it is only remedy that j&#13;
can be depended upon in caVes of!&#13;
cholera infantum. !&#13;
7. Because it is the most prompt&#13;
and most reliable medicine in use for&#13;
bowel conipiaints.&#13;
8. Because it produces no bad results.&#13;
9 Because it pleasant &amp;nd safe to&#13;
take. 4 . . .&#13;
1ft T3,»,o.,„ u L-»„ J .i i- - i and the lat«&lt;t sty-lee of Type, etc., lrbicb «uablee&#13;
10. Hecanse it has saved the lives of j nntt&gt; execuie ah kind8 oTwork, .ucb wBooke,&#13;
m o r e people, t h a n a n y o t h e r jner-'icilie Pa»H,]f'*. P'^i'f*. Programmes, Bill Heads, Note&#13;
Hp.iflu&#13;
Wanted-An Idea WEh o can think&#13;
of aomeatmpl*&#13;
thltn to patwutr&#13;
Protect your idaaaj ther mar brinayou wealth.&#13;
Write JOHN WfiDDEKBURN * CoT/Patent AttoN&#13;
oeya. Washington, D. C . for their $1,800 price offer&#13;
and list of two hundred Inventions wanted.&#13;
JO'S f&gt;l?IXTlJVG/&#13;
{ In alliUbranc&amp;ea, aapecialty. WehaTeallkinde&#13;
in t h e woiirj.&#13;
The 25 and 50u size*; for sale by&#13;
A. Siller;&#13;
Stniciuents, Cards, Auction Bills, etc., in&#13;
pniit-rior «*tvlr-K. upon-tl\&lt;&lt; nhortebt notice. Pricesao&#13;
\fv HS iroorl work ran he none.&#13;
-1.,1.. BLLI.Ji I'AYABLE Fl UST OV BV'KKY MuStK,&#13;
:-^&#13;
CUR^S IN T H E HIOHT WAY, BY REQULATINQ T H E UVER^&#13;
AND KIDNEYS, AND PURIFYING THE BLOOD.&#13;
It Is a positive core lor Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Dyspepsia, Sick and*&#13;
Nervous Headache, Fever and Ague. ChiHs, and all diseases arising from*&#13;
' a diseased Ever o r the kidneys, or impure blood&#13;
!YOUR MONEY BACK Se^^S5h^l,n.^?ATint&#13;
• boa, aad we will a n d yoa * check for * . • » by r^mmSJL *™ +&#13;
J ^ ^ ^ t o t ! ? ? f « 3 ^ pew**"*od tablet* Th«t»*kUai»th«ewJl«reBtak«,reg«ir.&#13;
JfDomLjjnf. Prlceauoo ior ilk, doee. of dther k^Ts^MSSSim^T^ ^^'A&#13;
( pr»e. a . i d K . c c a t a l o r t a e i ^ n ' t a e a t t H m t a ^ l c o w f o f N a i D ^&#13;
A. R LEWIS MEDKINE OO^ . Brihttr#Ha&lt;&#13;
."H MICHIGAN&#13;
RAIUWAY. ™LS ^&#13;
Popular route for Ann Arbor, Toledo&#13;
and points East. South and for&#13;
Howell, OWOSJO. Alma, Ml Pleasant,&#13;
Cadillac. Manistee. Traverse Cit3' a r d&#13;
points in Northwestern Atichigan.&#13;
W. H. UEKNETT,&#13;
0 . P. A., Toledo.&#13;
SO YEARS'&#13;
t X P I R I S N O B .&#13;
TRACK MASKSt&#13;
CCSICNS,&#13;
0 O P Y R I C H T 8 4.0,&#13;
Anyone sending a sketch and description may&#13;
quickly ascertain, free, whetl: »r M\ tnventionla&#13;
probably patentable. TOIIDM n.-u.one strictly&#13;
confidential. OUieyt aponcr jnrnvurtng patent*&#13;
In America. Wc have i \Va&gt;)ilnKron orlice.&#13;
Patents taki n Ibruujch Mmm aCa. reaelf&#13;
Special not let' ID rue&#13;
8CIENT1FIC AMERICAN,&#13;
tlfully illustrated, largest oircul&amp;tlo&#13;
anysclentifle Journal, weekly, tensc W-dO a :&#13;
beautifully circulation&#13;
lc tens c y&#13;
I six months, fpeclnien copies and llVHO&#13;
of&#13;
ear i&#13;
)K OK PATKNTS seut free. Address&#13;
MUNN A C C ,&#13;
3H1 Hroudwr.i, New Vork*&#13;
Sick Headache&#13;
Permanently Cured&#13;
"I was troubled, a long time, witk&#13;
sick headache. It was usually accompanied&#13;
with severe pains in the&#13;
temples and sickness at the atom*&#13;
ach. I tried a good many remedies&#13;
r e c o m m e n d e d for&#13;
this complaint; but&#13;
it was not until I began&#13;
taking&#13;
AVER'S&#13;
Pills that I received&#13;
w i TOT-sav- anything like perma-&#13;
-*\\v*f-W- nent benefit. A single&#13;
box of these pills did the work&#13;
for me, and 1 am now a well man."&#13;
C. H. HutciiiNGS, East Auburn, Me.&#13;
For the rapid cure of Constipation,&#13;
I&gt;y*pepsta, Biliotrsness, NaBsea,&#13;
and all disorders of Stomach,&#13;
Liver, and Bowels, take&#13;
Cflftatffl# MHsi&#13;
sw sprs&#13;
V&#13;
. *&#13;
f t '&#13;
?&gt;' • * :&#13;
i% s&#13;
* • • • : •&#13;
,ii i PI 1 MUM *m*^~**&lt;****mr^^^^*m*^mimm*f*im&#13;
. * • • : . '&#13;
^ - , ¾ ¾&#13;
• v V : ' 0'*&#13;
^&#13;
. • • , . . » &gt; • ,&#13;
5?3C^^r MM* m&#13;
if&#13;
u&#13;
Anltiei Whooaa thlak&#13;
ueour&#13;
«^j^M«IK«rillB«V»c*MA&gt;ni«glau.&#13;
I THE HERMIT'6 REMEDY&#13;
•PRU66 OtUt» mi u u m m % an Invaluable remady for •» affectloiM&#13;
•ftbeTHROATaadCUNOS. Contain*&#13;
no opium or other injurio«U| Drug**&#13;
It Kill* C0U0H8 and COLDS.&#13;
Keep a Bottle tq tie Hwse,&#13;
• ^ SAVE YOUR LIFE.&#13;
P R I C E , O S C e n t * .&#13;
We can tfl?e employment permanent and&#13;
lucrative to a good agent 1» tbls section. For&#13;
particulars can on publiaher of thU paper.&#13;
JAMES W. FOSTER CO.. M-fO DRWOUTa,&#13;
BATH, N, H.&#13;
•H *N 'Hive ''oo ualsoi *M eawvr $7 x**.&#13;
^•«»*Jpnn«ll»-«niMaS^&#13;
•mni*8&gt;MnO 'unqoag&#13;
rq«T IUOOK« iiias aax «IXVK •uosjodf&#13;
iwntut ton Biq^aSaa aqttau raptooo^&#13;
Sk •6KiviNaonairHM««i»&#13;
^pV^ jo ispti paisSru »i|} 00 * » l &gt; ^&#13;
O X i.iujjapini^W^&#13;
BotlUJr B I 1 M « .&#13;
A loot! prMfib^r In tat west of England&#13;
recently ottered up the singular&#13;
prayer "that the spark of grace might&#13;
be watered with the dew of blessing&#13;
from on high."—London .Saturday Review,&#13;
Left t h e B»by Out A l l Might.&#13;
The friends oft a certain professional&#13;
woman in Washington tell a story&#13;
on her which they call a huge joke.&#13;
There is a baby in the professional&#13;
woman's family. The baby has a&#13;
nurse. It has alao a doting grandfather,&#13;
who came to see It very early&#13;
one morning recently. As he came&#13;
near the house he saw the baby carriage&#13;
standing near the aide door. The&#13;
house doors were still locked. -Nobody&#13;
was stirring. The grandfather looked&#13;
into the carriage, and there, to his&#13;
amazement, lay the precious baby. It&#13;
had actually been left out all night,&#13;
for, as the mother explained, she had&#13;
been busy all the evening and supposed&#13;
nurse had baby, and the nurse&#13;
had been busy all evening and supposed&#13;
the mother had baby. Between&#13;
the two of them the child had been&#13;
left out of doors all night.&#13;
W i l l i s f A » a i « .&#13;
"How shall we check th* Sunday bicycle?"&#13;
demanded the president of the&#13;
Caxrlstlan, ettiwn8*-TeftpTn league.&#13;
"Same as trunks," courteously suggested&#13;
the oommepctal tourist who had&#13;
wandered In merely because he saw a&#13;
crowd.&#13;
avaclclon's Arnica Nalre.&#13;
The Best Salye in the world for&#13;
*atsvbrui8*«, sores, ulcers, palt rhenm&#13;
frier sores, tetter, chapped Lands,chill&#13;
Mains, corns, and all skin eruption*&#13;
Mid positively cures piles or no pa&gt;&#13;
required. U is can ran teed to eiv&gt;&#13;
perfect satisfaction or money refand&#13;
td. Price 25 cents per box. For SPI'&#13;
bv P.A.Sijrler.&#13;
Michigan^ People.&#13;
LOCATED&#13;
Directly Opposite M. C R'y Depot&#13;
Two Block* from Union Depot&#13;
Three Blocks from Steamer Dock*,&#13;
b the Ccntct fci the Wholesale Datriot&#13;
Three Mistfte by Electric CATS to Retail&#13;
Center and all Places of Amusement.&#13;
300 Rooms with Steam Heat&#13;
Sao,000 In New Improvements.&#13;
Cuisine Unsurpassed.&#13;
American Plan&#13;
Rates, $2 and $2.50 per Day.&#13;
Rooms, with Bath, 13. S.noia meats, otic.&#13;
I &gt;HE MASON ARTIFICIAL&#13;
.STONE WATER TAlKK. A wonderful&#13;
4 , , invention a ad a irreat boon to f armors.&#13;
H e n or cold do not effect them, and they'will laet&#13;
aajMS dentroytd by an earthquake while the earth&#13;
laaw. We Invite your inspection. They will not&#13;
rot. m a t »r wear out. Warranted for five years.&#13;
For farther particulars call or write to&#13;
WILL EVERS,&#13;
Ageut and manufacturer "it &gt;vVji&gt; ridge, Mich&#13;
PEARLS.&#13;
W h y There A r e Very Ancient Specimen*&#13;
Now in Kxtatenee.&#13;
According to M. Rerthelot, the celebrated&#13;
scientist historian, there are no&#13;
very ancient pearls in existence, for&#13;
which a sufficient reason is found in&#13;
the fact that pearls, unlike precious&#13;
stones, are destructible. They discolor&#13;
and disintegrate. The pearl is not&#13;
mentioned by Homer or Herodotus, he&#13;
states. It begins to appear in the&#13;
time of Alexander—that is, of the conquest&#13;
of the east, and it is about this&#13;
time that the name Margarita—that is&#13;
to say, Pearl—is first given to women.&#13;
Not a great deal is known about the&#13;
value attributed by the ancients to particular&#13;
pearls. The one that Cleopatra&#13;
drank was valued at $200,000 modern&#13;
money. * Mention is made by Pliny of&#13;
a practice of Clodius, son of the actor&#13;
Aesop, who gave his guests drssolved&#13;
pearls to drink, says the San Fnancisco&#13;
Argonaut.&#13;
The Romans appreciated the pearl&#13;
and after, the growth of luxury began&#13;
to have its usual effect in, diminishing&#13;
the birth-rate one of the laws against&#13;
celibacy provided that no childless&#13;
woman or spinster should wear pearls&#13;
under the age of 55. Pearis are prominent&#13;
in frhe j;oyal toilets of Europe.&#13;
Catherine de Medicis was said to have&#13;
the finest pearls in Europe. When she&#13;
married Henri, due d'Orleans, Francis&#13;
I. preseated her two g-reat pearls weighing&#13;
fl ye grams each. She afterward&#13;
presented these to Marie Stuart, who,&#13;
while queen of France, had them set&#13;
in the partrres tarn 1 liar in her portraits.&#13;
At that queen's fall the pearls&#13;
were captured by Morton and sent&#13;
to London. Catherine instructed «her&#13;
ambassador to buy them, but they&#13;
were bought by Elizabeth for 12,000&#13;
crowns. At that time pearls cut a&#13;
leading figure in woman's' dress. The&#13;
great sleeves were" decorated with&#13;
them. The favorite ornament, however,&#13;
was the paternoster embracing&#13;
the waist, then hanging down in front&#13;
to the bottom of the skirt. The decoration&#13;
was completed by a bertha destining&#13;
the breast, Joining in front and&#13;
descending in two rows to join the&#13;
paternoster, giving the effect of an&#13;
opening in the corsage. Pearls and&#13;
precious stones were bought as a con-&#13;
VCnient investment ana acceptaoie collateral.&#13;
Elizabeth lent £20,000 on a&#13;
pledge of jewels by the prince of Conde,&#13;
Jeanne d'Albret, Henry of Navarre&#13;
and Coligny. The jewels were never&#13;
redeemed and now figure among the&#13;
crown jewels.&#13;
The M. E. Sunday school of&#13;
Howell enjoyed a picnic at Long&#13;
Lake, five miles east of that place&#13;
on Thursday of last week. Three&#13;
wagon loads of them were drawn&#13;
over by a traction engine.&#13;
The Livingston Democrat says:&#13;
"How many highway overseers&#13;
in Livingston county have failed&#13;
to enforce the following law from&#13;
Howell's Annotate*! Statutes:&#13;
"Every overseer shall cause the&#13;
noxious weeds within the limits&#13;
of the highways in his district to&#13;
be cut down twice in each year,&#13;
once before the first day of July&#13;
and aguiu before the first day in(&#13;
September and the requisite labor&#13;
shall be considered highway work.&#13;
* * * * Any overseer who shall&#13;
refuse or neglect to preform these&#13;
duties required by this section&#13;
shall be liable to a penalty of $25.&#13;
The way to advertise U to tell *the whole&#13;
story in plain, simple language, in as few&#13;
words as possible, and as direct as a rifle&#13;
shoots a bullet. Very well; here Is our story.&#13;
We want you to read&#13;
THE DETROIT EVEN I NO NEWS regularly.&#13;
ft will cost you very little. . . . ,&#13;
The Detroit Evening News.&#13;
Agents In every town in Michigan,&#13;
T I I I : H I : i s &gt; O T H I I V &lt; ; S O G O O D .&#13;
There is nothing juat as good as Dr.&#13;
Kind's New Discovery tor Consumption,&#13;
Coughs and Colds, so demand it&#13;
and do not permit the dsaler to sell&#13;
you some substitute. He will not&#13;
claim there is anyilunar better, but in&#13;
order to make n (re profit he may&#13;
claim something d&gt;e to he just a*&#13;
pood. You want Dr. King's New&#13;
Discovery because you know it to be&#13;
safe and reliable, and guaranteed to&#13;
do good or money refunded. For&#13;
Coughs, Colds, Consumption and for&#13;
all affections of Tbroat, Chest, and&#13;
Lungs there is nothing so good as is&#13;
Dr. Kings New Discovery. Trial bottle&#13;
free at b\ A. Sigler's Drug store.&#13;
Regular size 50c and $1.00.&#13;
DR. A. 3, GREEN.&#13;
DENTrST—Every Thursday and Friday-&#13;
Office over l»igler'3 Drug Store.&#13;
PUBLISHED EVRP.Y THUBSDA V MJRNIMi BY&#13;
F R A N K I.. A N D R E W S&#13;
Editor and "Proprietor.&#13;
Subscription hrice ¢1 in Advance&#13;
Entered at tbe Poatottica at Piucliaey, Miiibiean,&#13;
aa second-class matter.&#13;
Advertising rates made knuwn on application,&#13;
Business Cards, $4.00 per year.&#13;
Death aud marriage notices published tree-&#13;
Announcements of entertainments may t»e paid&#13;
for, if desired, by presenting the (.(tice witu tickets&#13;
of admission. In case tickets are not bru&#13;
to the office, regular rates will be cuar^ed. IHL,'ht&#13;
«A ,K * .e r m ^C»J «"&gt;tice column will be charir&#13;
&amp; . rH^^'JK!.1, H n e o r f r a c t i ° n thereof, for ,&lt;«&amp;&#13;
insertion. Where no time is speclflVd, all uotices&#13;
will be inserted until ordered &lt;Wntiuaed, and&#13;
will be charged for accordingly, £ j r A U c h a n t s&#13;
of adrertisementa MUSTreacb tntaofflceaa ejrly&#13;
aaiUEsiMY morning to insure an insertion the&#13;
Speciar§argain&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIRECTORY,&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PKBSIMKT.. ,.~, Claude L. Sigler.&#13;
TnusTKKS, Geo. Iteasou Jr., .V. £ . iluruuy, t ii&#13;
Jackson, F. J. Wright. E. K. Brown, C. L. Grimes'.&#13;
CLBHK. ,..K. li. Tee pie,&#13;
TiiKASUBKB J A. Cadwell&#13;
ABSBSSOK D. W. Mima&#13;
STHEET COMMISSIONEK A. Monk*&#13;
MAKSAHL. p. Monroe.&#13;
UKALTU CHTFICCB Dr. H. F. Sigler.&#13;
ATTORNEY. \v. A. Curr.&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
JKJtK&#13;
QlJlCa.&#13;
tic J, u l j r&#13;
Pric- $5.00.&#13;
Sp-cial&#13;
PVice as&#13;
lain, as they&#13;
' ast, the } b l u e s t bar-&#13;
: ,*a!u e v e r&#13;
; offered, r&amp;i-sz&#13;
, r-i,» out IT.&gt;-&#13;
i mire book of&#13;
\ ;.jieysav-&#13;
• itr ;LIH1 , v , jiesale&#13;
&gt;••!•"&gt; enisle.&#13;
' '.. lie for it&#13;
Banquet&#13;
Lamp*&#13;
F i n i s a e d l n&#13;
gold&#13;
lacquer,&#13;
ha* No. 3&#13;
Rochester&#13;
Chimney&#13;
and Wick.&#13;
with either&#13;
a handsome&#13;
14-inch&#13;
shade or 16-&#13;
Inch fancy&#13;
erepe tiasue&#13;
paper shade&#13;
or fancy&#13;
hand painted&#13;
banquet ,&#13;
globe, with*&#13;
gold trimmings.&#13;
all for&#13;
$1.97&#13;
A. M. ROTHSCHILD &amp; CO.&#13;
WHOLF.SALR.&#13;
State, Van Buren to Jacksou-sts., Chicago.&#13;
MMJtlou thl* p-r»;*.&#13;
GRUMMOND'S&#13;
DETROIT and CLEVELAND&#13;
LINE OF STEAMERS&#13;
25?; TO&#13;
WHY NOT BUY THE BEST?]&#13;
A DELIGHTFUL&#13;
MooDliikt Trip Across Late Erie&#13;
71 GOOD SADDLE* J&gt;M&#13;
S * b the most noticeable and|&#13;
taking point on a Bicycle* «a» J*!&#13;
WIM* tmyinz insist oa getting a&#13;
5PRINQ&#13;
._ ^ SADDLE.&#13;
m* mt THb atsT. * M #&#13;
CIC BEAT MKG. CO,&#13;
I wp*m * 0in nm**mw\*n^mm»m&#13;
A New Arctic I d e a .&#13;
A plan is proposed for reaching the&#13;
North Pole by cutting through fields&#13;
of ice. The craft is not unlike the&#13;
whaleback in appearance, and is made&#13;
of steel, heavily, riveted, braced and&#13;
strengthened to the" last limit, in order&#13;
to withstand the buffeting incident to&#13;
such a perilous undertaking. At the&#13;
bow of the boat is located what for&#13;
lack of a better name is called an ice&#13;
destroyer, which Is composed of a&#13;
combination of toothed wheels not unlike&#13;
circular saws. These wheels by&#13;
revolving rapidly cut the ice into fragments&#13;
and open the way through tBe&#13;
most solid fields. The idea would suggest&#13;
itself to the critical reader that&#13;
this might, he very well, provided the j *&#13;
\c* wa_8 r^Mpj^aWy thin and there could&#13;
be any assurance, in case of accident,&#13;
that the vessel could be gotten out of&#13;
its rigid environment.' But supposing&#13;
! It were necessary to back out and the&#13;
lire had frozen solid behind it, t&gt;r if&#13;
T it simply cuts a passage wTaTcndugTTto&#13;
get through ahd there were an obstacle&#13;
in the way of proceeding, how is the&#13;
vessel to turn around asd get out?&#13;
The world is full of the most brilliant&#13;
inventions which are perfectly rit)bt&#13;
and satisfactory if all goes well, but&#13;
there must Invariably be left a wijh&#13;
margin for accidents ana incidents oat&#13;
of the common. A pieoe^of.toeohanisaa^,&#13;
is not complete, perfect or practical&#13;
ualeat it provides to a &lt;mrtaih txu*C&#13;
LOCAL TIME. . .&#13;
Lv. Detroit,&#13;
BICYCLES CAKRIED FREE.&#13;
U. G. GRUMMOXD&#13;
. . DAILY.&#13;
11:00 P.M.&#13;
UEX L MGR.,&#13;
TEL. NO. 162. OFFICE &amp; DOCK. FOOT FIRST ST.&#13;
n t- - - - • - -*• **^*t*&#13;
Nothing.else like it:^^&#13;
T h e most refreshing and&#13;
peasant Soap lor the skin.&#13;
ior easerjencie*.&#13;
It lasts twice as long: .as others.&#13;
Atrial w:ll convince you of lt« creat&#13;
merit. Will H ^ : J *hs riioat fastidious.&#13;
CHARLES F. MILLER,&#13;
AJfr. erf FRENCH MfCL£D TOILET&#13;
~»~ SOAPS AND PERFJJ 731Y,&#13;
Lancasicr, Penn»&#13;
E » T A »I-IW|BI£I&gt;. J * * » .&#13;
METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH.'&#13;
Kev. M. H. llcMahoii paetor. 5&gt;ervlc«8 every&#13;
SiiDday morniuK at w.'^i, and every Sun day&#13;
evening at 7:00o'clock, 1'iuyer meotluiThuraday&#13;
uveniags. Sunday ec;:ool nt olose of mornn^&#13;
aervice. Mrs. Estelln liraliuiu, buo»»riutend't.&#13;
ClONtittEGATIONAL CHl'KCir.&#13;
) U,D. Jonos, pastor. Servlue t«very&#13;
Sunday morning at iu:;iu, and e?ury Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:0C o'cijek. Prayer nieetint,' ThurBday&#13;
evenings. Wundiy scbuol at CJOBO of inornin&#13;
«s«rvic«5. I. J. Co«k, uuut. S. I . Griiu**a. Sec.&#13;
PATENTS CaveataandTrftda Marts obtained and lall Pat&#13;
ent business conducted for Moderate P e e s .&#13;
Bend model, drawing or photo. WOftdviaeif&#13;
patentable free of charge. Our feenotdnetUl],&#13;
latent is aocurea. A Pamphlet "How to Ob-1,&#13;
idiu Patonta," vith cost of same i n the U. 8.,&#13;
and fortiyn coontriea sent free. Addrraa,&#13;
C. A. SNOW &amp; CO.&#13;
\ d**. PATCNT Orricc. WatHINOTON. D . C.&#13;
ST. MAitf'S VAi'iJiJi.LC IHILKCU.&#13;
Uev. il. J. Couim itoid, i'aator. .Service*&#13;
every tbird Sunday. Low waaa at T;:iOo clock,&#13;
high uititiB witUeeruiou m •J.'.b*. in. Cutecuism&#13;
at a:Uu p. ui., veepere ana benediction at 7:30 \&gt;.ia.&#13;
WpiL:pf»r cared by Dr. Miles1 Kerrtne.&#13;
._ . II&#13;
SOCIETIES. *&#13;
rniie A. O. H. itocletv ot tliid place, meeu every&#13;
X third Sunday in tne Kr, Matthew Hall.&#13;
John Mcfiuiness,County Delegate.&#13;
Pinokney Y. P. 8. C, 1!. Meetings lield every&#13;
Sunday evening in COIIH'1 cliarch at 0:'k) o'clock.&#13;
Mrs. i£. W. Crofut, Pros. Ktttie brieve,Soc.&#13;
U»PWORTH LEACiLK. Meets everv&#13;
Xl«e\eain^ at 0:00 uclock in the SI. E. Cuurcfa. A&#13;
cordial invitation is extended toevervou&#13;
cially young people. .Mis* Jennie UtuV. I'&#13;
Sunday&#13;
a. espe-&#13;
Junior Epwortti League .Meet&#13;
at'trruuon at :i:U ) u'ci^L. at M,&#13;
cordially invited.&#13;
-Miss Alue Mi Malum Superintendent&#13;
s everv Sunday&#13;
I": .'llUHU. .-ill&#13;
^I{LISLG&#13;
THE WHEEL OF WHEELS.&#13;
Tho C. T. A. and li. soaety of this place, meet&#13;
?vtvy fill"'1 ^"'M-iit/ •'•' 'nin ' in ' i I'l &gt;fnl&#13;
thew lidll. John L;ou'»hue; I resiaent.&#13;
KNIGHTS OF'MACCAPfTES.&#13;
Meet everv Friday evening on or before full&#13;
of the moon at their hall in the Swarthout hldg.&#13;
Visiting brothers are cordiallvinvited.&#13;
CHAJ. UiMPtiELr., Sir Knight Commander&#13;
L' ivin^*?t'»n Lotige, No.7", " * &gt;., M. P**«".'•.»&#13;
Couimuiiicaiion Tuesday evening, oa or before&#13;
the full o? the moon. . ii. F. Sigler, \V. M.&#13;
0 RDEB OF EASTERN .s rAli meets each month |&#13;
the Friday evening following the reirular F. ;&#13;
JcA.M. meeting, MRS. C. ELLKN KICHAKO*. W.M, I&#13;
LADIEMOFTHE MACiABEt-S. Meet everr '&#13;
1st aad:ird Sttturdny of each uiotuh at ••&gt;:•*),&#13;
o'clock at the K. «i. T. M. hall. Visitinjc sisters j&#13;
coidiaily iuvited. JTLIA SIOLEB, Lady Com. |&#13;
THE PERFECT&#13;
^ - W H E E L .&#13;
Don't buy a wheel until you see&#13;
THE CARLISLE and get our prices.&#13;
THE CARLISLE MFG. CO.&#13;
B u " l d 1 ^ e r i 203 Michigan Bouleva^&#13;
CHICAGO,&#13;
ILL.&#13;
^&#13;
KrN i"HTSovTHE LOYAl. UC *Ri&gt;&#13;
meet every second Wednesday&#13;
evening of every month hi the K. O.&#13;
T. M. Hall at 7:30.&gt;'dock. A\\ visiting&#13;
Guards welcome.&#13;
F, L. ANDKEWS, C;i]&gt;t. Cen.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
H. F. S1GLER M. D' C. L. SlGLER M. O&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp;. SIGLER,&#13;
Phy*icia idand Suri e ns All calls promptly)&#13;
attended to day or uight. Office on Main street&#13;
Pin-*!&#13;
Act • • s&gt;aew pdBdhl6~&#13;
xenlkto the Utor, tuauth&#13;
•Da bowel* tbrpug* Ot&#13;
nervM. DB. Mnir Frxxa&#13;
tjxMtilv « N atHwampae,&#13;
terpldmiar «o* oojaopaf&#13;
M.0KBaklrt.lli&#13;
Sold bv F. A.. Sialer.&#13;
www**&#13;
v&gt;&#13;
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Bfy&#13;
FRANK L. AKPH»WI» Publifthoiv&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICHIGAN&#13;
The Knsllsh pupers are atill discussing&#13;
"Laureate Austin's jubilee&#13;
etr*in." it undoubtedly TTM severe.&#13;
It to aMdleu to add that it Victoria&#13;
erer come* to New York she will not&#13;
be tfcoorded the privilege*to boiler In&#13;
Gen, Milea' rain barrel.&#13;
The day rapidly approaches when the&#13;
Cheerful Idiot will console a broiled&#13;
and baked population with the information&#13;
that It is great weather tor the&#13;
corn crop.&#13;
The present address of America's&#13;
most picturesque liar is Jacksonville,&#13;
Fkv This is the obvious inference&#13;
from the dtapatcJh with, a Jacksonvllle&#13;
date alleging that the ministers of New&#13;
Castle, Ind., have ordered a carload of&#13;
alligators, to be placed In, the New&#13;
Castle ponds, for the purpose of keepin*&#13;
bad little boys from "going in&#13;
swimming" on Sunday.&#13;
TALMAO&amp;S SBBMON.&#13;
"SALES M*rt AND »ALB8WC*&#13;
MEN" 8UNDAY'» SL9BJBCT.&#13;
rrom the T i x i , A«ts 1 S U 4 m» Follows»&#13;
And » Ccrtftla Woatftji N a « » d LjnUm&#13;
H 8«U«r of Farplo of thm City «f&#13;
Tfcyfttlrft Whl&lt;A WontUpoA Ood.&#13;
35!&#13;
A recent writer notes that "a good&#13;
orchard" is one of the most important&#13;
and attractive Improvements offered by&#13;
one who has "a farm for sale." A rural&#13;
nonagenarian, now dead for nearly&#13;
half a century, made it a part of his&#13;
chief Industry to persuade his neighbors&#13;
to start nurseries of future orchards&#13;
by saving and planting fruitseeds.&#13;
A blessing has been pronounced&#13;
on the man who, plants a tree, in the&#13;
generous hope' that others will eat its&#13;
fruit or sit in its shade. What a&#13;
mighty debt we, who are "heirs of all&#13;
the ages," owe to those who have come&#13;
and gone before us! Oddly enough,&#13;
we can only pay it to those who are&#13;
to come and go after us.&#13;
• processor in the college of the city&#13;
of New York said recently that the&#13;
average schoolboy in that city "has to&#13;
be taught English as If he was learning&#13;
a new language." This is absolutely&#13;
true. The vilest "English" spoken&#13;
anywhere is heard from the lips of&#13;
youngsters in the streets of New York.&#13;
Many children of well-to-do people&#13;
learn It, and tn their play their speech&#13;
Is substantially the same as that of the&#13;
"young tough.' It may not be profane,&#13;
obscene, or slangy, but it is characterised&#13;
by a clipping and distortion&#13;
of words, and by what may be termed&#13;
an impudence of utterance, that make&#13;
it the most offensive corruption of the&#13;
English tongue to be heard anywhere&#13;
in the world. No wonder tbst when&#13;
these youngsters come to study correct&#13;
English they have to begin at the beginningi&#13;
Trusts aro not regarded as Illegal&#13;
combinations In Germany, as Is evidenced&#13;
by a recent decision of the Supreme&#13;
Court of the empire. Economic&#13;
considerations appear to have played&#13;
a prominent part in the deliberations&#13;
of the court, which, in its opinion, says&#13;
that it Is not to the interest of the&#13;
community that inadequately low&#13;
prices Bhould prevail in any branch of&#13;
business or industry, and points out&#13;
that attempts have been repeatedly&#13;
made by legislative bodies to bring&#13;
about higher prices for certain products&#13;
by means of protective duties. The&#13;
ground is taken that if this policy be&#13;
pursued by the legislature, agreement*&#13;
or combinations between manufactur&#13;
ere to prevent rulnft»* AQmpMtUnn •*.&lt;&#13;
check the downward tendency of prices&#13;
cannot be regarded as generally arid&#13;
absolutely obnoxious to the inters 11&#13;
of the community.&#13;
jWf"&#13;
HE first passage&#13;
introduces to you&#13;
Lydia, a Christian&#13;
merehantess. Her&#13;
business is to deal&#13;
in purple cloths&#13;
or silk*. She is&#13;
n o t a g i g g l i n g&#13;
nonentity but a&#13;
practical woman,&#13;
not , ashamed to&#13;
work for her living.&#13;
All the other women of Philippi&#13;
and Thyatira have been forgotten;&#13;
but God bar made immortal in our&#13;
text Lydia, the Christian saleswoman.&#13;
The other text shows you a man with&#13;
head, and hand, and heart, and foot all&#13;
busy toiling on up until he gains a&#13;
princely success. "Seest thou a man&#13;
diligent in his business? He shall&#13;
stand before kings."&#13;
Great encouragement in these two&#13;
passages for men and women who will&#13;
be busy, but no solace for those who&#13;
ate waiting for good luck to show&#13;
them, at the foot of the rainbow, a&#13;
casket of buried gold. It is folly for&#13;
anybody in this world to wait for&#13;
something to turn up. It will turn&#13;
down. The law of thrift is as inexorable&#13;
as the law of the tides. Fortune,&#13;
the magician, may wave her wand in&#13;
that direction until castles and palaces&#13;
«ome; but she will, after a while, invert&#13;
the same wand, and all the splendors&#13;
wjll vanish into thin air.&#13;
There are certain styles of behavior&#13;
which lead to usefulness, honor, and&#13;
permanent success, and there are certain&#13;
styles of behavior which lead to&#13;
dust, dishonor and moral default. I&#13;
"would like to fire the ambition pf&#13;
young people. I have no sympathy&#13;
with those who would prepare young&#13;
folks for life by whittling down their&#13;
expectations. That man or woman&#13;
will be worth nothing to church or&#13;
state who begins life cowed down. The&#13;
business of Christianity is not to&#13;
quench but to direct human ambition.&#13;
Therefore it^ls that I utter words of&#13;
encouragement to those who are occupied&#13;
as clerks in the stores and&#13;
shops and banking houses of the country.&#13;
They are not an, exceptional&#13;
class. They belong to a great company&#13;
of tens of thousands who are in&#13;
this country amid circumstances which&#13;
will either make or break them for&#13;
time and eternity. Many of these people&#13;
have already achieved a Christian&#13;
manliness and a Chrltslan womanliness&#13;
which will be their passport to&#13;
any position. I have seen their trials.&#13;
I have watched their perplexities.&#13;
There are evils abroad which need to&#13;
be hunted down and dragged out into&#13;
the noonday light.&#13;
In the first place, I counsel clerks to&#13;
remember that for the most part their&#13;
clerkship is only a school from which&#13;
they are to be graduated. It takes&#13;
about eight years to get into one of&#13;
the learned professions. It take?&#13;
about eight years to get to be a merchant.&#13;
Some of you will be clerks all&#13;
your lives, but the vast majority of&#13;
you are only in a transient position.&#13;
After a while, some December day, the&#13;
head men of the firm will call yoti into&#13;
The total.product of American manufactures&#13;
is in excess of $7,000,000,-&#13;
000 a year, whereas the total values of&#13;
the combined manufactures of Great&#13;
Britain in a year amount to only $4,-&#13;
100,000,000. Germany follows with |2,-&#13;
915,000,000. France comes third with&#13;
12,245,000,000, Russia fourth with SI,-&#13;
816,000,000, and then the other countries&#13;
having large manufactures as follows:&#13;
Austria-Hungary $1,265/)00,000,&#13;
Italy $606,000,000, Belgium $510,000,000,&#13;
Spain $426,000,000, and Switzerland&#13;
$160,000,000. In respect to the product&#13;
of manufactures by hand the United&#13;
States are far in excess of all other&#13;
countries. The average here is $1,888,&#13;
in Great Britain $790, in France, in&#13;
Belgium and Germany the same, $545;&#13;
In Switzerland $438, in Russia $381,&#13;
and in Italy $265. In respect to the&#13;
amount of steam power used, the&#13;
United States stand at the bead of all&#13;
manufacturing countries, with a total&#13;
of WmfiOO horse power. Great Britgin&#13;
fast 12,000,000, Germany »,000,000,&#13;
France 5,000,000 and Austria-Hungary&#13;
and Russia 2,600,000 each. Belgium,&#13;
which has less than one-seventh of this&#13;
population of Austria-Hungary, and&#13;
Vtm than r^^^nth of the population&#13;
of Russia, has 1,000,000 horse&#13;
power, having increased at a. rate more&#13;
rapid than any other country in Europe.&#13;
Isi sespect to the7 wages paid,&#13;
the United States a n t e stand first,&#13;
with an average of IMS a year. Great&#13;
Britain foitowlag/wit* $204, France&#13;
with H75, Belctiusi with $146, Oormany&#13;
tltf, SwUseriand and AusUia-Hun-&#13;
CAjy #L», and Spate and Russia fiSO. 1&#13;
the back office and win say to you:&#13;
"Now, you have done well by us; we&#13;
are going to do well by you. We invite&#13;
you to have an Interest in onr concern."&#13;
You will bow to that edict&#13;
very gracefully. Getting into a street&#13;
car to go home, an old comrade will&#13;
meet you and say: "What makes you&#13;
look so happy to tonight?" "Oh,M you&#13;
will say, "nothing, nothing." But in&#13;
a few days your name will blossom on&#13;
the sign. Either In the store or bank&#13;
where you sre now, or In some other&#13;
store or bank, you will take a higher&#13;
position than that which you now occupy.&#13;
So I feel I am now addressing&#13;
people who will yet have their hand on&#13;
the helm of the world's aommerce, and&#13;
yon will tum It this way or that; now&#13;
clerks, but to be bankers, importers,&#13;
insurance company directors, shippers,&#13;
contractors, superintendents of&#13;
railroads — your voiee mighty "on&#13;
•Change"—standing foremost in the&#13;
great financial and religious enterprises&#13;
of the day. For, though we&#13;
who are in the professions may, on the&#13;
platform, plead for the philanthropies,&#13;
after all, the merchants must come&#13;
forward with their millions to sustain&#13;
the movement,&#13;
/Be, therefore, patient and diligent in&#13;
this transient position. You are now&#13;
where you can learn things you can&#13;
never learn in any other place. What&#13;
you consider your disadvantages are&#13;
your grand opportunity. You see an afn"&#13;
o*irt fafcher some day come down a&#13;
prominent street with his son who has&#13;
just graduated from the university, and&#13;
establishing him in business, putting&#13;
$50,000 capita} in the store. Well, you&#13;
are envious. You say: "Oh, If I only&#13;
had a chance like that young man—&#13;
if I only had a fs|her to put $6040* In&#13;
a business for me, then I would hate&#13;
ao»e chance te the world." Be&#13;
envious. You have advantages over&#13;
that young man which he has not over&#13;
you. As well might I come down to&#13;
the docks when a vessel is about to&#13;
sail tot Valparaiso, and say, "Let me&#13;
pilot this ship out to as*" Why. I&#13;
would sink crew and cargo before I&#13;
got out of the harbor, simply because&#13;
I know nothing about pilotage.&#13;
Wealthy sea captains put their sons&#13;
before the mast for the reason thai&#13;
they know it is the only place where&#13;
they can learn to be successful sailors.&#13;
It la only under drill that people get&#13;
to understand pilotage and navigation,&#13;
and I want you to understand that it&#13;
takes no more skill to conduct a vessel&#13;
out of the harbor and across the&#13;
sea than to steer a commercial establishment&#13;
clear of the recks. You see&#13;
every day the folly of people going&#13;
Into a business they know nothing&#13;
about. A man makes a fortune in one&#13;
business; thinks there is another occupation&#13;
more comfortable; goes Into&#13;
it and sinks all. Many of the commercial&#13;
establishments of our clUea are&#13;
giving their clerks a mercantile education&#13;
as thorough as Yale, or Harvard,&#13;
or Princeton are giving scientific attainment&#13;
to the students matriculated.&#13;
The reason there are so many men&#13;
foundering In business., from year to&#13;
year, Is because their early mercantile&#13;
education wis neglected. Ask the men&#13;
in high* commercial circles, snd they&#13;
will tell you they thank God for this&#13;
severe discipline of their early clerkship.&#13;
You can afford to endure the&#13;
wilderness march, if it is going to end&#13;
in the vineyards and orchards of the&#13;
promised land.&#13;
But you will say: "Will the womanly&#13;
clerks in our stores have promotion?"&#13;
Yes. Time is coming when&#13;
women will be as well paid for their&#13;
toll in mercantile circles as men are&#13;
now paid for their toil. Time is com-'&#13;
ing when a woman will be allowed to&#13;
do anything she can do well. It is&#13;
only a little while ago when women&#13;
knew nothing of telegraphy, and they&#13;
were kept out of a great many commercial&#13;
circles where they are now welcome;&#13;
and the time will go on until&#13;
the woman who at one odunter in a&#13;
store sells $5,000 worth of goods in a&#13;
year, will get as high a salary as the&#13;
man who at the other counter of the&#13;
same store sells $5,000 worth of goods.&#13;
All honor to Lydia, the Christian saleswoman.&#13;
The second counsel I have to give&#13;
to clerks is that you seek out what&#13;
are the lawful regulations of your establishment,&#13;
and then submit to them.&#13;
Every well-ordered house has Its&#13;
usages. In military life, on ship's&#13;
deck, in commercial life, there must&#13;
be order and-discipline1. Those people&#13;
who do not learn how to obey will&#13;
never know how to command. I will&#13;
tell you what young man will make&#13;
ruin, financial and moral; it is the&#13;
young man who thrusts his thumb into&#13;
his vest and says: "Nobody shall dictate&#13;
to me, I am my own master; I will&#13;
not BUbmit to the regulations of this&#13;
house," Between an establishment in&#13;
which all the employes are under thorough&#13;
discipline and the establishment&#13;
in which the employes do about as&#13;
they choose, is the difference between&#13;
success and failure—between rapid accumulation&#13;
and utter bfifikruptey.&#13;
Do not come to the store ten minutes&#13;
after the time. Be there within two&#13;
seconds, and let it be two seconds before&#13;
instead of two seconds after. Do&#13;
not think anything too insignificant to&#13;
do well. Do not say, "It's only just&#13;
once." From the most important&#13;
transaction in commerce down to the&#13;
particular style la which&#13;
i i •»"•' » m •iT,,!! i |iTTii|ff¥TrT 11¾ 1» m&#13;
«AII t** tnt*r««t 1 have **• •earns*- MIWW« UpM All the interest l nave, thm a . W A M _ _ 0 , f e l l A„ _ T U e ^ ¾ ^ ^ w&amp;siiz 9¾ »SSr* —- - ^ as to say:&#13;
in you is&#13;
you." , • r i - . . w&#13;
of incompetent wages, hot In such&#13;
times as these, when If a man gets half&#13;
a salary for his servies he ought to&#13;
be thankful; but I mean in prosperous&#13;
times. Some of you remember when&#13;
the war broke out and all merchandise&#13;
went up, and - merchants were made&#13;
millionaires in six months by the simple&#13;
rise In the values of goods. Did&#13;
the darks get advantage of that rise?&#13;
Sometimes, not always. I saw estates&#13;
gathered in those times over which the&#13;
curse of God has hung ever since. The&#13;
cry of unpaid men and women in these&#13;
stores reached, the Lord of Sabaotb,&#13;
and the indignation of God has been&#13;
around those establishments ever since.&#13;
Then, there are boys ruined by lack&#13;
of compensation, In how many prosperous&#13;
stores it has been for the last&#13;
twenty years that boys were given just&#13;
enough money to teach them how to&#13;
steal! Some we«e seized upon by the&#13;
SiaAT*.—»7th day.-&#13;
UgpaA* in ^ ifefttors Chitto*, at&#13;
Texsai Jones, of Arkansas, end Petti*&#13;
'tWWTof South Dakota, in opnosjttion,&#13;
while Mr. Aldrioh toot frequent peon*&#13;
sion V? defend the report The eradenials&#13;
ofjhe new Senator from Tennessee,&#13;
Thomas B. Turley, who succeeds&#13;
the late Senator Harris, were&#13;
presented by his associate* Mr; Bate-&#13;
Mr. Turley. was Hworn in at once. Mr.&#13;
Tillman, of South Carolina, offered a&#13;
resolution discharging the committee&#13;
on contingent expenses rrom further&#13;
consideration of the resolution for an.&#13;
investigation' of alleged senatorial&#13;
sugar speculation. Before anything*&#13;
could be said Mr. Jones, of Nevada,&#13;
presented a report from the committee&#13;
on the same resolution ajjaiuSt a» investigjation.&#13;
Mr, Tillman promptly _&#13;
asked tliut the report be read. B&gt; did]&#13;
not want it sidetracked by' any parlia*&#13;
mentary device, and he wished to sc«&#13;
cure a direct vote on the resolution.&#13;
police^ Thft vast majority of instances | M&gt; o»iHnger objected, and the report&#13;
^ = iiore .&#13;
yuu tl« a&#13;
string around a bundle obey orders.&#13;
Do not get easily disgusted. While&#13;
others in the store may lounge, or fret,&#13;
or complain, you go with ready hands,&#13;
and cheerful face, and contented spirit&#13;
to your work. When the bugle sounds,&#13;
the good soldier asks no questions, but&#13;
shoulders his knapsack, fills'his canteen&#13;
and listens for the command of&#13;
"March!"&#13;
Do not get the idea that your interests&#13;
and those of your employer are&#13;
antagonistic. His success will be your&#13;
honor. His embarrassment will/fce&#13;
your dismay. Expose none of the frahties&#13;
of the firm. Tell no store secrets.&#13;
Do not blab. Rebuff those persons&#13;
who come to find out from clerks what&#13;
ought never to be known outside the&#13;
store. Do not be among those young&#13;
men who take on a mysterious air&#13;
when something is said against the&#13;
firm that employs them, as much as&#13;
to say: "I could tell you something if&#13;
I would, but I won't." Do not be&#13;
among those who imagine they can&#13;
build themselves up by pulling somebody&#13;
else down. Be not ashameffTO&#13;
be a subaltern. * • •&#13;
Then there are all the trials which&#13;
come to clerks from the treatment of&#13;
inconsiderate employers. There are&#13;
professed Christian men who have no&#13;
more regard for their clerks than they&#13;
have for the scales on which the sugars&#13;
are weighed. A clerk is no more than&#13;
so much store furniture. No conslderalloirHter-^&#13;
eii^-rJghtr or interests&#13;
were not known. The head of the firm&#13;
asked: "Where is George now?" "Oh,&#13;
he isn't here any more." A lad might&#13;
better starve to death on a blasted&#13;
heath than take one farthing from his&#13;
employer. Woe be to that .employer&#13;
who unnecessarily puts a temptation in&#13;
a boy's way. There have been great&#13;
establishments in these cities, building&#13;
marble palaces, their owners dying&#13;
worth millions, and millions, and millions,&#13;
who made a vast amount of their&#13;
estate out of the blood, and muscle, and&#13;
nerve of half-paid clerks. Such men as&#13;
—well, I will not mention any nahie.&#13;
But I mean men whoi have gathered up&#13;
vast estates at the expense of the people&#13;
who were ground under their heel.&#13;
"Oh," say such merchants, "If you&#13;
don't like it here, then go and get a&#13;
better place." AB much as to say:&#13;
"I've got you in my grip, and I mean&#13;
to hold you; you can't get any other&#13;
place."&#13;
. Oh, what a^ contrast between those&#13;
men and Christian merchants who today&#13;
are sympathetic with their clerks&#13;
—when they pay the salary, acting in&#13;
his way: "This salary that I give you&#13;
is not all my interest in you. You are&#13;
an Immortal man; you are an immortal&#13;
woman; I am interested in your&#13;
present and your everlasting welfare;&#13;
I want you to understand that, if I am&#13;
a little higher up in this store, I am&#13;
beside you in Christian sympathy." Go&#13;
back forty or fifty years to Arthur Tappen's&#13;
store in New York—a man whose&#13;
worst enemies never questioned his&#13;
honesty. Ever.y morning, he brought&#13;
all the clerks, snd the accountants, and&#13;
the weighers into a room for devotion.&#13;
They sang. They prayed. They exhorted.&#13;
On Monday morning the clerks&#13;
were asked where they had attended&#13;
church on the previous day, and what&#13;
the sermonB were about. It must have&#13;
sounded strangely, that voice of praise&#13;
along the streets where the devotees&#13;
of mammon were counting their golden&#13;
beads. You Bdy, Arthur Tappen&#13;
failed. Yes, he was unfortunate, like&#13;
a great many good men; but I understand&#13;
he met all his obligations before&#13;
he left this world, and I know&#13;
that he died in the peace of1 the Gospel,&#13;
and that he is before the throne&#13;
-of^ God today—forever blessed. If that&#13;
be failing, I wish you might all fail.&#13;
• * •&#13;
After the last store has been closed,&#13;
after the last bank has gone down,&#13;
after the shuffle of the quick feet on&#13;
the Custom House steps has stopped,&#13;
after the long Line of merchantmen&#13;
on the sea have taken sail of flame, af-&#13;
ter Washlnglon, and New York, and&#13;
went to the calendar. Shortly bei&#13;
the Senate adjourned Mr. Allison, in&#13;
charge of the tariff bill, made a strong&#13;
effort to have a time fixed for the final&#13;
vote on the tariff conference report.&#13;
Failing in this he gave notice that the&#13;
session the following day would be&#13;
protracted with a view to securing a&#13;
vote. HOUSE.—Two important bills&#13;
were passed. The first allows a partial&#13;
suspension of the discriminating&#13;
duties imposed on the vessels of foreign&#13;
countries which impose similar&#13;
duties on our vessels. The effent of&#13;
the bill is to open the way;for securing&#13;
a market for American coal in Mexico,&#13;
which is now supplied by English coal&#13;
mines. The other bill is to create a&#13;
civil government in Alaska, with an&#13;
additional land office, which is made&#13;
Imperative by recent gold discoveries,&#13;
Rep. C. W. Stone, of Pennsylvania, in*&#13;
traduced a bill to authorize the* appointment&#13;
of a monetary commission&#13;
and to appropriate $100,000 for. its, expenses.&#13;
This is the bill that will probably&#13;
be passed by the House as a response&#13;
to the special message of the&#13;
President, which, it is understood, he&#13;
will.send to congress as soon, as the&#13;
tariff bill gets out of the Senate.&#13;
NEWSY CONDENSATIONS.&#13;
Etyrht tramps were k^lljedby. a&#13;
N. W""train beiinngg ditched and wre&#13;
near Boone, 1st&#13;
Not one word of encouragement from&#13;
sunrise to sunset, nor from January&#13;
to December. But when anything&#13;
goes wrong— a streak of dust on the&#13;
counter, or a bog with the cover off—1&#13;
thunder-showers of scolding, Men imperious,&#13;
capricJoua, cranky toward their&#13;
whole&#13;
London, and Vienna have gone down&#13;
into the grave where Thebes, and Babylon,&#13;
and Tyre lie buried, after the great&#13;
fire-bells of, the* judgment day have&#13;
tolled at the burning of a world—on&#13;
that day, all the affairs 'of banking&#13;
houses and stores will come up for inspection.&#13;
Oh, what an'opening of account&#13;
books! Side by side, the clerks&#13;
and the men who employed them.&#13;
Every invoice made out—all the labels&#13;
of goods— all certificates of stock—all&#13;
lists of prices—all private marks of the&#13;
firm, now explained so everybody can&#13;
understand them. All the maps of&#13;
cities that were never built, but in&#13;
which lots,were sold. All bargains.&#13;
All gouglngs. All snap judgments. All&#13;
false entries. A\\ adulteration of liquors&#13;
with coppers and strychnine. All&#13;
mixing of teas, and sugars, and coffees,&#13;
snd syrups, with cheaper material. All&#13;
embezzlements of trust funds. All&#13;
swindles in coSjl, and iron, and oil, and&#13;
silver, and stocks. On that.day when&#13;
the cities of this world" sre smoking&#13;
in the last conflagration, the trial will&#13;
go on; and down in as avalanche ofdestruction&#13;
will go those who wronged&#13;
man or woman, insulted God and defled&#13;
the judgment. Oh, that will be a&#13;
great day far you, honest Christian&#13;
clerk. No getting up early; no retiring&#13;
late; no walking around with&#13;
weary limbs; but a mansion In which&#13;
to live, and a realm of light, and love,&#13;
and joy over which to hold everlasting&#13;
dominion. Hoist him up from glory&#13;
C. A&#13;
wrecked&#13;
Idrs. Mary E, lifease, £be,*amo\i» fpp&gt;&#13;
ulist politician, has* announced herself&#13;
as a candidate for aojrernor of Kansas..&#13;
H. P. LiUibrldgur, &lt;who was consulgeneral&#13;
from Hawaii to Japan during&#13;
the reign of Kin ft »JCalftka«B&gt;r has written&#13;
a letter to Senator Hanna in which&#13;
he says that he knows ti|#4Japan has&#13;
designs, upon Hawaii.&#13;
The sheet scale was settled at a conference&#13;
between the wage committees&#13;
of the. manufacturers and the Amah&#13;
gamated association at Pittsburgh the&#13;
men gaining their point The effect&#13;
of the settlement was to put between&#13;
20,000 and 25,000 men at work at once.&#13;
The bar iron and puddling Amalgamated&#13;
scales yet remain to be settled.&#13;
John Norman, a carpenter, jumped&#13;
from the central viaduct at Cleveland,&#13;
to the water l6l feefe below, to rescue&#13;
John Millard, a boy, who was calling&#13;
fqr help. The boy had sunk, but Norman&#13;
went down and brought him up&#13;
unconscious. He struggled with, his&#13;
burden to the dock, where the two&#13;
were dragged out.&#13;
The increased discoveries of gold in&#13;
large quantities in Alaska is causing&#13;
great excite meuU—The almost fabnlous&#13;
finds on. the Klondyke where; from&#13;
1,000 to $6,000 worth of gold is panned&#13;
out in a day by dozens of men has induced&#13;
many western miners to prepare&#13;
to emigrate to the new El Dorado.&#13;
The steamer Portland has arrived at&#13;
Port Townsent, Wash., with over&#13;
92,000,000 of the yellow stuff on board&#13;
which was taken from the Klondyke&#13;
fields within the last four, or five&#13;
months. . / - . f .^ j .&#13;
ilmA I&#13;
a 00 493 8 90&#13;
to glory, and from song to song, and&#13;
from throne to throne; for while others&#13;
go down Into the sea with their gold&#13;
like a millstone hanging to their neck,&#13;
this one shall cosne u7~the heights of&#13;
amethyst and alabaster, holding in his&#13;
right head the pearl of great price in&#13;
a anarklins:. ^Uttering **«•»«*"•&#13;
. T H E MARKETS.&#13;
- .. 'Mil.. / * - -• \ i \&#13;
LIVE STOCK. ' * ***•&#13;
N«w York—Cattle Sleep i S &amp; t e * . Best grades. ..14 75^5 06 14,50 SS 7V W t t&#13;
Lower grades.. 2 75® t W&#13;
Chicago— -&#13;
Best grades.... 4 75Q5 &lt;X&gt;&#13;
Lower grade*. .2 &amp;0&amp;4 60&#13;
Detroit—&#13;
Best grades..&#13;
Lowersrades&#13;
' Uaffolo—&#13;
Best grades. -.. * TfitiU 00&#13;
Lowcrgradas. .SSS&amp;8 60&#13;
CUMjlanatl"-&#13;
LojTergrades. .2 M$4 00&#13;
. C l a v U n d — ,.: •&#13;
Best gradesTT rffsgu^—rg&#13;
Lowergrade».2 60ft4 00 Sf(&#13;
Plttebvrg—&#13;
Best grades « B0O4 89 4 10&#13;
Lower grades. .8 &amp;0&amp;4 » S .00&#13;
.4 0004 25&#13;
.2 2ft#8 86&#13;
400&#13;
229&#13;
a «4&#13;
22»&#13;
4 »&#13;
2 M&#13;
840&#13;
6SS&#13;
8 00&#13;
« *&#13;
S H&#13;
S00&#13;
4 »&#13;
' , &amp;&#13;
IBB&#13;
8 »&#13;
a ao&#13;
5 40&#13;
8 «&#13;
»60&#13;
S46&#13;
UBAXX, KTC&#13;
Wheat, Corn,&#13;
No. 2 red No. 2 mix&#13;
Now York 77*d77* 81 &amp;H&#13;
Chicago 75 £ 7 6 * 80 « * « *&#13;
•DotroH 78 078½ , 27 Q87&#13;
Toledo Tfitte?** SO&#13;
«Mcl»n*U78 ¢73 «&#13;
cioTiaaAn.osn so QSS&#13;
piDffayg 75 amM trejsv&#13;
Bmffatft 78 © 7 8 * 2»M&lt;tj|t&#13;
N•eDwo tProotlat-toHeas,r&#13;
4 « see&#13;
NoOTaiwts,h u*&#13;
# • » *&#13;
si • » *&#13;
« S)S4*&#13;
_1*-4W*&#13;
f i -&#13;
ts * * « *&#13;
r.No. l Umothy.SWXOOper ton.&#13;
9dco;a t urBleuyttae,r S. cd. alEryg^gT*,c s ptreirc ltbly; efrresasski,i srSyc, plieer.&#13;
4A&#13;
&gt; : . _&#13;
I&#13;
' • /&#13;
^&#13;
'vv&#13;
v»&#13;
m '-,.M'. -' - h \ . . - .&#13;
" &lt;/''"' •'.• '.-'' &lt;V ••'"..:&#13;
:.: . ' . : } • • ..„• • ••&lt;..•,.. ,:..,•'••: •:./.•.. ---^- -••&gt;&gt; ,- , /:&gt; •;.• v,j;.v.v 'V &lt;v V . W , " - ' * ' *$xk&lt; V;''&lt; '-^ •/.- V^v^'^&amp;k^ --^ •' =--v' '""•' •• 'v ' • •„&#13;
4 *&#13;
U&#13;
•Sft&#13;
Row Old are You? *:)&gt;&#13;
r if/ '(-&#13;
&gt;•'* Ton need not answer the question, madam,&#13;
for in your oaae age is not counted by years- It&#13;
Will always be true that "a woman la aa old&#13;
as she looks," Nothing sets the aeal of age&#13;
90 deeply upon woman's beauty as gray hair.&#13;
It is natural* therefore, that every woman is&#13;
anxious to preserve her hair in all its original&#13;
abundance and beauty; or, that being denied&#13;
the crowning gift of beautiful hair, she longs&#13;
to possess it. Nothing is easier than to attain&#13;
to this gift or to preserve it, if already&#13;
possessed. Ayer's Hair Vigor restores gray&#13;
or faded hair to its original oolor. It does this&#13;
by simply aiding nature, by supplying the&#13;
nutrition necessary to health and growth*.&#13;
There is no better preparation for the hair&#13;
than&#13;
AYER'S HAIR VIGOR.&#13;
People who have tried to keep the&#13;
strap of a silk tie beneath a short neek&#13;
collar button will not be surprised to&#13;
hear that the cotton, tie trust is go*&#13;
toff tip.&#13;
^ ^ ^ • I • II • ! • • • ! • ! • » • ! • • •&#13;
Shake Into Your Shorn&#13;
Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder for the&#13;
feet. It cures painful, swollen, smarting&#13;
feet and instantly takes the sting&#13;
out of corns and bunions. It is the&#13;
greatest comfort discovery of the age.&#13;
Allen's Foot-Base makes tight-fitting&#13;
or new shoes feel easy. It is a certain&#13;
cure for sweating, callous and hot,&#13;
tired, aching feet Try It loday. Sold&#13;
by all druggists and shoe stores.. By&#13;
mail for 25¾ in stamps. Trial package&#13;
FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le&#13;
Rov, N. Y.&#13;
peOrfceccatsliyo npaul rIen nstaatnivcee sI rhoanv ien bmeeetne ofroiutensd.. of&#13;
B4«f«at« Tout Bowels With Oasearett.&#13;
10Cc. anIdfy0 .C Ca.t haa rfatiicl,, cdurrueg cfcolnstsst irpeafutinodn ?m oroenveeyr..&#13;
The Krupjl ^un works have 1,500 furnaces.&#13;
is Fthore bLeUsnt gmahetdfi ccinhee swt ed ihsaeavsee su, seIdh.s—b'ssiCrsu. rJe. L. Northcott, Windsor, Out, Canada.&#13;
The earth Is gradually growing; colder.&#13;
The Bicycle&#13;
^Sensation&#13;
1697 COLUMtlAS AT $75.&#13;
•tsnderd of the World.&#13;
1896 Ciliibias \ . it $80.&#13;
1187 Hirtfirtt. . . .it 50.&#13;
HirtfirtPittin2 . . .it 45.&#13;
Hirtfirf Pittin I. . . it 40.&#13;
fcrtJwi Ptttim 5 Mi 6. it 30.&#13;
These are the new prices.&#13;
They btve set the whole&#13;
Wcycie world taUdnf—&#13;
aod buying&#13;
POTE MFC. CO.. Hartford, C o n .&#13;
Gfttftlor trm tnm »»7 Oolaabto A— If)&#13;
by Mil tor m t-Mot aUap.&#13;
There Is something ciUlU la tai&#13;
Shakespearian manner In tae simplicity&#13;
