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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 xvn. PINOKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MICHM THURSDAY, MARCH 2, 1899. No. 9,&#13;
LOCAL NEWS.&#13;
Born to ;). E. Reynolds and wife of&#13;
Marion, ia*t week, ft boy.&#13;
The bnrU boys are preparing to&#13;
repeat ? in play "Ticket of Leave Man"&#13;
at c W Lent.&#13;
This vi inity was visited on Sunday&#13;
last, Fe&lt; 26, with a severe electrical&#13;
storm with rain and bail.&#13;
Miss 'Jame Sigler is spending a&#13;
eon pi ^ &lt;- C weeks with her sister, Mrs.&#13;
B. K. Pierce, at Ghesaning.&#13;
The second item in oar last issue&#13;
should h*ve read Mrs. Silas Barton&#13;
instead of Mr. It was a typographical&#13;
error.&#13;
The W C T U ladies will meet at&#13;
the home of Mrs. Leal Sigler, Friday&#13;
at 2 p. m. All are cordially invited to&#13;
attend.&#13;
Jame8 Green, of the U. of M, was&#13;
home over Snnday.&#13;
The high school at Stoekbridge will&#13;
play "Btnb," or "A Pool from Boston"&#13;
on Friday evening ot this week.&#13;
Do not forget that we are offering&#13;
the Farm Journal free for five years&#13;
to all who pay i s $1 in advance.&#13;
Subscribe quick.&#13;
An eighth grade examination was&#13;
held at the school house in this place&#13;
last Saturday but only a few applicants&#13;
were in attendance.&#13;
The play "Caprice" by the Columbian&#13;
Dramatic Club will be a good&#13;
one and will be largely attended. Be&#13;
sure and get your ticket early.&#13;
MARRIED—At the M. E. parsonage,&#13;
in Pinckney, Feb. 22, 1899 by Rev.&#13;
Simpson, Hartley Bland, of Putnam,&#13;
and Mi&amp;s Nettie Hudson, ot Lyndon.&#13;
to&#13;
W R I G H T S GROCERY&#13;
SATURDAY, MARCH 4, '99&#13;
WHEN YOU CAN BUY&#13;
20 ft) Granulated Sugar for 91.00&#13;
24 Bb light brown Sugar for 1.00&#13;
10 bars Jaxon Soap for 25&#13;
10 bars Lenox Soap for 25&#13;
13 bars Ajax Soap for 25&#13;
5 tt&gt; good Raisins for 25&#13;
36 boxes Parlor Matches for 25&#13;
2 ft) bulk Soda for 05&#13;
Sweet Cuba tobacco tor $ 42&#13;
1 1b Telegram tobacco for&#13;
1 doz good Tea Spoons for&#13;
1 doz good Table Spoons for&#13;
1 Washbowl and Pitcher for&#13;
1 75c willow Clothes Basket&#13;
160c "&#13;
29&#13;
40&#13;
50&#13;
78&#13;
55&#13;
40&#13;
tion.&#13;
Hundreds of other articles will receive the same cut in propor-&#13;
No Credit atthesVprlces so do not aaiHfr=IttrCA8II we want.&#13;
Butter and Eggs taken at cash values.&#13;
JD . JS1. T.&#13;
A Good Meeting&#13;
The Hamburg and Putnam Farmer's&#13;
Club met last Saturday at tbe&#13;
home of Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Kennedy&#13;
and although the day wa- by no&#13;
means a pleasant one nor the going&#13;
good nearly 100 were pivs. nt&#13;
Tbe meeting was called t&gt;&gt; order by&#13;
Free. S. E. Swarthoot at about lla..m.&#13;
and committees appointed. .u noon&#13;
the usual excellent dinner v\ .tand&#13;
then came tbe regular&#13;
It was opened by an excellent program&#13;
and tben tbe committee on resolutions&#13;
reported tbe following which&#13;
were unanimously adopted:&#13;
Resolved, that we, the members of the Hambar&#13;
; and Pntnano Farmers1 Club do hereby enter&#13;
, protest against the unbuelneae like and extravagant&#13;
methods of the present legislature, also&#13;
Besotved, that we urge tbe adoption of tbe&#13;
Kimmis Count; Salary Bill, also&#13;
Resolved, that an equal taxation bill, (imilar&#13;
to the Atkinson Bill, would be to tbe best interest&#13;
of the tax-payers ot Michigan, also&#13;
Besolved, that the law regarding the publication&#13;
of township treasurers reports be changed&#13;
to read, printed in the local paper or suoh paper&#13;
that has the best circulation in each township,&#13;
also&#13;
Besolved, that we petition our representative,&#13;
Hon. J. B. Taziiman, and senator, Ira T. Say re,&#13;
to use their influence to forward the passage of&#13;
Bald bills.&#13;
The Jast resolution was adopted as&#13;
so many desire to see a report printed&#13;
as to the receipts and expenditures of&#13;
the township moneys. There is a law&#13;
already compelling the publication of&#13;
such reports, but as puDlication may&#13;
be understood as 'wutten and posted/&#13;
most reports were so posted and but&#13;
few if any of tbe tax payers ever saw&#13;
them. Tbe people desire to know&#13;
and should know where their money&#13;
is going and ask that the law be&#13;
changed;&#13;
The Sugar Beet question was discussed&#13;
and much interest manifested&#13;
altbouffta'they seemed about equally&#13;
divided on the bonnty question.&#13;
Tbe next question was "Should tbe&#13;
Philippines be Retained.4' They were&#13;
m&#13;
11 ;••&gt; "&#13;
;ii; &lt;&#13;
•••it&#13;
Our store is nicely decorated now&#13;
and we feel like asking our many old&#13;
friends and also new ones to call and&#13;
see how we look. We aim to please&#13;
in quality and price on everything&#13;
in our line—Books, Stationery,&#13;
Toilet Articles, Etc.&#13;
Pure Drugs a specialty. 'i&#13;
F. A. SIGLER.&#13;
• \ '&#13;
*»i *&#13;
'•ASPECIALS&#13;
For Saturday, March 4th:&#13;
I will not have a dollars worth of old goods&#13;
in this stock,&#13;
I Have about 30 prs. of Men's Cotton&#13;
Pants of the dollar, and dollar and half kind.&#13;
Will sell Saturday for 50c per pair.&#13;
Will sell from 100 to 150 yds. of French&#13;
Ginghams on Saturday for 5yic per yard.&#13;
Will continue to close out the rest of the&#13;
$3.op Pingree and Smith Shoes, for 99c.&#13;
Any old shoe in my stock will be sold at&#13;
some price.&#13;
IR GROCERIES FOR SATURDAY—&#13;
Alaska Red Salmon at 9c&#13;
Men's Boston Shoe Polish,&#13;
per bottle, 16c&#13;
XXXX Coffee for 9c per pound&#13;
AD. \fr.&#13;
also about equal on this question. A&#13;
committee was appointed to circulate&#13;
tbe petition and the club adjourned to&#13;
meet at the home of Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
John Fohey tbe last Saturday in&#13;
March.&#13;
m mm .&#13;
A Liberal Offer&#13;
We have made arrangements where&#13;
by we can give our subscribers tbe&#13;
Farm Journal for five years free on&#13;
the following conditions:&#13;
AH new subscribers to tbe DISPATCH&#13;
who pay one year in advance. -&#13;
All old subscribers who pay up&#13;
arrears and one year in advance.&#13;
All 15c subscribers who send in&#13;
$1 will receive credit for one year&#13;
from the time their present subscription&#13;
expires.&#13;
The Farm Journal is a 24 page&#13;
monthly paper devoted to the interest&#13;
of tbe iarm and farmers and will be&#13;
a good one for reference.&#13;
Subscribe quick as we only have 100&#13;
at our disposal at the above terms.&#13;
Call and see sample copy.&#13;
A Black Eye&#13;
Tbe common council in a special&#13;
meeting last Monday evening gave&#13;
the electric question a black eye by&#13;
dropping it altogether. We think it&#13;
would have been a good idea to have&#13;
brought it up at the coining charter&#13;
election and found out the feeling of&#13;
the people.&#13;
., f&#13;
ACCEPTE0 THE CALL.&#13;
Rev. C. W. Riee, of Oberlin, Ohio,&#13;
preached in tbe Cong'l. church last&#13;
Sunday morning. The church onanimoualy&#13;
extended a call to Mr. Bice&#13;
and he accepted, and will move his&#13;
family hem at once.&#13;
The place to buy&#13;
HARDWARE,&#13;
WAGONS,&#13;
CARRIAGES,&#13;
SURREYS,&#13;
HARNESS,&#13;
Light and Heavy&#13;
18 AT&#13;
TEEI»LE and CA.1&gt; WELL'S,&#13;
Milburn, Lansing and Webber Wagons&#13;
Deering Binders and Mowers and&#13;
a line of spring and spike&#13;
tooth harrows, the&#13;
choice of all.&#13;
t i&#13;
TEEPLE CA DWELLDRESS&#13;
GOODS&#13;
We tM by tto Free Preti that the&#13;
orders are that Ue ttirt/fifth Miehim&#13;
is to be tbe last rejrisseat ui&#13;
Camp MeKraiM to be mattered out&#13;
as H it tbe best tfteifliftet re#isMtiL&#13;
HH « Metre&#13;
cooiortbr. TUs s»eftfcs art for ov&#13;
This week we offer oar entire line of colored dress&#13;
goods at less than wholesale prices.&#13;
28 in. plaids at&#13;
Plain Henrietta^ '_.',&#13;
Serges at&#13;
6£ and 10c a yd&#13;
19, 26, 87t 69p&#13;
22,&#13;
3 doz. Gents Teck Ties, 25c kind at&#13;
Gents 25c Bows at&#13;
lie&#13;
19c&#13;
We have just received oar spring line of j&#13;
Ladies* and Children's Shoes also a complete&#13;
line of Hats, Caps, Umbrellas, Lape Carv&#13;
tains and Men's and Boys fancy&#13;
shirts. These goods yoa shomld&#13;
see and there is no time like&#13;
the present&#13;
G. 3ACKSON. ••» i&#13;
! .&#13;
&lt; * ! • ' • ;&#13;
Doings of the Week Recorded in a&#13;
Brief Style.&#13;
CONCISE AND INTERESTING.&#13;
Aatnuil Report of Gen. l'oud Shows&#13;
•tfee &lt;3. A. XI. Society to bo In a l'ro«-&#13;
Condition—An Ypallautl Man&#13;
UN Throat lu Spite of Ills Child.&#13;
O. 4. R. Annual Iteport.&#13;
The annual report of (Jen. C. V. R.&#13;
for the year ending Dec. 31, 1898,&#13;
the present membership of the&#13;
&lt;C. A. It. in this state at 1S,S31, as&#13;
«Uminst ir&gt;,831 at the close of the preceding-&#13;
year, showing a net loss for the&#13;
year of 300. As a matter of fact there&#13;
vrms a loss of 348 by death during1 the&#13;
r, and therefore there has really&#13;
a ifain in membership of 48.&#13;
There were received during the year&#13;
%y muster, 534; by transfer, 2.V.'; by reinstatement,&#13;
r&gt;r»3. Four posts have been&#13;
organised and three have surrendered&#13;
•Cheir charters. The losses in member-&#13;
•*kin during the year have been by&#13;
.suspension, 054; by tranfer, 210; death,&#13;
JfS; lionorubio discharge, 03; by dis-&#13;
Jhnaded posts, 58. Over $2,000 has been&#13;
-•expended from post funds for the relief&#13;
of over 200 families of soldiers, and&#13;
4Jbix amount docs not include a large&#13;
•relief given by individual members of&#13;
4bc order and by the Woman's Relief&#13;
Corps, which will probably amount tp&#13;
95,000 additional.&#13;
; Cat lilt Throat la 8j&gt;Ue of Dli Child.&#13;
* WDL Cory, of Ypsilanti, committed&#13;
smkude while terapororily insane, by&#13;
ajeveriuj* his jugular with a razor.&#13;
O»ry had been suffering from ill-health&#13;
for the past six mouths aud at times&#13;
dad becu demented. Thu day the&#13;
£ragady occurred he left the house,&#13;
Socking* the front door after him. His&#13;
oldest daughter, , a mute, followed&#13;
Hhintand grappled with him in the&#13;
front yard, taking from him a razor&#13;
•amd throwing it as far os she could.&#13;
With unwonted strength the demented&#13;
toan threw oft his child, reached the&#13;
Iceen blade before she could, and&#13;
quickly drew it across his throat, severing&#13;
botli windpipe and jugular.&#13;
Ills Mrlde Came Not.&#13;
• The wedding of Norman Urovvn, one&#13;
of the leading young men of Grand&#13;
* Marais, was to take place last week.&#13;
His bride was to raee!/ him there, he&#13;
baring1 furnished the collateral. But&#13;
when the train rolled in on the appointed&#13;
day and she failed to alight,&#13;
the disappointed would-be bridegroom&#13;
reconciled himself to his lot and said:&#13;
*4I send her no more cAsh," lie has&#13;
resumed his employment again and,, is&#13;
* sadder but wiser man.&#13;
CotMhall Uet» 10 Years.&#13;
&lt;• Tea years at hard labor in the state&#13;
prison at Jackson was the sentence&#13;
John 11. (jotshali, received in the circuit&#13;
court at Flint by Judge Wisner.&#13;
This U the penalty that GoUhall must&#13;
' pay the people for the burning of the&#13;
tiaras of Lee and Aitken in September, 11897. When asked by the court what&#13;
' he had to say why sentence should not&#13;
fee pronounced, Mr. Gotehall arose and&#13;
friwapiy said: 'I am not guilty of the&#13;
cfrarge."&#13;
Lund Case.&#13;
1 Assistant Attorney-General Vandevefitcr,&#13;
of the interior department, listened&#13;
to arguments in the land case of&#13;
Ann Patterson against the Lake Su-&#13;
•fterior Ship Canal Co., but as yet has&#13;
'rendered no decision. This is a test&#13;
rear for the possession of about 150,-&#13;
O00 acres of land located in the upper&#13;
peninsula, near the Wisconsin .state&#13;
line, chiefly valuable for its timber.&#13;
Stricken Down la the Palplt.&#13;
While in the middle of the morning&#13;
in his church at New Holland,&#13;
r. Abraham Stegetnan, aged 42, suddenly&#13;
fell from a shock of apoplexy,&#13;
few moments later while be-&#13;
• carried to the parsonage nearby.&#13;
leaves a widow and three children.&#13;
TE^e tragic incident created great ex*&#13;
«ttemee.t among the congregation.&#13;
m&#13;
New Life Saving Station.&#13;
A new life saving station will be&#13;
tmilfc at Grand Marius early in the&#13;
anting, so that the station can be in&#13;
leal operation during the entire season&#13;
-navigation.—The only harbor of&#13;
between Whitefish point and&#13;
Island is located at Grand Marias&#13;
and a life saving station there can be&#13;
«n* a great deal of good.&#13;
attorneys of JCalamazoo and&#13;
counties are working unitedly&#13;
get a bill through this legislature&#13;
asperate those counties from Van&#13;
and Cass and make Berrien and&#13;
oo judicial circuits by them'&#13;
The business of either eounty&#13;
emtteieatly large enough to war&#13;
fttraa*-e Cane Caoae* Death.&#13;
Rovre, the 10-year-old daugh-&#13;
JBpencee fiowc, a well-to-do&#13;
of near Montgomery, met with&#13;
and mysterious death.&#13;
iaii roat aad&#13;
for her, eut Wore&#13;
doctor ooala be summoned the secladjr&#13;
was dead.&#13;
STATE GOSSIP.&#13;
Electric ears are now running between&#13;
Plymouth uud Northville.&#13;
The M. E. society at Millington will&#13;
erect u new $3,000 church this spring.&#13;
The Sandusky Iron works at Sanitac&#13;
Center have beeu destroyed by lire.&#13;
Loss 81,500.&#13;
Uig- Kapids will have fre mail delivery&#13;
service, with three euiviers, beginning1&#13;
on May 1.&#13;
Alma college now has an endowment&#13;
of $'.'25,000 and President A. F. Uruske&#13;
is much pleased.&#13;
The annual encampment of the&#13;
Michigan G. A. It. will be held at Petoskey,&#13;
June -1 aud '21.&#13;
The St. Andrew's Catholic school at&#13;
Grand Kapids has been destroyed by&#13;
fire. Loss, 50,000: insured.&#13;
The capacity of the 5300,000 sugar&#13;
beet factory to be erected at lienton&#13;
Harbor will be 400 tons per day.&#13;
Port Austiu adopted a resolution at&#13;
its last session to provide for a system&#13;
of Water works at a cost of $4,000.&#13;
The body of Robt. Clark, carpenter,&#13;
was found in the dan* at Calumet, lie&#13;
had been missing for several days.&#13;
The Wabash railroad, in its change&#13;
of lime, has sidetracked Belleville.&#13;
There is now only one train a day&#13;
each way.&#13;
John Cirmpbell, an employe of the&#13;
Wagner Luke Ice Co., Haw llosse lake,&#13;
fell 30 feet from an icehouse, and was&#13;
fatally injured.&#13;
The Michigan Gas association, which&#13;
met at Lansing this year, choose Detroit&#13;
as the place for holdiug their&#13;
meeting in 1000.&#13;
Jacob S. M. Roger, aged 73, of Almn,&#13;
who was recently married to a Mrs.&#13;
Harriet II. Wilson, of Lansing, is said&#13;
to be a bigamist.&#13;
Albert Heysler, of Burkettville, who"&#13;
murdered his. wife and stepdaughter&#13;
recently, hns committed suicide by&#13;
taking Paris green.&#13;
The St. Johns Manufacturing Co.&#13;
has changed its name to the St. Johns&#13;
Table Co/, and reduced its capital from&#13;
§300,000 to $100,000.&#13;
^avanac people are raising a fund to&#13;
pay the expense of driving a test shaft&#13;
to see if there is coal in paying quantities&#13;
underlying the village.&#13;
Menominee people are circulating a&#13;
remonstrance ngainst the passage of a&#13;
bill by tiie legislature to establish a&#13;
state normal school at Marquette.&#13;
Lansing has lost one of its industries,&#13;
the Lansing Paper Box Co.'s factory,&#13;
which has been consolidated with another&#13;
like concern and moved to Ionia.&#13;
Isaac Anderson, of Saginaw, claims&#13;
he has invented a plan whereby electricity&#13;
can be generated with oxygen,&#13;
and Una same will revolutionize the&#13;
cost. "•&#13;
Esscxville people are all worked up&#13;
over the move by the Bay county representatives&#13;
to detach a part of the&#13;
village and throw it into Hampton&#13;
township.&#13;
Corunna young ladies have organized&#13;
an old maids'club, undone of the rules&#13;
is that any member seen in the company&#13;
of a young man at any time is&#13;
liable to a fin*. ,.&#13;
The high school building at Sand&#13;
Beach, which was destroyed by fire&#13;
several weeks ago, will be replaced by&#13;
a fine new building with all the modern&#13;
improvements. '&#13;
What is said to be the largest single&#13;
farm in southern Michigan is located&#13;
in Hillsdale County and owned by&#13;
Jacob Beck. It consists of 800 acres,&#13;
all joined together.&#13;
The work of tearing down the Methodist&#13;
Episcopal church at Chelsea, recently&#13;
damaged by fire, has commenced&#13;
preparatory to the erection of an $8,000&#13;
edifice on the same site.&#13;
Battle Creek ia to have a new $40,000&#13;
public library building, which was bequeathed&#13;
to the school district by the&#13;
late Chas. Willard. The building will&#13;
be erected this summer.&#13;
A movement has been started at&#13;
Hastings looking towards the building&#13;
of a fine new opera house, and the&#13;
chances for the success of the project&#13;
are at present first class.&#13;
The Omega Cement Co. has been organized&#13;
at Jonesville with a capital&#13;
stock of $303,030. The marl beds are&#13;
three miles north of the village, but&#13;
the offices will be in town.&#13;
On July 1 the postoffice at Hough ton&#13;
will be raised from a third class to a&#13;
second class office, the business of the&#13;
office, exclusive of money orders, now&#13;
exceeding $10,000 per year.&#13;
Marshal Frank Dolan, of Mt. Clem*&#13;
ens, was badly slashed by a knife in&#13;
the hands of Phinees Phillip, an insane&#13;
person. Phillip imagined Dolan&#13;
was conspiring against him.&#13;
The Ohio Paper Co. and Nile* Paper&#13;
Mill Co. plants, at Nlles, have been&#13;
sold under mortgage to the Niles Board&#13;
&amp;, Paper Co. The former brought&#13;
$148,000 and the latter $47,000.&#13;
Win. Conklin, of Battle Greek, aged&#13;
G6, committed suicide by shooting at&#13;
Charlotte. An hoar later his father&#13;
died in the Kalamazoo asylum, where&#13;
he had been confined several years.&#13;
The village council of Sehooicraft&#13;
has decided to submit the question of&#13;
bonding the village for $7,344 for an&#13;
electric lighting plant to a vote of the&#13;
people at the regular election in March.&#13;
The children of Wm. 11 ill is, a farmer&#13;
living near Port Huron, havo been doclared&#13;
state o'nirges. It is alleged that&#13;
they have "been neglected by their&#13;
father uud foived to live in a hencoop.&#13;
The citizens living along the route&#13;
of tho Detroit, Luke Shore &amp; Mt.&#13;
Clemens railroad have petitioned for x\&#13;
inuil service on the su:uc, withpostolh1-&#13;
ce.s at Lakeside and the Five-Mile&#13;
house.&#13;
A common article on tho bill of fare&#13;
in many Michigan homes from now on&#13;
for several months, as a.result of the&#13;
recent extreme cold, will be, "pommes&#13;
bo terre u la glace," or in plain English,&#13;
fro4en potatoes.&#13;
The inquest over the remains of Mr?,&#13;
llartel, ot Port lluron, developed the&#13;
fact that death was caused by acute&#13;
alcoholism. Her husband had furuished&#13;
her with two gallons of whisky&#13;
during the week she died.&#13;
Hereafter the farmers of Benzie Co.&#13;
will have iv local market for their&#13;
wheat, as a big flour mill is to bo&#13;
erected at Frankfort the coming summer,&#13;
work beginning as soon as the&#13;
frost is out of the ground.&#13;
The latest electric railway project in&#13;
southwestern Michigan is a line from&#13;
Allegau to South Haven to connect&#13;
there with another running through to&#13;
Chicago. The fare from Allegan to&#13;
Chicago to be not more than Si.&#13;
Tho probato court of Ionia had a&#13;
queer case of insanity ,before it last&#13;
week. The victim was a young man&#13;
who refused to speak a word in tho&#13;
morning, although he was talkative&#13;
enough for nuyone io the afternoons.&#13;
The wur department has issued an&#13;
order to the effect that tho 2Mh Michigan&#13;
and ail other volunteer regiments&#13;
be mustered out of service. The mustering&#13;
out of the 33th regiment will&#13;
take place at the present camp grounds&#13;
in Georgia.&#13;
A 1-year-old daughter of Peter Paul,&#13;
of Saginaw, was probably fatally&#13;
burned while warming herself at a&#13;
ground fire, which "was being used to&#13;
thaw drain pipes. Her mother was&#13;
severely injured in her efforts to rescue&#13;
her daughter.&#13;
The Baptist Ministers' home, at&#13;
Fen ton, a handsome five-sto^' stone&#13;
building has been destroyed by fire.&#13;
The building was valued at 825,000 and&#13;
is nearly a total loss. Insured for 810,-&#13;
000. A gasoline stove caused the blaze.&#13;
No casualties.&#13;
Two brothers met by chance on the&#13;
street at Cheboygan one day last week,&#13;
and recognized each other instant^',&#13;
although they had not seen each other&#13;
since they were boysj years ago. and&#13;
neither of them had the slightest idea&#13;
where the other lived.&#13;
A joung lad named Gus Gartner, of&#13;
Petersburg, was fooling with a sup-&#13;
News of the Day as Told Over the&#13;
posed unlo.ideil gun, when it was accidentally&#13;
discharged, the contents&#13;
shattered the left arm of Charlie Mohl,&#13;
aged 12 years, necessitating amputation&#13;
near the shoulder.&#13;
The West Bay City Sugar company&#13;
has notified Land Commissioner French&#13;
that it would manufacture beet sugar&#13;
in Michigan this year, and would expect&#13;
to claim the bounty offered by the&#13;
state. The factory will have a capacity&#13;
of 40,000 tons of beets.&#13;
A scheme is on foot to build an electric&#13;
railway along the St. Clair river,&#13;
connecting Marine City and St. Clair&#13;
with Port Huron. This would form a&#13;
through route from Detroit and Port&#13;
Huron. The Port Huron Electric Railway&#13;
Co. is interested in the deal.&#13;
Lee Shank, aged 30, a prominent man&#13;
in society circles at Albion, made an&#13;
unsuccessful attempt at suicide in the&#13;
Albion house. Shank took four bottles&#13;
of laudanum, but physicians say&#13;
there is a chance for his recovery. He&#13;
was despondent, caused by drink.&#13;
Ice cutters at work at Owosso the&#13;
other day found a small mud turtle&#13;
frozen in the middle of a cake of ice.&#13;
It is thought that the turtle, in swiming&#13;
to the surface for air, swam into&#13;
some slush ice and was caught in Jack&#13;
Frost's icy grasp before it could escape.&#13;
The Michigan Republican club banquet,&#13;
held in Detroit, was a success in&#13;
every particular. Following are the&#13;
officers elected: President, W. A.&#13;
Hurst, Detroit; vice-president, H. II.&#13;
Smith, Ionia; secretary, Burt D. Cody,&#13;
Port Huron; treasurer, Frank Wait,&#13;
Sturgis.&#13;
Au Ores has been a very sleepy village&#13;
ever since the pine ceased to come&#13;
down the river. Now i t will have an&#13;
awakening, for A first-class stave and&#13;
heading mill, employing 60 men, is to&#13;
be erected there. The village has donated&#13;
$1,000 to the mill owners, and&#13;
will exempt them from taxes for five&#13;
years. ^&#13;
While Alfa, the 0-year-old daughter&#13;
of Mr. and Mrs. Myron Parker, of Berville,&#13;
was trying to light a fire in the&#13;
parlor stove, her dress became ignited&#13;
aad before her mother could extinguished&#13;
the flames she was so badly&#13;
burned that she may die. Her left ear&#13;
was burned to a crisp, and her left'&#13;
side nearly to the bones.&#13;
William Farnsworth, of Prescott,&#13;
who inherited the famous Hyland legacy&#13;
amounting to $300,000, four years&#13;
ago. after traveling all the European&#13;
,countries and part of Africa, Egypt&#13;
And Palestine, TuiHcey in Asia and the&#13;
Holy Land, is back again in Sanilac&#13;
county, en route to Ogemaiv county,&#13;
where he will remaia permanently.&#13;
Slender Wires,&#13;
DOMESTIC AND FOREIGN NEWS&#13;
The Late War P a w n ! Without the Kxerutluu&#13;
of a Siugle Soldier — A UulU&#13;
Murder at Chic*go — That Sainoitu&#13;
DUpute to be Settled—War Notvtt.&#13;
STATE&#13;
Not A Single Uxeoatlou in tho Lsto War.&#13;
la reaching the decision to recommend&#13;
a long term of imprisonment iu&#13;
the case of a private iu au Alabama&#13;
regiment, who had killed a man in an&#13;
att'ruy, Judge Advocate Liber has completed&#13;
a remarkable record, disposing&#13;
of thu lust of the capital cases that&#13;
had eoaie be Tore his department for review&#13;
without in any single case imposing&#13;
the death penalty. Thus, the war&#13;
has passed without the execution of a&#13;
sinyle soldier on account of military&#13;
crimes. This is believed to be without&#13;
parallel in history. There were crimes&#13;
committed, but they lacked malice or&#13;
premeditation and there were" no desertions&#13;
because of cowardice or&#13;
treachery.&#13;
A liohl Chlvxffo Murder.&#13;
Robt. J. Walsh, of Chicago, a dealer&#13;
in real estate and partner of E. W.&#13;
Cartridge in a large dry goods business&#13;
iu Detroit, was shot and killed in the&#13;
hallway in front of his office by Daniel&#13;
Driseoll, a former janitor of Walshs&#13;
hall. Since DriscoU was discharged it&#13;
is said he brooded over the loss of his&#13;
position, and on the day of the shooting&#13;
he went to Walsh's cilice and demanded&#13;
his place buck. On being refused&#13;
he pulled a revolver and fired five&#13;
shots, all of which took effect, Driseoll&#13;
is in jail.&#13;
Dispute to be Settled.&#13;
What is regarded as an inspired suggestion&#13;
coming from Uerlin, to the effect&#13;
that the differences between the&#13;
powers part}* to the treat}'of lierlin relative&#13;
to Samoan. could best be adjusted&#13;