of a former magistrate of. Newburyport,&#13;
in the old days of queues and&#13;
ruffled shirt-bosoms. A case was peine&#13;
tried before him In which the accused,&#13;
who stoutly denied the charge, was asserted&#13;
to hare stolen from a gentle*&#13;
man a new set of shirts.&#13;
WE WANT IV1H1 YOU&#13;
Way Tear Back is Lame—Way It Aches&#13;
a i d Faiaa, and How to Care i t&#13;
Do you know what it Is to hare a back&#13;
that is never free from aches and constant Eain, a lame back, a sore back, an aching&#13;
ack, in fact, a back that makes your Ufe&#13;
a burden? What have you done for Uf&#13;
And does it still keep you from the happiness&#13;
that perfect health brings to slit We&#13;
Mow full welt If such is your condition&#13;
a cure for it will be a blessing you no&#13;
doubt desire. Plasters won't do it, but&#13;
may assist in bringing stteegtb. Liniment&#13;
won't do it; for, while it may give temporary&#13;
relief, it does not reach the cause.&#13;
The cause, there's the point; there's where&#13;
to make the attack. Most backaches come&#13;
from disordered kidneys, therefore you&#13;
must correct their action if you would be&#13;
cured. Read the following from D. D.&#13;
Cook, Whose address is No. 18 Michigan&#13;
Street, Grand Rapids. He says: —&#13;
" I have used Doan's Kidney PUls and&#13;
wish to say it is a truly great medicine.&#13;
Thirty years ago I had nenrotis prostration&#13;
while in the army, where I served for&#13;
over four years. I thfnk H was during&#13;
this service that the seeds were sown which&#13;
have caused all my trouble. Severe bilious&#13;
attacks bothered me, and at such timet&#13;
my kidneys were worse. It is almost impossible&#13;
to describe the pain which ao&#13;
often lamed me. I have been so lame that&#13;
to stand up after I had been sitting down&#13;
required a great exertion. Walking wss&#13;
at times an impossibility; even at sight I&#13;
did not rest, being forced to get up during&#13;
the night I heard of Eton's Kidney Pills&#13;
and wondered if they could make an almost&#13;
lame man well I got some, and&#13;
soon after taking them began to feel their&#13;
good effects. I used them for some time,&#13;
my lameness all left me and I have not&#13;
felt it since. Doan's Kidney Pflls have&#13;
done me an inestimable amount of good."&#13;
For sale by all dealers; price SO cents.&#13;
Hailed by Foster-MUburn Co., Buffalo,&#13;
N. ?., sole agents for the U. S. Bemem*&#13;
bet the name. Doan'$, and take so ether.&#13;
• 7 5 S S O&#13;
BiCYCL&#13;
tWeeUrn Wheel 'Works&#13;
- CATl%L9CVgVwE|&#13;
NEBRASKA A dry healthy&#13;
climate, f r e e&#13;
from malaria, an&#13;
S* • aa mm abundance of pure wat«r,a&#13;
I* A K M *°^ which is unsurpassed&#13;
I I I I I H I for richness, and is easily&#13;
I 1 1 1 i l O cultivated, yielding all&#13;
I A N | | \ varieties of crops. That&#13;
k n i l e J U l U what Nebraska offers&#13;
to the hosseseeker. Lands are cheap&#13;
now. Send for a pamphlet describing&#13;
Nebraska, mailed free on application&#13;
to P. S. Eusris General Passenger&#13;
Agent, &amp; , E s Q , B . B., Ohicago.&#13;
UNIVERSITY 0* NOTRE DAME,&#13;
Notre Dame. Indiana.&#13;
letters, S C U M * . L « W . Civil,&#13;
emmtson&#13;
CM St* • for&#13;
W H M M N i Aoff •M«M««•A•B«« mabroMt.&#13;
FAlakts, MS not totci*.&#13;
••»* or OOUOMMM.&#13;
£Sfc&#13;
Wo •&#13;
"And her husband"—&#13;
"Oh, she has no husband; the man&#13;
she married is a stamp collector."&#13;
Thorp |s i Class vt Pwiyle"&#13;
Who are injured by the use of coffee.&#13;
Recently there has been placed in all the&#13;
grocery stores a new preparation called&#13;
GRAIN-O, made of pure grains, that&#13;
takes the place of coffee. The most&#13;
delicate stomach receives it without&#13;
distress, and but few can tell it from&#13;
coffee. It does not cost over X as&#13;
much. Children may drink it with&#13;
great benefit 15 cents and 85 cents&#13;
per package. Try i t Ask for GRAIN-O.&#13;
It is always easy to see where others&#13;
could do better.&#13;
Try Grain-G!&#13;
Try Grain-O!&#13;
Ask your Grocer to-day to&#13;
show 70a a package of&#13;
GRAIN-O, tse new food&#13;
drink that lakes she piece&#13;
refcOdrem may drink It&#13;
adalt All wke try tt.Mke&#13;
i t GRAIN-O has&#13;
but it is&#13;
grains, and tae saost dslioate&#13;
stomach receives it witaost&#13;
distress. H the price of&#13;
15&#13;
paekeie. Sold by all&#13;
Tastes like Coffee&#13;
Looks Ilka Coffee&#13;
DBEAV OF HOME,&#13;
(By Emma If. Wise.)&#13;
VSR the frontdoor&#13;
was the motto,&#13;
"God BleeT~Our&#13;
Hone,*; worked in&#13;
red, blue and yellow&#13;
silk. Close beside&#13;
it, between the&#13;
door and the window,&#13;
was Joe Luramis'&#13;
first composition.&#13;
It was written&#13;
in a large, uneven&#13;
hand on foolscap paper, and was&#13;
framed with an inch wide fancy design&#13;
in varnished straw festooned with&#13;
acorns. It ran in this wise:&#13;
"When I get big I want a home. I&#13;
want a wife and children. I want to&#13;
hear their cheerful voices. I want to&#13;
see the Are burn brightly, and to watch&#13;
it glimmer on my wife's hair. When&#13;
I come home at night I want to find&#13;
supper ready, then we will be very&#13;
happy," - —&#13;
When Joe first had the composition&#13;
framed and placed near the motto bis&#13;
mother smiled half chldingly and&#13;
looked upon his fondness for the crude&#13;
literary effort as a bit of childish folly&#13;
that ought to be shamed out of him.&#13;
She even went so far once as to begin&#13;
to tell him that if be wished to treasure&#13;
his composition it would be better to&#13;
put it In the trunk Instead of hanging&#13;
It on the wall where all could see it&#13;
and comment on it, perhaps unkindly,&#13;
but hardly had he divined her thought&#13;
when he turned toward her with such&#13;
a wondering, appealing look in his&#13;
large dull eyes that her tongue tripped&#13;
and faltered over the words and she&#13;
hastened to ohange the subject, hoping&#13;
he had not clearly understood what had&#13;
been in her mind. Her heart was so&#13;
sorely grieved at having wounded him&#13;
that to make amends she, too, began&#13;
to love the faded composition, and had&#13;
any one dared to attempt to take it&#13;
from Its place on the wall she would&#13;
have defended^/more vigorously than&#13;
the most valued'art treasure.&#13;
As the years passed, taking Joe&#13;
through boyhood and youth and far&#13;
Into manhood and each night found&#13;
him sitting at the opposite side of the&#13;
room, looking at the motto and the&#13;
composition with a smile expressive of&#13;
both hoped for happiness and realized&#13;
disappointment resting on his plain&#13;
face, her mother-heart read the secret&#13;
of his attachment to the composition,&#13;
which was the only tangible expression&#13;
he had ever shown of his constant&#13;
dream of a home. Sometimes she wished&#13;
he would take her into his confidence&#13;
and tell her whether there was any&#13;
possibility of his drream coming true,&#13;
but he never showed any inclination&#13;
to become confidential on that subject,&#13;
freely as they talked on other topics.&#13;
One night her anxiety got the better of&#13;
the reserve which she, too, had maintained&#13;
in deference to the evident wish&#13;
and hobbling across the room she sat&#13;
down beside him and laid her knotted,&#13;
rheumatic hand in his.&#13;
"Joe," she said, half timidly, "do you&#13;
think it will ever come out all right?"&#13;
The rapt, entranced expression died&#13;
away from his face and he flushed&#13;
deeply.&#13;
"What are you talking about?" he&#13;
asked.&#13;
"That," and she pointed to the composition.&#13;
"Do yon think you will ever&#13;
get a home, Joe?"&#13;
"Why, mother," he said, with a short&#13;
laugh, "I've got one now, haven't I?"&#13;
She looked around the little room&#13;
with its plain walls, cheap ingrain car-&#13;
MT POOR BOY.&#13;
pat and homely furniture. His eyes&#13;
followed hers, and they sighed In oni-&#13;
"Joe, soy poor boy, it's a bard life&#13;
you've had, Isn't it?"&#13;
He raised her hands to his lips and&#13;
caressed it gently. That unwonted&#13;
mark of affection loosened the floodgates&#13;
of feeling she bad hitherto kept&#13;
well under control add she broke out&#13;
into a vehement, peetioaate Sow of&#13;
simple etoqaeaos he had aerer leomrnl&#13;
It poosfhle to hear from his mother's&#13;
Ufa.&#13;
"Aa, Joe, say dear.** she said, and&#13;
her shriveled hand passed tenderly to&#13;
and fro over his rough face as she&#13;
tMnfcT-yoa can o^oeive&#13;
I've known all about it&#13;
far years, Joe. Ton never knew that&#13;
I eaderetaoi you, bat your every&#13;
has been as clear as print to&#13;
rve aeea you sitting here night&#13;
gating so latently at that&#13;
jnoito with Its brown hpuse aud mossgrown&#13;
weli aear by that I anew your&#13;
invagination was busy painting pictures&#13;
something akin to that with the&#13;
wife and children of your epmpealtlon&#13;
as central figures. No supper I can&#13;
ever cook, Joe, wilt taste so good as&#13;
that prepared by your wife, and s o&#13;
other laughter will ever sound so sweet&#13;
t e your ears as that of her and the&#13;
children. But it is not in this homely&#13;
old room alone that yoor mind&#13;
dreamed. All through the day your&#13;
mind has been intent upon the same&#13;
theme, and I«have dreamed with you.&#13;
In fancy I have been with you down&#13;
there by that burning furnace where&#13;
you are fireman, and I have seen with&#13;
you the pictures that have biased and&#13;
danced in the flames and glowing coals.&#13;
Whether you were looking1 jnjp" the&#13;
fiercest fire or upon banks ef (Unit eold&#13;
cinders, it has always been the same;&#13;
the home you long for has been ever&#13;
before you. Oh, how I wish you had&#13;
it, Joe, how I wish you had it.&#13;
"Joe," she resumed, after a short sllence,&#13;
"the girls are marrlad nnw and&#13;
off your bands. I am the only one left&#13;
It isn't right that you should waste&#13;
more precious years of your life on&#13;
me. You are past 30. It Is time for&#13;
your dreaming to end and the reality&#13;
to begin. I am old and crippled and&#13;
worthless. Don't let me be a burden&#13;
to you any longer. Put me away some&#13;
place and let the home making commence."&#13;
"Mother." The reproach in his voice&#13;
thrilled and startled her, and she&#13;
turned her face away. "Why, mother,&#13;
how can you talk like that to me? Put&#13;
you away? Don't hurt me by suggesting&#13;
such a thing. I wouldn't give you&#13;
up for all the women in the world. Who&#13;
said you were a burden to me? Let's&#13;
brush the old picture of hqme away,&#13;
mother, and paint another."&#13;
"No, no, Joe; not yet," and she nestled&#13;
closer to his side; "is there—anybody—&#13;
in particular?"&#13;
Joe's face turned a deeper crimson&#13;
and he looked around in affright as if&#13;
he would fain seek refuge in flight&#13;
"Is there?" she persisted.&#13;
He nodded.&#13;
"Who is she? Tell me. I have a&#13;
right to know, haven't I, Joe?"&#13;
Oh, how his heart throbbed and how&#13;
his great, strong hands trembled.&#13;
"The alto singer in the church&#13;
choir,** he said, weakly.&#13;
"Joe," she asked, at length, "have&#13;
you told her about It?"&#13;
"I've hinted at i t "&#13;
"And what did she say?"&#13;
"Nothing. Didn't seem to understand."&#13;
"You mustn't hint any longer. She's&#13;
all the world to you, isn't she, Joe?"&#13;
He tried to say "ye*." The monosyllable&#13;
somehow lost its identity, and&#13;
reached her ears in the guise of a&#13;
cough, put the mother understood.&#13;
"And she has been just that, dear,&#13;
for a great many years, hasn't she?"&#13;
"Yes." mqre clearly that time.&#13;
"Then you must go to her tomorrow&#13;
night and tell her all about i t It will&#13;
come easier now that you and I understand&#13;
each other. Put me in the&#13;
background. She will object to me, I'm&#13;
sure. I know all her arguments; your&#13;
wages are not large enough to support&#13;
two women, and the house that would&#13;
hold two families has never been built&#13;
That is all true, too. She wouldn't&#13;
be a genuine woman If she didn't look&#13;
at It in that way. Rut you must overcome&#13;
these objections. Tell her I sm&#13;
very sneak ead aamhle; that I won't&#13;
coat yea wane.; that 1*1 aw content&#13;
n&#13;
LAURA KBBNK AND LINCOLN.&#13;
s^Msw wBSjBsy e s s w s s e asj^s^^^sss^PTp ve^nw^s* ws^ss^si ^ * f&#13;
the eteea fprortte a genemtioo ago,&#13;
brinejs to trtad eht) tepxntaot part afce&#13;
played io the greatest tragedy this •aatkoBL&#13;
hse ever been ceiled upon to s e e -&#13;
the easassiaemlon of Abraham Lincoln.&#13;
Tt» play bill &lt;tt Ford's theater in&#13;
Wsswiinetoa announces for the evening&#13;
of Friday, April 14, 1865, «he "Benefit&#13;
and Last Night of Ifiea Laura Keeae,&#13;
the Dtotlnvulshed Manageress. Authoress&#13;
and Actress." On the same single&#13;
sheet of faded paper may be read:&#13;
o , o&#13;
"This Evening&#13;
: the performance will be :&#13;
: honored by the presence of :&#13;
: President LlecaJn." :&#13;
The play was the one the elder Sothern&#13;
did. so much to popularise, Tom&#13;
Taylor's "celebrated eccentric comedy,&#13;
ae originally produced in America by&#13;
w i t h - * % *&#13;
dearly, ana&#13;
ger, anyway.&#13;
happy, Joe, you deserve it so. Will&#13;
you go, tomorrow?"&#13;
"Yes, tomorrow. Please God the&#13;
dream may come true."&#13;
He drew his couch around so he&#13;
could see the firelight from the open&#13;
stove falling fitfully on the motto and&#13;
the composition, and his dreams that&#13;
night had an added significance. The&#13;
next day when attending the furnace&#13;
his ideal home seemed very near. The&#13;
fantastic figures in the flames took on&#13;
the semblance of his beloved&#13;
family, and the hissing of the&#13;
tongues was resolved into the merry&#13;
cries of children.&#13;
His mother watched him proudly&#13;
that night, when, attired la bis new&#13;
black suit—the first tailor made suit&#13;
he had ever owned—he tipped and tilted&#13;
the little mirror In the vela endeavor&#13;
to catch a full length view of his&#13;
tall figure.&#13;
"You look handsome, Joe," she said,&#13;
with a quavering laugh. "May success&#13;
be with you."&#13;
—She did nor expect him to return until&#13;
late, and was surprised when, a little&#13;
peat *. she heard his familiar step&#13;
oa the board walk In froat of the cottage-&#13;
Her crippled limbe seem s i endowed&#13;
with aew life as she advanced to&#13;
meet him.&#13;
"My dear, dear hoy." she cried, "is It&#13;
well with you? Has the dream come&#13;
tree?"&#13;
The look of hopeless misery that had&#13;
settled over alft haggard face&#13;
answer. 8ae glanced toward the boyish&#13;
composition hanging oa the wall&#13;
and sobbed piteeueiy.&#13;
"There, there, mether." he i&#13;
ly. "dontcry. *tH he all risjht Well&#13;
of something else."&#13;
Miss Keene and performed by her upward&#13;
of 1,000 night*, entitled 'Our&#13;
American Cousin/ " The prices of admission&#13;
were $1 to the orchestra, 75&#13;
cents to the drees circle and parquet&#13;
and X cents to the family circle. The&#13;
boxes were 16 and $10 each. The president&#13;
occupied one on the northern&#13;
side of the theater, just above and&#13;
upon the stag*. The bouse was crowd-&#13;
Laura Keene was standing behind&#13;
the rcanes on the side of the theater&#13;
fertheet from the presidential box,&#13;
near what is called the "tormentor,"&#13;
awaiting her cue. Of right she should&#13;
not have been eo near the prompter's&#13;
desk, but he had gone to call some of&#13;
the actors. B6 she placed herself at&#13;
band, hoping to be of service. Her&#13;
part was that of Florence Trenchard.&#13;
The time had come for the entrance&#13;
of Mr. G. O. Spear as Binney. He had&#13;
a drunken scene to go through, and&#13;
Mies Keene, was expecting to give hdm&#13;
a push as he went by her. to aid in the&#13;
effect as he oame within view of Che&#13;
audience. Instead she felt herself&#13;
pushed in the other direction—from&#13;
the stage, toward which she was not&#13;
just at that moment looking. As she&#13;
felt hersetf struck on the hand by the&#13;
hand of another she glanced up and&#13;
neeosmised John Wilkes Booth and&#13;
saw, loo, the dagger be was clutching*&#13;
At that very moment the appallina cry&#13;
ranc out through the house:&#13;
"The president is shot?"&#13;
It was echoed spontaneously from&#13;
among the audience, and, ea Miss&#13;
Keene eime forward she could see&#13;
many men on their feet, some of them&#13;
evidently making for the stage, from&#13;
which they had seen the assassin disappear.&#13;
Women were crying aloud,&#13;
men cursing and children weeping, aH&#13;
in an indeterminate panic, much se if&#13;
the alarm of fire had been raised. M2es&#13;
Keene came down to the footlights&#13;
forthwith and said: "For God's sake,&#13;
have presence of mind and keep your&#13;
Pisces, and all will be well."&#13;
Meanwhile Booth had made his escape&#13;
through the stage door, fleeing on&#13;
the horse which had been provided for&#13;
him. He had been followed by a Mr.&#13;
Stewart, one of the audience, down on&#13;
the stage" after his leap from the president's&#13;
box, but had avoided him by&#13;
dodging about the scenery, and had&#13;
gotten away from the stage carpenter,&#13;
who had attempted to detain him, by&#13;
jtrlasng at him with the dagger. No&#13;
eae except Mr. Stewart tried to purawe&#13;
tee fugitive, though everybody&#13;
willing to aid. Amid the ooutPss&#13;
Keene heard a cry for&#13;
the presidential box.&#13;
a ghus she made her way from&#13;
to the box by way of the&#13;
Mrs. Lincoln was crying&#13;
Keene at once did&#13;
her power to aid, though&#13;
she fek meet taw aagltwilna that help&#13;
was useless.&#13;
Seating herself am gee:&#13;
the body of the&#13;
the eetiess raised&#13;
It in her lap. It was t*&#13;
that the shot had penetrated hie'&#13;
When the chest and&#13;
been bared Without dtecoverhxg&#13;
alga of injury the poor head was&#13;
ed. Then the pool of blood which had&#13;
gathered in the hollow of Miss Keene**&#13;
gown told the story. She remained fat&#13;
thai position uattt the&#13;
Lincoln from the&#13;
gered down to her&#13;
«aly her gai meals&#13;
lace dabbled with bsocdL&#13;
tee&#13;
dm&#13;
pi&#13;
ev&#13;
^-&#13;
•'. .H&#13;
•hd&#13;
'•••"iS'-ll&#13;
m&#13;
;-::f.&#13;
W&#13;
•I&#13;
-/-&#13;
v..4&#13;
• • &gt; &lt;&#13;
Si&#13;
ri*i&#13;
.s M&#13;
From the «Ceet of the shook and&#13;
horror of this Mies Keeae never rally&#13;
recovered, and. tauugfc she rived mora&#13;
than&#13;
never&#13;
fast* eapealssaW ttaale to attack.&#13;
in&#13;
Mr. TMf-I&#13;
the prince.&#13;
Mr. TlhV-1 receive my hoar's&#13;
my wile at&#13;
/&#13;
/&#13;
%$. \&#13;
-'- -J^tMatun-*: .^1!»W , ' l ^ k B . u J -A, &lt;. M&gt;li¥iWftt«:0Z ff£Zi\&#13;
p.* *£' &gt;'•'&#13;
•A&#13;
&amp; ~&#13;
PuuNrma&#13;
Mrs. B. Washburn is on the&#13;
sick list.&#13;
S. G. Topping and wife^were in&#13;
Pinokney last Tuesday, '&#13;
* Ohas. Ingels and C. E. Watters&#13;
were in Danerille last Tuesday.&#13;
Eugene Mann and wife a&#13;
Pinokney were in town Monday.&#13;
Mrs. F. Kix has returned from&#13;
a visit" with relatives at Swartz&#13;
Crook*-&#13;
i&#13;
"THe~~car^nTeT"~w^:''6ft Albert&#13;
Reason's residence is nearly all completed&#13;
and tbe buildinjr presents a&#13;
very tine appearance.&#13;
A large number of our subscribers&#13;
are still in arrears upon our subscription&#13;
book. Owing to the stringency of&#13;
the times and the hurrying season, we&#13;
have been easy with our collections&#13;
since the first of the year, but now,&#13;
we most respectfully ask all who are&#13;
indebted to THE DISPATCH to settle as&#13;
soon as possible.&#13;
E. E. Quirk, who for the past year&#13;
has had dental rooms over I. J. Kellogg's&#13;
store has turned the business&#13;
oyer to Bert Green of Pinckney who&#13;
has moved in and taken possession.&#13;
_ Mr. Quirk goes to Jackson. Mr. Green&#13;
has just completed. a course in the&#13;
,-H.&#13;
GREGORY.&#13;
Ohas. Howe of Petoskey was in&#13;
town this week.&#13;
There are a number of new&#13;
wheels in town.&#13;
F. A. Daniejs and family spent&#13;
last week visiting friends at Dexter&#13;
and Ann Arbor.&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Westfall of Stockbridge&#13;
called on friends here one&#13;
day last week.&#13;
There will be a literary social&#13;
at the home of S. A. Denton, on&#13;
Friday evening July 30.&#13;
Eugene Smith of Anderson ran&#13;
his new engine into the ditch&#13;
just after leaving town Saturday&#13;
night and it took until 3 o'clock&#13;
the next morning to get it out&#13;
dental collage of the U. of M. and is&#13;
thoroughly fitted to fit your teeth.&#13;
He has one of the finest dental chairs&#13;
manufactured, costing $160, He will&#13;
visit bis old home in Pinckney for&#13;
work Thursdays and Fridays, We&#13;
wish Dr. Green success.—Stockbridge&#13;
Sun. Bert may have a chair at Stockbridge&#13;
that cost $160 but be has a&#13;
good one here and has a very fine&#13;
office fitted up over Sigler's drug&#13;
store where he is' prepared to do all&#13;
dental work in the most approved&#13;
manner.&#13;
y&#13;
L$*%i**• '• .'.&#13;
; it. v &amp;£&amp;?•&#13;
.•V^'&#13;
K3M&#13;
'7&#13;
Wir.l.l&#13;
f«&gt;iV&#13;
: *&#13;
tM&#13;
Additional Local.&#13;
Fred Grieve waj in town last Tuesday.&#13;
Miss Allie Hofi of Dexter is visiting&#13;
her parents here.&#13;
Henry Barton has been under the&#13;
doctors care the past week.&#13;
Geo. Reason Sr. and wife were in&#13;
Stockbridge visiting relatives over&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. L. D. Alley and daughter,&#13;
Grace were guests of Mrs. F. G. Hose&#13;
on Saturday last.&#13;
Editor Barnes has just closed the&#13;
eight year of his management of the&#13;
Livingston Republican.&#13;
The pioneers of this county will&#13;
meet at Howell, Tuesday, August 31.&#13;
. It is the annual meeting and picnic.&#13;
The small boy—and some older&#13;
ones too—are saving up their pennies&#13;
as Singling Bros, show is coming to&#13;
Howell.&#13;
A State Teachers Institute will be&#13;
held at Howell August 23-27, which&#13;
will be a great help to the teachers in&#13;
the county.&#13;
Through the new management, the&#13;
Pinckney ball team have arranged a&#13;
game of ball with the Brighton team&#13;
to be played on the fair grounds at&#13;
the latter place Saturday July 31.&#13;
fc The L. 0 . T. M. of this place celebrated&#13;
their fifth anniversary last&#13;
Monday evening and did justice to&#13;
that which was set before them. Cake&#13;
and cream were served in grand style.&#13;
W*S,£eraxth0ut has been appointed&#13;
en |iej|f tor of this village by&#13;
"T}ie Foot&#13;
of a Fly"&#13;
•ays an eminent English doctor, "will&#13;
carry enough poison to infect a household."&#13;
In summer-time, more especially,&#13;
disease germs fill the air, multitudes&#13;
are infected, fall ill, die; multitudes&#13;
escape. These messengers ef&#13;
mischief do not exist fer millions. Why&#13;
not ? Because they are healthy and strong&#13;
—protected as a crocodile is against genshot.&#13;
It is the weak, the wasted, the&#13;
thin-blooded who fall; those who&#13;
hare no resii-4ve power so that a sadden&#13;
cough or cold develops into graver&#13;
disease. We hear of catching disease!&#13;
Why not catch health r W e can do it&#13;
by always maintaining oar healthy&#13;
weight.&#13;
of Cod-liver Oil, is condense^ nourishment;&#13;
food for the building np of the&#13;
system to resist the attacks of disease.&#13;
It should be taken in reasonable doses&#13;
all summer long by all those whoot&#13;
weight is below the standard o f health.&#13;
If you are losing ground, cry a bottle&#13;
now.&#13;
For aal« by all druggists at 901&#13;
Mrs. Maggie Melvin is the guest -of j -&#13;
relatives here.&#13;
The C. X. society will serve iee&#13;
cream at tbe opera house next Saturday&#13;
evening.&#13;
Ed. Kearney ot Jackson, Nebraska,&#13;
who has been visiting in New York&#13;
for some time past, is the guest of bis&#13;
mother at this place.&#13;
Notice—All members of Livingston&#13;
Lodge No. 76 P. &amp; A. M. are request*&#13;
ed to attend a special meeting tonight&#13;
(Thursday) as there is very important&#13;
business to transact. Order of Sec.&#13;
Musical Recital at tbe opera house&#13;
Saturdav evening, August 7, 1897&#13;
given by the pupils of Amelia F.&#13;
Clark, assisted by Miss Anna Estelle&#13;
WooToTCaro, Miss Katie -fleabott-of&#13;
Ann Arbor and Mr. H. Isham, violin'&#13;
ist. Program next week.&#13;
James Wilcox has purchased the&#13;
barn recently belonging to E. A.&#13;
Mann and will move it on to tbe lot&#13;
near E. R. Brown's blacksmith shop,&#13;
with the intentions of running a&#13;
livery barn. Mr. Wilcox is a bustler&#13;
and we know b« will succeed.&#13;
Those who visit Detroit on tbe numerous&#13;
excursions should not fail to&#13;
visit Wonderland and tbe "Crystal&#13;
Maze/ The sights and scenes in the&#13;
museum are wonderful and tbe crystal&#13;
maze is worth more than the price of&#13;
admission. The proprietor, J. H.&#13;
Moore spares no expense to give good&#13;
entertainment to his patrons and this&#13;
has brought about his wonderful success.&#13;
Be sure and visit Wonderland.&#13;
Ten cents admits to all.&#13;
4a Baajr wisuaaoY /&#13;
"We uaed to have'somegreat time*&#13;
there boat motng o a Sunday," began&#13;
the &lt;man who had helped buikl a southern&#13;
railroad, "There W M a good deal&#13;
of money flying around, betting was as&#13;
oonunon aa eating, and it was all right&#13;
to turn a sharp trick if you didn't get&#13;
caught at It. I ted a partner, and we&#13;
worked a scheme that coined money&#13;
for a time. He never entered the raoea,&#13;
but always backed me heavily, and we&#13;
split the winning*. He had Invented&#13;
a miniature propeller with a big&#13;
spring as a motive power, on the same&#13;
principle as a watch. At the side of&#13;
the boathouse a little wharf rat used&#13;
to dive under my boat and attach this&#13;
machine. When the starting gun teat&#13;
ua off I "only had to touch a button,&#13;
the propeller set to work, and I could&#13;
regulate my speed by rowing, aa the&#13;
situation demanded. I was a ohnmpion,&#13;
and I won money against All&#13;
SAL JULY 31,&#13;
We will sell&#13;
til it* t.&#13;
I PLUG PRUNE JUICE&#13;
TOBACCO for&#13;
16 CENTS&#13;
And what is said of Englishmen anr&#13;
pllee with equal force to Americana.&#13;
We not only eat too much and too&#13;
often, but we eat food that Is teo nutritious&#13;
in proportion to Its bulk; in&#13;
other words, we eat too much meat&#13;
Not only are gout and rheumatism&#13;
favored, or, as some eminent authorities&#13;
contend, solely caused by too much&#13;
meat, but even certain tumors are&#13;
thought by many to be hastened in&#13;
their growth by the same means.&#13;
For the majority of city dwellers, especially&#13;
brain-workers, three meat&#13;
meals a day are too many; two are all"&#13;
sufficient for most people, and many&#13;
are better oft with meat only once in&#13;
the twenty-four hours. The other&#13;
meals should be slight, consisting of&#13;
bread, butter, cheese, milk, green vegetables&#13;
and fruit.&#13;
There is an unfounded prejudice&#13;
against nuts, which are regarded as Indigestible,&#13;
but that is because they are&#13;
eaten at the wrong time. Both fruit&#13;
and nuts are excellent foods, but they&#13;
should be taken at the beginning of&#13;
breakfast or luncheon, instead of at4he&#13;
end of the meal.&#13;
The dietary rules for lenten ebservwhteh&#13;
the Catholic Church Isnupon&#13;
its members arp hygieaically&#13;
irreproachable, and it would be better&#13;
tor nearly all of us unless the r1ncT&#13;
comers, until the boy was seised with&#13;
a'cramp one day. He cams up yelling,&#13;
holding the machine over his head.&#13;
My partner and I escaped in the confusion&#13;
and never went back." "It's&#13;
odd," said a brawny and grhuued listener.&#13;
"I joined .that crowd just after&#13;
you left, and there was a standtn' offer&#13;
of a thousand fur any one that&#13;
would bring you into camp. I was&#13;
somethln' of an oarsman myeelf, but&#13;
the company was a little too fast, so I&#13;
eddicated a big catfish that was aa&#13;
strong as a yoke of steers. I had a&#13;
collar with a ring on that I 'teehed to a&#13;
hook under the boat; Mr. Oatuah weed*&#13;
hitch himself on there when the gun&#13;
cracked, an' I'll be durned if I didttt&#13;
have to back water sometimes to keep&#13;
frum makln' express time. In my last&#13;
race I capeiscd. and that durned mm&#13;
just got skeered an' took th' boat down&#13;
th' river like a rocket X swusn to th*&#13;
other shore in a hall of bulletB an' got&#13;
away." The mam who had toM else&#13;
first story solemnly removed hie hat,&#13;
and every other listener followed his&#13;
example. "Tatw the money, nerd,"&#13;
was all he eocjfta bring himself to say.&#13;
—Detroit Free Proas.&#13;
Alget Be«gMI the Cow.&#13;
There are teo many millionaires&#13;
among Mr. McKlnky's cabinet selections&#13;
to suit some people. And yet,&#13;
from the head of the Vtog table down&#13;
to the foot of it, so fa? a* the seats&#13;
have been tiled, every prospective sec* *&#13;
retary was a boy who began with no&#13;
capital except brain and muscle, Alger&#13;
was a lad" without a cent, and with&#13;
only the one coat on his back when he&#13;
went to a doctor in town and begged&#13;
to be allowed] to do the chores and attend&#13;
sebool. The doctor had no need&#13;
of a boy, but Alger's earneetncaf won&#13;
his interest and he took aim and gave&#13;
him the opportunity for an education.&#13;
Many years afterward, when Alger&#13;
had more hundreds of thousands than&#13;
the superannuated physician had dollars,&#13;
the millionaire went to h * benefaotor,&#13;
who was In straits, and told hint&#13;
he wanted, to pay that debt&#13;
"You don't ewe me anything," replied&#13;
the doctor. — = - 7 —&#13;
"I owe you my education," argued the&#13;
rich man.&#13;
"Bosh!" returned the doctor, "you&#13;
owe that to yourself."&#13;
"It must have cost you trouble and&#13;
expense, and I want to make It good,"&#13;
Alger urged.&#13;
"Well," replied the old nun, grimly,&#13;
"if there was any trouble I have forgotten&#13;
it. The only expense I can re-v&#13;
call was the loss of a flue cow. When&#13;
you came to live with me, Alger, I hast&#13;
the best oew in these parts. Ton completely&#13;
spoiled her with year awkwardness.&#13;
It wasn't three weeks untlr you&#13;
had her so skittish nobody could go&#13;
near her. I had to sell her for beef."&#13;
"There," said Alger, "I certainly owe&#13;
for that oew, and there is about forty&#13;
years' Interest due on the debt. I am&#13;
going to pay it."&#13;
The old doctor finalljk yielded. That&#13;
animal brought a higher |rice than any&#13;
cow which has been sold in Michigan&#13;
since the time of Lewis Case.—at. Louis&#13;
Globe-Democrat.&#13;
, PoUtMftCM » t&#13;
In family life do not let ssmttiartty&#13;
swallow up all courtesy. Many of uc&#13;
have a habit of seeing to those Wish&#13;
whom we liye snoh things as we saw&#13;
about strangers behind their backs.&#13;
There is no place, however, where real&#13;
politeness is of more value than where&#13;
we mostly think k would be superfluous.&#13;
Ton may say more troth, or&#13;
speak more plainly to your associates,&#13;
but you ought not to do 'it Less|oourteoueiy&#13;
than you would speak to stranger*.&#13;
a men plat* the&#13;
I t M funny, U n t it, whom ha&#13;
usually gets worked ?"—Philadelphia&#13;
American.&#13;
«eiSpTi^«9el7eswj^g&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler.&#13;
* • • •&#13;
«tM;f.:,&#13;
' • &gt; •&#13;
8am W. Smith, although&#13;
ion hat not yet been received.&#13;
B e will probably take hie&#13;
position about the first of next month.&#13;
The readers of the Pinckney Dis-&#13;
JTATCH will probably find a a unusual&#13;
number of mistakes in the paper this&#13;
week but you will overlook the mat-&#13;
# T M-hnu Pftn lrnftw ihmt. t.hm '-lin-ril" -30c (Toffaa&#13;
^ M ^ W W U J VVI ftUU IT t O l v VOV UUV AC&#13;
hai bam "chief cook and bottle wash&#13;
ALSO&#13;
A Foot of Tobacco for&#13;
8 cents.&#13;
tors be excepted-—if these rules were&#13;
followed, not only by Catholics during&#13;
lent, but by everybody all the year&#13;
round.&#13;
inUTIOI EffMIIDf!&#13;
This Will Interest Yoo.&#13;
IT WILL PAY YOU&#13;
TO COME TO THE&#13;
BUSY&#13;
BEE&#13;
25c Coffee&#13;
27c Coffee&#13;
18c I&#13;
20c&#13;
25c&#13;
krr&#13;
it,; ' v .&#13;
A&#13;
er.&#13;
Until recently, Portage Lake has&#13;
not had as many campers thia year aa&#13;
usual, probably on account of tbe&#13;
latejsest of the season. Now, however&#13;
nearly efery oottaje is full, besides&#13;
many in tents amd picnics are tbe orderofthedav.——&#13;
Mia. G. £. Cordley and daughter,&#13;
Bosnia, who have been living at Ann&#13;
Arbor for the past l o w years, have&#13;
returned to our pretty fstsssfe and&#13;
will be at home m the / . E . JDnnninar&#13;
residence on Piety HJAl Jfign Beanie&#13;
£ttinated from the * Jtt*fc&#13;
A popular and successful business of&#13;
our town and one that is a credit to&#13;
our village is that carried on by Mr.&#13;
Thomas Clinton, Pinckney s leading&#13;
harness maker. Mr. Clinton is among&#13;
the longest established of our business&#13;
men, having founded his business i of&#13;
a century ago. The success he has&#13;
met with is the results of careful management&#13;
and straight forward dealing&#13;
and the deserved popularity the&#13;
business has acquired ha» been *ecur*&#13;
ed by tnrninfl nnfra an peri or class of&#13;
HIVE&#13;
RED&#13;
XXXX Coffee 15c&#13;
Seeley1* 10c Bluing for 5c&#13;
Seeley'e 5c Bluing for 8c&#13;
Climax Stove Polish 5e aice, 2 for 5&#13;
Climax Stove Polish 10c aire' 2 for 10c&#13;
All Clothinc in Suits 15 per cent off&#13;
Choiof rannad Peart JXSL&#13;
Choice canned grapes . . .15&#13;
8 Cans Plumbs .25&#13;
epkgs.WaahingrPow. . . . . .25&#13;
TLeae sales tnoat be CASH.&#13;
work and offering to the public ail&#13;
the advantages possible. The shop is&#13;
known for the excellence of the work&#13;
done, and for prioar it is not undersold&#13;
in the county. All kinds of&#13;
machine and harness oil, to be sold&#13;
lower than can be purchased in Livingston&#13;
county, and a complete • stock&#13;
of everything found in a first-class&#13;
shop i i&#13;
MARK&#13;
whips, combs, broth**, robes; also&#13;
trunks, valises, etc l a connection is&#13;
also a boot and ahoa department&#13;
where custom work m manermotnring&#13;
aad repairing is done, fie carries&#13;
a stock of medWunes for man and&#13;
beast, and ponltrv, which is the hast&#13;
in tbe world. At all times von can&#13;
awt the high aft oaeh price lor htdea,&#13;
p f i ^ f^ sj ihtjshoj ~ —&#13;
SALE,&#13;
/&#13;
T o m latjiiBithuly, L. Hs FIELD.&#13;
. • • • • &gt; • * » - -&#13;
•;#:&lt;&#13;
/ »&#13;
y.&#13;
"\&#13;
» •* r « »&#13;
/&#13;
•ilV ftfca j * k i 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 29, 1897</text>
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                <text>July 29, 1897 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>No Copyright - United States</text>
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                <text>1897-07-29</text>
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                <text>Frank L. Andrews</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>VOL. XV. PINOKNEY, LIVINGSTON 00., MIOH., THURSDAY, AUG. 5, 1897. No. 31.&#13;
**•*&#13;
"WE ARE IN IT&#13;
EVERY MINUTE."&#13;
The NEW PROPRIETOR at the OLD STAND will b6&#13;
glad to welcome tbe old customers six days in the week, and to show them&#13;
that be proposes to save them money, names tbe following real bargains:&#13;
XXXX Coffee&#13;
Standard Rio&#13;
1,200 Parlor Matches&#13;
We also shall keeep right on selling:&#13;
1 lb Japan Leaf Tea at&#13;
1 Jb Pearl Tapioca at&#13;
These are only a few of the bargains.&#13;
we can show yon when yon call.&#13;
12c per lb&#13;
12c per lb&#13;
10c&#13;
15c&#13;
5c&#13;
We have a lot more that&#13;
Everybody that bought 30c tea now buys oir new 15c which is&#13;
just the same with other things—they are all going.&#13;
Wm. A- SPROUT,&#13;
A N D E R S O N , MICH.&#13;
~ NOTICE:. —&#13;
Ji&amp;v-isivq. iced ftcu d£&lt;s-te&gt; cutvet &amp;u,-i*&lt;sneJ4, a,* Ciix,o€,Li,o-tv}&#13;
J deA.&lt;Ase, to- ie,ttl&amp; &lt;x,tt a^c,o^As&gt;tsti- asusd, oct^e. nv t f J •&#13;
fK-e-dlcctelu. J te,4,h4,&lt;ytlu,££u- aA&amp; a,tt ut-Axs- o.-u£e «t-e o-tv &amp;4-G-1&amp;&#13;
Gs&amp;c&amp;utvt to- cc&lt;,CL a,*v&lt;JL teXtte, cut &lt;^-ivc^.&#13;
ANDERSON. .nicn.&#13;
Business Pointers.&#13;
A Popalar Weeding Trip Is to take&#13;
a D. k t. Steamer to Mackinac Island.&#13;
If you want a delightful wedding&#13;
trip where you are not likely to meet&#13;
acquaintances, take one of the new D.&#13;
£ C. steel steamers to the island of&#13;
cool breezes. Staterooms and parlor&#13;
reserved 90 days in advance. Send 2&#13;
cents for illustrated pamphlet Address&#13;
A. A. Schantz, GPA, Detroit,&#13;
Mich.&#13;
Local Dispatches*&#13;
Mrs. E. G. Embler of Oceola spent a&#13;
part of last week at -tbe home of Chas.&#13;
Love.&#13;
A party of young people from Anderson&#13;
have been enjoying &amp; week's&#13;
damping on the Bluffs at Portage&#13;
Lake.&#13;
"TCwXiSaanDSIan of Detroit, who&#13;
#ae the gneet of relatives here, was&#13;
Fred Fish of Detroit&#13;
over Sunday.&#13;
was in town&#13;
John Sigler of Leslie visited friends&#13;
and relatives here over Sunday.&#13;
Barnnm and Bailey's show exhibits&#13;
at Ann Arbor Tuesday, Aug. 17.&#13;
George and Bruce McPherson of&#13;
Howell sailed for Europe Saturday,&#13;
July 24.&#13;
Miss Eva Smith gave a party to&#13;
several of her friends and playmates&#13;
last Saturday afternoon.&#13;
The regular teachers examination&#13;
for Livingston county will be held «t&#13;
Howell, August 19 and 20.&#13;
Certainly our citizens do not have&#13;
to go out of town in search of a quiet&#13;
place to. rest, these haying—harvest&#13;
days. The streets, excepting evenings&#13;
are as quiet as a country graveyard.&#13;
Pmekney Chapter 0. E. S. has suffered&#13;
its first loss by death in the person&#13;
of Bro, Th/*™!"8™* Grimes, and the&#13;
Laverne Brokaw of Howell was in&#13;
town Monday.&#13;
Miss Blanche Graham is visiting&#13;
relatives in Howell.&#13;
J.J. Tseple was on tbe sick list the&#13;
fore part of this week.&#13;
A. G. Wilson of Anderson was in&#13;
Jackson, several days the past-^week.&#13;
Dr. R. W. Coleman of Cadillac spent&#13;
Sunday with his sister, Mrs. Chas.&#13;
Love.&#13;
A. B. Green Sr. and Samuel Grimes&#13;
were in Munith on business a few&#13;
days this week,&#13;
Michael Ruen, who has been in&#13;
Plainfield the past month, returned&#13;
home Saturday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. P, C. Bird of Detroit&#13;
visited at R. M. Glenn's in North&#13;
Putnam last week.&#13;
E. W. Mann and wife move this&#13;
week to Mil ford, where Eagene has&#13;
secured a position with a marble&#13;
works.&#13;
F. L. Andrews and family returned&#13;
Wednesday from a trip to Mackinac&#13;
by tbe way of D. &amp; C. steamer. F. L.&#13;
reports a very fine time.&#13;
We wish to remind our citizens that&#13;
onr item box on tbe first door of our&#13;
office is there for use. When you&#13;
have an item, either personal or local,&#13;
that you wish published, please drop&#13;
it in the box and we will assure yon&#13;
of its publication, if such be the&#13;
proper thing.&#13;
The grand annual picnic of St'&#13;
Mary's society will be held at Jackson's&#13;
grove on Thursday, Aug.. 19,&#13;
1897. The speakers of the day are&#13;
Senator Teeple, Rev. K. H. Crane, C.&#13;
S. Jones and Messrs. Howlett and&#13;
Shields. There will also be singing&#13;
by Jim Harkins. J. O'Connor, Luke&#13;
Reilly and Rev. Fr. Goldcrick. Lombard's&#13;
orchestra will be present during&#13;
the day and furnish music for the&#13;
occasion.&#13;
ABOUT 1&lt; • &gt;?:&#13;
ONE MAN IN M TEN&#13;
. . Trade With . .&#13;
. . US . .&#13;
We'rs After That Man!&#13;
CLASS MUSICAL %&#13;
At Pinckney Opera House, Saturday&#13;
Evening, Angus 7.&#13;
A musical will be given at the opera&#13;
house, Saturday evening, Aug. 7, by&#13;
the pupils of Amelia F. Clark, assisted&#13;
by Miss Anna Wood, soprano, Miss&#13;
Katie Seabolt. of Ann Arbor. Mr. H.&#13;
called home by the «UMSS of her sister,&#13;
Nellie,&#13;
TUPJsmkaey fe*£ team were defeated&#13;
k f * f t Bnghtom team At the&#13;
Utter »U*e la* Saturday afternoon&#13;
b y a * x * * o f # i o 7 .&#13;
Topic fiNkt Sp worth Leagnc_at&#13;
^ ^ . t^fcfcwT next Sunday even&#13;
in*A«lfc.€,i8MTbe Prayer* at Miletus&#13;
and Ty**" Everybody welcome.&#13;
Mr*. C. 0 . VaaWUUie hit bean&#13;
apendia* the past two monthe with&#13;
friends i« liagba** *«d ^aokaon&#13;
4 * s t y . 8be ,j»atars*d iom« #j*nrooramand&#13;
"Be ye also ready'1 .has been&#13;
brought home to us as a Fraternity.&#13;
He was a faithful member of our order,&#13;
and an almost constant attendant&#13;
while health lasted. We shall misa&#13;
him, there will be one vacant chair,&#13;
the chapter of this earthly sojourn&#13;
line closed, the messenger of death has&#13;
3M» fallen away in death «&#13;
this aflwtkm remind us that,&#13;
"W*. too, al&amp;l oome to U» rtvw aide,&#13;
On* by one,&#13;
W« v Mirer its irate** eaoa awriids,&#13;
O M by one,&#13;
W« one totr the noise m&amp; disk of U»&#13;
Stow MMIm&gt;int thron*h o«r mVa&#13;
tn« floods its taeki o «r tow,&#13;
.^ m ii i . *»**»»•» tb« MMU wttvw «•&#13;
On***&#13;
Let&#13;
Isham, violinist, Mr. Crego, coronetisf,&#13;
of Ann Arbor. Amelia F. Clai4r, accompanist.&#13;
" PROGBAM.&#13;
Duet, ' 'Polo,'* grand galop de concert.&#13;
Ethel Read, Hazel Johnson&#13;
Solo, ''Music Among the Trees," Ella Mae Kyan&#13;
Duet, "On the Water,1' LeJa Monks, Katie Birnie&#13;
Song, -Don't Yon Care for Them, Ned,"&#13;
EdnaTiplady&#13;
Duet. '*New American Barn Dance,''&#13;
Josephine Harris, Ella Mae Byan&#13;
Solo, "Merry Sleigh Bells," Master Willie Ryan&#13;
Duet, "Beauties of Paradise.''&#13;
Minnie and Leia Monks&#13;
Violin and Piano, "Air Varie," H. Iehaui&#13;
t&gt;uet, "Jolly Blackemith,''&#13;
Marion Claik, Edith Wood&#13;
Song, "Little Doris," AnnaEstelle Wood&#13;
Solo, "Songsters of the Grove," Katie Rnen&#13;
Xiuet, "La Baladine, ' Katie Seabolt, Amelia Clark&#13;
Solo, "Snow Flakes," Sadie Harris&#13;
Duet, "Polka Caprice,'' Ethel and;Soss Read&#13;
Solo, "Tramway." Marion Clark&#13;
Duet, "May Night," Katie Birnie Katie Ruen&#13;
Solo, -'March Coemapelitan," Louise Tiplady&#13;
Sons. "Creole Ltrre Song," A una Bstelle Wood&#13;
Solo, (Coronet) Mr. Crego&#13;
Duet, "CbevelUr," Edith Wood, Grace Reason&#13;
Solo, "Silver Threads of Love," Huel Johaaon&#13;
Duet, "King oi the stoErlmlay R yan, Josephine Harris&#13;
&amp;„.]*&gt; (») "May BTeeaes," Josephine Harris&#13;
^0 1 ^ (b) "Whirlwind"&#13;
D net, "Pairy Wedding Walti,"&#13;
Sadie and Joie Harris&#13;
Solo, ••Whiapariac 8ope," Ethel Read&#13;
Vio lin and Piano, *C«noarto," H. Xthasn&#13;
Poet, "Water Sprite,". Katie Bnsn, Minnie Monk*&#13;
Song, "There, Little Qi rl Donn Cry,"&#13;
Ann* Raaalle Wood&#13;
toio, ttermaa Melody, ' The Mill Wha«t,n&#13;
Edith Wo*d&#13;
About one man in ten dosen't know&#13;
that his neighbors are saving money on&#13;
every deal, because they trade with us,&#13;
We're After That Man!&#13;
About one man in ten can't be expected&#13;
to know that we are headquarters for&#13;
And we expect to get his trade.&#13;
ARE YOU THE TENTH MAN?&#13;
WERE AFTER YOU!&#13;
F. A. SIGLER,&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICH.&#13;
W E A R E&#13;
Always,&#13;
Everlastingly,&#13;
Continuously,&#13;
Persistently,.&#13;
Effectively&#13;
Seeking Trade.&#13;
W E S E L L&#13;
Oil Stoves,&#13;
Gasoline Stoves,&#13;
Wood Stoves,&#13;
Lawn Mowers,&#13;
Bicycles,&#13;
Farming Implements, etc.&#13;
W E W I L L&#13;
Gladly,&#13;
Politely,&#13;
Carefully,&#13;
Promptly&#13;
,, Wait Upon You.&#13;
Respectfully Yours,&#13;
TEEPLE iP CAD WELL.&#13;
Did you see the eclipse?&#13;
Miss Jessie Topper spent a few days&#13;
iaet week visiting her cousin, Miss&#13;
Jennie Tapper and other relatives.&#13;
Several line swingiatr oamp chairs&#13;
just large enough for two, beautify&#13;
the .yards of a number of our residences.&#13;
Mrs. E. J. Noble of Howell spent&#13;
several days tbe past week as the gnest&#13;
of her sister, Mrs. Sam1! Grimes at&#13;
ttnYplace; ~&#13;
oallackhuu home. "Onr ohaia i* brokea TW, ^r n« n—r'&gt;&#13;
— - ' alatie fftatnh, anrtta ftaart-&#13;
Mr.Oago&#13;
SUa and WiUfe Mr**,&#13;
flocMosUarrhTMaaaie&#13;
Soto, (Coronet)&#13;
Some, "Little Gleaners,"&#13;
LiowmA iMllaJaeil^-,&#13;
Mcmusttci.&#13;
Adoaiaaioa.lO oent*&gt;; raaerved atats&#13;
UotttU. J&gt;oora open at 7 *'*l«iak;&#13;
ooMurt \mttm 7^Ma^i4iiwaf ^iaavo&#13;
a«ed at tfce «iwiiigfjgwi &amp;m Ax*#&#13;
Topic for the Christian Endeavor at&#13;
the Cong'l church next Sunday evening&#13;
Aug. 8 "Tbe Comfort that comes&#13;
from tbe Bible/' Everybody is cordially&#13;
invited.&#13;
Last Thursday was the day prophesied&#13;
for tbe eclipse on the sun Jojajp-&#13;
At any time during the&#13;
forenoon you could hear the expression,&#13;
"Did you see it?" Yes we saw i t&#13;
J. L. Newkirk of Flat Bock, formerly&#13;
editor of this sheet, was a pUa&amp;aat&#13;
earier at this office, while i* tow*&#13;
several 4ay« this past week, fie it-&#13;
Urn* ajkinc wp mmmteitl ***** Oaf&#13;
Good time to have a harvest dance,&#13;
Mrs. F. G. Bose was the guest of&#13;
friends at Anderson one day last&#13;
week.&#13;
Henry Ruen is acting in the capacity&#13;
of a bookkeeper for fl. Lough lin&#13;
at Fowlerville.&#13;
Miss Anna Spears visited at the&#13;
home of her sister, Mrs. Wm. Dojte&#13;
of Cnadilla the past week.&#13;
W. H. Padley was in South Lyon&#13;
one day last week, soliciting patron -&#13;
age for the Cleary Business College.&#13;
It is about time some of our sub*&#13;
soribers remembered"us with a little&#13;
of that "Klosdyke" dust on subscription.&#13;
Parties from Williamstoa and&#13;
_Wfeite flak are -camping -at-Camy~~&#13;
Doyle on the pleasant shores of Piterson&#13;
lake.&#13;
0 » Thm&amp;dar. Aug. 5, (today) thert':'&#13;
will be an excursion to Portland, M*.,&#13;
ratarning Aug. 16, either a dumefe&#13;
ro«te or by tbe way of Niagara Vatitt&#13;
Tickets wiil be sold lor No, X&gt;\mfim&#13;
riawkney at 5^0 p, m. oaty, Ti» I V&#13;
J kola. F a r e f l i&#13;
7» • *&#13;
• -a&#13;
' &lt; ! • ' • $&#13;
r 4&#13;
' • &lt; . . . . '•*'&gt;;$&#13;
. »• . . . J . 1&#13;
.X&#13;
*^w&#13;
^:&#13;
3&#13;
~\&lt;.X)^£\~-&#13;
Wk&#13;
FS?&gt;'&#13;
;u--:-.^---V -v ':"-'* " ; -i: v-li: -' • •'- '•'•"••• '•'"••• • • • " - *&gt; "•'•&gt; " ^--'•'".'* —v "v'-'\ • • - ••••Or.*-- '*••, vi'!^"r&gt;V^.^v. v i ^ : * ! ^ " " - - ' ^ : ^ ^ ' . ^ j ^ V ^ ! v- *.-, 0. •*-••• ;.'.i*&#13;
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• i : W . &lt;• A.-.V.&#13;
V ., % "t&gt; V I&#13;
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"•V? '•&gt;•' "'&gt;&gt;V. ' ' . ,:v.-' :•-);&#13;
PijNlMSULA MATTMBS.&#13;
it- *&#13;
&amp;&#13;
» ; . -&#13;
!/":-'&#13;
!;t '-&#13;
&amp;&#13;
« . , • „ ,&#13;
RELATED IN A BRIBr,&#13;
MANfJEH.&#13;
CONCISE&#13;
-*-••-&#13;
Bloody Crime o f Ian Aged a«4 Jes^eus&#13;
Lover In Lenawee County— Three&#13;
Detroit Men Drowned and Three&#13;
Other* Commit tialclde.&#13;
H N H l r Cambria Wrecked.&#13;
The steamer Cambria, of tbe Detroit,&#13;
Windsor &amp; 800 line, which left Detroit&#13;
with 150 passengers for Georgian bay&#13;
and Sault Ste. Marie, was wrecked in&#13;
Lake Huron, three miles north of Sarnla,&#13;
O a t A. very heavy sea was rolltag&#13;
when?, the Cambria entered the&#13;
Lake VbMit l a. m. and ,Oapt. Hill&#13;
decided t o ' turn back to Saraia.&#13;
When Within a few miles of that port&#13;
thft Bfaamnr Jttii-upQn_,a__ raft of logs&#13;
which had broken loose from the tug&#13;
Vigilant in the storm, and the result&#13;
was that the Cambria's paddles were&#13;
broken and the cylinder head blew out&#13;
leaving the boat in total darkness and&#13;
a t the mercy of the waves. She was&#13;
driven upon the shore and at daylight&#13;
the passengers were landed&#13;
(n boats and taken to Sarnla. During&#13;
the-night panic among the passengers&#13;
was narrowly averted several times,&#13;
but they were finally cooled down so&#13;
that they dressed and g o t their baggage&#13;
together.&#13;
The Cambria was badly strained and&#13;
she may be a total loss. She was built&#13;
a t Point Levis, Que., in 1877, was rebuilt&#13;
in 1888 when she was lengthened&#13;
69 feet, and she was remodeled again&#13;
to 1889. She was valued at $17,000 and&#13;
insured for §12,000.&#13;
— • •&#13;
An A«od Lover's »loo«y Crime,&#13;
N. N. James, aged 50, shot and probably&#13;
mortally wounded Martha Minor,&#13;
aged 25, and then killed himself at the&#13;
home of Chas. Gadd, farmer of Bridgewater&#13;
township, Lenawee county. Mr.&#13;
Gadd says that he rose a t 5 a. m. and&#13;
galled Martha Minor, w h o answered,&#13;
* n d tben be went to the barn. Upon&#13;
Ills retnra, nnoi^finding the girl, he&#13;
called ber again and received &amp; very&#13;
weak reply. Mr. Gadd then pjafhed&#13;
tier door open and saw James lying&#13;
ejpon his baek upon t h e Jloor and&#13;
Martha Minor lying across him. Calli&#13;
n g his son, Charles, they found James&#13;
t o be dead and the woman seriously&#13;
wounded from pistol shots: Dr. J. L.&#13;
Tuttla, of Clinton, was summoned, but&#13;
a s the wound is In the g i r l * right temple&#13;
there are only slight hopes for her&#13;
recovery. James probably died instantly.&#13;
The girl says that James had been&#13;
calling to see her quite frequently and&#13;
that for two days and nights before&#13;
the tragedy she had secreted him in&#13;
her room. No cause for the shooting&#13;
is known.&#13;
Kpidemle of SnlrMee in Detroit.&#13;
Detroit had three suicides in one&#13;
day. Mrs. Francis Schischko, 265&#13;
Brady street, was found by one of her&#13;
aoos dead in a rocking chair with a&#13;
ballet hole in her forehead and her&#13;
oldest son's revolver in her Lap. She&#13;
leaves five children a n d a husband&#13;
from whom she had separated. An&#13;
uaktMrtm man jumped npoa the rail of&#13;
the Detroit and Windsor ferry boat as&#13;
it was leaving the dock and shouting&#13;
"Here goes nothing" leaped into the&#13;
liver. He refused to hang on to life&#13;
^preservers thrown to him and soon&#13;
drowned. Charles Witzke, a Laborer,&#13;
""*• "' • ? - - - ^ - - ^ ¾ 1 •*&gt;*"•*• - ~ u ~ ~ . •»*-« -d&#13;
Eingling Bros.1 circus parade, and&#13;
then tank advantage of their absence&#13;
to end his life by hanging himself to a&#13;
crossbeam in the garret.&#13;
lafornaatle*.&#13;
For the information of ail comrades&#13;
and friends of the Michigan departaaent,&#13;
G. A, B., who intend to visit the&#13;
Buffalo encampment, Commander&#13;
Bliss announces that he will leave&#13;
, Saginaw on a special Michigan Central&#13;
train at 6:05 a. aa. Monday, Aug. S3. A&#13;
atop will be made a t Detroit until 11:45&#13;
^&#13;
m. to meet a l l late arrivals and the&#13;
rty will arrive in Buffalo at 5:80 a.&#13;
the next day. At Detroit the TV'.&#13;
B* C headquarters sleeper and as many&#13;
•lay coaches as are needed will be&#13;
taken on. Prospective passengers are&#13;
nrged to take as Little baggage aa posjs£&#13;
bie, and t o have it checked&#13;
jNhrough. Tbe fare will be 1 cent a mile&#13;
each way.&#13;
• ' Three&#13;
&lt;*yo«ttg&#13;
Bt.&#13;
U DotNtt Blver.&#13;
Detroiters. William W. Shier,&#13;
attorney; Francis EL Buaaell,&#13;
carrier and superintendent of&#13;
Episcopal Sunday school,&#13;
and Bdward, the young son of John K.&#13;
ptnbensjrj, » letter carrier, were&#13;
drowned a t Sogar island, down Detroit&#13;
itTcr, by the capsizing of a rowboat in&#13;
a whirlpool. Francis BnsseU, t h e&#13;
fattier, and Jeaae hi. Russell, broth*&#13;
of the drowned letter carrier, had very&#13;
taoai Jnaing their lives. | th^jr&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
i^&lt;J&gt;-&#13;
Boala, o f K e v Buffalo,&#13;
beard a bnrgtaria tbe bonne and jumping&#13;
out of bad abe aecaped a batcher&#13;
knife and attacked hiaa. Tbe robber&#13;
dropped hkV revolver a n d inaaped&#13;
dbvongh a window. Mks Boais followed&#13;
clad only in her night dress and&#13;
bad tbe satisfaction o f *eoiag tbe leilam&#13;
1 uptnred afu.'.r elm -'..i;: ulna&#13;
MICHIGAN NEWS ITEMS.&#13;
&lt;.W,m. UumFord, aged 7 ^ , , 1 ^ from a&#13;
load of grain near Stanwocd and broke&#13;
hia neck. s&#13;
Tjighthing- killed fotn* horses, \wo belonging&#13;
to Werthen Seymour and two&#13;
to Henry Corcoran, pear Chillicbthe.&#13;
Stockholders uf the defunct Ingham&#13;
County Savings bank will be assessed&#13;
05 per cent for the benefit of depositors.&#13;
The Third and Fourth regiments of&#13;
Uniformed Rank Knights of Pythias&#13;
of Ohio camped on St. Clair near Port&#13;
Huron.&#13;
The Chapman house at Lansing has&#13;
been completely gutted by tire, .the&#13;
second time within a month. Loss&#13;
83,000, insured.&#13;
Bay county farmers* experiments in&#13;
raibiug sugar beets have proven successful,&#13;
and Bay City capitalists will&#13;
build a refinery.&#13;
The Whlttemore foundry and raaehiue&#13;
shop. At West Bay Cityt Was gutted&#13;
by tire, causing a loss of $20,000;&#13;
insurance 813.000.&#13;
The second of the deaf mutes killed&#13;
b.y the lake shore train near Monroe&#13;
has been identified as Alex. Bergfield,&#13;
of Ifew Concord, O.&#13;
The first load of Michigan peaches&#13;
on the market at Grand Bapids was&#13;
brought in by Thos. Quinlan, of Tallmadge,&#13;
Ottawa county.&#13;
Henry M. Rose, Senator Burrows'&#13;
private secretary, has opened headquarters&#13;
at Grand Rapids/looking&#13;
to Mr. Burrows' re-election. (&#13;
Adrian lodge No. 91, F. &amp; A. M., celebrated&#13;
its fiftieth anniversary, with&#13;
its first initiate, D. D. Sinclair, now&#13;
aged 93, among those present&#13;
Two large barns belonging to Chas.&#13;
Seibert, near St. Johns, were destroyed&#13;
by fire, with all their contents. Loss&#13;
$3,000, insurance $900. Tramps.&#13;
. Ed Cross has given up his farm a t&#13;
Kinde and built a 40-foot schooner and&#13;
with his family will now live on the&#13;
lakes, trading from place to place.&#13;
Gov. Pingree has been invited by&#13;
Department Commander Bliss to ac&#13;
company Michigan department G. A. B.&#13;
to the national encampment at Buffalo&#13;
The first shipment of Michigan&#13;
peaches went from Saugatuck by the&#13;
steamer Bon Ami to Chicago. The&#13;
crop will be light, but the fruit is large&#13;
and good.&#13;
Rev W. H. Shier, of Detroit, h a s&#13;
been appointed presiding elder of the&#13;
Adrian district of the Detroit M. E.&#13;
conference to succeed the late Dr. L.&#13;
P. Davis.&#13;
Chas. Sherman, aged 24, a telegraph&#13;
lineman, caught hold of a live wire&#13;
while working on a pole on the Pearl&#13;
street bridge at Grand Rapids, and was&#13;
killed by falling 50 feet.&#13;
When Charles Spears and wife, of&#13;
Owosso, returned from camp meeting&#13;
they found a baby boy aged about two&#13;
months calmly sleeping in their bed,&#13;
with no clew to its identity.&#13;
Maj. W. K. Bush, private secretary&#13;
to Gov. Pingree, came near choking to&#13;
death on a fish bone at the Park hotel,&#13;
at Sault Ste. Marie. A doctor removed&#13;
the bone with much difficulty.&#13;
Thos. Watson was putting down a&#13;
drive well in West Owosso when he&#13;
drilled through a tree-foot vein of coal&#13;
at the depth of 55 feet. The vein will&#13;
be investigated, and a shaft may be&#13;
sunk.&#13;
' Robbers entered the store of E. F.&#13;
Rhodes &lt;fc Co., a t Granger, and carried&#13;
away three bicycles, tobacco, knives,&#13;
•other—merehandics,—hwt ]fft, t,h&lt;.&#13;
building.&#13;
The latest Michigan crop report says&#13;
the wheat, rye and hay are quite generally&#13;
secured and oats and corn have&#13;
made progress. The yield of early potatoes&#13;
is poor, but late potatoes are in&#13;
fair condition.&#13;
Boyce Speicher, living near Glendale,&#13;
was taken from bed by masked men&#13;
and treated to a coat of tar and feathers&#13;
and ordered to leave the community.&#13;
He had been slandering several&#13;
women of that section.&#13;
Frank Klumpp, proprietor of a large&#13;
steak-farm near Port Huron, attempted&#13;
to suicide bv severing the arteries in&#13;
his arms, but this evidently proved too&#13;
slow so he jumped into his cistern and&#13;
was drowned. Family troubles.&#13;
A meat market belonging to Martin&#13;
Kramer and a grocery store occupied&#13;
by Martin Waalkes, were destroyed by&#13;
fire at Muskegon. Win. Winter, h i s&#13;
wife and son barely eseaped from their&#13;
rooms over the grocery. Loss $8,000.&#13;
Atty.-Gen. Maynard has rendered an&#13;
opinion to the state auditors to the effect&#13;
that the state bank&#13;
aanst be allowed reasonable compensation&#13;
for their work, notwithstanding&#13;
tbe fact that the law makes no provision&#13;
for it.&#13;
Secretary of War Alger and Mrs.&#13;
Alger visited their Detroit friends on&#13;
Gem. Alger aaidthat nothing&#13;
would he left undone to secure tbe U.&#13;
S. cruiser Yen tie far the use of the&#13;
Michigan Naval Reserves.&#13;
Mrs. E. B. Bailey hid her gloves behind&#13;
a pile of plates in her husbands&#13;
grocery and crockery store a t Allegan,&#13;
but when she went t o get them she&#13;
picked up iustead a snake 30 inches&#13;
long. She 1- ' .: '&lt;&lt;&gt;'n and his smaeseship&#13;
was m-—,—--r-v... . --.•.'••&gt;',• i"orva0&amp;.&#13;
A '..V',000 Qi'o &gt; t Aahloy destroyed&#13;
the hardware* a^pre and warehouse of&#13;
Jos. F. Bush, the general store of Milton&#13;
M-. Clark, the Saturday Evening&#13;
Post printing office, the postofflce,&#13;
two vacant stores, three barns , and un&#13;
ice house. The total insurance is only&#13;
810,000.&#13;
The Michigan Building and Loan&#13;
Association league meet in Detroit and&#13;
after merely formal reports elected&#13;
the following officers; President, C.&#13;
D. Hauchetto, of Hancock; vice-president,&#13;
W. C. Sheppard, of Grand Bdpids;&#13;
secretary, T. R, Goulden; treasurer, H.&#13;
tntotfaeman, of Grand Rapids.&#13;
Cecil Fitzslmmons, aged 10, a pretty&#13;
girl, was arrested at Grand Rapids for&#13;
stealing from a man with whom she&#13;
had spent the night. She asked the officer&#13;
to excuse her for a moment, and 15&#13;
'minutes later he found her almost dead&#13;
from strangling herself with a handkerchief.&#13;
She is of a splendid family.&#13;
Miss Addie Hill, of Nottawa, w a s&#13;
siezed by an unknown man asaheHstepped&#13;
out of the house about 0:30 p. in.&#13;
The fellow gagged her and started to&#13;
drag her toward the lake. Miss Hill&#13;
struggled desperately and finally tore&#13;
the gag off and called for help. Her&#13;
parents ran out of the house, when the&#13;
villain dropped her and fled.&#13;
The fifth annual meeting of the&#13;
United States League of Building and&#13;
Loan associations was held at Detroit,&#13;
and the sessions were full of Interest.&#13;
Lake W. Sanborn, of Illinois, was&#13;
elected president; H. F. Cellarius, of&#13;
Cincinnati, secretary, and W. C. Sheppard,&#13;
of Grand Rapids, treasurer.&#13;
They will meet at Omaha in 1896.&#13;
The Jennison Park hotel at Holland&#13;
was destroyed by fire which made such&#13;
quick headway that the guests were&#13;
compelled to hustle out scantily clad.&#13;
Several were injured, but not seriously.&#13;
The loss of the guests In clothing&#13;
and jewelry will reach $12,000.&#13;
Mrs. Frank Deam, of Cincinnati, lost a&#13;
full set of diamonds, valued at several&#13;
thousand dollars.&#13;
Miss Pearl Morrison, aged 20, a very&#13;
pretty and highly respected girl of&#13;
Crystal Falls, mysteriously disappeared&#13;
and t w o days later her body w a s&#13;
found a mile from town. It was found&#13;
that there were several bruises on her&#13;
person and ugly looking finger prints&#13;
on her neck, which indicates that&#13;
death was caused by strangulation.&#13;
Several persons are suspected and two&#13;
have been placed under arrest.&#13;
About $50 in money and $1,500 worth&#13;
of diamonds and jewelry disappeared&#13;
from the jewelry store of Albough &amp;&#13;
Son, at Hillsdale, at the same time&#13;
that F. W. Vergein, who had been&#13;
Bleeping in the store nights for some&#13;
time, quietly left town. Vergien was&#13;
finely educated, speaking several languages,&#13;
and be had made many friends&#13;
during the few months he was in Hillsdale,&#13;
but it Is now learned that he was&#13;
an ex-convlct, having been sent from&#13;
Adrian to Jackson prison to serve ODJP&#13;
year for false pretenses.&#13;
NEWSY C O N D E N S A T I O N S .&#13;
Ex-Sen. Doolittle,of Wisconsin,is dead&#13;
Secretary of War Alger is. about to&#13;
establish a military post in Alaska. .&#13;
" "A boiler explosion occurred on the&#13;
steamer Nutmeg State at Bridgeport,&#13;
Conn., killing four men and injuring&#13;
six others.&#13;
Minnie Karl, aged 26, of Cincinnati,&#13;
after a quarrel with her lover swallowed&#13;
a mixture of paris green, carbolic&#13;
acid and laudanum, but a doctor&#13;
and a stomach pump saved her.&#13;
District assembly No. 49 of the&#13;
Knights of uabor, of New York,&#13;
passed strong resolutions condemning&#13;
the nomination of T. V. Powerly as&#13;
U.S. commissioner of immigration.&#13;
Information has been received that&#13;
the English have taken possession of a&#13;
number of small islands in the South&#13;
sea, particularly the Palmyra group&#13;
Which has long been regarded as helonging&#13;
to Hawaii&#13;
The Casino summer theater building&#13;
at Ramona park, Paducah, Ky., caught&#13;
fire daring a performance before an&#13;
audience of 600 people. A terrible&#13;
panic ensued in which over 200 were&#13;
very seriously burned or trampled upon.&#13;
The movement t o present France&#13;
with a statue of Washington aa a gift&#13;
of the American people has received a&#13;
fresh impetus through a contribution&#13;
and a strong letter from ex-Senator&#13;
Bradbury, of Maine, now 06 years old.&#13;
It is stated Gen. Maximo Gomes, the&#13;
leader of the Cuban insurgonls, has&#13;
reaffirmed his determination not to accept&#13;
a compromise with the 'Spanish&#13;
government, but t o adhere to his de-&#13;
Cuba.&#13;
A trestle on the ZanesviUe 6 Ohio&#13;
River railroad, near Marietta, gave&#13;
way as an excursion train was patiing&#13;
over and two cars plunged through&#13;
and were wrecked. About 15&#13;
burned, but i t seems a miracle that&#13;
no one was killed.&#13;
Cretans are enraged because t b e&#13;
powers permitted tbe sultans special&#13;
^^^o^o^aBe*M*unnnnep^e^nn^H a e mL0^^^&amp; w^p^nje* a ojaunnu&gt;nnnp n^ne* jSVnwn^sai&#13;
on the island, and have notified the&#13;
admirals of the foreign fleet* that they&#13;
will decline t o entertain proposals for&#13;
autonomy so Jong as Djevad Pasha or&#13;
the Turkish troom remain o n the&#13;
island.&#13;
AFMIRB IN GENERAL.&#13;
BRIEF MENTION OP E V E N TS OF&#13;
INTEREST.&#13;
THE TARIFF BILL PASSED.&#13;
Labor Leader* Decide - to support the&#13;
Striking Coal Miners la all Ways—&#13;
Youffttown, 0.» asd Vicinity Buffered&#13;
Heavy Damage from a Cloudbaret&#13;
Organised Labor Stands by the Miners.&#13;
The conference of the heads of labor&#13;
organlztlons of the United States called&#13;
at Wheeling, W. Va., by President&#13;
Ratchford, of the United Mine Workers,&#13;
and approved by President Gompers,&#13;
of the Aine lean Federation of&#13;
Labor, was atteni^d by 30 delegates&#13;
representing nearly every branch of&#13;
organized labor. President Ratchford&#13;
and other leading miners' representatives&#13;
stated the cause's of the strike&#13;
and the condition of the miners and&#13;
and showed that upon the material&#13;
and moral sympathy of organized labor&#13;
generally now depended the success of&#13;
this great strike against "white slavery."&#13;
Messrs. Debs, Mahon and Rea&#13;
who have been endeavoring to bring&#13;
out the miners of the Fairmont, W.&#13;
Va., district made It clear that much&#13;
depended upon their success there.&#13;
Every organization represented at&#13;
the conference pledged aid for the&#13;
miners and telegrams of like nature&#13;
were received from officers of organizations&#13;
not represented.&#13;
It was decided to flood the West Virginia&#13;
coal fields with miners' organizers&#13;
and if they fail to bring the miners&#13;
out there the railroad men will probably&#13;
act and tie up the roads.&#13;
President Gompers arranged for sympathetic&#13;
mass meetings all over the&#13;
country.&#13;
Mine Owners Also Meet.&#13;
Eighty-nine coal companies' miners&#13;
located in the Pittsburg district were&#13;
represented at the coal operators' uniformity&#13;
meeting at Pittsburg, the river&#13;
operators refusing to join the movement.&#13;
The uniformity agreement of&#13;
1896 was reported with a few new&#13;
clauses, but was not acted upon. Col.&#13;
W. Pv Rend denounced the proceedings&#13;
because there was no evident intention&#13;
to try to settle the strike. He said the&#13;
1896 uniformity agreement had been&#13;
used to cloak sham schemes and transparent&#13;
frauds; he wanted to see justice&#13;
done the miners first. Col. Rend then&#13;
bolted the conference which adjourned&#13;
for the day.&#13;
Strike Note*.&#13;
The Illinois field is witnessing&#13;
troublous scenes. At DuQuoin the&#13;
miners are working and an attempt is&#13;
to be made to force them o u t About&#13;
50 strikers from Belleville went to Du&#13;
Quoin for that purpose, but were ordered&#13;
out of town by the marshal&#13;
The strikers returned home but&#13;
threaten to gather 800 men from Belleville&#13;
and reinforcements from Freeburg&#13;
and other points-and drive out&#13;
every miner at DuQuoin, Cartersville,&#13;
Murphysboro and Marrissa.&#13;
Union Cloak makers of New York&#13;
City are preparing to strike—12,000&#13;
strong—against the starvation wages&#13;
prevailing One man received only&#13;
$1.35 as wages for a week of 63 hours.&#13;
The miners' officials were greatly encouraged&#13;
by the news that the men&#13;
have quit work a t the Turtle Creek&#13;
mine—one of the De Armit mines in&#13;
the Pittsburg district where the men&#13;
have continued at work in spite of all&#13;
the pressure previously brought t o&#13;
bear upon them. This victory for the&#13;
fltriktrs wan the result of a big mass&#13;
meeting held near the mines and attended&#13;
b y several thousand strikers&#13;
with a dozen bands of music. The&#13;
mines were surrounded by deputy&#13;
sheriffs to prevent the strikers from&#13;
interfering with the men at work.&#13;
Q The W . 4 L R railway during the&#13;
past few days has laid off scores of employes&#13;
on both the east and west divisions&#13;
pending a settlement of the miners'&#13;
strike. The freight business of&#13;
the road depends largely on t h e coal&#13;
traffic&#13;
8 ^ 4 ^ - - ^ 1 1 1 . . ^ . - ^ 1 ) 6 debate o n&#13;
the tariff conference report continued,&#13;
Mr, Teller, of Colorado, making a&#13;
vehement.speech in which-be not only&#13;
denounced the tariff bill,' b&lt;*feal&amp;o attucked&#13;
t h e Republican l&amp;jfcf* Senators&#13;
White of California, a%d Pettuf,&#13;
of Alabama, spoke In opposition the&#13;
bill, and Senators Allen, of Nebraska,&#13;
and Foraker, of Ohio/engaged in a&#13;
heated personal colloquy in which Allen&#13;
charged fraud in the Ohio elections of&#13;
last year. I t led to such epithets as&#13;
"balder-dash," and to pointed references&#13;
to the methods of court "pettifoggers."&#13;
The event of the davhqyr*&#13;
ever was reached when Mr. Morgan,&#13;
of Alabama, who has bitterly opposed&#13;
the bill and obstructed its progress,&#13;
presented a resolution that the Senate&#13;
on the following'day continue in session&#13;
until a vote was taken on the bill.&#13;
This was unanimously, agreed to, and&#13;
there were demonstrations of pleasure&#13;
from Senators o f Jthe Rej&#13;
lican side as they saw the .path&#13;
elear for the passage of the bill.&#13;
HOUSE—Three brief sessions were held&#13;
owing to the uncertainty of Senate&#13;
action on the tariff bill, but little business&#13;
was transacted. A bill was passed&#13;
to ratify the compact entered into between&#13;
the states of South Dakota and&#13;
Nebraska relative to the disputed&#13;
boundary line.&#13;
SBNATB. — 99th day.—The tariff bill&#13;
passed its last legislative stage at 3 p.&#13;
m., when the Senate, by the decisive&#13;
vote of 40 to 30, agreed to tbe conference&#13;
report on the bill The announcement&#13;
of the result was greeted with enthusiastic&#13;
applause by the crowded&#13;
chamber. (Althought the result was a&#13;
foregone conclusion y e t this did not&#13;
abate tbe eager interest attached to&#13;
the close of a great contest Early in&#13;
the day the debate was listless, though&#13;
enlivened i t times with virulent criticism&#13;
by Mr. Allen and by a speech&#13;
from Mr. Burrows, of the finance committee.&#13;
Messrs. Cafferv, Morgan and&#13;
Stewart occupied the time up to 3&#13;
o'clock, when the vote was* promptly&#13;
taken. This closed the great labor for&#13;
which tbe 55th congress assembled i n&#13;
extraordinary session, and after stubborn&#13;
resistance, at times threatening&#13;
a deadlock, the Senate concurred with&#13;
the House in a resolution for the final&#13;
adjournment of the session at 9 p. m-&#13;
The Presidents message for a currency&#13;
commission w a s received from the&#13;
House, but the Honse bill creating a&#13;
commission was not acted upon.&#13;
HOUSE.—The last session of the House&#13;
was marked by many interesting&#13;
events. In addition to the&#13;
final act of the speaker in affixing&#13;
his signature to the Dingley tariff&#13;
bill, a bill providing for the creation&#13;
of a currency commission w a s&#13;
crowded through in the closing hours.&#13;
The House recessed until after tbe&#13;
Senate had adopted the tariff conference&#13;
report, and as soon a s the House&#13;
reconvened the engrossed bill was&#13;
signed and sent to the President. The&#13;
demonstrations which marked these&#13;
events were spontaneous and enthusiastic&#13;
in the extreme, the galleries&#13;
playing a significant part in them.&#13;
When the President's message came in&#13;
recommending the creation of a currency&#13;
commission it was answered b y&#13;
the Republican •• maders with great&#13;
-promptitude. By means of a special&#13;
order the Stone bill introduced some&#13;
days previously with the approval of&#13;
the administration was brought to a&#13;
vote and passed after an hour's debate,&#13;
during which considerable feeling was&#13;
manifested on both sides. As the final&#13;
act of t h e session the speaker an-&#13;
TMMMIIWH the House committees.&#13;
. r&#13;
Tne •eeuMJoi of Comical istertne Unite.&#13;
A treaty has been completed and&#13;
signed and goes into effect S e p t IS for&#13;
the formation of the Republics of Central&#13;
America t o be composed of the&#13;
states or republics of Guatemala, Costa&#13;
Rica, Nicaragua, Honduras and S a n&#13;
Salvador. The government of the new&#13;
republic is vested in a council of the&#13;
chief of states who is elected from each&#13;
of the states in their alphabetical order&#13;
and shall hold office for one year, and&#13;
two representatives from each state.&#13;
alTUncci of deJsnge and preservation&#13;
for aH tbe states aw. pumrwriri&#13;
expenses of tbe goanrnmeatand of&#13;
ane.4a be • seemed by tbe council.&#13;
T h e report k asrain re vived that Secretary&#13;
of State Sherman will shortly&#13;
leave the csbmet and that m a t e l a w&#13;
BeidwLUbe appointed his successor.&#13;
The report is practially oonnrssed by&#13;
t h e fact t h a t Mr. Reid teas leased the&#13;
house In'Washington of John Hay,&#13;
ambassador to Great Britain, and will&#13;
occupy-H next winter. Mr. Sherman&#13;
was vary much liiHsrtnfiiiil w n b t b e&#13;
selection of Judge Day a s atstsesMtant&#13;
secretary of stats and baa date that&#13;
be was merely a ngurehead hi t b e&#13;
transaction of the department's&#13;
The PreeMont wig—a&#13;
The Dingley tariff bill is now the&#13;
law of the land. Tbe last step necessary&#13;
was taken a t the White House&#13;
when tbe Pnftsident aflBxJng hfc signature&#13;
with a pen presented for t b e purpose&#13;
by Rep. Dingley. The ttfjnifC of&#13;
the bill occurred in the cabinet room&#13;
in the presence of Secretary of t h e&#13;
Treasury Gage, Atty.-Gen. MeKenna,&#13;
Postmaster-General Gary mam Secretary&#13;
Wilson, Reps. Dingley and Hager&#13;
and Private Secretary Porter.&#13;
Debs says he was threatened with&#13;
death unless he leaves West Virginia.&#13;
The Amoakeag cotton mills at Manchester,&#13;
N. BL, have closed down&#13;
throwing 6,000 persons o u t of work.&#13;
Overproduction. tf—*&#13;
Dr. T. DeWitt Talmage denies that&#13;
he intends t o leave Washington, and&#13;
says his relations with his congregation&#13;
are most happy.&#13;
The largest watermelon grown i n&#13;
the south this season was shipped b o m&#13;
M Atlanta, Gs , k) President McKinley.&#13;
It weighed 78 pounds.&#13;
President MeKinley has&#13;
members of the Nicaragua canal&#13;
Rear Admiral John G. Walker,&#13;
U. a N.; GaptOberlia M. Carter,&#13;
%A VQxtDwOlnf %*• ft «U"|&#13;
Hanpt, of Pennsylvania, a n&#13;
civil life.&#13;
and Lewia X .&#13;
The powers have drafted .&#13;
which provide for European arbitoation&#13;
of any differences that nt*# arise&#13;
between t h e Greek and Turkish plenipotentiaries&#13;
in arranging a desWJAe&#13;
tsealgv The desire of Germany t o isvjgjfctute&#13;
a European oontnol over Greek&#13;
lamnoss still hampers the s c t t l a — a t&#13;
of tbe indemnity rji.st.ioa.&#13;
(H&#13;
&gt;&#13;
x&#13;
mmmmm^m^^&#13;
")•*'• '^.-/•v-'-&#13;
y&#13;
if/&#13;
*w&#13;
»4&#13;
•&gt;&gt;s-, 'r;# • W&#13;
&lt;• * ^ r-:^&#13;
/&#13;
53&#13;
BlSHOltQF TOfiTUGA.&#13;
ei," the Bishop re*&#13;
marked reflectively&#13;
"as ydtt amy, Trayers,&#13;
we had some&#13;
delightful times at&#13;
Oxford together/'&#13;
"I should think&#13;
sol" the new-comer&#13;
assented. "We&#13;
did have larks!&#13;
What days on the&#13;
river! And what&#13;
eights ft* college!"&#13;
The Bishop moved uneasily In his&#13;
chair. Then he glanced at the Bishopess&#13;
and the two Bishopinas. "My dear,"&#13;
he said, wriggling Inside his black apr&#13;
o i v i t is very hot in here. I think I&#13;
wiR take Mr. Travers out in the garden&#13;
'-ftUttte.1*&#13;
The BlehopesB' faoe expressed sincere&#13;
relief. Mr. Travars' talk tended&#13;
act to edification. She. too. glanced at&#13;
the Bishopinas. "I would, Edward, if&#13;
1 were you," she answered. "Perhaps&#13;
Jsfr. Travera emotes, He might like&#13;
« cigar." She threw out the bint in the&#13;
firm voice of one wfco Implies that to-&#13;
*b*ceo within the house was not permissible&#13;
at BishoDstow. 1 "Ah, you don't amoke now, then?"&#13;
Travers put in, with a note of surprise,&#13;
"Well, that's odd. Given it&#13;
up? Must have cost him a wrench,&#13;
though, Mrs. Mitchell. Never saw him&#13;
at Oxford without a short biar-root&#13;
pipe in his mouth, bar chapel or lecture.&#13;
Did I, Mitchell?&#13;
The Bishop rose solemnly, *tood for&#13;
a moment by the open window with&#13;
tifl episcopal legs in a studied attitude&#13;
of episcopal doubt, and then led the&#13;
way into the garden. It was a beautiful&#13;
West-Indian night; tropical&#13;
moonlight lay pale green upon the&#13;
floor of the verandah; fireflies flitted&#13;
in and out; the scent of large white&#13;
flowers was heavy on the air, Travers&#13;
thought it all beautiful. He had only&#13;
arrived at Tortuga that morning, and&#13;
had come straight-up to Bishopstow to&#13;
make his first impression of the tropics&#13;
under his old friend's roof and his&#13;
old* friend's auspices.&#13;
The Bishop selected a sequestered&#13;
spot *t the furthest-end of the verandah,&#13;
placing a lohg deck-chair for&#13;
Travers, where he was least likely to&#13;
be overheard by the two Bishopinas.&#13;
"Yes." he continued, in a tolaad professional&#13;
murmur, "we have a Great&#13;
Work here, and I fee! that abstinence&#13;
from all appearance of evil is a aeces-&#13;
Sity of my usefulness."&#13;
John Travers lighted a cigar. Its&#13;
•mOfce blew towards the Bishop. "Capital&#13;
tobacco- one - gets here," Travers&#13;
remarked.&#13;
The Bishop sniffed it regretfully. "It&#13;
has a delicious fragrance. I will admit;"&#13;
h* answered with reluctance.&#13;
Travers leaned back in his chair and&#13;
watched the fireflies as they flitted.&#13;
The air was balmy. "Ah, what times&#13;
we had at OxfordT" he west on, reflecting.&#13;
"What times we had there,&#13;
Mitchell! Bo you remember that saucy&#13;
little girl who used to sell flowers at&#13;
the corner near the Randolph? A pretty&#13;
bit of fluff; Polly Peach, they called&#13;
her. What fun we had chaffing her!&#13;
Well, -aha's married a doctor now, and&#13;
has-a son at Brasenose."&#13;
"I am glad to hear it," the Basket&#13;
answered, putting his thumbs and&#13;
forefingers together. "Though she&#13;
waa a frivolous young woman, she was&#13;
not Wholly lacking in—in what I may&#13;
vastus* to call the -essentials of refine-&#13;
TOQUE AT A DBLUKJL&#13;
And we moat remember ate&#13;
jilsaort in JI .position .of some temnt-&#13;
"Tea, ahe's married," Travers went&#13;
.on, "to a. doctor, as I say. I think&#13;
j o u knew him. Oh, of ooorae; we were&#13;
«t a drank together at Ida rooms in&#13;
Balttai!"&#13;
ml saeaUeet talcing wine," the Bishop&#13;
after A pause, "with a man&#13;
The very CeUaw! What&#13;
* war sat A J * artta the jlria. itoo! And&#13;
DSttre Do yon remember&#13;
An the night oar Torpid&#13;
*n4 Oriae How&#13;
oat faajgota into the «uad&#13;
After the B u n s flawr, and reaaaxked&#13;
that yon didnt cam A aomethiAg-oroCfcar&#13;
for the Dons, and made a jolly&#13;
#ood Maae, And arena aJsnoet sent down&#13;
for ttr"&#13;
The Biahof hesitated, "I have some&#13;
indistinct neeoUeetion that there was&#13;
A bonmre/' he aliowed at last, da-&#13;
4fe*«lr. /&#13;
-W0*a hpAfltwt Whjr. my rear feiiow,&#13;
yon were nil bat aent packing for&#13;
I t Ton can* AoaatMr fornet Ton&#13;
ssare 1st eC on the Aroond thai aaoet&#13;
4af tA»&#13;
drunk than you; yon were just sober&#13;
enough to light the faggots in the middia&#13;
of ths quad, while the other men&#13;
wanted to pile and light them against&#13;
the hall and chapel."&#13;
The Bishop's face waa rigid with terror,&#13;
-&#13;
Just then a cry arose on the air from&#13;
a cottage not far off—a wlerd, shrill&#13;
cry, aa a woman walling.&#13;
"What's that?" Travers asked, with&#13;
a start.&#13;
"Saved, saved!" The Bishop gasped&#13;
with joy. He remembered that Travers&#13;
had had typhoid at college, and&#13;
lived ever after in bodily dread of zymotic&#13;
diseases. "That," he replied, in&#13;
very calm and measured tones, "Is—&#13;
only a negro wake. The women are&#13;
walling and keening after their kind&#13;
over one of their people who had died&#13;
in this epidemic. I regret to say, owing&#13;
to our imperfect sanitary arrangements,&#13;
such scenes are too common.&#13;
We grow perhaps to disregard them&#13;
with almost unchristian lack of sympathy."&#13;
"Epidemic? What epidemic?"&#13;
The Bishop stretched truth as far&#13;
-as--it-wmiM""'go. "Yellow Jack," he&#13;
answered, in an unconcerned voice.&#13;
"Very bad here at present. They are&#13;
dying by thousands—the whites and&#13;
browns especially. It attacks new comers&#13;
most of all. People of florid complexion&#13;
and full habit of body, fresh&#13;
out from England, are almost sure—"&#13;
Travers rose In horror. He was&#13;
fresh-colored and full-blooded. "Is it&#13;
all over the islands?" he asked, with&#13;
marked eagerness.&#13;
The Bishop gave a dramatic pause.&#13;
"Not in Barbadoes," he answered slowly.&#13;
"Barbadoes Is quite wholesome.&#13;
There's a steamer to Barbadoes tomorrow&#13;
morning."&#13;
WOMEN! DON'T WATf,&#13;
If Y o a B A T * A n y of That* S y m p -&#13;
tom* Act a t OnoA.&#13;
CURIOUS TRIBE OF INDIANS.&#13;
The government's attention was lately&#13;
called to a strange people, known&#13;
as the Muskwaki, occupying a small&#13;
tract of land in the eastern central&#13;
part of Iowa,&#13;
Although the Muskwaki have for&#13;
many years been close neighbors of the&#13;
whites they have always held themselves&#13;
strangely aloof from the latter.&#13;
They have ever been peaceful, and, to&#13;
all appearances, law-abiding; yet the&#13;
whites have never been able to know&#13;
them, to exchange goeslp with them&#13;
nor even to corrupt them. On account&#13;
of this unusual reserve the Muskwaki&#13;
have always been regarded as a mysterious&#13;
race.&#13;
Prof. W. J. McGee has just returned&#13;
to Washington from an interesting visit&#13;
to tfhese people, made on behalf of the&#13;
bureau of ethnology.&#13;
The Muskwaki number in all about&#13;
400 souhB, who occupy 3,000 acres, all&#13;
their own.&#13;
Their agriculture is purely aboriginal,&#13;
the crops consisting principally of&#13;
the aboriginal Indian torn, beans and&#13;
pumpkins. Their only domesticated&#13;
animals are ponies and dogs. They&#13;
have no end of strange customs and beliefs.&#13;
One of these 1B their sacrifice&#13;
pt dogs as en important part of certain&#13;
religious ceremonials. To them&#13;
the dog Is a sacred animal, but they&#13;
may resort to dog flesh and sustain the&#13;
spark of life thereby when all other&#13;
supplies of human food have been cut&#13;
off.&#13;
They treat whites coming to their&#13;
villages as we commonly treat ordinary&#13;
street beggars. This contempt is not&#13;
expressed in threats or actual deeds of&#13;
violence, but rather by condescension&#13;
and hauteur&#13;
The Maakwakl object fo faf YJM* fogf'&#13;
PQ JOT know the reason why yoa will&#13;
go to the hospital, my poor friend? •&#13;
Because you have allowed yourself&#13;
to go from bad to worse. Yon did not&#13;
know that that heat, swelling and tenderness&#13;
In your left aide were all signs&#13;
of congestion of the ovary.&#13;
Any intelligent woman could have [&#13;
told you that congestion is fatal to the&#13;
uterine&#13;
system,&#13;
and that&#13;
an ovary&#13;
congested&#13;
leads&#13;
to tumor&#13;
formation,&#13;
and&#13;
that _&#13;
you&#13;
were&#13;
In awful&#13;
danger. Now (^&#13;
yon will nave - —&#13;
to undergo the operation of ovariotomy,&#13;
the cutting out of the ovary.&#13;
Yes, you will recover, at least I hope&#13;
you will; but yon will never be quite&#13;
the same woman again. Congestion of&#13;
the ovaries Is fatal to health. If yon&#13;
have any such symptoms be advised&#13;
in time; take a medicine of specific&#13;
powersl You can find none better&#13;
than Lydla E. Pinkham's Vegetable&#13;
Compound, prepared especially to meet&#13;
the needs of woman's sexual system.&#13;
You. can get it at any good druggist's.&#13;
Following we publish a letter from&#13;
a woman in Milwaukee, which relates&#13;
how she was cured of ovarian trouble:&#13;
" Dear Mrs. Pinkham:—I suffered with&#13;
congestion of the ovaries and inflammation&#13;
of the womb. I had been troubled&#13;
with suppressed and painful menstruation&#13;
from a girl. The doctors told me&#13;
the ovaries would have to be removed.&#13;
I took treatment two years to escape&#13;
an operation, but still remained in miserable&#13;
health in both body and mind, expecting&#13;
to part with my reason each&#13;
coming month. After using one bottle&#13;
of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound&#13;
and a package of Sanative Wash&#13;
I was very much relieved. I continued&#13;
to use your remedies until cured. T)n&#13;
last nine months have been passed in&#13;
perfect good health. This,lknow, I owe&#13;
entirely to the Vegetable Compound.&#13;
My gratitude is great, indeed, to the&#13;
one to whom so many women owe their&#13;
health and happiness."-Mas. F. M.&#13;
KHAPP, 603 Wentworth Ave,, Milwaukee*&#13;
Wis.&#13;
*bak* late T W IhoM&#13;
Allen's Foot&gt;Basa, a powder&#13;
feet It cures painful, swollei&#13;
lug feet and instantly takes &lt;&#13;
ont of corns and bunions,&#13;
greatest comfort discovery of&#13;
Allen's Foot-Ease makes tight-fitting&#13;
or new shoes feeleasy. ~Tt ! • certain&#13;
cure for sweating, callous, nod - hot,&#13;
tired, aching feet Try it today. Sold&#13;
by all druggists and shoe storea By&#13;
mail for 35c in stampa Trial package&#13;
FREE. Address Allen &amp; Olmsted, Le&#13;
Eov, N. Y.&#13;
If sheets o t table cloths are wrung by putting&#13;
the selvidge through the wringer the&#13;
edges will not curl up, and they will iron&#13;
much easier.&#13;
Those who never watched a man while he&#13;
was at work often wonder why he is successful.&#13;
, m —r —i-i II • •"»• children educated in the agency school,&#13;
because there they must associate with&#13;
white children. They say tnat the&#13;
white children attending are not always&#13;
honest, that they have been&#13;
known to be deceitful and sly and sometimes&#13;
to lie and take things which do&#13;
not strictly belong to them. Honesty is&#13;
one of the prevailing virtues of the&#13;
MttskwaaX&#13;
It is rare that the Muskwaki of either&#13;
sex intermarries with the whites. There&#13;
have been but six cases since the tribe&#13;
has Bred among the whites.&#13;
Tfcese people have excellent pfay&amp;i-&#13;
Qttos and great stature. They drees&#13;
more like Mongols than red men, wearing&#13;
odd turbans woven of hemp and&#13;
Real Warm W«ath*r, Rest ana C o n fort.&#13;
There is a powder to be shakes into the&#13;
shoes called Allen's Foot-Ease, invented by&#13;
Allen 8. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y., which&#13;
druggists and shoe dealers say is the best&#13;
thing they have ever sold to core swollen,&#13;
burning, sore and tender or aching feet.&#13;
Some dealers claim that it makes nght or&#13;
new shoes feel easy. It certainly will cure&#13;
corns and bunions and relieve instantly&#13;
sweating, hot or smarting feet. It costs&#13;
only a quarter, and the inventor will send&#13;
a sample free to any address.&#13;
A great deal of repentance reaches a man&#13;
about the time he discovers that people&#13;
whom he had injured are in a condition to&#13;
retaliate.&#13;
Careful purents who are planning to send&#13;
their daughters to the city for study, wish&#13;
them to be plucod in surroundings as aearly&#13;
like home as possible. In thia respect the New&#13;
England Conservatory of Music Boston, Mass ,&#13;
with Its admirably equipped Home Department,&#13;
meets a widely felt need and offers an&#13;
absolutely safe and delightful basse life for&#13;
young women student* 6f musle. Add to this&#13;
the curriculum of courses leaving nothing undone&#13;
to secure broad and muaiclsnly training,&#13;
and It is easy to see why parents prefer this&#13;
school to any other, and particularly to those&#13;
which make no provision for pleasant and anal-&#13;
Hired dormitory ltfei — • ~&#13;
People who want to keep out of trouble&#13;
generally wait until called on before offering&#13;
either help or advice.&#13;
Hall's Catarrh Car*&#13;
Is a constitutional cure. Price, 75c.&#13;
Never thing is lmefatk teo atnhe a igmreaegmineantti onIn. which any-&#13;
^ITT^"^"^^ I "iirrt T% fltl Df II 11^0-1111 «f t U&#13;
flcsi « V s aNtfDr. KUM'S Great Nerve Btrtorw.&#13;
aaadfer P R B A 9**« Mai bottle sad trertisi.&#13;
Da. K. JUL Kims, IAA..KH Area fit* Rrtadetoaia, fa-&#13;
What a dry time some of us would hare if&#13;
we got nothing but our deserts.&#13;
Edaeate Tour Bowels Wit*&#13;
Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever.&#13;
10c I f C C C. fail, druggists refund money.&#13;
Paper belting for machinery is being&#13;
made and used in Germany.&#13;
&gt;w|ad|re Is Power.&#13;
"Oh. dear!" sighed the poor girl ae&#13;
she came down stain in her cycling&#13;
suit and stood at the window looking&#13;
at the pouring rain. "Oh, dear! 1&#13;
.don^jses) AOW the weather bureai cacj&#13;
gneas wrong so often.** "Ton must remeamher,&#13;
my child," said the wise olc&#13;
mother, "that they have the advantage&#13;
of careful observation and scientific research,**—-&#13;
Detroit News.&#13;
For child*** teotalajc»oftea* %hmmumijtidmtm laSmav&#13;
awttoa^aUay* pels, cars* wisa ootte. sft ceasi a bottle.&#13;
.«TA « • JDaaa.&#13;
Mrs. Beacon—So yon thin* your&#13;
youngest will make a great flnaAAsarT&#13;
Mrs. Lakeside—Tea. Whj, the other&#13;
day I bought him a toy bank* and,&#13;
wonW you believe K, &amp;V cried far an&#13;
honr for his papa to get him a typewnstar.—&#13;
New Tork Praam.&#13;
tioPnh iolfa dfoeslpsihlsia f oisr It3o0 .0bJuUy. Prof. Cope's collec-&#13;
Er fox skin is wuff er dollar, but hit&#13;
ia de hardest way in de wurld ter earn&#13;
er dollar ter git er fox whar you kin&#13;
skin him.&#13;
There is a Class of People&#13;
Who are injured by the use of coffee.&#13;
Recently there has been placed in all the&#13;
grocery stores a new preparation called&#13;
GRAIN-O, made of pure grains, that&#13;
takes the place of coffee. The most&#13;
delicate stomach receives it without&#13;
distress, and but few can tell it from&#13;
coffee. It does not cost over M as&#13;
much. Children may drink it with&#13;
great benefit. 15 cents and 33 cents&#13;
per package. Try i t Ask for GRAIN-O.&#13;
Blchelieu, who was a king in all but&#13;
name, took to play writing.&#13;
Napoleon III. wrote a life of Csasar&#13;
that ranks wery high.&#13;
Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoks Your LHs Away.&#13;
To quit tobacco easily and forever, be magnetic.&#13;
full of life.nerve and vigor,take No-To-&#13;
Bac, the wonder worker, that makes weak&#13;
men strong. All druggists, bOc ortl. Cure&#13;
guaranteed. Booklet and sample free. Ad.&#13;
Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York.&#13;
Lord Kelvin, the great British scientist,&#13;
declares that the world is 30,000,0J0 years old.&#13;
AMERICA'S LEADING MUSICAL INSTITUTION&#13;
is the "NEW ENGLAND CONSERVATORY&#13;
OF MUSIC" of Boston, Mass.,&#13;
which has nearly one million dollars invested&#13;
in its magnificent buildings and home&#13;
with unsurpassed advantages in the line of&#13;
equipment and educational ability.&#13;
Aluminum helmets have not proved entirely&#13;
successful in the German army.&#13;
To Care Constipation Forever.&#13;
Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic 10c or 28c&#13;
If C.C.C fails to care,druggists ref and money&#13;
iNl«T. SAsV#A ^Hl^ASBswA'eAAF As»VAAA&gt;AA4W"AA ^ P V •*»••/4svB|S^VBBBA^pBAVAV&#13;
A*** Bttrtit, ttllt • WAT flfciy&#13;
• f M i own Exparttsot,;m£+&#13;
theBAtali.&#13;
(Tram Dttrott JPSMS.)&#13;
Owr representative called at 118 HfemV En Avenue, tha residence of Mr QiiintuA&#13;
ummel. Mr. Hummel is a veteran of&#13;
the late war, and received, in the campaign,,&#13;
an inj ury which hat given him muoa fato&#13;
and suffering since. Be belonged to •&#13;
Michigan cavalry regiment and his horsa&#13;
becoming frightened one day reared up,&#13;
throwing him backward, in falling he&#13;
struck Bis spine on a sharp stone, inflicting&#13;
a deep cut over five inches long. ' The&#13;
injury affected the kidneys. About two&#13;
years ago the left kidney started to bleed,&#13;
and has been doing so ever since. Mr.&#13;
Hummel, in a few pointed senteoceay gave;&#13;
our representative the following account:&#13;
"The accident of my 'wardays1 h&gt;fi&#13;
.me in bad shape; pain in my hack and&#13;
spine rendered me almost useless, and I&#13;
was compelled to give up work eathely.&#13;
I could not turn over in bed witbont assistance.&#13;
I have spent hundreds of dollars to&#13;
various ways trying to find relief. Physicians&#13;
have told me my spine was honeycombed&#13;
for 18 inches. I bad given up »&#13;
despair, never hoping for reUef, when a&#13;
friend told me about Dean's Kidney Pills,&#13;
and they have done mo a world of good.&#13;
The pains have disappeared from my back,&#13;
and the bleeding of my kidney has almost&#13;
entirely stopped. I know I can never b»&#13;
cntirely cured, as I would have to be 'a&#13;
new man/ but Doan's Kidney Pills have&#13;
done more to make me fed like 'a.new&#13;
man' than all the other things I have tried&#13;
during past years. I have not had anjr&#13;
recurrence of the pain or bleeding sinca&#13;
taking them"&#13;
Doan's Kidney Pills for sale by aH dealers.&#13;
Price 60 cents, by mail, from Foster&#13;
Milburn Co., Buffalo, N.^Y., sob&#13;
agents for the United States,&#13;
the name, Doan's, and take no other.&#13;
6etyourPeisiOA&#13;
DOUBLE 6UIC&amp;&#13;
An Oshkosb, Wis., firm is successfully&#13;
making' binding twine of marsh hay.&#13;
PENSIONS Writs CAPT. O'PARRBLL, Pcoslsfl Agsflt,&#13;
1425 New York Aveao*. WASHINGTON, O . C&#13;
W. N . U. — D E T R O I T — N O . 3 1 — ' 0 7&#13;
weriaa Advertlsai&#13;
MsaMoa This Fapac&#13;
AN OPEN LETTER&#13;
To MOTHERS.&#13;
W l ABE ASSERTING IN THE COURTS OUR RIGHT TO THS&#13;
EXCLUSIVE USE OF THE WORD " C A S T O R I A , " AMD '&#13;
" P I T C H E R ' S CASTORIA,** AS OUR TRADE MARK.&#13;
/ , DR. SAMUEL PITCHER, of Syannis, Ma$$achu$stt*,&#13;
was the originator of "PITCHER'S CASTORIA," the same&#13;
that has borne and does now fT&amp; s/fJ s "" ** e9erlf&#13;
bear the facsimile signature of C&amp;atf/x/&lt;&amp;cc&amp;lu wrapper*&#13;
This is the original "PITCHER'S CASTORIA," which has beem&#13;
used in the homes of the mothers of America for over thirty&#13;
years. LOOK CAREFULLY at the wrapper and see that it is*&#13;
the kind you have always bought fM y/fb. 7*^ &lt;&gt;n *&amp;*&#13;
and has the signature of £&amp;*4&amp;Ji /oe^U^tf wrapper,&#13;
No one has authority from me to use my name except&#13;
The Centaur Company of which Chas. . H. Fletcher i*&#13;
President. * ** *&#13;
March 8, 1897: Q^^uJ, &amp;/m**Ct* &gt;+*.&amp;&gt;&#13;
Dp Not Be Deceived.&#13;
Do not endanger the life of your child by accepting a cheap substitute&#13;
which some druggist may offer yoa (because he makes a few more pennies&#13;
on it), the ingredients of which even he does not know.&#13;
«s The Kind You Have Always Bought&#13;
BEARS THE FAC-SIMtLE SIGNATURE OF&#13;
.*a&#13;
Insist on Having&#13;
The Kind That Never Failed You*&#13;
» « * • •&#13;
*«•«. i9. r r IV W M H , H W T O M C«Y*-&#13;
UPrxiseod'osj Cctuarre-h fUorla Cr^onc,s uLm Mptiaokne rh,•a s sared me BqTPhlUdelphia, Pa.. Dec 8, VS. Begem I&#13;
mFaonratguen tahteemly. for men, few wosaea care to&#13;
I ^ C M S lea***** Haaataad fast,&#13;
CfeUMataa. m«u «c C.e.Ctak«a*&#13;
BnW galatnerd . pipes of paper are a success in&#13;
tl?O- to/oRroroulxd eBnA8Tto rLeiax*K«-aA%am,dt4o&gt;fto'iki . OftJMM*S _oaaeUaa#sa llp a» «s*t..&#13;
or 110 Woodward Ave., Detroit, or aar'OT aerat&#13;
Getting the biar head shrinks tike heart&#13;
lfcere is a blli-posUof vaxrMmt,&#13;
Paper doors are in Aaaiand.&#13;
Buy Your Bicycler&#13;
of a concern that will be in business as&#13;
long as you live, and whose guarantee is&#13;
the best security that can be given.&#13;
«897 COLUMBIAS, . . . $ 7 5&#13;
SJTANDAftO OP THS WORLD.&#13;
1896 COLUMBIAS, . . . . 6 0&#13;
1897 HARTFORDS, . . . . SO&#13;
HARTFORDS Pat 2, . . 4 5&#13;
HARTFORDS Pat I, . . . 40&#13;
HARTFORDS Pat 5 and 6, . 3 0&#13;
POPE MFC. CO.. Hartford, Com.&#13;
iWepatofc&#13;
wtx* «M&#13;
.fcjoarTiatattr.latM&#13;
TEACHERS WANTED!&#13;
#&#13;
A-J&#13;
llfTk' ' ^ L y .&#13;
4 t : 3: &lt;, N ^mt?m- ?'V " &amp; &gt;&#13;
irt.4&#13;
Jvv ;v •.&#13;
f % v V;:V • '' •&#13;
W"".V&#13;
L&gt; V&#13;
l\-^——&#13;
it"1' ' .&#13;
m&#13;
'W&#13;
A •'&#13;
S/V •'".•''&#13;
''&gt;&#13;
£*•&#13;
»'*:'.&#13;
Ly*0&lt; : f&#13;
y-1 /i- f&#13;
Kir&#13;
V&#13;
* -^:&#13;
&gt;'&#13;
&gt;&#13;
M-1'&#13;
• •••" • • • ' ' ' . ' ' . , • y • ; " ' . . ^ v - . &gt; • ' , . - - - 1 ^ • • • : • • ' - - - - ^ : - - - 4 - - - ^ ^ - : . . &gt; • &lt; • " . : • - . . :&#13;
• ^ . . ^ I ' . P I I • » 4&#13;
•1&#13;
ghukneq gi&amp;aUl&#13;
h\ L. ANDREWS, EDITOR.&#13;
THURSDAY, AUG. 5, 1897.&#13;
Interesting Items.&#13;
be longest pieced of straight&#13;
railroad i n the United&#13;
Slates is said to be on the air Hue&#13;
of the Lake Shore. I t commences&#13;
at a point three miles west of&#13;
Toledo and for 09 miles there is&#13;
not a curve.&#13;
— \V. B . Peek removed the Fowlerville&#13;
Observer outfit to Linden&#13;
this week. I t is a good opening&#13;
and he is a good writer, a fine&#13;
job printer and a general hustler&#13;
ajicl ire wish him abundant succ&#13;
e s s , M r * r - J*eek is a pleasantj-._«l_j«gtthink it*.&#13;
lady and our loss will, be Lindens'&#13;
gain.—Observer.&#13;
"Why don't you trade with me?"&#13;
said a close-fisted merchant to a&#13;
farmer the other day. "Because"&#13;
was the characteristic reply, "you&#13;
have never asked me, sir."*"Ihave&#13;
looked, all t h r o u g h the papers for&#13;
an invitation in the shape of an&#13;
advertisement, but in vain* I&#13;
never go where I am not invited."&#13;
—Owosso Argus.&#13;
Quite a number of people in&#13;
different parts of the state have&#13;
been siezed by the Alaska gold&#13;
fever and are forming companies&#13;
to go to the Elondyke fields to&#13;
make, their fortunes( ?) We are&#13;
not able to say just yet who will&#13;
go from Pinckney( ?)&#13;
way that girl spits slang" said&#13;
one Ypsilanti girl to another on a&#13;
motor car yesterday. "My! If I&#13;
twirled my talker as she does, my&#13;
blooming old dad would tan my&#13;
duda until the dust was thicker&#13;
than fleas in fly time." "You&#13;
betcher brass, and serve you right&#13;
replied the other young lady. "My&#13;
parents are sunflowers of the same&#13;
hue, and if I should make a rawcrack&#13;
in my conversation the'd&#13;
M Y S T E R I O U S W A Y S O F W A R T S .&#13;
Que that W M " W U h t d OAT of » Child's&#13;
Flnjcvr&#13;
"The more I study into the question&#13;
of warts," said a well-known physician&#13;
to a Washington Star man, "the more&#13;
convinced I am that there la but little&#13;
known of them. It Is surprising what&#13;
few references are made to warts by&#13;
the standard writers. In many of the&#13;
leading books on surgery there Is no&#13;
mention at all of warts, and as a result&#13;
physicians are almost as much in&#13;
the dark about them as others. To tell&#13;
the truth, I have got more information&#13;
from old nurses about warts than I&#13;
ever did from my medical or surgical&#13;
lectures or from my reading. Hundreds&#13;
and hundreds of times patients&#13;
have asked me how to get ridTrf warts&#13;
and my answer has generally been to&#13;
the | let them alone and tfmt- tb*y would go&#13;
away as mysteriously as they came.&#13;
Of course, I could cut them off or burn&#13;
them off with caustic or nitric acid&#13;
but my experience has been that two&#13;
or three came back for every one so&#13;
removed. A few weeks since I was&#13;
visiting the wife of a southern senator,&#13;
who has two grandchildren with her&#13;
this winter. One of the grandchildren&#13;
had a big wart on the end of the foreuzjtvi'&#13;
of tne nerijt hand. and. of covr*10&#13;
nix ic every time the child toacneo anything.&#13;
I was asked If I could do anything&#13;
to remove It, and I replied as&#13;
usual to let it alone and that in a short&#13;
time It would disappear. This, however,&#13;
was but little comrort to the&#13;
lady, who said the child, a little boy&#13;
of 4 years, was, she thought, in constant&#13;
pain from It. I then told her&#13;
that if she wished the wart from the&#13;
little fellow and on herself It would&#13;
likely change places, and that it would&#13;
be necessary for her to 'wish very hard'&#13;
to make a sure transfer. I had forgotten&#13;
all about It till Tuesday last, when&#13;
I visited the lady again. Strange as&#13;
it may sound, the wart had left the&#13;
grandchild's finger and was on her&#13;
own, and giving her a great deal of&#13;
pain, too."&#13;
! thrash the cussedness out of my&#13;
"Go for somebody, quick!" B X 1Be l i c anatomy quicker than&#13;
; There's a bug down my back" c h a i u lightning." And then they&#13;
cried a Dundee girl to her best j proceeded to suck lemon juice&#13;
, young man while out walking the | through a stick of candy.&#13;
*• other evening. "Hadn't I better&#13;
go for the bug?" he suggested,&#13;
Then she fainted dead away and&#13;
when she had unswooned, the bug&#13;
had finished its evening stroll and&#13;
gone home.—Ex.&#13;
A Saugatuck young man who&#13;
thought he was old enough to&#13;
have a girl, called on a Douglas&#13;
young woman a few nights since.&#13;
The girl's mother quietly left the&#13;
room and in a few minutes returned&#13;
with a big piece of bread and&#13;
molasses, which she hanaed to&#13;
tbe caller, telling to eat it and run&#13;
home, as his mother might be uneasy,&#13;
if he should stay out late.—&#13;
Ex.&#13;
A merchant in a neighboring&#13;
town was out late to club meeting&#13;
a few nights ago and when he returned&#13;
home at 3 a. m. and was&#13;
undressing very quietly, his wife&#13;
awoke and asked him why he was&#13;
getting up so early, he made some&#13;
excuse about packing eggs before&#13;
the sun got up and hatched out&#13;
some of the fruit, and, quickly&#13;
dressing himself, went down to&#13;
the store where the clerks found&#13;
him asleep on the counter and&#13;
when asked why he was out so&#13;
early, said he must have dreamed&#13;
t h f l t • +h»™&gt; ti-nrn I . I I I ^ I I I I H i n t H e&#13;
store and came down to drive&#13;
them away. The stories kept for&#13;
a few days then leaked out.&#13;
Everybody is talking about&#13;
Kingling Bros, famous big circus,&#13;
which is to exhibit at Howell&#13;
Friday, August 6. Several&#13;
big excursions will go from this&#13;
vicinity and the popularity of the&#13;
show will insure an enormous&#13;
crowd. People from this locality&#13;
should make an especial effort to&#13;
arrive in time to see the new free&#13;
street carnival which precedes&#13;
the exhibition every morning at&#13;
10 o'clock. I n Chicago where&#13;
Singling Bros, have exhibited for&#13;
_ _osex 100 |&gt;erformancesr ^the- leading&#13;
newspapers declared the street&#13;
parade to be_the mostmflgiiiiiciett^j^ or not&#13;
As the object of these prizes is to&#13;
The Grand Trunk Railway&#13;
System will give a grand excursion&#13;
to Niagara Falls on Thursday&#13;
Aug. 12. Extremely low&#13;
rates will be made for nil points&#13;
on its system west of the Detroit&#13;
and St. Clair rivers. Also from&#13;
stations of connecting lines.&#13;
Special trains will be run and&#13;
special accomadations made for&#13;
this occasion. The rate from Detroit&#13;
for this excursion will be&#13;
$3.50 for the round trip and proportionately&#13;
low ratts will be&#13;
made from all points in Michigan.&#13;
Tickets will be valid to return up&#13;
to and including August 16, 1897.&#13;
Everybody should wait for this&#13;
grand excursion. See advertising&#13;
bills which give full information&#13;
as to train service and rates which&#13;
can be obtained from all Grand&#13;
Trunk Agents and from Ben.&#13;
Fletcher, Traveling Passenger&#13;
Agent, Detroit.&#13;
Prizes lor Bright People.&#13;
S O E R - Y I L L - B A Y I D - T t B T U P C H E -&#13;
LOTEVI-LIDODFAF.&#13;
The above letters, if properly&#13;
arranged, will spell the names of&#13;
six well known flowers. Can you&#13;
solve the puzzle? If you do you&#13;
in a prize! For the neatest&#13;
and best arranged correct answer,&#13;
according to our judgement, of&#13;
the above problem, we will give a&#13;
gold filled, hunting case, American&#13;
watch; to the next best, a&#13;
diamond ring. We give many&#13;
other valuable prizes in this contest.&#13;
A few of them are as follows:&#13;
Silverplated water pitchers,&#13;
bake dishes, nut bowls, butter and&#13;
cheese dishes, cut glass, silvermounted&#13;
cracker jars, bronze mantle&#13;
clocks, etc., in the r e ^ l a r order&#13;
of merit. Write out the words&#13;
neatly and plainly, and see if you&#13;
cannot win ; the prize. Be sure&#13;
to give your full name and correct&#13;