by mutual disclaimers for the objectionable&#13;
acts of tlieiv agents at Apia,&#13;
is regarded at Washington us cvidenco&#13;
that the whole matter is now within&#13;
the line of safety, and that the disputes&#13;
are about to be committed to&#13;
adjustment by diplomatic means.&#13;
lls have been passed:&#13;
Disorganizing the village of Kwen it)&#13;
Outonu'jon county and uttaehing the&#13;
territory to McMillan township;&#13;
•Passed tlie house, gone to the sena-tof&#13;
legalizing thu action of thu Sagiuaw&#13;
eounty supervisors in detaching a part&#13;
of Milwaukee township and attaching&#13;
it to ISucua Vibta township. Passed&#13;
the house, gone to the governor; authorizing&#13;
Oliver township, Huron Co.,&#13;
to bond for Si0,000 to aid \n securing •&gt;&#13;
tmgar beet factory. Massed the house,&#13;
gone to the senate; for a constitutional&#13;
amendment for additional circuit judge)&#13;
in St. Clair eounty. Passed tho senate.&#13;
gone to tho house; authorizing Wayne&#13;
county to bond for 3Si)O,O0O. Paase«l&#13;
the senate, gono to tho governor; for&#13;
the organization of corporate M. E.&#13;
churches. Passed thu senate, gone to&gt;&#13;
the governor.&#13;
The following bills have passed both&#13;
houses of the legislature and been sen*&#13;
to the governor: One providing for&#13;
(submission to qualified voters of tho&#13;
township of Nottawa, Isabella county,&#13;
the question of relict of Chas. Hibhnen,&#13;
township treasurer, who lost the money&#13;
in a bank failure; submission to qualified&#13;
voters of ltloomUold township*&#13;
Isabella county, tho question of relief&#13;
of Henry D. Wright, treasurer, who&#13;
lost money on account of bank failure;&#13;
to authorize Iloseominon supervisora&#13;
to bond for f 10,000.&#13;
The house had a scrap over a resolution&#13;
offered by Rep. Hoffmeistcr that&#13;
the state affairs committee take a jnnket&#13;
to the Hay City sugar beet factory&#13;
to observe tho practical workings of&#13;
the industry, in view of the legislation&#13;
on the subject that will be asked.&#13;
Several members opposed it and several&#13;
roll calls were taken on amendments.&#13;
It was finally amended to include tbo&#13;
committee on private corporations and&#13;
then passed.&#13;
On the last day for introducing bills&#13;
the house handled them for a t)me a t&#13;
the rate rate of three a minute. In&#13;
one period of 110 minutes, 363 bills&#13;
were received, read a first find second&#13;
time by title, ami referred to committees&#13;
or tabled. The total number introduced&#13;
at this session was 1,143.&#13;
The total number of senate bills introduced&#13;
at this session was 540, as&#13;
against 501 last session.&#13;
Ttixeg (u the&#13;
The war department has received the&#13;
first itemized statement of receipts&#13;
from all sources of taxation in tho&#13;
Philippines from the occupation of&#13;
Manila bay by the United States forces,&#13;
Aug. 13 iast, to Dec. 31. The total&#13;
collections amounted to 81,810,913. Of&#13;
tlijs total 3o31.0;Sfi was made np of&#13;
funds seized by the Americans&#13;
the capture of Manila.&#13;
France's President Dead.&#13;
After a brief suffering of only four&#13;
hours President Felix Faure of France&#13;
succumbed to a stroke of apoplexy. He&#13;
was the sixth president of the third republic&#13;
of France and by his death all&#13;
the sovereigns of Europe are in&#13;
mourning.&#13;
WAR NOTES,&#13;
•.'he latest piece of \reachery to be |&#13;
undertaken by the Filipinos was to&#13;
burn Manila in the night, and they&#13;
succeeded in burning acres of buildings.&#13;
During the burning of the buildings&#13;
the natives did all in their power&#13;
to block the work of the firemen, by&#13;
cutting the hose and keeping up a continual&#13;
fire upon the Americans. The&#13;
casualties were few but the property&#13;
loss was enormous. Four Americans&#13;
were wounded.&#13;
The officials at Washington have&#13;
now decided that the Filipinos must&#13;
be crushed without delay. Gen. Lawton,&#13;
an old Indian fighter, with troops,&#13;
are expected to reach the Philippines&#13;
in a few weeks, when a forward campaign&#13;
will begin and a heavy blow&#13;
struck that will keep the insurgents&#13;
quiet during the rainy season or cause&#13;
them to surrender.&#13;
Aguinaldo has issued a manifesto accepting&#13;
the situation caused by the&#13;
"unexpected provocation of the Americans,"&#13;
wherein he assumes that he is&#13;
prepared to sacrifice anything to maintain&#13;
the national honor of his country,&#13;
and alleges that "even the corrupt&#13;
Spanish dominion is preferable to the&#13;
odious American dominion."&#13;
The natives of the village of Paco&#13;
made a bold attempt to burn the quarters&#13;
of the 1st Washington Volunteers&#13;
by setting fire to huts adjoining their&#13;
quarter* in the rear. Fortunately the&#13;
wind changed and the flames spread in&#13;
the opposite direction, destroying fully&#13;
20 shacks aud houses.&#13;
Brig.-Gee. Kings troops came/off&#13;
victorious in an engagement with the&#13;
Filipinos near Guadalupe, driving them&#13;
from the reVfaes and shelling Guadalupe&#13;
church with the loss of three&#13;
killed and two wounded, while the insurgents&#13;
had 50 killed.&#13;
Gen. Miller has sent troops to Santa&#13;
liarbara, which is now occupied by the&#13;
Americans. This te an important&#13;
town, 16 miles from Iloilo, with a large&#13;
population.&#13;
Gen. Miller at! 11 holes Jaro and Molo*&#13;
The governor has sent the followingf&#13;
appointments to the senate: D. A. Mac-&#13;
Lachlan, Detroit, member of the state&#13;
board of health, for six years; George&#13;
H. Wetherboe, of Detroit, member ot&#13;
the board of managers for the Michigan&#13;
Soldiers' home, for six years; Cbas.&#13;
F. Coffin, of Grand Rapids, member of&#13;
the board of managers of the Soldiers*&#13;
home, for aix years; Collins P. John*&#13;
sf.nn, AT. P., o H l r a n d llapids, m e m b e r&#13;
untarily hoisted the stars and stripes,&#13;
offered allegiance and asked for protect'&#13;
-, a. . — _&#13;
of the state board of health, for B!X&#13;
years; Amariah F. Freeman, of Manchester,&#13;
member of the Michigan state&#13;
prison board, for six years; Dr. B.&#13;
Howard Liwson und Dr. John L. lrwin,&#13;
Detroit, health board to succeed&#13;
Dr. C. S. Morley and Dr, Long-year.&#13;
The Pingree men in the house&#13;
worked a little 'scoop" on the antis&#13;
when Hop. Gillara introduced a copy of&#13;
the Cheevcr-Atkinson bill, and had it&#13;
re/erred to the committee on revision&#13;
of the statutes of which John J. Carton&#13;
is chairman and on which the Pi agree&#13;
men claim they have a majority. In&#13;
the rush of bills the title was not no- -&#13;
ticed or recognized or there might&#13;
have been a fuss over the reference.&#13;
In the same way Rep. Aldrich introduced&#13;
the same bill and had it laid on&#13;
the table from which it caji be takenand&#13;
put on its passage at any timts&#13;
when there are votes enough.&#13;
Senator Monaghan's bill amending&#13;
the divorce laws limits the causes for&#13;
which divorces shall be granted to&#13;
adultery, physical in competency, imprisonment&#13;
for crime for three years,&#13;
utter and willful desertion for two&#13;
years, habitual drunkenness and extreme&#13;
cruelty such as endangers life&#13;
and health. Separate maintenance&#13;
and limited divorces are cut out entirely.&#13;
The guilty party is prohibited&#13;
from marrying again, except a remarriage.&#13;
Bishop Ninde has" written ft&#13;
letter to Senator Monaghan approving&#13;
the bill.&#13;
Rep. Kevins, of AUegan county, offered&#13;
a measure in the house that proposes&#13;
to license tipplers at the rate of&#13;
|5 per year. The licenses are not&#13;
transferable on penalty of being sent&#13;
to jail for 30 days, while the dealer who&#13;
sells to any person not folding&#13;
cense ia liable to a fine of 935 for&#13;
offense. The proceeds derived fi&#13;
such licenses are to go into the county&#13;
poor fund.&#13;
The attorney-general has sustained&#13;
the optnion of the }edge*advoeate general&#13;
of the war department in the celebrated&#13;
ease of the Cortex Bros., of Manila,&#13;
aad h u notified Gen. Otis to tarn&#13;
over to the representatives of the'Corlez&#13;
family all of their property&#13;
held by the military authorities in&#13;
archipelago.&#13;
Ken. Atwood is the latest legislator&#13;
to try fcis fetad at drafting a railroad&#13;
tax bill. H« will aim to avoid the mmconstitutional&#13;
and otherwise objectionable&#13;
features of the^other bills on&#13;
subject.&#13;
and tl*5 oatitaa-of Nogros Island vol. ^ Tfae ^mdtteen soUHora rn the Philippines&#13;
are beginning to suffer from the&#13;
terrible beat while the insurgenta a**&#13;
becoming porti active. .&#13;
- » " • • . ' - •&#13;
* * * %&#13;
DICK RODNEY;&#13;
Or. The Adventures of&#13;
An Eton Boy...&#13;
BY JAiVIES GRANT,&#13;
I&#13;
aUt&#13;
I&#13;
CHAPTER X.—(Continued.)&#13;
"Bah!" said the Spaniard, grinning&#13;
and showing a row of sharp, white&#13;
teeth, .under a dirty and sable mustache;&#13;
"though I said eo, I knew better.&#13;
A shipboy seldom has a gold&#13;
watch lika this," he added, displaying&#13;
my gold repeater. "Now, we shall&#13;
keep you; and if this seamau.—after&#13;
he has first sworn that he will uot betray&#13;
us—dots not return to us here&#13;
•with ?54)0 within two hours after sun&#13;
•et, par el"—(here he made a dreadful&#13;
vow In Spanish), "we will toes you like&#13;
a dead dog into the ventana of the&#13;
mountain. Look down, and see what&#13;
a journey is before you," he added,&#13;
with a diabolical smite, as he dragged&#13;
me to the beetling edge of the chasm&#13;
and forced me to look into it.&#13;
Our eyes had now become so accustomed&#13;
to the light of the gallery or&#13;
grotto that the rays of sunshine fall-&#13;
Ing through the fissure above U3 were&#13;
aufficient to disclose a. portion of the&#13;
vast profundity on die verge of which&#13;
we stood.&#13;
From the earth** womb, far, far&#13;
down below, there came upward a&#13;
choking steam, wiiii a hollow, buzzing&#13;
sound, which'deepened at times to a&#13;
rumble.&#13;
This steam or xriist rose and fell on&#13;
the currents of air; -sometime:* It sank&#13;
ao low that nothing but a black and&#13;
dreary void met the eye, which ached&#13;
In attempting to pierce it. Anon the&#13;
steam would rise in spiral curls from&#13;
that gloomy Imd below, where doubtless&#13;
the fires of the now almost extinct&#13;
volcano seethe their embers in&#13;
the W&amp;VEB of ^thci ocean,&#13;
The words "have mercy" were on&#13;
my lips, Trat I could not utter them;&#13;
Bor wom&gt;fl th'/y have availed me. Ignoraat&#13;
of what tho ruffian said, and&#13;
believing "he was about to thrust me&#13;
In, poor Tom Lambourne, in the fullness&#13;
«tf his heart, uttered a howl of&#13;
dismay; and at that moment the sentinel,&#13;
&lt;Whom the gang had left at tire&#13;
entrance to their lurking-place, came&#13;
hurriedly on, with alarm expressed la&#13;
his glittering eyes, nnd a finger plaoed,&#13;
as a warning, on his hairy lip.&#13;
"Paxa! Pdz! Silenzio!" (hold—peace&#13;
^-silence), he exclaimed, and added&#13;
that iour^offlcere from the garrison &lt;of&#13;
S t Cruz had dismounted in the ratheir&#13;
seated themselves under a tree l o&#13;
amofce.&#13;
This information was received toy&#13;
the band with oaths and mutteriags&#13;
of impatience; and by us with mingled&#13;
emotions of hope and agony—hope&#13;
that they might 'be the means of oar&#13;
escape or rescue; and agony to know&#13;
that such means were so near, and yet&#13;
could Jtvnil ue nothing; for on the&#13;
slightest tfouud being made by either&#13;
of us, there were the Albacete knives&#13;
of our captors on one hand, and the&#13;
rentaxta—rthat awfu^ventana— on the&#13;
other, to Insure forever the silence an*&#13;
oblivkm of the :grave.&#13;
Not t2te least of -my sufferings was&#13;
from the cord which-secured my wrists.&#13;
Already the sltin was swollen, cut and&#13;
bleeding In consequence of the tightness&#13;
witli vfrich these wretches had&#13;
bound me. .&#13;
CHAPTEE XI.&#13;
SeQfciel to Oar Adventure.&#13;
For two hoars—they ceemed an eteralty&#13;
to me—It would appear, the four&#13;
Spanish officer* lingered over their&#13;
wine-flasks and cigarz jo the wooded&#13;
ravine, their more»itente being duly&#13;
reported from tirue to time by one of&#13;
the outlaws, who stole to the cavern&#13;
mouth and peeped out&#13;
At last they mounted, sad rod,e off,&#13;
when a fresh cause for wrath and delay&#13;
was produced by the announcement&#13;
that a -wagon, drawn by mules,&#13;
and attended by several laborers and&#13;
ftegroea, haVtbroken.down on the road&#13;
About a' mile distant&#13;
; The irritation of our Spaniards—&#13;
ftome of whom spoke of haring a ship&#13;
to iota—wag, now, 4? great that I feared&#13;
ih -aiig^d h&#13;
1 that yawned close by—the ventana, or&#13;
nostril of the Piton—are yet vi7i4Iy&#13;
Impressed upon my memory.&#13;
At last the darkness was BO great&#13;
that a lantern */a3 lighted, aad its&#13;
wavering gleams, as they fell on the&#13;
crystals, the spar, quartz, and glassy&#13;
blocks of black obsidian and ruddy&#13;
lava, which formed tho walls and arch&#13;
of the cavern, on the dark ferocious&#13;
visages, the gaudy sa3he3, the naked&#13;
arms and feet, the scrubby black&#13;
beards, and brass-mounted knives and&#13;
&gt;piusicet3 of the taciturn Spaniards,&#13;
who sat in a sullen group smoking paper&#13;
cigaritos—all added to the gloomy&#13;
but picturesque hcrror of the place&#13;
and of the incident.&#13;
"Antonio, que hcra es?" I heard one&#13;
say, Inquiring the time.&#13;
"Las neuve y media, companoro&#13;
mio" (half-past nine), replied the possessor&#13;
of my gold watch, which, he&#13;
consulted with considerable complacency.&#13;
"Maldita!" growled the others, knitting&#13;
their brows, for the dusk was&#13;
rapidly becoming darkness, and they&#13;
had no desire for killing us, if -\ve&#13;
could be made profitable. I have often&#13;
thought since that had Torn actually&#13;
•procured and returned with the required&#13;
ransom of $500, they would have&#13;
pocketed it and then killed us both—&#13;
me most certainly, as they seemed to&#13;
have other views for poor Tom iu the&#13;
Southern States.&#13;
"We have had a long spoil of this,"&#13;
said he, in a low voice. "I am going&#13;
to escape, if I can."&#13;
"Escape! but how?"&#13;
"'I don't know exactly hew yet; but&#13;
we must first have our lashings ca3t&#13;
pff."&#13;
"Would to heaven they rvere, Tom.&#13;
My hands are so swollen and ray&#13;
"wrists so cut and benumbed that my&#13;
arms are well-nigh powerless," I&#13;
"whispered ia a low voice, like a groan.&#13;
~Sit with me here, in the shadow of&#13;
this angle of rock; and now, as the&#13;
darkness is fairly set,in, I shall soon&#13;
make you free."&#13;
By ;a rapM ana skillful application&#13;
of lits strong teclh to the cord, which&#13;
Tjorrad my wrists, he untwisted the&#13;
knot and freed say liands; aad then in&#13;
the «uddenry-Jgiven luxury of being&#13;
able to stretch ray arms, I almost forg&#13;
^ ^ n d the- jchole affair y&#13;
disposing of us in ajmmmary manner.&#13;
This, wagon, being, heavily laden&#13;
caaaed a. delay for several hourt. The&#13;
,'s rays ceased to shine through the&#13;
above us; the grotto drew dark&#13;
the inj^taae 4 t tau&gt;ereeptjbj« afcad-&#13;
; the diagy /aces of our olive-sklndeUinejs&#13;
grew darker still; end&#13;
their impatience was only surpassed by&#13;
for i we, too, had a ship to remlaute&#13;
of these hoursof&#13;
erery minute—pasood&#13;
ttke a pao* of agony in my&#13;
erery&#13;
ftM every feature of that natural&#13;
ranlt, through which the dying&#13;
stole with tho faces and&#13;
•f th* « # • whoos victims w*&#13;
and More ti*a all, tho eoaseless&#13;
ttermai PUS i l Jfej 4*4* ft****&#13;
jjot the necessity for ccrace&amp;ltag the&#13;
fact that I was now unbound.&#13;
1 «oon tound an opportunity for un-&#13;
^om'fi fetters. Then we kept&#13;
our iiand3 clasped before HE, waited&#13;
and hoped—we scarcely knew for what&#13;
w.iiile te the further end of this inner&#13;
cavt. our detainers' sat sullenly&#13;
V&gt; a-ud, t y the dim lantern light,&#13;
.making up cigaritas from their tobacco&#13;
.pouches .and those little rice-paper&#13;
books v/hich are txov? procurable aeariy&#13;
icverywliem.&#13;
From the conversation of our captors&#13;
I .could gather that -our brig, th£ Eug-&#13;
enie, &lt;was visible at anchor in the&#13;
roadstead of Sauta Cruz, a mile or so&#13;
distant.&#13;
Tiree of these Spaniards had placed&#13;
Uteir uitiekets against the wall of rock&#13;
an-d seexoed dispos*^ t*j doze off to&#13;
sleep.&#13;
Close by its lay "ibe plank which&#13;
crossed that dread ventana, like the infernal&#13;
bridge of Poulsherro. which the&#13;
Mahommedans believe crosses the sea&#13;
of fire that on the day of doom shall&#13;
separate Good from Evil. Tom and I&#13;
looked at it and exchanged glances of&#13;
intelligence from time to time, hut&#13;
the attempt to rush across might prove&#13;
doubly fatal to one or both. A slip&#13;
of the foot would hurl us into eternity;&#13;
and if the passage were achieved we&#13;
would be exposed to the firo o* those&#13;
we fled from and met by that of the&#13;
armed man at the mouth of the&#13;
grotto.&#13;
Thus our position and its perils were&#13;
somewhat complicated.&#13;
- Suddenly the distant report of a&#13;
piece of ordnance, coming from the&#13;
seaward, made us look up and listen.&#13;
"El ruido que hace el canon" (the&#13;
crack of a guu), exclaimed a Spaniard,&#13;
scrambling uy to the lower end of&#13;
the fissure in the arch of the grotto,&#13;
and looking out.&#13;
' "We all know that well enough; but&#13;
what does It mean?" asked the other.&#13;
The English brig at the anchorage&#13;
has fired it. I see a litfht glittering on&#13;
her deck: and now away it goes up to&#13;
the foremast head."&#13;
"It Is the Eugenie, Master Rodney,"&#13;
whispered Tom.&#13;
"Can the captain be about to sail tonight—&#13;
and without us?" aatt I, with&#13;
growing dismay.&#13;
"No; but he is Impatient for us to&#13;
coma oC H* know* woU what a *tarttl&#13;
allppery att of imps&#13;
Spaniards are, and has show* a light&#13;
and fired a gun as a hint for us •«&#13;
look sharp."&#13;
"Companero," eaid one of the Spaniards&#13;
to the other, who was looking&#13;
out, "are you BUre that it is tho English&#13;
brig and not ours?"&#13;
"Yes; but by St. Paul! there ia a&#13;
light burning now on the Caatte de&#13;
Santa Cruz; so our craft had bettor get&#13;
her sweeps out and put to sea, even&#13;
without us. Can the Senor Gobernadcr&#13;
have emelt a rat?"&#13;
This announcement, though we knew&#13;
not what it referred to, had an evident&#13;
effect on our captors, who were probably&#13;
part of a slaver's crew; for they&#13;
all scrambled up to the opening in tho&#13;
rocks to look out.&#13;
"Now, now is the time to slip our&#13;
cables and run. Follow me!" said&#13;
Tom Larabourne, in a hoarse but determined&#13;
whisper, as he sprang forward,&#13;
snatched up two of the muskets&#13;
nnd rushed across the plank, tripping&#13;
as lightly as he would have done along&#13;
a boom or yard, though it crossed a&#13;
gulf HO terrible.&#13;
Less steadily, but not Ics3 rapidly,&#13;
ycu may be assured—yet with a frozen&#13;
heart—I followed him, and his Mrd,&#13;
tarry hand v/as ready to grasp mir.s&#13;
and dragged me forward into safety,&#13;
while with a violent kick he tossed tiie&#13;
plank away, and surging, down it went&#13;
Into the black gulf v.'e had crossed.&#13;
It vanished in a moment, and no&#13;
sound ever ascended, for It seemed to&#13;
have fallen into a pit that was as dark&#13;
as it was bottomless.&#13;
"Take this musket, and see that&#13;
you can use it, sir," said Tom, as an&#13;
emotion of bjavado seized him. "And&#13;
so, you, Spanish greenhorns!" ho&#13;
shouted, "you thought to sell me for&#13;
a nigger to the Yankees, did you?&#13;
Whoop! hurrah!"&#13;
A volley of Spanish oaths followed&#13;
this rash outburst, which drew their&#13;
attention at once upon us. Some&#13;
rushed to the dark brink, and paused,&#13;
I suppose, for neither Tom nor I&#13;
could Eee distinctly, as there was a&#13;
double explosion which filled the cavern&#13;
with echoes like those of rolling&#13;
thunder, and a momentary glare of&#13;
smoky light, while two musket balls&#13;
whistled past U3, and I felt one, like&#13;
a hot cinder, as it grazed my left ear.&#13;
Then came *n Albacete knife, which&#13;
was hurled by no erring hand, for it&#13;
wounded Tom's right knee.&#13;
"Give them a shot, Mr. Rodney!"&#13;
said he, furiously; "I'll reserve my fire&#13;
for tho sentry—and here he is, already!"&#13;
And just as the eighth fellow, who&#13;
was on the watch, alarmed by the fir-&#13;
Ing, came rashing i» with his piece&#13;
at Cull cock, Tom fired at him.&#13;
"Saints and angels!" yelled the&#13;
Spaniard as he bounded into the air&#13;
and then fell flat on his face, where he&#13;
lay beating the earlu with his feet&#13;
and bauds.&#13;
"Fire! flYe! Master Rodney, and&#13;
then mn for it, before they can reload.&#13;
1' cried Tom, who saw that I was&#13;
irrerolute; "give 'em a stern chaser!"&#13;
My blood was now fairly up. Wheel-&#13;
Ing~round, I leveled full at the group,&#13;
one of whom was in the act of taking&#13;
aim Rt me, while I saw the steel ramrod&#13;
of the OOer, who had a musket,&#13;
glitter in the lantern light as he reloaded.&#13;
I fired! I know not whether the ball&#13;
hut one of the ruffians sprang&#13;
wildly forward and fell headlong Into&#13;
the ventana!&#13;
"That will do!" cried Tom; "away&#13;
now as fast as we can~-stretch out—&#13;
bear away for the harbor and the&#13;
brig!"&#13;
Grasping £di* newly- acquired weapons,&#13;
which we never thought of relinquishing,&#13;
we rushed out, and, descending&#13;
the ravin*, favored by the&#13;
starlight, instinctively took the path&#13;
which led directly to the harbor.&#13;
1 With a heart that beat wildly, a&#13;
head in a whirl of thoughts, and every&#13;
pulse quickened by the whole affair—&#13;
by the ferocious treatment to which&#13;
we had been subjected for so many&#13;
hours, by the perils which had menaced&#13;
us, by the narrow escapes we had&#13;
made from bullets, by the wild and&#13;
disastrous tragedy which closed the&#13;
adventures of a long and exciting day&#13;
—I ran beside Tom Lambourne; on,&#13;
on, without a breath to spare or a word&#13;
to utter.&#13;
(To be continued.)&#13;
DOINGS OF CONQRE3S.&#13;
The caval appropriation bill finally&#13;
passed the house, after four days of&#13;
acrimonious debate, most of which was&#13;
spent upon the question of rehabilitating&#13;
the nuval academy at Annapolis,&#13;
in accordance with the scheme inaugurated&#13;
by the appropriation of half a&#13;
million in the last naval bill and the&#13;
proposition to increase the maximum&#13;
price to bs paid for armor plate to $545&#13;
per ton, existing law limiting it to ?400.&#13;
Upon both propositions the naval committee&#13;
suffered signal defeats. The&#13;
amendment to build a great armor&#13;
plant was ruled out upon a point of&#13;
order, after a rancorous debate, in !&#13;
'' Evil Dispositions&#13;
Are Early Shown,**&#13;
Just so evil in the btooi&#13;
comes out in shape of scrofula,&#13;
pimples, etc*, in chUdftm&#13;
and young people* Taken it*&#13;
time it can be eradicated bp&#13;
usmg Hood's SarsaparQhu&#13;
In older people, the aftermath&#13;
of irregular living shows ftwhich&#13;
the price to be paid for armor J self in BUtOUS COndittOtlS,&#13;
was cut down from S545, the price&#13;
which the committee insisted was being1&#13;
paid for the new Krupp armor, to&#13;
8-145, and a proviso was also added precluding1&#13;
the government from paying&#13;
more than was paitl by any other foreign&#13;
government for similar armor. A&#13;
motion to recommit the bill was lost,&#13;
and when the question on the amend'&#13;
rcont was f-ut it was carried with a&#13;
routing- cheer.&#13;
A separate bill appropriating 823,-&#13;
000,000 for payment to Spain under the&#13;
provisions of the treaty of Paris has&#13;
been passed by the house under suspension&#13;
of the rules. No amendment&#13;
was in ortler and an attempt to secure&#13;
unanimous consent to offer an amendment&#13;
declaratory of cv\r policy not permanently&#13;
to annex the islands was objected&#13;
to. The senate bill to reimburse&#13;
governors of states for expenses&#13;
incurred by them in the organization&#13;
of volunteers for service in the war&#13;
with Spain passed the housa by a vote&#13;
of 155 to 15.&#13;
There was a pronounced movement&#13;
in the seuate looking to a comproinis2&#13;
on the army reorganization, bill. The&#13;
movement originated with several Republican&#13;
senators, who advanced the&#13;
opinion that a compromise was preferable&#13;
to an extra session of congress.&#13;
The Cockrell bill v,as reported by them&#13;
as the the first advance on the part of&#13;
the Democrats toward an understanding,&#13;
and many felt tliat they would go&#13;
further in that direction in case Republicans&#13;
should indicate a willingness&#13;
to meet them half way.&#13;
liy direction of the finance committee&#13;
Sen. Burrows reported a bill permitting&#13;
the proprietors of the Barnura&#13;
&amp; Bailey eircus to bring their animals&#13;
back into the United States free of&#13;
duty. The report cites the fact that&#13;
all the animalhof foreign origin have&#13;
already paid duty once and therefore&#13;
would be entitled to free admission except&#13;
for the fuilure of the law to provide&#13;
for sueh. cases. .&#13;
The senate committee on commerce&#13;
has completed its considerations of the&#13;
rivers and harbors bill. Aside from&#13;
the provisions for the construction of&#13;