address, and enclose a two-cent&#13;
stamp with your answer, and we&#13;
will notify you promptly whether&#13;
IT SHINES&#13;
FOR A L L .&#13;
TBI SEWEST&#13;
AND BEST&#13;
SHOE&#13;
GENTLEMCN5ANDpni 1911&#13;
HAWCSS^PATTNT LCATHER&#13;
' PRICE 2 5 *&#13;
An English hygleniat of repute says&#13;
that a large proportion of the 111« which&#13;
afflk-t men past the middle of life are&#13;
due to errors in diet, chiefly in the direction&#13;
of excess In quantity. He even&#13;
goes BO far as to make the deliberate&#13;
assertion that more mischief in the&#13;
shape of lessened resisting powers,&#13;
actual disease and shortened life comes&#13;
to the inhabitants of Northern Europe&#13;
fron, their habits of eating than from&#13;
their abuse o/ alcoholic liquors.&#13;
Railroad Guic-le.&#13;
ttrand Trunk Railway Hjstem.&#13;
' VI) I&#13;
AS.&#13;
Arrival nod Dei)»rtur« of Tr»l«« at PlacUnfc/&#13;
la Effect June 14, itttf,&#13;
witiani'Mj,&#13;
hv.&#13;
Jaokion tod rnterm'dt* St*. f9.44 am&#13;
XAiraouwo ,-'&#13;
PontUc £)»tro^n-Od. lUpld* • * ' '&#13;
aud iiittM'ttuxiUte St» f5.2Q p Dl&#13;
Ponttai Lenox Detroit and&#13;
intermediate 8U. fr.SSam&#13;
Mioh. Air Mae Div. train*&#13;
leave Ponttac at f6.80 a a&#13;
for Romeo Lenox aud int. eta.&#13;
D. AM. pIVISION'LKAVEPQXiTUO. ' •:&#13;
waarsoDMO ,&#13;
Lv. '&#13;
Saginaw Gd Rapid* and Gd Haven f8.0oia »&#13;
Kaplde OoTHaven CnTcifo&#13;
f3.«y p m&#13;
fl.fA a tu&#13;
tfLHina&#13;
Has paa&#13;
t».» &gt; la&#13;
fftADV^Oft CAS*.&#13;
££QU/RCO$R n ojz »&amp;uuaj&gt;aH/f*/nQo .&#13;
ROESSHERtfFdCO Thia la truly a&#13;
lWtN0HA&gt;.MINN.LL5AL~ polish, as it&#13;
The Coast Line to MACKINAC&#13;
*—TAKI T H B — •&#13;
l a Colon. TO&#13;
BLACK, TAN,&#13;
GREEN and&#13;
OX BLOOD.&#13;
will bold a shine for a. week, and rain or sno.w&#13;
will not spoil it. A Liquid Polish, put up in&#13;
large bottlea, encased in neat cartona, and makes&#13;
a good show in the package and on the shoe.&#13;
The nicest t h i n g on tbe market fer LADIES'&#13;
AND GENTLEMEN'S FINB SHOES AND&#13;
PATENT LEATHER. Easily applied. Requires&#13;
no rubbing, Will not freeze&#13;
Ask your local dealer for it.&#13;
Boessoer's "Ooce a Week" Shite Shoe Tolieh&#13;
BOESSiEBNFB. 80., ViMBi, Mill.&#13;
It is always gratify in jr to receive&#13;
testimonials" tor Chamberlains Colic&#13;
Cholera and Diarrhoea liemedy and&#13;
when the endorsement is from a physician&#13;
it is especially so "There is no&#13;
more satisfactory or effective remedy&#13;
tharrChamberlains Colic, Cholera and&#13;
Diarrhoea Remedy" writes Dr. R. E.&#13;
Robey. physician and pharmacist of&#13;
Olney, Mo., and as he has used the&#13;
remedy in his own-family and sold it&#13;
in his drug ptove for six years he&#13;
should certainly know. For sale by&#13;
F, A, Sifter.&#13;
Send your addr^s to H. E. Buckler&#13;
Si Co., Chicago, ant tret a free sample&#13;
box ul" Dr. King's .,&lt;&gt;w Life Pills, A&#13;
trial will convince you of their merits.&#13;
These pills are eaM in action and are&#13;
particularly effective in the cure of&#13;
display ever seen in the Worlds'&#13;
Fair-City a n d the press of other&#13;
cities lias been equally unstinted&#13;
in its praise. I n this gorgeous&#13;
display are shown over 100 beautiful&#13;
dens and cages of wild animals,&#13;
400 horses, 25 elephants and&#13;
nearly a thousand people, and the&#13;
costumes throughout are of the&#13;
finest silks, satins, velvet and&#13;
cloth of gold. Tbe performance&#13;
t h a t follows is the most magaift-&#13;
«ietareni« display ever presented&#13;
bj-mf circus in America.&#13;
call attention to and advertise our&#13;
90-page monthly, family magazine&#13;
and story paper, those who win&#13;
the prizes wil] be required to send&#13;
us five yearly subscribers. Try&#13;
it; see if you are one of the bright&#13;
people. If you are you may get&#13;
a watch. We will also pay »10.00&#13;
cash for the best problem submitted&#13;
for future use in our columns.&#13;
Send to-day. Address, Chicago&#13;
Household G u e s t Premium Dfcpt&#13;
Journal Bl$g., Chicago, ilL .&#13;
Constipation and **'&#13;
Malaria and Liver&#13;
been proved inv;&#13;
guaranteed to be ;&#13;
every deleterious a..&#13;
'i Headache. For&#13;
&gt;ubles they have&#13;
:ble. They are&#13;
ectly free from&#13;
'stance and to he&#13;
purely vegetable. They do not weaken&#13;
by their aotion, but give tons to&#13;
the stomach and bowels greatly invigorating&#13;
the &gt;ystem. Regular size&#13;
25c. per box. bold by F. A, 8fig2er,&#13;
Druggist . J * - —&#13;
Chamherlain's Colic, Cholera and&#13;
Diarrhoea Remedv always afford*&#13;
prompt relief. For sale by F. ASigler.&#13;
Subscribe lor the DISPATCH.&#13;
MACKINAC&#13;
D E T R O I T&#13;
PETOSKEY&#13;
CHICAGO&#13;
New Steel Passenger Steamers&#13;
Tbe Oreatett Perfection yet attained In&#13;
Boat Construction-Luxurious Equipment,&#13;
Artistic Furnishing, Decoratloa and Efficient&#13;
Service, insunug the highest degree of&#13;
COMFORT, SPEED AND SAFETV&#13;
FOUR TRIPS PER WECK BETWEEN&#13;
Toledo, Detroit and Mackinac&#13;
PETOSKEY, "THE SOO," M*RQU£TT£&#13;
AND DULUTH.&#13;
LOW RATES to Picturesque Mackinac and&#13;
Return, Including /lea!* sn.t berths. From&#13;
Cleveland, $18; from Ttiieda, $13; Iroai&#13;
Detroit, $13 so.&#13;
DAY AND NlQHT SERVICE. Between Detroit and Cleveland&#13;
Connecting- «t C?ere*iand with F. ir'if*t&#13;
Trains for all points Kast. bo;ttl» ati'l S"uth&#13;
vest and fit Detroit tor all poiuts North umi&#13;
Northwest.&#13;
Sunday Trips June, July. August and Sept. 9nly&#13;
EVF-:RY DAY B E T W E E N Cleveland, Put-in-Bay ^Toledo&#13;
6 e o d for Illustrated Pamphlet. A».J-irr.i3&#13;
A. A. S C H A N T 2 , «. *. »., OITROT. MICH Tne Detroit &amp; Cleveland Steasi liav. Co.&#13;
A Remarkable Cure of Chronic Diarrhoea.&#13;
In 1862, when I served mv country&#13;
as a private in Company/ A, 167tb&#13;
Pennsylvania Volunteers, I contracted&#13;
chronic diarhoea. It has given me a&#13;
great deal of trouble^ ever since. I&#13;
have tried a dozen different medicines&#13;
and several prominent doctors without&#13;
any permanent relief. Not long&#13;
ago a friend sen* me a bottle of Cbamberlain;?&#13;
Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea&#13;
Saginaw Gd Kapide MUwaakee&#13;
Okftoago and Intermediate sta. •&#13;
Gd Rapids M M W O D&#13;
K»STBOUNO&#13;
Detroit Bast and Canada&#13;
Detroit East and Canada&#13;
Detroit and South&#13;
Detroit East nod Canada&#13;
Detroit Suburban&#13;
Leave Detroit via Windsor&#13;
EAKi'BOUND&#13;
Buffalo—New York &amp; Boston&#13;
Toronto Montreal New York&#13;
London Express&#13;
Buffalo New York A East&#13;
f]9.8gvm&#13;
+6.07 p n ttusapto&#13;
•13.11. lujl&#13;
•6.0H-W&#13;
! 10.58 a n&#13;
• 1t7&amp;.06t tfa n*i&#13;
•7.49 a m&#13;
,' *12. noon&#13;
, . / t«.4o P m&#13;
... T '• • l l . M p m&#13;
7.4A am Urln b&amp;s sleeping cars Detroit to Sew&#13;
York and Boston. 12.00 noon t.ainhaa parfcr&#13;
car to Hamilton—Sleeplngcar to . uffalo a n l N e w&#13;
York 11.25 train bas sleeping car to New York&#13;
fDaily except bnnday. , *Daily. •&#13;
W. J. BLACK, Agent, Pinekuejr Mien. . &lt; •&#13;
W.K. DAVIS E. H. UCOHEJ* ... - -&#13;
G. r», AT. An»n» A. G. P ^ A T A g t .&#13;
Montreal, Que. Chicago, III.&#13;
BKN FLBTCUKU, Trav. Pass. Agt., Detroir Mich.&#13;
JLEDO r-N 1 I '&#13;
N ARBOW&#13;
Remedy, and alter that I bought and&#13;
took a 50 cent bottle; and now I can&#13;
•say that I am entirely cured. I cannot&#13;
be thankful enough to you for&#13;
this great remedy, and recommend it&#13;
to all suffering vetrans. If in doubt&#13;
write me. Yours gratefully, Henry&#13;
Steinberger, Atleotown, Pa. Sold by&#13;
F. A. Sigler.&#13;
Wanted-An Idea Protect jour Ideas: tber may tu&#13;
Write JOHN WEDDERBURN * 0~., . _ » „ «&#13;
Beys. Washington, I&gt;. C~for their »i.80frprls» offer&#13;
and Uat of two hundred larenUoos wasted.&#13;
Wboeaathbsk&#13;
of aonwaimpS&#13;
thing to patohft&#13;
on wealth.&#13;
J OH TEIJVlIJfGsI&#13;
In all Its branches, a specialty. We hare all kinds&#13;
and tbe latest styles of Type, etc., which enable*&#13;
us to execute all kinds of work, such as Books,&#13;
Paroplet*, Posters, Programme*, Bit! Heads, Note&#13;
Heads. Statements, Cards, Auction Bills, etc., in&#13;
superior styles, upon the shortest notice. Prloesas&#13;
ir-v as gnoo work can be aone.&#13;
-LL BILLS PATAULS FIRST OK EVERT MONTH.&#13;
[CURES IN THE WatfT WAY, BY KBOUUMNQ THE UVBR4&#13;
JWD KIDNEYS, ANOPURLFYINO THE BLOOD.&#13;
Itbaporidve can for Rhmimarhm Nenralg^. DypqwA,, $^ ^&#13;
N e r a u s H e t d a c h « , F « w ^ A g ^&#13;
- diKaaed fiver or tbe kidney*, or impure blood.&#13;
BafJOBw wMwM 9 a % ^ B f t t t n t f ^aatt A ^ U H r ^ ^ B B \ # 1 S B M M SBI«B4 aT^Ba^awTaW&#13;
As U LEWIS I 3 I ; &gt; 1 GO*. - Bolhoyv Hb.&lt;&#13;
Popular route for Ann. .Arbor, Toledo&#13;
and points East, Sootti and for&#13;
Howeil, Owoseo, Alma, Mt Pleasant,&#13;
Cadillac, Manistee, Traverse City and&#13;
points in North western Michigan/&#13;
W. H. BENNETT,&#13;
G. P. A., Toledo.&#13;
SO Y I A R S *&#13;
txramcNOK.&#13;
TRADE MARKS*&#13;
DESIQMS,&#13;
COPYRIGHTS A c .&#13;
Anyone aendlng a sketch and descriipetiona ma i qackiyawwmn; Wee, whetnef aa tni.&#13;
probably patentable. rommumCations strictly&#13;
confidential. Oldest a«ency tor securing- patent*&#13;
In America. We have a Washington office.&#13;
Patent* taken through Mima ft Co. receive)&#13;
special notice lu the&#13;
SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN,&#13;
&gt;K otr P A T I K T S sent free. Addroaa&#13;
M U N N * C C . ,&#13;
3 0 1 Broadway, Now Y o r k .&#13;
The Only One&#13;
To Stand the Test&#13;
Kev. William Copp, whose father&#13;
was a physician for over fifty years,&#13;
in New Jersey, and who himself&#13;
spent many years pnparing for the&#13;
practice of medicine, but subsequently&#13;
entered the ministry of the&#13;
if. £. Church, writes: " I am glad&#13;
to testify that I have&#13;
had analyzed all -the&#13;
ssrsaparilla preparations&#13;
known, in the&#13;
trade, but&#13;
AYER'S&#13;
(is the only one of&#13;
them that I could&#13;
recommend as a&#13;
blood-purifier. I have&#13;
given away hundreds of bottles of&#13;
it, as I consider it the safest as well&#13;
as the beat to be had."—WM. COPP,&#13;
Pastor M. £. Church, Jackson, Minn. ] SYEffS • • v esur WOKS* rat T ^ S a f aparJHa&#13;
&gt;&#13;
/ liN-fCti&#13;
•••' ftt"&#13;
• ,,-&lt;,•'- • - , : •. , . y ' . , . '•*••;•'• -•"'V '" ' , l - &lt; - - - . - • ' ' . * v w i , : , . ¾ * / • ,&#13;
&gt; ' • - , . ' • , • : • , ' • \ y , i - • . - • / • . • : " &lt; • : • ' . • •*.- " H . ' ' V V . ' . &lt; * . . . . . • 1 . -,:••• : '•- • ' -&#13;
« * • Jl; -(¾&#13;
#&#13;
. *,iJv&lt;&#13;
^ ^ ¾ ¾ . ^k # 'V •/?• i&amp;s'i&#13;
: ^ -&#13;
:'l ?, &gt;«.;&#13;
/y. : &gt;&#13;
*.'.&#13;
&amp; A .&#13;
•»•] ^w^-$ ft »&#13;
'tfS*&#13;
&amp;V &lt;TV&#13;
,*v, : - *&#13;
$ *&#13;
• • ^ — 4 »• ,'i.i&#13;
t&#13;
•.'V. &amp;*?; -.-0¾.&#13;
* " *rs. &lt;J&#13;
.V- * . *&#13;
l ^ W " ^&#13;
Wanted-An THB&#13;
&lt;V«&#13;
• ^ • W&#13;
w&#13;
V f HERMIT'S REMEDY&#13;
IPRUCSOUAk&#13;
1 "the T H S 0 A / i 5 d t l ) N Q » . Ceatala*&#13;
Keep a Battle In lite Hwse,&#13;
! ^ SAVE YOUR LIFE.&#13;
£»1110X3» OB C e n t s .&#13;
luWcraet iovwe t og iav eg oeomdp algoeynmte innt 'tpaeler mseacntieonnt. aFnodr particular* oau on publisher of tats paper.&#13;
JAMES W. FOSTER CO., M*ro Dewtfart,&#13;
BATH, N. H.&#13;
•H'H 'tuvg &lt;&lt;oo UllMOi *M 81WVP&#13;
*&gt;&#13;
*no|Z9Tdm(0 dm JOJ&#13;
"5AVS IN THS V I A * .&#13;
y&#13;
••u'liion** Arnica Naive.&#13;
I V IV*r tj.iivn in the worM for&#13;
jotn, l»in»s"«. * T**, nleern, f»«lt rheum.&#13;
fiver soi^v. u*Mr, :l) ;pned hands,chill&#13;
Ha'ns. 4 o-f », rid ail skin eruption?&#13;
tnd | u"'*iv- lv »:uv«a piles or no pa)&#13;
required. It &lt;&lt; rut'antaed to g'\v&gt;&#13;
pert'coi B«f&gt; faction or money refund&#13;
•d. Pricn 25 e«ato par box. For sal&#13;
.*« f\ A.fiHer.&#13;
M i c M f a n ^ Piopte.&#13;
LOCATED&#13;
Directly Opposite M. C R'y Depot.&#13;
Two Stocks from Uoioo Depot&#13;
Three Blocks from Steamer Docks.&#13;
lo th* Center of the Wholesale District.&#13;
Three Minute* by Ekctrk Cars to Retail&#13;
Center and all Pfaccs of Amusement.&#13;
aoo Raonss with Scaam Haat&#13;
fao.ooo lo New Improvementa.&#13;
CeilalM Unettrpaaaed&#13;
Aaaertcaa Plaa.&#13;
Rates, $2 and $2.50 per Day.&#13;
••esn.STite MstMl, tl»|le&#13;
• a « Oaf* « M »• Olv* W a j ta Pavaraf&#13;
* Qaa of. S M ,&#13;
TfcajtJl • Iton: la Plutarcfc whkb&#13;
inuat oonvinoe ©vary rajtder that one&#13;
myth at least relates to an alteration&#13;
made In tba Egyptian calendar to extend&#13;
the length of the year from 360&#13;
day* to 36S. A year of 360 days existed&#13;
Un Egypt at an early period, and may&#13;
possibly have been arrived at In the&#13;
way fcug^eated by Mr. F. ,L. Griffith.&#13;
The lunar mouth, from new moon to&#13;
new moon, being twenty-nine and a&#13;
half day* In length, the convenient&#13;
rcund number of thirty days was taken&#13;
as a standard, and twelve months&#13;
of thirty days each made up the year.&#13;
The eolar year is more, difficult to&#13;
observe than the lunar month, the Intervals&#13;
being longer, and a year of&#13;
360 days was a very convenient and&#13;
reasonable approximation to it. At&#13;
any rate, the year of 360 days came&#13;
into use, and a curious custom of&#13;
Acanthae, near Memphis, seems to allude&#13;
to it. A perforated vessel was&#13;
filled with water by 360 priests on each&#13;
day of the year. In the Island of Phllae,&#13;
again, 360 pitchers were placed&#13;
around the tomb of Osiris, for making&#13;
funeral HbatloajKand were filled every&#13;
day by the priests with milk. With&#13;
360 days in the year, the ecliptic circles&#13;
of the heavens, as represented in&#13;
the charts, would be divided into 360&#13;
equal parts; and we must regard it&#13;
as a relic of this time that the circle&#13;
is still made to consist of 360 degrees.&#13;
But so erroneous an estimate of the&#13;
length of the year would soon be corrected&#13;
by experience. It is evident&#13;
that in about seventy-two years a cycle&#13;
nould be accomplished in which the&#13;
New Tear's Day would sweep through&#13;
all the months, remaining only six&#13;
year* in eaeh. The same month, so&#13;
far as its name was concerned, would&#13;
now be In the inundation time, now&#13;
in the season of sowing, and anon in&#13;
the time of reaping, and the agriculturist&#13;
must have been perplexed. A&#13;
text in the papyrus Anastasi makes&#13;
reference to such perplexity, and&#13;
may receive Its explanation here.&#13;
Goodwin translated it, "May Amen deliver&#13;
me from the Cold season, when&#13;
the sun does not shine, the winter&#13;
comes instead of the summer, the&#13;
month is stormy, the nours shortened."&#13;
Similar confusion would overtake the&#13;
religious festivals, the New Year, for&#13;
example, coming five days before its&#13;
proper time, and then ten tUys before,&#13;
and go on; and it might be thought&#13;
that its observance at the wrong season&#13;
would displease the gods. The&#13;
year of 360 days had to give way and&#13;
ultimately did so in favor of one of&#13;
365 days. The precise date of the&#13;
change is not known, but it is referred&#13;
to in inscriptions of the time of Amenemha&#13;
I (circa 2400 B. €.), and may, of&#13;
course, have been introduced much&#13;
earlier. When this was done, the original&#13;
months were not altered, but a&#13;
"little month" .of five days was interpolated&#13;
at the end of the year, between&#13;
the month Mesori of one year and the&#13;
Thoth of the next—Westminster Review.&#13;
W&#13;
Too Tra«.&#13;
You never eome to the&#13;
T &gt;HE MA86N ARTIFICIAL&#13;
STONE WATER TANK. A wonderful&#13;
„ _ Invention sod a great boon to farmers.&#13;
Heat or oold do not elect them, and they will l*»t&#13;
antes* destroyed by aa earthquake while the tsrta&#13;
lasts. We Invite your inepection. Tbey will uot&#13;
rot, rust or wear oat. Warasnted for fire years.&#13;
For .further pert looters call or write to&#13;
WILL EVER8,&#13;
Agent aad mean lecturer, Stockbridge, Mich&#13;
"Pshaw!&#13;
point."&#13;
The young girl seated at the table&#13;
seemed nettled at his remark. Her face&#13;
flushed, but she restrained her anger&#13;
by biting her lip and giving sundry&#13;
vicious little digs with her foot at the&#13;
rug in front of her chair. Even the&#13;
casual observer would have said that&#13;
they were lovers. There was a look &lt;&gt;t&#13;
mm pi a ront oatiafaxlluii uu the face of&#13;
new* *oc*aa; and tnere waa&#13;
leckjaw. • There was * email puncture&#13;
la the foot, which wae *woiton. Death&#13;
waa due to asphyxia, following tetanua,&#13;
the result of a punotured wound in&#13;
the foot, caused by a nail In the hoot.&#13;
THEY CHANOB THBIW TlMS.&#13;
Wateha* laM «*&gt; stafl*** tba Taaaparasnamt*&#13;
of Thete Owner*.&#13;
There appear* lo be some occult connection&#13;
between a watcb and its owner.&#13;
Else way should a tlmepleoe go at&#13;
one speed on one person and at a different&#13;
one on another? Read what a&#13;
jeweler has to say about the matter,&#13;
says tihe Home Journal. "I used to haws&#13;
a friend who had an excellent Swiss&#13;
watch, while I had one of another&#13;
make. By mutual consent at one time&#13;
we exchanged watches and' though&#13;
they had gone all right before they&#13;
changed their gait entirely, mine running&#13;
five minutes ahead in a couple of&#13;
days and: hip running five minutes behind.&#13;
There was ten minutes' difference&#13;
in our temperament. But that is&#13;
nothing compared to the difference between&#13;
some people. Sometimes a watch&#13;
that will run well on one man will not&#13;
go with another and there are some&#13;
people who cannot get a watch that&#13;
will run on them at ail. I remember a&#13;
good many years ago I had a man&#13;
come to my place wttfc an ord-fashioned&#13;
English lover wateh to be repaired. I&#13;
had some very nice gold watches in&#13;
stock at the time and as he lookod well&#13;
off I tried to sell him one but he&#13;
laughed and said if any of the gold&#13;
watches I had in the store would run&#13;
twenty-four hours in his pocket he&#13;
would give me twice what I asked for&#13;
it. He said he had tried all sorts of&#13;
gold watches and had never been able&#13;
to get one that would run while he had&#13;
it. He had experimented with his&#13;
brother's watch only a little while before,&#13;
he said, and it cost hdm 13.50 to&#13;
have it demagnetized after he had carried&#13;
It in his pocket two days. Most&#13;
silver watches acted the same way with&#13;
him but the old English watch he was&#13;
carrying had a double inside case to it&#13;
and worked fairly well. I've never&#13;
been able to tell whether the average&#13;
watch will run faster when it is in its&#13;
owner's possession or not. There&#13;
seems to be no rule on the subject, but&#13;
I can never regulate a watch on my&#13;
swlngboard there and then give it to&#13;
a customer and have it keep good&#13;
time. Then there is a variation wMh&#13;
a change of vitality. A watch will ordinarily&#13;
run slower the longer it is&#13;
carried after cleaning, because the oil&#13;
dries and the bearings are harder, but&#13;
I have had customers come to me and&#13;
say tbeir watches had started up and&#13;
gone to gaining time several modths&#13;
after they had been cleaned. I just&#13;
tell them I cant account for it except&#13;
on a theory of a change in their ow*\&#13;
vitality and temperament. It's one of&#13;
those things that cannot be explained&#13;
but it is true, nevertheless."&#13;
• • * Tlie Evening&#13;
Supplement Your Home Paper,&#13;
2 CHtS 1CIIJ. Otvt-gyoasJl&#13;
IOeNftiw*«(Mlifril).&#13;
$ 1.25 fir 3 Mitts (Li MU).1 ^ ^ Ntwf#&#13;
AGENTS IN BVM*Y TOWN IN MICHIGAN.&#13;
The Evening News, Detroit.&#13;
i$ne fists tug JispaUh.&#13;
PUBLISHED KVXKT THUaSIM V X iMWO BY&#13;
FRANK L. A N D R E W S&#13;
Editor and f*rcpri«ior.&#13;
Subscription Vrice $1 In Advance&#13;
Entered at the Poetoftce at flnckney, Miehi***.&#13;
as aecond-claee matter.&#13;
Advertising rstee made known on application.&#13;
Business Cards, 14.00 per year.&#13;
Death and marriage uoticee published tree.&#13;
Announcements of entertelntoeote may be paid&#13;
for, if desired, by preeenting the office with tlckete&#13;
of admission. In case tlckete are not brought&#13;
to the office, regular rates will be charged*&#13;
All matter In local notice column will be chare&#13;
ed at 5 centa per line or fraction thereof, for each&#13;
Insertion. where no time is specined, all notices&#13;
will be inserted until ordered discontinued, and&#13;
will be charged for accordingly. £*V"AU changes&#13;
of advertisements MCttT reach this office as early&#13;
ae TUSSBAY morning to insure an insertion the&#13;
same week.&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIRECTORY,&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PRBSIDEKT.. .— ...Claude L. Sfgler.&#13;
TtiUsTens, Geo. Eeaaoa Jr., ff, &amp;. Murphy, f. G.&#13;
Jackson, F. J. Wright, £ . K. Brown, C. L. Grime*.&#13;
CLBKK. fi. H. Teeple.&#13;
T B B A 8 C B B » . . J A. Cadwell.&#13;
AssBsson D. W. Mtirta&#13;
STBBBT COMJOSSIONBB A. Monks&#13;
iUaaABL P. Monroe.&#13;
HEALTHOrrxoin ...Dr.H. F.Sigler.&#13;
ATTORNEY ; W. A. Carr.&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
HY NOT MY THE BEST?)&#13;
I&#13;
/T GOOD S A W ) L E J - »&#13;
^ 1 h the most noticeable woA&#13;
pokak on a Bicycle* *#«i»&#13;
Whs* iasyaeg; lasss* oa gatcta* a&#13;
DUlCni2&gt; SADDLE.&#13;
Oat a&#13;
+^+^*t^**^****^*+*&#13;
the young man as he sat watching the&#13;
girl. It was an expression that comes&#13;
only to one when he realizes that the&#13;
object of his love is wholly his own.&#13;
The careless indifference of his tone&#13;
showed that he felt secure in her love,&#13;
and had no fear that an idle word&#13;
dropped in jest would precipitate anything&#13;
more serious than a lovers' quarrel—&#13;
a mere trifle, which a honeyed&#13;
word and a little caress at the proper&#13;
time would smooth over in a moment.&#13;
"Pshaw! You never eome to the&#13;
point."&#13;
As the young girl remained seated at&#13;
the table his words seemed to keep&#13;
ringing In her ears. While they had&#13;
angered her, she had never attempted&#13;
to contradict him. Indeed, as the moments&#13;
passed on she had ample opportunity&#13;
to reflect that what he said was&#13;
only too true.&#13;
It was no wonder the impetuous&#13;
lover, as he sat impatiently watching&#13;
her, said that she never came to the&#13;
point. She was a woman, and she was&#13;
trying to sharpen a lead pencil.&#13;
K i U « 4 by • Kail t a tat* B o o t .&#13;
An inquest was held recently concerning&#13;
the death of George Wood^ged&#13;
82 years, lately residing at North Kensington,&#13;
England. The evidence&#13;
showed that about six weeks previous&#13;
the deceased complained of a nail in&#13;
his boot having punctured his foot&#13;
Afterward the toe began to swell, and&#13;
he complained of hoauwness. Early&#13;
one morning he had a sudden apssan&#13;
and his jaw became looked. He was removed&#13;
to the Infirmary, where he died&#13;
the next day. Dr. H. P. Fatter tea*.&#13;
when admitted the deceased hack was&#13;
arched; he li • ilaga*Ta*aVcd tfce limbs;&#13;
fee was unat^ S ^ f o o d . hat jaws&#13;
OVEREATING.&#13;
It has been computed by some one&#13;
fond of mathematical calculations and&#13;
antithetical conceits that if the food&#13;
which is consumed in Great Britain not&#13;
only in excess of need, but to the actual&#13;
harm of the eaters, could be saved and&#13;
sent to India, it would more than supply&#13;
the wants of the starving thousands&#13;
in that country.&#13;
MBTHODIST BPISCOPAL CEUftCH.&#13;
Rev. M. H.iicMabon pastor. Services every&#13;
Sunday morning at U):iW, and erery Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:00 o'clock. Prayer meeting Thursday&#13;
evenings. Sunday school at close of morn-&#13;
OKservice. Mrs. Esitlla Graham, Suoerintend't.&#13;
CONlitUJGAflONALCHUUCH.&#13;
O. B. Jk&gt;oe&amp;, pastor. Service every&#13;
Sunday morning at 10:30, and erery Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:0C o'clock. Prayer meeting Thursday&#13;
eveninge. Bunday school at close of morninn&#13;
service. I. J. Coek, Supt. S. T. Grimes, Sec.&#13;
ST. MA K¥"S 'JATtfOLIC C H U itCH.&#13;
Eev. M. J. Comui^rford, Pastor. Services .&#13;
every third Sunday. Low mass at 7:30 o'clock, !&#13;
high mass with sermon at y.30a. m. Catechism&#13;
ata:0o p. m., vespers ana benediction at 7:3u p.m.&#13;
J offered,&#13;
{ onlv&#13;
K B E B -&#13;
S Just out 192-&#13;
) page book of&#13;
( Tioney sav-&#13;
( lug and&#13;
, wholesale&#13;
I Drtcernlde.&#13;
} Write for It ^ ^&#13;
I A. M. ROTHSCHILD &amp; CO.&#13;
i * . . . WHOLESALE.&#13;
&gt; State. Vaa Berea ta Jackaoa-ata, Caeca**.&#13;
Mention (hi* paper.&#13;
*ya%%»»%»ay%*yaa^sA*^a%*^%a^i%%»&gt;aa^%aaa*j&#13;
PATENTS Caveats and Trade stark* obtained and all Patent&#13;
business conducted for Moderate Pee*. 1 Bend model, drawing or photo. We advise If,&#13;
patentable free of charge. Onrteenotdn*tUl&lt;&#13;
patent i s secured. A Paaaphlet "Bow to Obtain&#13;
Patents." with cost o f same In t h e U,&#13;
and foreign countries sent free. Add*****&#13;
C. A. 8NOW &amp; CO.&#13;
Ore. P A T E N T O r n c « . WaSHINaTOH, O . C .&#13;
Epilepsy cored by Dr. Mile*" Kervta*.&#13;
SOCIETIES;&#13;
IThe A. O. H. Society of thie plane, meets every&#13;
. third Sunday ia tne Fr. Matthew Hail.&#13;
John McGuiness, County Delegate.&#13;
This computation is of course little&#13;
more than a guess, but it serves to emphasize&#13;
the fact that many, perhaps&#13;
the majority of mankind above the&#13;
ranks of the very poor, sin against&#13;
themselves daily by overeating.&#13;
DR. A. B. GREEN.&#13;
DENTIST—Every Thursday and Friday&#13;
Office over Sigler's Drug Store.&#13;
ninckney Y. P. S. C&#13;
Mrs&#13;
E.&#13;
Sunday evening in Cong'l church at 6:¾) o'clock.&#13;
- H. W. Crofot, Pres.&#13;
Meetings held every&#13;
church &amp;*)o' "&#13;
Kittie tfrieve^oc.&#13;
IfPWORTH LEAGUE. —Mewe.t«s every Sunday&#13;
evening at 6:00 oclock in the M. E. Cburcb. A&#13;
cordial invitation is extended to everyone, especially&#13;
young people. .Mies Jennie Hez«\ Pro-.&#13;
JunioTTEpwortn League Meets&#13;
afternoon at 3:00 o'clock, at M. E church&#13;
cordially invited&#13;
every Sunday&#13;
' • -All&#13;
Mies Alice McMahon Superintendent.&#13;
Ihe C. T&#13;
everr t&#13;
thew Hail.&#13;
A. and B. Society of this place, meet&#13;
third Sataroay ovening in the fr. Mat&#13;
John Donohue, F resident.&#13;
THE WHEEL OF WHEELS.&#13;
rtStorfh^.1&#13;
"Nothing else like it"&#13;
The most refreshing anc&#13;
pleasant Soap for the skin.&#13;
KNIGHTS OF MACCABEES.&#13;
Meet every Friday evening on or before fall&#13;
of the moon at their hall in the Swartbout uldg.&#13;
Visiting brothers are cordiallv invited.&#13;
CHA». CAMPBELL, Sir Knight Commander&#13;
Livingston Lodge, No.7",? A A. if. K«yi'»?&#13;
Communication Tuesday evening, on or before&#13;
the full of the moon. ii. f. Sigter, W, M.&#13;
0RDEB OF EASTERN STAR meetaeach month i&#13;
the Friday evening following the regular F :&#13;
6A.M. meeting, Mas. c. E L L I X RICHARDS, W.M," j&#13;
LADIES OF THE MACCABEUS. Meet every&#13;
1st and 3rd Saturday of eaeh month at £:30&#13;
o'clock at the K. »&gt;. T. M. halt Visiting sisters '&#13;
cordially invited. JULIA Siousa, Lady Com&#13;
»&#13;
1&#13;
11 ;UIANEOU:&#13;
.SOAP.&#13;
ilatsy AMHSIK FOR net&#13;
fOUXT SUR*Cay4$BATMJ&#13;
PfflCE25t&#13;
*&#13;
*k KNIGHTS OF THE LOYAL GUARD&#13;
meet every second Wednesday&#13;
evening of every month in the K. O.'&#13;
T. M. Hall at 7:30 o'clock. All visiting&#13;
Guards welcome.&#13;
F, L. AXDBKWS, Capt. Gen.&#13;
THE PERFECT&#13;
WHEEL,&#13;
Dont buy a wheel until you seel&#13;
THE CARLISLE and get our prices. I&#13;
THE CARLISLE MFG. CO.'&#13;
B u i u f o g . ( 203Mkbiga*Bouaevn*aV&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
H. F. SIOLEfl M. 0- C, I, SKJLER M, D&#13;
, DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
Physician* asd 6urre*&gt;as Ail calls promptly&#13;
attended today or uight. Office on Main street&#13;
Pln«&gt;cm tt&#13;
•ot oa a "&#13;
S o l d b y F . A . S t a l e r .&#13;
|k lists twice as long as others.&#13;
Atrial will convince you *f its great&#13;
irH. Will pk-uo the saoat faet-dicn*.&#13;
CHARLES F. MILLER, f&#13;
Mar. ei FSROEANFCSH **m Mp&amp;M&amp;JvJ;E&gt;D. 'i'.^;.vZ, T&#13;
Si©gele(&#13;
Have more points of merit, than&#13;
Grade Bicycle.&#13;
PULL OP GRflGB AND&#13;
Hlgb&#13;
aVlald ^«idinff)&#13;
N ' . - • •. *&#13;
~^K&#13;
. • • . " ^&#13;
^&#13;
-M&#13;
.M&#13;
'sty&#13;
&lt; • ' • ; • : • &lt; »&#13;
^&gt;1&#13;
•';|1 i&#13;
' - • • s ' *&#13;
""W&#13;
• • ' &lt; ' ' .&#13;
X'i*1&#13;
^ /&#13;
- . ^ 1&#13;
••-•J ••{*&#13;
'' A--&#13;
K - *-» ' * ; . V /'•*•&lt;&#13;
sr ^ f t a ^ &amp; ::2^.:^-.^5^,&#13;
/ f -,&#13;
J'k *•&gt;'".* '••&lt;•'&#13;
. - « » • : . '&#13;
^ -&#13;
, : * • . - '&#13;
£-7v -vj&#13;
K •.;•&#13;
• I&#13;
: • $ • ' » .&#13;
•7&#13;
\r *&#13;
r i^S&#13;
FRANK I* A&gt;nanw8.. Publisher;'&#13;
PINCKNBY, • * MICHIGAN&#13;
Jim Oorbettu asvartaooa on the dla*&#13;
mood proves that he can't Mt anythin*.&#13;
ITAIMAGE'S SERMON.&#13;
&lt; &lt; f &gt;&#13;
T H S C A U t * O f , m O H T B U U S -&#13;
N E S S F L O U ^ p H l N Q ,&#13;
• 1 1 » 1 . 1 «&#13;
A IUM***** fMun the T«ali U m m t a -&#13;
tlaM, Chapter III, • • » • • at—"Wkwr&#13;
fore Doth a U«ln* Ma« C««o|a»UiT"—&#13;
Ba^twr D«y« A N N*»r at Hand.&#13;
^&#13;
L?-. If,&#13;
a * ' • • ' • . . ,&#13;
The ramson that Quean Victoria&#13;
nevar quarrels with her aervanta la&#13;
t h a t s h e staya out ot the kitchen and&#13;
nevar pokes around to see how late&#13;
their company stay a at n i g h t&#13;
I. — — — — ~ f — »&#13;
In the Whltechapel (London) county&#13;
court three wltneasea In aucceaalon In&#13;
one caae could neither read nor write.&#13;
Three- wltneasea In the case were&#13;
ampajaeV respectively Speller, Reader&#13;
and b r i g h t .&#13;
-~JL plana! hie young man accosted a&#13;
&lt;3eorgla farmer recently, and in a very&#13;
little while induced him to pay ISO&#13;
(or "a machine which he assured him&#13;
would turn out brand new $20 bills&#13;
by simply turning a crank.&#13;
It has been decided by the presbytery&#13;
of New York that after a minister&#13;
of the gospel has said all that his holy&#13;
office, requires him to say about Sunday&#13;
newspapers and the bicycle habit&#13;
and the evils of vaudeville and other&#13;
matters vital to the salvation of the&#13;
human soul he should not be required&#13;
to officiate at funerals on the Sabbath&#13;
day.&#13;
There was a realism in the college&#13;
commencement of earlier days unknown&#13;
to these times. Thus on July&#13;
1, 1797, a newspaper had this paragraph:&#13;
"The elephant is advertised as&#13;
being at Providence on his way to Boston.&#13;
He is to be at Cambridge the approaching&#13;
commencement." ' Even the&#13;
glory of the escorting Boston Lancers&#13;
might be eclipsed were boyish eyes&#13;
now permitted to feaat on an elephant&#13;
within trumpeting distance of the commencement&#13;
proceaafcm.&#13;
&gt;) ^ «1 - y » » ~ . 1 m&#13;
. d u i a M B a x a l orange ortha?d&gt; In California&#13;
are descended, ae an account in&#13;
a contemporary informs us, from two&#13;
tree* Imported from Bratll by the United&#13;
States government and sen* to the&#13;
Pacific coast thirty years ago. It la&#13;
suggested that these trees be removed&#13;
to some public park, and preserved ai&#13;
a monument t o a profitable branch ot&#13;
an industry which haa so enriched&#13;
that atate. The value of the yteld thus&#13;
secured to California, could it be computed,&#13;
would be a sum so great as to&#13;
make these trees seem like fairies, the&#13;
touch of whose wand has made gold&#13;
cover the ground.&#13;
It has been prophesied that at no&#13;
very distant day it will be possible to&#13;
dissipate the thick fog by a charge of&#13;
electricity, and that the atmosphere of&#13;
smoky cities will, by the same means,&#13;
be kept clear and bright. On a small&#13;
scale, a modification of the principle&#13;
has already been applied by Pro. Oliver&#13;
Lodge, who precipitated both&#13;
smoke and dust on the walls Inside&#13;
a chimney or flue by static electricity,&#13;
and now a patent has been taken out&#13;
in Germany for an apparatus for&#13;
smoke prevention by means of wires&#13;
stretched inside a flue or chimney, and&#13;
rendered incandescent by an electric&#13;
current. There is no doubt that this&#13;
extremely simple electrical method&#13;
win nnmpifttj&gt;iv congume the blackest&#13;
smoke possible, but it is at the present&#13;
time too costly to be commercially&#13;
profitable.&#13;
v \&#13;
The announcement Is made by Mr.&#13;
Bellamy Storer, United States minister&#13;
to Belgium, that the United States ambassadors&#13;
to Great Britain and Germany&#13;
will, in common with him, take&#13;
vigorous 'Steps to secure a modification&#13;
of the laws against American sheep,&#13;
cattle and meat products, which now&#13;
involve so large a loss to American&#13;
agricultural interests annually. The&#13;
action taken will be sUnnstaaeous, and&#13;
is the outgrowth of the determination&#13;
ot the administration'at Washington&#13;
to protect Amerkan agricultural interests&#13;
by doing its utmost to have the&#13;
^lsertminating laws of European coontries&#13;
against American products&#13;
changed. As a matter of fact, the attention&#13;
of all United States representatives&#13;
has been called to the need of&#13;
urgent and vigorous action in the&#13;
premises. It is explained by the minister&#13;
i o Belgium that Great Britain and&#13;
Germany control that country, and that&#13;
all three are influenced to discriminate&#13;
H r w American meats by the agrarian&#13;
element in their parliaments on&#13;
the pretense that American sheep, cattle&#13;
and meats are not sufficiently protected&#13;
against disease, and the claim&#13;
that i t e r moat have their own inspectfcNS,&#13;
wfckfe i n practice acts as a prohibition&#13;
of Imports from this country.&#13;
The contention Is made, on the part&#13;
of. the American representatives that&#13;
ottr system of inspection'Is the most&#13;
scientifically complete In the world, and&#13;
that, as a matter of fact, the ground&#13;
of dmtesjfttr l i reimnr eeoooaoic than&#13;
sanitary. The reefcrt of this action on&#13;
CHEERFUL, interrogatory&#13;
In the&#13;
moat melancholy&#13;
book ot the Bible!&#13;
Jeremiah wrote so&#13;
many sad things&#13;
that we have a&#13;
word named after&#13;
him, and when anything&#13;
is surcharged&#13;
with grief and complaint,&#13;
we call It a&#13;
jeremiad. But In my text Jeremiah, aa&#13;
by a sudden jolt, wakens us to a thank*&#13;
ful spirit. - —&#13;
Our blessings are ao^mucb more numerous&#13;
than our deserts that he is surprised&#13;
that anybody should ever find&#13;
fault. Having life, and with it a thouaand&#13;
blessings, it ought to hush into&#13;
perpetual silence everything like criticism&#13;
ot the dealings ot God. "Wherefore&#13;
doth a living man complain?'&#13;
There are three prescriptions by&#13;
which I believe that our individual and&#13;
national finances may be cured ot their&#13;
present depression. The first is cheerful&#13;
conversation and behavior. I have&#13;
noticed that the people who are most&#13;
vociferous against the day in which we&#13;
live are those who are in comfortable&#13;
circumstances. I have made inquiry&#13;
ot those persons who are violent in&#13;
their jeremiads against these times, and&#13;
I have asked them, "Now, after all, are&#13;
you not makinjLa living?" After some&#13;
hesitation and coughing and clearing&#13;
their throat three or four times, they&#13;
say stammeringly, "Y^e-s." So that&#13;
with a great multitude of people it is&#13;
not a question of getting a livelihood,&#13;
but they are dissatisfied because they&#13;
cannot make as much money as they&#13;
would like to make. They have only&#13;
two thousand dollars In the bank.where&#13;
they would like to have four thousand.&#13;
They can clear in a year only five&#13;
thousand dollars, when they would like&#13;
to clear ten thousand, or things coma&#13;
out just even. Or, in their trade they&#13;
get three dollars a day when they wish&#13;
they could make four or five. "Oh!"&#13;
aays some one, "are you not aware of&#13;
the fact that there is a great population&#13;
out of employment, and there are&#13;
hundreds of good families of this country&#13;
who are at their wits' end, not&#13;
knowing which way to turn?" Yes,&#13;
I know it better than any man In private&#13;
life can knOw that sad fact, for&#13;
it comes fc^&gt;etantly to my eye and ear,&#13;
Bat who is responsible for this state of*&#13;
things?&#13;
Much of that responsibility I put upon&#13;
men in comfortable circumstances,&#13;
who, by an everlasting growling, keep .&#13;
public confidence depressed and new enterprises&#13;
from starting out and new&#13;
houses from being built. You know&#13;
very well that one despondent man can&#13;
talk fifty men into despondency, while&#13;
one cheerful physician can wake up into&#13;
exhilaration a whole asylum of hypochondriacs.&#13;
It is no kindness to the&#13;
poor or the unemployed for you to join&#13;
in this deploration. If you&#13;
have not the wit and the&#13;
common sense to think of something&#13;
cheerful to say, then keep silent. There&#13;
is no man that can be Independent of&#13;
depressed conversation. The medical&#13;
journals are ever illustrating i t I was&#13;
reading of five nfen who resolved that&#13;
they would make an experiment and see&#13;
what they cottld do 1H tliy wa&gt; of depreasing&#13;
a stout, healthy man, and they&#13;
resolved to meet him at different points&#13;
in ids journey; and as he stepped out&#13;
from his house in the morning in robust&#13;
health, one of the five men met&#13;
him and said, "Why, you look very sick&#13;
today. What is the matter?" He said,&#13;
"I am in excellent health; there Is&#13;
nothing the matter." But passing&#13;
down the street, he began to examine&#13;
his symptoms, and the second Of the&#13;
Ave men met him and said, "Why, how&#13;
bad you do look." "Well," he replied,&#13;
- I don't feel very well." After a while&#13;
the third man met him, and the fourth&#13;
man met him, and the fifth man came&#13;
up end said, "Why, you look as if yoe&#13;
had had the typhoid fever for six&#13;
week*. What is the matter with yon?"&#13;
And the man against whom the stratagem&#13;
had been laid went home and diet.&#13;
And tf you meet a man with perpetual&#13;
talk about hard times, and bankruptcy&#13;
sund dreadful winters that are He come,&#13;
yon break down his coerage. A few&#13;
autumns ago, as the winter was ooarlag&#13;
on, people said, "We shall have a'&#13;
terrible winter. The :poor will be frosen&#13;
out this winter." There was something&#13;
in the large store of e e o m s that&#13;
the squirrels had gathered, and something&#13;
in the phases o f the moon, and&#13;
something In other porteadeAhat soade&#13;
yon certain we were going to have a&#13;
hard winter. Winter came. It was&#13;
the mildest one within my memory and&#13;
within yours. All that winter long I&#13;
do not think there was an icicle that&#13;
hung through the day from the eaves&#13;
of the house. 80 you prophesied falsely.&#13;
Last winter was coming, and the&#13;
people said, "We shall have nanaralfteted&#13;
suffering among the poor. It will&#13;
he a dreadful winter." Sore enough it&#13;
was a cold winter; but these was more&#13;
large hearted chanties than&#13;
lore poured out on the country; better&#13;
provision made for the poor, m that&#13;
there have been scores ot winters when&#13;
the poor had a harder time than t&gt;^»&#13;
did last winter. Weather p r o p h ^ , ^&#13;
wa will have frosts this eux&amp;a*;. wAiak&#13;
will kill the harveatey tf6Nt,^etm7te$;&#13;
you, you ha,ve lied trfa* about the&#13;
weather, and I ba^eve you are lying&#13;
this tuna, ,&#13;
The aetoad prescription for the alleviation&#13;
oZ financial distresses la proper&#13;
Christian lavestment. God demands of&#13;
every Individual atate, and nation, a&#13;
certain proportion of their income. We&#13;
are parsimonious! We keep back from&#13;
God that which belongs to him, and&#13;
when we keep back anything from God&#13;
he takes what we keep back, and he&#13;
takes more. He takes it by storm, by&#13;
alckneas, by bankruptcy, by any one&#13;
of the ten thousand ways which he can&#13;
employ. The reason many of you are&#13;
cramped in business Is because you&#13;
have never learned the lesson of Christian&#13;
generosity. You employ an agent.&#13;
You give him a reasonable salary; and,&#13;
-ld:yoiiflsd out that he j s appropriating&#13;
your funds\ besides the salary.&#13;
What do you do? Discharge. him.&#13;
Well, we are God's agents. He pute&#13;
In our hands certain moneys. Part are&#13;
to be ours. Part are to be his. Suppose&#13;
we take all, what then? He will&#13;
discharge us; he will turn us over to&#13;
financial disasters, and take the truat&#13;
away from us. The reason that great&#13;
multitudes are not prospered In business&#13;
is simply because they have been&#13;
withholding from God that which belongs&#13;
to him. The rule is, give, and&#13;
you will receive. Administer liberally,&#13;
and you shall have more to administer.&#13;
J am in full sympathy with the man&#13;
who was to be baptised by immersion,&#13;
and some one said. "You had better&#13;
leave your pocket uook out, it will get&#13;
wet." "No," said he, "I want to go&#13;
down under the wave with everything.&#13;
I want to consecrate my property and&#13;
all to God." And so he was baptized.&#13;
What we want in this country is mors&#13;
baptized pocketbooks.&#13;
I had a relative whose business&#13;
seemed to be tailing. Here a loss, and&#13;
there a loss, and everything was bothering,&#13;
perplexing and annoying him.&#13;
He sat down one day and said, "God&#13;
must have a controversy with me about&#13;
something. I believe I haven't given&#13;
enough to the cause of Christ." And&#13;
tjhere and then he took out his check&#13;
book and wrote a large check for a missionary&#13;
society. He told me, "That&#13;
was the turning point lb my business.&#13;
Ever since then I have been prosperous.&#13;
From that day, aye, from that&#13;
very hour, I saw the change." And,&#13;
sure enough, he went on, and gathered&#13;
a fortune. The only safe Investment&#13;
that a man can make in tbia world is&#13;
in the cause ot Christ If a man give&#13;
from a superabundance, God may or&#13;
he may not respond with a blessing;&#13;
hut if a man give until he feels it, if a&#13;
man give until, it fetches the Mood,&#13;
If a man give until his selfishness&#13;
cringes and twUts and cowers under&#13;
it be will get not only spiritual profit&#13;
but he will get paid back In hard&#13;
cash or in convertible securities. We&#13;
often see men wbo are tight fisted who&#13;
seem to get along with their investments&#13;
very profitably, notwithstanding&#13;
all their parsimony. But wait Suddenly&#13;
in that man's history everything&#13;
goes wrong. His health fails, or his&#13;
reason is dethroned, or a domestic&#13;
curse smites him, or a midnight shadow&#13;
of some kind drops, upon his soul&#13;
and upon his business. What is the&#13;
matter? God is punishing him for his&#13;
small heartedness. He tried to cheat&#13;
God and God worsted him. So that&#13;
one of the recipes for the cure of Individual&#13;
and national finances Is mors&#13;
generosity. Where you bestowed one&#13;
dollar on llie cause of Christ, give two.&#13;
God loves to be trusted, and he Is&#13;
very apt to trust back again. He aays:&#13;
"That man knows how to handls&#13;
money; he shall have more money to&#13;
handle." And very soon the property&#13;
that was on the market tor a great&#13;
while gets a purchaser, and the bond&#13;
that was not worth more than fifty&#13;
cents on a dollar goes to par, and the&#13;
opening ot a new street doubles the&#13;
value of his house, or in any way of a&#13;
million God blesses him.&#13;
people quote as' a joke what Is a divine&#13;
promise: "Cast thy bread upon&#13;
the Waters, and it will return to thee&#13;
after many days." What did God mean&#13;
by that? There is an illusion there. In&#13;
Egypt, when they sow the torn, it is&#13;
at a time when the Nile Is overflowing&#13;
its banks and they sow the seed corn&#13;
on the waters, and as the Nile begins&#13;
to recede this seed corn strikes in the&#13;
earth and comes up a harvest and that&#13;
is the allusion. It.seems as if they are&#13;
throwing the corn away on the waters,&#13;
but after a white they gather it up fa&#13;
a harvest. Now say a God m his Word:&#13;
"Cast thy bread upon tine waters, and&#13;
it shall come back to thee after many&#13;
days," It may seem to yon mat you&#13;
are throwing it away on charities; but&#13;
% will yield a. harvest of green and gold&#13;
—a harvest on earth and a harvest in&#13;
heaven. If men could appreciate that&#13;
and •act on that* we would have no&#13;
more trouble about Individual or national&#13;
finances .&#13;
Prescription the third, for the cure&#13;
of all our individual and national financial&#13;
distresses; a great spiritual&#13;
awakening. It Is no more theory. The&#13;
merchants of this country were positively&#13;
demented with the monetary excitement&#13;
in 181 f. There never before&#13;
nor since has been such a state of flds&#13;
Mm&#13;
uacelr^ d e c i s i o n as there waa at that&#13;
t i o r . * A revival tame, and five hundred&#13;
thousand people were born Into tha&gt;&#13;
kingdom of God. W h a t came after the&#13;
revival? The grandie^ uaanclal pros-&#13;
, pertly ? e hay* aver hj|d In t | i s eounf&#13;
E y ^ n e fljpt rortSiai; t u t largest&#13;
fortunes In tiw United HtateA, have&#13;
been made since 1857. "Wall." yot? say.&#13;
* *hai has aitrttual Improvement-and&#13;
revival to do with monetary Imprs?^-&#13;
ment and revival?" Much to do. The&#13;
religion of Jesus Christ has a direct&#13;
tendency to make men honest and&#13;
sober and truth-telling, and are not&#13;
honesty and sobriety and truth-telling&#13;
auxiliaries ot material prosperity? It&#13;
we could have an awakening in thla&#13;
country as In the days ot Jonathan Edwards&#13;
of Northampton, as lu the days&#13;
of Dr. Pindley of Basking Ridge, aa in&#13;
the days of Dr. Griffin of Boston, the&#13;
whole land would rouse to a higher&#13;
moral tone, and with that moral tone&#13;
the houeot business enterprise of the&#13;
country would come up. You «ay A&#13;
great awakening has an influence upon&#13;
the future world. I tell you It has a&#13;
direct Influence upon the financial&#13;
welfare of thii world, The religion ot&#13;
Christ is no toe to successful business;&#13;
it is Its best friend. And if there&#13;
should come a great awakening In this&#13;
country, and all the banks and insurance&#13;
companies and stores and offices&#13;
and shops should close up for two&#13;
weeks, and do nothing but attend to&#13;
the public worship ot Almighty G o d -&#13;
after such a spiritual vacation the laud&#13;
would wake up to such financial prosperity&#13;
as we have never dreamed ot.&#13;
Godliness is profitable tor the Ufa that&#13;
now is as well as for that which is to&#13;
come. But, my friends, do not put so&#13;
much emphasis on worldly success \&amp;&#13;
to let your eternal affairs go at loose&#13;
ends. I have nothing to say against&#13;
money. The more money you get the&#13;
better, it it comes honestly and goes&#13;
usefully. For the lack of It, sickness&#13;
dies without medicine, and hunger&#13;
finds its coffin In an empty bread-tray,&#13;
and nakedness shivers for clothes and&#13;
fire. All this canting tirade against&#13;
money as though it had no practical&#13;
use, when I hear a man indulge In It,&#13;
it makes me think the best heaven tor&#13;
him would be an everlasting poorhouse!&#13;
No, there is a practical use In&#13;
money; but while we admit that, we&#13;
must also admit that it cannot satisfy&#13;
the soul, that it cannot pay for our ferriage&#13;
across the Jordan of death, that&#13;
It cannot unlock the gate of heaven&#13;
for our immortal soul. Yet there are&#13;
men who act as though packs of bonds&#13;
and mortgages nould be traded off for&#13;
a mansion In heaven, and as though&#13;
gold were a legal tender In that land&#13;
where it is so common that they make&#13;
pavements out of It 8alvation by&#13;
Christ is the only salvation. Treasures&#13;
In heaven are the only Incorruptible&#13;
treasures. Have you ever ciphered out&#13;
that sura in loss and gain, "What shall&#13;
it profit a man tf be gain the whole&#13;
world and lose hiB soul?" You may&#13;
wear fine apparel now, but the winds&#13;
of death will flutter It like rags. Homeppuu&#13;
and a threadbare coat have sometimes&#13;
been the shadow of robes white&#13;
in the blood of the Lamb. All the&#13;
mines of Australia and Brazil, strung&#13;
in one carcanet, are not worth to you&#13;
as much as the pearl of great price.&#13;
You remember, I suppose, some years&#13;
ago, the shipwreck of the Central&#13;
America? A storm came on that vessel.&#13;
The surges tramped the deck and&#13;
swept down through the hatches, and&#13;
there went up a hundred-voiced death&#13;
shriek. The foam on the jaw of the&#13;
wave. The pitching of the steamer,&#13;
as though it would leap a mountain.&#13;
The glare of the signal rockets. The&#13;
long cough of the steam-pipes. The&#13;
hiss of extinguished furnaces. The&#13;
HWMi =s&#13;
walking ot God on the wave. 0, it was&#13;
a stupendous spectacle.&#13;
So, there are men who go on in life&#13;
--a fine voyage they are making out of&#13;
it. All is well, till some euroclydon of&#13;
business disaster comes upon them,&#13;
and they go down. The bottom of this&#13;
commercial sea is strewn with the&#13;
shattered hulks. But, because your&#13;
property goes, shall your soul go? 0,&#13;
no! There Is coming a more stupendous&#13;
shipwreck after a while. This&#13;
world—God launched it 6,000 years ago,&#13;
and It is sailing on; but one day it will&#13;
stagger at the cry of "fire!'" a*d the&#13;
timbers ot the rotks will burn, and&#13;
the mountains flame like masts and&#13;
the clouds like sails in the Judgment&#13;
hurricane. God will take a good many&#13;
off the deck, and others out of the&#13;
berths, where they are now sleeping in&#13;
Jesus. How mamy shall go down? NO&#13;
one will know until it Is announced&#13;
In heaven one day: ^Shipwreck of a&#13;
world! So many millions saved! So&#13;
many millions drowned!" Because&#13;
your fortunes go, because your house&#13;
goes, because all your earthly pose&#13;
Ions go, do net tet your soul go! MMT\*&amp;*&#13;
the Lord Almighty, through the blood&#13;
of the everlasting covenant, save your&#13;
souls.&#13;
T H » JAPS KICK HARD&#13;
Ago****,*** fatted a t e t ^ ^aueate* the*&#13;
/ sua»euea^«»au*i, - ' l j \&#13;
T/hat JapaMwill continue to. oppose&#13;
th*&gt;Hewaiten annexation treaty is c o w&#13;
ciusively shown by the latest protest&#13;
of^tfee, Jaoanese government addressed&#13;
to^feretej-y of^State "Sherman, which&#13;
has been made public. ,&#13;
The protest bpgioa by,admitting rtya&#13;
predominant and paramount Influence&#13;
of the United State* in Hawaii, but'&#13;
aays that ia a reason why the status&#13;
quo should not be disturbed. Only a&#13;
small fraction of the population of&#13;
Hawaii desire annexation. The. absorption&#13;
of Hawaii by the United&#13;
States would doubtless be the signal&#13;
for the revival of dormant territorial&#13;
ambition in toe &amp;acino«-oa- itii% part of&#13;
the European powers and tneTast vestige&#13;
of native autonomy would disappear.&#13;
And it is not too much, to apprehend&#13;
that a partial redistribution of&#13;
colonial possessions among the various&#13;
western powers might also follow? It&#13;
can easily be *een jiow thla would nf*&#13;
feet the interestsi of Japanese subjects&#13;
who are now engaging in increasing&#13;
numbers in various undertakings and&#13;
enterprises in the. Pacific witf.ppoflt&#13;
to themselves and advantage te&gt;J»nen.&#13;
The imperial government recognises&#13;
i t as a well established principle of International&#13;
law, t h a t . t h e completion&#13;
of annexation would render the treaties&#13;
and conventions al'present existing&#13;
between Japan and Hawaii ^voidable,&#13;
either at the option of Japan or the&#13;
United States, and they catmot antici*&#13;
pate this without apprehension. .The&#13;
sphere of Japan's expanding activities&#13;
is J,o the Pacific Her trade with/Hawaii&#13;
is important, and nearly 36,000&#13;
Japanese subjects are now residing&#13;
there. Under the circumstances bnly&#13;
the most cursory review of the actual&#13;
situation is required to show1 file* disadvantageous&#13;
position in which Japan&#13;
would be placed by the ahrupt termln&#13;
ation of her treaties: The importance&#13;
to Japan of the stable and well-recognized&#13;
commercial, residential and industrial&#13;
status which her s u b l e t s have&#13;
gained in Hawaii, is consequently&#13;
evident&#13;
The Japanese, papers contain an interview&#13;
with Gount Okuraa, the Japanese&#13;
minister of foreign affairs, relative&#13;
to the proposed annexation ot Hawaii&#13;
by the United- States: ^'Japan must oppose&#13;
It to the* utmost." (The annexation&#13;
^ustnotrbe re/cognited. England haa&#13;
repeatedly attempted to make Egypt&#13;
dependenthut prance bemgvooaitively&#13;
opposed teruVnt a*Mgemefl|| England&#13;
la obliged to abide by the status quo.&#13;
Just In the same way Japan must op-&#13;
Upee t h e ' annexation to the utmost, -&#13;
4nd must stand by this decision resolutely.&#13;
Japan has communicated to&#13;
England, Germany and France the&#13;
Saeons for the protest against annexion1.'&#13;
THe&gt; may send! their answers&#13;
before long."&#13;
The'London S t JaaieS GauetUh commenting&#13;
upon Japan's protest to the&#13;
Hawaiian .$tovx*ti0i£jm: MAecordro?&#13;
te8aropl#n usage, l t * W e W u to&#13;
a threat to resist the transfer of the&#13;
archipelago by force, and is equivalent&#13;
to warning the United States that tbey&#13;
must give lip their views as to Hawaii&#13;
or prepare for war."&#13;
A' Chicago dispatch' aays that a most&#13;
gigantic^ruat or combination of capital&#13;
is abeatt to be formed by pooling&#13;
the i n t e r 4 t a j £ t**,Stenderd Oil Co.,&#13;
tbje leather^ sugar,' tobacco, whiaky,&#13;
paint and oil trusts, witii 84 totAl cap*&#13;
ital represented of $1,000,000.00$&#13;
T H E M A « H E T S&#13;
*&#13;
N«w York—Cattle&#13;
a m treses 11 tf&#13;
Lower grades&#13;
h Chicago—&#13;
Best grades..&#13;
Lower grades&#13;
botrolt— B*stt(rade8..&#13;
Lover grades&#13;
BeVal*—&#13;
Best grades..&#13;
Lower grades. .2 25®4 00&#13;
CliMleaatl—&#13;
Best grades....4&#13;
Lowergrades.. 2&#13;
CUveUad—&#13;
Best grades... 4&#13;
Lower grades ..2&#13;
Ptuabor*—&#13;
Best grades....4&#13;
Lower grades..*&#13;
.4 10*4 S3&#13;
140&#13;
00&#13;
4 09&#13;
f2tt*i&#13;
2 »&#13;
l a t&#13;
92?&#13;
eoa4 w 4*m&#13;
MuV4M *%&#13;
• »&#13;
4 00&#13;
3 f t&#13;
600&#13;
8 »&#13;
4 »&#13;
3 06-&#13;
875&#13;
8*0*&#13;
375-&#13;
soaset&#13;
« 6 *&#13;
410&#13;
3 «&#13;
Mei&#13;
QKAIV, BfX.&#13;
Wheat, Cora, 0ets.&#13;
No. 2 red No. 1 mix N a * white&#13;
Yotk. «5 ¢85¼ M 0)84¼ fe*gtfl*V&#13;
TC 4*7«* 30X9*«*&#13;
27 etr&#13;
» * * *&#13;
«8 4 *&#13;
Vfc* Child Is *a4Kt* f the&#13;
Tommie—Would yer like to know&#13;
now oM sister Is, Mr. Smith? Mr.&#13;
Smith—Yes; how old is she. Tommie&#13;
—Waal, I alius git a quarter for taUia*&#13;
i t&#13;
*DotfOit 7S Q7«&#13;
Toledo 75 uVW&#13;
n uw s*&#13;
7* «Z5* 98&#13;
W SJlie 28&#13;
•Detrett^Bay.Ko. I Umotby.ato^eper too.&#13;
flew Potatoes, sac per bo. Ure PoaHrv.&#13;
«prla« chicken*, 18c per lb; fowl, 7Me»4acka,&#13;
:v &lt;&#13;
m&#13;
at est&#13;
stswusw or&#13;
The widespread confidence that these will&#13;
be a auurked revival la seoexsl fenase In the&#13;
fall continues to grow, aea with it saaterial&#13;
evidence that it T» well founded, l &amp; c a g e&#13;
lobbers i s clothing, dry goods and sope*, and&#13;
manufacturers there and elsewhere report&#13;
that fall business tfalrhrtroa, Whichta much&#13;
earlier than usual The «ed of uncertainty&#13;
regarding duties oiuiaports-elves greater&#13;
confidence alike to toooe who have opposed&#13;
and those wbo have favored the change&#13;
The&lt;one retarding force—the strike o f t e o .&#13;
Paiat for Loafors. coal miners-has caused the closkngof a 1 e*J&#13;
/\r&gt;*. T»/M*».M raMiAXn* in • .la*!** •**- maauxactortng works for want of «uel, but&#13;
One woman residing » a Jfeiau fll- ewgoUattons for settlement are atilf pushed&#13;
lage has been so much annoyed s y •**« jEfte « 1 « n « » ^ ; i * K * B h i **•« **&#13;
loafers teat** i ^ f h t t h e r tarns that ) &amp; ^ X S S S S t S S ^ ^&#13;
ah&lt; now keep* rt freshly painted \1&amp;JW!^£rtU*t *** lerefea aswlftfosja ,&#13;
/&#13;
/&#13;
. ' • * ' . ' • , • ' • * &gt; : • • • ' • ' * ' ^ / " ' /&#13;
J »t .&#13;
?,•'*#' :"&#13;
. ' \ ' ' ' ' . * .- &gt; : • • ' « ,• " • . . , ' * • •"*,-•' ' • '.L&#13;
• : : , • • ' , "•••• . , • . • . • ' . . • . * . . ' &gt; , •• • • - ! - " ' • * ' - ' &lt; - * • ' * , &gt; • ' ' • ; . • , • - &amp; • &lt; ;'• ' &amp; • • ' - * ' : ' •&#13;
•• •' .-,..-.. f M&lt;; " .'''. / ^ f / / ^ , / ^ " v^*"-*'.v ?;':-: •-',*/.•••.rr:.^&#13;
: .,•* .-r.vA;,&amp;\^-v-'r vw .--^aW • •••'•, ^/.r-i^r-V.&#13;
•t*S&lt;i\ :,r ,y-i •::-. •• "' - ' .' ' • • • • • • • ' •••' ' . • ' • : • '•'&gt;•••* •• '&#13;
..••&lt;r;^ • . - - • * / - : . 1 . - - - - . - - V ;..,&#13;
', %•*&#13;
* M »&#13;
• « • •••r*-W*»j«»«*«*«»». * - M » « t a i*»7 « 4&#13;
&gt;»&#13;
* %\&#13;
U wmfcasm afr fchS stoaseh. , » is the&#13;
sonrca of untold" misery. It way be&#13;
cured by toning, snd strengthening the&#13;
stomach and enrioh$ag and purifying/the i&#13;
blood with Hbod'i Sarsapsrllla. Many i&#13;
khoaiand« bava bean cured by thl» medi-&#13;
«ina and wrlW tbat now ta#y "can eafc&#13;
anything (hay With without dlttreie."&#13;
Hood't Saraaparllla&#13;
la prepared by C. I. Hood &amp; Co., LowoU, MAM.&#13;
lokt by dmgg&lt;eU. fl, *lxfor»&amp;, OetHooo'a.&#13;
He&gt;Od'« Pllla'ouro all Uver Jus. 26 oenU.'&#13;
M. a, VHLIMOH aca.Wub.'&#13;
iB«toa,n.a NaiMUUr '&#13;
PATENTS —cuifi. «•»#•«• beak Awe.&#13;
wt&#13;
n D A D Q V NEW W3C0VEPV; ^»- «%Mf«Wr.% h^eJawrt% fo9r book o1l twq»uti*ckm roenlli»tiUt wan*ad .c u1r0aadw»uTm»t'&#13;
ereMmautyrtat ar. a.a.oaitiai&gt;inteiia»fm&gt;y»uiy&#13;
i ^ ^ ^ B MO wb««i (or WM, e» (or eaa, eiot W&#13;
• ^ ^ ™ * ^ M l i O . O. O.'0Q »pproT»l. Cttolof (roil.&#13;
B.A*JWai«pr#i » T &gt; . , W J #«kMk AIMM. WN««.|&#13;
^ ^ " ^ • • • • • ^ • ^ ^ • " ^ • • ^ " ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ " ^ ^ ^ • ^ ^ ^ ^ • ^ " ^ ^ • * ^ ^ " • L I I L L r A l l Hfl 9 kood prttoa. Kv«y&#13;
r n C r tormor'«aon afcouid »e«k « homa in tb*&#13;
«MMHu4tlM»ro »UBkTtdr to any other &gt;uM o( «b«&#13;
vorMU Appl/ (or fall ptrtloultn to the&#13;
QANAOIAN PAOIFIO RAILWAY,&#13;
pom—»i w aw* »t., tamee.&#13;
UNIVERSITY OP NOTRE DAME,&#13;
Notra Pama, Indiana.&#13;
«bOjMlAiMlealMl o, wI^l USloero**.r Sioo»lol nXoon,g Ltn»«w«,r Cljilgr.U , X«- Tnoronith PrepAratorr »«4 Commerolal -CoarsM. BoeiMluttMU *tud»aU at spoci»l rotoo.&#13;
Booms Fro*. Junior or Uoolor Yoar, CoUogteto&#13;
-Coanm. B|. Kaword't Hall, (or boys nnoor tt.&#13;
The 107 th Term will open Sopterobor 7 th,&#13;
t a 0B7 (r .G Attt.n lMQfotTrarot oMyya,t pF.r oa*. Con^ Paprpeloiciadtiooont .t o HarvestExcuTsions! AAUllfBi i 00 Ul lni nll I1f7i oTfo ttbhee WFaremn. rNerpirotaha-&#13;
CBT, 5 ANO 19. a;.1' 2^? i Q J S 4iM*ytsi-r ob ptooplo toev aetr aablloouwt ehda lofn fag-roe' good (arTl Ask your local ageat for portloula&#13;
„ tog paasave.&#13;
tloulara.&#13;
ftUrUenmea ottrrvaaaiieepddp ppliaaeanm^mpohhnllee ttto dd Piias,cc arr,ll hiE tfUf?ST NItt,B ORAoaII'Ul P saennt.&#13;
ttotoirmppneaVonto P, a, I&#13;
Afk. C, B. A Q B. B. Cbluigo. i n H " HALL'S&#13;
Vegetable Sicilian&#13;
HAIR RENEWER&#13;
Beautifies and restores; Gray&#13;
Hair to its original color and&#13;
vitality; prevents baldness;&#13;
cures itching and dandruff.&#13;
A fine) hair dressing.&#13;
(&#13;
em reman&#13;
IrriiliTlJS* w u M n U o a i&#13;
of a v o o a i m—braon.&#13;
~F gaoiaaito oMr ,| «ad aot aatria*&#13;
SIOO To Any Man.&#13;
WILL PAY S)lOO FOR ANY CA8E&#13;
INTERNATIONAL PRESS AMOCfATION.&#13;
la Moa Thoy&#13;
rail to Care.&#13;
An Omaha Company places for the Ant&#13;
1before sate paMfa a KAOICJX TaaiT- Cor the enroot Lost Vitality, Merrooa&#13;
loxaoi Woakmoos, aad Rootorotion of&#13;
l i f e Fovea la old and yoang aeon. No&#13;
;«ofavo«t Frojaob roBsody; POP tains no&#13;
Phosphorus or other harmful drags. It is&#13;
;• Wosrnaarox TasuTnaar- magtoal in its&#13;
oaTeots positlTo in its cure. All roadors,&#13;
who are ssuTorfrtg from a w earn em that&#13;
ht^kta their life, couaiag that mental and&#13;
idijsiisil seaTsrlaa ntnals" to Lest sfaa&lt; &lt;&#13;
po*4LshonM srritoto'tha^STATE MEDICAL&#13;
lOOMFAjrY, Oaftaha, Kob., aid~"fhar""will&#13;
" you absolatoly TBJBfi, a Talaable&#13;
' - .smapoaittaeproofs&#13;
naavaonf*. Thoua*&#13;
have lost aM hope of a&#13;
rtarad by them to a perlaotnnaiitsliiir&#13;
This Miwnr TaatnrsirT may bo takoa&#13;
dirootloaa, or thoy wiU&#13;
ed hotel bitte to aU&#13;
Seder to go&#13;
iaaltooareV&#13;
'hjpre no Fras ^ - .&#13;
Kreeaampie. o r C O. C. fake. Thoy hare&#13;
l*se\MS oapital, aad guaraatee to ours Cay nasiihaytpaator rofaad orerydol-&#13;
; or their «h*nje* may hedspa&#13;
jhsjk to bo paidto tkam wSeaT&#13;
atiefil Writs them today.&#13;
h i&#13;
aomre is&#13;
CHAPTER IX.—fCouTiwuap.)&#13;
She ceased her tirade, and stood gazing&#13;
keenly at Marjorie, who sat still,&#13;
listening in wdaderr Despite her sharp&#13;
tone and brusque manner, there was&#13;
a tenderness In her tone that could not&#13;
be mistaken. Then, all at once, with&#13;
the abruptness peculiar to her, she&#13;
changed her tone again, and broke into&#13;
a low, chuckling laugh.&#13;
"And now I hae preach'd my sermon/*&#13;
"stie saloT, witnTTier grim smile;&#13;
"hae you had breakfast? Will you tak'&#13;
tome tea?"&#13;
But Marjorie had breakfaatod before&#13;
itartlng, and wanted nothing.&#13;
"Very well. Come and walk in the&#13;
jarden," ,&#13;
She led the way from the room, and&#13;
Harjorie quietly followed.&#13;
Passing out by the rear of the house&#13;
.Toss a lonely court yard, they reached&#13;
i door in the high wall, and entered&#13;
die garden—a wilderness of fruit trees,&#13;
ihrubs, and currant bushes, sadly In&#13;
leed of the gardener's band. Tangled&#13;
jreepers and weeds . grew over the&#13;
irassy paths. Here and there were&#13;
leats, and in one corner was an arbor&#13;
Almost buried in umbrage. It was a&#13;
Jesolate, neglected place, but the HUU&#13;
•/as shining, and the air was bright&#13;
rod warm.&#13;
Miss Hetherlngton took her companion's&#13;
arm and walked slowly from path&#13;
to path.&#13;
"The garden's like Its mistress," she&#13;
said, presently, "lonesome and neglectit.&#13;
Since Wattle Henderson died, I hae&#13;
never employed a regular gardener.&#13;
But it's bonny in summer time, for a'&#13;
that, and I like it. wild as it la. I&#13;
should like weel to be burled here,&#13;
right in the heart o' the auld place!"&#13;
She entered the neglected arbor and&#13;
sat 4own wearily. Marjorie stood looking&#13;
at her in timid sympathy, while&#13;
she pursued the dreary current of her&#13;
thought&#13;
"Folk say I'm mean, and maybe I&#13;
am; but it's no that! I'm the last o'&#13;
the. Hetheringtons, and it's right and&#13;
fitting that the place should waste awa'&#13;
like, mysel'. But I mind the time weel&#13;
—It's no aae lang syne—when it was&#13;
gladsome and merry. Everything was&#13;
in grand order then, and my father&#13;
kept open house to the gentry. Now a's&#13;
changed! Whiles I wonder what will&#13;
become o' the auld house when I'm&#13;
ta'en. Strangers will come, maybe, and&#13;
turn It upside doon. What would you&#13;
dae, Marjorie Annan, if you were a rich&#13;
leddy and mistress o' a place like&#13;
this?"&#13;
The question came so abruptly at the&#13;
end of the long string of lamentations,&#13;
that Marjorie scarcely knew what to&#13;
reply. She smiled awkwardly, and repeated&#13;
the question.&#13;
"What would I do, Miss Hetherlngton?"&#13;
"Ay. Come!"&#13;
"I cannot tell, but I don't think I&#13;
could bear to live here all alone."&#13;
"Ay, indeed? Would you sell the&#13;
Castle, and pooch the siller?"&#13;
"No, Miss Hetherlngton. I should like&#13;
to keep what mj fuiebtHis had owned."&#13;
The lady nodded her head approvingly.&#13;
"The lassie has sense after a'!" she&#13;
exclaimed. "Ay ay, Marjorie, you're&#13;
right! It's something to belang to the&#13;
line o' the Hetheringtons, and the auld&#13;
lairds o' the Moss would rise in their&#13;
graves if they kenned that strangers&#13;
were dwelling on the land."&#13;
CHAPTER X.&#13;
ABLY in the afternoon,&#13;
after a dismal&#13;
lunch, tete-atete&#13;
with Miss&#13;
Hetherlngton, Marjorie&#13;
returned home&#13;
across the fields.&#13;
The sun was just&#13;
beginning to sink&#13;
as she paased&#13;
through the village&#13;
and approached the&#13;
As she did so, she saw Mr.&#13;
Lornlae standing inside the churchyard&#13;
gate in quiet conversation with&#13;
the French tasoher.&#13;
She entered the churchyard and&#13;
joined these, the frentftmaa aahrting&#13;
her with lifted hat as ahe approached.&#13;
"Ah, Marjorie, my bairn/' said the&#13;
minister, "you are hone early. Did&#13;
you walk back? I thoaght you would&#13;
have stayed later, and that Miss Hethlngton&#13;
would have seat JOVL hoane in&#13;
the caxriags after gOojuaiag."&#13;
Marjorie glaaoed at Ossssldlere, aad&#13;
•net his eyes. .&#13;
••She did aot wish me to star/* ahe&#13;
answered, "and I was clad to escape.&#13;
Bat I see yoaand Mojismar CtassMiere&#13;
have snads sVttavda. I met hist oa the&#13;
-way. aad he said he was coming hw."&#13;
"So he has t*Kl aae/* said Mr. JLor-&#13;
*1 have last been showing him&#13;
over the kirk and through the graveyard,&#13;
and now I have invited him to&#13;
take pot-luck, as the English call it,&#13;
this evening."&#13;
"But it is so late, monsieur," said&#13;
Marjorie. "How will you get back to&#13;
Dumfries?"&#13;
"Did you not know?" returned the&#13;
Frenchman, smiling. "I am taking a&#13;
leetle holiday, like yourself! I have&#13;
engaged a bed at the inn, and shall not&#13;
return till lEaHbeginnlng of the week."&#13;
They entered the manse together, and&#13;
Cajiasldlere joined them at their simple&#13;
evening meal.&#13;
When tea was over they sat round&#13;
the hearth. The minister lit his pipe&#13;
anc his guest a cigar. They were chatting&#13;
pleasantly together, when Solomon&#13;
Mucklebackit, who had been up to&#13;
the village on some household errand,&#13;
quietly entered.&#13;
"Johnnie Sutherland's at the door.&#13;
Will you see him?"&#13;
Marjorie started, tor she had an Instinctive&#13;
dread of a meeting between&#13;
the two young men; but the minister&#13;
at once replied: *&#13;
"Show him in, Solomon;" and as tbe&#13;
sexton disappeared, he said to his guest,&#13;
"A young friend of ours, and a schoolfellow&#13;
of my foster-daughter."&#13;
The next moment Sutherland appeared.&#13;
A look of surprise passed over&#13;
his face as he saw the stranger, who&#13;
rose politely, but, recovering himself,&#13;
he stook the minister warmly by the&#13;
hand.&#13;
"Welcome, Johnnie," said Mr. Lorraine.&#13;
"Take a seat Do you know&#13;
Monsieur Caussidlere? Then let me&#13;
introduce you."&#13;
Sutherland nodded to the Frenchman,&#13;
who bowed courteously. Their&#13;
eyes met, and then both looked at Marjorie.&#13;
"Monsieur Caussidlere is my French&#13;
teacher," she .said smiling.&#13;
Sutherland looked somewhat pawled,&#13;
and sat down in slienee. After an awkward&#13;
pause, the minister began questioning&#13;
him on his London experiences;&#13;
he replied almost in monosyllables,&#13;
and was altogether so bashful&#13;
and constrained that Marjorie could&#13;
not avoid drawing an unfavorable comparison&#13;
in her own mind between htm&#13;
and the fluent Frenchman.&#13;
"An artist, monsieur?" said the latter,&#13;
presently, having gathered the fact&#13;
from some of Mr. Lorraine's questions.&#13;
"I used to paint, when I was a boy,&#13;
but, finding I could not excel, I abandoned&#13;
the attempt. To succeed in your&#13;
profession is the labor of a life, and,&#13;
alas! so many fail."&#13;
"That's true enough," returned Sutherland,&#13;
"and when I see the great pictures,&#13;
I despair."&#13;
"He paints beautifully, monsieur,"&#13;
cried Marjorie, eager to praise her&#13;
friend. "Does he not, Mr. Lorraine?"&#13;
The minister nodded benignly.&#13;
"Ah, Indeed," said Caussidlere, with&#13;
a slight yawn. "The landscape, monsieur,&#13;
or the human figure?"&#13;
"I have tried both," replied Sutherland.&#13;
"I think I like figure painting&#13;
TS&amp;C :&#13;
"Then you shall not go far to find a&#13;
subject," exclaimed Caussidlere, waving&#13;
his hand toward Marjorie. "Ah, if&#13;
I were an artist, I would like to paint&#13;
mademoiselle. I have seen each a face,&#13;
auch eyea, and hair, in some Of the Madonnas&#13;
of the great Raphael."&#13;
Marjorie cast down her eyes, then&#13;
raised them again, laughing.&#13;
He has painted me, and more than&#13;
once; but I'm thinking he flattered the&#13;
aitter. Miss Hetherlngton has one of&#13;
the pictures up at the Castle."&#13;
Caussidlere fixed his eyea suspiciously&#13;
upon Sutherland.&#13;
"Do you work for pleasure, monsieur,&#13;
or for profit? Perhaps you are&#13;
a man of fortune, and paint for amusement&#13;
only?"&#13;
The question tickled the minister,&#13;
who laughed merrily.&#13;
"I am only a poor man," answered&#13;
Sutherland, "and paint for my bread."&#13;
"It la aa honorable occupation," said&#13;
Caassidiere, emphatically, though aot&#13;
without the suspicion of a covert sneer.&#13;
"At one time the artist was mejdected&#13;
and despised; now he Is honored for&#13;
h&lt;8 occupation, and can make much&#13;
moaey#"&#13;
The conversation oontiaued by fits&#13;
aad starts, fcutfertfcaYiantfs appaf^aaee&#13;
seemed to have unite destroyed the gay&#13;
freedom of the little party. At last&#13;
Solomon reappeared and grimly announced&#13;
that it was nine o'clock.&#13;
"We keep early hours," 'xpiaiaed&#13;
Mr. Lorraine, "and are all abed at tan&#13;
o'clock."&#13;
"Then I will go," cried Caussidiere.&#13;
rialac. ybut I shall call again. It i s&#13;
often in Scotland, one finds such&#13;
s s s s m v ^^^Saa^a^ass^^aa^ajy' • Csasairtlefffi shook the&#13;
oordlaHy, and favored&#13;
8H3P 5PV Mtr^aW&#13;
with a warm&#13;
Had&#13;
t&#13;
and M « w r l v ^ * ^ » ^&#13;
which left her' more dislmH^* J T S&#13;
i f i T T^sp'the t1»? wnj •fOpO**'0 1&#13;
th* *mse together&#13;
Osjmsidler* and Satherl***&#13;
up the-village aide by 44B iaVtk*&#13;
of ths&gt; moos, which was them atfhw&#13;
IttUj;-'..,../ ., ' , . ' , • - „ . v&#13;
"You are a native of this placv, monsieur?"&#13;
said the Frenchman, after a&#13;
long silence.&#13;
"Yes," was the quiet reply.&#13;
"A charming placed a i d the/ people&#13;
still more charming! You have, known&#13;
our old friend a long, long time?"&#13;
"Ever since 1 can mind."&#13;
"And his daughter-rhjs f^ftoj&gt;daimhter,&#13;
I should say? I have heanf Jjer&#13;
story; it is romantic, monsieur; it&#13;
touches my heart Do yo^ think her&#13;
prettyr&#13;
Sutherland started at the question,&#13;
which was made with apparent nonchalance,&#13;
but in reality with eager suspicion.&#13;
He was silent, and the other&#13;
continued:&#13;
"She is hot like one of common birth;&#13;
ahe has the grace of a lady. I was&#13;
struck with her elegance when she&#13;
first came to me for lessons,&#13;
child! To have neither father&#13;
mother, to be a castaway! It is&#13;
sad."&#13;
"She Is happy and well-cared&#13;
sturdily answered Sutherland,&#13;
didn't like the turn the conversation&#13;
waa taking; "and ahe has many true&#13;
friends."&#13;
"Yourself among the number, I am&#13;
sure!" said Caussidlere quickly.&#13;
'Ton are right there, at any rate," returned&#13;
Sutherland; and he added coldly,&#13;
"I'll wish you good-night."&#13;
He stood before the gate of his father's&#13;
cottage and held out his band, the&#13;
Frenchman, however, did not attempt,&#13;
to take it, but kept bis own hands in&#13;
his coat pockets aa he returned a polite&#13;
" Good-night"&#13;
mmmmfmr mmm -mumiovs wm * •&#13;
FOU1W-AT.THr~&#13;
EUA18PRINGS, INO.&#13;
•ll • ••&gt;• | MilHBO f J*A&#13;
Poor&#13;
nor&#13;
very&#13;
for,"&#13;
who&#13;
CHAPTER XI.&#13;
HE next day was&#13;
Sunday, the solemn,&#13;
not to say sanctimonious&#13;
Sabbath&#13;
day of that peoplo&#13;
which, above all&#13;
others, reverences&#13;
the great work of&#13;
creation.&#13;
In the brightest&#13;
place in the church,&#13;
with her r.urcole&#13;
round her, sat Marjorie Annan; and&#13;
three pairs of eyes at least were constantly&#13;
fixed upon her. The first pair&#13;
belonged to young.Sutherland, the second&#13;
to the French visitor, the third to&#13;
the eccentric mistress of Hetherlngton&#13;
Castle.&#13;
Of these three individuals Caussidiere&#13;
was the most ill at esse. The sermon&#13;
bored him, and he yawned again and&#13;
again, finally going to sleep.&#13;
- He was awakened by a loud noise&#13;
•%nd looking round him, he saw the&#13;
congregation moving toward tlje door,&#13;
and Solomon Mucklebackit, from the&#13;
precentor's desk, glaring down at him&#13;
in Indignation, He rose languidly, and&#13;
jjmed the stream of people Issuing&#13;
from the church.&#13;
Out i n the churchyard the sun was&#13;
shining golden on the graves. At the&#13;
gate several vehicles were waiting. Including&#13;
the brougham from Hetherlngton&#13;
Castle.&#13;
As Caussidiere moved down the path,&#13;
he saw before him a small group of persons&#13;
conversing—the blind weaver and&#13;
his wife, John Sutherland, Marjorie,&#13;
and the lady of the Castle. He passed&#13;
by them with lifted hat, and moved on&#13;
to the gate. Where he waited.&#13;
"Who's yon?" asked Miss Hetherlngton,&#13;
following him with her dark&#13;
eyea.&#13;
"That is Monsieur Caussidiere," answered&#13;
Marjorie, "my French teacher."&#13;
"Humph!" said the lady. "Come awa'&#13;
and Introduce me."&#13;
She walked slowly down the path,&#13;
while Marjorie followed to astoaiahzaent&#13;
and Nyt&lt;wg right up to the&#13;
Frenchman, she looked him deliberately&#13;
over from head to foot Not at all&#13;
disconcerted, he took off his hat again,&#13;
and bowed politely.&#13;
"Monsieur &lt;^ussidiere," said Marjorie,&#13;
"this is Miss Hetherington, of the&#13;
Castle."&#13;
Caussidiere bowed again with great&#13;
respect&#13;
"I am charmed to make mademe's&#13;
acquaintance."&#13;
To his astonishmeuL Miss Hethering•&#13;
tan addressed him In his own tongue,&#13;
whkh ahe spake fiuontly, though with&#13;
an unmistakable Scottish inflection.&#13;
"You speak: English well, moaateur,"&#13;
ahe said. "Have you been long absent&#13;
from your native landT*&#13;
"Ever ntnee the crime of December,"&#13;
he returned, also l a&#13;
merismn Is slmoat a&#13;
ahe speaks the lsagun* oo aimlattnn.&#13;
Ah. it Is a pieasnre to me, an exile, to&#13;
hear the beloved tongas of&#13;
perfectly apoken! Y&lt;&#13;
Yon have Mved there, madamer&#13;
1 know tt. and know little good of&#13;
It" cried the lady sharply. "Am yon&#13;
Uke the rest of your coamtrymen, light&#13;
and treacherous, nattering i n ne^hissj&#13;
that is good, spending their ttvos in&#13;
vanity and a B nan si pjessnret" «&#13;
* The more wo ate tried and&#13;
the mote God ean 4 » to&#13;
, - 1 «&#13;
Bhoansetiaw, Klasay,&#13;
Blood, Ssla aw* B«*To«a&#13;
^•Mg Hotal Ba* Boos&#13;
0^-ut p«os*e Are Joaiaoylag&#13;
T k oro from All Of or Iho&#13;
c^xntry to Bathe&#13;
... the Mae. :,4&#13;
A dews* of mm "wkable mud&#13;
diecoveri* in rno\aB«V • f ? . 0 ' 'P-"!*&#13;
years bee* attraeti*a&lt; #h» 'l^1 ?*?. **"&#13;
tention, i* la looaten" a* k ^ w 5 ™ 1 *&#13;
Mineral Springs. W a m n «P*vnt*» « *&#13;
has been formed by tin* actfe* °{«B9&#13;
water from the famous* lfagno^W&gt;u&#13;
springs. Through eounftam aaasv * n*&#13;
Jaliage of magnificent oaks on tga Mfc"&#13;
side has annually fallen into a basin/&#13;
and has been reduced by nature into&#13;
a pure black eirth unmixed with roots,&#13;
stones or sand.—The water from the&#13;
big spring for thousands of years has&#13;
been soaking this deposit and saturating&#13;
it with mineral salts, until now&#13;
there is a layer of medicated mud&#13;
abcut two acres in extent and from&#13;
ten to twenty feet in thickness.&#13;
Tbe strange medicinal value of this&#13;
peculiar, black, porous substance was&#13;
accidentally discovered by an old sol-'&#13;
dier, Sam Story, who had brought&#13;
rheumatism home from tbe war and&#13;
suffered with it for years. He was attempting&#13;
to dig a drainage ditch&#13;
through the mud deposit and after indulging&#13;
in this useless experiment tor&#13;
a neefc er more, gave up tbe Idea, but&#13;
meanwhile had been cured of his rhrgmatlsm.&#13;
The fame of the mud began to spread&#13;
and afflicted congregated at the Springs&#13;
from everywhere. The method of using&#13;
the mud waa at first very primitive,&#13;
the patient merely sitting: down&#13;
In the deposit where nature had laid&#13;
i t But since then improvements haze&#13;
been made, a beautiful hotel erected,&#13;
and the mud bath developed Into a&#13;
luxurious experience. The accompanying&#13;
out shows how it's done.&#13;
^Hjsoe-'&#13;
After an, Nature la the greatest of&#13;
all chemists, and seems here to have&#13;
prepared la a gigantic receptacle an&#13;
enormous mass of medicine for poulticing&#13;
sore humanity. When ail else had&#13;
failed. Nature's treatment the Magno-&#13;
Mhd cure, as It is now called, has la&#13;
hundreds of cases brought bach health&#13;
and happiness.&#13;
An awful homely man at er socherable,&#13;
whar kissis* games are played.&#13;
looks as lonesome as er atraw hat in&#13;
de snow storm.&#13;
Cola—• oa iho Cat.&#13;
Mr. R. Lindsay CMemaa, oz-wosidoat of&#13;
thsJtatapoal Cycle Board of Trade, sad&#13;
pnaidlmToftho Wasters Wheal Works, ia&#13;
spoatlag on the oat ta Issvyelea, says:&#13;
''Thiscatiath* psioaof SUM wheels has&#13;
ooeasiaasd no sogprise. We aiproasod the&#13;
opinion five years ago that other makers&#13;
would fulry roahso their error ia eases*-&#13;
oriag to maJetsin a fictitious vaioe on&#13;
thair product, aad that the prices we had&#13;
fixed oa Crescents would bsaamo the&#13;
rd prioe for other high grade wheels&#13;
'One of the secrets of the saeesai of the&#13;
Wostora Wheal Works&#13;
only guarantee oar wheals, bat&#13;
tee our prices as wall, aad the&#13;
of a Craseoat ia Febnrary has the&#13;
tioa of knowing that his aoig'&#13;
a Crescent in July&#13;
*&gt;-tm&#13;
v » 0&#13;
'-'".•I'm&#13;
' ; • * ; * / * •&#13;
' • &lt; ' * ' $&#13;
••tt&#13;
•• • •• l . * J&#13;
'• •!••&#13;
asprlosashodldT&#13;
Ids aaoott anticipate that a stm further&#13;
m the price of bicycles wiU he&#13;
year.''&#13;
I'd like tax know how many apokes&#13;
dar ia in de wheel of forchane. What&#13;
kind of timher is de pes' of Honor&#13;
made ov?&#13;
Put an end to misery. Doaa's Ointment&#13;
will cure the worst case of Itchins;&#13;
Piles there over was, and do it almost&#13;
instantly. Years of Buffering relieved&#13;
in a single nighL Get Doan&gt;&#13;
Ointnsent from your dealer.&#13;
Er newspaper asks: "How shall use&#13;
perwent cider from worlds??* Yer&#13;
moot f i t hit a gnbermint nersiahnnu&#13;
Nearly all summer ooam4ain£s are&#13;
due to had blood and naheslthv bile.&#13;
Dr. Fowlers Ext. of Wild sitrawherry&#13;
cares by attacking the root of t e e&#13;
trouble. It never falls.&#13;
The present emperor&#13;
above all else an ardent&#13;
has few indoor asanas!&#13;
Axe yon tuflarhia; fi&#13;
E^eelecetrice OH&#13;
aaads of the vaorst tt&#13;
tbouof&#13;
this terrible&#13;
ewoeatststryii&#13;
Frederick the Csreat played the flute&#13;
and nnmaoeed mask and did both wall&#13;
? &lt; —&#13;
wliy sjssler from indigestion? Bar-&#13;
Bitters cores Dyspepsia&#13;
and act disorders of the stomach, liver.&#13;
rises frjM. nh atvheo sbee cpolmanet ceods minm ojnao irae sNt iaLgaawrna&#13;
* - B M « r&#13;
: QnaranteeWd tooobda pccuor eh,a aaettc acut.r ei .lsKtarknegsa rt s.a_s_&#13;
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j&gt; v T&#13;
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PAA6HAUVILLE.&#13;
Dr. S t John aud wife of High&#13;
laud visited friends here last Sun&#13;
day.&#13;
Frank Walker and wife Suiidayed&#13;
with his father, J. L.&#13;
Walker.&#13;
Chaa. Cole and family of Owos-&#13;
80 spent the past week with&#13;
friends here.&#13;
Miss Pearl Algo of Fenton is&#13;
the guest of her cousin, Miss&#13;
Grace Wakeman.&#13;
Ernest Babcock and family&#13;
spent a few days the past week&#13;
with relatives here.&#13;
Mrs. Wra. Deal and daughter&#13;
of Elsie have been visiting relatives&#13;
here the past week.&#13;
Miss Merriman of Grand Bapids&#13;
is spending a few weeks with&#13;
her brother, Dr. Merriman.&#13;
Miss Hattie Smith gave readings&#13;
at the M. E. church Tuesday&#13;
evening for the benefit of the Epworth&#13;
League.&#13;
: Miss MableSigler is&#13;
friends in Howell.&#13;
Born to Uhas, Mills and wife, one&#13;
day the past week, a boy.&#13;
Miss Cora Wilson is spending a few&#13;
weeks with relatives in Mason.&#13;
E. P. Kearney, of Jackson, Neb.,&#13;
is the guest of bis moth er at this place&#13;
Several from here attended the&#13;
Catholic picnic at Dexter, yesterday.&#13;
Don't fail to read W, A. Sprout's&#13;
adv on the first page. It may interest&#13;
you,&#13;
E. L. Thompson and wife, of Fow*&#13;
lerville, are visiting relatives at.this&#13;
place.&#13;
H. G. Briggs and wife are spending&#13;
a couple of weeks with&#13;
Flint and Fenton.&#13;
relatives in&#13;
EAST PUTNAM.&#13;
Miss Lela Spaulding is visiting&#13;
relatives at Perry.&#13;
Guy Hall and Mother spent&#13;
Sunday in Green Oak.&#13;
Messrs Ernest Fish and Guy&#13;
Hall spent last Thursday in Brighton.&#13;
G. W. Brown and daughter visited&#13;
relatives at North Lake Monday.&#13;
Miss Sarah Pearson is entertaining&#13;
Miss Julia Cotant of Ann&#13;
Arbor.&#13;
Mrs. Fred Lake is at Chilsoa&#13;
with her sister, Miss Hattie Carpenter,&#13;
who is ill.&#13;
Misses Kate and Mary Roche,&#13;
of Marion, were guests of Miss&#13;
Nettie Hall Friday last.&#13;
Horse and bicycle racing are favorite&#13;
pastimes for the people in&#13;
this vicinity just at present.&#13;
Silas Thrasher, Mrs. Orr Waite&#13;
and daughter, Gladys, of Dexter,&#13;
visited relatives here, Sunday.&#13;
All the business places in this village&#13;
were closed dnring the funeral&#13;
of Thompson Grimes, last Thursday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Nolan and&#13;
daughter Ethel, of Darand, are visiting&#13;
Mrs. Nolan's parents near Anderson.&#13;
Miss Florence Cool/ gave a garden&#13;
party to several of bev young playmate!&#13;
on Wednesday evening from&#13;
4 to 8. The little folks had an excel*&#13;
1 lent time.&#13;
We have returned from our outing&#13;
on the lakes and can truly say that it&#13;
did us good. We are making arrangements&#13;
to give our readers a write-up&#13;
of our trip that will be worth preserv*&#13;
j in?, but it will take some time to secure&#13;
the cuts for the illustrations, and&#13;
to do the work.&#13;
GREGORY.&#13;
W. M. Smith was in Pinckaey&#13;
last week.&#13;
A good time reported at the&#13;
social Friday evening.&#13;
Miss Beal, of Ann Arbor, is visiting&#13;
Miss Persis Daniels.&#13;
—P^rr ^ \fr nr^ Mru Fred&#13;
Jacobs, a son of 12 pounds.&#13;
Rev. Ellis and H. S. Bead took&#13;
a bicycle trip to North Adams.&#13;
Mr. Fisher, of Detroit, has&#13;
opened a new barber shop here.&#13;
Bev. Ellis and Wm. Smith&#13;
went to North Lake on their&#13;
wheels Monday.&#13;
F. G. Montague has 3 hills of&#13;
potatoes left from 4 acres. The&#13;
bugs are the cause of this mishap.&#13;
Lyceum Theatre co. was in&#13;
town last week. Their entertainment&#13;
was not as good as last&#13;
spring.&#13;
An M. D. from Indianapoli was&#13;
in town last week with the view&#13;
«1 locating here. A good opening&#13;
for the right man.&#13;
Weak Lungs&#13;
Hot weather won't cure weak&#13;
lungs. You may feel better because&#13;
out of doors more, but&#13;
the trouble is still there. Don't&#13;
stop taking your&#13;
Scott's&#13;
Emulsion&#13;
because the weather happens&#13;
to be warm. If you have a&#13;
weak throat, a slight hacking&#13;
cough, or some trouble with&#13;
the bronchial tubes, summer is&#13;
the best time to get rid of it.&#13;
If you are losing flesh there is&#13;
all the more need of attention.&#13;
Weakness about the chest and&#13;
thinness should never go together.&#13;
One greatly Increases&#13;
the danger of the other. Heal&#13;
the throat, cure the cough, and&#13;
strengthen the whole system&#13;
now. Keep taking 'Scott's&#13;
Emulsion all summer.&#13;
tale by all druggist* at $ac sad feee.&#13;
Notice.&#13;
A number of barn stalls to&#13;
school children: also room&#13;
doya. Inquire at this office.&#13;
rent to&#13;
for two&#13;
^r^Bf^»»i*^-*ea^awa^' •sU"W%p^ • •&#13;
B.E. Brwin was ia Jackson last&#13;
Xxtmitf.&#13;
8 . 1 . JGBBM of tfaii «Cce, spent&#13;
F k i l u i Awlww u 4fc* gtmt of&#13;
her gna&amp;ptn** j * ftatfc«lMU&amp; %~,&#13;
'•• fitgu BMUMH. at fowtandlU,*-&#13;
A Foot of&#13;
TOBBACCO&#13;
for&#13;
8 CENTS.&#13;
ENTIRE&#13;
LINE&#13;
OF&#13;
50 CENT&#13;
HATS&#13;
FOR&#13;
• 35 CENTS.&#13;
Several from here took in the excursion&#13;
to Detroit today. ' On Sept. 1,&#13;
there will be another, Riven by the 0.&#13;
E. society of this place and many will&#13;
wait until then.&#13;
Mm Laura Dolan, who has been&#13;
tbe guest of friends here the past&#13;
week, was called to her home in Detroit,&#13;
on Saturday last, by the severe&#13;
illness of her sister, Miss Nellie.&#13;
While in Maolcinac Island we put&#13;
up at the Parmer House, and was well&#13;
satisfied with the treatment we re*&#13;
ceived and the price we had to pay.&#13;
While most of the hotels charge ex*&#13;
orbitant prices, Mr. Jollie, the proprietor&#13;
of the Parmer House, is very&#13;
reasonable, and tne service good.&#13;
The executive committee of theTarmers'&#13;
Picnic Association of Washtenaw,&#13;
Livingston, Oakland and Wayne&#13;
counties, has made arrangements to'&#13;
hold tbe annual picnic at Wbitmore&#13;
Lake, Saturday, Aug. 28. The speakers&#13;
who have been chosen lor the occasion&#13;
are: Gov. H. S. Pingree, ex-Gov. 0.&#13;
G. Luce and Rev. L. P. Goldcrick.&#13;
Vocal and instrumental music will be&#13;
provided for the entertainment of&#13;
those who will be in attendance and it&#13;
is expected that there will be tbe&#13;
largest- crowd and the best time at&#13;
this picnic of any that has ever yet&#13;
been held.&#13;
WAITING FOR T H E E N D .&#13;
The Old Darkey Keeps Up HU Spirit!&#13;
by StrnramltiK*&#13;
Up the stairway which leads to the&#13;
basement of the building floated a soft,&#13;
tremulous whisper of music, says the&#13;
Boston Journal. The Idler who heard&#13;
H followed the olew of melody until he&#13;
found an aged colored man, whose&#13;
withered fingers caressed the strings of&#13;
a banjo. HU llpe were slightly parted&#13;
with a smile and he looked upward&#13;
with half-closed eyes; When he paused&#13;
In his performance 'the auditor applauded&#13;
and remarked:&#13;
"Having a good time all to yourself,&#13;
uncle?"&#13;
'•Yessuh. I done had er little 'spare&#13;
tisne an' I done put It In practize-in'."&#13;
"That don't sound much like the ordinary&#13;
banjo music."&#13;
"No, suh. Dat's er different kin'."&#13;
"Oen't you play reels and breakdowns.&#13;
Maybe they're too quick for an&#13;
old man like yourself?"&#13;
"Toe OjtMck foh me? No'ndeedy. I&#13;
done got clean pas' dem lone ago. I's&#13;
got mo' on my mln' dan he'pdn' de&#13;
young folks twis' deh foots at er petty.&#13;
Dem dat yon wus Us'nin' to was hymnohunes"&#13;
"Hymn tunes on a banjo?"&#13;
"I done de bes' I could," he replied,&#13;
apologetically-.&#13;
"But what gave you the idea?"&#13;
"De good book." he answered, reverentially.&#13;
"I's gettin' 'long in y'uhs, I&#13;
is, an' when I called ter mind 'boat de&#13;
hiLhps o' gold It done sot me ter thinkin'.&#13;
I didn't trad no early 'vantages,&#13;
an' i doesn't speck I could er lun ter&#13;
•toy on de hafcp nohow. But I ain't&#13;
'scouraged, an' whenesber I gits de&#13;
cfeane* I comes byuh an' tetchee de&#13;
strings, 'cause I's sho dat w'en I shows&#13;
'em I ain't gwtnter sturb de hahmonles&#13;
deyil let me set back some place whah&#13;
I won' be noticed, an' play 'long wif&#13;
'em in de way dat I've used to."&#13;
IT1EITIII MRBOOf!&#13;
This Will Interest You.&#13;
SIUIHITIW&#13;
r;&#13;
A popular and successful business of&#13;
our town and one that is a credit to&#13;
our village is that carried on by Mr.&#13;
Thomas Clinton, Pinckney's leading&#13;
harness maker. Mr. Clinton is among&#13;
the longest established of our business&#13;
men, having founded his business £ of&#13;
a century ago. The success he has&#13;
met with is the results of careful management&#13;
and straight forward deal*&#13;
ing and the deserved popularity tbe&#13;
business has acquired has been secured&#13;
by turning out a superior class of&#13;
work and offering to the public all&#13;
the advantages possible. The shop is&#13;
known for the excellence of the work&#13;
done, and for prices H is not undersold&#13;
in the county. All kinds of&#13;
machine and harness oil, to be gold&#13;
lower than can be purchased in Livingston&#13;
county, and a complete stock&#13;
of everything found in a tret-class&#13;
harness shop is on hand, such as&#13;
whips, combs, brashes, robes; also&#13;
trunks, valises, etc. in connection is&#13;
also a boot aad shoe department&#13;
where custom work in maanfjacturing&#13;
aud repairing is done. He carries&#13;
a stock of medwtaee for/ man aad&#13;
beast, and poultry, whicn is the best&#13;
in the world. At «11 tisaee yoa can&#13;
get tbe bichest casji price tor hide*,&#13;
4&gt;elts,etc,«tthe9Wf&gt;. ?9t8E&#13;
FOUND AN AZTEC&#13;
Q*e«r Dieoorety *f • Professloasl&#13;
B-wte* «f Arises*,&#13;
Jofen McCarthy, a professional lionhunter&#13;
of Phoenix, Aria., while pursuing&#13;
his quarry tnxough one of the&#13;
toughest portions of that mountainous&#13;
district, discovered a mummy that has&#13;
been attracting attention all over the&#13;
country, and is likely to be the cause&#13;
of much' litigation as to its ownership.&#13;
McCarthy calls It "adesiccated human&#13;
body," and gives it an antiquity antedating&#13;
Father /dam's. And to prove&#13;
that his muxr-^y came by some other&#13;
route than the Garden of Bdea he&#13;
points to the place where the twentythird&#13;
rib ought to be and is not. Mc-&#13;
Carthy was hunting bounty scalps in&#13;
Verde canyon, about seventy-five miles&#13;
ncrth of Phoenix, says the San Francisco&#13;
Examiner, when he came upon&#13;
the ruin of a wonderful prehistoric castle.&#13;
His dogs chased the game almost&#13;
to the door of the ruin. He killed the&#13;
lion and then entered the ruin. He&#13;
climbed into a small chamber, which&#13;
he describee as about six by twelve&#13;
feet in dimensions, and in accidentally&#13;
striking the rear wall was surprised&#13;
that it gave back a hollow sound, wataa&#13;
caused him to investigate with bowls&#13;
knife the cement with which the hugs&#13;
stones were held in place. Digging&#13;
tli rough a thick cement wall, he opened&#13;
an air-tight vault about six feet square&#13;
and was astonished to find the mummy&#13;
inside. It was mantled in cerements*&#13;
of soap weed fibre cloth, which dissipated&#13;
into nothingness as soon as the&#13;
air reached it. By its side was a wooden&#13;
-haadled stone mallet and an arrow&#13;
with a flint head. The wood ofythe arrow&#13;
and mallet likewise disintegrated&#13;
immediately. There were also^sssns&#13;
beautiful specimens of turquoise s2sT4&#13;
obsidian in the vault McCarthy says&#13;
he touched nothing but sealed up the&#13;
v&amp;ult carefully and then hied himself&#13;
down to Phoenix as fast as he could.&#13;
McCarthy made up an expedition of&#13;
all the prominent scientists and physlclsns&#13;
in Phoenix and took tfcem out to&#13;
the newly-found mummy. It rwee&#13;
brought down to Phoenix and given a&#13;
coat of carriage varnish by way of&#13;
shining up its rather dull and rusty ate&#13;
hide. Recently the mummy, together&#13;
with a live rattlesnake and a Gila monster,&#13;
wee shipped out of Phoenix&#13;
marked "old clothes," and, not betmg&#13;
called for, the box was opened at a&#13;
way station and its contents gave the&#13;
station agent a bad fright. Now the&#13;
authorities are looking for, the responsible&#13;
parties, and a criminal proseeution&#13;
will follow.&#13;
Wianed to BePreeateS,&#13;
«1 wish, my dear," said Mr. Frank*&#13;
fort to his wife, "that you would let&#13;
the hired man bring my rifle down^&#13;
from the attic while I get some otbtr&#13;
things ready." "&#13;
"Your rifler she repeated, "Surely&#13;
you are not going hunting ?M&#13;
"Not at all."&#13;
As he spoke ho took a howls knife&#13;
from Its sheath and began to sharpen&#13;
it carefully on a whetstone.&#13;
"What is that knife for?" asked his&#13;
wife&#13;
"Well, I hope I shall not have oecasion&#13;
to use it, but it la best to be prepared."&#13;
As he said this he examined his seven&#13;
shot revolver, and filled the side&#13;
pocket of his coat with cartridges. By&#13;
thie tine the hired man had brousjat&#13;
the rifle, and Mr. Fraakiort made sure&#13;
that he had a good supply of ammusa*&#13;
tion for the weapon."&#13;
"My dear," begged his wife, "wamt&#13;
you tell me what all this means? Tea&#13;
say you are not going hunting. What&#13;
do you need of all these wsaponer&#13;
"My darling," repUed the brave maa.&#13;
"do not be anxious. It is more than&#13;
probable that I shall return alive, bat&#13;
if not you will find nay will made, aad&#13;
my life insurance policy to valid. Kiss&#13;
me, dear, and hope for the best."&#13;
"But where, oh where, are you aetng?"&#13;
"Have you forgoUsn that I an a&#13;
member of the Kentucky legislature,&#13;
my dear? I go to attend a regular&#13;
session."&#13;
And before she could, protest the&#13;
brave man had snatched a kiss&#13;
her pale forehead and departed.-&#13;
lsville Courier-Journal.&#13;
3c:&#13;
WEAK M i l MUDE VHSMOS.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler.&#13;
BE SURE AND ATTEND THE LAST WEEK OF&#13;
THE&#13;
BUSY&#13;
BEE&#13;
HIVE&#13;
RED&#13;
MARK&#13;
SALE&#13;
/ Yours ftaaisfltfiiUy, JL HFIELa 3V&#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 August 05, 1897</text>
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                <text>August 05, 1897 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1897-08-05</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="5528">
                <text>Frank L. Andrews</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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      <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>SAVE MONEYP&#13;
If you are too busy, you are the exception and not the role. We&#13;
•hall keep right on selling&#13;
XXXX Coffee&#13;
2,400 Parlor Matches&#13;
1 lb Warranted Baking Powder&#13;
1 lb Leaf Tea&#13;
. Even if you are so busy you can't come.&#13;
12c per lb&#13;
10c&#13;
10c&#13;
15c&#13;
Send the children alrorer-we will&#13;
give them honest trelrawent, f&#13;
weight, correct change, and b&#13;
goods. We don't send thelf&#13;
home with goods that we could&#13;
not sell to a growiyperson.&#13;
Wm. A. SPROUT,&#13;
ANDEBSON, MICH.&#13;
t&#13;
NOTICE.&#13;
I must again ask those who owe me on&#13;
book account to call and settle.&#13;
My books must be closed at once, and as&#13;
money can be hadBJnvsier than at almost any&#13;
other time of thir year I shall expect&#13;
prompt settlements. ,&#13;
ANDERSON, ttlCri.&#13;
A Week of V BARGAINS&#13;
Have yon learned where the postoffice&#13;
i§ yet?&#13;
One nan near Howell had seven&#13;
acres of wheat that went 42 bushels&#13;
per acre.&#13;
Eobt. Kelly drew over 900 bushels&#13;
of wheat to the elevator at this place&#13;
the past week.&#13;
Mrs. Snooks and daughter Goldie,&#13;
of Romeo, viaited Mrs. T. Turner the&#13;
past few days,&#13;
Miss Galligan, of Ann Arbor, has&#13;
been visiting her sister, Mrs. Andrew&#13;
Bates for a tew days.&#13;
Butter has been a scarce article in&#13;
this village the past week and several&#13;
have had to go without.&#13;
Several from here took in Singling&#13;
Bros, show at Howell lait Friday. Of&#13;
course some went "for the o|iildren(?)&#13;
Mrs. B. J. Youngloreand children,&#13;
of Detroit, are taking their annual&#13;
outing at the home of Geo.,Younglove&#13;
of Marion.&#13;
The DISPATCH office issued the bills&#13;
for the C. E. excursion Sept. 1st. Good&#13;
* work and reasonable prices will surely&#13;
tell in the long run.&#13;
Five young people were taken into&#13;
fall connection at the M. £, church on&#13;
Sunday morning last. Two were received&#13;
by letter and three baptized.&#13;
Last Wednesday W. S. Swarthout&#13;
received bis commission as postmaster&#13;
at this place and on Thursday morning&#13;
last the office was moved to the&#13;
Swarthout block.&#13;
Mrs. S. Walker,' who has been caring&#13;
for her sister, Miss Sweeny, who&#13;
has been very ill at her home in Detroit,&#13;
returned home Monday. Miss&#13;
Sweeny is. slowly improving.&#13;
Rev. Wm. Shier, D. D., of Detroit,&#13;
preached at the M. £. church last&#13;
Sunday evening. Mr. Shier has been&#13;
appointed as Presiding Elder for this&#13;
district to fill the vacancy caused by&#13;
the death of Rev. Davis.&#13;
Ed. T. Kearney of Jackson, Neb.,&#13;
while here had several teeth filled and&#13;
some gold crowns put in by our dentist,&#13;
Dr. Green. Mr. Kearney says:&#13;
"I have had dental work done in several&#13;
states bat this is the best work I&#13;
ever had.&#13;
Clyde Bennett and Miss Lena Force,&#13;
of Fowlerville, were married at the&#13;
home of the bride's parents, Wednesday&#13;
of this week. Clyde was a former&#13;
Pinckney boy and an employee of&#13;
this office. The young couple have&#13;
our best wishes.&#13;
We are in receipt o&lt;" *h« '• Wofwftti'n&#13;
DRUGS, MEDICINES, CHEMICALS,&#13;
FINE TOILET SOAPS. FIRE HAIR M D TOOTH BRUSHES,&#13;
PURE WINES AND LIQUORS FOR MEDICINAL PURPOSES,&#13;
Trusses, Supporters,&#13;
o K 5 j&#13;
Carbon Oil, Lamps and Chimneys*&#13;
gookp,&#13;
Stationery,&#13;
Wall Paper•&#13;
All Kinds of Family tesmtftt.&#13;
F. A. SIGLEd&#13;
PiNCKNET, MIOH.&#13;
Commencing:&#13;
SATURDAY, AUG. W,&#13;
And Continuing One Week*&#13;
15 Pisces Light and Dark PVinte,&#13;
10 Pieces Standard Print*,&#13;
7c Unbleached Cotton,&#13;
Oar fL00 Shirt Waists,&#13;
@&#13;
@&#13;
@&#13;
@&#13;
4c&#13;
4£C&#13;
5c&#13;
69c&#13;
W E A R E&#13;
AlwaysT*&#13;
Everlastingly,&#13;
Continuously,&#13;
Persistently,&#13;
Effectively&#13;
Seeking Trade.&#13;
W E S E L L&#13;
Oil 8toves,&#13;
Gasoline Stoves,&#13;
Wood Stoves,&#13;
Lawn Mowers,&#13;
Bieyelee,&#13;
Farming Implements, etc.&#13;
W E W I L L&#13;
Gladlv,&#13;
Politely,&#13;
Carefully,&#13;
Promptly&#13;
Wait Upon Yo u.&#13;
25 PEE CENT OFF&#13;
On every pair of Ladies1 $2150, sttJeX) and **M&#13;
Shoes purchased during this Sale.&#13;
F. 6. Jad • M i l&#13;
Edition" of toe St. Ignace Enterprise,&#13;
also a regular copy. The samples are&#13;
both works of art and full of interesting&#13;
reading. While in St. Ignace We&#13;
called upon Bro. Jones and found him&#13;
and entire force busy.&#13;
L.F.Rose and wife of Bay City,&#13;
visited his mother, Mrs. F. G. Rose, at&#13;
this place this week. They are just&#13;
returning from an extended trip to&#13;
Cleveland, Buffalo, Brooklyn, New&#13;
fork and other eastern cities. While&#13;
In New York, they called on Dr. and&#13;
Mrs. H. P. Sigler.&#13;
The hot days of this month are apt&#13;
to cause illness if there are any places&#13;
about your homes where slops etc&#13;
are thrown or collect. Be careful&#13;
about such places and give tbem a&#13;
thorough cleansing. A bottle of Bromine&#13;
Purifier may save a large doctor's&#13;
bill. Yoa can get it at F. A. Sigler's&#13;
drug store.&#13;
The grand annual picnic of St*&#13;
Mary's society will be held at Jackson's&#13;
grove on Thursday, Aag. 19,&#13;
1897. The speakers of the day ate&#13;
Senator Teeple, Rev. K, fl. Crane, O&#13;
8. ^encs and Messrs. flowlett and&#13;
."•hfrfl There will also be singing&#13;
by Jim Harkms, J. O'Connor, Luke&#13;
Reiti? and Bev. Fr. GoMsriek. JUnnv J If. Jeffrey who will give yon the beat&#13;
bar** afebesu-a will he present d«r* i f treatment, and the highest market&#13;
-QwpeclXtilly Yours, ~ ~ ~&#13;
TEEPLE S* CADWELL.&#13;
in* the nay and furnish mask for the&#13;
Miss Gertrude Andrews of Toledo,&#13;
has been the guest of Mrs. Root. Tiplaay&#13;
the past week.&#13;
Mrs/E. F. Chase, son and daughter,&#13;
of Dexter, were guests of Pinckney&#13;
relatives the last of last week.&#13;
Thos. Read has been entertaining a&#13;
brother from Ann Arbor, and one&#13;
from Green Oak, tbe past few days.&#13;
Bert flowe and the Misses Blanche&#13;
and Beatrice dark, of Salem, visited&#13;
relatives in this vicinity the past week,&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Neynabor and children,&#13;
who have been guests at the&#13;
home of Will Dunning far the past&#13;
few weeks, returned to their home in&#13;
Detroit on Saturday last&#13;
Business Peiater*.&#13;
An umbrella with ubirch" hamdlsv&#13;
Finder please leave at this office.&#13;
• * 7&#13;
:m\&#13;
;• ./a&#13;
•ay'&#13;
x&#13;
\v*I&#13;
&gt; •&#13;
r v*t f ^ •,&#13;
' r . , . • •&#13;
«*-&lt; A Pepalar Wedding Trip it te taftftV, &amp;&#13;
a B. k C. Steamer to Maettese ^lannti • • • ' * If you want a delightful wedding&#13;
trip where you are not likely to meat&#13;
acquaintances, take one of the new D.&#13;
AC. steel steamers to the island af&#13;
cool breezes. Staterooms and parlor&#13;
reserved 90 days in advance. Sesjl %&#13;
cents for illustrated' pamphlet. AaV&#13;
dress A. A. Schauta* GPA, Datvsis*&#13;
Mich.&#13;
&lt;j&lt;&#13;
•''"• &amp; '" i&#13;
#V&gt;' \&#13;
: # M&#13;
A number of nam stalls to rent to&#13;
school children; sis© room for two&#13;
doya. IsK|siiwjnVtsu office.&#13;
After this date there will be s regular&#13;
market for ill kinds of grain,&#13;
beans and fiarm produce at this place.&#13;
The business will be conducted by 8 .&#13;
prices. Wm. A. Spnout,&#13;
Anderses, Miehu&#13;
We aria* to remind oar eltiiens that&#13;
one item hex on the first door of oar&#13;
office* there for ass. When yam&#13;
ease an Hem, either personal or laessV&#13;
that yon wish published, please doa&gt;&#13;
at ha the box and we will asanas J*a&#13;
of its publication, if each he&#13;
proper thing. \&#13;
•:J»r'&#13;
;fc.&#13;
/&#13;
i f . , 1 • . V - \ f&#13;
^ - : .'•'&lt; ••; '.'0 , '•*&lt;•• v M v - : , - - ^&#13;
r~v&#13;
»&lt;++ir*1&#13;
&lt; .-A&#13;
i. w&#13;
-.^-&#13;
WITHIN-OUjl WALLS.&#13;
! &gt; • / • • • . * • ' • " ' '&#13;
&amp;'..&#13;
IJV-'&#13;
I A:&#13;
»&#13;
£•&#13;
fc&lt;. -&#13;
I"&#13;
,•,&#13;
is '•-?»' •,••&#13;
? &gt; • • • -&#13;
$?-&#13;
MfeCRE MENTION OP MICHIOAN&#13;
MATTER*.&#13;
A Lars« Numbir of. V. P. HomitoaaeN&#13;
Hejoietag Over a U. a. land OJlee&#13;
Decision—NteUitles Showlas Bstent&#13;
of Dual sllaUg 1« Michigan.&#13;
ft ^ »-y ','&#13;
•',' ,t&#13;
iPpeer Peataaala Haulers afeao Happy*&#13;
The action of U. 8. Land Commisaioner&#13;
Hermann in lending hack to the&#13;
Marquette land office the contest between&#13;
the Michigan Land and Iron Co.&#13;
and the settlers wJM vause an open&#13;
court contest for 50,000 acres of land&#13;
and may jeopardise the title to nearly&#13;
10 times that much.&#13;
The land claimed by the Michigan&#13;