the Nicaragua canal the committee&#13;
increased the cash appropriations to&#13;
the extent of about 82,000,000 over the&#13;
house appropriation, while the amount&#13;
of continuing contracts is increased&#13;
to the extent of about 810,000,000.&#13;
The house has passed the sundry&#13;
ciril appropriation bill, to whick it&#13;
had devoted over a. week without makiug&#13;
any important amendments. The&#13;
speaker's ruling upon the motion to recommit&#13;
the bill with instructions to&#13;
incorporate in it the Nicaragua canal&#13;
amendment was sustained 155 to 96.&#13;
Senator McMillan made a favorable&#13;
report upon a bill appropriating 820,-&#13;
000 to prevent the spread of smallpox&#13;
which has broken out in what threatens&#13;
to prove epidemic fcrm in Washington.&#13;
The report-was passed by the&#13;
senate without the formality even of a&#13;
first reading.&#13;
Petitions from all sections of the&#13;
country are being received by members&#13;
of congress asking that the war revenue&#13;
act bo amended so as to compel the&#13;
telegraph and express companies to&#13;
pay the tax ou telegrams and packages&#13;
sent by express.&#13;
The senate has confirmed the following&#13;
appointments: To be engineers in&#13;
the navy, Ernest P._Goodrich, of Michigan.&#13;
Leonard M. Cox. of Kentucky,&#13;
Alfred C. Lewereuz, of Michigan.&#13;
THE MARKETS.&#13;
heavy head, a foul mouth,&#13;
disordered kidneys, yellow eyea and&#13;
skin, with a general bad feeling.&#13;
ll is the blood, the impure blood*&#13;
friends, which is the real cause. Portly&#13;
that with Hood's SarsaparilJa&#13;
happiness will reign in your family.&#13;
BlOOd Poison-" I lived in a bed of i&#13;
for yeara owinc to blood poisoning that&#13;
lowed small pox. It broke out all orer :&#13;
body, itching intensely. Tried doctoxt&#13;
hospitals In vain. I tried Hood's Sai&#13;
rilki. It helped. I kept at it and was&#13;
tirely cared. I could eo on the hoasetop*&#13;
and shout about it." MRS. J. T. Wii&#13;
Carbondale, Ta.&#13;
Scrofula Sores - " My baby at&#13;
months had scrofula sores on cheei&#13;
arm. Local applications and p y&#13;
medicine did little or no ^ood. Hood's S«r»&#13;
saparilla cured him permanently. He&#13;
now four, with smooth fair skin."&#13;
-S. S. WBOTEN, Fjjrmington, Del.&#13;
Hood'* i'ilU curejjver 111*, tlie&#13;
the only cathartic to tnke with H&lt;MXI'»&#13;
The woman who takes in all a&#13;
tells her often does it merely fojf X&#13;
purpose of talcing him in.&#13;
G3.000 for • Netr Corn.&#13;
That's what thi3 new corn cost. Tltl&#13;
E13 bushel* per acie. Big Four Oats&#13;
bushels—Salzcr's Rape to pasture »)&#13;
and cattla at 25c per acre yieJ'ia fit&#13;
potatoes Jl.^0 per bDl. Bromus&#13;
the greaics-t grass on *arth; K«&#13;
liarley CO bushels per acre; 16 ldvd**&#13;
grasses and clovers, etc.&#13;
Send th's notice to JOHN A. ?&gt;lI*ZS3t&#13;
6EED CO., LA CROSSK, W1S., wttb&#13;
etamps and receive free great v&#13;
13.000 Corn and 10 Far at Sc4d&#13;
ples.&#13;
Only the fear of endless&#13;
causes some sinners .to repent.&#13;
"I owe ray whole life to Bart?ode.&#13;
Blood Bitters. Scrofulous sores&#13;
ered my body. I seemed beyond&#13;
B. B. B. has made me a perfectly&#13;
woman." l£rs. Chas. Rutton, B&#13;
Mich.&#13;
It is safer to lcarn^ from the&#13;
than it is to instruct a friend.&#13;
Hives are a terrible torment to&#13;
little.folks, and to some older&#13;
Easily cured. Doan's Ointment&#13;
rails. Instant relief, permanenT&#13;
At any drug store, 50 cents.&#13;
No one has been able to&#13;
Bacon was Shake's peer. prone&#13;
A household necessity—Dr.&#13;
Eclectric Oil. Heals burns,&#13;
wounds of any sort; cures- sere throat*&#13;
croup, catarrh, asthma; oevrr fails.&#13;
Realization is never a luxury to&#13;
man who did not hope.&#13;
"A dose i in time saves lives."&#13;
Wood's Norway Pine Syrup;&#13;
remedy for coughs, colds,&#13;
diseases of every sort.&#13;
Nature's laws are disregarded&#13;
officeholder who occupies&#13;
once.&#13;
L1VU STUCK, ,&#13;
New York— Cattle Sheep Lambs&#13;
Unreatonabla Qoocs.&#13;
The man in the street car aj&amp;rnied&#13;
that it was a true story, but the Cleveland&#13;
Leader does not vouch for it, although&#13;
giving it in the narrator's own&#13;
words: I was up at the market house&#13;
night before last, buying stuff for over&#13;
Sunday, and I saw an Irishman up&#13;
there with a live goose under his arm.&#13;
Pretty soon the goose looked up at the&#13;
Irishman kind of pitiful, and says:&#13;
"Quawk, quawk, quawk," in that coax-&#13;
In' way a goose has sometime*. The&#13;
Irishman didn't say anything at irst,&#13;
but after a bit the goose looked up&#13;
and says, "Quawk, quawk, gmawk."&#13;
again. Then the Irishman cocked his&#13;
head over on one side, looked tho goose&#13;
in the aye, and aay»: "Phat's tho matter&#13;
wM yea, ony way? Phwy oo yes&#13;
want to walk whin Ot'a with** %»&#13;
B e s t g r a d e , . , .if • 3 «&lt;5tM f* .&gt;•)&#13;
L o w e r g r a d e s ? '2 &gt;&amp;i 1 &gt; 3 OJ&#13;
Chicago—&#13;
Best grades.... 5 7i3.6 oo 4 &lt;i&#13;
Lower grades.i 7«.©4 9&gt; 3 50&#13;
Detroit —&#13;
Fcstgrades....3 8)"&gt;4 «"&gt; 4 0)&#13;
Lower grades, l .&gt;ojfcj ii 3 »j&#13;
Buffalo—&#13;
Lower grades..3 SJJ.4UJ. 2 7*&#13;
Cleveland—&#13;
Bet* grades....-I 5 SIS 0» 4 00&#13;
Lower grade v.J wOx* 8* z ut»&#13;
Cincinnati—&#13;
Best grades.... 5 0i©5 tt 4 10&#13;
Loner grades..'! ft)£4 8» S JU&#13;
73 4 «&gt;&#13;
IS&gt; S 7j&#13;
C BLeoswt egrr agdraed*e .s....-&amp;J&#13;
o OJ&#13;
5 0)&#13;
4 7&gt;&#13;
4 8»&#13;
4 oO&#13;
ft 15&#13;
tbi&#13;
4 0)&#13;
5 8&gt;&#13;
4 SJ&#13;
4 2)&#13;
4 vO&#13;
Hogs&#13;
*4 Si&#13;
4 H&#13;
5 01&#13;
3 2)&#13;
3 8".&#13;
3 JO&#13;
4 10&#13;
8»&#13;
S60&#13;
4 11&#13;
GRAIN, ETC.&#13;
heat&#13;
Nat red&#13;
K«w T#rk 8 ^ t .&#13;
Corn.&#13;
Ha 2 mix Oats.&#13;
7tft7i*&#13;
Tif 7,&#13;
n TJJS&#13;
SUM*&#13;
II it*&#13;
nan* SI Ml&#13;
^Detroit-Hay 4fa 1 tisaothy* »1 to per too.&#13;
Foutoe*. iic per bu. LAtre Poultry, sprlac&#13;
chiolcea«.a«u: »er4b: fowls, tc: turswvs, \m£ci *&#13;
ducks. 8c. JCxjcs. atrtctly (reah. tic per das.&#13;
Butter, acMUsaUr, We per ib; creasMry, tsc&#13;
THE EXCELLENCE Of SY1UP&#13;
is due not only to the originality&#13;
simplicity of tho combination, b«t i&#13;
to the care and skill with which i t fe&#13;
manufactured by scientific pr&#13;
known to the CAJJPOKKIA FIO __.&#13;
Co. only, and we wish to impress •_&#13;
all the importance of purchasing S i&#13;
trtte and original remedy. A* {fctv&#13;
genuine Syrup of Figs Is manuf aetsspti&#13;
by the CALIFORNIA FIO S T B B ^ C *&#13;
only, a knowledge of that fact&#13;
assist one in avoiding the w«rti.&#13;
imitations manufactured by other&#13;
ties. The high standing o* the&#13;
VOUSIA Fio ST*CP CO. with the&#13;
cal profession, and the mtisfaiiiisnl&#13;
which the genuine Syrup of FJrs W&#13;
given to millions of ^nitfr&#13;
the name of tb» Company a&#13;
«rf the exceUeaee of tt* rem&#13;
far in a d r a m of aU other kua_&#13;
ss it acts on the kidneys, IH«r&#13;
bowels without feritatinjr&#13;
' • &lt; &gt; : • • • •&#13;
ta order to get ha&#13;
ciupomu m snoot oa&#13;
(TW 7TT&#13;
V.&#13;
••is. .&#13;
' * &gt; • : &gt; •&#13;
•••' : H " .&#13;
. T •*&#13;
r * • * •&#13;
ffhuhteq&#13;
F. L. ANDREWS EDITOR.&#13;
THURSDAY , MAR . 2, 1899.&#13;
Interestin g Items .&#13;
One of the latest bills tha t has&#13;
been introduce d in the state legislatur&#13;
e asks for an appropriatio n of&#13;
•10,00 0 for the erectio n of a statu e&#13;
in memor y of Zack Chandler .&#13;
An exchange says: The calendar ,&#13;
like history, repeat s itself. If&#13;
you have an old calenda r of 1893&#13;
on han d it will answer the purpos e&#13;
of an 1899 calendar , th e year being&#13;
just the same.&#13;
Last fall Gaorg e Dent , of Lapeer,&#13;
buried 4,000 bushels of pota -&#13;
toes to await higher prices. Thi s&#13;
week he was offered thirt y cent s&#13;
a bushel for them , and accepted ,&#13;
When he opene d the pit to begin&#13;
haulin g th e potatoe s he found [&#13;
tha t they were frozen into a solid&#13;
heap.—Ex.&#13;
The Lapee r Pres s printe d anj&#13;
item to the effect tha t a certai n •&#13;
residen t of the fourth ward, whose!&#13;
nam e it did not give, had bette r&#13;
stop kissing his hired girl, or he&#13;
mingh t be found out . Twentyseven&#13;
men from tha t part of the&#13;
city gav« themselve s away by&#13;
calling on the edito r and threaten -&#13;
ing to thum p him if no iidn' t retract&#13;
.&#13;
The plan s for th e new sugar&#13;
factory at Alma, has been approved.&#13;
They call for new buildings,&#13;
th e entir e length of which&#13;
will be 1,250 feet, or nearl y onefourth&#13;
of a mile. The main building&#13;
will be 33x70 feet and constructe&#13;
d entirel y of brick, fitone&#13;
-with cemen t floor. I t&#13;
will be five and one-hal f stories&#13;
high. The othe r buildings&#13;
will be arrange d about this one.&#13;
—Williamston Enterprise .&#13;
Hira m E. Reed , proprieto r of&#13;
the Rocky Ridge frnit farn, Marion,&#13;
examine d bis peach buds&#13;
Monda y afternoo n an d found&#13;
tha t all the buds on some varieties&#13;
of tree s are killed, while trees of&#13;
othe r varieties only part of th e&#13;
budsai e killed. On those trees&#13;
he think s ther e are enough live&#13;
buds to matur e and possibly make&#13;
a full crop.—Democrat . The man&#13;
who has plent y of fruit to sell&#13;
next year will have a small Klon -&#13;
dike of his own.&#13;
musician s from all part s of th e&#13;
country . The orchestr a was augmente&#13;
d by brass band s ia certai n&#13;
pieces when artilier y was added&#13;
for really stunnin g effects as, for&#13;
example , when th e Star Spangled&#13;
Banne r was brough t out with th e&#13;
full musica l force, or in th e Anvil&#13;
Chorus , from Verdi's U Trovator e&#13;
which had an auxiliary force of&#13;
50 anvils beate n by twice tha t&#13;
numbe r of firemen of Boston . A&#13;
great organ was built expressly&#13;
for the festival.&#13;
Ther e were four foreigu bands,&#13;
the crack musica l organization s&#13;
of thei r respective countrie s and&#13;
the musica l glory of America was&#13;
uphel d by the Marin e Band of&#13;
Washington an d twenty-eigh t&#13;
othe r brass band organizations .&#13;
Thu s ther e were, countin g both&#13;
foreign and America n bauds, 860&#13;
instrumentalist s who were inde -&#13;
penden t of th e grand orchestra ,&#13;
except tha t some^of th e American&#13;
players also assisted in th e last&#13;
force, Th e orchestr a prope r num -&#13;
bered 829 players, in th e grand&#13;
chorus , as it was finally mustere d&#13;
for th e Jubilee concerts , a hundre d&#13;
and sixty-five chora l organization s&#13;
were represente d and th e tota l&#13;
numbe r of voices was 17,282. The&#13;
solo singers numberh d 199 and&#13;
the y include d th e most famou s&#13;
vocalists of the day.Fo r th e thre e&#13;
weeks the tota l attendanc e was&#13;
47(5,000, upon thre e occasion s th e&#13;
audienc e numbere d 50,000, Th e&#13;
tota l receipt s were $1,076,000,&#13;
being about 8150,030 less tha n th e&#13;
aggregate expenses.&#13;
MONTHLY REPORT&#13;
Of the Pinokney Public School&#13;
for the month ending.&#13;
February 24&#13;
High School Department&#13;
Whole number of days taught 19;&#13;
grand total number of days attend-1&#13;
ance 703; average daily attendance 37&#13;
whole number belonging 43; aggregate&#13;
tardine&amp;s 40; pupils neither ab-7&#13;
sent nor tardy during the past month: ,&#13;
Mabel Siftler Mande Richmond&#13;
Norman Reason Lucy Swarthout&#13;
Daisy Reason IVA Plaoeway&#13;
Kate Clark Marlon Reason&#13;
STRPHKN DURFKB, PRINCIPAL.&#13;
Grammer Department.&#13;
Whole number of days taught 19;&#13;
grand total humber of days attendance&#13;
60t&gt;: average daily attendance&#13;
32; aggregate tardiness 55; number&#13;
pupils 37; neither absent nor tardy&#13;
during the month:&#13;
Dail Darrow Uene Reaaon&#13;
Beth Swarthout Mae Reason&#13;
Eva Smith&#13;
C. L. GRIMES, TEACHER.&#13;
Why Hla IHOM Hut,&#13;
They were seated In tbe back room,&#13;
and, after exhausting all exciting topic*&#13;
of the day the&gt; conversation turned&#13;
on the subject of shoe*. One man held&#13;
that there was no sense la paying&#13;
fancy prices; It was better to get cheap&#13;
shoes and buy them oftener. Another&#13;
claimed that he found It more economical&#13;
to pay Waxend $12 a pair for his,&#13;
aa they outlasted three cheap pair*&#13;
and looked better all the time. A&#13;
third raised his foot to the level of the&#13;
table and said: "There lfi a pair I&#13;
bought eighteen months ago for $5. I&#13;
have worn them all t,he time, and they&#13;
have never needed repairs and never&#13;
hurt my feet for a minute. Then Jabbit&#13;
broke In. He was on the third&#13;
day of spree and he pointed a wabbly&#13;
finger at his feet and said: "That's&#13;
funny. There's a pair I have had on&#13;
only two days and nights and they&#13;
hurt my feet already."&#13;
MORE LOCAL.&#13;
Thousands of busbies of potatoes&#13;
are beititf found frozen, «nd now the&#13;
question comes up will it raise the&#13;
price of beans.&#13;
J. P. Ferguson, of Jackson, representing&#13;
the F. L. Raymond Piano Co.,&#13;
ot Cleveland, Ohio, was in town the&#13;
&amp;,.&#13;
America's Greatest Concert&#13;
l -"The great orchestra was one of&#13;
the marvels of the World' s Peace&#13;
Jubilee, held in Boston in 1872,&#13;
and as a distinguishing feature&#13;
was second only to the mammoth&#13;
chorous" writes Luther Holden of&#13;
"The most wonderful musical&#13;
festival in America" in the Marqh&#13;
Ladies' Home Journal. Tbe great&#13;
body of players was no mere aggregation&#13;
of numbers, but a carefully&#13;
organized force of picked&#13;
Gould not express the raptnre of&#13;
Anna E. Springer of 1125 Howard fit.&#13;
Philadelphia, Pa., when she foqnd&#13;
that Dr. Kind's New Discovery for&#13;
Consumption bad completely cared&#13;
fcer of a backing cough that for many&#13;
/ear s had made life a burden. All&#13;
other remedies and doctors could give&#13;
her ao help, bat «be says of this Royal&#13;
Core "it «OOD removed the pain in my&#13;
o t a t t a sd 1 can now, sleep urandly,&#13;
gMstUua* I can scarcely remember&#13;
i o i a? before. I feel like soandiaf its&#13;
jflilWttrnnfrhrTT t tbe universe." 8o&#13;
will AVtfjons who tries Dr. KUf's&#13;
New Discovery for any trouble ot the&#13;
tkftftt* cto*t or ijiflft. Prioe ft* md&#13;
$1., Tri*l bottlst free at P. A. Sin-&#13;
's drag&#13;
last of last week.&#13;
Rev. K. H. Crane and wjfe returned&#13;
from New York last week where Mr.&#13;
Crane has been treated at a hospital.&#13;
He Kays he is much improved in&#13;
health.&#13;
We understand that Judge E. H.&#13;
Persons has refused to accept a re*&#13;
nomination as circuit judge, tie has&#13;
many friends here who would like to&#13;
see him on the supreme bench.&#13;
It is a froticible fact that those who&#13;
do not believe in advertising are tbe&#13;
oiles to take np with some foreign&#13;
scheme that will bring them little if&#13;
any boginess and then tboy say it does&#13;
not pay to advertise.&#13;
The assessor will be going the&#13;
rounds soon and it would look better&#13;
if some people abonld get rid of their&#13;
doc or else pay the tax on him next&#13;
fall like a man. Do not ieed and pet&#13;
a dog unless yon think enough of him&#13;
to pay tbe tax—you are not only&#13;
cheating tbe government but your&#13;
neighbors.&#13;
The Farm Journal is chuck full of&#13;
gumption and it has the L'gpst circulation&#13;
of any farm pr-t r in the&#13;
world. It is good everj t\i » in. We&#13;
off«r it fora-^horr time as a prize to&#13;
advanc^'paying snbscri? v to the&#13;
DISPATCH a year ahead an ^ Farm&#13;
Journal tive years, all for cue u, \c». of&#13;
our paper alone.&#13;
CUT OF THE WRONO HAT.&#13;
•iTOlll )&#13;
by » »ta&lt;i«rt.&#13;
A Scotch university professor, irritated&#13;
to. find that hli students had got&#13;
into the habit of placing their hats and&#13;
canes on his desk, instead of in the&#13;
^cloakroom, announced that the next&#13;
article of the kind placed there would&#13;
be destroyed. Some days later the&#13;
professor was called for a moment&#13;
from the classroom. A student sllppet&#13;
into his private room and emerged&#13;
with the professor's hat, which ht&#13;
placed consdhmously on the desk,&#13;
while his Iwslws grinned and trembled.&#13;
The professor, on returning;&#13;
saw the hat, thought some rastty obstinate&#13;
studOBt ted boss delivered into&#13;
U s hands, and, taking out bis k&amp;llfc&#13;
he cat the otteadiaf article to pises*&#13;
vfaile vainly stfcompHng to conceal tfc»&#13;
•mil s of triusaph that StSjFtd abmtt M t&#13;
ommfr—s»oo. Bo was It * rsry bai&#13;
tfc* BSS* 409.&#13;
Intermediate Department.&#13;
Whole number of days taught 19;&#13;
grand total number of days attendance&#13;
425; average daily attendance&#13;
2 1 | ; whole number belonging 24; aggregate&#13;
tardiness 34; pupils neither&#13;
absent nor tardy during tbe past&#13;
month:&#13;
Clyde Darrow Norma Vaughn&#13;
R«x Head Ethel Dnrfee&#13;
Fred Read Ellray Durfee&#13;
EDITH CARR, TEACHER,&#13;
A Fifth Seaaon.&#13;
In northern Russia the month of October&#13;
is characterized by features so&#13;
remarkable that it is reckoned as a&#13;
fifth season, coming between autumn&#13;
and winter, and called the rasputnya&#13;
season. It is nearly coincident in time&#13;
with our Indian summer, but is more&#13;
regular in its occurrence, and lasts&#13;
longer. The word "rafiputnya", says&#13;
Mr. Tr'evor-Battye, a recent traveler in&#13;
Russia, means "the separation of the&#13;
roads." During the season bearing&#13;
this name the country is impassable,&#13;
owing to the thawing of the first frosts&#13;
and the blocking of the streams with&#13;
broken Ice. The land resembles a&#13;
quagmire, and even the government&#13;
postal service is suspended for a&#13;
month.&#13;
Primary Department—Whoel number&#13;
of days taught 19; grand total&#13;
nnmber days attendance 448; average&#13;
daily atte&gt;nJance 22.4;• whole&#13;
number belonging 27; aggregate tardiness&#13;
25. lJupil8 neither absent nor&#13;
tardy during the past mon'h:&#13;
Mary Lynch Florence Keason&#13;
Helen Reason Howard Brown&#13;
Clarence Brown BangB Richmond&#13;
JESSI E GREEN, T&gt;aeh«r.&#13;
Th e Pinckne y DISPATC H&#13;
one year and th e Far m Jour -&#13;
nal five years, all for" $1.00.&#13;
Trie 8trlkln» F n t a n/&#13;
"What do you consider the most&#13;
striking feature about golf, Mr. Jay?"&#13;
"The ball, madame, the ball. I WM&#13;
struck in the back of the neck by one&#13;
this summer and I shall never for*&#13;
f*t it."&#13;
fOLED O&#13;
•tabbe d the Grave&#13;
A startling incident ot which Mr.&#13;
John Oliver of Philadelphia, was tbe&#13;
subject is narrated by him as follows:&#13;
"I was in a most dreadful condition,&#13;
my skin was almost yellow, eye3 sunken,&#13;
tongne coated, pain continually in back&#13;
no appetite, gradually growing weak*&#13;
er day \,y day. Three physicians bad&#13;
given me up but fortunately a friend&#13;
advised try in? Electric Bitters and to I&#13;
my great joy and surprise, Ihe first&#13;
bottle made a decided-improvemen.t I&#13;
continued their use for three weeks&#13;
and am now a well man. 1 know they&#13;
saved my life and robbed the grave of&#13;
another victim. No one should fail to&#13;
try them. Only 50c guaranteed at F.&#13;
A.. Sigler's drug stoie.&#13;
NOfiTHMICHIG A&#13;
RAILWAY&#13;
»•&gt;»; • Well.&#13;
It is better to keep well than to get&#13;
well, although when one ^s sick it ii&#13;
desirable to get well, When we con*&#13;
«ider that eight-tent! 8 of the ailments&#13;
that afflict the American people are&#13;
oaased by constipation, we shall realize&#13;
why it is that Baxter's Mandrake&#13;
Bitters "keeps folks well" or if sick&#13;
enablas them to get well. Baxter's&#13;
Mandrake Bitters cur^s constipation.&#13;
Price 25c per bottle—Wliy not step in&#13;
and get a bottle and by usiutr it be assurod&#13;
of jfood health th&gt;ouuh tbe trying&#13;
hot months. We sell it and guarantee&#13;
it to give satisfac iou or mohej&#13;
refunded.&#13;
F. \. Bi&#13;
Railroad Guide.&#13;
tfrand Trunk Ball WAY System.&#13;
Time Table in effect, February 5,1899&#13;
M. A. L. DIVISION -WESTBOUND .&#13;
No 27 Piasenper, Pontiac to Jackson&#13;
conuectlon from Detroit 9 44 » m&#13;
No. 43 Mixed, Lenox to Jackson&#13;
counectiou from Detroit 4 46 p m&#13;
All trains dally except Sunday.&#13;
EASTIOUND.&#13;
No. 80 Passenger to Pontiac and Detroit 5 11pm&#13;
No. 44 Mixed *.o Pontiac and Lenox 7 65 a m&#13;
All trains daily except 8unday.&#13;
No. 80 connection at Pontiac for Detroit.&#13;
No 44 connection at Pontiac for Detroit and&#13;
for t Lowest on D A M R S&#13;
E.H , Hughes, W. J. Blaek,&#13;
A G P A T A g e n t, Agent,&#13;
Chicago, IJ1. Ptnckner&#13;
STATE OP MICHIGAN, County ot Livingston&#13;
M.&#13;
At a Bessinn of the Probate Court for sail connty,&#13;
held at tlie probate oflke in tho \lllaKU of&#13;
How?tl ou Friday Urn 10th day «f February in&#13;
the yeur oee thousand, eight luindn &lt;i ami ninety&#13;
nine. Present: AIbird M, Davis, Judye of Probate.&#13;
I&#13;
n the matter of the estate of Otis i\ m !, «le&#13;
ceased,&#13;
On reading and (Ding the petition,. &lt;luly vt&gt;rN&#13;
fled, of Prank Pori I praying that tuluihii.-arat, n&gt;&#13;
of said estate may he grunted to Elmer Van IHireo&#13;
or some otber suitable pcrsm.&#13;
Thereupon, H is ordered that Friday the&#13;
day ot March next at X o'clock In the afternoon,&#13;
at said Probate OttJo*, be assigned for ihe hearing&#13;
of said petition.&#13;
And It is further ordered that a ropy of this&#13;
order be published in the l'luckiny In PATCH a&#13;
newspaper piinted and circulation^ in paid county,&#13;
three eucceteivc *et»ke | revioui! to paid day of&#13;
bearing. AT.BIRD W. I&gt;AV*. Jiidp.e of Probate.&#13;
[A true copy] 6t10&#13;
WAYNE HOTEL, DETROIT&#13;
A MO EUROPE Aft PLAN.&#13;
• * TO • » co #i.oo roit.oo&#13;
MMALM* ffOC. UP TO DATM&#13;
Popular rout« tor Ann Arbor, To&#13;
ledo and points East, South, and toi&#13;
Howell, OWOPSO, Alma, Mt Pleasant&#13;
Cadillac, Manistee, Traverse City and&#13;
points in Northwestern Michigan.&#13;
W. H. BENNETT,&#13;
(}. P. A Toledo&#13;
BtST SEWING MACn№ 6N EAfiTII Wmer cifctf tRtoT Yth e %cozoz&amp;5(&gt;jincr at factory priaa&#13;
me* urtiy m mr MACH ^&#13;
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BIGGLE BO A Far m Library of meqnalle d talue — Practical *&#13;
Up-to-date , Concise and Comprehensive—Hand -&#13;
somely Printe d and Beautifully illustrated .&#13;
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No. 1-BKWLE HORSE BOOK&#13;
All about Horae*—« Cotamon-Sease Treatise, with over&#13;
74 Illustrations, a standard work. Price, soi^mta&#13;
No. 2—BKMLE BERRY BOOK&#13;
All about growintr Small Fruits—read and learn bow .&#13;
cootaias 43 colored lile-like reproductions of all leu ding&#13;
rarktiea and 100 other illustrations. Price, 50 Cents.&#13;
No. 3-BKWLE POULTRY BOOK&#13;
Ail about Poultry ; the beat Poultry Book in existence v&#13;
teQseverything; witbaj colored lire-like reproductions&#13;
of all the principal breeds; with 102 other illustrations.&#13;
Price, 30 Cents.&#13;
N©,4-BWaL E COW BOOK&#13;
All about Cows and (be Dairy Business •. h a v t a g a m at&#13;
sale; contains t colored life-tike reproductions oreach&#13;
breed, wfth 133 other illustrations. Price, 50 Cents.&#13;
NO. 6-BKML B SWINE BOOK&#13;
Just o at All about Hoa&gt;-Breeding, Feeding, Botch*&#13;
cry, Diseases, etc Contains over 80 beautiful halftones&#13;
aad other engravings. Prioc, 50 Cents.&#13;
TbeBKMLB BOOKS are ttaique.original.uiieful—yuo never&#13;
saw anything like them—«o practical, sosenaibk. They&#13;
are having an enormous sale—Baat, West, North and&#13;
South. Every one who keeps a Horse, Cow, Hog or&#13;
Chicken, or grows Small Fruits, ought to scad right&#13;
•wa y for the BMQLB BOOKS. H » FARM JOURNAL idBdfje wHpfacp&amp;cre, nfriMeatW bIobflreydo^«oaw4n n,s Mott at jpdUftaTygn hsv aakUt F d&#13;
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MEDICAL INSTITUTE 303 E. Main St., i CKSON, MICH.&#13;
TREATS ALL DISEASES&#13;
OF MEN AND WOMEN.&#13;
r« .JOLI t o v i g o r ami&#13;
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OOHBCLTinOS FBU. CHAMI8 BODUUTS.&#13;
Boar* B U S . lat O H * Su4»ym.&#13;
DR. HALE IN PERSONAL CHARGE.&#13;
SPiCUt SOTlCli Thow unable to call should send&#13;
•Ump for question blank for home treatment.&#13;
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^ BAZAR. L PATTERNS&#13;
NOME BETTER AT ANY PRICE&#13;
I he»e patterns art sold In nearly&#13;
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If »cui dealer does not kerp them tend&#13;
direct t3 ui One cent itampt received.&#13;
Addren yoor nearest point.&#13;
THE McCALL COMPANY,&#13;
138(0 U6 W lithStrnt, N«« York&#13;
BRANCH o m c i s :&#13;
i8g Fifth A v e , Chicago,&#13;
3 1051 Market St., San Francisco. MS CAUSES&#13;
*EAR&#13;
Brightest Magula* Pttbtlslied&#13;
Contains Beautiful Colored Plates.&#13;
Illustrates Latest Patterns, Fash-&#13;
Ions, Fancy Work.&#13;
Agent* wanted for this msftitne In every&#13;
locality. Beautiful premiums (or a tittle&#13;
work. Write for term* and other particular*.&#13;
Subscription only 5 0 c * pt y«*»i&#13;
including a F R E E Pattern.&#13;
Addr.** THE McCALL CO-&#13;
13S to 146 W. 14th St., New York&#13;
&gt;; MfUeft*0P!EPNEZQS3 MILES IN 132 HOURS ifle Eldredge&#13;
• OO v&#13;
4O.OO&#13;
^i to all others Irrespective&#13;
ri^i!. Cautfosne i?t?« you&#13;
why. W rite for one.&#13;
m SEWING MACHINE CO.,&#13;
«&#13;
:.&gt; U)WAY.&#13;
York.&#13;
Factory,&#13;
BELVIDERE. ILL.&#13;
•CTIVB , WU.ICIT0R8 WANTED EVERT&#13;
V HERE for "The Story of Ibe. Diiliplnes1&#13;
«, MM*t tfabtoad. eon missioned by tbe Govern&#13;
senta* Oflcial-HiMnriaj) to the WarDepartmeat&#13;
The h»*k was vrittso la fbs army camps at 8aa&#13;