band an4 tow Co, is the old Marquette,&#13;
Bough ton t&amp; Ontonagon railroad grant&#13;
Which watt gi^tm to aid the construetion&#13;
of a line from Marquette to 0n«&#13;
tonajfoo backio 18*1. It consists of&#13;
400,000 acres. Since passing to the&#13;
new corporation its title has been in&#13;
dispute and settlers have squatted on&#13;
60,000 acres of the best homesteads.&#13;
The company tried to oust them&#13;
through the land office iit Marquette,&#13;
tout it was referred to Washington,&#13;
Opke Smith, secretary of the interior&#13;
under Cleveland, decided against the&#13;
«ettlers, but now the present .administration&#13;
returns the matter to the Marquette&#13;
land office and requires all the&#13;
aettlers to be notified and the oompany&#13;
will have to prove in court that it&#13;
eomes under the railroad grant confirmatory&#13;
act passed in 1887. The settlers&#13;
claim it will be impossible for&#13;
the company to do this and are already&#13;
rejoicing in their victory.&#13;
m&#13;
Oraod Rafttdf Ooaoera la TroabU.&#13;
Chas. A. Thayer, vice president,&#13;
treasurer and manager of the Kenwood-&#13;
Hamilton Bicycle Co., at Grand&#13;
fiapids, was attested for the alleged&#13;
•emDesalement of $4,000 of,the funds of&#13;
the company. The plant was recently&#13;
assigned on a mortgage and was to&#13;
tiave been sold, but Thayer began a&#13;
counter suit against President Charles&#13;
&amp; Sllgh and Secretary J. Q &lt;fe»&gt;, and&#13;
« t bis Instance ^ i n j u n c t i o n was&#13;
granted forbidding the sale. He al-&#13;
, leges that Sllgh and Case mismanaged&#13;
the. concern and that the mortgage&#13;
foreclosure is a scheme to force him&#13;
oaU The company was organized one&#13;
year ago with $100,000 capital, with&#13;
Thayer, as manager, and the inventory&#13;
shows assets $170,000 and liabilities&#13;
$101,070.&#13;
WefcigaaM Coal Oatpat.&#13;
The U. 3. geological survey has completed&#13;
its anneal report upon the coal&#13;
product of Michigan, which shows&#13;
that the total production in 1806 was&#13;
«2.882 short tons valued at $150,631—&#13;
nearly 20,000 tons less than in 1605.&#13;
The production by counties was as follows:&#13;
Bay 7,436 tons, Baton 1,645,&#13;
Jackson 45,318, Saginaw 7,316, Huron&#13;
«nd Shiawassee, 31,168. Total number&#13;
Of mines, 11; amount of coal loaded at&#13;
mines for shipment. 83,150 tons; sold&#13;
to local trade and used by employes,&#13;
&lt;,fr47 tons; used at mines for steam&#13;
«nd heat, 3,185 tons; average price per&#13;
ton, $1.*?; average number of days&#13;
active work in mines, 157; total nnm-&#13;
&lt;ber of employes, 330.&#13;
Two Girts Drowaae Vaar Uraad Rapid*.&#13;
: Clara Hall, aged l»r and Ethel Herriek,&#13;
aged 18, both of Grand Rapids,&#13;
avere drowned in Lake Michigan at&#13;
Ottawa beaeb. They were bathing&#13;
eiorth of the pier and were on the&#13;
spring board when Miss Hall was&#13;
tgwept Off by a wave and Miss Herrlck&#13;
4ove in to save her. Both screamed&#13;
frantically for help. A row boat&#13;
^ttickly went to the rescue, but was&#13;
.too Late, as the young ladies were&#13;
•caught by a wave and thrown Into the&#13;
«ndertow which sucked them under&#13;
«nd o*t of sight The young ladies&#13;
4»elonge4 to weilrknown families, their&#13;
lathers heLng prominent business men.&#13;
Peter Bona, tramp charged with the&#13;
enurder of Pearl Morrison, at Crystal&#13;
Palls, has made a complete confession,&#13;
Acknowledging that he first assaulted&#13;
the girl and then strangled her to&#13;
death. The confession was secured by&#13;
&lt;a detective, who visited Bons in his&#13;
cell in (he robe of a Catholic priest&#13;
The confession was heard by two reliable&#13;
citizens, who had been placed in&#13;
adjoining cells on the ostensible&#13;
flhirge of drunkenness. The confession&#13;
has created, intense excitement,&#13;
ky be lynched.&#13;
MICHIGAN NEWS 1TBM9.&#13;
will spend $»5,090 for new&#13;
contains over&#13;
A Lryoos laraaer has contracted to&#13;
« d l £,«$$ bwahekctf wheat at 80 cents&#13;
Aliscs* csftaty tamed ont 5,«00 chU-&#13;
4ren s t their thu&gt;d «sm«si Sunday&#13;
The sakmrs s t the Monitor mines&#13;
wear Bay Otty have strack tor higher&#13;
Nile* grocers engaged i s a bitter&#13;
ftiee war until one game sway » pons d&#13;
^ c o s ^ W e v e r y -—"&#13;
At ^UHUiiW»*.^V«&lt;Cjfe .lliwick's dry&#13;
gooda^re brwnedt ioaa J ^ a a \ -&#13;
, •fraiS.'JrWyqp ^has(i*ar4pj|e4 Jesse&#13;
.SifiJtc^tVeiif-fi'om Uffiiot etranvr hwt&#13;
Oc%3ty 1» ioftia for oa3 year, f c * ^ « -&#13;
Lewis A Alien wiU start an\ axle&#13;
factory with 40 men, in connection&#13;
with .'their vehicle sprloff .work* at&#13;
Jack&amp;PB.&#13;
Lou John, %ged 40, aa Indi%n' living&#13;
south of Burgess, was gored to death&#13;
by a bull. John was a farmer and&#13;
leaves a large family.&#13;
Alexander Uraut, of Monroe, has&#13;
been made assistant general superintendent&#13;
of the railway mail service by&#13;
the postmaster-general.&#13;
The Tildeu mine at Bessemer has&#13;
closed down, throwiug 350 men out of&#13;
employment. Poor demand for that&#13;
grade of ore is the cause.&#13;
Silas Hues ted, of Muir, a pensioner&#13;
in moderate circumstances, took oarbi&gt;&#13;
Hojwid_ajadjdieii.ln.._terrlble agony.&#13;
He was very intemperate.&#13;
The Ionia council has decided tq&#13;
bond the city for $8,500, to extend the&#13;
city water system, and a special election&#13;
will be held on Aug. 16.&#13;
James Miller's 3-year-old son, at&#13;
Croswell, became frightened at some&#13;
hogs that came close up to him and&#13;
fell in a faint and finally died.&#13;
On Aug. 19 Gov. Pingree will deliver&#13;
an address at the fourteenth annual&#13;
picnic o( the farmers of Jackson&#13;
und Ingham counties, at Pleasant lake.&#13;
The F. &amp; P. M railroad has issued&#13;
orders that no person shall be employed&#13;
in any of its departments unless&#13;
able to read and write intelligently.&#13;
Mrs. Emily (xoodale left her home at&#13;
Medina July 29 to call on a neighbor.&#13;
Nothing has been seen of her since.&#13;
She leaves a husband and three small&#13;
children.&#13;
Geo. W. Delano, of Monterey township,&#13;
near Allegan, fell from a bay&#13;
press, which ran over him and broke&#13;
both legs above the knee. He may&#13;
not recover.&#13;
A Washington special says the treasury&#13;
department intends to close the&#13;
small ports of entry at Mt Clemens,&#13;
New Baltimore, River Rouge, Del ray&#13;
and Trenton.&#13;
All the grocery stores and meat markets&#13;
in Grand Rapids were closed for&#13;
one day and the business men with&#13;
their clerks took a day off for their&#13;
annual picnic.&#13;
As a result of the recent pan-American&#13;
visit to Grand Rapids an order for&#13;
1,000 desks, tables and chairs for the&#13;
Mexican government has been placed&#13;
with firms there.&#13;
The Michigan State Pharmaceutical&#13;
association met at Grand Ledge with&#13;
about 50 present Besides addresses&#13;
and papers there was considerable&#13;
pleasure indulged in.&#13;
Prof. Frank Wood, teacher of science&#13;
in the Bay City high school, has resigned&#13;
to accept a position in the government&#13;
school at Tokio, Japan, where&#13;
he will teach science and English.&#13;
Melita Sallovbani, a young woman,&#13;
was found beastly drunk lying across&#13;
the railroad track at Iron Mountain.&#13;
She was pulled off just in time to save&#13;
her from beiny run over by a freight&#13;
Fred W. Vergien, who Is wanted for&#13;
i the burglary of Albaugh's jewelry&#13;
store, at Hillsdale, where he was night&#13;
watch, has been captured in Chicago&#13;
and part of the stolen goods recovered.&#13;
The City roller flouring mills at&#13;
Adrian have started after an idleness&#13;
of three and a half years. With&#13;
cooper shops they employ 45 men and&#13;
have a capacity of 800 barrels of flour&#13;
dally. •&#13;
Jerry WetseL a retired farmer near&#13;
St Joseph, was drugged and robbed of&#13;
$135 and left in his berry patch unconscious.&#13;
The drug was administered in&#13;
a glass of cider and a hired man is suspected.&#13;
John Willett, aged 60, a wealthy&#13;
farmer, drove to Owoaso to do some&#13;
trading. He carried considerable cash&#13;
and the man, horse and rig have mysteriously&#13;
disappeared. Foul play is&#13;
suspected.&#13;
The Monitor Coal Mine Co., Bay City,&#13;
has let the contract for 20 new nouses&#13;
to be built near the mine for the accommodation&#13;
of miners. There are already&#13;
good-sized villages near the&#13;
two shafts.&#13;
Henry Smith's only daughter, Ethel,&#13;
was burned to death at Dimondale by&#13;
her clothing catching fire from a rubbish&#13;
fire. The father became so de-&#13;
.spondent that he took morphine, but&#13;
will recover.&#13;
While Mrs. Geo. Rohrbach and family&#13;
were driving near Chesaning the&#13;
horses became frightened at their umbrella,&#13;
ran away and threw them all&#13;
out, injuring Mrs. Rohrbach so badly&#13;
that shedied.&#13;
Hesekiah Callan, of Muskegon, took&#13;
cartel ie acid and was found dead in&#13;
bed, with his son Arlie sleeping quietly&#13;
beside him. Callan leaves a widow&#13;
and five children. Ill health and poverty&#13;
induced the suicide.&#13;
Prof. Dave Anderson made a balloon&#13;
ascension at Leslie, but when 800 feet&#13;
in the air his ballon burst He was&#13;
severely shaken up, bWt no bones were&#13;
broken. Sam Beach got caught in the&#13;
guy ropes and was yanked into the&#13;
top of a tree.&#13;
n j ' i ^ f y i i | i i i • • w w ^ ^ ^ w&#13;
Co. 11, Sixth Michigan artillery, the&#13;
first company mustered into the state&#13;
service at the commencement of the&#13;
oWU was, held a reunion in Oak grove,&#13;
near Charlotte, where the oompauy&#13;
was organised 86 years ago.&#13;
The street cars of the Marquette&#13;
City &amp; Presque Isle line were,taken&#13;
possession of by the young ladies of&#13;
Marquette for the benefit of the Fr.&#13;
Marquette statue fund. They sated&#13;
as conductors, ringing up every fare&#13;
and giving no change. Tickets were&#13;
not accepted under any olrcumstaaoea.&#13;
About 195 men and women of the&#13;
Minnesota Editorial association struck&#13;
the Wolverine state at Ludington,&#13;
after a Journey across Lake Miohigan&#13;
from Milwaukee, on a week's outing.&#13;
A special F. &amp; P. M. train carried the&#13;
party to Detroit where four days were&#13;
spent in sight-seeing and side excursions.&#13;
The abandoned coal mines near Sebewaing,&#13;
some of which extend under&#13;
the business and residence part of the&#13;
village, are settling gradually. People&#13;
frequently wake up in the morning&#13;
to find that their front yard has&#13;
sunk a foot, and it is nothing uncommon&#13;
to find the walls cracked and the&#13;
clock stopped.&#13;
Morgan Florence, a farmer near&#13;
Ridgeway, stopped the team attached&#13;
to his reaper and WSB fixing the knives&#13;
when the horses suddenly started, and&#13;
before he could get out of the way one&#13;
limb was completely severed and he&#13;
was otherwise severely bruised. Florance&#13;
is about 70, and there is little&#13;
hope of his recovery.&#13;
Certain GaleBburg citizens succeeded&#13;
in closing the public billiard rooms&#13;
and now the devotees of that game&#13;
propose to retaliate by stopping public&#13;
croquet, which they call "church billiards."&#13;
The croquet lovers Indulge&#13;
in some rather heated arguments at&#13;
times which the others say do not have&#13;
the most beneficial effect upon young&#13;
people.&#13;
Four prisoners escaped from the&#13;
county jail at St Joseph. They are&#13;
Alex. McDonald, awaiting trial for attempt&#13;
at murder; Louis Ake, bicycle&#13;
thief; Frank Roby and Otis Bentley,&#13;
burglars. They sawed the bars from&#13;
their cells and the windows in the rear&#13;
of the jail, gaining the ground below&#13;
with the aid of blankets. Saws were&#13;
probably smuggled into the jail by a&#13;
woman.&#13;
While the A. O. H. of Port Huron&#13;
were picnicing on Stag island George&#13;
Reamer, a &lt;J. &amp;, G. T. brake man, engaged&#13;
In a friendly fracas with Miss&#13;
Gettings, his sister-in-law. She struck&#13;
at him with her parasol and the point&#13;
of the stick entered his ear over an&#13;
inch, causing him to fall to the ground&#13;
like a dead man. He was taken home&#13;
as soon as possible, but may not recover&#13;
from the shock.&#13;
A national organization of farmers&#13;
and fruit growers is being talked of&#13;
by Michigan fruit growers, to handle&#13;
and sell all farm products at a nominal&#13;
advance over actual cost, thus doing&#13;
away with middle and commission&#13;
men. It is proposed to establish&#13;
branches in the leading cities and to&#13;
ship the products where the best&#13;
prices can be secured and above all&#13;
else to guard against glutting any one&#13;
market.&#13;
John Ryan was elected drain commissioner&#13;
of Scioto township, Shiawassee&#13;
county, last spring and notwithstanding&#13;
the fact that the last legislature&#13;
abolished that office John has been&#13;
doing business just the same. He experienced&#13;
no particular difficulty until&#13;
the laborers who had been constructing&#13;
a costly drain demanded their pay&#13;
and the township treasurer refused to&#13;
THE TEiKGRAPH,&#13;
INTJ|RE8TjNa AND IMPORTANT&#13;
NRWB MATTER*&#13;
atrtklag Miners Lay liege to Working&#13;
MIUM and Decrease Thvlr revest&#13;
by lactaola* Men to Come Out—A&#13;
V» a. Protectorate lor Hawaii.&#13;
formed the men that they must look to&#13;
Mr. Ryan for their pay, about 9500.&#13;
John Boyington, of Durand, and an&#13;
unknown man were arrested at Saginaw&#13;
charged with raising t l bills to&#13;
$10 snd passing them. The same day&#13;
two young women giving their names&#13;
as Bella Whitmore and Lydia Ward&#13;
were arrested at Detroit while Willis&#13;
Whitmore and Sherman Johns were&#13;
locked up at South Bend, Ind., all on&#13;
the same charge. Detroit, Toledo,&#13;
Lansing, Pontine and other points&#13;
have been visited by the gang and a&#13;
great many of the altered bills passed.&#13;
Mrs. Charles Bishop, who lives with&#13;
her husband and little child at Mason,&#13;
has conducted a very prosperous matrimonial&#13;
business with herself as one&#13;
of the principals. It is alleged that&#13;
she advertised in matrimonial papers&#13;
that she wanted to marry and when&#13;
promising replies were received "bled&#13;
the suckers" for wedding trousseaus&#13;
and for money to pay her fare to the&#13;
point where the would-be groom resided.&#13;
The U. &amp; postal authorities&#13;
are now after Mrs. Bishop, but she has&#13;
skipped.&#13;
Assistant Secretary otf the Navy&#13;
Roosevelt has finished his inspection&#13;
of the naval militia of the various&#13;
states and highly praises the Miohigan&#13;
contingent, declaring them to be unexcelled&#13;
by those of any other state.&#13;
He was especially struck by the fact&#13;
that tbe Detroit battalion was evidently&#13;
recruited from the very best&#13;
class of young men in the state, their&#13;
conduct indicating an enthusiasm and&#13;
serious purpose on their part which&#13;
was not only creditable t o them, but&#13;
most promising for the efficiency of&#13;
this arm of the nations defense.&#13;
f. '•«&#13;
Minors' Strike News,&#13;
The officers of the striking coal&#13;
miners are centering their influence&#13;
and efforts upon the men still working&#13;
in the West Virginia fields and tbe&#13;
mines of the New York and Cleveland&#13;
Gas Coal Co., of which P. H. • DeArmit&#13;
is president, in the Pittsburg district&#13;
Strikers to the number of 0,000 to 8,000&#13;
assembled near the Turtle Creek and&#13;
Plum Creek mines for the purpose of&#13;
inducing the workers there to come&#13;
out DeArmitt urged Sheriff Lowry,&#13;
of Allegheny county, to post notices&#13;
demanding that the strikers disband&#13;
and return to their homes under the&#13;
threat of legal proceedings being taken&#13;
against them. This only produced a&#13;
more .determined feeling among the&#13;
strikers and the sheriff, fearing that a&#13;
crisis was approaching, telegraphed&#13;
Gov. Hastings news of the situation with&#13;
a view of having him prepare for an&#13;
emergency. The strikers continued to&#13;
gather and held big mass meetings at&#13;
McCrea's school house and other points&#13;
about tbe DeArmit mines, and they&#13;
established camps at various places.&#13;
The strikers are slowly winning&#13;
points about the De Armit mines.&#13;
They have already practically closed&#13;
the Sandy creek and Oak Hill mines,&#13;
and the Plum creek men are coming&#13;
out in small bodies. The marchers&#13;
claim they have succeeded in inducing&#13;
those of the miners who live at Coalport,&#13;
where the Plum creek tipple Is&#13;
located, in joining the ranks. This reduces&#13;
the number of men in the mine&#13;
by 50. The success of the campers in&#13;
bringing out the Coalport miners&#13;
brightened the spirits of the men and&#13;
made tbem more positive of victory.&#13;
The men were pleasantly surprised&#13;
when a dozen women, with their children,&#13;
walked into camp. They are&#13;
the wives of miners, and when they&#13;
said they had come to stay as long as&#13;
their husbands and brothers were&#13;
there, and would cook, they were given&#13;
three cheers.&#13;
Peace and order seem to be the&#13;
watchword of the strikers. They realize&#13;
that they have the sympathy of the&#13;
public, and if they lose it their cause&#13;
will get a black eye. At the headquarters&#13;
of the miners' officials in&#13;
Pittsburg there are daily many proffers&#13;
of aid, and the majority did not wish&#13;
the public to know of their sympathy.&#13;
Undo soat so Pretest • Coop ay the Japs&#13;
A Washington dispatch says: The&#13;
navy department Issued an order for&#13;
the battleship Oregon, the fastest and&#13;
most powerful in the navy, to proceed&#13;
at once to Honolulu. The Baltimore,&#13;
now at Mare Island navy yard, will&#13;
also be ordered to Hawaii as soon as&#13;
she is out of dock, and orders were&#13;
sent to rush work on her. These orders&#13;
are taken here as an indication&#13;
that the government is not entirely&#13;
satisfied with the polite attitude of&#13;
Japan and does not propose to be caught&#13;
napping by any coup that may be meditated&#13;
by the astute Japs.&#13;
While it has been the policy of the&#13;
high officials of the administration to&#13;
treat all talk of trouble with Japan&#13;
with scorn, there is a strong feeling in&#13;
the war and navy departments and&#13;
among the officers of both branches of&#13;
the service that affairs are really&#13;
growing serious.&#13;
Information has just been received&#13;
from Honolulu by the steamer Belgic&#13;
that upon the arrival of the steamship&#13;
Mouna at Honolulu from San Francisco&#13;
D. S. minister Seweli will carry&#13;
out the instructions received in the&#13;
last mail said to be to this effect: If&#13;
the Mouna brings word that congress&#13;
failed to pass the annexation treaty,&#13;
Minister Seweli is to declare a protectorate&#13;
and raise the American, flag. In&#13;
view of the attitude of Japan Secretary&#13;
Sherman believed a protectorate of the&#13;
United States is the only way to prevent&#13;
possible hostility on the part of&#13;
the Japanese while awaiting congressional&#13;
action on the annexation treaty.&#13;
Senator Morgan, of Alabama, the&#13;
leading Democratic member of the&#13;
Senate foreign relations committee,&#13;
will leave Sept 1 for Hawaii as a rep&#13;
resentative of the committee, to make&#13;
a report on the condition of affairs on&#13;
the island. He will return before the&#13;
convening of congress in December.&#13;
It is safe to say that Morgan's report&#13;
will be a strong appeal for annexation.&#13;
Senator Morgan's two daughters will&#13;
accompany their father.&#13;
Senator M. 8. Quay, of Pennsylvania,&#13;
has announced hie intentions of making&#13;
an early trip to the Hawaiian&#13;
islands to make a careful study of the&#13;
country.&#13;
John C. O'ConnelL a well-known politician,&#13;
was found at his home near&#13;
Redwood Falls, Minn., with seven big&#13;
gashes in his scalp and his clothing&#13;
saturated with oil and partially burned.&#13;
Investigation showed that his wife had&#13;
killed him and tried to bum the bod/&#13;
while temporarily insane because of&#13;
his abuse while drunk.&#13;
•mmtm&#13;
qPRlplNQ AOA N*T ptfJTlSH.&#13;
levoltla tndis wii«U|anaMer-&#13;
,&gt;.J, \ M4%Mel''%rhtbuf-^ ••*&#13;
fe«pnsequeuoe of W r«pW »I*P«d&#13;
of ifWfewolt against BrftUh authority&#13;
in India, from 18,000 to lft&gt;QQv natives&#13;
now being under anna, she government&#13;
hail ordered the reserve brigade&#13;
to assemble under the command of CoL&#13;
Wodehouse. Fort Chakdasa was at*&#13;
tacked by the natives abdul 8 p m .&#13;
and continued until J. o'clock the next&#13;
day. The English lost five wounded.&#13;
The native loss is not known, but it is&#13;
believed to have been heavy. Fort&#13;
Chakdara is strong enough to resist&#13;
any attack and it has a good supply of&#13;
ammunition. The only fear U that&#13;
the garrison may become exhausted&#13;
by constant fighting. The tribesmen&#13;
are sending forth fresh relays continually.&#13;
British reinforcements with&#13;
abundant supplies of ammunition have&#13;
arrived at Dargai. The march was&#13;
forced and very rapid, and 19 Sikhs&#13;
died from sunstroke on the way.&#13;
Insurgent* Attack Havana's Suburbs.&#13;
A Hhvana dispatch says: • The story&#13;
of an attack by insurgents on the suburbs&#13;
of Havana is confirmed by Senor&#13;
Calbajer, a \ wealthy Spanish, who&#13;
with his wife and daughter have fled&#13;
from Havana, \ The attack was made&#13;
on the vtllage^of Majnanao.about 10&#13;
miles west of HavjWa^Senor Calbajer&#13;
was an eye witness of the raid. He&#13;
says that the/attack was led by insurgents&#13;
under Baldomeroa Coasts, Juan&#13;
Delgado and Hernandez. They were&#13;
well armed with dynamite rapid-fire&#13;
guns and met with slight resistance.&#13;
The engagement was short and desperater&#13;
and 40 Spaniards were killed&#13;
and ISO wounded; two Cubans were&#13;
killed and 40 wounded. Tbe inhabitants&#13;
of the town fled for their lives,&#13;
leaving the insurgents in complete&#13;
possession. They sacked the place&#13;
and secured 840,000 in gold besides a&#13;
large quantity of supplies, Senor Calbajer&#13;
says that the wildest terror&#13;
reigns in Havana and that tbe well-todo&#13;
inhabitants are leaving as fast aa&#13;
the local laws permit&#13;
The Oroctan ftttnaWon Again Alarming.&#13;
It is rumored that the possible abdication&#13;
of the king of Greece has inspired&#13;
the following dispatch from&#13;
Athens: "It Is stated on good authority&#13;
that In the event of a proposal&#13;
looking to the establishment of foreign&#13;
control of Grecian finances being&#13;
adopted by the powers the king will&#13;
make a declaration of Exceptional&#13;
gravity. Russia and Germany having&#13;
counseled Greece to submit to the conditions&#13;
imposed by the powers, M.&#13;
Ralli, the premier, replied that Greece&#13;
would never accept the idea of financial&#13;
control proposed, and that she&#13;
would help herself."&#13;
The foreign admirals at the Island of&#13;
Crete held a conference and decided to&#13;
oppose by force the landing of any additional&#13;
Turkish troops. In reply to&#13;
their notification to that effect Ismail&#13;
Bey said he could not accept such a&#13;
decision. It is believed that fresh&#13;
trouble is brewing.&#13;
Spots to War Witk U. 8. to ROT* HOMOM&#13;
A Spanish diplomatist who is in close&#13;
touch with Senor Canovas del Castillo,&#13;
the Spanish premier, says that it is&#13;
useless longer to attempt to disguise&#13;
the fact that the Spanish ministry is&#13;
in a very tight place, and that in order&#13;
to retire gracefully from Cuba and at&#13;
the same time save the monarchy&#13;
Spain may have to go to war with the&#13;
United States. He admits that Spain&#13;
cannot raise money to carry on the&#13;
war in Cuba much longer. The premier&#13;
will court war the moment the&#13;
United States becomes im??ratiTf In&#13;
its demands tor the independence of&#13;
Cuba. The wave of great emotion and&#13;
patriotism, such as war would call out&#13;
in Spain, would naturally sink aU&#13;
threatening domestic questions and&#13;
disturbances, and save the present&#13;
dynasty.&#13;
K - - • — • A cyclone struck the farm of A. C.&#13;
McDowell, near San Jose, III, and his&#13;
house and barn were eatkeiy destroyed.&#13;
Seven people - were killed&#13;
and three severely injured.&#13;
The right of the British government&#13;
to take possession of Palmyra island,&#13;
in the Pacific, is to be disputed. Luther&#13;
Wilcox, of Honolulu, declares&#13;
that the island belonged to himself&#13;
and two others, and that they secured&#13;
their right from the Pacific Navigation&#13;
Co., which purchased the island&#13;
from the Hawaiian government&#13;
Bluejackets from the U. S. ships&#13;
Yorktown and Boston have been several&#13;
times attacked by coolies in Kobe,&#13;
Japan, even the policemen taking part&#13;
against the Americans. James Mullen,&#13;
a bluejacket from the Boston, was tied&#13;
by the lega and dragged around she.&#13;
pier and was than arrested by Japanese&#13;
polieemen. On another occasion a&#13;
party of American bluejackets was&#13;
atoned.&#13;
The Canadian government has decided&#13;
to impose a royalty on all placer&#13;
diggings in Canadian territory on the&#13;
Yukon in addition to fl5 registration&#13;
fee and »100 annual assessment The&#13;
royalty will be 10 per cent each oa&#13;
claims with an output of 9600 or lass&#13;
monthly, and 80 per cant on every&#13;
claim yielding above that amount&#13;
Besides this every other claim is reserved&#13;
to the government&#13;
-a&#13;
L-U: -I'&#13;
4 '&#13;
* &amp;&#13;
% * , &lt; * • ;&#13;
*...w&gt;;. 1¾ •t'\&#13;
?i l ' "W' &gt;"&gt;"' "y 'A&#13;
• , p&lt;&#13;
.-, r*&#13;
'£?:;M*&lt;&#13;
: ^ • !**!&amp;&#13;
:':r.^' *&#13;
.y.i&#13;
*4.T&#13;
INTERNATIONAL&#13;
CHAPTER Xl.-rCojiTWiD«D.)&#13;
Caussidlere started in surprise; he&#13;
was not accustomed to auoh plain&#13;
•peaking.&#13;
"Madame is severe," he replied, with&#13;
a sarcastic smile. "She does not approve&#13;
of the morals of my nation? No?&#13;
Yet parbleu! they compare not unfavorably&#13;
with those of pious Scotland!"&#13;
This rebuff rathe* disconcerted the&#13;
plain spoken lady, who turned up the&#13;
path impatiently, while the Frenchmanshrugged&#13;
his shoulders and looked&#13;
loftily indignant Macfrrte, who had&#13;
watched the preceding passage at arms&#13;
with no little anxiety, not quite following&#13;
the ooMereation, glanced imploringly&#13;
at Oavsaidiew.&#13;
"Don't mind Miss Hetherington," she&#13;
said, when the lady was out of hearing.&#13;
"What Mr. Lorraine says of her&#13;
is true; her bark'a waur than her bite,&#13;
and she means no offense."&#13;
"Who is she, ray child? Oh, I remember,&#13;
the eccentric old lady whom&#13;
you visited yesterday."&#13;
Marjorie nodded; and at that mo-'&#13;
' inent Mr. Lorraine came down the path,&#13;
followed by Solomon, and met Miss&#13;
Hetherington, who began talking to&#13;
him vehemently.&#13;
"She is not very polite," muttered&#13;
Caussidlere; "and see, she 1B already&#13;
abasing me to your guardian."&#13;
He held but his band.&#13;
"Good-bye! I shall see you, porhaps,&#13;
later in the day."&#13;
"Perhaps. Oh, monsieur, you are not&#13;
offended?"&#13;
""Not at all," replied Caussidlere,&#13;
though the look with which he regarded&#13;
his late antagonist- rather betted&#13;
his words. "I forgive her for your&#13;
sake, my child!"&#13;
Mar jorie did not go to church again&#13;
that day. She had a headache and&#13;
kept her room. It was altogether a&#13;
gloomy afternoon. Mr. Lorraine, secretly&#13;
troubled In his mind, had difficulty&#13;
in concentrating his thoughts on&#13;
his religious duties,, and Solomon preserved&#13;
an invincible taciturnity. So&#13;
the day passed away, and evening&#13;
came.&#13;
There was no evening service, for&#13;
Mr. Lorraine was too infirm to conduct&#13;
three services in one day. After a dismal&#13;
tea, to which Marjorie came down,&#13;
the minister sat reading a volume of&#13;
sermons, and presently Marjorie left&#13;
the room, put on her hat, and strolled&#13;
into the garden.&#13;
It was a beautiful evening, and the&#13;
moon was rising over the far-off hills.&#13;
With her head still aching wearily, the&#13;
girl wandered out upon the road and&#13;
into the churchyard. She crept close&#13;
to the western wall and looked for a&#13;
long time at one of the tombstones.&#13;
Then, sighing deeply, she came out&#13;
strolled up the village.&#13;
The bright weather and the fresh air&#13;
esticed her on and on till she came&#13;
to the rural bridge above the Annan&#13;
PRESS ASSOCIATION.&#13;
All was sttH and peaceful; not a&#13;
aotmd, not a breath disturbed the Sabbath&#13;
silence. She leaned over the stone&#13;
parapet and looked sadly down.&#13;
iter thoughts were wandering far&#13;
away tewing, dewing with the mur&#13;
msving stream. She had fallen into a&#13;
waking dream, when she heard a footstep&#13;
behind her. She started and uttered&#13;
a low cry as she saw a dark figure&#13;
approaching in the moonlight.&#13;
CHAPTER XII.&#13;
HE figure advanced&#13;
rapidly, and in a&#13;
i moment Marjorie&#13;
•recognised her tutor.&#13;
"Monsieur Caussidlere!"&#13;
she cried.&#13;
"Xea," returned&#13;
the French m a n&#13;
quietly, "it is I!"&#13;
"He took her&#13;
hand in his, and&#13;
found It cold and trembling .&#13;
"I have frightened you," he aaid.&#13;
"Yea, monsieur; I was startled because&#13;
I did not hear you coming, and I&#13;
seemed to be far away."&#13;
She seemed strangely sad aad preoccupied&#13;
tonight After the Frenchman&#13;
had joined her she relapsed into&#13;
bar former draam; aha folded her arms&#13;
«pon the bridge again, and fixed her&#13;
aad eyes upon the flowing river. Caussidiere,&#13;
partaking of the mood, looked&#13;
downward, too.&#13;
"You love the water, Marjorie?"&#13;
'Tea; it Is my kith and kin."&#13;
"You have been here for hours, have&#13;
you not? I sought yon at the manse&#13;
in vain."&#13;
."I waa not here, monsieur. I was in&#13;
the kirkyard among the graves."&#13;
"Among the graves?- returned the&#13;
Frenchman, looking anxiously at her.&#13;
"A ettenge place tor you to wandar in.&#13;
my child! It is only when we have&#13;
seen trouble and lost friends that we&#13;
seel: such places, For me it would be&#13;
fitting, perhaps, but for you it is different.&#13;
You are so young and should&#13;
be so happy."&#13;
"Ah, yes!" sighed Marjorie. "I am&#13;
happy enough."&#13;
"And yet you sadden the days that&#13;
should be the brightest by wandering&#13;
near the dead. Why did you go to the&#13;
churchyard, little one?"&#13;
"Why, monsieur? To see my mother's&#13;
grave."&#13;
"Your mother'* grave? I thought&#13;
you did not know your mother?"&#13;
"They say she was my mother," returned&#13;
Marjorie, quickly. "She was&#13;
found drowned in Annan Water—was&#13;
it not dreadful, monsieur?—and *he&#13;
was burled yonder in the kirkyard&#13;
when I was a little child." _N&#13;
"And you think she was your mother?"&#13;
"They say so, monsieur, but I do not&#13;
think it is true."&#13;
"No?"&#13;
"I have gone to her grave and stayed&#13;
by it, and tried to think they are right,&#13;
but I cannot—I aye come away as I&#13;
did tonight and look at Annan Water,&#13;
and feel it more my kin."&#13;
"Marjorie!"&#13;
"Yes, monsieur!" J&#13;
"I fancy you are rignt, child; perhaps&#13;
your mother lives."&#13;
"Ah, you think that?"&#13;
"More; she is perhaps watching over&#13;
you, though she cannot speak. She&#13;
may reveal herself some day."&#13;
"You believe so, monsieur?" repeated&#13;
Marjorie, her face brightening with&#13;
joy.&#13;
"It Is very probable, my child. You&#13;
are not of the ranallle, Marjorie. When&#13;
I first saw you I knew that; then I&#13;
heard your story, an4 it interested me.&#13;
I thought, 'We are strangely alike—we&#13;
are like two of a country cast adrift In&#13;
a foreign land, but our destinies seem&#13;
to be one. She is exiled from her kindred;&#13;
I am exiled from my home. She&#13;
has a kindly heart and will understand&#13;
me; we must be friends, Marjorie, will&#13;
we not?"&#13;
He held out his hand, and the girl&#13;
took i t&#13;
"Yon are very good, monsieur," 3he&#13;
answered simply.&#13;
"Then you must treat me as a friend,&#13;
iaapevl, Uttle one!" he answered. "I&#13;
will take no money for your lessons. It&#13;
is a pleasure for me to teach you, and&#13;
—and Mr. Lorraine is not rich."&#13;
"Mr. Lorraine?" said Marjorie, opening&#13;
her blue eyes; "it is not Mr. Lorraine&#13;
who pays for my schooling, but&#13;
Miss Hetherington."&#13;
"Is that so?"&#13;
"Yes; that is so. Mr. Lorraine did&#13;
not wish to have me taught beyond my&#13;
station; but Miss Hetherington said I&#13;
must »e*m.M&#13;
Caussidlere seemed to reflect profoundly.&#13;
"Miss Hetherington is a philanthropic&#13;
lady, then?"&#13;
"Do you think so, monsieur?"&#13;
"Do not you chink so, Marjorie, since&#13;
she is universally kind and generous?"&#13;
"An," returned Marjorie, "I do not&#13;
think she is always generous, moiisleur;&#13;
but ane ML very kind to me. Why | sought&#13;
she has almost kept me ever since I&#13;
Mttle heart overflowing, ana walked&#13;
away down the moonlit road. She had&#13;
not gone many steps when she was&#13;
abruptly joined by a man. She did not&#13;
•tart nor seem surprised; indeed,&#13;
while she was parting with the Frenchman&#13;
she had seen John Sutherland&#13;
watching her from the opposite side of&#13;
the road.&#13;
"Good-evening, Johnnie," said Marjorie,&#13;
Quietly. "Why did you not come&#13;
forward to speak to Monsieur Caussidlere?"&#13;
The young man started, but made no&#13;
answer. /&#13;
"Johnnie, what is jrrong?" she asked.&#13;
He paused, and looked at her.&#13;
"Marjorie,"~*r said, "tell me what&#13;
you were doing with that man?"&#13;
It was so time for his reproaches;&#13;
her whole soul rose in revolt.&#13;
"With that man?" she repeated, iingrily.&#13;
"Do you mean with Monsieur&#13;
Caussidlere?"&#13;
"Yes, with that villainous Frenchman,"&#13;
he returned, driven recklessly&#13;
onward by his anger. Why are you&#13;
always in his company, Marjorie Annan?"-&#13;
Marjorie drew herself proudly up.&#13;
! SILENT SOTOMEEBa&#13;
« * s a M * M&#13;
&lt;»« nwt Lftw t o T«fl gv&#13;
t h s Details of TUaT&#13;
Private Wo,&#13;
Had the Frenchman seen her then, he&#13;
would have little doubt as to the stock&#13;
whence she came.&#13;
"I am in his company because I am&#13;
his friend," she answered, proudly.&#13;
"Yes, his friend; and as his friend I&#13;
will not hear him insulted. Goodnight."&#13;
She walked quickly away, but in a&#13;
moment he was again "beside her.&#13;
"Marjorie, will you not listen to&#13;
me?"&#13;
"No, I will not," returned the girl,&#13;
angrily. "Whatever you have to say&#13;
against Monsieur Caussidlere you shall&#13;
not say to me. He was right; you&#13;
are all agalnBt him, and you are the&#13;
worst of all. Do you think it is just or&#13;
kind to abuse a man simply because&#13;
he is a stranger and unfortunate? What&#13;
has Monsieur Caussidlere ever done to&#13;
you that you should dislike him so&#13;
much?"&#13;
The young man stared at her flushed&#13;
cheeks and angry eyes; then he exclaimed:&#13;
"Marjorie, answer me! Tell me It's&#13;
not possible, that you care for yon&#13;
man?"&#13;
She flushed 'crimson and turned&#13;
away.&#13;
"I care for anyone," she answered,&#13;
evasively, "who Is alone and who&#13;
wants a friend. Monsieur Caussidlere&#13;
has been very kind to, me—and I am&#13;
sorry for him."&#13;
"You are more than that, Marjorie—&#13;
but take care, for I know he is a scoundrel."&#13;
"How dare you say *&gt;?" returned&#13;
Marjorie.. "You are a coward, Johnnie&#13;
Sutherland. If he were here you would&#13;
not speak like that."&#13;
"I would gay the same to him as to&#13;
you. If he were not a scoundred he&#13;
would not entice you from your home."&#13;
This was too much for Marjorie. She&#13;
uttered an indignant exclamation, and*&#13;
without deigning to reply, hastened&#13;
rapidly away. This time he did hot&#13;
hasten after her; and almost before he&#13;
could recover from his surprise she had&#13;
entered the manse door.&#13;
The reason why so nMy&lt;womett/#wJto&#13;
I in alienee from the multiple disardmtae*&#13;
(stated wit* their sexual system la thai&#13;
they cannot bear to broach the subject&#13;
to a man, even if he is a physician.&#13;
No one can blame a modest, seasitlfwwoman&#13;
for this Sftioanca, It is&#13;
sary i s these times, however, for a&#13;
makes to all afflicted women a most generoue&#13;
offer. Mrs. Pinkham of Lynn, Mass., bids every?&#13;
woman who suffers to write to her and oonflda&gt;&#13;
every symptom that annoys her, and she will give&#13;
her advice without charge, and that advioe it&#13;
baaed upon the greatest experience ever possessed&#13;
by man or woman in this country, and extends over&#13;
a period of twenty-three years, and thousand* «po»&#13;
thonsandsof cases. Why suffer in tUenceany longer,&#13;
a y sister, when you can gethelpfor thaasldng? Don't fear totellher everything,&#13;
The ease of Mrs. Colony, whose letter to Mrs. Pinkham we publish, is an&#13;
Illustration of the good to be received from Mrs. Pinkhara's advice ; here is a&#13;
woman who was sick for years and eonld get no relief-—at last in despair she&#13;
wrote to Mrs. Pinkham—received in return a prompt, sympathetic and interested&#13;
reply.Kotei the result and go and do likewise.&#13;
"I was troubled with such an aching in my back and hips; and I felt so tired&#13;
all the time, and had for four years. For the last year it was all I eonld do to&#13;
drag around. I would have such a ringing in my head by spells that it seemed&#13;
as though I would grow crazy. I ached from my shoulders to my feet and&#13;
was very nervous. I was also troubled with a white discharge. I wrote to Mrs.&#13;
Pinkham at Lynn, Mass., received a prompt reply and followed her adviee, and&#13;
BOW I have no backache and begin to feel as one ought; in fact, I never fait better&#13;
in ten years than I do now. I thank God that I went doctoring with Mm&#13;
Pinkham when I did, for if J had not I know I would have been in my grave**&#13;
—MB*. NBXLXX B^COLOJTY, Nahma, Mien.&#13;
he*i&#13;
*i«%C&#13;
was a child/*&#13;
To this the Frenchman did not reply;&#13;
he seemed somewhat disturbed; he lit&#13;
a cigar and watched Marjorie through&#13;
the clouds of smoke. Presently the&#13;
clock in the church tower struck the&#13;
hour, and Marjorie started.&#13;
"I must be walking home," she said.&#13;
She began to move across the bridge,&#13;
the Frenchman, keeping beside her.&#13;
They walked steadily onward, and&#13;
now they reached the door of the inn.&#13;
Marjorie paused and held forth her&#13;
hand.&#13;
"Good-night, monsieur," she said.&#13;
"Good-night!—shall I not walk with&#13;
&gt;ou to the manse, little one?**&#13;
Marjorie shook her head.&#13;
"I would rather walk there alone."&#13;
The Frenchman shrugged his shoulders.&#13;
"Eh Men! since you wish it I will&#13;
think you are right Good-night, my&#13;
little friend, and au re voir."&#13;
He took the hand which she had oxtended&#13;
toward nim, raised it toward&#13;
hie lips, then patted it as if he had been&#13;
patting the fingers of a child; it was&#13;
this air of fatherly friendliness which&#13;
made her trust him, and which worn lor&#13;
him ail the sympathy of her affectionate&#13;
heart.&#13;
When Caussidlere imprinted a kiss&#13;
upon her hand she neither blushed nor&#13;
drew it away, but she said softly:&#13;
"Good ulght, monsieur, God bieas&#13;
you!" at which the Frenchman 1"ttml&#13;
her hand again, then, turning quickly&#13;
entered the inn.&#13;
Marjorie turned, too* feeUag her kind&#13;
-an&#13;
CHAPTER XIII.&#13;
FTER the scene&#13;
with Marjorie on&#13;
Sunday night,Sutherland&#13;
was in a&#13;
state of despair; for&#13;
two days he walked&#13;
about in misery; on&#13;
the third day his&#13;
resolution was fixed&#13;
and he determined&#13;
to act. He went up&#13;
to the Castle and&#13;
Interview w i t&#13;
erington, to whom he told of the scene&#13;
which he had had with Marjorie, of her&#13;
anger against himself, and of her constant&#13;
meetings with the stranger, via?&#13;
Hetherington listened with averted&#13;
head, and laughed grimly when he had&#13;
done.&#13;
"I see how it is," she said; " 'tis the&#13;
old tale; twa lads and a lassie. But I&#13;
dinna like the French man, Johnnie,&#13;
no more than yourself. I'll speak&#13;
with Mr. Lorraine; maybe 'tis his work&#13;
to keep the bairnie right, though he&#13;
does his work ilL Tm thinking. You're&#13;
a good lad, Johnnie, and as to Marjorie,&#13;
she's a short-sighted eedict not to see&#13;
wha's her friend."&#13;
She spoke lightly and cheerfully; but&#13;
the moment Sutherland disappeared&#13;
both her face and manner changed.&#13;
"The lad was right," she said. "Love&#13;
has made him keen sighted, and he has&#13;
told me the truth. Marjorie la in danger.&#13;
Now is the time when she needs&#13;
the care o' kind folk to keep her free&#13;
the one false step that ruins alL Marjorie&#13;
Annan, what shall I do for you&#13;
my bairn?"&#13;
She stood for a time meditating:&#13;
then Abe looked at her watch and found&#13;
it waa still early in the day; aha summoned&#13;
her old servant, ordered her carriage,&#13;
and a quarter of an hour later&#13;
was driving away toward the town of&#13;
Dumfries.&#13;
Hardly had she left when the Frenchman&#13;
came to the castle, and, by dint of&#13;
bribing the old serving man, 8andy&#13;
Sloan, with a golden sovereign* was&#13;
permitted to view the different rooms.&#13;
(ro as covtwosmj&#13;
Fruit is considered by many authorities&#13;
as one of the best aids to digestion.&#13;
Therefore, they say It should he&#13;
eaten freely. Its -"beneficial effect is&#13;
due to the malic and other aafcfc which&#13;
are found in the cultivated mats, such&#13;
as pears, apples, grapes, etc.&#13;
There is a physician in Paris who declares&#13;
that the milk diet usually ordered&#13;
In fever cases is largely responsible&#13;
for the falling out of the hair.&#13;
He believes that a vegetable diet will&#13;
cure baldness or at any rale ward it&#13;
off and he points to the "hairy Scot&#13;
who lives on oat meal as a proof of big&#13;
theory*&#13;
WASHING A F I N E A S T .&#13;
'Ever since spinning was a type of&#13;
womanly industry from age to age, it has&#13;
been expected that beautiful apparel should&#13;
clothe women. From the classic robes of&#13;
Aepasia to the rich dresses of Elisabeth,&#13;
and thence to the wedding gown of Puritan&#13;
Priscella we see the attractiveness of&#13;
dress." But at this time only has it become&#13;
possible for all women to be becomingly&#13;
attired at a small cost, the supply of&#13;
beautiful inexpensive dress fabrics BOW to&#13;
be bad, making it an easy matter. Yet&#13;
there are women who insist that the expense&#13;
of having summer gowns laundered&#13;
is greater than the original cost, aad that&#13;
in the end light woolens or summer silks&#13;
are more economical. This is a mistaken&#13;
idea, as washing pretty belongings is aline&#13;
art, which is very easy to learn. Any girl&#13;
no matter how delicately reared can wash&#13;
her own summer gown. A bright day,&#13;
plenty of water, and a little pule soap are&#13;
the necessary aids in the work. To do it,&#13;
fill a tub two-thirds full of warm water,&#13;
dissolve a fourth of a cake of Ivory Soap,&#13;
(which will not fad* the moat delicate&#13;
colors), add it to the water, wash the garments&#13;
carefully through it, rinse first in&#13;
dear water, then in Hue water, wring,&#13;
dip in thin starch, hand on the line in the&#13;
shade. When dry, sprinkle, and iron on&#13;
wrong side. Eliza B. Parker.&#13;
son eyes, use JI awBBpasjBrg Bjsj WeTIKfe&#13;
OPIUM SW&amp;'tXVSl JffSi&#13;
V I l l r s s s j aerraA».»MNM«ii*s.,cwir4se.na,&#13;
CANCER K H T J « S&#13;
DROPSY c*at«, treatment&#13;
NEW DISCOVERY;,&#13;
_ _ _ quick reller sou cnreswenSttead&#13;
for book of tMttmoniaU sad lO dare*&#13;
S^SUSBSSB'SSSIS. l&gt;lMia7ea&gt; PENSIONS. PATEHT8. CUUM&amp;&#13;
»yi»Jai—tw«rJssajBrtt»«ttnaifwiiiM&lt;4iKjri&#13;
Cast jet&#13;
$12 TO $35 Faro*)&#13;
Per WEEK 5 ^ rt-otrvVaV/sre&#13;
PIANO FREE a &lt;P e— t copr &lt;rf oar POP"*** .and teaaij^ asajr&#13;
Sesd as 10 Mattes*&#13;
s two ceat&#13;
etMsaadwewils&#13;
atsiltojou.Frat,&#13;
entitled&#13;
~ with i&#13;
a new aprichs nlaaa,&#13;
&gt;feo*t. firamnsfreeofcost. Send roaSr ex or 3f» County aid State—plainly Written, to the&#13;
•W e^sjs^P SJpggw ene^g^g^sgf S^esn^f. mrw^F ae^e^aasl ^ • ' • y ^^•V^Snfl^^Vp'Si^ps*&#13;
UNIVERSITY OP NOTRE DAME,&#13;
N o t r e Dame),&#13;
Classics, Letters,&#13;
Indiana.&#13;
L a w , Civil,&#13;
B o t a u F r e e . Jaalar or N U N T«ar,&#13;
P a n e s . St. Bdward's B a l l , Urn m&gt;y%&#13;
TIM l e i t k T e n s wtu M M aepceaal&#13;
1 0 0 7 . Cataloa*m« ate* Free oa appt&#13;
B e v . • . Harris—v. O. S- C F n&#13;
l * &gt;&#13;
7«*»&#13;
i£y)olun)bias,r,S5-el&amp; •m^L^gg ssewaaaifor ass.su testa, sieste*"&#13;
^mmmmm* M*. C. O. D. oa Manual Qatakaf fraa&gt;&#13;
Some fellews get very low down in getting&#13;
up in the world.&#13;
freelTeeacce Sad sad Sets** Year U s t M s t f .&#13;
To quit tobacco easily and forever, be magnetic.&#13;
rull of lit e .nerve and vigor .take No-To-&#13;
Bac, the wonder worker, that makes weak&#13;
men strong. All druggists, 60C or Si. Cure&#13;
guaranteed. Booklet and sample free. Ad.&#13;
Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York.&#13;
Before we can do much good We must first&#13;
be good.&#13;
an ogset to stupidity.&#13;
estE YemtiF!&#13;
• f i h a ? * * i a s U a t a a a a l&#13;
Irritation* er aJcanttteaa*&#13;
of a t a c o a * BMMJ&#13;
raialeat, and sot&#13;
W.N. U,—DETROIT—NO.32--97&#13;
STANDARD OF&#13;
THE WORLD. &gt;&#13;
»75.00&#13;
Closest Detailed Inspection&#13;
Every single one of the many parts of a Columbia bkyde is&#13;
passed several times through the hands of skilled *w&gt;rkinej*&#13;
who examine it in the utmost detaiL Suo% an elaborate system&#13;
of inspection is expensive, but no expense is spared in&#13;
building Columbias. They are as near perfection in&#13;
ment and finish as buman ingenuity can make them.&#13;
1*96 COLUMBIAS, M l&#13;
HAinWRD BICYCLES, $5«9 $45, $41&#13;
POPE MWi. CO., Htutfavl, OMUL&#13;
tar&#13;
TEACHERS WANTED! Sand torliatofiOSO&#13;
nsstisflaa ISesats jsgnssr Msfc* eoasi&#13;
tjlsslrs end cjrealees t w a Wi s a — i %&#13;
five free resist ration; oaeptaa&#13;
aad a eVkUS love stetr&#13;
m&#13;
^&#13;
.'•V;&#13;
x'ti&#13;
:M&#13;
.if:&#13;
J,i 9:&#13;
; • • : : &amp; •&#13;
••' #i&#13;
X' ".-I&#13;
•..#:L&#13;
M&#13;
' \ * . ' • * . • '&#13;
'• **'•?...&amp;&#13;
%f&#13;
mmuikA&#13;
m KwWa-x1. '•ttV u » **"&#13;
i ::-¾&#13;
urn* MVP&#13;
T l v •P&#13;
\K .. . .1&#13;
s.'• Tft£!"&#13;
p&gt;,3#&#13;
i • * * ;&#13;
&amp;&#13;
N'.&#13;
'rV&#13;
1J -'\ ,&#13;
* &amp;# "&#13;
; ! * . •&#13;
m&#13;
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'•"'»:••&#13;
ftp&#13;
'•V,:&#13;
, • » '&#13;
rftn^f&#13;
F. L ANDREWS, EOITOR,&#13;
THURSDAY, AUG. 12, 1897.&#13;
Interesting Items.&#13;
When anything is proposed for&#13;
t h e good of your town don't stop&#13;
to quarrel with or about the person&#13;
proposing it. Leud a helping&#13;
hand. If it is a good thing it is&#13;
just as pood coming from your&#13;
worst enemy as if proposed by&#13;
your best friend.&#13;
An Oakland county farmer, who&#13;
has been unable to secure sufficient&#13;
help for the harvest, has postthis&#13;
sarcastic sign upon his fence:&#13;
"Harvest hands wanted Hired&#13;
girl blond and genial. Cabinet&#13;
organ music in the evening. Pie&#13;
three times a day. Three spoons&#13;
of sugar with every cup of coffee.&#13;
Hammocks, featherbeds cr leather&#13;
divans at your option for sleeping.&#13;
Rising hour 9 o'clock in the&#13;
morning. Three hours' rest at&#13;
n o o n . , Come one come all."—Ex.&#13;
Gov. Pingree does not like the&#13;
"Dingley Tarriff" bill as amended&#13;
and in persuance to his usual&#13;
custom, sends the following protest&#13;
to President McKinley, and&#13;
also t o ^ e n a t o r Burrows and Congressman&#13;
Spaulding: " I regard&#13;
the duty on lumber, hides and sugar&#13;
as unrepublican, unpatriotic&#13;
and unfair. The lumber now&#13;
used goes largely into small&#13;
homes and farm houses, and to a&#13;
class already greatly overtaxed.&#13;
T h e laborer wears twice as many&#13;
shoes as the millionair and must&#13;
pay twice as much toward the tax&#13;
on hides. H e must use as much&#13;
sugar and pay as much toward the&#13;
duty on sugar. I t is grossly unfair&#13;
to make the poor pay as much&#13;
per capita as the rich toward the&#13;
support of the government. Property&#13;
is protected by our laws and&#13;
should pay for its protection."&#13;
With five delightful stories in&#13;
the August COSMOPOLITAN, one&#13;
might judge that it was intended&#13;
solely for light reading in midsummer;&#13;
but a second glance&#13;
shows that it contains as well&#13;
much of serious interest. The&#13;
second paper by the special commissioner&#13;
sent by T h e Cosmopolitan&#13;
to India tells a tale, the like of&#13;
which has never before appeared&#13;
in any periodical. We have in&#13;
histories second-hand accounts of&#13;
MYSTERIOUS W A Y S OF WARTS.&#13;
On* that Waa "Wished OJT of » Child'*&#13;
flutter&#13;
, *'The more I study into the question&#13;
ofwarts," said a well-known physician&#13;
to a Washington Star man, "the more&#13;
convinced 1 am that there Is but little&#13;
known of them. It is surprUing what&#13;
few references are made to warts by&#13;
the standard writers. In many of the&#13;
leading books on Burgery there is no&#13;
mention at all of warts, and as a,resuit&#13;
physician* are almost as much in&#13;
the dark about them as others. To tel! j ten all about It till Tuesday last, when&#13;
the truth, I have got more information&#13;
from old nurses about wartB than 1&#13;
ever did from my medical or surgical&#13;
lectures or from my reading. Hundreds&#13;
and hundreds of times patients&#13;
have asked me how to get rldrjf warts&#13;
and my answer has generally been to&#13;
let them alone and that they would go&#13;
away as mysteriously as they came.&#13;
Of course, I xjould cut them ofX-or burn&#13;
them off with caustic or" nitric acUl&#13;
but my experience has been that two&#13;
or three came back for every one BO&#13;
removed. A few weeks since I was&#13;
visiting the wife of a southern senator,&#13;
who has two grandchildren with her&#13;
this winter. One of the grandchildren&#13;
had a 1)1¾ wart on the end ot the fore&#13;
"'r*wt*i" ui ime rietit harrt. and. of c&lt;\^r^-&#13;
ecftl-was paid for tiietn, with the&#13;
understandiug that when they&#13;
were put into book form the magazine&#13;
was to share the royalties&#13;
accruing therefrom. Mr. Bok,&#13;
however, of his own accord, generously&#13;
released General Harrison&#13;
from paying him any loyalty, for&#13;
the reason, as he states, that by&#13;
the publication of the articles by&#13;
General Harrison the subscription&#13;
list of his magazine was enlarged&#13;
mauy thousands. The profits&#13;
to "The Ladies' Home Journal"&#13;
were more thon t h e publishers&#13;
anticipated, and in view of this,&#13;
Mr. Bok asks nothing further.&#13;
General Harrison placed the disposition&#13;
of his book in Mr. Bok'a&#13;
hands. The best offer came to&#13;
the editor from the Scribners' and&#13;
to them Mr. Bok gave the book&#13;
for his distinguished contributor.&#13;
General Harrison's revision of&#13;
the book has just been completed,&#13;
and the volume will appear in the&#13;
autumn.&#13;
HARD ON PKDDLERS.&#13;
But All Right Just the Same.&#13;
The last legislature saw fit to ,&#13;
pass the following law,— !&#13;
"It, shall not be lawfull tor any per-;&#13;
son to engage in bawkinp, peddling&#13;
or pawnbrokeraizH by gointf about j&#13;
from door to door or place to place, or ,&#13;
from stand, to stand, cart, vehicle or j&#13;
in any other manner in the publin j&#13;
stn-rts, highway or in or upon open&#13;
plat"*, public building, in any town-';&#13;
ship in the state without first obrain-.&#13;
in*? of the township where such business&#13;
is to be carried on a license theieof.&#13;
Everybody who peddles except&#13;
wholesale merchants, inptiment dealers,&#13;
nurserymen, etc., selling bysam&#13;
pie, or those selling fish or meat outside&#13;
of incorporated villesres and cities,&#13;
shall procure a licence from the town&#13;
clerk, the amount of »nch license the&#13;
town board shall fix. The supervisor j ^&#13;
is required to see that the law i= en- It is always eratifuig f" receive&#13;
forced, and any violation of it must be j testimonials for Chamberlains, Colic&#13;
« i it every time the chtljd loucneQ anything.&#13;
I waa asked it, i could do anything&#13;
to remove It, and I replied a*&#13;
utual to let It alone and that In a abort&#13;
time it would dieappear. This, however,&#13;
was but little comiort to the&#13;
lady, who said the child, a Uttle boy&#13;
of 4 years, was, she thought, In constant&#13;
pain from it. I then told her&#13;
that if aha wished the wart from the&#13;
little fellow and on herself It would&#13;
likely change places, and that it would&#13;
be necessary for her to 'wish very hard'&#13;
to make a Bure transfer. I had forgot&#13;
I visited the lady again. Strange as&#13;
It may sound, the wart had left the&#13;
grandchild's finger and was on her&#13;
own, and giving her a great^deal of&#13;
pain, too."&#13;
An English hygienist of repute says&#13;
that a large proportion of the ills which&#13;
afflict men past the middle of life are&#13;
due to errors in diet, chiefly in the direction&#13;
of excess in quantity. He even&#13;
goes so far as to make the deliberate&#13;
aBsertion that more mischief in the&#13;
Bhape of lessened resisting powers,&#13;
actual disease and shortened life comes&#13;
to the inhabitants of Northern Europe&#13;
fron. tl.'.ir habits of eating than from&#13;
their a Li use o/ a^ohollc liquors.&#13;
Railroad Guide.&#13;
Oraud Trunk Railway System?&#13;
Arrival and Departure of Train* at Ptookuoy.&#13;
IaX«tc«Jiuie it, ifrvr.&#13;
warrtfoVfcD.&#13;
Lv. A»,&#13;
Jackson tad [Bterni'dta SU. t*.44 am t*.*) V m&#13;
" ••. •' H » p m T7.'v'»m&#13;
•AMBOVKD&#13;
Pontine Detrolt-^W.E»pl&lt;U&#13;
and Intermediate SU fS.JOpm t O U a a&#13;
Poatiae Lenox Detroit and i&#13;
toternudlate-Sta. f7.Wan H t t p a&#13;
M loh. Air Mae Dlv. train*&#13;
leavwPootlacat * . M a u t l » p m&#13;
for Romeo Leuox arid int. fU&lt;&#13;
D. 4 M. DIVISION LJ8AVB PONTUC&#13;
WMfSOCKD&#13;
IT SHINES&#13;
FOR ALL.&#13;
THBHSWEST&#13;
AIP BEST&#13;
OIL****&#13;
SHOE&#13;
POLISH&#13;
l a Colon.&#13;
BLACK, TAN,&#13;
GREEN and&#13;
OX BLOOD.&#13;
This U truly a&#13;
"OMCB A W E E K . "&#13;
shoo polish. a&gt; it&#13;
will bold a tbiae for a week, aad rain or snow&#13;
will cot spoil it. A Llqul4 Polish, put up in&#13;
large bottles, encased in neat canons, and makes&#13;
a good show in the package and on the shoe.&#13;
The s l e w t t a l a g on t h e Market for LADIES'&#13;
AND &lt;lENTLBMeN*5 FINB 5 H 0 B S AND&#13;
PATENT LEATHER. Easily applied. Requires&#13;
no robbing. Will not freeze.&#13;
Ask your local dealer lor it.&#13;
loetMer'ft "Oice a We*kMSkUt8aoe foils*&#13;
1^11111^1.(8.,11^1,^1.&#13;
I0E&#13;
0ENTLfMEN5AND&#13;
CH1LDREN5 5H0E5&#13;
HAflrCSSv^P/tTtNT LtATtCfl.&#13;
PRICE 2 5 *&#13;
PtADV FOB U&amp;t.&#13;
ROESSNERMGO&#13;
W1NONA.MIHHU5A&#13;
The Coast line to MACKINAC&#13;
• - • T A K l T M « — •&#13;
Saginaw Od Baplds and Gd Haven&#13;
Qd Rapids Od Haven Chicago&#13;
Saginaw Gd Kaplds MilwankM&#13;
Ohleago and Intermediate n a:&#13;
GdHapldB Muskegon&#13;
Detroit Bast and Canada&#13;
Detroit Eaat and Cuuaria&#13;
Detroit and South&#13;
Detroit East *udCiiuiul»&#13;
Detroit Suburban ., ,&#13;
Leave Detroit via Windsor&#13;
KAS1BOUND&#13;
Buffalo—Now York &amp; Biwtou&#13;
Toronto Mout:«»i»l New York&#13;
London Expre**&#13;
Buffalo New York k East&#13;
Lv. .&#13;
t&amp;ttAUl&#13;
flSJI p 01&#13;
tft.07pm&#13;
•a,fiopnj&#13;
•li.nara&#13;
•«.07,« m&#13;
Tio.saa m&#13;
\i.\n p m&#13;
t r . u s a m&#13;
*V.45 a m&#13;
•12. noon&#13;
-HMOpu&#13;
M M „ „„ ni.25jp m&#13;
7.45 a in tarln has sleepinK oara Detroit to Sew&#13;
York and Boston. ViM noon t ain has parlor&#13;
car to Hamilton—Sleeitlng car to ufaio an-1 New&#13;
York 11.25 train has sleeping oar to y e w York&#13;
fDaily except Sunday. 'Daily.&#13;
W. J. BLACK, Agent, Pintkoey Mich.&#13;
W. E. DAVIS ' E. H. UUUHK*&#13;
G. P. 4 T. A*en». A. G. PJ 4 T Agt.&#13;
Montreal, Qae. Chicago, 111.&#13;
BBN PtiTCHEit, i'rav. Pass. Agt., Detroit Mich.&#13;
•f&#13;
I O L E D O rv&#13;
NARBOji^&#13;
TO&#13;
reported to the prosecuting attorney,&#13;
who will proceed to prosecute.&#13;
great famins, but tbey lack that&#13;
startling distiuctne ss which comes&#13;
from beholding at first hand the&#13;
sights described Twenty millions&#13;
of people slowly starving to death&#13;
many of then in sight of the railways!&#13;
No American can form any&#13;
idea of t h e state of affairs now existing&#13;
in India. Mr. Hawthorne&#13;
has gone into the interior and&#13;
stood amongst the dead and dying,&#13;
I t is the first time that we have&#13;
h a d an American investigation of&#13;
t h e condition of affairs in India.&#13;
T h e report will open t h e eyes not&#13;
only of t h e civilizied world, but of&#13;
t h e English Parliament and t h e&#13;
Q u e e n herself to t h e necessity of&#13;
extraordinary exertion in behalf&#13;
of those unfortunate millions.&#13;
T h e Indianapolis Journal prints&#13;
t h i s interesting story concerning&#13;
ex-President Harrison's forth&#13;
com in g book: General Harrison&#13;
has just completed t h e revision of&#13;
his articles which have appeared&#13;
in " T h e Ltdiet* H o m e J o u r n a l / '&#13;
making extended notes a n d additions&#13;
to them. There is a little&#13;
gtory in connection with both articles&#13;
and publication. W h e n the&#13;
arrangement l o r t h e articles was&#13;
made with fjWerai Harrison by&#13;
B d w a t d J f c * o k , editor of "Xbe&#13;
I . ^ ^ J K s ^ ^ o a r n A l , ' ' t h e G e x -&#13;
M Y S T E R Y O F A S W I S S V A L L E Y .&#13;
Arm the Iuhabltaate Descendant* of t h e&#13;
UOJMf&#13;
Some notes on the population of the&#13;
A-nnlvlers valley in Switzerland are&#13;
given by a German authority quoted&#13;
in the Revue Sctentifique. This is a&#13;
long, narrow, deep valley, opening into&#13;
that of the Rhone and traversed by the&#13;
Naviscence, a rapid torrent. It includes&#13;
several villages, among others&#13;
Chandolin, which/ being situated at a&#13;
height of 5,376 feet, is one of the most&#13;
elevated in Europe. Its population has&#13;
given rise to lively controversy. Deaor&#13;
considered it of Arabian origin and&#13;
Frobel and Tschudi regarded It as&#13;
Celtic. A. K. Flahei, 111 a recent workT&#13;
is of another opinion. He considers&#13;
that the inhabitants of the Anniviers&#13;
are Huns, comformably with local tradition.&#13;
A small band of Huns was&#13;
separated from the main body and established&#13;
itself in the Fournanche valley.&#13;
Afterward, at the time of the&#13;
Lombard invasion, in the second half&#13;
of the sixth century, they fled into the&#13;
valley of Anniviers, then uninhabited,&#13;
and have held their position there ever&#13;
since, being very much Isolated irom&#13;
their neighbors, and being converted&#13;
to Christianity toward the twelfth century.&#13;
Many characteristics of the dialect&#13;
used by the people and many of&#13;
their customs seem to indicate, according&#13;
to Mr. Fisher, the accuracy of thl?&#13;
interpretation.&#13;
The Precious Totasne.&#13;
The highest price ever paid for a single&#13;
volume was tendered by a number&#13;
of wealthy Jewish merchants of Venice&#13;
to Pope Julius II for a very ancient&#13;
Hebrew Bible. It was then believed to&#13;
be an original copy of the Septuagint&#13;
version made from the Hebrew into&#13;
Greek in 277 B. C, careful copies of the&#13;
Hebrew text having been prepared at&#13;
that date for the use of seventy translators.&#13;
The offer to Julius was 20,000&#13;
pounds, which, considering the difference&#13;
between the valve of eaoney then&#13;
and now, would in our day represent&#13;
the princely sum of t68fc\0tt. Julius&#13;
was at that time greatly pee—ed for&#13;
money to maintain the Holy League&#13;
which the pope had organised against&#13;
France, but in spite of this lack fid&#13;
funds he declined the ofler.&#13;
Cholera and DurrlioHa lteuie.Jy and&#13;
when thtt •Midoi^inr.n • is froru a physician&#13;
it i? specially &gt;o. "There is no&#13;
more satislawoiy or fffeclive remedy&#13;
than ChamheHains Colic, Cholera and&#13;
Diarrhoea Remedy" writes Dr. R. E.&#13;
RDbey. physician and pharmacist ol&#13;
Olney, Mo. and as lie has used the&#13;
remedy in his own family and sold it&#13;
in his druuri--'"e for MX year*, he&#13;
should certainly Kncv. For sale hy&#13;
F, A. SiRkr.&#13;
r i c c r . i h .&#13;
Send your add) JJS 10 H. E. Buckle&#13;
Sc Co., Chicago, ar. 1 ^ot a free sample&#13;
box of Dr. Kings :: ^v Life Pills. A&#13;
trial will convince \ ou of tteir merits.&#13;
These pills are e&amp;&gt;\ n action and are&#13;
MACKINAC&#13;
DETROIT&#13;
PET08KEY&#13;
CHICAGO&#13;
New Steel Passenger Steamers&#13;
The Oreetest Perfection yet ettalned in&#13;
B««t Constmctton-Luxurteus Equipment,&#13;
Artistic Furnlsbla/r. Decoretlon end Efficient&#13;
Service, Insuring the highest degite of&#13;
COMFORT, SPEED AND SAFETV&#13;
Fous TRIPS PEH W E E K BETWEEN&#13;
Toledo, Detroit and Mackinac&#13;
PET08KEY, "THE SOO," MARQUETTE&#13;
AND DULUTH.&#13;
LOW RATES to Picturesque Mscklnecend&#13;
Return, including fleets end Berths. From&#13;
Clevelsnd. $«81 Irom Toledo, (15; Irom&#13;
Detroit, $13 50.&#13;
DAY AND NIQHT 8ERVICE.&#13;
Between Detroit and Cleveland&#13;
Connecting et Cleveland with Earliest&#13;
Trains for all point* East. South and »outhvtft&#13;
and at Detroit for all points North and&#13;
Northwest.&#13;
Sunday Trips June, July, August and Sspt Only&#13;
EVERY DAY BETWEEN&#13;
Cleveland,Put-in-Bay^Toledo&#13;
bend for Illustrated Pamphlet. Address&#13;
A. A. e C H A N T Z , « . w. ».. DBTROIT, M«CM.&#13;
Tte Detroit t Gimiana steam lav. Co.&#13;
particularly effect!v&#13;
•Constipation and F&#13;
Malaria and Liver&#13;
been proved inv;&#13;
guaranteed to be -&#13;
every deleterious i&#13;
purely vegetable.&#13;
in the cure of&#13;
. Headache. Fo;&#13;
ublesthey have&#13;
. u!e. They are&#13;
Hectly free from&#13;
stance and to he&#13;
1 bey do not weak&#13;
en by their action, but give tone to&#13;
the stomach and towels greatly invigorating&#13;
the &gt; stem. Regular size&#13;
25c. per bos. Sold bj F. • , 8igter,&#13;
Druggiat . . ^&#13;
A Keniarkalile Cure of Chronic Diarr-&#13;
&gt; li&lt;x»a.&#13;
In 1862, w'.^en I swrved mv country&#13;
as a private in Company A, 167th&#13;
Pennsylvania Volunteer*, I contracted&#13;
chronic diavboea. It has given rae a&#13;
srrrat deal of trouble evrr since. I&#13;
bavo tried a dozen different medicines&#13;
and several prominent doctors without&#13;
any permanent relief. Not long:&#13;
ajjp a Iriend sen* me a l&gt;uttle of Cham*&#13;
beriains Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea&#13;
Komcdy, nnd after that I bought and&#13;
Popular route for Ann Arbor, Toledo&#13;
and points East, South and for&#13;
Howeil, Oiroeso, Alma, Mt Pleasant,&#13;
Cadillac, Manistee, Traverse Oity and&#13;
points in Northwestern Michigan.&#13;
W. H. BWHITT,&#13;
G. P. A.. Toledo.&#13;
took a 50 cent bottle; and now I can&#13;
-ay that I am entirely cured. I cannot&#13;
be thankful enough t,o you for&#13;
this great remedy, and recommend it&#13;
to all suffering- vetrans. If in doubt&#13;
write me. Yours gratefully, Henry&#13;
Steinberger, Allentown, Pa. Sold by&#13;
F. A. Sigler.&#13;
so Ytaur&#13;
t X M M S N O C&#13;
TRAoOieSi otNdAe,a aa,&#13;
OOPYRICMTt A4J.&#13;
-peobal&#13;
•soerUin, free, whether an Invention u&#13;
eooftdedtlisL Oldest s*enoy lorsecuriaar psttenta&#13;
ID America. We have a Washington office.&#13;
Patents taken through liunn A Co. reoelre&#13;
speol&amp;l noctoe in th*&#13;
SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN,&#13;
Chamberlain's Colir, Cholera and&#13;
Diarrlio^a R e m e d v a l \ w &gt; s affords&#13;
prompt relief. F T HA\* by F A'&#13;
SK'ler.&#13;
S u b s c r i b e l«r t h e .r»x&amp;i&gt;v'CH.&#13;
Wanted-An Idea WbeeaAth!h&amp;&#13;
Ihlag to PMSSSW&#13;
your Ideas: they wsjr brinarjron wealth.&#13;
„ rite JOHN WKDDKBBUKN it CO„ ftteat i&#13;
oeTS. WMbiogtoo. D. C . for tfeelr $1,800 prts*&#13;
•ad Ust ot two Uumlred Ingenuous wanted.&#13;
JO'S f^RIJVTTJiTG!&#13;
ID all it* branches, a specialty. We haveallkliida&#13;
nod tbe latest style* of Type, etc., which enables&#13;
us I:&gt; executf all kinds of work, such as Books,&#13;
Partipkta. Posters, Programmes, bill Heads,Note&#13;
H&lt;:H&lt;in, Siatt'ineuts. r«rrts. Auction Bills, etc., ID&#13;
*&lt;\iw&gt;r|nr etvl«». «p«vr&gt; \\w MHnrteat notice. Pricesas&#13;
lev a* K(»o&lt;l work can lv» none.&#13;
beatttifiUbr lUnstrated, lawreat ctrcuUtion &lt;X&#13;
gpeciQM&#13;
TESTS seat t&#13;
MUNN &amp; CC&#13;
Oric^Ml&#13;
Roucet de I'lale'a tnaauscrtpt «f * 1 A&#13;
MinelUfswe" WM 4MM m. anctten l«to*&#13;
lw rn Parte for 2,8» traoee.&#13;
fliO six nonCbe_._ uuS, pweceiemaeirn. vceonpi)iseeso a.unud 1 ^ 0 0 ^ c&#13;
3 6 1 B r o u d w a y , H^w x^oriu&#13;
Over Thirty Years&#13;
Without Sickness.&#13;
Mr. H. WETT8TEIN, a well-known,&#13;
enterprising citizen of Byron, III.,&#13;
writes: "Before I paid much attention&#13;
to .regulating the bowela, I&#13;
hardly knew a well day; but since I&#13;
learned the evil results&#13;
of constipation,&#13;
and tbe €sfct*cr of&#13;
AVER'S&#13;
Pills, I have not had&#13;
oue day's sickness&#13;
f for over thirty years&#13;
— not one attack&#13;
that did not readily yield to this&#13;
remedy. My wife had been, previous&#13;
to our marriage, an invalid for&#13;
years. Sbe hud aj^rejudice against&#13;
cathartics, but as roon as she began&#13;
to use Ayer's Pills her health was&#13;
restored."&#13;
i ^ s t t a d M s M a *&#13;
*r&#13;
• &gt;&#13;
LW4AJ .^ikifi* • • w t f W 1 A'/'&amp;fjfflitt'ii'/':&#13;
^-rJ&#13;
• &lt;. s . v V ••&gt;.\, -y,&#13;
f i - ?&#13;
F*&gt; v '• M ' TO^&#13;
,^ :&#13;
* " ' ' - • • ' ' -',; *.«••. •••. * \f&gt;-. •; £ •&#13;
v V 1" ;J.' *&#13;
* &gt;&#13;
Idea 2 ^&#13;
F JBSJT beta&#13;
IWSMSMM&#13;
BSH&#13;
at&#13;
THE HERMIT'S REMEDY&#13;
fPRUGfl GUM*&#13;
iBIi Ulirifflfflll EDBE&#13;
Keep a Battle In tie Hooee,&#13;
• ^ SAVE YOUR LIFE.&#13;
P X i I C X 3 » » » C e n t s .&#13;
rive employment permanent&#13;
j » good agent in this section.&#13;
particulars call on publisher of tbis paper.&#13;
JAMB6 W. FOSTER 0 0 . , M w DRUOOMIV,&#13;
•H 'H 'tuvfl ''00 U3180J 'M SiWVf&#13;
We can give em&#13;
lucrative to&#13;
and&#13;
For&#13;
Ui&#13;
h&#13;
UI&#13;
*&#13;
i*.&#13;
lift&#13;
H&#13;
2&#13;
lo&#13;
* *XWOIQ fit *«&gt;"«&#13;
*SNSM,j,ii*i**OTn*H i r n o&#13;
«JCV HlOOHt MIM SKI W«V««UOtfOd&#13;
•tea ton s|qvp*u ainin «mooo.&#13;
- ^ •wnvxxnoiiaa.rHMwn&#13;
*«^iL •jitus' punoj vuvt\!^ljn^S&#13;
" ^ pirs ituno ^ « ^&#13;
lucujspsui^&#13;
•nojx^rdtnoa sq) JOJ&#13;
k.,p 't'i II'K i r n f c i S a l v e .&#13;
i t . ••si r.i'vH in tbe world for&#13;
r^s, nicer*, p*it rbsom.&#13;
;.••••••»•, ;lr'»ne4 bancrg, chill&#13;
. -id ail Jskln eruptions&#13;
v U'HS piles or no pa^&#13;
!t IH »'ii8i anteed to ffiv&lt;&#13;
perVt'ci fiR'&gt; ".lutiou or monej refund&#13;
pd. Pri«"» J5 cent* per box For sal&#13;
! - P. A Ri"l«r.&#13;
j H U . J . M I ' S&#13;
j'eVr r S ' T f ^&#13;
t n - 1 i &gt;&gt;••'&lt;&#13;
reo mvH&#13;
TM MfdtnUot Machine.&#13;
The recognition given to tbe socalled&#13;
"slot machine" In granting to&#13;
an Individual the privilege of using it&#13;
tor supplying drinking water to pedestrian*-&#13;
In tbe streets of Chicago is&#13;
likely to give that appliance the prominence&#13;
it enjoyed centuries ago on the&#13;
banks of the Nile. When the slot mart&#13;
ine made its appearance a few years&#13;
since It was described as a wonderful&#13;
Invention that was destined to do away&#13;
with the newsboy, the bootblack and&#13;
other venders of small articles. The&#13;
adoption of tbe device for furnishing&#13;
drinking water at tbe World's Pair&#13;
was regarded as a wonderful appliance&#13;
to meet the necessities or wants&#13;
of the people. And yet tbe slot machine&#13;
was in common use thousands&#13;
pf years ago. In Hiero's "Spirltalla,"&#13;
blob was published In the seventeenth&#13;
century, a description is given&#13;
of a closed vessel in use in the temples&#13;
of Egypt, in which the sacred&#13;
water was -kept. The machine bad a&#13;
slot In the top and when five drachmas&#13;
were dropped in a valve opened and&#13;
a small quantity of the water flowed&#13;
out. Then the valve closed automa&gt;&#13;
ically, to await the arrivaT'oTtfc'e next&#13;
worshiper. It is probable that the&#13;
modern machines may be more ornamental&#13;
than those in use in the Sgyptian'tesnples&#13;
so long ago, but it is not&#13;
likely that they do their work any&#13;
better than those that caught the&#13;
drachmas of worshiping followers of&#13;
the sun god in days when cats were&#13;
divine and dogs were believed to have&#13;
souls.&#13;
Novel Cue f o r a Bicycle.&#13;
A novel UBO was~ made of a bicycle&#13;
by the manager of a small electric&#13;
line in a western town. Being anxious&#13;
to ascertain the length of a particular&#13;
stretch of road without going to the&#13;
expense of having it surveyed he had&#13;
a bicycle equipped with a cyclometer&#13;
riddem over the route and found fche&#13;
distance within tbe required limits of&#13;
exactness.&#13;
AL.DBRMET' IN BELGIUM,&#13;
i . II . L . i They Would Be Voted Slow by Assartes*&#13;
Muaiotaal Bx porta.&#13;
My guide of varied accomplishment*&#13;
combined, M business men abroad often&#13;
do, tbe roles of country gentleman,&#13;
manufacturer, bank president, school&#13;
trustee, and—broaden! ug tbe gulf be*&#13;
tween bis kind and tbe typical American&#13;
"bo*s"--hj9 holds the more important&#13;
position of alderman. In every&#13;
city the aldermen and mayor, or burgomaster,&#13;
are of high social repute, elected&#13;
to office because of special fitness foi&#13;
the branch of publio affairs tbey are&#13;
chosen to manage. Said one, with horror&#13;
and shame, "We hear that in America&#13;
aldermen are sometimes—&#13;
thieves!" Tbe first "alderman of public&#13;
instruction" to whom I presented&#13;
my credentials in a Brussels commune&#13;
proved to be a barrister of note, authoj&#13;
of eceral well known law treatises. In&#13;
anc:iu-r cemwuae tbe alderman of public&#13;
instruction is projfc*»«or at the normal&#13;
school, progressive and public spirited.&#13;
Tbe alderman responsible for&#13;
the Client schools fills also the chair&#13;
of political economy at the university,&#13;
keep3 in touch with tbe methods of&#13;
other nations, reads tbe reports of the&#13;
United States department of labor, and,&#13;
much to my surprise, identified me at&#13;
once from having seen my name in one&#13;
of those volumes. The faculty of the&#13;
university at Liege has more than one&#13;
representative In the "college" of aldermen—&#13;
a suggestive title, loelrig none&#13;
of its dignity wher. applied to the body&#13;
of brilliant men who administer civic&#13;
affairs with scrupulous fidelity on&#13;
broad, wise lines,—-Harper's . Magazine.&#13;
THE OLD WAYSIDE INN.&#13;
The near f n t w ia big with kiftofy.&#13;
He who would Jseap posted&#13;
Eagerly peraaen tbe daily newspaper.&#13;
Every family should take the&#13;
Very best in connection with their&#13;
Ever needful local paper. The&#13;
News—THE DETROIT EVENING&#13;
Is an indefatigable newtgatherer.&#13;
Now is the accepted time.&#13;
Give us your subscription.&#13;
Nothing gained by waiting. Tbe&#13;
Evening News—10 cents a week. II yoo&#13;
Want further information,&#13;
Seek it of our agent in your own town,&#13;
H e $inrfctug dispatch.&#13;
P D B U S H I D KVK9T THURSDAY *J**IXB BY&#13;
FRANK L. A N D R E W S&#13;
Sditor and 2*roprittor.&#13;
Subscription Price f l in Advance&#13;
Entered at tbe PostoiBce at fincline?, Minhi«as,&#13;
ae second-class matter.&#13;
Advertising ratee mad* known on application.&#13;
Business Cards, $4.00 per year.&#13;
Death and marriajte notices published tree.&#13;
Announcements of entertain meats may be paid&#13;
for, if desired, by presenting the office with tick-&#13;
'ete of admission, ia case tiu-kfUsaro not brought&#13;
to tbe office, regular rated will ha ^tiaraed.&#13;
All matter in local notice column will be charg&#13;
ed at 5 cents per line or fraction thereof, for each&#13;
insertion. Where no time is Rpaciaed, *li nutices&#13;
will be inserted until ordered didcontinned, and&#13;
will be charged for accordingly, j3s~4.ll changes&#13;
of advertisements MUST reach this office aa early&#13;
as T U S S S A T morning to insure an Insertion the&#13;
tame week.&#13;
**• **»r„,m *****n&#13;
Michigan ^ People.&#13;
r^e^ 1&#13;
When tbe Shoe* Plnebea,&#13;
He walked into a little shoe shop&#13;
where he has had his work done for&#13;
years, stood squarely upon a big sheet&#13;
of white paper in&lt; bis stocking feet, had&#13;
the dimensions of each foot marked&#13;
out with a pencil and his measure was&#13;
taken. "Why, when we were boys,&#13;
Bob," said a friend who was with him,&#13;
"you were a great fellow for snug footwear,&#13;
and many a time I helped you&#13;
off with your caJfskin boots and saw&#13;
you pull and stamp to get them on."&#13;
"I'm all over that tomfoolery now. I&#13;
want shoes as easy as a wool mitten,&#13;
and each new pair is a little larger&#13;
than the last. You know where Bird&#13;
Hollow is, six miles out from the old&#13;
town. Batelejr's you&lt;ng people were&#13;
giving a dance out there, and it was&#13;
the biggest thing of the season. I&#13;
rushed around in advance, engaging&#13;
dances, amd didn't let a number get&#13;
away, I had to, throw things together&#13;
in a hurry at last to catch the sled,&#13;
and tumbled fa just as the whip cracked.&#13;
When it came time to get into&#13;
my pumps I had one of the struggles&#13;
of my life. When I had conquered,&#13;
my tees were jammed back, my heels&#13;
jammed forward, and each foot humped&#13;
up like a elosed fist. Before the&#13;
first dance was over I was in mortal&#13;
agony, but I would endure It rather&#13;
than let my best girl's dances go to&#13;
other fellows, who were aching to supplant&#13;
me. When I hobbled to the floor&#13;
for the second waltz I w?a "rabbling&#13;
line a man on stilts! I bopped around&#13;
like a chicken with frozen feet. I was&#13;
literally leaden-footed and the lead&#13;
seemed to be molten. I had to stop or&#13;
faint, and when I took my pretty partner&#13;
to a seat as if walking over red&#13;
hot plow shares, it was whispered&#13;
H J E M A 8 0 N A R T I F I C I A L ; a b o u t that I had made too free with&#13;
hard cider. It required help to get me&#13;
LOCATED&#13;
Dirccllr Opposite M. C R'y Depot.&#13;
TwoHocko from Unieo Depot.&#13;
TV** Block.- from Steamer Dodka.&#13;
In tfat Ceeter oJ the Wboksdc PHtrict.&#13;
Three Minuu* by Electric Can to Retail&#13;
Center and A!&gt; Placet «4 Amusement.&#13;
aoo fcooms wit* Steate Meet&#13;
t s e . o o o ID M$W Improvement*.&#13;
Cuisine Unsurpassed-&#13;
American Plan&#13;
Rates, $2 and $2.bU per Day.&#13;
taairts.vKh BaHi.tS. Sintl* mstlf.60c.&#13;
House Made F a m o u s by L o n g f e l l o w Sold&#13;
to a B o s t o n Mao.&#13;
If there is no bitch in tbe papers tbe&#13;
old wayside inn at Sudbury, Mass..&#13;
made famous by Longfellow, will pass&#13;
Into the ownership of a Boston gentleman&#13;
of antiquarian tastes, who will&#13;
preserve the building and'flll it with&#13;
articles of historic interest, says the&#13;
New York Times. The name of the&#13;
buyer will not be given out until the&#13;
papers have passed. This estate passed&#13;
into the hands of ex-Mayor 8. H. Howe&#13;
of Marlboro and ex-Aid. Homer Rogers&#13;
of Boston in 1892. Those two gentlemen&#13;
have expended considerable money&#13;
in renovating the house and improving&#13;
it, such as shingling the roof and retopping&#13;
the chimneys, which had been&#13;
broken in several places. This work fn&#13;
no way, however, interferes with its&#13;
exterior or its historic worth, for Mr.&#13;
Rogers told a reporter at his house in&#13;
Allison that he would not have that&#13;
happen for thousands, and the work&#13;
j was done for preservation. When the&#13;
1 deed came into the hands of Mr. Rogers&#13;
j three years ago it was the first time it&#13;
had passed out of the hands of the&#13;
Howe family since the house was originally&#13;
built, two centuries since. The&#13;
building was built shortly after King&#13;
Philip's war and up to 1893 It was&#13;
known as Howe's tavern. David Howe&#13;
built ii about the commencement of the&#13;
eighteenth century and in 1702 received&#13;
from Samuel Howe, his father, a tract&#13;
of 130 'acres of land. John Howe, the&#13;
grandfather of David, had the'fot on&#13;
which the tavern stands assigned him&#13;
' in the apportionment of 1651. In 1746&#13;
[ Col. Ezekiel Howe, who won fame in&#13;
j the revolution, huug out the red-horse&#13;
; sign and when, in 1796, the colonei died,&#13;
I Adam, his son, took the tavern, and for&#13;
forty years conducted it as a nubile&#13;
Special Bargain&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIRECTORY. 'Ii&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PKJWIDBNT.. Claude L. Sigler.&#13;
TausTEss, Geo. Rea&amp;oaJr., ft- K. Murphy, r'. (j.&#13;
Jackson, F. J. Wright, ii. H. Jirowu, C. L. Grime*.&#13;
CLBKS.. K. ii. Teeple.&#13;
TttKAeuasa.... .J A. Cad well.&#13;
AfrtEflHOB l&gt;. W. Mitrt«&#13;
STUEET CoaxxsetoHKR A, Monktt&#13;
MABBAUL ..¥. Monroe.&#13;
HKALTU O r n c s B Dt. U. F. airier.&#13;
ATTOBNjfY W. A. Curr.&#13;
m&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
QUO.&#13;
ttezuUr&#13;
Price ¢3.00.&#13;
Special&#13;
Price a s&#13;
long a s t h e y&#13;
ast, t h e&#13;
biggest bar&gt;&#13;
. gain e v e r&#13;
J offered,&#13;
I only&#13;
I K R K B -&#13;
) Ju3t out H2- S oiige book of&#13;
noney eav- .&#13;
, inland&#13;
; wholesale&#13;
; oi'leo *ulrte.&#13;
I VV.'ite tor It&#13;
F i n i s a a d i n&#13;
gold&#13;
iacquer.&#13;
has No- ;&#13;
Rochester&#13;
Chimney&#13;
and Wick,&#13;
w i t h either&#13;
a handsome&#13;
14-lnch&#13;
•bade or 16-&#13;
Inch fancy&#13;
crepe tissue&#13;
paper shade&#13;
or fancy&#13;
band painted&#13;
banquet&#13;
globe, with&#13;
gold trim-&#13;
$1.97&#13;
4, M. ROTHSCHILD &amp; CO. !&#13;
WHOLESALE. &lt;&#13;
5tate, Van Buren t o Jackson-sts., CMccgo. 1&#13;
Mention tfil* p;iper. I&#13;
METHODIST EPISCOPAL Ctil'KCH.&#13;
Kev. M, H. AioMahou paator. .Services every ;&#13;
Sunday morning at 11&gt;:&amp;I, and evury Sundsy &gt;&#13;
evening at 7:011 o'clock, i'rayer meotinjt Ttmre- ',&#13;
day evenings. Sunday school at cluse of uiorn-'&#13;
nfteervice. Mrs. Estella Graham, Stiuerinteud't. '&#13;
_pONGHEGAfIONAL CHUHCH.&#13;
KJ c. "*• .Jones, puator. .Service every j&#13;
Sunday morning at 1U:3U, and wary bundsy 1&#13;
evening at 7:m; o"cl?ck. Prayer meeting Tburs- •&#13;
day eveniage. auuday school.«. clout* of morn- ,&#13;
inu service. I. J. Cuek, Supt. ft&gt;. T. Grimes, See.&#13;
^»T. MA H Y'rt V AT tl( »LIC C H U KJII.&#13;
O itov. M. .!. Cu.uait»ri'urd, 1'u.Bior. .Services&#13;
every third Sunday. Low mass aiT:;W o'clock,&#13;
uiglt uituib witli t»eriiiuu at a Jib a. in. Catectuam&#13;
at H :0u p. ui., vesperbaua bcneclktiou ut 7 :HJ p.m.&#13;
SOCIETIES;&#13;
PATENTS Csveata and Trade if arks obtain ed and all Pat&#13;
ent business conducted for Moderate Fee*.&#13;
Bend model, drawing or photo. WeadTiseif&#13;
patentable free of charge. Oar fee not du e till&#13;
patent i s secured. A P a s w h l e t "Bow toObutla&#13;
Patent*," -with cost o f same In the U. B.&#13;
and foreign countries sent free. Address,&#13;
C. A. SNOW &amp; CO.&#13;
; Off. Pvrtirr Omee, WaSHiNOTON, D. C^&#13;
ApAepsy coxed hr Dr. Miles- MarrUM.&#13;
a^be A. O. ii. Society of ttjia plscn, meets every j&#13;
. third Sunday in the Fr. Matthew Hall.&#13;
John McGuineas, Cc-uiiiy Delegate. '&#13;
Pfnckney Y. P, S. C. K, Meetings held every&#13;
J«t'."day"cv«&gt;niU)}iii Cong'l ehurcli at 6:30o'clock.&#13;
Mra. Ii. \V". TJi-ofrd, Vcm. ivucie Grieve,S«c. 1&#13;
tj&gt;iAVOitTII LL'AGUE. Meets every Sundsy j&#13;
\*\ v.'tiiug UL 0:00 oclock in the ii. L. Cijurch. A j&#13;
eoruv1 invitation i* extendol to everyone, espe- ;&#13;
ciaily mug j&gt;e«ple. -Miss Jennie daze. Pre? I&#13;
Junw r Epwortu League Meets every .Sunday '&#13;
al't» rn'oou at a:0u o'eluck, at M. E chiiie'j. Ail 1&#13;
cordially invited.&#13;
Miss Alice McMahon Superintendent. |&#13;
The C.T. A. and B. Souety of this i&gt;!ate, meet '&#13;
every third Saturuay evening in the Fr. Mat- !&#13;
STONE WATER TANK. A wonderful&#13;
___ invention and a great boon to farmers.&#13;
Beat or oold do not eflect them, and they will laet&#13;
nnless destroyed by an earthquake while the earth&#13;
lasts. We invite your inspection. They will not&#13;
rot, rust or wear oat. Warranted for five years.&#13;
For farther particulars call or write to&#13;
WILL EVEB8,&#13;
Agent and manufacturer, dtockb ridge, Bfica&#13;
[ft! NOT BUY TMf&#13;
7\ GOOD SADDLE****&gt;&#13;
S1" h the most noticeable and&#13;
taktnf point on * Bicycle. &gt; &gt;&#13;
WsMsi taytes Insist on getting a&#13;
B U R N S 5PRn2UDLa&#13;
to the dressing room, where I cut away&#13;
.he vice-like pumps and plunged my&#13;
feet Into Ice cold water that threw off&#13;
iteam like a blacksmith's tub. I had&#13;
Aken my brother's pumps,, and they&#13;
*/ere three sizes too small. My friends&#13;
wouldn't keep the joke, and I failed to&#13;
ieep my girl. I'm a bachelor, but my&#13;
shoes never pinch me."—Detroit Free&#13;
Press.&#13;
.' '* ' ——^~»_&#13;
Cologne's CarnlvaL&#13;
Cologne has been celebrating the&#13;
carnival by a historical and artistic&#13;
procession around the cathedral, including&#13;
young women who represented&#13;
3t. Ursula and her 11,000 virgins, the&#13;
;own tower and the- mercenaries employed&#13;
by the archbishops when they&#13;
were secular prin«ee. It is asserted&#13;
that the carnival iias been held at&#13;
Cologne sinne pre-Chriatian times and&#13;
that it is the direct representative of&#13;
:hi Roman saturnalia.&#13;
house. 'Lyman Kobe, a brother, took&#13;
possession when Adam passed away,&#13;
and continued to keep an inn until&#13;
about 1S66. Then its days of usefulness&#13;
in this direction ceased. It has, however,&#13;
been open to the public for several&#13;
seasons past. Time and the storms&#13;
have dealt lightly with the historic&#13;
structure, for the white-oak beams are&#13;
in g fine state of preservation.&#13;
As i t Goes.&#13;
"Wftqr da tbey say a man plays U s&#13;
raossr "Xt is fonny, isn't it, wh«n hs&#13;
usually gets worked?"—Philadelphia&#13;
American.&#13;
^ *h f h &lt; a &gt; 4 M a i ^ M M A r t S k ^ a A t f f t M S k i&#13;
"Nothing else like it:"&#13;
The most refreshing and&#13;
pleasant Soap lor the skin.&#13;
Coin&#13;
nBstJBriitti near.&#13;
vs. v etJJ9eura»&#13;
C1XU « * T **G&gt; &lt;*K&#13;
m u m w s f M i m i • t r - i - i -*H"*-TI" — -niiri-WTKi&#13;
:&#13;
Many a U u U o f r««sr.&#13;
It appears from 5,456 kinds of fear&#13;
leecribed by President G. Stanly Hall&#13;
m a recent study of tbe subject that&#13;
'thunderstorms are feared most, that&#13;
reptiles follow, with strangers and&#13;
Jarkness as close seconds, while fire,&#13;
ieath, domestic animals, disease, wild&#13;
animals, ghosts, insects, rats and mice,&#13;
robbers, high winds, dream fears, cats&#13;
and does, cyclone*, solitude, drowsing,&#13;
tdrds etc., represent decreasing dagree&#13;
it feaffniaess.**—Ex.&#13;
thew Hall. John Donohue, r-resilient.&#13;
KmV.&#13;
LM&#13;
^HiHi'SOP M A C C A B E E S .&#13;
eet every Friday evening on or before fall j&#13;
of the moon at their hall iu the t«\varthout bldg. {&#13;
Visiting brothers are cordially invited. ]&#13;
CHA$. 0'iMPttfX.i., Sir Knight Commander&#13;
&lt;?ApiSL€&#13;
THE WHEEL QF.WHEELS.&#13;
Livingston Lodge, Ko.7p, ? A A, &gt;i. K^g-i'ar ;&#13;
Communication Tuesday evening, on or before&#13;
the full ot the raooa. 11. r\ Sigler, W. M.&#13;
RDEK OF EASTEKX STAR meets each month |&#13;
the Friday evenina; following the regular t\ \&#13;
AA.M. meeting, MRS. C. ELLEN RICUAKD*, V\*.M, !&#13;
LAUIK-SOFTHE MACi;AB£iSA Meet every !&#13;
)st and 3rd Saturday of rach mouth at 2:40 •&#13;
o'clock at the K. O. T. M. hall. Visiting sifters !&#13;
cordially invited. JULIA SIOLKK. Lady Com. |&#13;
^5&gt;&#13;
KNIGHTS OF TUK LOYAL GUA.RO&#13;
meet every second Wednesday&#13;
OTenins of every month in the K. O.&#13;
T. M. Hall at 7:80 o'clock. All viaitiug&#13;
Guards welcome. ,&#13;
F, L. ANDREWS, Capt. Gen.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
H. F. SIGLER M. 0 C. L. SkOXER M, 0&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
Physicians and SuxKe&gt;»ns. All calls promptly&#13;
attended to day or uignt. Ofnoe on Main street&#13;
P . B ' l C l i t l&#13;
DR. A. B.GREEN.. (&#13;
DENTIST—Every Thnraday and Friday.&#13;
Office over Mgler's Drag Store.&#13;
THE PERFECT&#13;
% » WHEEL.&#13;
Doot buy a wheel until yots see&#13;
THE CARLISLE and get our prices.&#13;
THE CARLISLE MFG. CO.&#13;
CHICAGO,&#13;
iBRIIim&amp;UrV&#13;
* " • » « . arta*sftar-&#13;
^—M—sdi te Umsr.t UsotijtuersfswiiMsa&#13;
S r S w u T S S S&#13;
Sold bv F. A. Sialer.&#13;
. 1&#13;
ft lasts twice as Jony as othet^.&#13;
Atrial will convinro you of i t s preat&#13;
aaerit. Will r-U- --• " '•'•« most faatidiout.&#13;
CHARLES F. MILLER,&#13;
V f r . e i F*ENCtt MII4JPT&gt; " " &gt;&gt;T&#13;
- ^ " ^ SOAPS ANO H»Bki-i;}. J V.&#13;
^* LancasJcr, Petio,&#13;
B T A B L l b H ^ X * » &gt; a v . — !&#13;
^ ¾ ¾ ^ W ' V J&#13;
fekg&#13;
®i©g©Iei&#13;
more jx&gt;ints of merit, than any other Higk&#13;
Orade Bicycle.&#13;
PULL. OP ORAC&amp; AND BEflUTY.^l&#13;
Settdior fylabMTQG+i, sheading, ft&#13;
( •&#13;
):,&#13;
• t v&#13;
-J'&#13;
'••..•i&gt;9&#13;
'Mi&#13;
W»l&#13;
..'. M&#13;
*&#13;
•&amp;M&#13;
{;•&#13;
•' -¾&#13;
.*ii&lt;&#13;
' T / , . . ' .&#13;
r*.&#13;
C:.&#13;
!ril&#13;
&amp;•!&lt;&#13;
X&#13;
• • .M s '&#13;
•./-V-,&#13;
&lt; • • » • • V&#13;
J 4&#13;
^ ^ Jfc.. 'it". . . &lt; • &gt; ' •&#13;
f.'J • . *•. • • /&#13;
*%¥* v * ) : .• • •;-'&gt;•&#13;
iqpMPIMMis!&#13;
SjS|^SJi|SjSjy|ppPS^||SJSSBj|M^|B^^ iii H* ^ • • lwwiHl»^»«^*» m ••*i*-»i*wii*'*^MI-*-^f'^W"-'i-' -»^*-** .«--&lt;• /I'IHI'VL . LBjHu i I'.J i bfm+kB IgfrMpnSH^^^^^^^^^SjS^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^W^^^IIIlMMiiJJ&#13;
*-v-&#13;
&amp; #&#13;
^&#13;
&amp; ; *&#13;
iffar&#13;
%&#13;
H":\&#13;
&amp; • •&#13;
It"&#13;
» * *&#13;
tfe&#13;
4&#13;
§iwk\eu ili&amp;aUh&#13;
F2U.mc L. Avxnarws, Publishatv -&#13;
PINCKNEY. • " ' • MIOHIGAjr*&#13;
Crooked nteps are the moat apt to ha&#13;
noticed.&#13;
TALM AGE'S SEBMON.&#13;
'A CART-ROPE INIQUITY" S U N -&#13;
DAY'S SUBJBBT.&#13;
It takea will power to look oneself&#13;
BQuarely in the soul.&#13;
Probably Colonel IngerapU la right&#13;
It li hard to believe that there's a land&#13;
that la hotter than this.&#13;
from the Following Wale Tess« Xsiaftnftt&#13;
Chapter 8* V«n« 1ft "Woe Unto&#13;
Than, That el* A* *« Were Wltfc a&#13;
Cim-Roj*."—Vi*-U#n&lt;* A4vjs«4.&#13;
"Politically there is something In the&#13;
wind out in Kansas," remarks a contemporary.&#13;
0, let up on Pefler.&#13;
Rev. John Jasper of Richmond, Va.,&#13;
has Just celebrated his 84th birthday,&#13;
firm in the faith that the "sun do&#13;
move. i*&#13;
It turns out that Dr. S. Weir Mitchell&#13;
is not dead, as was reported the&#13;
other day; but he is spending the summer&#13;
In Philadelphia.&#13;
"Why did we celebrate ?rt asks a Denver&#13;
editor. O, pshaw! What's the use&#13;
of being sorry about It now? Stick to&#13;
bromo seltaer and you'll pull through&#13;
all right&#13;
It is reassuring to learn from a local&#13;
contemporary that "Sculptor St.&#13;
Gaudens works quietly in his studio&#13;
in New York." Those loud, explosive,&#13;
boisterous sculptors never accomplish&#13;
much, anyway.&#13;
One of the worst things about whisky&#13;
drinking is that it "catches 'em coming&#13;
and going," to use a somewhat&#13;
slangy expression. In prosperous times&#13;
the tippler tipples because he thinks&#13;
he can afford it; in dull times he tries&#13;
to drown his despondency in drink. It&#13;
seems that the per capita consumption&#13;
of whisky in this country last year was&#13;
larger than in any twelvemonth within&#13;
the last quarter of a century.&#13;
Dean Goulburn, who recently died&#13;
In England, was once master of Rugby.&#13;
His discourses to the boys were&#13;
ornate. He talked to them one day&#13;
on the subject of sohoolboy jesting,&#13;
and remarked in hia stately way: "Let&#13;
your pleasantry, my younger brethren,&#13;
resemble the coruscation of the summer&#13;
lightning, lambent but Innocuous."&#13;
Bueh English may seem high and; lifted&#13;
up, but better this mountainous&#13;
range of speech than the low and malarious&#13;
land of slang.&#13;
Among the citizens who are worse&#13;
than worthless are the Cubans who&#13;
have been naturalized in the United&#13;
States for the purpose of using their&#13;
citizenship here as a shield while plotting&#13;
against the Spanish^ government&#13;
In Cuba. How many there are It is&#13;
impossible to know; but Spain is making&#13;
only a reasonable request when she&#13;
asks the United States for an agreement&#13;
that will prevent naturalisation&#13;
Cor such a purpose. No one who has&#13;
a keen sense of honor, would seek the&#13;
armor of a bad-faith American citizenship&#13;
before exposing himself to danger.&#13;
The United Postal congress, whieh&#13;
recently finished its work at Washington&#13;
accomplished something in the&#13;
way of simplifying the postal transactlona&#13;
of the world: Following is an&#13;
official resume of the result* uf the&#13;
work of the congress: The principal&#13;
treaty which excludes the entry of&#13;
Corea into the postal union; the declaration&#13;
of the Orange Free state,&#13;
which failed to send a delegate to&#13;
Washington, that it hoped soon to enter&#13;
the union; and the declaration of&#13;
the Chinese empire, which was represented&#13;
in the congress, that it will observe&#13;
the regulations of the union as&#13;
soon as the organization of its service&#13;
permits. The intermediary transit&#13;
rates have been facilitated, and the&#13;
tariff diminshed materially on a graduated&#13;
scale for the ensuing six years.&#13;
Uniform colors have been projected&#13;
for postage stamps. Postal cards unpaid&#13;
are subject to a double tax; that&#13;
is, 4' cents in place of the former tax,&#13;
which was 10 cents, the same as for unpaid&#13;
letters. Circulars produced on a&#13;
machine (typewritten) in quantities of&#13;
twenty circulars, all of the same character,&#13;
are admitted to the international&#13;
mails at the same rates as printed&#13;
•circulars. Samples of merchandise&#13;
are admitted up to 350 grammes. Object*&#13;
of natural history, animals, dried&#13;
.pfaats, or preserved geological specteoeas;&#13;
are admitted as samples. The&#13;
question of the creation of a universal&#13;
postage stamp was brought up, and&#13;
the proposition was defeated on account&#13;
of the difficulty which would occur&#13;
in putting into practice that important&#13;
Innovation, especially because&#13;
of the diversity of currency standards.&#13;
Special arrangements concerning packages&#13;
of declared values, postal orders,&#13;
books of identity, and subscriptions&#13;
to journals have been thoroughly revised.&#13;
This country is not actually&#13;
concerned in these arrangements.&#13;
They mostly affect the states of the&#13;
continent of Strops.&#13;
HERB are some iniquities&#13;
that only&#13;
nibble at the heart&#13;
After a lifetime of&#13;
their work, the man&#13;
still stands upright,&#13;
respected, and honored.&#13;
These verm&#13;
i n h a v e n o t&#13;
strength enough to&#13;
gnaw through a&#13;
m a n's c h a r a cter.&#13;
But there are other transgressions&#13;
that lift themselves up to gigantic proportions,&#13;
and seise hold of a man and&#13;
bind him with thongs forever. There&#13;
are some iniquities that have such great&#13;
emphasis of evil that he who commits&#13;
them may be said to sin as with a cartrope.&#13;
I suppose you know how they&#13;
make a great rope. The stuff out of&#13;
which it is fashioned is nothing but&#13;
tow which you pull apart without any&#13;
exertion of your fingers. This is spun&#13;
into threads, any of which you could&#13;
easily snap, but a great many of these&#13;
threads are interwound—then you have&#13;
a rope strong enough to bind an ox,&#13;
or hold a ship in a tempest. I speak&#13;
to you of the sin of gambling. A cartrope&#13;
in strength is that sin, and yet I&#13;
wish more especially to draw your atr&#13;
tentlon to the small threads of Influence&#13;
out of which that mighty iniquity&#13;
Is twisted. This crime is on the advance,&#13;
so that it is well not only that fathers,&#13;
and brothers, and sons, be interested&#13;
in such a discussion, but that wives,&#13;
and mothers, and sisters, and daughters&#13;
look out lest their present horn* be&#13;
sacrificed, or their intended home be&#13;
blasted. No man, no woman, can stand&#13;
aloof from Buch a subject as this and&#13;
say: "It has no practical bearing upon&#13;
my life;" for there may be in a short&#13;
time in your history an experience In&#13;
which you will find that the discussion&#13;
involved three worlds—earth, heaven,&#13;
hell. There are gambling establishments&#13;
by the thousands. There are&#13;
about five thousand five hundred professional&#13;
gamblers. Out of all the gambling&#13;
establishments, how many of&#13;
them do you suppose profess to be honest?&#13;
Ten. These ten professing to be&#13;
honest because they are merely the&#13;
ante-chamber to those that are acknowledged&#13;
fraudulent There are firstclass&#13;
establishment*. You step a little&#13;
way out of Broadway, New York. You&#13;
go up the marble stairs. You ring the&#13;
hell. The liveried servant Introduces&#13;
you. The walls are lavender tinted.&#13;
The mantels are of Vermont marble.&#13;
The pictures are "Jephthah's Daughter,"&#13;
and Dore's "'Dante's and Virgil's&#13;
Frozen Region of Hell," &amp; most appropriate&#13;
selection, this last, for the&#13;
place. There, is the roulette table, the&#13;
finest, costliest, most exquisite piece of&#13;
furniture, in the UnKed States. There&#13;
is the banqueting room where, free of&#13;
charge to the guests, you may find the&#13;
plate, and viands, and wines, and cigars,&#13;
sumptuous beyond parallel. Then&#13;
you come to the second-class gambling&#13;
establishment. To it you are introduced&#13;
by a card through some "roper&#13;
In." Having entered, you must either&#13;
gamble or fight. Sanded cards, dice&#13;
loaded wtch quicksilver, poor drinks&#13;
mixed with more poor drinks, will&#13;
soon help you to get rid of all your&#13;
money to a tune in short metre with&#13;
staccato passages. You wanted to see.&#13;
Yon saw. The low villains of that place&#13;
watch you as you come in. Does not&#13;
the panther, squat in the grass, know a&#13;
calf when he sees it? Wrangle not for&#13;
your rights in that place, or your body&#13;
will be thrown bloody into the Btreet,&#13;
or dead Into the river.&#13;
You go along a little further and find&#13;
the policy establishment In that place&#13;
you bet on numbers. Betting on two&#13;
numbers is called a "saddle;" betting&#13;
on three numbers is called a "gig;" betting&#13;
on four numbers is called a&#13;
"horse;'* and there are thousands of&#13;
our young men leaping into that "saddle,"&#13;
and mounting that "gig," and behind&#13;
that "horse" riding to perdition.'&#13;
There is always one kind of sign on the&#13;
door—"Exchange; "a most appropriate&#13;
title for the door, for there, in that&#13;
room, a man exchanges health, peace,&#13;
and heaven for loss of health, loss of&#13;
home, loss of family, loss of immortal&#13;
soul. Exchange sure enough and infinite&#13;
enough.&#13;
Now you acknowledge that Is a cartrope&#13;
of evil, but you want to know&#13;
what are the small threads out of which&#13;
it Is made. There Is, In many, a disposition&#13;
to hazard. They feel a delight in&#13;
walking near a precipice because of&#13;
the sense of danger. There are people&#13;
who go upon Juhgfrau, not for the&#13;
largeness of the prospect, but for the&#13;
feeling that they have of thinking&#13;
"What would happen If I should fall&#13;
off?" There are persons who have their&#13;
blood filliped and accelerated by skating&#13;
very near an air hole. There are&#13;
men who find a positive delight in driving&#13;
within two inches of the edge of a&#13;
bridge. It is this disposition to haaard&#13;
that finds development In gaming praetloss.&#13;
Here are five hundred dollars,&#13;
I may stake them. If I stake them I&#13;
may lose them; but I may win five&#13;
thousand dollars. Whichever way.lt&#13;
turns I have the excitement. Shafts&#13;
the cards. Lost! Heart thumps. Head&#13;
dissy. At It again—just to gratify this&#13;
desire tor haaard.&#13;
Then there are others who go into&#13;
this sin through sheer desire for gain..&#13;
It is especially so with professional&#13;
gamblers. They always keep cool. They&#13;
never drink enough to unbalance their&#13;
judgment They do not see the dice so&#13;
much as they see the dollar beyond the&#13;
dice, and for that they watch, as the&#13;
spider in the web, looking as if dead&#13;
until the fly passes. Thousands of&#13;
young men in the hope of gain go into&#13;
'these practices. They say: "Well, my&#13;
salary Is not enough to allow this luxury.&#13;
I don't get enough from my store,&#13;
office, or shop. I ought to have finer&#13;
apartments. I ought to have better&#13;
wines. I ought to have more richly&#13;
flavored cigars. -1 ought to * e aWe-to&#13;
entertain my friends more expensively.&#13;
I won't stand this any longer. I can&#13;
with one brilliant stroke make a fortune.&#13;
Now, here goes, principle or no&#13;
principle, heaven or hell. Who cares?"&#13;
When a young man makes up his mind&#13;
to liye beyond his income, Satan has&#13;
bought him out and out, and it is only&#13;
a question of time when the goods are&#13;
to be delivered. The thing is done.&#13;
You may plant in the way all the batteries&#13;
of truth and righteousness, that&#13;
man is bound to go on. When a man&#13;
makes one thousand dollars a year and&#13;
spends one thousand two hundred dollars;&#13;
when a young man makes one&#13;
thousand five hundred dollars, and&#13;
spends one thousand seven hundred&#13;
dollars, all the harpies of darkness cry&#13;
out: "Ha! ha!" we have him," and&#13;
they have. How to get the extra five&#13;
hundred dollars or the extra two thousand&#13;
dollars is the question. He says:&#13;
"Here is my friend who started ont the&#13;
other day with but little money, and in&#13;
one night, so great was his luck, he&#13;
rolled up hundreds and thousands of&#13;
dollars? If he got It, why not I? It is&#13;
such dull work, this adding up of long&#13;
lines of figures in the counting-house;&#13;
this pulling down of a hundred yards&#13;
of goods and selling a remnant; this&#13;
alWaya Waiting upon somebody else,&#13;
wAen I could put one hundred dollars&#13;
on the ace and pick up a thousand."&#13;
Many years ago for sermonic purposes&#13;
and in eompanV with the chief&#13;
of- police of New York I visited one&#13;
of the most brilliant gambling houses&#13;
in that city. It was night and as we&#13;
came up in front all seemed dark. The&#13;
blinds were down; the door was&#13;
guarded; but after a whispering of the&#13;
officer with the guard at the door, we&#13;
were admitted into the hall, and thence&#13;
into the parlors, around one table, finding&#13;
eight or ten men in mid-life, welldressed—&#13;
all the work going on in&#13;
silence, save the noise of the. rattling&#13;
"chips", on the gaming-table in one&#13;
parlor, and the revolving bsjil of the&#13;
roulette table in the other parlor.&#13;
Some of these men, we were told, had&#13;
served terms in prison; some were&#13;
ship-wrecked bankers and brokers and&#13;
money-dealers, and some were going&#13;
their first'rounds of vice—but all intent&#13;
upon the table, as large or small&#13;
fortunes moved up and down before&#13;
them. Oh, there was something awfully&#13;
solemn in the silence—the intense&#13;
gaze, the suppressed emotions of&#13;
the players. No one looked up. They&#13;
all had money in the rapids, and I&#13;
have no doubt some saw, as they sat&#13;
tnere, Horses arid cttrrlngeg, and houses&#13;
some resort to the suicides revolver, OieessTteawot Muddi* AS«I» atitfd vpbut&#13;
all going down, and that work Whs* i t looked as though the arproceed*&#13;
day by day. and might bf iiwafasasnts for peace between Tnrkey&#13;
night "That cart-rope," aaya soma and Greece were all settled the aulUn&#13;
young man "has never hirnn wound' •*•** U B Wtth-auiew game to secure dearound&#13;
my soul." But have not 1 0 ^ ¾ J* ™ ^ * *****!?£ %?*t&#13;
threads of that cart-rope been t w i s W * ™ » * f ^ « to t h e p r o ^ f c ?&#13;
settlement The powers promptly instructed&#13;
their ambassadors to maintain&#13;
the plaa as Arranged, word for word,&#13;
and Intimated that another ultimatum&#13;
£'&#13;
I arraign before God t h e gift e n -&#13;
terprises of our cities, which have a&#13;
tendency t o make this a nation of&#13;
gamblers. Whatever you get, young&#13;
man, in such a place -as that, without&#13;
giving a proper equivalent, i s a robbery&#13;
of your o w n soul, and a robbery&#13;
would, b e sent to tb.e.eu.ltau.&#13;
According t o a dispatch from'Constantinople,&#13;
a division of the Turkish&#13;
fleet has been ordered to-sail for Canea,&#13;
of the community. Yet, how we are I s U n d ^ C r e t 6 t w l t h a attachment of&#13;
appalled to see men who have failed Turkish troops. This will surely cause&#13;
in other enterprises go into gift con- fpe8h trouble in the settlement of t h e&#13;
certs, where the chief attraction la not Graceo* Turkish peace preliminaries,&#13;
music, but the prises distributed i t has been reported for some time&#13;
among the audience: or to sell books that the Turkish government was conwhere&#13;
the chief attraction Is not the templating landing additional troops&#13;
book, but the package that goes with in Crete and the admirals la command&#13;
the book. Tobacco dealers advertise ; of the foreign fleets in Cretan waters&#13;
that on a certain day they will put held a conference and decided to op*&#13;
money Into their papers, so that the 'pose such a move by force. Thus a&#13;
and lands, and home and family rush&#13;
ing down into the vortex. A man's&#13;
life would not have been worth a&#13;
farthing In that presence had he* not&#13;
been accompanied by the police, If&#13;
he had been supposed to be on a Christian&#13;
errand of observation. Some of&#13;
these men went by private key, some&#13;
went by careful introduction, some&#13;
were taken in by the patrons of the&#13;
establishment. The officer of the law&#13;
told me: "None get in here except by&#13;
police mandate, or by some letter of&#13;
a patron." While we were there a&#13;
young man came in, put his money&#13;
down on the roulette-table, and lost;&#13;
put more money down on the roulettetable&#13;
,and lost; put more money down&#13;
on the roulette-table, and lost; then&#13;
feeling in his pock*^ for more money,&#13;
finding none, in severe silence he turned&#13;