Prantlreo. on tb* Hdicwith General lferrit, la&#13;
tbs b&lt;*|ritals at Honolulu, In Hong Konf, la tbs&#13;
American Irenches at Manilla, in ibe insarjren.&#13;
oaicpsVith A&gt;nlD«Wo,t)n tbtdeckof the Ulynu&#13;
pis wifll lVw#y*s*d la the roar of tbs bait)* a.&#13;
S a fall of Mnattk BAnansa for amts. Bris»rat ' rforeSmal1 p k W&#13;
"W. O.&#13;
Edited by the W.C. T. U. of&#13;
We hope all will remember tbe&#13;
regular monthly meeting? of the&#13;
W 0 TU to be held at the home&#13;
of Mrs. Leal Sigler, .Friday p. m.&#13;
at 2.30 o'clock March 3rd. After&#13;
the transaction of business, the&#13;
time will be devoted to a program&#13;
on the subject of "Mothers' Meetings."&#13;
All mothers are earnestly&#13;
invited to attend.&#13;
i Work annum railrdhd employes:&#13;
This department includes work&#13;
among railroad men, telegraph&#13;
! operators, street-car men, police-&#13;
! men, express and hack-men and&#13;
! and train news agents, with their&#13;
\ respective families, and aims to&#13;
carry the gospel and temperence&#13;
pledge to them all, and to organize&#13;
among them gospel and temperence&#13;
clubs or railroad unions,&#13;
cottage meetings, noon-shop meetings&#13;
and personal work in connection&#13;
.with the mass meeinga, is the&#13;
line followed with the distribution&#13;
of literature etc.&#13;
Work among soldiers and&#13;
sailors: This department aims to&#13;
reach the army and navy with gospel&#13;
temperenco work, also by&#13;
means of the pledge and temperence&#13;
literature, through co-operation&#13;
with commandants and&#13;
chaplains, by correspondence, articles&#13;
in papers read by soldiers&#13;
sailors and personal visitation.&#13;
Work among lumbermen: This&#13;
department aims to carry gospel&#13;
temperance by means of the written&#13;
spoken work, to tbe great&#13;
armies of men in the logging&#13;
camps, destitute as they are of&#13;
Christian teaching, and sure to&#13;
fall an easy prey to the saloons&#13;
ual«88 forewarned and forearmed.&#13;
Work among miners: The department&#13;
aims to do for miners&#13;
the same that is stated above related&#13;
to lumbermen.&#13;
deavor to secure legislation of a,&#13;
character calculated to protect&#13;
the honor and pnrity *of . t V&#13;
young, and to protect woman and&#13;
Kirls from the depravity of brutal&#13;
men.&#13;
Purity in Hteratue and art: Th •&#13;
germ thought of this depart&#13;
is "Inner Mission",— the bibl*&#13;
the higest expression of&#13;
Christ in art now rales the&#13;
kingdom of art. Learning,&#13;
drama, theology, all have c&#13;
spired to glorify the unmv&#13;
Jesus, thus making possible&#13;
coming of the Holy Spirit,&#13;
seek the elevation of the pn&#13;
and to this end scrutinize&#13;
literatuae on news-stands,&#13;
roads, and steamboats libmry&#13;
shelves, in mail matter, bill posters,&#13;
shows, exhibitions, and ai I&#13;
galleries. Our methods are t_.&#13;
appeal to Congress, legislatures&#13;
councils, magistrates and courU&#13;
for the enforcement of&#13;
and creation of better laws; also&#13;
lectures and literature to arouse&#13;
public sentiment.&#13;
Would quickly leave you, if yot&#13;
used Dr. King's New Lift Pill*.&#13;
Thousands of sufferers have provtd&#13;
their mttcWlesa merit fortiok tBdatr*&#13;
voud headaches. They make port&#13;
blood and strong nerves and build up&#13;
your health. Easy to take. Try them.&#13;
Ou;y 25c, money back if not cured.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, druggist.&#13;
UNDERTAKER&#13;
AND EM BALMER.&#13;
J. G. SAYLES.&#13;
PLAINFIELD, MICH.&#13;
i&amp;ht ginrimftt&#13;
I T U T THua»D*v uom*i*o wit \&#13;
FRANK/L. A N P R E W 3&#13;
Editor and Vrop&#13;
SabacrlpUoa Price $1 la&#13;
Entered at tbe PoatoAc* at Placfcnqr, Mtehlfas,&#13;
aa aecnid-claaa matter.&#13;
Adverting "• . uudd Iwowa on appUoatioa,&#13;
Baaln«ad Curda* |4.00 per year.&#13;
I&gt;ealb and marrlafte uotlcea publlahed trM,&#13;
Annooaoemeatsol ent«rtalnmeate may be pale&#13;
tor, If daalred, bjr pr«««nttnz the office with tickate&#13;
of admlaaion. In case tickets are aotbronght&#13;
to toe office, regular rates will be charged.&#13;
All matter in local notice column wiUbe cnarg&#13;
ed at 5 cente per line or fraction thereof, for eaem&#13;
Inaertioa. w here no time is «peciaed, all notlcea&#13;
will be Inaerted until ard«r«d diacontlnued, aal&#13;
wtUbe charged for accordingly. idt^Ulchuiiiea&#13;
if adTerUaemeate MDdT reach thia office aa earlf&#13;
aa ToaaoAT morning to insure an insertion the&#13;
same week.&#13;
In all Ite branches, a specialty. We have all kinda&#13;
and the lateat mylee 0/ Type, etc., which unabiee&#13;
us u&gt; execute all kinds of work, such as Booka,&#13;
fainplete, Postere, Programmes, Bill Heads, Note&#13;
Head*, Statements, Card*, Auction BUU, etc., l«&#13;
•uperier styles, upon the shorteet notice. Frioesaa&#13;
o v as guod work can ba aone.&#13;
09 tVltSLX MOXTtf.&#13;
home ciays later 1 met the foreman ot&#13;
the jury and asked him how In the&#13;
world they arrived at such a verdict.&#13;
I hold a certificate from&#13;
the Champion Embalming&#13;
College of Springfield, Ohio&#13;
"Weil, i don't quite understand tt and a m prepared t o do emmyself,"&#13;
he said, scratching hi? head. '&#13;
"We all agreed for the plaintiff on the balminff of all kinds.&#13;
ifdiresats vaoste t,o bthuet deaacmha gfeel.l owI whaasd ihni sf aovworn i °&#13;
of one thousand dollars, another fellow&#13;
[ thought it ought to be two thousand&#13;
A lady assistant for em-&#13;
, and another stuck out for balming women a n d children.&#13;
seven hundred dollars, and ve were&#13;
getting all tangled up, wv«»n one ot the&#13;
jury suggested that we strike an average."&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIRECTORY.&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
. .&lt;#-. « ...CUada L. Shier&#13;
«Jao. K.-dsoa Jr., 0. J. Te«ol9, t\ *&#13;
F. J. SVri^lit, E. L. r u j iipdju, 0 . L*&#13;
Bowman.&#13;
R- H. Teeple&#13;
D. W. Hurt*&#13;
A»8KB8OH W. A. Garr&#13;
STHBKT (JOHXIDSIONKB Oeo. Burca&#13;
MAIUAUL t D- W. Murta&#13;
UKALTU urnoBB Dr.H. F.Si«ler&#13;
M W. A. Carr&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
Dr. Cidy's Conditiod Puwdyrs are&#13;
just what a hor^H needs when^ in bad&#13;
'But yon couldn't have done tlimt,** | condition. Tonic, blood purifier and&#13;
said I. if T&#13;
"That's Just what we did," said tkw&#13;
foreman. "Enrh man put down what&#13;
j he thought right, and I added them toi&#13;
gether. I know there seemB to b*&#13;
something wrong about the verdict, bnt&#13;
I hanged if I can see where it is!"&#13;
In&#13;
The OMAtt Forename.&#13;
ancient *imes people had on*&#13;
vermifuge. They, are not food but&#13;
medicine and tbe be»t io use to put a&#13;
horse in prime condition. Price 25c&#13;
per package. For sale by F. A. Sig&#13;
er.&#13;
Chamber I ttiu'ii Couirb Remedy&#13;
This remedy ia intended especially&#13;
for coughs, colds, croup, whooping&#13;
EPLSCOPAL OHCTRCH.&#13;
Kev. Una*. Simpson, pastor. Services every&#13;
Sunday morning at l'J:i*j, aud every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:00 o'clock. Prayer meeting Thursday&#13;
evenings. Sunday aciiool at close of morning&#13;
service. F. L. Andrews, Suut.&#13;
r^ONlirlBGAflONAL CUUHCd.&#13;
\J tlev. O. d. Jones, pastor. Service every&#13;
Sunday morning at 10:30 and every Sunday&#13;
evening at ":0C Jci &gt;ci. Prayer meeting Thursday&#13;
evenings. Saa-Uy school at close of &lt;noraservioe.&#13;
R. U. Teepla , •iiiJt.&#13;
ST. MA U r s 'J A I'tf &lt; &gt; u 10 0 HU ACU.&#13;
MA U r s J d&#13;
Kev. M. J. Ooiam Tlurd,&#13;
every Sunday. Low inaaa at 7:3U o'clock&#13;
high mass witu aermou kt 9::iU a. m. Catecniifiii&#13;
at 3:UU p. in., vespers ana benediction at l:6u p. in.&#13;
SOCIETIES.&#13;
A. O. H. Soclefv -&gt;i tuia plaoe, &lt;xx «ats every&#13;
Sunrlav iu tht» '•&gt;. Matthew Hall.&#13;
John Me* Tiitness. County&#13;
Pinckney Y. P. S. C. Ii. Heetiugs tiel&lt;i every&#13;
.•Sunday eveuinn in O'vi.j'l oimroU si (i: &lt;) )'i;t»••&lt;&#13;
i P.•Sunday n&#13;
Mi«d Beasle Cordiey,&#13;
fPWOLtTHa&#13;
name only, as Adam or David, and In cough and influenza, it has become t&#13;
order to distinguish persons of the famous for its cures of these diseases'^u^olmy^ae'&#13;
. '•*;•.'&#13;
SABBATH OBSEHVANCE&#13;
The aim of this department 13&#13;
to educate and arouse the public&#13;
intellect and conscience, through&#13;
leaflets, press ai tides, petitions&#13;
aud all other available means, to&#13;
the religious, scientific and other&#13;
reasons for sabbath observance,&#13;
especially raising a higher practical&#13;
standard among professed&#13;
cliristiaus, and testing.our owu&#13;
lives by the word of God. Also&#13;
to secure aud maiutain good&#13;
sabbath laws and usages, thus&#13;
protecting ail iu their right to a&#13;
civil rest day and fostering&#13;
morality.&#13;
Mercy .department: This departs&#13;
inen£ aims to develop in our&#13;
5onng people the renderest consideration&#13;
to award all who are&#13;
capable of pain, uever needlessly&#13;
iuflicting it, and shielding the&#13;
lower animals from both pain and&#13;
danger so far as possible, also securing&#13;
the entctmeut aud enforcement&#13;
of laws for this beneficient&#13;
purpose.&#13;
Purity; This department aims&#13;
to exhibit the relation existing between&#13;
the drink habit and the&#13;
nameless habits, outrages ac.&#13;
crimes which disgrace modern&#13;
civilization, and especially to point&#13;
out the brutalizing influences of&#13;
malt liquors upon the social nature.&#13;
This study to be conducted&#13;
by means of mothers' meetings,&#13;
leaflets, pamphlets, etc, co-operating&#13;
with the White Cross Army&#13;
and circulating its literature. It&#13;
seeks to establish a single code of&#13;
of morals* and to maintain tho&#13;
law of pu/itj* M equally biuding&#13;
upon men and women. I t has in&#13;
view a distinct effort to impress&#13;
upon the minds of men and woman,&#13;
youth and mftidena, the abeolnte&#13;
demands of religion aud&#13;
physiology lor purity in word,&#13;
and deed. Ii will en-&#13;
Bame name it was the custom to affix o v e r a , e t o f t h e c W i l i z e d&#13;
the description "son of Isaac oi\ Ja- , . _, „ .&#13;
cob, as the case might be. Thus we W 0 l l d l The most flattering teshmon*&#13;
get Solomon ben David among tho iats have be^n received giving account&#13;
Hebrews, and Evan ap Richard among' of-its srood work; of tbe a/tfravatintf&#13;
the Welsh, to quote two examples. AI- ' anc] persistnnt coughs it has cured; of&#13;
though the-argument that those names , , , u . , • ,. . .&#13;
were not strictly "forenames" i.s not *e v e r e C0'd* t b a t U a v e ?i e l d e f i P r o m p t "&#13;
within weight, yet it is reasonable to i '&gt;' t o ^s &gt;oo!.lmicr effects and of the&#13;
accept them as such, seeing that the dangerous attacks of croup it has&#13;
appellation had to be supplemented by Cttrfi(\, otten saving the life of the&#13;
another for the sake of distinction;&#13;
we are, therefore, entitled to include&#13;
them within the scope of the question.&#13;
Adam and other early Biblical names&#13;
are regarded as the oldest for obvious&#13;
reasons, but excluding these, the choice&#13;
falls upon Marmaduke, which is the&#13;
modern rendering of the ancient Chaldean&#13;
Maruduk and Merodach, the god&#13;
who interceded constantly between the&#13;
angry Ea and the bumble Damkina,&#13;
his father and mother. The Romans&#13;
used both forenames and family names&#13;
and of the former two that date back&#13;
about 2,500 years are still with us. fulof picUlres u k e a by ,,.v r a u l e ;t namely, Marcus and Lucius, represent- ! j»here on the sp &gt;t. Larye book, L.W pries. KI«;&#13;
ed in modern tongues by Mark and "*" L *&#13;
the feminine Lucy. The old form&#13;
"Marcus" Is still retained in some&#13;
families.&#13;
LKAiiUK, MeetH ev«ry&#13;
eiUMile t Co&#13;
Sundar&#13;
nni0T E [ ) W o r t n Mi* &gt;Irt-&gt;u evury SimJUy&#13;
K.litu i, S;ipyrir]tenJ'&lt;nt.&#13;
Th e C . T . A.jtndB. y thle p'ace,&#13;
evety third satura^.i •V-'iuJu ' ia ta-s Fr. Matthew&#13;
Hull. Joun i&gt; i i i&amp;ue, Predl l&#13;
K&#13;
cbild. The extensive use of it for&#13;
whooping contrh has shown tbat it&#13;
robs disease of all dangerous consequences.&#13;
Suld by P. A. Siller.&#13;
Meet every Friday .-V-QIUJ; OQ or before full&#13;
ot t h e inoon at ikeir uatl lu the gw&amp;rttiout bldg.&#13;
Visiting ti rot tiers ,ir? &lt;•&gt;: UiUv iavit&gt;J.&#13;
C i., s i r ii.ni«bt Ootain&amp;aier&#13;
tlie lull o( iliu uiuou.&#13;
Lodge, No..", ^ A A. M. Ke&lt; i'»r&#13;
i Tuesday eveniUjj, i n or i&gt;-&lt;: &gt;re&#13;
U. vV. M.&#13;
0RO&amp;R OF EASTEllN ST.Vlt moetaeacii m .:Uh&#13;
t'nliy t.»ll tart&#13;
'.V. &gt;&#13;
b*.&#13;
LADlfc&gt;: Ob i'Llt MAOUABtlas.&#13;
aud .Jr t -^alarirty ot i^cliiiioLiiu at ^:&#13;
ACTIVK SOLIClTOtW \7V.NrRi) EVR'iY&#13;
WHEKEfor "The Sn»rv of th* Philippines. '&#13;
by Murat HalstOHcl, commi^sion-'d bv thr- (Govern,&#13;
ment as OlBiUal Histori;:i to 'he War Pepartni8Dt,&#13;
Th« N&gt;ok w&amp;s written in a. mv camjis H&#13;
Saa Francisco, on the Pacific with Gfiinrsl Merritt,&#13;
ID the hoepitniM at Honolulu, in IIOQ.' Koti r. m&#13;
the American trencher at Maui;!^. in tho iuiurgenta&#13;
camps with Aguinall&gt;, on the (Wk 01 the&#13;
01yni|&gt;ia with Drwey. and in the ru:ir of the butt Ia&#13;
at th« 1 al. or Manilla Bouinz.i foru^euis. Bntnercry&#13;
1st&#13;
&gt; p ui. at&#13;
-i.i.' 1 1&#13;
Com.&#13;
KN'nillTS ov THIS LOYAL GLJ x&amp;D&#13;
rae'-t every »«coad W'eduesdAjr&#13;
ev^uluit of every montftiathe K. O.&#13;
T. M. Hall at 7:.i0o'clock. All visiting&#13;
Guards welcome.&#13;
KOBEKT ARNELL, Capt. (T«&#13;
profits. Freight paid. CreiHt •Jtivcn. Drop ati&#13;
trMhyunomcial war books Outdt'free. Address iowTfillTTnvit'^T Mr*!&#13;
A F i i f f h l l n l B l u n d e r&#13;
Will often oau^e a borribie burn,&#13;
scald, cut or bruise. Bueklen'a arnica&#13;
salve, the best in tin world, will kill&#13;
the pain and promptly heal it. Cares&#13;
old sores, (ever sores, ulcers, boils, felons,&#13;
corns and ait skin eruptions.&#13;
F. T. Barber, Sec'y. Star In^uraact* BUg. Caica^o.&#13;
W. C. T. U. me-ts the first Friday of qp&#13;
month at 2:3 p. m. at t ie ho ae of Dr. U. F.&#13;
Siller. Kveryone interested ia temperans* I*&#13;
ll y ii M ' 1 Sigler, Pres; Mr*.&#13;
Durfee, Secretary.&#13;
pile cure on eartb. Onlj 25c a box.&#13;
Cure guaranteed,&#13;
ler,&#13;
Sold by P . A. Sig-&#13;
I bave been afflicted with rueuma&#13;
tism for fourteen years ard nothing&#13;
seemed to give any relfef. I was abie&#13;
to be around all the time, but COQstartlv&#13;
suffering I had tried everything&#13;
I could bt&gt;ar of ami at- last, was&#13;
told to try Chamberlain's Tain Balm&#13;
winch I did and was immediately relieved&#13;
and in a short time cured. I&#13;
am happy to say that it has not since&#13;
rvturnrd.— Josh Ed^ar, Germantown,&#13;
For sale by P. A. Sipler.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
H. F. SIGLER M. O- C, L, SIQLER M, O&#13;
DRS. SLGLER &amp; SIGLER, Phyeicians and Sur. e us.&#13;
attenaed to day or&#13;
Pinokney, Mich.&#13;
AU calU prompt!&#13;
Office on 'Main sir&#13;
DR. A. B. GREEN.&#13;
Office orer J ^&#13;
Thnniij and Frid»y&#13;
Utmx Store.&#13;
STATB OH1 MICHIGAN; County of Livingston&#13;
At &amp; oeoslon of the probate court, f r said&#13;
eonnty h«ld at tbe probatenfflf* In the village of&#13;
Howell on Monday the 8th &lt;*av of February in the&#13;
year one thousand eight hundred and ninetynine,&#13;
Pmont, ALMIRD * . D i n s , Jndge of Pronate.&#13;
ID tbe matter of th» estate of Orang* Bangs,&#13;
deceased.&#13;
On reading and&#13;
of KMIIBA&#13;
For&#13;
r o l a t n the livv,&#13;
•ad bo^f^j lirougk&#13;
DB. ilora* T&#13;
spdily cvre&#13;
torpid D&#13;
ti&#13;
Rev. E. Edwards, pastor of the&#13;
BaptlftchUroh . t&#13;
to be to* last wtH and t««taa«Bt of said deceased,&#13;
may be admitted to probate.&#13;
Ther*«pooU is ordervd that Thursday th« 16th&#13;
day of Mareii next, at 10 o'clock la tbs torsnooa&#13;
at »aldrf«bat«oa«e,beaMi«B«dfarU« hmuiDg&#13;
sf pstitto*. Aa4 It is fvrtlMW vrtfA ttal a&#13;
this court, purporting! Pa,, when suffering with rbeomatism&#13;
was aclvised to try Chamberlain's Pain&#13;
Balm. He says: "A. few applications&#13;
of this liniment proved of great service&#13;
to nee. It subdued tk* mftanation aid&#13;
la&#13;
priiM «ai&#13;
ti said eonaty, U N S I&#13;
ralirad the pain. 8hoald %mj saffervr&#13;
proBt hj f mag pain rmloi a trial it&#13;
•rill please me." For iale by F. AT&#13;
Ws can make to&#13;
jour mesaure a&#13;
Fine. All-Wool&#13;
Latert City 3ty I—&#13;
Ton can b* a welWressed nan&#13;
i( you know how. Write as for&#13;
Samples and Booklet "HomU&#13;
LiWdl Dress WtU, and&#13;
Laig* Faanadb Sksnt tFptseMte B*a^^^«f&#13;
TbeDAVKMAOBNECa&#13;
2j@jlotelinDetrou[&#13;
M.H,&#13;
I tj&#13;
"&#13;
'•.«'•**' •&#13;
№ FBAXK L. ANDIIBWS , Publisher .&#13;
PXNCKKEY , - ' . " MICHIGAN ,&#13;
'.-•&gt; &gt;&#13;
There can bo no corse of true love U&#13;
true love never dies.&#13;
Man is the only animal with a chronlo&#13;
longing for the unattainable.&#13;
The extra avsslon boom had a hard&#13;
tilt when the treaty of Pauls was ratified&#13;
Every husban d hear s a ffood deal&#13;
•bou t th e saintlik e action s of otiier&#13;
tiusbauds .&#13;
TALMAGE\S SEBMON .&#13;
TH E MIDNIGH T EXPRES S&#13;
TRAIN " AS SUBJECT .&#13;
**Th* Charloti fthall K»V« la tit* Strata,&#13;
Tfc#y Sliull Jostle&#13;
Otfcer la tU«&#13;
Nttltum tt:4.&#13;
Oil* A|r»la«t thsv&#13;
W«y»»—From&#13;
' • •' A&#13;
A monarch y has subjects. A repub -&#13;
lic has citizens , «nd canno t have subjects&#13;
withou t s&amp;'.f-stultification .&#13;
Gome z has no gold collar or frol:5&#13;
vhlstle, but he seems to have consid -&#13;
erable SUCCGE S in financing his situations&#13;
.&#13;
At th e rat e the Frenchme n arc press-&#13;
In g thing s the y may get thei r ditch&#13;
acros s th e isthmu s finished before oura&#13;
Is begun.&#13;
This tim e Speaker Reed has decide d&#13;
tha t he will no t let th e Nicaragu a&#13;
cana l bill pass. He is a3 loyal as ever&#13;
,to the principl e tha t he is th e whole&#13;
thin g in spite of Cuba and Hawaii .&#13;
&gt; Man y varying picture s of Aguinaldo&#13;
,are curren t In thi s country . The Fll-&#13;
Ippin o chief canno t whip our army,&#13;
'but he may have an actio n for libel&#13;
lagainst&#13;
'States .&#13;
It has been found out tha t man y of&#13;
the art * and discoveries which we supposed&#13;
were peculia r to our own age&#13;
are merel y tho restoratio n of thou -&#13;
sands of years ago. I suppose tha t&#13;
the paa* centurie s have forgotte n mor e&#13;
tha n tbe presen t centur y knows. I t&#13;
seems to me tha t the y must have&#13;
knowa thousand s cf years ago, in th e&#13;
days of Nineveh , of th e uses of steam&#13;
and its applicatio n to swift travel. In&#13;
n?y text 1 hea r th e rush o*f th e rail&#13;
train , th e clan g of th e wheels and tho&#13;
Jammin g of the, car couplings . "The&#13;
chariot s shall rage in the streets ; th# y&#13;
shall jostle one against anothe r in th e&#13;
broad ways; they ctiall seem like&#13;
torches; they shall run like th e lightnings."&#13;
Have you ever taken your positio n&#13;
in th e night , far away from a depot ,&#13;
alon g the track , waitin g to see tho rail&#13;
trai n come at full speed? At first you&#13;
hear d in tbe distanc e &amp; rumbling , like&#13;
the comin g of a storm , the n you saw&#13;
the flash of the headligh t of th e locomotive&#13;
as it turne d th e curve; then&#13;
you saw th e wilder glare cf th e flery&#13;
eye of th e train as it cam e plungin g&#13;
toward you; then you hear d th e shriek&#13;
of the whistle tha t frenzied all th e&#13;
on all these comfortabl e article a of&#13;
appanil . Th e seasons are so change -&#13;
able yam hat e no t take n a single pre -&#13;
cautio n too many . Some night you&#13;
will get ou t in th e snowban k and have&#13;
to walk thre e or four miles unti l you&#13;
got to th e railroa d station , and you&#13;
v/IU want all thes * comfort s and con -&#13;
veniences . But wiil you excuse me if&#13;
I make a suggestion or two abou t thi s&#13;
valise? You say, "Certainly , as we&#13;
are havin g a plain , frank talk, I will&#13;
not be offended at any honorabl e suggestion.&#13;
"&#13;
Pu t in amon g your baggage some&#13;
carefully selected , wholesom e reading .&#13;
Let It be in histor y or a poem or a&#13;
book or pure fiction , or sorao volume&#13;
tha t will give you informatio n in regard&#13;
to your line of business. Then&#13;
add to tha t a Bible in round , beautifu l&#13;
type—small type ig bad for th e eyes&#13;
anywhere , but peculiarl y killing in th e&#13;
jolt cf a rail train . Pu t your railroa d&#13;
guide and . your Bible side by side—&#13;
evening*, and I will tell you wher» fc«&#13;
will spend eternity, and I will tot:&#13;
you what will be his earthly prospects.&#13;
There is an abundance of choice. Ther«&#13;
U your room with the books. Thert&#13;
are the Young Men's Christian Association&#13;
rooms. There are the week-&#13;
TUght services of the Christian&#13;
churches. There U the gambling saloon.&#13;
There t3 the theater. There is&#13;
MISSOURI' S WAR GOVERNO R&#13;
B«fttor«d bj Prn'ta-am. &gt;&#13;
the one to show you th e rout e throug h&#13;
thi s world, and tho othe r to show you t o&#13;
the house of infamy. Plent y of places&#13;
to go. But which, 0 immorta l man ,&#13;
which? Oh, God , which? "Well," yoir&#13;
say, - I guess I will- I guess I will go&#13;
to th e theater. " Do you thin k th e&#13;
tarryin g in tha t place unti l 11 o'cloc k&#13;
at night will improv e your bodily&#13;
hsalth , or your financial prospect s or&#13;
your eterna l fortune ? No man ever&#13;
found tho path to usefulness, or honor ,&#13;
or happiness , or commercia l success,'&#13;
ojr heaven throug h th e America n thea -&#13;
ter. "Well," you say, "I guess then I&#13;
will go to—I guess I will go to th e&#13;
saioon. " You will first go&#13;
newspaper s in th e Unite d&#13;
« Th e censu s burea u ought to be mad e&#13;
m permanen t institution , organize d as&#13;
rthe arm y and navy are. for the efficient&#13;
'doin g of th e work intruste d to its&#13;
charge . Ito member s should be chosen ,&#13;
after due examination , for fitness&#13;
'alone , and once in ten years thi s permanen&#13;
t organizatio n should adop t&#13;
mean s of its own for addin g to its&#13;
workin g force, for temporar y service,&#13;
onl y th e most capabl e person s it can&#13;
find for subordinat e work. So only&#13;
shall we be rid cf a decennia l spoilt&#13;
ecandal.&#13;
The Americanizatio n of Puert o Rico&#13;
is in an encouragingl y progressive&#13;
•state . The inhabitant s seem to welcom&#13;
e and appreciat e all measure s designed&#13;
to furthe r thei r social and civic&#13;
•well-being . It is almost patheticall y&#13;
suggestive tha t a people so long unde r&#13;
th e dominatio n of Spanish law in&#13;
echoes ; the n you Eaw th e hurrican e&#13;
dash of cinders ; the n you felt th e jar&#13;
of th e passing earthquake , and you&#13;
saw th e shot thunderbol t of th e express&#13;
train . Well, it seems tha t we&#13;
can hear th e passing of a midnigh t&#13;
expreee train in my text : "The chari -&#13;
ots shall rags in th e streets ; the y&#13;
shall jostle one against anothe r in the&#13;
broad ways; the y shall seem like&#13;
torches ; the y shall run like th e lightnings."&#13;
I halt the trai n long enough to get&#13;
on board , and I go throug h th e cars,&#13;
and I find three-fourih s of the passengers&#13;
are commercia l travelers. They&#13;
are a folk peculia r to themselves ,&#13;
easily recognized , at hotn e on all&#13;
trains , no t startle d by th e sudden&#13;
droppin g of the brakes, familiar with&#13;
all th e railroa d signals, can tell you&#13;
what is th e next station , how long&#13;
the train will stop, what place the passengers&#13;
take luncheo n at, can give you&#13;
informatio n on almost any subject, are&#13;
cosmopolitan , at hom e everywhere&#13;
from Halifa x to San Francisco . They&#13;
e on the 8 o'cloc k mornin g train , on&#13;
the rout e to th e next world. "Oh, "&#13;
you say, "tha t is tuperfluous , for now&#13;
in nil the hotels , in th e parlor , you&#13;
will find a Bible, and in nearl y all 'th e&#13;
room s of the guests you will find one. "&#13;
But, my brother , tha t Is no t your&#13;
Bible. You want your own hat , your&#13;
own coat , your own blanket , your own&#13;
Bible. -But, " you say, "I am not a&#13;
Christian , and you ough t not to expsct&#13;
me to carr y a Bible." My brother ,&#13;
a great man y people are no t Chris -&#13;
tian s who carry a Bible. Besides that ,&#13;
before you get hom e you might become&#13;
a Christian , and you would feel&#13;
awkward withou t a copy. Besides that ,&#13;
you m i h t t b '&#13;
look; the n you will go to play,&#13;
i will make $100, .you will make&#13;
GOVKKNOH T. C. I'LETC'IIEO.&#13;
Hon . Thoma s C. FlcUlier . the&#13;
. •• - — , — ^ n e noon train , en th e midnigh t train .&#13;
whose method s of jurisprudenc e ha- | You take a berth in a gleeping-ca^ , and&#13;
.tea s corpu s had no place, and of whos&#13;
graciou s meanin g the y were&#13;
you might get bad news from homo .&#13;
I see you with tremblin g han d open -&#13;
ing th e t?legram saying, "Georg e ia&#13;
dying," cr "Fanni e is dead-com e&#13;
home! " Oh. as you sit in th e tmln ,&#13;
stunne d with th e calamity , going&#13;
home , you vill have no taste for fine&#13;
scener y cr for conversation , and yet&#13;
you must keep ycur thought s employed&#13;
cr you will go stark mad . Then&#13;
you will want a Bible, whethe r you&#13;
read it or not . I t will bs a comfor t&#13;
to have it nea r you—that book full of&#13;
promise s which have comforte d othe r&#13;
people in like calamity . Whethe r you&#13;
study th e promise s or not , you will&#13;
want tha t book nea r you. Am I no t&#13;
wise when I say put In th e Bible?&#13;
* • *&#13;
"Oh, " you can say, "I have no tast e&#13;
for reading. " Now, tha t is th e trouble ,&#13;
but it i s no excuse. Ther e was a time ,&#13;
my brother , when you had no taste for&#13;
cigars; the y mad e you very sick; but&#13;
you persevered unti l cigars have beyou&#13;
will make $1,000, you will w a r Governo r cf the Slaty of Missouri .&#13;
make $1.500—then you will lose" all i s , a g r e a t irlen(^ of I'e-ru-na . tf#&#13;
Then you will borro w £ome money so i ?u n&#13;
a* to start anew. You will make ^ o ! j ' t s ^ o " " ^ M T S C°' ^ ^&#13;
J ° " * ! " m a k e ? l ° 0 &gt; y o u w m m a l c e ' G*nt&gt;emen-For years I hare beea&#13;
1600-then you will lose all. These afflicted with chronic"SiirrH which&#13;
wretches cf tho gambling saloon know : h a s «°«e through my whole 'system,&#13;
how to tempt you. But mark this- i a n , d n ? o n e knows the torture and&#13;
All gamblers die poor. They mav I Dll6fry I h a v e Passed through. My&#13;
tmheayk e lesfeo rtthuenmes —great f*cc-t,utunen«e hut • 2? 5a s PrescrllJed various reme* a -lvt d l e s a n d l h a v e n e m . £ ( j u ^ a a y&#13;
, u n t l , ! w a s p e r s i l a d e d b y a f r J e n d t ( |&#13;
* • • i «se Dr. Hartman's Pe-ru-ua. After tho&#13;
uut now the question is still open: i u s e °* on&lt;3 bottle I feel like a new&#13;
m a n - It also cured me of a droppiag&#13;
I had in my throat, and built my system&#13;
up generally. To tho*e who ar»&#13;
suffering: take&#13;
Where will you spend your evening?&#13;
commercial travelers, how much&#13;
will you give me to put you on the&#13;
right track? uhZt ^ * suftennsr with catarrh I tak&#13;
ithout charging you a i in recommending your ereat&#13;
farthing. I willl pprreessccrriibbee ffo r you a Very r e t f l l&#13;
Plan which will save you for this&#13;
world and the next, if you will take&#13;
it. Go, before you leave home, to&#13;
the Young Men's Christian Association&#13;
of the city where you live. Get from&#13;
them letters of introduction. Carry&#13;
them out to the towns and citie3&#13;
where you go. If there be no such&#13;
association in the place you visit, then&#13;
present them at the door of Christian&#13;
churches and hand them over to tne &lt;&#13;
pastors. Be not slow to arise In the :&#13;
devotional meeting and say: "I am&#13;
a commercial traveler; I am far away&#13;
from home, and I come in here to- ;&#13;
night to seek Christian society." The '&#13;
best houses and the highest style of i&#13;
amurement will open before you, and&#13;
Very respectfully.&#13;
'iliomaa C. Fletche?'. '-,&#13;
Everything that afreets the welfare&#13;
of tbe people is a legitimate subject&#13;
of comment to tho real statesman&#13;
Tho statesman Is not a narrow mazu&#13;
It is the pc!itip.n:i.who is narrow. Th«&#13;
true statesman looks out on the world&#13;
as it is, and seeks, as far as is in his&#13;
power, to remedy evils and encourage&#13;
Catarrh In Its various forms fs rapf&#13;
Idly becoming a national curse. AnV&#13;
undoubted remedy has been discovered&#13;
by Dr. Hartman. This remedy&#13;
has been thoroughly tested during the&#13;
past forty years. Prominent men have&#13;
como to know of Its virtues, and are&#13;
making public utterances on the subject.&#13;
To save tho country wa must&#13;
save tho people. To save the people&#13;
wo must protect them from disease.&#13;
Ignorant.should request its application&#13;
throughout the island. Much to their&#13;
rejoiciLg-, the system of direct, taxr.-&#13;
tlon Is to be abolished. Under Spanish&#13;
rule, its workins were bitterly oppressive&#13;
and the visit of the tax collector&#13;
was the prelude of cruelty ard despoilment.&#13;
come to you a luxury. Nor/, if you&#13;
can afford to struggle on to get a bad&#13;
habit, is it not worth while to struggle&#13;
on to get a good habit like that of&#13;
reading? I am amazed to find how&#13;
either above you or beneath you i3 I mrxnV merct^nts ?.nd cominorcial travinstead&#13;
cf your being dependent upon I T h e disease that 1B at once the most&#13;
the leprous crew v.ho hang around the '• Pr e v a 5ent and stubborn of cure U cahotels,&#13;
wanting to show you all the U r r h *&#13;
slums of the city, on the one condition&#13;
that you will pay their expenses,&#13;
you will get the benefit of God in every l&#13;
town you visit. Remember this, that ! A L a d y o f&#13;
AFTER 20 YEARS.&#13;
The National Carbon Company was&#13;
organized during January "under&#13;
the Jaws of New Jersey, with a capital&#13;
of $10,000,000, $4,500,000 of which Is&#13;
In 7 per cent non-cumulative preferred&#13;
stock and $5,500,000 in common&#13;
stock. The corporation will absorb&#13;
the principal manufacturers of carbon&#13;
one of these sentlemen. There are&#13;
100,000 professed commercial travelers&#13;
in the United States; but 500,000 would&#13;
sot include all those who are sorne-&#13;
;iiiies engaged in this servic?. They&#13;
spend millions of dollars every flay&#13;
in the hotels and in the rail trains.&#13;
They have their official newspaper&#13;
organ. They have their mutual benefit&#13;
association, about 4,000 names on&#13;
the rolls, and have already distributed&#13;
more than ?200,000 among the&#13;
families of deceased members. They&#13;
are ubiquitous, unique and trernondous&#13;
for good or evil. All the tendencies&#13;
of merchandise are toward their&#13;
multiplication. The house that stands&#13;
back on its dignity and waits for cussupplics,&#13;
particularly electric light car- i t o m e r s t o come&gt; instead cf going to&#13;
bons, carbon brushes for motors and * e e k b a r S a i c - m a k e r s - * J " nave more&#13;
electrolytic carbons for all varieties of I a n d m ° r e u n s a l a b l e Eoods on the&#13;
Emelting purposes. Arthur J Eddy of i ? }*' , a n ? w i l ! S r a d u a l l y l o s e i t s&#13;
Chicago, who was prominent In the or- * ° f t h e m a r k e t s = v ; h i l e ^&#13;
ganization of the American Linseed&#13;
Company recently, i3 the promoter of&#13;
the enterprise, and Chicago capital is&#13;
interested. These companies are paid&#13;
to tn^Jude the entire active carbon industry&#13;
of the United States and threequarters&#13;
of the carbon industry of the&#13;
•world, / i addition to the United&#13;
preserve their Ignorance "from&#13;
year to year, notwithstanding all their&#13;
opportunities. It was well illustrated&#13;
by one who had been largely successful,&#13;
and who wanted the show of a&#13;
library at home, and be wrote to a&#13;
book merchant in London, saying:&#13;
"Send me cix feet of theology and&#13;
about as much metaphysics and lfear&#13;
a yard cf civil lav.- in old folio!" There&#13;
Is no excuse for a man lacking information,&#13;
if he have; the rare opportunities&#13;
of a commercial traveler.&#13;
Improve ycur mind. Remember the&#13;
"Learned Blacksrailh," vao, while&#13;
blowing the bellows, s?t his book&#13;
up against the brjck work and became&#13;
acquainted with fifty languages.&#13;
Remember the scholarly Gifford, who,&#13;
while an apprentice, wrought&#13;
whatever place you visit, bad Influcuces&#13;
will peek you out; good influences&#13;
you raust gfck out.&#13;
While I stand here, I bethink mys*-&#13;
l: of a commercial traveler who was&#13;
a member of my church in Philadelphia.&#13;
He was a splendid young man.&#13;
(he pride cf his widowed mother aiM&#13;
cf his sisters. It was his joy to support&#13;
them, acd fcr that purpose he&#13;
postponed his cwa marriage day. He&#13;
thrived, in business, and after a whilo&#13;
Many&#13;
Grand Rapids&#13;
RlRht Thing.&#13;
Strikes thm&#13;
work of the little conqueror are comrepresentative,&#13;
and each but fives ifcdded&#13;
strength to those which have gone before&#13;
SucU w c i l d d d&#13;
g&#13;
fore. word* of&#13;
praise amt dull? shbrtered on this&#13;
modern wonder-worker from all parts&#13;
of the Union. Speaking of her experleuce&#13;
a lady of Grand liapids, Mr*.&#13;
Jno. Gardner, who resides M No 300&#13;
Second -Street,, sayys:&#13;
"For over 20 years I wa«&#13;
with kidney trouble, and&#13;
to the U&#13;
'Stages Industries the new company n&#13;
own a half interest in the Ottawa Car-*&#13;
t J CCo mpany of Ottawa, Canadia,&#13;
whiuh company controls the carbon industry&#13;
of Canada.&#13;
In&gt;common with many other trades,&#13;
the silk industry terminated a proaperons&#13;
year on December Zl last Commenting&#13;
on the conditions governing&#13;
the trade, the Silk Association of&#13;
Aiaqrics. through its .secretary, has&#13;
Oils Ur say: "Rising prices in the&#13;
ailk markets of the world hare&#13;
decided rise in the&#13;
came of tho-branches of the&#13;
enterprising and succsssful houses will&#13;
have Uteir agents on all the trains,&#13;
and 'their chariots vill rage in the&#13;
streets; they shall Josile one against&#13;
another in the broad v«iys; they shall&#13;
seem like torches; they shall run like&#13;
the lightnings."&#13;
I think commercial travelers can&#13;
stand a sermon of warm-hearted sympathy.&#13;
If you have nny words of good&#13;
cheer for them, you had hotter utter&#13;
them. If you have any good, honest&#13;
prayers in their behalf, they will be&#13;
greatly obliged to you. I never knew&#13;
a man yet who did not like to be&#13;
prayed for; I never knew a man yet&#13;
that did not like to be helped. It&#13;
seems to me this sermon is timely. At&#13;
this season of the year there are tens&#13;
of thousands of men going out to&#13;
gather the spring trade. The months&#13;
of February and March in all our&#13;
establishments are very&#13;
days our naall&#13;
be seined,&#13;
and then look out for the brightest&#13;
the arithmetical&#13;
awl on&#13;
member A&#13;
out&#13;
his&#13;
othered&#13;
\ t r e a t -&#13;
set up his own household. Leaving&#13;
that city for. another city, I had. no&#13;
opportunity for three c four years of&#13;
mating: inquiry in regard to him. i I received no permanent «lie"f n n t i l T&#13;
When I made such inquiry, I wa? told [ tried Doan's Kidney Pills. No one ex-'&#13;
that he was dead. The st?ry Tras, ho \ CCP,1 t h o &amp; e w h o l i a v e been through tho&#13;
was s-enerous, and kind-hearted, and -•'•'-»-— • - . . .&#13;
genial, and social, and he got Into the&#13;
habit of "treating" customers and of&#13;
showing them all the sights of the&#13;
rcrombie,&#13;
here and theie a fragmentary five minutes&#13;
from an exhausting profession,&#13;
and wrote Immortal trpatises on ethics • • • H&#13;
Again, I charge you, tell the whole&#13;
truth about everything you sell. Lying&#13;
commercial travelers will precede&#13;
you; lying commercial tr*rulers will&#13;
come right after you intov the same&#13;
store. Do not let their unfair competition&#13;
tempt you from the straight line.&#13;
It i f l&#13;
problem with&#13;
of leather. Re- i town, and he began rapidly to go c&#13;
w h o s n a t c h e d ftnwn ,,^,-t i.» i—^ ..•_ .. . . . . . i i&#13;
| mill of kidney complaint cau tell the&#13;
I torture that one endr.res. The constant&#13;
pain across my back extending up the&#13;
right side, totally unable to lie on my&#13;
4own, and fce lost his position in the i s s o m ethi»g much mr&gt;re easy to'think1&#13;
church of v.hich he was a member, and " ^ " *&#13;
he lost his position in the commercial&#13;
house, of which he was ihe best agent;&#13;
and his beautiful young wife, &amp;ii$ hia&#13;
It is an awful bargain that&#13;
makes when he sells his goods and his&#13;
soul at the sa^ae time. A young man&#13;
l» one of the stores of New York was&#13;
selling some silks. He was binding&#13;
them up when he said to the lady&#13;
customer: "It is my duty to show you&#13;
that there is a fracture in that silk.&#13;
She looked at it and r e j e c t s &lt;Jae&#13;
goods. The head of the firm, hearing&#13;
of It, wrote to the fs^ier of the young&#13;
man in the countr.r.Taaying: "Come&#13;
and take your son away; he will&#13;
U11 y e a r s ot v*1**** prosperity- which&#13;
**• over -witnessed.&#13;
there are *7,i©a power looms for&#13;
aiik weaving and C.COO for ribbon&#13;
weaving. During&#13;
feitn a number of&#13;
Ublished i&#13;
and&#13;
«xUasio» of facilklea by our&#13;
«r mannfarturer*. While tfddltfcmaJ&#13;
of manufacture ia a&#13;
It also carries with I&#13;
of facilities&#13;
It ia hardly aeoeasary to&#13;
9*erpi "&#13;
l 0 n *&#13;
from the&#13;
ytni are to start&#13;
You have- your&#13;
or&#13;
inkaow&#13;
on&#13;
prices you firm,&#13;
what prices&#13;
You kavf fonr&#13;
If&#13;
no~figfct trt look&#13;
brother I wtu tata m&#13;
Into the valiat aad I&#13;
y; ill *e*er&#13;
make a merchant." The father came&#13;
In agitation, wondering what his Icy&#13;
had been doing, and the head men of&#13;
the firm said: "Why, your soa stood&#13;
here at this counter and pointed out a&#13;
fracture In the silk, and of course the&#13;
lady wouldn't take i t We are not&#13;
responsible for the Ignorance of customers;&#13;
customers must look o«t for&#13;
themselves, and we look tut for ourselves.&#13;
Your son will never s a k e a&#13;
merchant" "Is that all?" said the&#13;
father. «Ah! I am prouder of my boy&#13;
than i ever was. Joka, get your feat&#13;
and come hone.**&#13;
But it is ahftost night, aad yoa ao&#13;
to the hotel Now eo»ea tb»&#13;
J*tohty tag for U e cosuaercUl tra&gt;-&#13;
«* Tell M W&#13;
g , &amp;ii$ ha&#13;
sick old mother, and hfe »!sters, went&#13;
into destitution, and he, as a result&#13;
of his dissipations, died in Kirkbride&#13;
insane asylum.&#13;
Ch, commercial travelers, I pray for&#13;
you the all-sustaining grace of God.&#13;
There are two kinds of days when you&#13;
are especially in need of divine grace.&#13;
The on*, the day when you have~no&#13;
srv-ens—when you fail to make a sale,&#13;
and you are very much disappointed!&#13;
ana you go back to your hotel discomfited.&#13;
That night you will be tempted&#13;
to go to strong drink and rush into&#13;
bad surroundings. The other day,&#13;
when yoo will especially need divine&#13;
grace, will be "when you have had a&#13;
day of great success, and the devil&#13;
tells you you muet go and celebrate&#13;
t h a t success. Then you will want the.&#13;
grace of God to sustain you from rollicking&#13;
indulgences. Yas, there will&#13;
be a third day wLon you will need to&#13;
be Christians, and that will be the last&#13;
day of your life. I do not know where'&#13;
you will spend i t Perhaps in your&#13;
house, or more probably in « rail car&#13;
or a steamer or the strange hotel. I&#13;
•ee you on your last commercial errand.&#13;
You have bidden good-by to the&#13;
family at home for the last time The&#13;
train of your earthly extatenoe ia&#13;
neaping the depot of t*e grave, Tka&#13;
brakea are falling. Tht bell rings at&#13;
the termiaua. The train stops. Ah&#13;
out for eternity. Bhow r o w ticket&#13;
BOW tor getting into the gate of tho&#13;
«W«tag city—the red tick*&#13;
the Wood ot the LAM*.&#13;
than to express. Many a time&#13;
husband has had to rub my back to&#13;
pet up the circulation, before I was&#13;
able to pet on my feet My family prevailed&#13;
on me to try DoariY "^&#13;
Pills, but a* I had ctfced dezeu^ of i&#13;
very little^&#13;
ing relief. They -^eYSi&amp;cd* in&#13;
vice a-ridi*Uie tall of J897 boxes. Ifi^B^4HRi&#13;
was&#13;
in years, i The pam in my back left,&#13;
I slept well at mjzrbt, I conld do ray&#13;
housework as well as I ever cofcld, and&#13;
I give the entire credit to Dpun's Kidney&#13;
Pills. I make thiis statement so&#13;
that e^har women who f.ttffer to Isutfered&#13;
my be In a position to know&#13;
what to use if they wish to pqt HS tf,&#13;
that too prevalent disease, kidnoy&#13;
complaint," . . • -jf'.&#13;
:&#13;
Price 50 temMi&amp;fAlfr Fost&#13;
Buflujo. N. Y. -Sow A*r©Dts f6r thV&#13;
member the nama Doaa's and take mo&#13;
and ^et a 15c. package of&#13;
It takes&#13;
fee at f the cost&#13;
Made from pure ins ft&#13;
health-&#13;
•14&#13;
SP^BIPP^&#13;
- What does your mirror sty?&#13;
Does it tell you of some little&#13;
streaks of gray? Are you&#13;
pleased? Do your friends of&#13;
the same age show this loss&#13;
of power also?&#13;
Just remember that gray&#13;
hair never becomes darker&#13;
without help, while dark hair&#13;
rapidly becomes gray when&#13;
once the change begins.&#13;
will bring back to your hair&#13;
the color of youth. It never&#13;
fails. It is just as sure as&#13;
that heat melts snow, or that&#13;
water quenches fire. ^&#13;
It cleanses the scalp also;&#13;
and prevents the formation dt&#13;
dandruff. It feeds and noup&#13;
ishes the bulbs of the hair&#13;
making them produce a luxuriant&#13;
growth. It stops^the&#13;
hair from falling out and^ives&#13;
a fine soft finish to the hair'&#13;
as well.&#13;
We bare m book on th« Hair and&#13;
Scalp which you may obtain In*&#13;
upon request.&#13;
If you do not obtain all the benefits&#13;
yoa expected from the use of the&#13;
Vigor, write th« Doctor uftut it.&#13;
• d d r e u , DR. J. &lt;S AVER.&#13;
Ixmelt, MASS.&#13;
DOYOU&#13;
D.ONT DELAY&#13;
TAKE&#13;
BALSAM&#13;
1 • Own Colds, Coughs. S«re Tfcroit, CrMip. In-&#13;
I Vuenza. WhoopmftCdbflh, Bronchitis and Asthma.&#13;
' AMrtaii cure for Consumption in .first stages,&#13;
' sad a sure relief in advanced atMts. Use at once.&#13;
/ Von trill see the excellent effect after takhif the&#13;
L «rst dose. Sold by (iealera everywhere, Urge&#13;
kettles 25 cents and 60 cents.&#13;
Vhcs Answering fttveftlsenettta KisdJf&#13;
: Mcatioi Tats raoer.&#13;
PATENT «» r*wrmr&lt;, search free*&#13;
Collamer * Co. SS45 F st.,Tr*atL D.C.&#13;
WAXTED-Casc of bad nealtn ttiat IM-P-A-&gt;T 6&#13;
."•will not benefit, l-*nd 5 rent* to Kipane Chemical&#13;
'Co., New York, for K) aaniplc* and 1,000 testimonials.&#13;
Relief at Last satPisrfaieisde dla tdwi etsh aosu ssaanfde,* a ol-f ways reliable and without&#13;
Freaea&#13;
itha Fmlafglt oaal tobpo lxa Bwltutea, Bed. Iaslst on having tbs «eaala«;&#13;
Wast**," malted PHSI1* peat* tea)**&#13;
testtaoolals sadpsTtHmUrs. Add:&#13;
uXmat&#13;
Haonlato a&#13;
co.. M I&#13;
&gt;esJi t t . ICY:&#13;
CUE TSmtELFf&#13;
Vm B4f • for uatrtvnl&#13;
vteotee\nMaV tSeftsUUMAttOHsV trrttatkew or ttloaratias*&#13;
e* nueoss aMssbraaea.&#13;
rateless, aad aot&#13;
HT&#13;
CHEAP FARMS N YOIWMT A H K f&#13;
STORY OF TWO DEATHS&#13;
ieoM oa long time and «s*y p y . a t U e&#13;
5*oh mar. ( omo «atf • • « tad or wAt*&gt;*. T H E&#13;
M MOSS STATE DANK, S t e l l a *&#13;
THE TRUMAN MOSS ESTATE.&#13;
CroswoHSanllacCo,&#13;
li»wertag &amp;avertite»cstt' Kitty&#13;
v HutJra ffch fastr.&#13;
One dull November afternoon, John&#13;
Gerrard, the weil knowu flnancier, was&#13;
Lhwwn into the handsome private ofitce&#13;
or Nathaniel Nugent, the even better&#13;
Lnown raiHionalre company promoter.&#13;
Nugent rose with extended hand—a&#13;
bland smile appearing on his usually&#13;
Impassive features, which remained&#13;
there till the clerk withdrew. Then it&#13;
disappeared with the swiftness of a&#13;
magic-lantern slide, leaving his face&#13;
rigid and ghastly.&#13;
"Gc-rrard, for God's sake, don't tell&#13;
me you must have that money back&#13;
now!"&#13;
"That's just what I have to tell you&#13;
Nugent, and sorry I am to do it, but I&#13;
was hard hit over Kaffirs, and this new&#13;
scare has made matters worse than&#13;
ever."&#13;
"Then I'm a ruined man."&#13;
There was dead silence in the ofUce&#13;
for a few moments. A look of despair&#13;
crept over NugenL's face, and his guest&#13;
locked almost as ill at ease. Suddenly&#13;
steps were heard oh the stairs.&#13;
"That's Lord Mount Dacre, one of&#13;
our directors. He half suspects some&#13;
thing already, and if he sees you here&#13;
he will guess at once what you have&#13;
come about."&#13;
"What can I do? Is there another&#13;
way out?"&#13;
"No—but stay! Step into that cup&#13;
board. He won't be here many min&#13;
utes."&#13;
Hastily pushing Gerrard into a large&#13;
cupboard, Nugent locked the door, and&#13;
turned smilingly to greet another un&#13;
welcome guest.&#13;
As Lord Mount Dacre discussed the&#13;
business of the company in which they&#13;
were mutually concerned, his hearer&#13;
was on tenter hooks, for there was a&#13;
slight noise in the cupboard.&#13;
"Dear me, I didn't know you had another&#13;
room adjoining. I hope we can&#13;
not be overheard."&#13;
"No, no) it's merely a cupboard,"&#13;
said Nugent, and he* got rid cf his visitor&#13;
as quickly as possible, and then&#13;
went to set Gerrard free.&#13;
The atmosphere of the cupboard&#13;
seemed unusually oppressive.&#13;
"Come out—he's gone. Why, Gerrard,&#13;
where are you?" demanded he, as&#13;
nothing stirred.&#13;
Then his hand touched another hand&#13;
which was cold and lifeless.&#13;
"My God—he's dead!"&#13;
• * •&#13;
When Nugent had partially recovered&#13;
from the shock which this discovery&#13;
gave him, he found that the accidental&#13;
closing of a ventilator had&#13;
of th« c&#13;
Then he called in Wells, the clerk&#13;
who had shown Gerrard into the office.&#13;
Wells, formerly a schoolfellow&#13;
of Nugent's, twenty years his head&#13;
clerk, was the one man in London&#13;
from whom the great company promoter&#13;
had no secrets.&#13;
"Now, Wells, what is to be done?&#13;
You must think, for I'm nearly past it.&#13;
The fact of Gerrard's having come to&#13;
**THB MEN CARRIED A MYSTERIOUS&#13;
BURDEN."&#13;
my office will be enough to ruin me,&#13;
for there arc rumors out in the city&#13;
already about our dealings, and, besides&#13;
that, his executors will demand&#13;
repayment of all the money I owe him.&#13;
In anj case I'm ruined now."&#13;
"Who knows that he came here excepting&#13;
ourselves?"&#13;
"Did nobody see you let him In?"&#13;
"No, he came in by the side door,&#13;
I tJwayy* attend to mysyelLL"&#13;
"But might not some one in the&#13;
street have seen him coming in?"&#13;
"Impossible in a fog like this, sir."&#13;
"Why, no—I suppose not—then you&#13;
mean to suggest—"&#13;
T h a t we search the body—see if by&#13;
luck fee aaa your papers on him—&#13;
if be hat, burn them, and—put the&#13;
body into the river."&#13;
"But—tnis is terrible—and it&#13;
amounts to a fraud."&#13;
"Why should you look at it like&#13;
tnat, stir? You can repay the money&#13;
to hto friends anonymously when&#13;
things mend, and you said this morning&#13;
everything would go right if only&#13;
you could keep the money another six&#13;
montfas."&#13;
True—I h*te tht idea, Wells, but I&#13;
don't aee what else I*m to do, and—&#13;
111. risk'If&#13;
0 * 0&#13;
Some tamrs later two froped&#13;
tlielr way through the fos which Lad&#13;
driven nearly everybody indoors. The&#13;
uiea carried-some mysterious burden,&#13;
which at any other time would have&#13;
provoked ncme policeman's curloaity,&#13;
tut touight, when a man could hardly&#13;
spc hlK hand before him, even under&#13;
the street lamps, the men and their&#13;
burden passed unchallenged.&#13;
"We're nearly at the wharf, sir,&#13;
now," whispered* Wells as the noise of&#13;
the sirens grew every moment more&#13;
distinct. "Keep your courage up—another&#13;
few steps and we're safe—my&#13;
God!—"&#13;
As he uttered this exclamation Well3&#13;
fell over the edge of the wharf, dragging&#13;
with him the body of Gerrard.&#13;
• • *&#13;
After desperate but vain attempts at&#13;
rescue, Nugent left the wharf, well&#13;
nigh demented by the horror of the&#13;
situation.&#13;
He had sufficient self-control, however,&#13;
to be silent as to what had occurred,&#13;
and when the bodies of the two&#13;
men were found, far apart in the river,&#13;
no one connected the death of the&#13;
great flnancier with that of the obscure&#13;
clerk.&#13;
To the surprise of everybody Mr. Gerrard&#13;
left far less wealth than hat', been&#13;
expected, though six months later lais&#13;
heirs received a large sum from an unknown&#13;
source.&#13;
The Nugent companies are as prosperous&#13;
now as ever, and their promoter&#13;
is a baronet, but few men who know&#13;
him would care to change places with&#13;
the great speculator, for, since the day&#13;
when his clerk was drowned, Nugent&#13;
has teen an altered man. Those who&#13;
note his bowed head and brooding eyes&#13;
attribute this startling change to the&#13;
effect of "A City Scare."—Ally Sloper,&#13;
WOMAN'S BASE INGRATITUDE.&#13;
She Stile the Poor Man's Frnit Into&#13;
tlio Itargaln.&#13;
It was only a pantomime as the&#13;
neighbors saw it, but it was easily&#13;
understood, and it represented a case&#13;
of the basest ingratitude and inconsistency&#13;
on the woman's part, they&#13;
agreed, says the New Ycrk Times. I f&#13;
was last Tuesday afterroon, when the&#13;
clouds appeared to be suddenly condensed&#13;
and were spilling themselves&#13;
upon the earth In a most uncomfortable&#13;
and penetrating fashion. Notwithstanding&#13;
this, two fruit peddlers,&#13;
young men, not much more than boys,&#13;
were walking along the street calling&#13;
out their wares—bananas—which were&#13;
getting a thorough drenching In the&#13;
wagon, which a melancholy horse was&#13;
drawing down the street after them.&#13;
the different houses along the street,&#13;
wondering if the rain would ever cease,&#13;
and watching the peddlers with a lazy&#13;
interest. Suddenly this became intensified,&#13;
for one of the men did a&#13;
most unusual thing; he suddenly raised&#13;
the :mall bunch of fruit he had in&#13;
his hand and threw it swiftly into the&#13;
yard of the house before which he was&#13;
passing. That was a very strang thing&#13;
to do. Was he crazy? No, for the&#13;
reason of the throw could be seen&#13;
when an enormous gray rat appeared&#13;
in view and ran lazily through the&#13;
fence into the next yard and disappeared.&#13;
The animal had not been hit,&#13;
certainly, and why did not the man go&#13;
into the yard and pick up his bananas?&#13;
Instead cf this a woman came to the&#13;
basement door of the house, spoke to&#13;
the man, was apparently not satisfied,&#13;
came further out in the rain to&#13;
the gate, and there harangued him vehemently.&#13;