his back upon the scene and passed&#13;
out. While we stood there men lost&#13;
their property and lost their souls.&#13;
Oh, the merciless place! Not once In&#13;
all the history of that gaming-house&#13;
has there been one word of sympathy&#13;
uttered for the losers at the game.&#13;
Sir Horace Walpole said that a man&#13;
dropped dead in one of the Clubhouses&#13;
of London; his body was carried Into&#13;
the clubhouse, and the members of&#13;
the club began Immediately to bet as&#13;
to whether he were dead or alive, and&#13;
when it was proposed to test the matter&#13;
by bleeding him, it was only hindered&#13;
by the suggestion that it would&#13;
be unfair to some of the players! In&#13;
these gaining houses of our cities, men&#13;
have their property wrung away from&#13;
them, and then they go ont, some of&#13;
them to drown their grief in strong&#13;
drink, some to ply the counterfeiter's&#13;
pen, and so restore their fortunes,&#13;
purchaser of this tobacco in-Cincinnati&#13;
or New York may unexpectedly come&#13;
upon - a magnificent gratuity.—Boys&#13;
hawking through the cars packages&#13;
containing nobody knows what, until&#13;
you open them and find they contain&#13;
nothing. Christian men with pictures&#13;
on their wall gotten in a lottery, and&#13;
the brain of community taxed to find&#13;
out some new way of getting things&#13;
without paying for them. Oh, young&#13;
men, these are the threads that make&#13;
the cart rope, and when a young man&#13;
consents to these practices, he is being&#13;
bound hand and toot .by a habit&#13;
which has already destroyed "a great&#13;
multitude that no man. can number."&#13;
Sdmetimes these gift' enterprises are&#13;
carried on in the name of charity; and&#13;
some of you remember at the close of&#13;
our Civil War how many gift enterprises&#13;
were on foot, the proceeds, to&#13;
go to the' orphans arid widows of the&#13;
soldiers and sailors. What did these&#13;
men who had charge of those gift enterprises&#13;
care for the orphans and&#13;
widows? Why, they would have allowed&#13;
them to freeze to death upon&#13;
their steps. I have no faith in a charity,&#13;
which, for the sake of relieving&#13;
present suffering, opens a gaping jaw&#13;
that has swallowed down so much of&#13;
the virtue and good principle of the&#13;
community. Young man, have nothing&#13;
to do with these things. They&#13;
only sharpen your appetitle for games&#13;
of chance. Do one of two things; be&#13;
honest or die.&#13;
I have accomplished my object if I&#13;
put you on the look-out. It Is a great&#13;
deal easier to fall than It is to get up&#13;
again. The trouble is that when men&#13;
begin to go astray from the path of&#13;
duty, they are apt to say: "There's no&#13;
use of trying to get back. I've sacrificed&#13;
my respectability, I can't return;"&#13;
and they go on until they are utterly&#13;
destroyed. I tell you, my friends, that&#13;
God this moment, by his Holy Spirit,&#13;
can change your entire nature, s o&#13;
that you will be a different man in a&#13;
minute. Your great want—what Is it?&#13;
More salary? Higher social position?&#13;
No; ne. I will tell you the great want&#13;
of every man, if he has not already&#13;
obtained it. It is the grace of Ood.&#13;
Are there any who have fallen victims&#13;
to the sin that I have been reprehending?&#13;
You are in a prison. You rush&#13;
against the wall of this prison, and&#13;
try to get out, and you fall; and you&#13;
turn around and dash against the other&#13;
wall until there is blood on the grates,&#13;
and blood on your soul. You will&#13;
never get out in this way. There i s&#13;
only one way of getting out. There Is&#13;
a key that can unlock that prisonhouse.&#13;
It is the key of the house of&#13;
r*n"H Tt In thn* Jrfy thnt fin*1*'* wftar*&#13;
collision eannovwell be avoided.&#13;
More British Land Grsbblsafr&#13;
The steamer Miowera from Sydney,&#13;
Australia, brings details of the recent&#13;
annexation of the Solomon islands by&#13;
her majesty's ship Wallaroo, The first -&#13;
island made a colony was Bellona,&#13;
where the union jack was hoisted with&#13;
the usual ceremonies. The natives were&#13;
shy a t first and much frightened by&#13;
the salute, but they became reassured.&#13;
Runnel island was placed under British&#13;
' protection the same day. The&#13;
Wallaroo called at Maru sound and&#13;
proceeded to the Stewart islands, annexinj?&#13;
them. The natives are of a&#13;
high type and very friendly.&#13;
N E W S Y C O N D E N S A T I O N S .&#13;
.4 0O&amp;4 25&#13;
..42 2650®343 27.5)&#13;
at his girdle. If you will allow him&#13;
to put that key to the lock, the bolt&#13;
will shoot back, and the door will&#13;
swing open, and you will be a free&#13;
man in Christ Jesus. Oh, prodigal,&#13;
what a business this is for you, feeding&#13;
swine, when your father stands in&#13;
the front door, straining his eyesight&#13;
to catch the first glimpse of your return;&#13;
and the calf Is as fat as it will be,&#13;
and the harps of heaven are all strung,&#13;
and the feet tree. There are converted&#13;
gamblers in heaven. The light of&#13;
eternity flashed upon the green baize&#13;
of their billiard-saloon. In the laver&#13;
of Cod's forgiveness they washed off&#13;
all their sin. They quit trying for&#13;
earthly stakes. They tried for heaven&#13;
and won it. There stretches a hand S N«W Y»rk «s Q8$&lt;&#13;
A freight train was stalled in Lewis&#13;
tunnel, near Hinton, W. Va., and the&#13;
crew was overcome by foul air. Conductor&#13;
Ed Bray is dead, Sam Hamilton,&#13;
Ed Womack and Tom Karaewood cannot&#13;
recover.&#13;
The Egyptian intelligence departhas&#13;
received word of heavy tribal&#13;
fighting up the Nile between the dervishes&#13;
and the' Jaalins. The latter&#13;
suffered cjefeat after heavy loss on&#13;
both sides, the Jaalins losing 3,000&#13;
killed.&#13;
The biff hardware establishment of&#13;
C. C. Snyder, at Canton, 0., was destroyed&#13;
by fire, entailing a loss of&#13;
glbo,000. The fire started from an exploding&#13;
lamp in the middle of the store&#13;
and the firemen could do little op account&#13;
of the heat and smoke.&#13;
Inventor Holland will, i t Is said,&#13;
BOOB have on the ways the skeleton of&#13;
several more of his submarine torpedo,&#13;
boats, which, he is confident, will revolutionize&#13;
naval warfare. It is known&#13;
that other governments than that of&#13;
the United State* are taking more&#13;
than passing interest in i t&#13;
Reports of very heavy damage to the&#13;
corn crop in Kansas, Oklahoma and&#13;
the Cherokee strip as a result of&#13;
drought and torrid-like hot winds are&#13;
pouring into headquarters of the Santa&#13;
Fe and Rock Island roads, whose lines&#13;
practically cover the state. The damage&#13;
to crops varies from 20 to 60 per&#13;
cent&#13;
Incursions of Albanians, who attacked&#13;
almost simultaneously seven&#13;
Servian blockhouses along the stretch&#13;
of frontier between Madlisa and Rashks,&#13;
have led the Servian government to&#13;
make a formal protest to the powers,&#13;
and It is believed that this is part of&#13;
an organized plan by Turkey to provoke&#13;
Servia.&#13;
THE MARKETS.&#13;
LIVE STOCK.&#13;
—Betfsitr iTgr ar-dTelsr. .- MPa tBH0car4 95 f.l1ir4f6D0 Lower grades.. 2 50®4 25 3 00&#13;
Chlc»f&lt;4—&#13;
Best grade*....4 4094 60&#13;
Lower grades. .2 50$4 60&#13;
Detroit-&#13;
Best grades..&#13;
Lower grades&#13;
Buffalo-&#13;
Best grades..&#13;
Lower grades&#13;
Cincinnati—&#13;
LBoeswte grr gardaedse.s..., .42 22&amp;6S®&amp;*4 6000&#13;
Cleveland—&#13;
Best grades... .4 2&amp;S1 50&#13;
Lower grades. .2 60©J OJ&#13;
PUUborg—&#13;
BLoewste gr rgardaedse.s.....4 2 7WN&amp;&amp;45 5000&#13;
GRAIN, ETC.&#13;
Wheat, Corn.&#13;
No. 2 red No. 2 mix&#13;
Spring&#13;
4 00 4 2S&#13;
422550&#13;
400&#13;
225&#13;
84 0205&#13;
IS&#13;
23 M25&#13;
420&#13;
2 70&#13;
5 25&#13;
3 75&#13;
500&#13;
350&#13;
# 5 15&#13;
400&#13;
35 7130 &lt;&#13;
S4 7550&#13;
525&#13;
400&#13;
3 00&#13;
875&#13;
»80850&#13;
848050&#13;
380705&#13;
889700&#13;
488155&#13;
from heaven toward the head of the&#13;
worst offender. It is a hand, not&#13;
clenched as If to smite, but outspread&#13;
as if to drop a benediction. Other&#13;
seas have a shore and may be fathomed,&#13;
but the sea of God's love—eternity&#13;
—has no plummet to strike the bottom,&#13;
and immensity no iron-bound&#13;
shore to confine it. Its tides are lifted&#13;
by the heart of Infinite compassion.&#13;
Its waves are the hosannahs of the redeemed.&#13;
The argosies that sail on it&#13;
drop anchor at last amid the thunderins;&#13;
salvo of eternal victory. But alas&#13;
for that man who sits down to the&#13;
final game of life and puts his Immortal&#13;
soul on the ace, while angels&#13;
of Ood keep the tally-board; and after&#13;
kings and queens, and knaves, and&#13;
spades are "shuffled" and "cut," and&#13;
the game Is ended, hovering and impending&#13;
worlds discover that he has&#13;
lost it, the faro-bank of eternal darkness&#13;
clutching down Into its walls*&#13;
aU the blood-stateed&#13;
Cklcago 77 Q77X&#13;
•Detrolt 77tt^77X&#13;
TOUrfO 77 677*4:&#13;
Cla0*M»tl7» Q75*&#13;
ClOTr«l»*4 7S W*&#13;
PlUsbara* 77K®78&#13;
Buffalo 7SHQ78V&#13;
»2*&lt;a»*&#13;
27*®27X&#13;
28 Q2B&#13;
\*&#13;
28 ¢28½&#13;
9t ©27&#13;
28 ^28&#13;
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Oat*.&#13;
No. 1 white&#13;
21 e u *&#13;
* 20 Q30 "'&#13;
21 © a j * -&#13;
21 o a ^&#13;
21*022&#13;
M « 2 4 *&#13;
, •Detroit-Hay, No. l timothy, 810,00 per ton.&#13;
"NNperwl nPf ochtaictokeesn,s ,8 l0ice ppeerr lbbu; .f owLli, v7e* cP; oduulctrkys,, 8d5o:e t. urBkuetytse.r S, cd. aiEryg,g lsi, es tpreirc tllbvj fcrreesahm. SerHyc, pl ieer&#13;
REVIEW Or TBAI&gt;E.&#13;
&lt;ltDyi sopfa Itmchpeosr tfarnocme raelpmorots tw ietvheoruyt enxocretphteiornn SImeaptrtolev eamnedn tP oinrt lbaunudn, ewaait hf rosmpl eDndeitdr oictr otop&#13;
r. pnreosssp aencdts .I ndTuhset rtiaessk o of ft hade jcuosutnintrgy tthoe c bonudsfi.- tions created by a new tariff law has progErveesns&#13;
edth wei tihn cgrreaatsiifnygi ngs trreanpgidthit yo fa nsdtr iekainseg ocof atlh me iunneirf*o rpmroitbya bpllva nfo, rwwhaircdhs tphreo madisoepst ioton Sreommoev ceo mntoussti oonf iths ec caauusseeds obt ys uecvhe nsttsr uScegelems.- itnogn lmy iclolsn twrhadenlc tmerayn;y boyt hcleors winogr koMs aafr eg set acrott-- i&lt;n*g? «"a•n »dr b? ya ddveacnlicnien g,i nb usto tmhee "bparliacnecse iws hnenn- p^a•r^taknalb: elyveonntt hsiennceg btXi ea pladses.a geT ohfe mtSoistat rii»tf- bill is the advance in the price of wheat&#13;
:*;-&#13;
,- 1 .&#13;
J-r.-j. "'^•'•--^^iftirfii&#13;
•if*,&#13;
.*V&#13;
w&#13;
- -&lt;J •&#13;
&lt; s .&#13;
Pill Clothes.&#13;
fbe good pill haa a ffood ooat. The pill ooat&#13;
earvea two purpoeee; it protects the pill, enabling&#13;
it to retain all its remedial value, and it&#13;
disguises the taste for the palate. Borne ptl&#13;
coats are too heavy; they will not dissolve &amp;&#13;
the stomach, and the pills they cover pass&#13;
through the system as harmless as a bread&#13;
pellet. Other coats are too light, and permit the&#13;
speedy deterioration of the pill. After 80 years,&#13;
exposure, Ayer's 8ugar Coated Pills have been&#13;
found as effective as if Just fresh from the laboratory.&#13;
It's a good pill with a good coat. Aak&#13;
your druggist for&#13;
Ayer's Cathartic Pills.&#13;
Mora ptlt particular* ia Avar's Curaboofcy so* pagea.&#13;
Scot free. J. C Ajrer Co.. Lowell, Mats.&#13;
For growing berries of all kinds sefoct&#13;
well-drained soil on which some&#13;
hoed crop was produced last season,&#13;
potato ground being best&#13;
Shake Into Your Shoe*&#13;
Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder for the&#13;
'feet It cures painful, swollen, smarting&#13;
feet and instantly takes the sting&#13;
out ef coma and bunions. It is the&#13;
.greatest comfort discovery of the age.&#13;
Allen's Foot-Ease makes tight-fitting&#13;
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•cure for sweating, callous and hot,&#13;
tired, aching feet TryTt today. Sold&#13;
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FREE. Address Allen 8. Olmsted, Le&#13;
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It iz quite possible to tell bow mutch&#13;
*branes a man has got, but to tell how&#13;
•tnutch harte iz another thing entirely.&#13;
Hives are not dangerous to life, but&#13;
they are a prolific breeder of misery&#13;
and profanity. Doan's Ointment gives&#13;
instant relief, even in the wbrst cases&#13;
-of this and other exasperating diseases&#13;
•of the skin.&#13;
A coquet i$ like a kiking heifer—&#13;
•dredphull hard to brake, but oqoe&#13;
broke, nothin' iz more tame than she iz.&#13;
An unfailing specific for cholera&#13;
•morbus, cholera infantum, diarrhoea&#13;
and all other dangerous diseases incipient&#13;
to the summer season, is found in&#13;
Dr. Fowler's Ext of Wild Strawberry.&#13;
Mi dear friend, don't talk to high;&#13;
thare iz no diet so remorseless az to&#13;
have to eat your own words.&#13;
Averice, when it takes full posseshun&#13;
of your harte, roots out all other things,&#13;
good, bad and indifferent&#13;
"If taken into the head by the nostrils&#13;
two or three times a week,&#13;
Thomas' Eclectric Oil will positively relieve&#13;
the most offensive case of catarrh."&#13;
Rev. E. F. Crane, Dunkirk, N. Y.&#13;
You have found out what a man is&#13;
when yon hare found out what he&#13;
loves.&#13;
Pure blood and a good digestion are&#13;
an insurance against disease and suffering.&#13;
Burdock Blood Bitters keeps&#13;
jthe blood pure, the digestion perfect&#13;
The importance of the maternal ancestry&#13;
is now so generally recognized&#13;
that this is called the broodmare age&#13;
of trotting breeding.&#13;
A&#13;
She Weapon Saudi,— bat Neae Mere&#13;
Certain er Effective.&#13;
In these times when backs are lame,&#13;
when almost every other one we meet has&#13;
DOW and then, or all the time, .a back that&#13;
sches or pains—"a weak back," " a bad&#13;
back," a back that makes their life a missry&#13;
to bear—and still they go on day by&#13;
day In pain and suffering. Mow 'tis the&#13;
easiest thing in the world to give this&#13;
played out back "a blow " that will settle&#13;
It, and put in its place a new one equal to&#13;
any. It's just like this: hit at the cause;&#13;
most backaches come from kidney disorders.&#13;
Reach the kidneys, start their&#13;
clogged-up fibres in Operation; when this&#13;
Is done you can say good-bye to backache.&#13;
Here is a case from Battle Creek: Mr.&#13;
Jofliah M. Shoup lives at 51 Broad Street&#13;
he was a 'member of the Battle Creek police&#13;
force for many years. As a member&#13;
of the force he served the city well, but&#13;
the rough weather be was often subjected&#13;
to laid the foundation of kidney disorder,&#13;
which has troubled him very much. Here&#13;
is what he says about it:&#13;
"About three years ago, while on the Eolice force, I contracted from exposure a&#13;
Idney trouble, which has since given me&#13;
no end of trouble. The pain was right&#13;
through my kidneys and across the small&#13;
of my back; if sitting down and I wanted&#13;
to stand up, I had to arise very slowly and&#13;
gently to avoid Increasing the pain; 1 had&#13;
such tlred-out feelings all the time, and I&#13;
was steadily getting worse. About two&#13;
months ago, hearing of Doan's Kidney&#13;
Pills, I got a box. Their action and effect&#13;
was most complete, they removed the old&#13;
aching pains for good I can now get&#13;
around as quickly as anybody. Doan's&#13;
Kidney Pills are certainly as represented."&#13;
For sale by all dealers. Price 00 cents.&#13;
Mailed by Foster-Milbura Co., Buffalo,&#13;
N. Y.t sole agents for the U. S. Remember&#13;
the name, Doarii, and take no other.&#13;
Pallets and put your depe ynedaernlcine gu phoenn sf oarr ea thsuer eo nperso ftiot&#13;
t No-To-Bave for Fifty Coats.&#13;
/ Guaranteed tobacco habit cure.makes weak&#13;
men strong, blood pure. 60c. H. All druggists.&#13;
inAg iawnadv ist fwolidll an dotr esoss e raisgihlyt swidrien okulet. I•n pack-&#13;
Mrs. Wbulow's Boothia* Srrnp . tw afcUSmas tatttl—.aoftana tha a-naujadaoaa Inlawi&#13;
via* aatte. St caals * ksttta.&#13;
mOakreee intt toeoak w aisll g roeovdiv aes rnueswty. black lace, and&#13;
,S1GT.s oraooru Mv dBaAnT SLtraora-Aaaaoua'ril cdao'etk .S OCMoo*t oluaattdaa*l a1S w Seatk, •r 1M Woodward Ava., DatooU, or any O.f.ar *&#13;
ruTbo w reelml woviteh t atre rfrpoemnt ainney. cloth saturate and&#13;
There is a&#13;
•Class of People&#13;
r&gt; Who are injured by the use&#13;
of coffee. Recently there&#13;
haa been placed ia all the&#13;
grocery stores a new preparation&#13;
called GRAIN-O,&#13;
made of pare grains, that&#13;
takes the place of coffee.&#13;
The most delicate stomach&#13;
reccitcait without distress,&#13;
and bat lew can tell it from&#13;
coffee, fydom not cost over&#13;
K at much. Children may&#13;
drink it with greet benefit&#13;
lft eeate and 2ft cents par&#13;
package. Try i t aak for&#13;
GBAJJT-a&#13;
|Try Orain-OI&#13;
Lincoln and Cotswold rams, used&#13;
with Merino ewes, produce large carcasses&#13;
and long wool, if food supplies&#13;
are liberal and good care given. .&#13;
Try Graln-O.&#13;
Ask your grocer today to show you&#13;
a package of GRAIN-O, the new food&#13;
drink that takes the place of coffee.&#13;
The children may drink it without&#13;
injury as well as the adult. All who&#13;
try it like i t GRAIN-0 has that rich&#13;
seal brown of Mocha or Java, but it is&#13;
made from pure grains, and the most&#13;
delicate stomach receives it without&#13;
distress. M the price of coffee.&#13;
15 cents and 25 cents per package.&#13;
Sold by all grocers. Tastes like coffee.&#13;
Looks like coffee.&#13;
anTdh tehree hiasc nknoe ryi.v aElrayc hb Iest wgoeoedn Int hhei st rpolattceer, which is one the other cannot fill&#13;
CUBED IX THKEE MONTHS.&#13;
Knoxville, Tioga Co., Pa.,&#13;
Dr. J. C. Hoffman, Isabella Blag.. Chicago,&#13;
III-:&#13;
Dear Sir:—Your medicine has eared&#13;
me of the Morphine Habit in 3 months.&#13;
I hare no desire tor the drug. I had&#13;
taken opiates for more than thirty&#13;
(SO) years. I am now moat 81 years old,&#13;
aad feel very grateful for your kind*&#13;
aeat to me.&#13;
GARDNER MATTBSON.&#13;
Care of Mrs. Ben Boom.&#13;
tilBiteyr.r aiensd r leelai,e rvee i tth ine saoni l eoxfc evlelernyt lictotnled ifteiorn- for other crops.&#13;
Bsjrs&#13;
b t a t a interna?. Fries, We.&#13;
hoInt eiya m saayid ^bet hcaatr ecdet btcy feraotdinugc ead e mbayil e aptiiencge&#13;
of " -——&#13;
To Owe&#13;
Take&#13;
If GCC fails to cure&#13;
Cathartic. ifcor»t&#13;
refund monev&#13;
raWceh iat tmevaeyr csaiuns eh Ians ycoanu. sed In the human&#13;
( W I C M Catalsawaatfbtss. »&#13;
toY roeuj ociacne waiiwtha ovtsh beer sh.a ppy if ye* are willing&#13;
su1m sphtaioUn rfeacorm amaedn dw iPdies.e —'s MCrasr. e Mfourl liCgaonn,- PUunstead. Kent England, Nov. t, m a&#13;
• wesae* Sharpens a pencil plgeontoefi.&#13;
MISSED A FOKTUNE.&#13;
VEN the wild rush&#13;
to California in ' «&#13;
hardly equalled&#13;
that to Caribou ten&#13;
years later. Surely&#13;
there never haa&#13;
been such a frentied&#13;
scramble for&#13;
gold as that which&#13;
filled the harbor of&#13;
Victoria, Vancouver&#13;
Island, with a&#13;
navy of antiquated, leaky craft, laden to&#13;
the scuppers with a horde of dauntless&#13;
adventurers, burning to reach the precious&#13;
places of the Upper Prazer. These&#13;
upper regions are wild enough even today;&#13;
forty years ago they were in the&#13;
heart of as untrodden wilderness. Civilisation&#13;
had not penetrated further&#13;
than the guns of the British cruisers&#13;
could reach; even the log forts of the&#13;
Hudson Bay Company were not to be&#13;
found in the remoter parts of that region,&#13;
so aptly described years afterwards&#13;
oy Lord Dufferin as "A Sea of&#13;
Mountains." Gold was known to exist;&#13;
inland tribes bartered it with others&#13;
nearer the coast for powder and lead,&#13;
or blankets, and it eventually made its&#13;
way to Victoria; but where it was&#13;
found, or in what quantities, no white&#13;
man knew, unless indeed it was the&#13;
head factors of the company, and it&#13;
was part of their duty to withhold all&#13;
such matters from the world, that they&#13;
might keep the great northwest a&#13;
breeding ground for the fur bearing&#13;
animals for all time. But one day a&#13;
certain Jim Barker found bis way up&#13;
stream, dug gold dust from the bars by&#13;
the spaaefunrand t h e n s dwen^HuiK&#13;
son Bay Companies could not have kept&#13;
back the adventurers. The rush had&#13;
begun.&#13;
There were no woods, or even trails,&#13;
save those made by the grizzly and&#13;
the blacktail; the Prazer and Thompson&#13;
were cruel streams ice cold and&#13;
full of terrible rapids and eddies. But&#13;
when did danger deter the gold seeker?&#13;
The army of red-shirted, bigbooted&#13;
dare-devils pressed on until&#13;
Caribou and its rich placers had been&#13;
reached. Hundreds died on the way;&#13;
disease and privation played sad havoc&#13;
with the survivors; but the rewards&#13;
were in a few cases beyond the dreams&#13;
of avarice, and the dogged fellows continued&#13;
to work like heroes all through&#13;
the short northern summer with rocker&#13;
and long Tom, ravishing the rich bars&#13;
of the wealth they bad accumulated&#13;
during the lapse of aeons. Wages were&#13;
125 a day, paid in gold dust. It was&#13;
barely a living pittance. Everything&#13;
had to be carried over 400 miles of&#13;
rough trail on men's shoulders, as the&#13;
country produced ^ nothing, after the&#13;
game had been driven away, except&#13;
"DEAD BEAT AND HALF FROZEN.&#13;
gold dust—but of that there was great&#13;
store. Potatoes cost $60 a bushel, flour&#13;
$10 a pound; a pair of gam boots told&#13;
for $60; drinks were paid for in pinches&#13;
of the precious dust—and some of the&#13;
barkeepers had thumbs broader than&#13;
ever miller possessed. A few men made&#13;
fortunes, many managed to pay expenses,&#13;
but the majority went dead&#13;
broke.&#13;
Then the awful winter was upon&#13;
them. The mercury disappeared in the&#13;
bulb; the river froze almost to the bottom&#13;
in the still reaches; deep snow&#13;
covered the land, and buried the shanties&#13;
and tents of the pioneers. Men&#13;
sickened and died like sheep with a&#13;
murrain. One historian met 4,000 miners&#13;
returning oa the Bakerfleld trail,&#13;
destitute, barefooted, and despairing.&#13;
When the ice thawed in the spring the&#13;
canyon of the Prater was a charnelbouse,&#13;
strewn with the bodies of the&#13;
red-shirted gold seekers who had met&#13;
their fate in Ma waters. ,&#13;
A few of the moat hardy struggled&#13;
through to the great bead of the Columbia&#13;
river, aad sailing dowa its&#13;
broad bosom eveatueily gonad tfceir&#13;
way back to Oregon. They wintered&#13;
aear the Arrow lakes, aad with Indomitable&#13;
resolution continued prospecting&#13;
daring the succeeding summer. Traces&#13;
of taeir operations are ooeaatoaaMy&#13;
found, bat though they were ia a comatry&#13;
far richer than Caribou, they knew&#13;
It not. Placers there were aeae, and&#13;
the m&gt;etertes of true fissure veins aad&#13;
smmMsag ores were beyond their kea.&#13;
Thar reenlred gold in it* native purity&#13;
eoeaething they could wash oat&#13;
i n - i n m,t, i^nfai in,. w VTTi. ,&#13;
with pan and rooi.er a:.tl excaange xor&#13;
necessaries without further trouble. It&#13;
was not there, so they passed oa.&#13;
Yet there were superior men among&#13;
them. One pioneer at least must have&#13;
found rich float on Red Mountain, oa&#13;
the very site of what ia now the Le Rbl&#13;
mine, aad evidently followed it up to&#13;
the outcrop of gossan, or "iron-hat,"&#13;
that toy exposed for hundreds of feet&#13;
In a half-hearted way, as If he doubted&#13;
the wisdom of vesting precious energy&#13;
on a quartz lead, be drove a shallow&#13;
trial shaft, but after going down a few&#13;
feet became discouraged and moved&#13;
away back to the dance hells and rum&#13;
of the coast; probably bit bone* now&#13;
bleach on some alkali desert, far to,&#13;
the south of the futile shaft be sunk&#13;
on Red Mountain. Yet a few more&#13;
shots, and he would have reached ore&#13;
that would have placed all that wealth&#13;
can buy within his reach.&#13;
For more than a generation Red&#13;
Mountain lay undisturbed. Wild animals&#13;
alone wandered over the lofty&#13;
mass of diorlte. The grizzly and mountain&#13;
lion pwned it by turns; blacktail&#13;
skulked in the forests at its base; big&#13;
horn skipped over its crest; the white&#13;
goat of the north chewed the scanty&#13;
lichens on its scarred sides. But the&#13;
treasure that lay in its bowels rested&#13;
secure under the protecting "iron-hat"&#13;
Yet through all those long years a man&#13;
was groning up in the distant east&#13;
who had been selected by fate as the&#13;
inheritor of the treasure hidden in the&#13;
great Red Mountain.&#13;
Born in Rntv»iv &lt;iA«nt«&#13;
str&#13;
roo&#13;
m "V/M&#13;
nesh and revu.; Red Mountain, they&#13;
would w&lt;i*p to see how near the pioneer&#13;
of *W came to finding his El Dor*&#13;
ado.&#13;
MINING BY OR EDO I NO. •frt&#13;
ttirfift&#13;
New Method* in llp«tea» to&#13;
the Placer Prod action.&#13;
Montana Is experiencing a revival la&#13;
placer mining. Many new digging*&#13;
have been opened, and placer grounds&#13;
abandoned years ago have attracted&#13;
men with capital enough to work them&#13;
on a scale that makes them profitable.&#13;
There ia every promise that the placer&#13;
production of gold in that state will&#13;
la a few years reach an enormous figure,&#13;
this year will greatly exceed last,&#13;
and there are reasons why this branch&#13;
of Montana's greatest Industry should&#13;
steadily increase in importance. The&#13;
greatest impetus to placer mining, according&#13;
to a Helena dispatch to the&#13;
Minneapolis Journal,haa come through&#13;
the application of the steam dredge to&#13;
difficult bars and creek beds that&#13;
could not 'be mined in the ordinary&#13;
way. At the present time the largest&#13;
steam dredge ever used in placer mining&#13;
is earning $600 a day in the bed&#13;
of Grasshopper Creek, in Beaverhead&#13;
county. It can handle from 4,000 to&#13;
5,000 yards of dirt every twenty-four&#13;
hours. A larger dredge is being built&#13;
in Milwaukee for the same company.&#13;
There Is perhaps no place in Montana&#13;
where the dredge can be used with so&#13;
much success as in Grasshopper gulch,&#13;
many years, in fact, from \he&#13;
liest placer mining In the Terriy,&#13;
the bed of the creek has befall&#13;
ordinary methods of working.&#13;
A LIFE—AND A DEATH.&#13;
torn the Whltechapel district of&#13;
fdon a young Jew named Barney&#13;
tcs, who had been by turns a cabrer&#13;
and a peddler, went twenty-five&#13;
ra ago, to South Africa. In 1849,&#13;
mty-two .years later, be returned to&#13;
idon—this time as Barney Barnato,&#13;
"Kafir King." It was said that he&#13;
) worth a hundred million dollars,&#13;
f that die "Barnato circle," which&#13;
A l l 1 / S M « I A V pJluaed C e c l J Rhodes, controlled the&#13;
M i l I V l l l Q S O f rcp««t gol* and diamond mines in the&#13;
F.i FU&#13;
ia&#13;
theVdllssouri to the coast&#13;
Topping had now found a quiet anchorage&#13;
after his adventurous youth,&#13;
and seemed IlkeTy to paas his later days&#13;
as many other mountain men had done,&#13;
in an uneventful fashion. When a man&#13;
is fond of the wilderness and finds himself&#13;
beside waters teeming with fish,&#13;
and prairies alive with fowl, and where&#13;
veneion may be had for the pressing&#13;
of a trigger, he is likely to be too contented&#13;
to make any very strenuous&#13;
efforts to change his lot&#13;
But that was six years ago. Read,&#13;
and let me tell you how Topping fares&#13;
today.&#13;
One evening In the fall of 1890 he&#13;
was startled by a violent rapping on'&#13;
the split cedar door of his cabin. He&#13;
lifted the latch and Joe BourgoU and&#13;
his "pard" Morris stumbled into the&#13;
little shanty, and dumped the bags of&#13;
ore samples they had been laden with&#13;
on the rough floor. Dead beat and half&#13;
frozen, they were yet full of enthusiasm&#13;
over a wonderful body of sulphide&#13;
ere which their trial shoots had disclosed&#13;
at the bottom of an old trial&#13;
shaft high on the flanks of Red Mountain.&#13;
They had staked out five claims,&#13;
they said, and would give one to Topping&#13;
if be would pay the recorder's&#13;
t~*. mi tftfl lo*. Thiiss nhee aagarro&lt;g! d to dn.&#13;
became U&#13;
e poorest&#13;
and in due course became the owner&#13;
of what seemed the poorest prospect&#13;
It is now the famous Le Hoi mine. One&#13;
of the locations is the War Eagle, and&#13;
another the Center Star, each a valuable&#13;
property, but inferior to the Le Roi.&#13;
From that day Trail Creek, Topping's&#13;
abode, began to be famous.&#13;
Brents move fast in the west Topping&#13;
was almost alone at Trail ia 1800;&#13;
today there are hotels, stores, a smelter,&#13;
a railroad station, and steamboat&#13;
wharfs, while perched on the shoulder&#13;
of the nrountain near the Le Roi has&#13;
sprung up the bustling town of Rossland,&#13;
numbering already 10,000, and increasing&#13;
in population at the rate of&#13;
5,600 a year.&#13;
Topping of course told oat long ago.&#13;
He need worry himself no more about&#13;
ways and means, but can buy all the&#13;
Winchesters, boats, and pack animals&#13;
he may desire, and still have aa ample&#13;
income left—and what more can a&#13;
frontiersman and old Indian fighter&#13;
ask? The veteran is a great favorite&#13;
with hit fellow citizens.&#13;
And Jthe -tmclcts wanderer who&#13;
sunk the shallow pit la the iron hat&#13;
beak in the fifties? What grudge aad&#13;
the blind goddess against aim? A shot&#13;
or two more aad he might have been&#13;
rich and famous. Bat the big air compressors&#13;
do act pant and groan in hit&#13;
service; a thoarand feet below the matight&#13;
men are tolling, but not for him;&#13;
the dump sparklet with fifty dollar ore,&#13;
but the proceeds will not be credited&#13;
to his account What it writ it writ,&#13;
aad in the Book of Destiny there It ao&#13;
turning back to correct errors—but If&#13;
the bare, blesched bones on the alkali&#13;
desert or v."* r.~: :&gt;. .. c'othed with&#13;
»n he began to organise companies&#13;
take over old mines or develop new&#13;
^ r j ^8. So skilfully were they promoted&#13;
— "fthat conservative England went mad.&#13;
Everybody wanted Bemato't stocks.&#13;
Shares that started at twenty-five cents&#13;
each rose to three hundred dollars.&#13;
Other shares that sold oa Wednesday&#13;
for five dollars commanded on Friday&#13;
five hundred. It has been estimated&#13;
that up to a year ago, the British public&#13;
had invetted seven hundred and fifty&#13;
million dollars in the Barnato&#13;
schemes. When the crate was at itt&#13;
height Barnato's income was asserted&#13;
to be twenty-five million dollars a year,&#13;
and his fortune was placed at three&#13;
hundred millions.&#13;
The tide turned with the failure of&#13;
the Jameson raid. Barnato spent vast&#13;
sums to bolster hit enterprises; but&#13;
public faith had been overstrained and&#13;
the stocks continued to fall Suddenly&#13;
Barnato went to South Africa—tome&#13;
say, to rest, others that he might save&#13;
a remnant of hit fortune. 'Returning,&#13;
insane or desperate, he ended his dife in&#13;
midocean.&#13;
The stories told of this modern Monte&#13;
Chrltto present a curious character.&#13;
Gossip dwelt impartially upon his&#13;
champaign baths, his "loud* toilets, hit&#13;
lavish generosity to tramps and beggars&#13;
and the pet bull dog that shared&#13;
his breakfast. People laugned at hit&#13;
social ambitions when they recalled&#13;
that for blackguardism, he had been&#13;
expelled from two clubs. He gave&#13;
much money to charity, but that did&#13;
not cause anybody to forget that hit&#13;
.wealth was largely gained by the ruin&#13;
of others. It was said of him that,&#13;
though he inhabited a palace in Piccadilly,&#13;
ait soul still lived in Whitechapel.&#13;
The most unfriendly view recognised&#13;
that Barnato had qualities of leadership.&#13;
He was inventive, energetic,&#13;
audacious, persevering, full of resource.&#13;
Yet he spent himself in erecting a&#13;
house of cards, destined aooa to faiL&#13;
doubtless, now that the Juggler's hand&#13;
hat been withdrawn.&#13;
And in the long run nobody win&#13;
Inflation aad devslnataeat are act&#13;
tyaonymout. The freaay of eaeealattoa&#13;
adds little or aota*ag to a nation'*&#13;
wealth, aad a wuiiiiaafal speculator is&#13;
chiefly remembered la aflU&#13;
one who brought many t e&#13;
- "I know not how to form to myself a&#13;
greater idea of humane Mfe.w said Richard&#13;
Steele, l a t n ia what it the practice&#13;
of setae wealthy men whom I&#13;
could atme, that make no step te the&#13;
of their own fortunes,&#13;
do not alto&#13;
thote of other men."&#13;
^^Congressman Spouter it the&#13;
atnoi leader of his party, is he a e t r&#13;
"Tea, by ever- one&#13;
speaker.*'&#13;
\ .-:¾&#13;
, m&#13;
m&#13;
• V.'. "&amp;'.&#13;
A t.'/K&#13;
:¾¾&#13;
• . " • &lt; &gt;&#13;
r, • • %&#13;
m •"•. V*"'&#13;
- i f •',&#13;
~~Xt,&#13;
. ' • I * "&#13;
'• ••lifai&#13;
y..&#13;
• &gt; * * * *&#13;
•&gt;v; .v?&#13;
W- -ve-'&#13;
••^JiL.*ttf&lt;iftttWit«t^'*,«'t*»*«*«wiJ (Jttw^MrfniikutiMMaMiaaH^MMjA&#13;
'**$ ; ' ^ ? ? ^ $ ^ ^&#13;
t ' t • * -,^&#13;
&amp;; Y. • # : * :'#&#13;
,&amp;';&#13;
.-'; v&#13;
i'X^W''&#13;
&gt;*1 #s ^ : : , / V&#13;
5¾¾ *$? *.*•' 'fev.^*^A i } y * FN&gt;: ,iirM 1 4*.&#13;
/»«;&#13;
.«:,-:•*.+•'&#13;
.«;&#13;
If-X #&#13;
;•'*Hvv-, »*&amp;.&#13;
$t ; : &lt;&lt;fvcf c&#13;
t * r&#13;
&amp;• f4^ U-5.A«:&#13;
• &gt; * ft •#£ tf: tt' V&#13;
.t *!* *&#13;
i?'H:&#13;
•M .&#13;
ISJ&#13;
r'&#13;
&amp; • :&#13;
^ -&#13;
i * * .&#13;
Mr.&#13;
PAR8HALLVILLE. /&#13;
and Mrs. Harry Charlie&#13;
and daughter Jennie, spent Sunday&#13;
with friends here.&#13;
Miss Burden, of Sweden, who&#13;
has been visiting Mrs. Dr. Merriman&#13;
has gone to Detroit.&#13;
Will Gonine and wife, of Oak&#13;
Grove, spent Sunday with her&#13;
mother, Mrs. Albert White.&#13;
Miss Florence Andrews of&#13;
Pinckney, is visiting her grandparents,&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. B. F. And&#13;
rews.&#13;
Saturday night; a bright light&#13;
was discovered south of here, and&#13;
afterward learned it was the saw&#13;
mill near Hartland in Cullens'&#13;
woods.&#13;
Last week Wednesday the funeral&#13;
service of Mr. John Avery&#13;
was held at the M. £. church, Bev.&#13;
J. L. Walker assisted by Bev.&#13;
Piatt, officiated. Mr. Avery was&#13;
an old pioneer of this place. Fork&#13;
over 61 years he and wife have&#13;
jojiroexedJhaiidJii-hand^apd she&#13;
J. E. Durkee was in Jackson&#13;
one day last week.&#13;
Oscar Hesse, of Howell, called&#13;
on Anderson friends Sunday.&#13;
Rev. B. H. Ellis, of Gregory,&#13;
called on Anderson friends Friday.&#13;
The Misses Stella and Mabel&#13;
Wood are visiting friends in Howell&#13;
this week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. 0. D. Bennett, of&#13;
Howell, were guests of Jaa. Marble's&#13;
family Sunday.&#13;
F. S. Lyon and d&amp;ughter, Emma,&#13;
of Pioneer, Ohio, are visiting&#13;
at J. E. Durkee's this week.&#13;
Elton Jeffery is prepared to&#13;
buy all kinds of nroduce at Anderson.&#13;
See adv. in DISPATCH.&#13;
Lelia Coleman and Kittie Hoff&#13;
returned to Gregory Monday to&#13;
pick beans, after a vacation of several&#13;
weeks.&#13;
There will be a social for the&#13;
benefit of Eev. B. H. Ellis tt the&#13;
home of Eugene Smith, Friday&#13;
evening of this week. Everyone&#13;
come and get a nightcap.&#13;
Additional Local.&#13;
Miss Mama Sigler is visiting&#13;
tives in Detroit&#13;
rela-&#13;
Lee Graham visited his aunt, Mrs.&#13;
Potter ton, at Hamburg the past week.&#13;
week from a pleasant two weeks visit&#13;
with friends in Hamburg.&#13;
Mrs. Margret Kearney and son Ed.&#13;
T. Kearney of Jaokson, Neb., visited&#13;
Howell friends one day last week.&#13;
Mrs. W. J. Blaok and children&#13;
spent a part of the past week with&#13;
relatives and friends in Plain field.&#13;
The sooiety of Church Workers will&#13;
serve their monthly tea at the home of&#13;
Mrs. Annie Francis, Wednesday, Aug.&#13;
18. All are cordially invited.&#13;
Ned Chubb has purchased the house&#13;
formerly occupied by Chas. Bowman&#13;
on Pearl street, and will move his&#13;
family there in the near future.&#13;
There will be an Ice Cream social&#13;
at the home of Montague Bros, at&#13;
Cbubb's Corners, on Tuesday evening&#13;
August 17, for the benefit of Rev. J.&#13;
fc* Wallace. Everyone welcome to&#13;
COtmeattd enjoy the evening.&#13;
The diamond on the race track&#13;
jrreuwss have been worked and fitted&#13;
until there are no better ball grounds&#13;
in the state for a game. On Tburs-&#13;
Myron Bogers of Lansing visited&#13;
bis sister, Mrs. Chas. Qrimes, the first&#13;
C. L. Bowman and family will move ^f the week. He oame * wheel.&#13;
into the east part of Mrs. T. « « • ( ^u^thwa.ttokrti iww sold from&#13;
use* tfcis place to Detroit on Thursday last.&#13;
Miss Jennie Haze returned last Over 400 tiokets were sold in all.&#13;
with a family of two boys and two&#13;
girls are4e)ft to mourn the loss of&#13;
one that was near and dear.&#13;
UNADILLABev.&#13;
Ellis and H. S. Reed tootf&#13;
a trip to Ohio on their wheels recently.&#13;
l&#13;
A union S. S. picnic will be&#13;
held at North Lake on Friday!&#13;
next. Everyone invited. !&#13;
Mrs. H. Seymour and daughter&#13;
of Jackson, are visiting a few&#13;
weeks at her home in Putnam. j&#13;
Quite a number of the youngl&#13;
people took advantage of the ex-1&#13;
cursion to visit Detroit on Inure-1&#13;
on and Pinckney nine will try titles&#13;
on these grounds, and a good game is&#13;
looked for. Admission 10 cents.&#13;
When will people learn that good&#13;
substantial houses advertise their business&#13;
through the newspapers instead&#13;
of through "fakirs."&#13;
Now begin to save up your money&#13;
for the C. E. excursion to Detroit, on&#13;
Wednesday, September 1st. Only II&#13;
for the round trip. Do not fail to go.&#13;
The Howell high school building is&#13;
to be heat by steam the coming winter,&#13;
the old furnace proving inefficient&#13;
and dangerous. C. 0. Jewett. secured&#13;
the contract,.&#13;
There are 235 qualified teachers in&#13;
this county. There are three who&#13;
hold state certificates ten Normal diplomas,&#13;
three first grade, 111 second&#13;
grade and 108 third grade certificates.&#13;
J. J. Teeple left here Tuesday for&#13;
Detroit and expects to go from there&#13;
to Mackinac Island and Marquette by&#13;
water and visit bis son, P. G, Mr.&#13;
Teeple is starting out on one of the&#13;
most pleasant trips in the world.&#13;
The sad news was received here on&#13;
Wednesday last that Miss Nellie Do&#13;
lar in this community, should receive&#13;
the hearty support of all, this season&#13;
especially, as they are putting on a&#13;
very high priced coarse.&#13;
Miss Vandelia Varnum, who, ColdayaftBrnoc^&#13;
Auf^l%4h&lt;^Brtghb4lairrofR$rt**T+*A-y«™«* "™ny ? M OPol L. f .Copelaud says, "T* »"* p«*r&#13;
j r».-_.i 1— _:n i.__ x:i.i„ has been a great sufferer for a number&#13;
of vears and is now at rest. The funeral&#13;
was held at Dexter, Friday, Aug.&#13;
Miss Nellie was a former resident&#13;
this village and was highly respect*&#13;
day last&#13;
The quarterly Tneetfng gemot*&#13;
"were-beid at the M. E.-ehnreh-oa&#13;
Sunday last. Presiding Elder,&#13;
W. H. Shier, of Detroit, was present.&#13;
Cass Obert, of Durand. visited&#13;
his cousin, Albert Watson, a few&#13;
days ago. They took a trip on&#13;
their wheels to Ypsilautl. Both&#13;
boys are graduates from Geary's,&#13;
College.&#13;
The M. A. L. will run their annual&#13;
Sunday excursion to Island LaVe next&#13;
Sunday, Aug. 15. Train leaves Pinckney&#13;
at 9:03 a. m.—fare for round trip&#13;
60c. Returning, train leaves lake at&#13;
8 p. m.&#13;
v&#13;
to&#13;
• •V- .'&#13;
$ • • • •&#13;
•X :-&#13;
«A:."&#13;
GREGORY.&#13;
Wm. M. Smith has gone&#13;
Owosso to spend a few days.&#13;
Morgan Sherman of Marshall,&#13;
is visiting his mother, Mrs. H.&#13;
Gregory.&#13;
Ninety-six persons from this&#13;
place went to Detroit last Thure*&#13;
day on the excursion.&#13;
Cass Obert, son of 0. H. Obert&#13;
a former resident of this township&#13;
was in town last week.&#13;
Two large bams with smaller&#13;
buildings, belonging to Hattle&#13;
Sharp, three miles southwest of&#13;
this place were struck by lightning&#13;
Monday evening and were&#13;
burned with 700 bushels of corn,&#13;
500 each of wheat and beans, 100&#13;
loads of hay and all farming tools.&#13;
Loss ¢3,000, insurance $1,800.&#13;
rx&#13;
«*«.&#13;
y vv f.-' 'V .&#13;
/ '* - ,'&#13;
"Mil .&#13;
&amp;%&#13;
m-'&#13;
i V . ' .&#13;
Depression&#13;
of Spirits&#13;
so common in summer-time,&#13;
iccompanied by loss of energy,&#13;
lack of thought-power, means&#13;
a deficient supply of nourishment.&#13;
The vital force Is lost.&#13;
It isn't a question of muscle and&#13;
sinew, but of resistance and&#13;
endurance. At any age, but&#13;
especially in youth, it involves&#13;
the risk of lung disease. Loss&#13;
of flesh and a cough are threatening&#13;
signs.&#13;
S of Cod-liver Oil, with the hypo*&#13;
phosphites, meets these cases&#13;
perfectly, it tones up, fattens&#13;
and strengthens.&#13;
In Scott's Emulsion the taste&#13;
of the oil is fully disguised,&#13;
making it almost as palatable&#13;
as milk.&#13;
For sal* at ;oe. and $t.&lt;p b r all drwrgi*tt.&#13;
SCOTT &amp; BOWNC, Mfg. Chemist*. New York&#13;
A Foot of&#13;
TOBBAOOO&#13;
for&#13;
8 CENTS.&#13;
^ i •&#13;
*K&#13;
ANDERSON.&#13;
L. £. Wilson attended the races,&#13;
at Jackson Wednesday.&#13;
l Willie, Mitchell spent Sunday&#13;
With his mother at Gregory.&#13;
The campers returned home&#13;
&gt; Thursday reporting a big time.&#13;
A number from this place at- j E N T I R E&#13;
tended the show at Howell, Friday.&#13;
Him Maude Gordon of Lansing&#13;
m ^ M ^ u e a t of friends here last&#13;
H a # X E. Dunning is the guest&#13;
of W daughter, Mrs. M. Allison.&#13;
*t fmifceis Corners.&#13;
Wm. H. Marsh of Gregory,&#13;
•hipped a couple of carloads of&#13;
gram from this place last week.&#13;
A G. Wilson returned Thursday&#13;
after spending a couple of&#13;
-sveek* with hit paosjr si JaVfcaou&#13;
Miss. Florence Matfcfc fscampin$&#13;
at Brown Oottags at Poctsis&#13;
wift a company of *MVa$ people&#13;
from Pinckney.&#13;
Mrs. Thos. Farley, of Chubb's&#13;
ners, bad a narrow escape from d&#13;
on Sunday last While driving borne)&#13;
from HoweH ber horse became fright*&#13;
^ned and ran throwing her and little&#13;
;on, who was with her, out. Mrs.&#13;
Farly was unconciona for sometime&#13;
but is better at this writing. The boy&#13;
was uninjured.&#13;
Yes, the street fakir struck tbifi&#13;
town, and had more money than be&#13;
wanted, sold watches and gave money&#13;
4way with every purchase etc. Bit!—&#13;
&gt;f course they bit!—and got a cbeau&#13;
vatch while the fakir got the X. Well&#13;
;xperience will teach 'em if warnings&#13;
will not. 8orrv boys, but read your&#13;
ieeai naper and it will sav5 you many&#13;
n^spplhe subscription price.&#13;
liyT. Kearney and wife started&#13;
hoaatward Friday afternoon, and will&#13;
visit at Jackson Mich, and at Chicago,&#13;
reaching their home in Jackson Net).,&#13;
about August 12th. Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Kearney visited their mother, Mrs,&#13;
Margret Kearney and their sister, Mrs.&#13;
Fred Melvin, For ten days, and spent&#13;
a month before coming here in Hack*&#13;
inac Island, Buffalo, Detroit, Canada,&#13;
Erie Penn., New York City and Long&#13;
Branch, and enjoyed a trip by rail and&#13;
water of about 5000 mile. Mr. Kearney&#13;
is a Pinckney boy who, during&#13;
bis 17 years absence has prospered,&#13;
having become attorney at law, owner&#13;
of Dakota county bank at Jackson&#13;
Neb., vice president of the bank of&#13;
Jefferson,^o. Dakota and has at present&#13;
100C acres of fine eastern Nebraska&#13;
land. Their visit was much enjoyed&#13;
by their relatives and friends. " *&#13;
way and Ve ronioa Fohey, after which&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Kiue, Mr. 0. W.&#13;
bmith and daughter Olive favored the&#13;
olub with sorne fine muaio.&#13;
The question in regard to the&#13;
Agricultural College, was not dia*&#13;
cussed aa moat of the raemters were&#13;
not prepared. After the Question&#13;
Box was opened and the questions&#13;
debated, supper was announced and&#13;
the company adjourned to the dinning&#13;
room where all enjoyed the refreshments&#13;
especially the ice cream.&#13;
Owing to the number of picnics and&#13;
excursions in August the Club will&#13;
not meet again until Saturday, Sept.&#13;
25tb, at the home of Mr. and Mrs, H.&#13;
Kioe in Hamburg. RBPOBTEB.&#13;
# M &lt;&#13;
CITIZENS LECTURE COURSE,&#13;
FIFTH SEASON, 189?&#13;
AND 98.&#13;
A Fine Aggregation of Talent.&#13;
The committee of the Lecture Association,&#13;
which has become so popu-&#13;
THE CLASS MUSICAL a SUCCESS.&#13;
As announced in the last issue, the&#13;
class concert of Miss Amelia Clark's&#13;
pupils, was held on Saturday evening&#13;
last. There was a large attendance&#13;
and the program was excellent. We&#13;
wo old (ike to speak of each one of the&#13;
pupils and their&gt;work but mwld be&#13;
too lengthy; it is sufficient to&amp;ay that&#13;
every part war exetuted wiffc skill,&#13;
and the teacher and scholars are to be&#13;
congratulated.&#13;
Those who assisted were Miss Anna&#13;
Wood, of Caro, who sang with good&#13;
effect and responded to an encore.&#13;
Miss Katie Seabolt, pianist, and Mr.&#13;
Crego, Coronetist, both of Ann Arbor,&#13;
were good. Henry Is ham, violinist,&#13;
plays exceedingly well and bandies&#13;
the highest class of music, The only&#13;
trouble with the program was that it&#13;
was too lengthy and should have been&#13;
made into two. Miss Clark has scored&#13;
a success and we hope she will&#13;
giye us another evening of music in&#13;
the near future; -&#13;
* *&#13;
*&#13;
I desire to thank the F. &amp; A. M. and&#13;
0. E. S. societies and all others who&#13;
so kindly assisted in my affliction, in&#13;
tho oicknoaa, death and Uuiial of TmU.X&#13;
husband. When you are in ne ed&#13;
may there be loving hands to assist&#13;
you. MBS. T. GRIMES.&#13;
IHEITIOI EKHIDfl&#13;
This Will Interest You.&#13;
LINE&#13;
OF&#13;
50 CENT&#13;
HATS&#13;
FOR&#13;
35 CENTS.&#13;
FARMER'S CLUB.&#13;
AN INTERESTING MEETING.&#13;
Putnam and Hamburg Farmer's&#13;
Club held a very pleasant meeting at&#13;
the home of Mr. and Mrs. John She*&#13;
han, on Saturday July 81.&#13;
TbiTdayj^as one of those beautiful&#13;
mid summer days when all nature&#13;
seems smiling and every body is happy&#13;
and glad that the b.usy harvest&#13;
time is past. Quite a large company&#13;
was present.&#13;
The meeting was opened with a&#13;
dnet bv two young ladies. Miss Kate&#13;
favored the company with a very ap&#13;
of any woman lecturer the American&#13;
platform has produced," is to be one&#13;
of the novel features of the course.&#13;
Hon. Burrett Hamilton will give&#13;
his popular lecture, "The American&#13;
Boy."&#13;
Hoyt L. Conary will be Heard in bis&#13;
entertainment, "Around the Stove,"&#13;
in which eight different characters&#13;
are .introduced. Mr. Conary filled&#13;
127 dates between Jan. and June of&#13;
this year, appearing three times in&#13;
Saginaw during this time-&#13;
The highest priced leoturer and the&#13;
one having the greatest national reputation&#13;
ot any spea*«r «ver engaged&#13;
for onr course, is Hon. John F. Finarty&#13;
of the Chicago "Citizen.'' His&#13;
subject W4f I be "The Story of Ireland."&#13;
He wa* one of the speakers at the&#13;
John A. Logan and James 6. Blaine&#13;
memorial meeting in Chicago, and is&#13;
the peer of any lecturer in America&#13;
to-day.&#13;
The musical number of the course&#13;
is the famous Clare Schumann Ladies'&#13;
Orchestra, of Boston, consisting of&#13;
seventeen ladies. The regular price&#13;
of tkfc organization is $250, and the&#13;
peojileofour community should fetl&#13;
flatered to know that Pi&amp;ckney will&#13;
be the smallest place in which this&#13;
entertainment was eyer given.&#13;
C. L. GBIMBB, Secretary.&#13;
propnate reading, followed by' Mrs&#13;
A. Francis and Mrs. J. W. Piaceway.&#13;
Recitations by the Misses Iva Place*&#13;
n OR. ramn _ ROYAL-TANSY PILLS&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler.&#13;
THE RED MARK&#13;
Come and Gone&#13;
snunn tut&#13;
£ popular and successful business of&#13;
our town and one that is a credit to&#13;
our village is* that carried on by Mr.&#13;
Thomas Clinton, Pinckney's leading&#13;
harness maker. Mr. Clinton is among&#13;
the longest established of our business&#13;
men, having founded his business^ of&#13;
a century ago. The success he has&#13;
met with is the results of careful management&#13;
and straight forward dealing&#13;
and the deserved popularity the&#13;
business has acquired has been secured&#13;
by turning out a superior class of&#13;
work and offering to the public all&#13;
the advantages possible. The shop is&#13;
Vnown for the excellence of the work&#13;
done, and for prices it is not undersold&#13;
in the county. Ail kinds of&#13;
machine and harness oil, to be sold&#13;
lower than can be purchased in Livingston&#13;
county, and a complete stock&#13;
el everything found in a Arat-class&#13;
harness shop is on hand, such as&#13;
whips, combs, brushes, robes; also&#13;
trtnk8, valises, etc 1A eosuMetion is&#13;
also a boot and shoe department&#13;
where custom work m mawsfacturing&#13;
and repairing is 4ooc He carries&#13;
a stock of mejifumi Cat saaa a&amp;d&#13;
beast, and poultry, whack is the best&#13;
4«. the work At tit timet&#13;
«et the hiffceat cash mice&#13;
felts, etc^ai the shtf). -&#13;
It has been like a cyclone in some respects, sweeping forests of merchandise&#13;
in its path regardless alike of value or quality but it has left it's&#13;
wake strewn with the wrecks and remnants of many a formerly handsome&#13;
lot which we shall bend our August effort to clean up.&#13;
Clear Away the Wrecks.&#13;
of India and Foulards Silk*. Perhaps a dress pattern each of&#13;
many lengths of former $L00 and 11.25 onee.&#13;
Clearing 2-rice* J+9c&#13;
Wrecks of French Organdies&#13;
until recently bearing with bride the marks 25c, 39c, 50c.&#13;
Mow Bumtbed to /5e&#13;
Light All Wool Mixtures&#13;
of Dress Goods which were much more in price four weeks ago&#13;
An* Marked 2fe&#13;
Even Checked All Wool Dress Goods&#13;
which were much sought at 50c and 60o a ftrd.&#13;
TThal there is left earn be bought for 29c a yard.&#13;
Yours BeepeotfoUy, " ~ L. H. FIELD.&#13;
•k^ak^^daMfc</text>
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          <name>Note</name>
          <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="36556">
              <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>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="5529">
                <text>Pinckney Dispatch August 12, 1897</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="5530">
                <text>August 12, 1897 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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            </elementTextContainer>
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                <text>Newspaper archives</text>
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                <text>No Copyright - United States</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="5534">
                <text>1897-08-12</text>
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          <element elementId="45">
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              <elementText elementTextId="5535">
                <text>Frank L. Andrews</text>
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