If she wished him to do&#13;
anything it was evident, from his attitude,&#13;
that he had no intention of&#13;
complying. The wom*n looked anxiously&#13;
up and down the street. Something&#13;
must be very wrong; she was&#13;
looking for a policeman. There was&#13;
none in sight, and she returned to the&#13;
house, while the young man jumped&#13;
hurriedly into the wagon and the melancholy&#13;
looking horse took them quietly&#13;
out of view. Not five minutes later&#13;
the woman appeared again, this time&#13;
in street dress, and, with a determined&#13;
look on her face, walked hurriedly&#13;
down the street. Then, as the curious&#13;
watchers were able to turn their attention&#13;
to the house, they saw the&#13;
basement window open, a hand was&#13;
put out and the bunch of bananas,&#13;
which had apparently been the cause&#13;
of the trouble, was taken inside. The&#13;
real trouble could be seen then, for&#13;
in the glass window pane was a big&#13;
break; the bananas had not hit the&#13;
rat, but they had hit the window.&#13;
"And that woman has gone to have&#13;
those poor men arrested," exclaimed&#13;
the woman across the street indignantly.&#13;
"If a big rat like that had come&#13;
within a half a mile of my house and&#13;
that man had tried to drive it away.&#13;
I should have had him brought in to&#13;
have a hot cup of coffee and bought all&#13;
his bananas I never thought that&#13;
woman was much, and now I know i t&#13;
Stole the poor man's fruit, too!"&#13;
Prior to 1859 Virginia .was the greatest&#13;
tobacco-producing state of America,&#13;
the annual yielfr being 122,000,000&#13;
pounds. The present yield of Virginia&#13;
s approximately 5t),0W,t)00 pounds per&#13;
annum. Since the civil war Kentucky&#13;
has taken first place in tobacco, yielding&#13;
annually 222,600,000 pounds.&#13;
IN CANADA'S FREE HOMESTEAD&#13;
LANDS.&#13;
Wetaskiwin, Alta., April 6tb&gt;&#13;
W. P. McCreary, Oovt. Immigration&#13;
Commissioner Winnipeg. Dear Sir:—&#13;
I like the country very muca so far;&#13;
have seen a great number of farmers&#13;
from the states and every one seen&#13;
so far says they have done well and&#13;
like it here far better than where they&#13;
came from, and all claim it to be the&#13;
best country for a poor man that they&#13;
were ever in, and with good crops this&#13;
season I predict a great rush. There&#13;
are some nice claims to be had yet, but&#13;
will not last the summer through. I&#13;
do not find it any colder thaw in Iowa&#13;
and am feeling much better than when&#13;
I ,left thero March 1st. I think this a&#13;
great country for those who are suffering&#13;
with throat and lung troubles.&#13;
I have seen men that had as high as&#13;
51% bushels wheat per acre aud near&#13;
100 bushels oats, but they *veigh from&#13;
45 to 51 pounds per bushel, but the&#13;
general run is 25 to 50 wheat, 50 to&#13;
75 oats, and stock looking fine; some&#13;
cattle running out were nearly In market&#13;
flesh. I expect to return to the&#13;
states late this fail for stock, etc.; will&#13;
write you when I want to go. Thanking&#13;
you all for past favors, I remain,&#13;
most respectfully yours,&#13;
(Signed) Dr. 1). E. StrevelL&#13;
If there is auythfnjf jrrecner than un emerald&#13;
it is the young man who presents one to another&#13;
fellow's best girl.&#13;
There is undoubtedly such a thin? as sympathetic&#13;
suffering. Many u poor man suffers if&#13;
his wife 1^ out of sorts.&#13;
There are times when even the philosopt«:r Is&#13;
unable to derive nay real comfort from his philosophy.&#13;
TUM0H EXPELLED.&#13;
Unqualified Success of Lydla B,i&#13;
Pinkham'B Vegetable Compound*&#13;
prescriptions from refutable physicians, as&#13;
damage they will do is ten fold lo the good ;&#13;
Beware of Olutments for Catarrh that&#13;
Contain Mercury,&#13;
as mercury will surely destro/ the sense of&#13;
smell and completely derange the whole system&#13;
when entering it through the mucous surfaces.&#13;
Such articles should never be used except on&#13;
tho&#13;
you&#13;
can possibly derive from tbem. Hall's Cutarrh&#13;
Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney &amp; Co., Toledo,&#13;
O.t contains no mercury, and is taken internally,&#13;
acting directly upon the blood and&#13;
mucous surfaces of the system. In buying Hall's&#13;
Catarrh Cure be sure you net the genuine. It is&#13;
taken internally, and made iu Toledo, Ohio, by&#13;
P. J. Cheney &amp; Co. Testimonials free.&#13;
t Sold by Druggists, price 75c-. per bottle.&#13;
Hall's Family Pills are the best.&#13;
When a choir singer's salary is raised It cn-&#13;
Bbles him to lift up his voice in songs of praise.&#13;
The wise girl who wants to catch a husbani&#13;
always runs the other way.&#13;
for Women a* to the Care&#13;
of Dainty Underwear.&#13;
It is one thing to have pretty belongings,&#13;
and another to keep them so. uf&#13;
nothing can this be more truly said than&#13;
of woman's underwear, so generally&#13;
ruined in washing with strong, impure&#13;
soap, and by hard ruhbinp. Silk and&#13;
toooien underwear should never be washed&#13;
on a cloudy day. When ready to do the&#13;
work, half fill a tub with warm water,&#13;
In which dissolve a fourth cf a bar of&#13;
Ivory soap, anil wash the articles&#13;
through it with the hands, rinse in warm&#13;
water and squeeze, but do not wring.&#13;
Hanp on the line and press with a hot&#13;
Iron while damp.&#13;
ELIZA R. PARKER.&#13;
A vacation makes some people so lazy they&#13;
don't cure if they never have to work a i i&#13;
Health for Ten Cents.&#13;
Cancar«ta make bowels and kidneys act&#13;
natr-rally. destroy microbes, cure headache,&#13;
biliiousnesi aud constipation. All druggists.&#13;
Time is u\oney: that's why the man who owes&#13;
you a little bill promises to pay it in time.&#13;
TO CURB A COLD IN ONE DAY&#13;
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. AH&#13;
druggists refund the money if it fails to cure.&#13;
'•5c. The genuine has L. 11 Q. on each tablet.&#13;
AU flesh may be grass, but the lawn mower&#13;
will never supplant the carving knife.&#13;
Mrs. ELIZABETH WJIEELOCK, Magnolia,&#13;
Iowa, in the following letter describes&#13;
her recovery from a very critical&#13;
condition:&#13;
" DEAR MRS. PIXKIIAM:—I have been,&#13;
taking your Vegetable Compound, and!&#13;
am now ready to sound&#13;
its praises. I t&#13;
has done wonders&#13;
for me in;&#13;
relieving me&#13;
of a tumor. : 44 My health,&#13;
has been poop&#13;
for three years.&#13;
Chango of lifo'&#13;
was working^&#13;
upon me. ii&#13;
was very:&#13;
much bloated:&#13;
and svas a bur-:&#13;
den to myself. Was troubled with,&#13;
smothering spells, also palpitation of;&#13;
the heart and that bearing-down feeling,&#13;
and could not be on my feet much.&#13;
'"I was growing worse all the time,:&#13;
until I tools your medicine.&#13;
•'After taking three boxes of Lydia.&#13;
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound:&#13;
Lozenges, the tumor passed from me.&#13;
"My health has been better ever;&#13;
since, can now walk quite a distance'&#13;
and am troubled no more with palpitation&#13;
of the heart or bloating. I recommend&#13;
your medicine to all sufferers&#13;
from female troubles."'&#13;
It is hardly reasonable to suppose&#13;
that any one can doubt the efficiency&#13;
of Mrs. Pinkham's methods and medi-.&#13;
cine in the face of the tremendous vol- t ume of testimony.&#13;
* E W DISCOVERY; fiTM&#13;
^ 9 quk-lc relief and cure* worst&#13;
ca«es. Book of temlmoniaU and l O d a y * ' t r e a t -&#13;
m e n t F r e e . Dr. II.p.UBXKV8SO5t&gt;, B«i B, AlUaU. Oa.&#13;
IEU-ROT-1 CO TEA To Introduce oar Tea.&#13;
we will inal! one full N\\ size package on receipt of 4 two-cent&#13;
Guaranteed to care Constipation and Headache.&#13;
A Nerve Tonic. 25r. it package. JS'curuUco Medicine&#13;
Co.. HorcellavIIIe. N. VGet&#13;
your Pension&#13;
PENSIONSDOUBLE QUICK Write CAPT. O'PARRELL, Pension Agent,&#13;
1423 New York Avenue. WASHINGTON. D . C&#13;
A GOOD GARDEN Is a pleasure and a profit Gregory'* seed book directs&#13;
a rlpbt beginning. Gregory's Seed Insure the&#13;
moat snccetatul ending, (jet the book now It'* free.&#13;
JAMES J. H. GREGORY &amp; SON. Marb.'ebead. Mass.&#13;
TO rat^r i/sen&#13;
write&#13;
DirecT to&#13;
73 BOND S T&#13;
PITS P*Mnn»entTjrCui«:u.?fo£ita ornerronscestarttf&#13;
a n t day's o*o of Dr. Kline'a Ore* t Nenre Restorer.&#13;
Send for F R E E S2.OO trial bottle «nd trettiwv&#13;
Da. &amp;. U. K U X K . Ltd.. 931 Arch St., Philfcdelpiu*. Pa.&#13;
When some men reach the top tlicy help to&#13;
Bet off the surrounding vacancy.&#13;
Carter's Ext. Sasmrt Weed&#13;
Will cure a cold in one nlfrlit; will cure sore&#13;
throat i» a few hours. Acts quick. Sure cure&#13;
for Catarrh Iu every 2jc bottle.&#13;
HARD&#13;
WHEAT&#13;
Is a variety which brings from 5 to 7 cents per&#13;
bushel more than any other variety grown.&#13;
It is on the wheat fields of Western Canada&#13;
that such a prade is grown, and a farm of ICO&#13;
acres is given free to every bonafide set&#13;
tier. For particulars apply to the Department&#13;
of the Interior. Ottawa, Canada, or to&#13;
M V. Mrlnnes, No. 1 Merrill Block, Detroit,&#13;
Mich.: James Grieve. Mt. Pleasant, Mich,, or&#13;
D. L. Caven, Bad Arc, Mich.&#13;
A man is always anxious to help another it he&#13;
lees a chance to help himself. FOR 14 CENTS&#13;
Mr*. WlnnIoWa S o o t h i n g S y r u p&#13;
Tor children teething .softens ttoe guns.reant-c* infl&#13;
nation, ailayi pain, euros wind oolic. Si cents» bottle.&#13;
wiah to gala tbia year SOOXOO&#13;
sew customers, aod hano* offer&#13;
1 Pkg. l i D*7 Kad iab, l c&#13;
- • abbace. Mo&#13;
Bae? 100&#13;
*1 PklgP.k KjMarlifD RaijpKe aCdaibabba.ge, 1 M* Karlteat Red Bee?&#13;
The majority may rule ix the minority isn't&#13;
made up of women. |&#13;
Piso'sCure for Consumption has saved me&#13;
large doctor bills.—C. L. Baker, «£8 Kegent&#13;
Sq., Philadelphia, Pa., Dec. 8. 1&amp;&#13;
An underdone steak is better than a steak&#13;
done over.&#13;
"There are no cross babies or sick babies in&#13;
families tfcat use Brown's Teething Cordial"&#13;
BaixerVBe*' Lettace,&#13;
California Fir Tomato,&#13;
KuLrlMniMrOBioa. MM&#13;
BrJlfiaat Flower 8—da, ISc&#13;
lao&#13;
•Bbaolwl yMoup kfrg«a«., wtoogrethth feUr »w,with* w©Uwl go*pwen* *P••la•*n£*« aCn dth iBs«MadC Cteaet a*la7nt*o p t W t e f t t d d&#13;
When winter dies spring will furnish the V#. N. U.— DETROIT— NQ. 8—1&#13;
flowers.&#13;
Between two erlls some men choose both.&#13;
Stuffing a turkey is culinary taxidermy.&#13;
Vies Affswtriftf Mtertiseaeits&#13;
Heitk* Tab rapes;&#13;
FROM SUDDEN WEATHER CHANGES&#13;
and Stifimt&#13;
ST. JACOBS OIL Z7X£2!2&#13;
"A HANDFUL OF DIRT MAY BB A HOUSEFUL&#13;
OF SHAME." CLEAN HOUSE WITH SAPOLIO&#13;
FARMS.&#13;
A twantifaUy illustrated paper called&#13;
"The G x n BeHM is pobUahed every&#13;
. a (jttf&amp;ttty of utter*&#13;
i about the farm bade&#13;
of tha Mississippi River. Pictttvse&#13;
fare*&#13;
who neat&#13;
published. Send as&#13;
eouri aod Nebraska, Penosal&#13;
from the Eaat yean ago. The htudeceneel&#13;
far a year's eabacriptioa to THE CORN BELT*&#13;
\-:&amp;k&#13;
•fY«r&#13;
m f^tim . .x; ;• ,,--f.//?.,&#13;
fc^&#13;
|i-"'&gt;&#13;
1 ,-&gt;;&#13;
Ttf'.&#13;
fr&#13;
•II&#13;
I:&#13;
i.&#13;
1 S T "&#13;
ANDER30N.&#13;
G. Dinkle has moved into the&#13;
"Win. Chambers houRe.&#13;
Jas. Birnie made a flying trip&#13;
to Fnadilla on Fridaylasfc&#13;
Fred Duvkee Sundayed with&#13;
LeBter Williams in Unadilla.&#13;
Miss Jennie spent last week at&#13;
the home of her Uncle, A. G.&#13;
„ Wilson.&#13;
E. Burden, who was very sick&#13;
for the past week with apoplexy,&#13;
is much better.&#13;
Chas. Bullis and wife, of Unad&#13;
ilia, visited in this vicinity the&#13;
first of last week.&#13;
Mrs. Chas. Hoff is the guest of&#13;
her daughter, Minnie, and other&#13;
relation in Lansing.&#13;
Fred Whithead has purshased a&#13;
lot of W. A. Sprout and is building&#13;
a house upon it&#13;
Chae. Stephenson is running a&#13;
barber chair in the store and so&#13;
far has had excellent trade.&#13;
Mr. Eoy of this place was called&#13;
to the bed side of his mother&#13;
,near Port Hm on one day last&#13;
week.&#13;
Alfred Morgan, who has been&#13;
in business at Byron for the past&#13;
two years, has returned with his&#13;
family and will work the Burgess&#13;
jarra.&#13;
The Ladies' Aid society met at&#13;
the home of Eugene Smith on&#13;
Feb. 22, but owing to the poor&#13;
roads and weather there was a&#13;
em allvattendance.&#13;
W. L. Keusch, formerly of this&#13;
place but now of Munith, shook&#13;
hands with his many friends here&#13;
on Friday and made known his&#13;
intentions of returning in the&#13;
spring and&#13;
EAST MARION.&#13;
M. F. Pierce is on the&#13;
sick list&#13;
Mr. D. Bennett and wife were&#13;
at Mr. Abbotts on Monday.&#13;
Earnest Darrow, of Pinckney,&#13;
is working for N. W. Pierce.&#13;
Mrs. Elliot and eon, Harold,&#13;
are getting better of an attack of&#13;
La Grippe.&#13;
Only four iucludiug the minister&#13;
ventured to church last Sunday&#13;
moruing.&#13;
Bert Gorton has bought a farm&#13;
near Howell and will settle on it&#13;
the near future.&#13;
John Bassencihl has rented&#13;
the Ale Carty farm, East of&#13;
Wright's school house, and will&#13;
move there about the first of&#13;
April. *&#13;
A -severe wind, hail, and rain&#13;
storm, accompained with heavy&#13;
thunder, visited this section Sunday&#13;
afternoon upsetting things&#13;
generally. No serious damage&#13;
was done.&#13;
shop here.&#13;
CHAPEL ITEMS&#13;
Mard Warn was in Detroit two&#13;
days last week.&#13;
There are many cases of La&#13;
Grippe in this vicinity.&#13;
Frank Farmington was in&#13;
Stockbringe laat Saturday.&#13;
The first thunder storm of the&#13;
season reached us last Sunday.&#13;
Emma Peacott and Elva Mitchel&#13;
called on Myrta Miller on Sunday&#13;
last&#13;
Otis Pond, of Company E, 34&#13;
tb Begiment, is at Stockbridge&#13;
where he is being treated for&#13;
heart trouble by Dr. Brown.&#13;
The lyceum at the Munsel&#13;
school-house was closed last&#13;
Wednesday evening, March 1st,&#13;
with an entertainment, consisting&#13;
of songs, recitations, and four&#13;
orations by James Stackable,&#13;
Louis Me Clear, Eugene Allison&#13;
and Kirk Van Winkle.&#13;
About thirty friends of Mrs.&#13;
Anna Hoff gave her a surprise&#13;
last Friday evening and presented&#13;
her with a nice willow rocker.&#13;
The Hoff family have lived on the&#13;
Geo. Reason farm about twelve&#13;
years and have done a gocd religious&#13;
work in the chapel and vicinity.&#13;
T^iey are about moving to&#13;
Ann Arbor. To say they are&#13;
leaving many friends here and&#13;
will be greatly misted is expressing&#13;
it in a very mild form.&#13;
SILVER LAKE ITEMS.&#13;
Master Paul Clark rides a new&#13;
tricicle.&#13;
Mrs. Quineiu is under the Dr's.&#13;
care at this writing.&#13;
Sid Thurston sold a jersey cow&#13;
for $50 to parties in Ann Arbor.&#13;
A severe thunder storm with&#13;
high winds visited this place Sunday&#13;
last.&#13;
A call from the same, tells us&#13;
that eirg buyers have started on&#13;
the road again.&#13;
John My res is the possessor of&#13;
a new emery wheel and is doing&#13;
fine Avork with it.&#13;
Do you love your dog well&#13;
enough to pay the dollar tax, was&#13;
the question aiked UH last week&#13;
by a man standing on- our steps.&#13;
"Suro thiny," we do, bat must we&#13;
pay it? It was&#13;
must and Mr.—&#13;
way rejoicing.&#13;
decided that we&#13;
went on his&#13;
WANTED—The Subscription&#13;
due on the DISPATCH.&#13;
PARSHALLVILLE.&#13;
Boewell Lamb is still very ill.&#13;
. lira. Myrtia Cox went to St&#13;
Johns last Saturday to visit relative*&#13;
"&#13;
It is roported that Fred Welsh&#13;
h*s bought the elevator at Fenton&#13;
§md will toon movethere.&#13;
Warren Cornell will have a&#13;
politic motion the 6th of March&#13;
and will move to lUed City aooo&#13;
ASH YOUR&#13;
DOCTOR! Ask your physician this question,&#13;
"What is the one great&#13;
remedy for consumption?*'&#13;
He will answer, "Cod-liver&#13;
oil." Nine out of ten will&#13;
answer the same way.&#13;
Yet when persons have&#13;
consumption they loathe all&#13;
fatty foods, yet fat b necessary&#13;
for their recovery and&#13;
they cannot take plain codliver&#13;
oil. The plain oil disturbs&#13;
the stomach and takes&#13;
away the appetite. The disagreeable&#13;
fishy odor and&#13;
taste make it almost unendurable.&#13;
What b to be done?&#13;
This question was answered&#13;
when we first made&#13;
• SCOTT'S&#13;
EMULSION&#13;
of OKHJVCT Ofl with Hypo.&#13;
Additlonal Local.&#13;
During the storm Sunday, ths chimney&#13;
on H..G. Briggs' farm house was&#13;
blown down.&#13;
Sunday's Tribune contained a picture&#13;
of a oouple of deer trotn Thos.&#13;
Birkett's park near here.&#13;
At the Cong'l church next Bnnday,&#13;
regular morning service conducted by&#13;
the pastor. Union service in the&#13;
evening.&#13;
The young ladies met one evening&#13;
last week and completed the organization&#13;
of a band. We wish them all&#13;
kinds of success.&#13;
Some good bargains in our advertising&#13;
colams this week—avail yourself&#13;
of some of them bat do not fail to&#13;
mention where you daw the advertisement.&#13;
Pop corn parties are the order in&#13;
the neighborhood west of here. One&#13;
waft held last: Saturday evening at the&#13;
home of Dell Hall and one will be&#13;
held this week Saturday evening at&#13;
the home of R. G. Webb.&#13;
The regular meeting of the Loyal&#13;
Guards will be held on Wednesday&#13;
evening of next week, March 8. Let&#13;
the Sir Knights remember that there&#13;
is an assessment. The per capita tax&#13;
should also be paid this month.&#13;
The Longfellow social at the home&#13;
of F. L. Andrews Monday evening&#13;
was attended by a large crowd and&#13;
was a success. The program consisted&#13;
of recitations and songs from Longfelws&#13;
works. Popcorn and peanuts&#13;
were served and all seemed to enjoy&#13;
themselves. The receipts were over&#13;
$6.&#13;
Why would it not be a good plan to&#13;
organize a "Kodak Club'1 in this vicinity?&#13;
Surely there are enough&#13;
amateur photographers in Pinckney&#13;
to form quite a large organization and&#13;
we wish some of uur kodak friends&#13;
would talk over this matter and see&#13;
what can be done. The interesting&#13;
lessons which one would receive, to&#13;
say nothing of the amusement, would&#13;
overcome all the obstacles.&#13;
every law-abiding citisen. •&#13;
Ofooarse "Old Putnam" feels an&#13;
interest in him at be was one of her&#13;
sons and should he be eleoted be will&#13;
not disgrace us. Honesty and fair&#13;
dealing has won for him a name to be&#13;
proud of.&#13;
BraiU'i Poor Island Transportation.&#13;
The facilities for inland transportation&#13;
are so limited in Brazil that the&#13;
Inhabitant! of the ports find it cheaper&#13;
to import grain from NorthAmerica&#13;
than from their owjn farms.&#13;
U ba« beta abowa that,&#13;
acre, water Is capable &gt;f supplying ft&#13;
much greater quantity U nltrogenoop&#13;
food for maa than land can luppty.&#13;
l%e cultivation of water area* U called&#13;
aqulculture, and its product!,' in contradistinction&#13;
to those of agriculture,&#13;
are nsh, crabs, oysters, elamt and other&#13;
edible marine animals. The art and&#13;
Bclence of "marine farming" are attracting&#13;
©special attention in Rhodt&#13;
Island.&#13;
phosphite*. Although that&#13;
was nearly twenty-five years&#13;
ago, y d it stands alone today&#13;
the one great remedy&#13;
for aH affections of the throat&#13;
and km*.&#13;
The tad taste and odor lttvt beta&#13;
takca away, the eti fee* KM beta&#13;
psrfy darted, am) the n o * fen*&#13;
to it tartly*&#13;
OBITUARYOn&#13;
the 13th day of February 1899&#13;
at 10 o'clock a. m , the funeral services&#13;
of Mrs. Jobn Sigler were held at their&#13;
home in the village of Leslie, attended&#13;
by the relatives and warm personal&#13;
friends of the family.&#13;
As her former home had previously&#13;
been in Pinckney and many of the&#13;
friends still reside here, her remains&#13;
were brought to this place to be laid&#13;
away to rest with others beloved who&#13;
have gone before.&#13;
Mrs. Sigler was born in Wheeler,&#13;
Stnben Co, N. Y , Oct. 5,1824. When&#13;
a child she came to Michigan and settled&#13;
in Pinckney, Livingston Co. She&#13;
jras married to John Sigl r Jan. 6,&#13;
1841. Seven children were born to&#13;
them, five daughters and two sons.&#13;
Twenty-six years ago they moved to&#13;
Leslie where they have since enntinued^&#13;
to live.&#13;
Mrs. Sigler has been in poor health&#13;
for several years, but in no apparent&#13;
danger until stricken with lajrrippe,&#13;
when, on the 10th day of February,&#13;
abe suddenly expired. Hence has&#13;
passed~frbm onr midst one of the old&#13;
landmarks of tbe early pioneer life of&#13;
our state. Uniting her strength with&#13;
her husband she bravely and cheerfully&#13;
bore the hardships incident to a&#13;
lite of that period.&#13;
8be was always cheerful and bright,&#13;
preservin&#13;
reasonable&#13;
HORSE-SHOEING V&#13;
GENERAL REPAIR&#13;
Contracted feet are biel&#13;
and horsesdo not interfere when'&#13;
I do the work. Call and give&#13;
me a trial. Onoop oon Mil&#13;
north of Opera House.&#13;
street&#13;
ALBERT 1. BROWN.&#13;
Busv Bee Hive • • /&#13;
The opening time for new goods has arrived and we are busy at the&#13;
Bive doing this interesting work. Spring merchandise never looked&#13;
more inviting and prices more tempting to purchasers than the line*&#13;
of goods now being unpacked.&#13;
The new wash good a, such as ginghams, percales, new prints and&#13;
the like, are marvels of beauty, while the prices at which we are going&#13;
to sell them at, are marvels of cheapness.&#13;
The new spring embroideries—they are pronounced by all lookers&#13;
as the sweetest, the daintest, the most attractive lot of edgings and&#13;
insertions that ever came to Jackson.&#13;
The same is true of spring laces. A line of beautiful lace to sell&#13;
at 5c a yard, contains goods such as previous seasons would have&#13;
been considered good value at 15c.&#13;
Our buyers have been unusually fortunate for this spring in seouing&#13;
choice, exquisite lines of goods at the very lowest prices. This is&#13;
a growing store and the manufacturers who have the best bargain*&#13;
to offer seek out the largest and the most progressive store of a town&#13;
to place their best offerings with. That explains why we are able to&#13;
rippiinir with laoffbter, wise in NOB- J o f f e r ^me kinds of merchandise at prices which other stores do not&#13;
Ntt cut in t « c « fafce a * «jrt&#13;
JheptedL Nh*«**ft«csji&#13;
take SCOTTS CMUUJON md 4-&#13;
#* it TluaV why et&#13;
oi eariy&#13;
ah, hat t * » and don. . i l l co»ti«a.&#13;
to descend in blessing upon her friends&#13;
and family. The brightness of such&#13;
a life cannot be eclipsed by the shadow&#13;
of death. In her passing 9he ha^&#13;
only made the way to heaven more&#13;
glorious,&#13;
All EXCELLENT CHOICE.&#13;
c«*rt and jrotiy praise*&#13;
We are glad to inform onr readers&#13;
that at the democratic convention held&#13;
in Owosee Tuesday, W. P. Van Win&#13;
kle, of flowell was tbe nnaaimous&#13;
eboiee of tbe delegates for Judge of&#13;
i tbe 81st Judicial Circuit Mo better&#13;
obotoe ootid have been made, and&#13;
here is beptaf for ft vicfc.y i i the&#13;
He it OM of tbe'&#13;
kmjm i t tbe state aadi&#13;
buyer is now in New York; also onr&#13;
Tbe former writes: "The weather has been something awfnL&#13;
have been hard at work from morning, till night and we shall have&#13;
the fiuest and choicest line of dress goods and silks to show that ever&#13;
came to Jackson. Mr. Ha#ae is equally enthused over his carpet&#13;
purchases and says he has never bought snob desirable goods at such&#13;
low prices before."&#13;
In every department our buyers and clerks are full of just thig&#13;
T • 1 P&#13;
B ° o v n jo** &amp;* v e r 7&#13;
ftt&#13;
the beet manufactnrers have produced&#13;
B a B 7&#13;
(&#13;
L. H. FIELD.&#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>March 02, 1899 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1899-03-02</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 XVII. PINCKNEY , LIVINGSTO N CO., MICH. , THURSDAY , MARC H 9, 1899. No . 10,&#13;
Will put those Magazine s into&#13;
fine shape for preserving, and&#13;
at a reasonabl e price. Call&#13;
see what we can do for you.&#13;
HERE WE ARE&#13;
AGAIN AT THE FRONT&#13;
Y? G&#13;
Because we are makin g prices on all kinds&#13;
of Furniture , Window Shades , etc., tha t will&#13;
pay you to investigate before buying. We&#13;
shall endeavo r to move more Furnitur e thi s&#13;
season tha n ever before, hopin g to be rewarded&#13;
by more sales with a less margin&#13;
which mean s more profit to us. N o troubl e&#13;
to show goods. If you thin k of any piece of&#13;
Furnitur e you may need, it will pay you well&#13;
to come" Xo our ^tOTe~befofe JB4iying^__Keeg_ai i&#13;
eye on thi s space for next week&#13;
Gh A. 8IOLER ,&#13;
LOCAL NEWS.&#13;
CARPET S&#13;
I wish to say a little to you abou t carpets .&#13;
I have a full line of samples of all new spring&#13;
Pattern s in Ingrai n Carpet s in Cotto n an d&#13;
Union s and Cotto n Chai n and all wools,&#13;
prices rangin g from 30 to 75c per yd. You&#13;
are invited to call and look the m over.&#13;
I have no mone y tied up in carpet s so can&#13;
afford to make the prices cheap .&#13;
\ 4&#13;
\&lt;&#13;
I have lots of New Shoes—can&#13;
fit and suit you all in qualit y and price.&#13;
Every thin g left in old stock&#13;
will be closed out as I will no t have any old&#13;
stock in this store,&#13;
My DR Y GOOD S STOC K is&#13;
nea t and new and prices will please you.&#13;
Specials for Saturday, Mar. II:&#13;
5 fb Craekers , for 25c&#13;
XXXX Coffee, for 9c&#13;
2 bars, Blue Lable&#13;
Ta r Soap,&#13;
CASH for all GOODS .&#13;
for 5c&#13;
AD. \JK&#13;
F . 0. Jackson has enlarge d bis adv.&#13;
space for tLU week.&#13;
E. W. Kenned y will erect a large&#13;
barn th e conoint r season.&#13;
The boys *njoyn«i a &gt;oupl e of boor s&#13;
in th e roller skatin g rink on Saturday .&#13;
The Mario n Atheniu m meet s at t^he&#13;
hom e of ii. M. tilen a ttie 21th of this&#13;
month .&#13;
H. i). Griev e ha* been suffering,&#13;
the pa&gt;t week, fjoin an attac k of th e&#13;
quinsy.&#13;
J . L. Roac h buHsold his house and&#13;
lot at Anderso n ro Mrs. J. E. Dnrke e&#13;
and be will move to this place.&#13;
Will whoever borrowed my quiltin g&#13;
frames pleane retur n them as I desire&#13;
to u&gt;e them . MRS . H. G. BBIGGS .&#13;
Teeple &amp; Cad well have a chang e of&#13;
adv this week—changed from page 1&#13;
to 4, top column , next pur e readin g&#13;
matter .&#13;
G. A. Sigltr has secured a space in&#13;
the DISPATC H for thre e month s and&#13;
those desirin g furnitur e will do well&#13;
to watch his space.&#13;
Very few attende d churc h services&#13;
Sunda y mornin g on accoun t of th e&#13;
weather . A fair congregatio n were out&#13;
in th e evenin g however.&#13;
Will Mulntyr e took his books and&#13;
starte d to school Monday . Goo d for&#13;
yon Will, stick to it and you will&#13;
never regret it. W9 admir e your&#13;
pluck .&#13;
The meetin g of th e Putna m and&#13;
Hambur g Farmers ' club will be postpone&#13;
d unti l April 1st, on accoun t of&#13;
tbe caucuse s on the day of th e regular&#13;
meeting .&#13;
Th e churc h workers will bold th*Mr&#13;
regular ter at th e hom e of Mrs. F A .&#13;
&amp;ig!exiU!_Wednesday of next&#13;
Our store is nicely decorate d no\ y&#13;
and we feel like asking our man y old&#13;
friends and also new ones to call and&#13;
see how we look. We aim to please&#13;
in qualit y and price on everythin g&#13;
in our line—Books, Stationery ,&#13;
Toilet Articles, Etc .&#13;
Pur e Drug s a specialty.&#13;
F. A. SIGLER&#13;
Marc h 15. All are cordiall y invited&#13;
to attend .&#13;
A lectur e by Rev. E. B. Allen on&#13;
tbe subject "A Talk With th e foil rs"&#13;
is tbe next numbe r on th e lectur '&#13;
course whh h occur s on Monda y even&#13;
ing, Marc h 27. '&#13;
Mrs. Clar a L. Buel, of Holly, widely&#13;
known an an evangelistic worker, was&#13;
marrie d Feb . 22 to Rev. E H . Harh -&#13;
ridge, pastor ot tbe Congregationa l&#13;
Churc h at Chester .&#13;
The lectur e rommitts e desire tha t&#13;
all who owe for thei r lectur e ticket s&#13;
to pay for the m immediatel y so tha t&#13;
the officers may bs read y for report .&#13;
Thi-s certainl y sbonld be seen to at&#13;
once .&#13;
Rupula r service at th e Cong' l churc h&#13;
next Sunday . Morning , preachin g by&#13;
tbe pastor , subject, ''Paul a Hop e for&#13;
the Christian s at Philippi. " Chris -&#13;
tian Endeavo r rt 6:30;service at Ham -&#13;
burg churc h at 2:30.&#13;
We are glad to see tha t every pape r&#13;
in the count y is endorsin g tb e nomi -&#13;
natio n ot of W. P . VanWiukle for&#13;
judge. A unite d effort on th e par t&#13;
of all durin g the next few weeks will&#13;
place him on th e bench .&#13;
The Columbia n Dramati c Clob will&#13;
presen t tb e emotiona l comed y&#13;
'Caprice " a t th e oper a house next&#13;
Frida y evening, Marc h 17. A well&#13;
known vocalist will entertai n the audienc&#13;
e between 'th e acts and th e&#13;
Pinckn« y Corne t Band will tarnis h&#13;
several selections . Admission. 25c.&#13;
LOADED FOR THE FRAY&#13;
Th e pocket book seeks~EHe~TowesT1evel ;&#13;
'tis said, "ther e is no friendshi p in trade. "&#13;
An inspectio n will convinc e th e most incredu -&#13;
lous tha t for L O W P R I C E S ,&#13;
G O O D G O O D S and plenty of them,&#13;
we take th e lead. -&#13;
Tillage Eleetto n Ntx t Xoriaj&#13;
On Tuesda y alter noon tb * village&#13;
canon s was held and th e following&#13;
men pa t np for village officers:&#13;
Pres . A. Mclntyr e&#13;
Clerk, R H , Teepl e&#13;
Treas , W. E. Murph y&#13;
AttMtor, W. A. Garr&#13;
Trustee * % in, D . Richard s&#13;
A. Most t&#13;
G W. Bowman&#13;
Trustee* 1 yr. P. 0. Johstoa.&#13;
This ticket if eketc*, «»d it №&#13;
d*tbte4ly will be, n*k«e a* eatif*&#13;
in oAeen with fto eioeytto*&#13;
Tee*e T ^ ;&#13;
BIG LINE OF LADIES' SHOES AND SLIPPERS&#13;
BIG LINE OF MEN' S BOOTS AND SHOES&#13;
BIG LINE OF MISSES' AND CHILDREN'S SHOES.&#13;
These at the low price.&#13;
In fact, re-inforcement s all along the line.,&#13;
New and natt y styles in hat s an d neck- ,&#13;
wear. '&#13;
Gentlemen' s furnishin g tha t are made lor&#13;
US E as well as ornaments .&#13;
We are makin g a SPECIALT Y of fine&#13;
Groceries .&#13;
Our line of poffees are unequalle d in town.&#13;
Thu s you will find ou r stock an assortmen&#13;
t of the best at reasonabl e prices. The ;&#13;
statemen t "Tis no troubl e t o show goods"&#13;
come s tru e with us. Give us a call.&#13;
Laundr y goes Tuesday , Marc h 14th.&#13;
•4&#13;
Saturda y&#13;
Low prices in Drew Goods.&#13;
Low prices in Groceries.&#13;
ALL SALES CASH.&#13;
F- G. 3ACKS0N•&#13;
' ! ( •&#13;
Doings of the Week Recorded in a&#13;
Brief Style.&#13;
CONCISE AND INTERESTING,&#13;
A Tramp Slugged • MwrsfctU Official&#13;
«o That He Might Obtalm&#13;
to the Jail — The T H W&#13;
Mills WUl Return* Operatte*.&#13;
Vuld Off BIortff»K«B WWJ» Fruit.&#13;
Now that the luinberiujj interest hi&#13;
Newaytfo county is exhausting the&#13;
farmers are turning their attention to&#13;
fruit growing with much sueeeas. Last&#13;
year's crop enabled many U&gt; pay oIT&#13;
their mortgages und a number would&#13;
tiavc lost their farms had it not been&#13;
for their fruit. . Experimt'utH with&#13;
•Uigur beets have shown th*l the soil&#13;
of the county i.s favorable for that&#13;
branch of agriculture also, and the&#13;
residents of the county are hoping for&#13;
the improvement of the Sluske^oa&#13;
river in order to give them au outlet&#13;
l»y witter for their products.&#13;
Costly Information.&#13;
' A tramp who applied for utttaission&#13;
to the jail at Marshall was refused because&#13;
ho had done nothing entitling&#13;
liim to board at the expense of the&#13;
county. He a&amp;ked of the commission&#13;
If assault and battery would make&#13;
him eligible, and being told that it&#13;
would he raised his flst and awaited&#13;
the officer who gave him th*» information&#13;
a hard one right on the proboscis.&#13;
Ife is a guest, of the connty now, but&#13;
the official who figured in the case is&#13;
on his guard when any hobo applies to&#13;
tiiin for information of asimilar nature.&#13;
Grunt Renomlaated.&#13;
Claudius U. Grant was renominat«d&#13;
for another 10 years on the Michigan&#13;
supreme court bench by the Republican&#13;
state convention held at Jackson.&#13;
ft took four ballots, on each of which&#13;
l»e gained steadily, and vrben the roll&#13;
call had been finished on the fourth&#13;
liib nomination was a cinch, and the&#13;
counties began to change their votes&#13;
tor him. -Col. Eli K. Sutton, of Detroit.&#13;
*tnd Col. II. S. Dean, of Ann Arbor,&#13;
were nominated as rejfents of the university&#13;
by acclamation.&#13;
Citnght In the Art.&#13;
For several weeks Alma peopie have&#13;
been suffering from the depredations&#13;
of cuicken thieves, but watchfulness&#13;
was of no avail in discovering the&#13;
guilty party until recently when a boy&#13;
was caught with several chickens belonging&#13;
to another in bis possession,&#13;
lie confessed that an organized band&#13;
-nt lmyti Vinri hppn ipn.trjjig ajwy»t.'wt*. of&#13;
Stealing chickens and selling them.&#13;
Resume Operatic*.&#13;
The Converse Manufacturing Go's&#13;
f)lant at Newaygo, which has been idle&#13;
-sine? 1895. has passed into the hands&#13;
&lt;ot David L. Stevens, of Grand Rapids,&#13;
•who will put it into operation again.&#13;
A chair factory and Portland cement&#13;
i»ctory are other inda*lrte» assured&#13;
i.lic vilJage for the coming season,&#13;
-ing employment&#13;
*tnen.&#13;
to several hundred&#13;
Are Talking tfoofeip*!&#13;
At the March election the people of j&#13;
• the village of Croswdl *rill decide&#13;
whether they want to purchase the&#13;
iligfhting plant in the village, which is&#13;
at present run by a private com pa.:./.&#13;
JShould the decision be in th« aflirmaiive,&#13;
arbitrators will be appointed to&#13;
agree on the proper price for the plant,&#13;
and a special election will then be held&#13;
tto ratify their action.&#13;
Lost 980 la&#13;
A I'ontiac man who was afraid his&#13;
^barrel of potatoes would fnane in the&#13;
night covered them carefailj with his&#13;
overcoat. In arranging the overcoat&#13;
fioasto cover the barrel thoroughly,&#13;
liowever, some matches ia the pocket&#13;
-were ignited and the S30 garment was&#13;
ruined. The potatoes* valued ai perliaps&#13;
$1.50 or $2, were saved.&#13;
Too Mac*&#13;
A Coldwater man who felt the grip&#13;
coming on was told that whisky and&#13;
quinine was a sure preve*tivc. Accordingly&#13;
he got a quart bottle of the&#13;
corn juice and into it dropped a twograin&#13;
capsule. Next morming he complained&#13;
that the quitime had made his&#13;
head ache and vowed that next time&#13;
he'd Leave it out altogether.&#13;
Will Try&#13;
t Yn*Hanti's lesdftay snusmtoctories&#13;
&lt;vrUi rus oa stAttdsr4 timm. This time&#13;
,&lt;vfas tried severs! jresrs sgo. %ut for&#13;
ionly a few weeks. Dsriag recent&#13;
years the Normal SSSMMI BUM been the&#13;
osly local institastiest which ased&#13;
standard time. ,&#13;
Foster -aad Anderaoa* directors of&#13;
Che failed Greeaville fcsafc, Settled,&#13;
with their depositors hy paytag Judge&#13;
Adsit 930,030 in ea«h aad torcwtiaerl tig-&#13;
#15,009 worth of eertifteate* of deposit&#13;
U«14 V*&#13;
• Charles&#13;
low, while os bis&#13;
load of poultry, irt«&#13;
smiles east of WaAs hf tfcrte oukaown&#13;
ater, of Wilwith&#13;
a&#13;
MICHIGAN NEWS ITEMS.&#13;
Jilinduu City has a uew bank.&#13;
Constiwitine now has a Sunday mail.&#13;
I), [J. Davis has been granted," a franchise&#13;
lor an electric road at Fenton.&#13;
I3i&gt;u Campbell, a notorious criminal&#13;
of l-'ontiae, gets 10 years ut Jackson.&#13;
IJig Hupid.s is to have a new Hour&#13;
mill with a capacity of 100 barrels per&#13;
day.&#13;
Coss City now has a business men's&#13;
association, organized to booui the village.&#13;
The death rate at La peer this winter&#13;
is greater than it has been for many&#13;
yea rs.&#13;
The Y. M. C. A. has a total membership&#13;
of S,000 in the Zi associations iu&#13;
the state.&#13;
Ivt. llev. John 15. Vertin. bishop of&#13;
the Catholic diocese of Sault Ste. Marie&#13;
und Martiuette, is dead. i&#13;
A postoiHee has been established at&#13;
Mallory, llillsdale county, with lienjaiuin&#13;
W. Ware as postxnaater.&#13;
The postofliee at Osceola Center, Livinyston&#13;
county, has been discontinued,&#13;
and mail will be sent to lion ell.&#13;
Many lumber camps all over northern&#13;
Michigan are breaking up, as a result&#13;
of the recent warm weather.&#13;
Marshal. will vote on a proposition&#13;
to bond that city for .$-."),000 for u sewerage&#13;
system at the coining election.&#13;
Miss Viola Bliss, formerly of Ann&#13;
Arbor, committed suicide ut Chicago&#13;
recently because she had become deaf.&#13;
George New berry, of I inlay City, received&#13;
the contents of u gun which he&#13;
was handling at Oraer. lie will probably&#13;
die.&#13;
Mt. Pleasant already has one electric&#13;
lighting company, but tlie council has&#13;
been asked to grant a franchise to another&#13;
one.&#13;
Deposits of lead of a superior quality&#13;
have been discovered on a farm in&#13;
Grant township, Huron Co., while&#13;
drilling a well.&#13;
The first carload of furniture for the&#13;
new possessions o* the United States&#13;
has been started on its journey to&#13;
Manila from Grand Rapids.&#13;
The scheme to make Calhoun county&#13;
a judicial circuit by itself is opposed&#13;
not only by the farmers,of the county,&#13;
but by some of the lawyers as well.&#13;
While John Corey, of Chelsea, was&#13;
stealing a ride from Jackson to his&#13;
home he accidently slipped and fell&#13;
under the wheels of the car and was&#13;
killed.&#13;
Roscommon people feel jubilant over&#13;
the bill passed by the legislature authorizing&#13;
the county to issue bond/* to&#13;
pay its indebtedness and outstanding;&#13;
orders.&#13;
A tramp who had been refused shelter&#13;
by Gas Karkawr— a former living ii£im&#13;
Okemo.s, set fire to the straw in the&#13;
farmer's barn and three horses were&#13;
suffocated.&#13;
• Alcona county is not a*dry county,&#13;
yet there has not been a criminal&#13;
case tried in the county in nearly two&#13;
years, nor a prisoner in the county jail&#13;
in that time.&#13;
It is but a short time since the two&#13;
daily papers at Menominec suspended&#13;
for lack of patronage, but already arrangements&#13;
are being inadc for startin?&#13;
another.&#13;
The Quiney mine in the copper country&#13;
has followed the lead of Calumet&#13;
A, Hccla and announced a 10 per cent&#13;
raise in the wages of all its employes&#13;
irom Marcli 1.&#13;
A drug stock as Ilillsdale owned by&#13;
H. D. Tisdale was damaged to the extent&#13;
of 3&lt;&gt;,000 by lire: insured for §4,500.&#13;
The building was damaged Si,500, but&#13;
was also insured.&#13;
A Gratiot county farmer sold his&#13;
farm at an advance of $~0G over the&#13;
outside figure at which he had held it&#13;
before the sugar factory at Alma became&#13;
a sure thing.&#13;
John McCollum. a Had Axe livery&#13;
man, was found dead in a buggy four&#13;
miles west of that village the other&#13;
day. Heart disease or foul play is supposed&#13;
to be the cause.&#13;
A lantern exploded under the oil&#13;
wagon of George Moore at Ann Arbor.&#13;
Friends got the wagon out of the barn,&#13;
when the oil exploded. Some narrow&#13;
escapes were reported.&#13;
It is said that pearl mussels in paying&#13;
quantities have been found in&#13;
creeks in Calhoun county. The story&#13;
goes that some valuable specimens of&#13;
pearis have been found.&#13;
Instead of the usual robin stories&#13;
this year the papers are telling of&#13;
snakes that are rushing the season.&#13;
A four-foot blue racer was killed at&#13;
Pinckney the other day.&#13;
Beet sugar will now take a back seao&#13;
for a short time ia the interest of&#13;
Michigan farmers while they gather a&#13;
sugar crop of another kind, for the&#13;
maple sugar season is on.&#13;
A small settlement of miners1 cottages&#13;
have been moved over the ice on&#13;
Sajjinaw bay from Sebewaing to the&#13;
stone quarries at Bay Popt. About 25&#13;
hare been moved already.&#13;
The steel range people from Chicago&#13;
who have been cauvasinjr Huron county&#13;
are said to have sold saore than 500&#13;
ranees there Uv prices a&amp;out 30 per&#13;
cetttMufffcer than hotee* merchants&#13;
would asi^, awd to have taken something&#13;
like'835,000 in cash out of the&#13;
During the extreme cold weather of&#13;
a few weeks u^o u hen belonging to a&#13;
citizen of l'ineknoy stole her nez~ and&#13;
has now 13 line ciiickeus.&#13;
Jules F. Jeauneret, manager of&#13;
Wright,. Kiiy it Oo.'s jewelry repair department,&#13;
of Detroit, ended his life by&#13;
stabbing himself through the heart.&#13;
He was disappointed in love.&#13;
Tontine people evidently believe in&#13;
savings bunks and do not keep their&#13;
spare eusli laying arouud loose. In six&#13;
houses visited by burglars iu the past&#13;
two weeks only §0.00 was secured.&#13;
The motion for a new trial in the&#13;
ease of Fred Clark, convicted at St.&#13;
Johns of rape, was denied by Judge&#13;
Daboll, and Clark was sentenced to six&#13;
years in Die state prison at Jackson.&#13;
The Ann Arbor assaulter turned out&#13;
to b« Geo. Lewis, a colored ha'ckdrivor,&#13;
aged IS. A derby hat retained by one&#13;
of his recent victims furnished the cluo&#13;
that caused his arrest und conviction.&#13;
Win. A. Halcer, of Column, had the&#13;
rit'itm of his ear punctured by coming&#13;
in contact with a twig while exploring&#13;
the woods. Uy eloshipr his nostrils i*&#13;
is said he can now whistle through&#13;
his ear.&#13;
Clayton Smith, of llerrien township,&#13;
thinks stock raising the best paying&#13;
business he can engage in. One of his&#13;
cows last week gave birth to four&#13;
calves, nil of which are healthy und&#13;
doing well.&#13;
Charter Maidment, of StandLsh, the&#13;
10-ycur-old boy who was arrested,&#13;
charged with placing1 obstructions on&#13;
tlie M. C. railroad at Peep River, has&#13;
confessed. He cays he doesn't know&#13;
why he did it.&#13;
The people of Sand tteaeh think the&#13;
present name of their village is mis- j&#13;
leading and liable to prejudice outsiders&#13;
against the place, and will accordirtgly&#13;
ask the •legislature to change it&#13;
to Harbor Ucach.&#13;
The question of bonding the village i&#13;
for electric lights will be voted on ut&#13;
the March election at Schoolcraft, for&#13;
the third time within a few months.&#13;
Doth times previously the proposition&#13;
has been defeated.&#13;
A family jar caused Mrs. Dan Mc-&#13;
Laughlin, of Tort Huron, to try and&#13;
commit suicide by the laudanum route.&#13;
After several hours* effective work&#13;
with a stomach pump at a doctor's&#13;
olh'ce her husband escorted her home.&#13;
The family of Austin IJastick, of&#13;
Millin^'ton. consisting of seven people,&#13;
were all poisoned by eating turkey.&#13;
Doctors worked over them for a long&#13;
time and iinally brought them out all&#13;
right. Mrs. Uastick narrowly escaped&#13;
death.&#13;
While in a crazed intoxicated condition.&#13;
John Itasor, of Menominee,&#13;
struck Peter StolTell repeated blows on&#13;
the head with an ax. The injured&#13;
man hoarded at Rasor's. and they qaar-&#13;
THE TEESRflPH&#13;
News of the Day as Told Over the&#13;
Sletidcr Wires,&#13;
DOMESTIC AND FOREIGN NEWS&#13;
Maj. Kvitna, Chlcr of Police of&#13;
Waiitii to Ketulu Two K i&#13;
Dotectlvva on HU Force — Treasury&#13;
liecetpt* und Expenditures.&#13;
Two HpunUh Detect I veil.&#13;
The ftict that Maj. Evans, the military&#13;
chief of the new police department;&#13;
"of. Havana, has recommended&#13;
that the Murtine/ brothers, ex-Spanish&#13;
detectives, be retained by the detective&#13;
bureau is causing any amount of&#13;
uneasiness among Cubans, who have&#13;
an intense haired for them. The Martinez&#13;
brothers have a record of hr.^luj?&#13;
sent more Cubans to execution than&#13;
any dcuen rnvn, with the possible exception&#13;
of (»en. Weyler. During their&#13;
career in and about Havana they have&#13;
urrested 1,000 of the most famous criminals,&#13;
i&gt;."0 having received sentences&#13;
ranging from .six months to '.10 years.&#13;
In addition they have captured l"&gt;0&#13;
murderers, till of whom were condemned&#13;
to death. Three alone of the&#13;
1,000 escaped official punishment.&#13;
February Receipts and&#13;
The comparative statement of the&#13;
government receipts and expenditures&#13;
shows that for February the receipts&#13;
aggregated S^7,9T9,u3-\ a gain as compared&#13;
with February, 189S, of about&#13;
$9,r»00.000. The expenditures for tlie&#13;
month were ? 13.91^'.)'.".). leaving a deficit&#13;
for the month of about Sti,000,OUO.&#13;
The receipts for the eight months of&#13;
the present ilscal year were Sn:.'.").4iri,-&#13;
li»7, against ^74,557.1)60, for the same&#13;
period hist year. The February receipts&#13;
from customs were 81&lt;i/.&gt;'M.fj72, a&#13;
gain over the same month in 1 SOS, of&#13;
nearly 8?,000,000; internal revenue receipts,&#13;
!5H».-VJ4.4'.)1), show a gain of&#13;
nearly $7,240,000.&#13;
reled over family affairs. The injured&#13;
man will die.&#13;
F. Tucker, of Coldwater. was given&#13;
4."i daj's in jail for stealing baggage&#13;
checks from the M. C. depot. He said&#13;
he thought the cheeks would entitle&#13;
him to a ride on tlie c*rs, but when he&#13;
presented one in payment of his fur^&#13;
he was arrested.&#13;
Farmers who think their fruit trees&#13;
have been killed by the late cold snap&#13;
will do well not to cut them down yet&#13;
awhile, else they may hee before the&#13;
season is over their less precipitate&#13;
neighbors picking fruit from trees now&#13;
considered dead.&#13;
A genuine case of smallpox has developed&#13;
at Watervliet. 10 mi'es north&#13;
of ltenton Harbor. The victim is a&#13;
girl who was employed at the paper&#13;
mill there in assorting rags, and it i.s&#13;
thought the disease was contracted&#13;
from that source.&#13;
A iine team, belonging to Geo. Harner,&#13;
of Ilaroda. became frightened and&#13;
jumped into tlie St. Joseph river, taking&#13;
driver, wagon and contents with&#13;
them. All were rescued, but the&#13;
horses were so badly injured that they&#13;
may have to be killed.&#13;
Wm. II. Learmouth. aged 30. employed&#13;
as switchman in the Michigan&#13;
Central yards at Detroit, was instantly&#13;
killed by stepping from one track to&#13;
allow a freight to pass when he was&#13;
struck by a switch engine from behind.&#13;
His body was frightfully mangled.&#13;
Mrs. Alice (i. Lonsdale. a "woman&#13;
doctor" of Detroit, is in jail to answer&#13;
to a serious charge. The recent death&#13;
of Miss Cora E. Hetherington, who&#13;
was the victim of maltreatment, alleged&#13;
to have been administered by the&#13;
doctoress, was the cause of her arrest.&#13;
Inquiries among the farmers in every&#13;
portion of Lapeer county indicate that&#13;
small fruits up that way will be a&#13;
minus quantity this season. Not only&#13;
hare the peach; pear and plum buds&#13;
been destroyed, but a large portion of&#13;
the trees themselves have been killed.&#13;
Charles Huntley, who was charged&#13;
with assault with intent to do great&#13;
bodily harm less than murder upon&#13;
Asa Pound, of Victor township,, last&#13;
December, pleaded guilty at St. Johns,&#13;
and was sentenced to five years1 imprisonment&#13;
in the state house of correction&#13;
at Ionia.&#13;
Hy the death of a wealthy old aunt&#13;
in th* Netherlands, three Urund Haven&#13;
people, Mrs. Solomon Verboeks, Mrs.&#13;
Kooiman aad John Donker have become&#13;
heirs to an estate valued at $d00,-&#13;
000 in that country. The Grand Haven&#13;
heirs will maka a trip across the ocean&#13;
to get the will settled satisfactorily.&#13;
New War Atutociatlun.&#13;
A new association, to be known as&#13;
the Spanish-American "Wur Veterans'&#13;
association, is about to be formed, and&#13;
a call has been issued for u, convention&#13;
to be held in Wushingion September 4,&#13;
."&lt; and (i. The proposed association will&#13;
have for its objects the wiping out of&#13;
sectionalism, the promotion of , closes&#13;
fraternal relations, the fostering of a&#13;
more unselfish patriotism and the corporate&#13;
effort to secure the enactment&#13;
of legislation, in state und nation, in&#13;
the interest of soldiers* tlie army and&#13;
navy generally.&#13;
40 Mtovl Cur a Per Day.&#13;
d Steel Car Co. has purchased&#13;
120 acres of land near Pittsburg&#13;
for a sum approximating 8300,-&#13;
000. The great new plant when completed'will&#13;
be capable of producing 40&#13;
steel cars per day. Already orders have&#13;
been placed for 8700,000 worth of the&#13;
largest machine tools in the country,&#13;
and the plant, when completed, will&#13;
be the finest in the world. About 3,-&#13;
000 men will be employed.&#13;
Dcwcy an Admiral-&#13;
President MeKinley has signed the&#13;
bill creating the rank of admiral iu&#13;
the uavj\ The commission of George&#13;
Dewey to that otlice was made out at&#13;
the navy department and had been sent&#13;
to the White house previous to the&#13;
signing of the bill by the President&#13;
which would create the office, that it&#13;
might be in readiness for his indorsement.&#13;
4&#13;
Are Jap* Meddling ?&#13;
Letters from reliable sources are said&#13;
to have been received at Manila saying&#13;
that 30 cannon, 30,000 rifles and&#13;
several million cartridges from Japan&#13;
have been landed atSual.on the gulf of&#13;
Lingayen, on the west coast of the island&#13;
of Luzon, about 100 miles from&#13;
Manila, and were taken thence to Maiolos,&#13;
the sent of the rebel government.&#13;
YouD^ Jc*fte James Acquitted.&#13;
Young Jesse James, son of the notorious&#13;
bandit whose name he bears, was&#13;
adjudged not guilty of complicity in&#13;
the robbery of a Missouri Pacific express&#13;
train at Leeds, in the outskirts&#13;
of Kansas City, last September. The&#13;
jury was out less than an hour, the&#13;
verdict of acquittal having been&#13;
reached on the first ballot.&#13;
Charged With Murder.&#13;
Roland Burnham Molineux, son of&#13;
Gen. Leslie Molineux, of Brooklyn, has&#13;
been arrested, charged with murdering&#13;
Mrs. {Catherine J. Adams in New&#13;
York City, Dec. 28, 1898. The arrest&#13;
followed the verdict of the coroner's&#13;
jury accusing him of the crime. He&#13;
was immediately locked up in the&#13;
Tombs prison without bail.&#13;
SpanUh S«nate Approve* a War Inquiry.&#13;
The Spanish senate by a vote of 130&#13;
to 7, approved of the motion of Marshal&#13;
Martinez de Campos, signed by&#13;
all the Spanish generals in the senate,&#13;
demanding a parliamentary inquiry&#13;
into the conduct of the recent wars.&#13;
The government supported the motion&#13;
and Count d'Almenas strongly opposed&#13;
it.&#13;
f • i&#13;
Many laborers are out of work at&#13;
Santiago owing to the lack of funds&#13;
necessary to keep them engaged.&#13;
Every cough makes&#13;
your throat more raw&#13;
and Irritable. Every&#13;
cough congests the lining&#13;
membrane of your lungs.&#13;
Cease tearing your throat&#13;
and lungs in this way.&#13;
Put the parts at rest and&#13;
give them a chance to&#13;
heal. You will need some&#13;
help &lt;o do this, and yojj&#13;
will find it in&#13;
From the first dose the&#13;
quiet and rest begin: the&#13;
tickling In the throat&#13;
ceases; the spasm weakens;&#13;
the cough disappears.&#13;
Do not wait for&#13;
pneumonia and consumption&#13;
but cut short&#13;
your cold without delay.&#13;
Dr. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral&#13;
Plaster slxrald be&#13;
over tlie lungs of every person&#13;
troubled with a cough.&#13;
Write totbeDoctor..&#13;
Uriupual opportunities and lonp expcrionco&#13;
cnr.tieutlT qualify IIR for&#13;
£ivlii&lt;{ you trieiilcil aovitfe. Write&#13;
freely »li the particular* Iu your case.&#13;
Toll in wlmt your &lt; xpunenre h«»&#13;
bonn with our ("h^rry Pwtornl. You&#13;
•will receive ;i |.&gt;rcjui{it rejily, *ithuut&#13;
Addre*s, Dlt. J. C AVER.&#13;
The recent decree of the Court providing&#13;
for the foreclosure and salb of&#13;
the main line of the Baltimore \nd&#13;
Ohio Railroad is dirpotly In %ie wiUi&#13;
the reorganization proceedings.&#13;
Lane'* lTHiitlly Medicine.&#13;
Moves the bowels each da}'. In order&#13;
to Y»i health}' this is necessary. Acts&#13;
jjently on the liver and kidneys. Cures&#13;
sick headache. Price 25 and riOc.&#13;
No man ever lives up to the reputa-"&#13;
tion he wants people to think he lias.&#13;
Some people kick because their daily&#13;
bread doesiffc come already buttered.&#13;
There would be fewer axes ground if&#13;
the grinders had to turn the crank.&#13;
Every time a man swallows a doctor's&#13;
advice he has to cough up 82.&#13;
A CONGRESSMAN&#13;
Cared of Catarrh of Long? Standing:.&#13;
Ex-Uongreum&amp;a A. T. Goodwya.&#13;
Ex-Congressman A. T. Goodwyn,&#13;
from Alabama, writes the following&#13;
letter:&#13;
The Pe-ru-na Drag Manufacturing&#13;
Company, Columbus, Ohio:&#13;
Gentlemen—I have now used two&#13;
bottles of Pe-ru-na, and am a well&#13;
man today. I could fee! :£*&gt; good effects&#13;
of your medicine before I had&#13;
used it a week, after suffering with catarrh&#13;
for over a year. Respectfully,&#13;
A. T. boodnryn.&#13;
Catarrh In its various forms is rapidly&#13;
becoming a • national cttme. An&#13;
undoubted **aa«dy bam been discovered&#13;
by Dr. Hartmna. , .• This remedy has&#13;
been thoroughly tested during the past&#13;
forty years. Prominent men have&#13;
come to know of its virtues and are&#13;
making public utterances on the subj&#13;
«ct. To save the country we must&#13;
save the people. To save the people&#13;
we must proWeot them from disease.&#13;
The disease that is at once the most&#13;
prevalent and. stubborn of cure is catarrh.&#13;
Public mfn of all parties rec-.&#13;
ognlce 1n Pe-ru-na A national catarrh&#13;
remedy of uneq-oaled merit. Send ta&#13;
Dr. Hartman, Columbus. Ohio, for %&#13;
free book on catarrh. &gt;&#13;
\&#13;
.&lt; •••*»&#13;
• - . * . - • ' • . " , .&#13;
sm&#13;
s&#13;
DICK RODNEY;&#13;
Of, The Adventures of&#13;
An Eton Boy...&#13;
BY JAMES GRANT.&#13;
&lt; ^~^_r~»,f&gt;_i&#13;
sI&#13;
I&#13;
^ ~ CHAPTER XL—(Continued.)&#13;
Headlong wo stumbled over piles of&#13;
lava; now we sank aukle deep among&#13;
the soft pumice dust; ancn we rolled,&#13;
fell or scrambled through nrSld vines&#13;
and creepers; then through fields of&#13;
prow ing maizo and wheat, or plantations&#13;
of coffee anrl apple trees; but&#13;
never pausing until we reached the&#13;
base of the mjghty Piton, where,&#13;
breathless, gapping, panti/g and bath-&#13;
«&lt;3 in perspiration, we lay down in a&#13;
little thicket of cinnamon bushes by&#13;
the wayslrte to rest for a short space.&#13;
During this flight. 1 had never apoken,&#13;
but Tom from time to time indulged&#13;
in disjointed remarks expressive of&#13;
an exultation in which I cpuld not&#13;
share, beizig only thankful to heaven&#13;
for my escape. But poor Tom had&#13;
eeen more of a rcu^h life, and of many&#13;
a violent death, than it could possibly&#13;
have been my let to witness.&#13;
"Ha, ha! you Spanish swabs! We've&#13;
slung two of your hammocks in a hot&#13;
place—before the time, perhaps!" said&#13;
he. "What a vow they make, like so&#13;
many nejrrocs clearing a cargo when&#13;
WK sheered off! Lucky it was that I&#13;
eased off CUT tow lines in time! I&#13;
have a good mind to put about, stand&#13;
fa* the cave and pot another of those&#13;
Spanish gorillas:'*&#13;
Whether h« meant guerrillas I did&#13;
not inquire, but was happy when vv-e&#13;
reached the harbor and I felt the cool&#13;
breeze of the ocean fan my throbbing&#13;
temples and my hands, which, from being&#13;
GO long and so tightl" tied with&#13;
rough cords, and having the blood afterward&#13;
driven through them 'oy rapid&#13;
exertion, felt literally burning hot.&#13;
AH was dark and still when we ran&#13;
along the stone mole of Santa Cruz.&#13;
Fortunately at that late hour there was&#13;
no official to question or molest us; and&#13;
we could see the brig anchored about&#13;
half a mile distant, with the lantern&#13;
etill burning at the foremasthead. The&#13;
light on the castle had disappeared.&#13;
W« soon found a small punt at the&#13;
-landing stairs, and, taking possession&#13;
of it -without leave, cast loose the&#13;
painter a-nrd shoved off.&#13;
Silently and steadily, with all our&#13;
remaining strength, we pulled for the&#13;
brig, «nd "were soon alo:igside.&#13;
spree is over, Master&#13;
] full; another wrench at the windlass,&#13;
and the anchor was tripped.&#13;
"Keavn and a-wash!" cried Tom&#13;
Lanboiirre, cheerily, giving the usual&#13;
call of encouragement when the drippine&#13;
anchoring is just out of the water&#13;
and the stock is see.!}'to stir the £urface.&#13;
The courses wore let fall and the J}b&#13;
was hoisted; lier head fell rapidly&#13;
round and she paid off bravely. iTien&#13;
the firey cone of the Piton and ths&#13;
lights of Santa Crux, which bud glittered&#13;
in tremulous Hues alony tbe water&#13;
on our beam, were shining upon&#13;
our lee quarter.&#13;
"Fill away the licadyards— handsomely&#13;
now!" cried Westou, and just&#13;
as the fust streak of day, coming on&#13;
with tropical rapidity, began to brighten&#13;
the horizon and shed long, Bhiny&#13;
ripples on tlio sea, the canvas swelled&#13;
out, tbe reef points began to patter&#13;
on the taut bo3om of every anow-v/hite&#13;
sail, and the loose rigging was blown&#13;
out in graceful bends.&#13;
There was a fine breeze rising; the&#13;
white water rippled under the forefoot&#13;
of the Eugenie, and soon it boiled&#13;
in fcam aa we sheeted home the topsails&#13;
and ran along the western shore&#13;
cf the mountain isle.&#13;
About the same time the Costa Rican&#13;
brig which was at anchor nearer the&#13;
shore (a smart craft she wr.s, straight&#13;
In the bend-, and all black, save a yellow&#13;
streak), also got ready for sea&#13;
with great expedition, and worked out&#13;
of the harbor; end when the hot sun,&#13;
which crcwhile had lit up the vast&#13;
continent of Africa to the cast of us,&#13;
rose from the ocean, v,'e SRW her black&#13;
hull and white canvas chining in his&#13;
morning rays about a mile astern.&#13;
"You say, Marc, that craft is A Coota&#13;
Rican?" said Weston, doubtfully.&#13;
"Yes, sir," replied Hislop.&#13;
"She may be; but she is also a Spanish&#13;
dealer lu black cattle," said Weston,&#13;
who was looking at her through&#13;
a powerful double-barreled glass. "I&#13;
am certain if you could only see her&#13;
deck when she careens a bit, you would&#13;
make out the ring-bolts for iashing&#13;
the slaves to in fine weather."&#13;
"Aye, and perhaps those of the carronades,&#13;
too," added Hislop; "sh^&#13;
looks rather rakish."&#13;
"Vou are just of my mind, sir," added&#13;
Tom Lambourne, who was at the&#13;
wheel. "She'll see the Shark's Nose&#13;
and t^f» Congo river before she sees&#13;
tho Hooquito cTttiks or the hills off&#13;
Costa Rica; aril I have a shrewd notion&#13;
that the pirates we escaped frosi&#13;
are part of her crew, if one&#13;
from what Master Rodney, who&#13;
their lingo, overheard them say."&#13;
Except acv^vs the Peak of Teneriffe,&#13;
where a cloud of white vapor floated&#13;
in midair like a permanent cymar or&#13;
the state of our hands and wrists, and ' gircll-e. and above which some thouthe&#13;
numerous cuts and bruises we aad \ sanfl feet of tire might:/ cone towcrefl&#13;
Rodney," said Tattooed Tom, wiping&#13;
his brow with his sleeve when wo&#13;
etood on the deck, where the wonder-&#13;
Ing crew gathered around us; "but&#13;
catch me having another in this&#13;
deuced Tcntiy Reef—that's all!"&#13;
•CHAPTER XII.&#13;
The Anchor A-Peak.&#13;
by the foregoing narrative,&#13;
which was fully corroborated by our&#13;
excitement, by the two ' muskets we&#13;
brought on board as trophies, by&#13;
unon us; «nd fearing the&#13;
detention of the brig for come rfcgal if*&#13;
«juiry, Captriin W'estcn prepared at&#13;
once for putting to sea.&#13;
I was happy when finding myself on&#13;
the deck of the Eugenie, but still more&#13;
pupremoly happy on hearing Weston'e&#13;
resolution to get underway, as I pos-&#13;
«eesed very Tague Xrut decidedly tanpleasant&#13;
idoas of Spanish justice, and&#13;
had visions of alcaldes, algnceelli:,&#13;
wheels, garrcfoes, a$d,.ev*r- the, market?&#13;
faerilfcrrs of the In&lt;y&lt;i:sitioa ttaelf,&#13;
floating before me,&#13;
My heart beat respmisive to the -clapk&#13;
of the w£nt!lpss pawle, as the Eugenl*&#13;
was foov.c pbort on her anchor, antl tlic&#13;
Bands started tCktlt to cast lease the&#13;
topsails. ./" •'•&#13;
Weston threw «ar two muafcets into&#13;
the «ea lest their discovery on board&#13;
might-cause suspicion or ennoyance.&#13;
The morning w&amp;e clc^r, cool and&#13;
etarry; as yet no^vjptige of dawn was&#13;
visible, and ••tf^as etill and quiet on&#13;
chore; tmt I was In momentary expectation&#13;
of seeing a boatvdash off toward&#13;
us, though those from whom we had&#13;
escaped could have no just cause of&#13;
complaint.&#13;
Suddenly I heard the sound of oars,&#13;
and eaw a long, low boat shoot out&#13;
from the obscurity of the harbor. My&#13;
heart stood still for a moment as this&#13;
«rtft WAS steered. in our direction, but&#13;
to my infinite relief it boarded a Costa&#13;
Rican thai lay near- us.&#13;
At yet ths shadows of »Jgfct were on&#13;
land aad sea—on everything save the&#13;
eo&amp;e of the Peak that towered above&#13;
th* clouds, and there shown the light&#13;
of the yet unriacn sun, yellow deepening&#13;
Lnto saffroa, purple, blue, and then&#13;
fndifg, bleeding with th« blrekness of&#13;
aigfct aa the eye deseendtf to the&#13;
into tin; bine immensity of space,&#13;
80 Weaton gare tfct order to brae*&#13;
Ike foreyarts aback and tht&#13;
lowing from green and purple to J\. i famt gray tint,- the sky was without a&#13;
ciond.&#13;
The wares dan red and sparkled rn&#13;
tie morning muss hi cc, the fresh breeze&#13;
swept pleasantly over their whitening&#13;
tops and &lt;wfaistlefl through our rigging,&#13;
as we ran filong the shore with consid-&#13;
&lt;nsai&gt;He epwd; trad LIICTW our hearts beat&#13;
lightly, fen- the broad, free ocean was&#13;
atxrtmfl tie., and on clearing the dar.-&#13;
gero-as yorks art T'unta de Anaga by&#13;
giTing lh&lt;?m a wide berth, we felt the&#13;
heavier swell of the Atlantic as we&#13;
brought fhi? larboard tacks on board,&#13;
and raa. clcse-Ttaulcfi, on a taut bowline&#13;
between the Isk?s of Teneriffe and&#13;
Pahna, keeping the weatherage of the&#13;
Costa Ricmi, and leaving her at the&#13;
same time fast and *ar astern.&#13;
We had a delightful run through *he&#13;
fertile Archipelago of the Fortunate&#13;
Isles, and, after clearing San Joeief,&#13;
found the wind coming ajore aft Long&#13;
after night had elosted in and darkness&#13;
had enveloped all the sea and the Isle&#13;
of Teneriffe, the rouo of the peak&#13;
shone redly in Midair, with, the light&#13;
of the sun that had set in the western*&#13;
waters of the Atlantic.&#13;
Fcr the whole of that day we had&#13;
run fast through the water, making at&#13;
least seven knots an hour off the logline,&#13;
but midnight came before we saw&#13;
the last of the mighty Peak of Adam.&#13;
CHAPTER XIII.&#13;
An Incident.&#13;
£y the time we had been a month&#13;
at aea, having applied myself assiduously&#13;
to work, I picked up a little&#13;
knowledge of seaznanshlp. I took my&#13;
turn of watch with the rest; I learned&#13;
to co aloft and to He upon a yard In&#13;
a stiff topgallant brtcse. I acquired all&#13;
the mysteries of knottiu* and splicing,&#13;
of •errinj: a rope with spun-yarn,ai»d to&#13;
know the technical difference betwten&#13;
tho TODO itsejf and a llr.«. I could&#13;
heave the log.box tho compass and take&#13;
my "trick" at the helm with tho best&#13;
man on board, and thus gained the&#13;
golden opinions of those among whom&#13;
a rough turn of the wheel of fortune&#13;
had so strangely and so suddenly cast&#13;
mo.&#13;
Some days after leaving the Canaries&#13;
we found ourselves passing&#13;
through what seemed to be immense&#13;
meadows of green stuff adrift. By&#13;
moonlight the branches, leaves and&#13;
fibers of this uprooted mariao forest&#13;
—for such it was, being wrack and seaweeds&#13;
of wondrous length springing&#13;
from tho loweat depths of the ocean—&#13;
sparkled:., hashed and whirled in the&#13;
foaming f'dies astern of the brig as»&#13;
she cleft c brushed down the yielding&#13;
masse*- viih her rushing keel.&#13;
I way never weary of sriirveyiag thin&#13;
scene, which w?.;i so marvelou3 in its&#13;
tieautj', v/heu the moon was shining on&#13;
the sea.&#13;
Theso vast, broad leaves and Ion?,&#13;
snaky tendrils that danced upon the&#13;
surface of the sea were the Florida&#13;
gulf-weed.&#13;
"Tho tropical grape of the sailors,"&#13;
said Hislop, as we leaned over the lee- |&#13;
j quarter one night. "These plants grow |&#13;
upon the two great banks of the At- |&#13;
lantic, and were known to the Phoe- I&#13;
nicians, who named them the Weedy&#13;
Sea." j&#13;
"I remember," said I; "and that the i&#13;
seamen of Columbu3 thought they&#13;
wero f.ent by heaven to stay their&#13;
course."&#13;
"You are right," replied tho mate,&#13;
with an approving smile. "It is pleasant&#13;
to meet one like you, Rodney, who&#13;
has read that which is worth reading,&#13;
and remembers it."&#13;
"The Gulf Stream," said Weston,&#13;
joining in the conversation, "is a great&#13;
current about sixty miles broad,&#13;
caused by the trade winds, which always&#13;
blow from east to west. It issues&#13;
from the Gulf between Cape Florida&#13;
and Cuba, and runs at the rate of i&#13;
three knots aa hour along the shores •&#13;
of South and North America, till tte ]&#13;
Newfoundland bank turns it to the i&#13;
southeast; so everywhere its track is !&#13;
known by that gulf-weed which you&#13;
now see floating past."&#13;
It is by this mysterious current—&#13;
this mighty river that traverses the&#13;
ocean—that tbe timber logs of the St.&#13;
Lawrence, the wrecks of the oM plate&#13;
argosies, and the carve;! idols of older&#13;
Mexico and tho Caribbean Isles, all&#13;
covered with the weeds and barnacles&#13;
of long immersion, have been cast&#13;
upon the western shores of Scotland&#13;
and tbe Hebrides,&#13;
Every morning the weather became&#13;
warmer—the sea anil sky more clear—&#13;
tho atmosphere more rarefied. The&#13;
wind was so steady that scarcely a&#13;
sheet or tack was altered. Thus for&#13;
several days we bore on with both&#13;
sheeU ftft, as the phrase is, whea running&#13;
right before the wind.&#13;
Shoals of porpoises plunged across&#13;
the bows of tire brig in the sapphirecolored&#13;
sea, and when it was smooth&#13;
a whole fleet of tho little nautili&#13;
passed us with purple sails up; nor&#13;
were the dark and gliding sharks and&#13;
the silvery flying-fish wanting at times j&#13;
to keep my attention excited; and the j&#13;
tiny petrels, as they came tripping j&#13;
along, half it the water and half in ;&#13;
the air, kept pace with the. Eugenie,&#13;
as siie crackod on under a press of&#13;
sail, dashin? the waves around her,&#13;
ploughing so freely and so fearlessly&#13;
the deep waters that hide a finny world&#13;
and wash the dark and unknown base-&#13;
One' glcnofcs morning, wlien we were&#13;
within a few liajs' sail of afcL^paniola,&#13;
there Recurred sy circumstance which&#13;
was aft^erwar.-.l a source of the deepest&#13;
regret to us.il 1; how and trhyywill be&#13;
shown during the progrjss/o£-*y story.&#13;
The day was fine, jj&lt;ven t&lt;?r that re-&#13;
BEE3 FROM THE PHILIPPINES.&#13;
Will D« Brought t o America t o&#13;
Honey for Ua.&#13;
There is one race inhabiting the&#13;
Philippines which will he a welcome&#13;
addition to American citizenship, and&#13;
will be afforded every facility and inducement&#13;
to immigrate to the United&#13;
States and engage in the skilled labor&#13;
in which it has no peer. This is the&#13;
giant East India honey bee, and investigation&#13;
of its work and immense&#13;
capacity fcr making honey and wax&#13;
has interested the department of agriculture&#13;
in a consideration of an&#13;
early effort to introduce it into the&#13;
United States. Secretary Wilson said&#13;
In connection with the proposed importation&#13;
of these bees to the United&#13;
States that a special appropriation&#13;
would be asked in his coming report&#13;
to congress for tho investigation of&#13;
the bees of the world, and a swarm&#13;
of the big Philippine honey-makers&#13;
would bo brought to America as soon&#13;
as the question of their value and the&#13;
possibility of their acclimation have&#13;
been fully determined. There will also&#13;
be an appropriation requested for fhe&#13;
study of the agriculture and kindred&#13;
products of the'newly acquired ssrrltory&#13;
of the United States, and even&#13;
under thin head the great honey bee&#13;
of the east would be introduced by the&#13;
department to this country.&#13;
"Durability is&#13;
Better Than Show."&#13;
The vfcaith of the mutttmillionaires&#13;
is not equal to&#13;
good health* Riches without&#13;
health are a curse, and yet the&#13;
rich, the middle classes and&#13;
the poor aUke have, in Hood's&#13;
SarsaparUla, a valuable assistant&#13;
in getting and maintaining&#13;
perfect health. It&#13;
never disappoints.&#13;
8 c r o f U B - M Three years ago oar son,'&#13;
now eterea, had • serious case of scrofula&#13;
and erysipelas with dreadful sores, discharging&#13;
awl itching constantly. He could not&#13;
walk. Sereral physicians did not help for -&#13;
sixteen mouths. Three months' treatment&#13;
with Jfood'a Saraaparilla made him perfectly&#13;
wril. We are rUd to tell others of it."&#13;
MRS. DATH&gt; LAIBO, Ottawa, Kansas.&#13;
Nausea—"Vomiting spells, dizziness&#13;
and prostration troubled lue for years..&#13;
Had neuralgia, grew weak and could not&#13;
ity asje was against roe, but Hood's*&#13;
Sarsnpartlla cared me thoroughly. Mg&#13;
weight increased from 125 to 143 joounda. I&#13;
aru the mother of nine children. Never fell&#13;
so well sod strong since I was married as ]&#13;
do now." MM. M. A. WATERS, 1529 33d S t , D.C.&#13;
Tongncs of th*»Ct»t Funnily.&#13;
The tongas of the cat family are&#13;
covered witii recurving spines. In tie&#13;
common domestic cat these are small,&#13;
but sufficiently well developed to give&#13;
the tongue a feeling of roughness. But&#13;
in the lion and tiger the spines are&#13;
strong enough to enable the animal to&#13;
tear away the skin of a man*s hand&#13;
merely ty licking it.&#13;
E c z e m a - " We bad to tie tbe hands of&#13;
oar twu year old son on account of eczenm&#13;
0!&gt; face and Hubs. No medicine evei*.&#13;
helped until we used Rood's San-apariUa.&#13;
which soon cured." Mas. A. VAN WYCK, 12$&#13;
Montgomery Street, Psterson, N. J.&#13;
Hood** n s * non-Irritating and&#13;
the ouit w l w i t e tofh&gt; with Hood* 8m»partila.&#13;
Society&#13;
Women&#13;
and,in fact.nearly all&#13;
women who undergo&#13;
&amp; nervous strain, &amp;TC&#13;
compelled to regretfully&#13;
watch the gTovring&#13;
pMloT of thciT&#13;
cheeks, the coming&#13;
wrinkles and thinnew&#13;
th&amp;t become moTe&#13;
'•distTtssing every dcy.&#13;
EveTy woman&#13;
knows that ill-health&#13;
is a fital enemy to&#13;
beauty and that good&#13;
health gives to the&#13;
plainest (ace an enduring&#13;
attract ivenevs.&#13;
Pure blood and strong&#13;
nerves — these *rt th«&#13;
secret of health and /&#13;
beauty:; '&#13;
DT.Willifcmtf PtnX&#13;
Pills for Pale People build up *nd purify tHc blood and&#13;
strengthen the nerves. To the youn£ ^vri tt*y *r« inv&amp;tv&#13;
dbl«, to the mother they are a necessity, to the woman&#13;
approaching fifty they are the best Ttmedy that science&#13;
his deviled fot this crisis of her kite.&#13;
7CMr*.&#13;
Jacob Weaver, of Bushnell, HI., is&#13;
"7 suffered for -five or six; years with the troutofit that&#13;
this tine oflife. I was mach weakened, was I M M T J I&#13;
d o m y w n work, aud suCered beyoml my power loi&#13;
acs to woiaea at&#13;
fe of the time, t o&#13;
I wma downhearted&#13;
anil melancholy. Nothing: seemed to «k&gt; aae aa&gt;y good. Tlatal&#13;
made «p my r*. ind to try Dr. Williams' Pink pills for Pale People.&#13;
I Vougbt the first box in March, 1^97, and was l i i f l t u l from the start.&#13;
A box and a'kralf cured me completely, r -ad 1 u &gt; s o * ragged aa4 among."&#13;
genuine package&#13;
ts or «&gt;ent&#13;
the DT.&#13;
bewr*. the full n6s*e " At&#13;
on receipt ofr price 50*&#13;
MedMine C», StHencctodY.N Y&#13;
•v&#13;
gion of fine .days. 'The Eugenie was&#13;
running sraoethly before the wind, and&#13;
Hislop, with (considerable animation,&#13;
was detailing to the captain »nd me&#13;
the appearawrc of that rare phenomenon,&#13;
a lunw rainbow, which, ty singular&#13;
good fortune, lie had oaoe seen&#13;
I in these lati'oides, and which Aristotle !&#13;
ij declares is never seen but at tbu time [&#13;
of the full mocn-a declaration which&#13;
our learned Scert.cn mate treat** v,itu I&#13;
contempt; for hr was a strange felfiow,&#13;
this Mnre Hislop. and could with&#13;
«equal facility dflaro on the Apology of&#13;
Plato and the method of club-ha*lins&#13;
a square-rigged vessel, or sheering her&#13;
to her anchor in a gale of wind; on&#13;
tbe Prometheus cf Eschylus, or the&#13;
proper mode of lying too in a harricaaie,&#13;
with everything struck aloft, aad&#13;
topsail yards on tbe rap; and now, on&#13;
the subject of the hinar rainbow, he&#13;
was proceeding to quote from the&#13;
Portuguese Pilot of ftanutsio, when&#13;
Weston interrupted him by hailing&#13;
aloft:&#13;
"Fore-top— there!"&#13;
"Aye, aye, sir." was the nsu&amp;l response&#13;
from Nod Carlton, a seaman&#13;
who was perched in the top.&#13;
(To be continued.) v&#13;
DUB 60c KEHVE AfSD BRAUI PtLLS. S ? ymn-anfod to tnw aay disaaau torwkucitkJa«raa»&#13;
if &gt;i&gt;u fee) Baa«r»ll7 mii»r»bi»a*:fcua'«z&#13;
bad feelings, both oaaatal&#13;
t, liieWttMw,&#13;
&gt; ect\Dg, cr aeaum ot goaene** or »IBPUBM« wt&#13;
Tlmckiug io Mficnes«,lni*u»ciie. bturrinx«f «*)&#13;
nervous irrttabilitf, poor irrnrrr rliifffa—.&#13;
t h b l i li b l i t i&#13;
occaaioualJ),palpitation of thah«an,aAa«t fcaaatfc a*&#13;
fcaOoA. cold Cast, palnwad oppression fa cheat and back, poia aronmdsa*&#13;
lowMlimba. rirnminaM sitet toealc but ncrroa* w&amp;£e!ulnasaataasatf,l«a&#13;
L Tsnswnj.cuaa TOD&#13;
J a s 4 • • • is4eacribal&gt;te&gt;&#13;
law aoitita, n*rr&lt;"3meaa»&#13;
UMat.lifca bloating aitef&#13;
flesh acft aad&#13;
$mrmipfimgv2&#13;
. alowcircsJatloa «f ; aed «ra«riaeaao&lt;th« '&#13;
i aad a «oartint*&#13;
inliTirrf dreads* ilfcoaatn.njawiU w&amp;j ROiagtahapitta*. If y • « * « * • aatr«f tfaata aynjptom« oar&#13;
VsMXmA-*ttBMASM yn.ijS willeuroion, &gt;o isattcrwhatih&amp; in—a Mat a«ay mmmaawaia yoar troabla iiw&#13;
|&gt;B.Cii«&lt;««s*x s*JSKMam«rV*B*AJ ij[oD BaiBTNi Pii i iai will eurayoa. TkaMFiIUhawa««aa»a&gt;fiM*affaet on both old and&#13;
TtMgr«»iiiio«'bs«g3alle&lt;i bjuny&#13;
t i i tor &gt; o l&#13;
7 n a &gt; «»iiiio«bg jy&#13;
«woat&gt;.«iia&gt;»iata«a.*B» icooei« wooltm wina).&#13;
Uj*«ofanT»:iad. i iJ 1 t th h d r f&#13;
rayoa. Tkaat pi&#13;
medlclce aa a&#13;
Ci b&#13;
i n l u ibu&lt;a. night&#13;
c o « ). wCjjLefoi bochantM —d faa&gt;,adafa&lt; from aaewaaa tad&#13;
t wiJ tone ap the who.6 aarroaa i i u r n , •oaaaMaar a—rawath wafm oat. orarworkad&#13;
or dmirmaarfj— aaay^w; thy weak and tiaaird^yoaag maa mada atBr—aawl &gt;a**fi»;.U&gt;a/ will a^Ta nwtaftliriiaraud&#13;
«Mw laaan of hfo totUBOIA. Bgirijn or QZiaxwamsmBjihmmiimthmib aeara maa int»&#13;
i l i i h i h b.nv« c o merit. Our Kerv*&gt;eji«.BaBfaiHugaM mamfimai^ from a №ra»&#13;
f O i ' a t a . a o 4 K r * t a a &gt; a a a a v a * J a a M a h a a * « « a 4 in Qermankoa*&#13;
CRK T r 3 U te£4 l i d t d i i b&#13;
oaerlot ramMiiea which&#13;
of omaof thaaaoetnoted&#13;
pttwa(ar V«AB» wiithh uarwlloas *ncow«. HOWTOCCRK rcrrixjm,&#13;
iuiloa&gt;4 «itk««CKT he*. AJloHersuc&lt;l iaqoin&gt;«ecn'*rBin« "&#13;
ail iai&gt;awataaMi1ii inTiiin aanled poeka«««. Oxi.7S3 00roa&#13;
•ar hAvioog «tak&lt;Uzu.ar hither rqoa^ or old no ma&amp;tm- from v&#13;
• c a l diractioba, ar*&#13;
aatad contidaDtlaJly, and&#13;
—^*jM*mnr eaaBj no asaW&#13;
•aSj&amp;Sl aa4 w» wi 11 m d J M&#13;
fall dliwetiona. Ko.&#13;
pill"-, don't dtiar*&#13;
Itt. Ckaaa'a Hiia»&#13;
a m u m w r i i w a&#13;
&gt;rc FB£X. KlzaimxiC?). Be m e aad Mart Jar Ik. Ws eaa tare 70a money ca&gt;&#13;
Drwra. All ortterti fitird fcv T«^lDten*d Ph»rmr«e№tK. Therw 1»•»&gt;!• • of aawaa jron aar a»moeh (a*as&gt;&#13;
• when yo*bvjiMimat null. T " IT-'-TTfirftniiiMjilaii«t Mfaai—polli Minn&#13;
DKLT WE MLUH DQW1&#13;
Fo* a _ ^ .&#13;
He—"What Is that you were Just&#13;
trying on tbe piano?" She—"Oh, that's&#13;
a new march." He—"Awfuyll fast&#13;
tint, isn't it?" She—"Yet; I think&#13;
th« composer was in a hurry to get&#13;
thpoofii when he was writing 1L*'-*&#13;
Yoixken fftatesroar.&#13;
ravjrboo,t laaat Ssiak. a a « M MaaV&#13;
k Uca fnm*. «B sss* A ssssasw s v _ - , ^ - .&#13;
SEARS, B8ENCU M. 0 » U C l i t t* ILL&#13;
"IF AT FIR8T YOU DON'T 8UCCEEO,'&#13;
\ TRY } SAPOL1O&#13;
'•-/A&#13;
fc-vi*&#13;
jgkuhu^&#13;
' • : . *&#13;
- \&#13;
F. L. ANDREWS EDITOR.&#13;
THURSDAY , MAR. 9, 1899.&#13;
^ Interesting Items.&#13;
Ice cutter s at work at Owosso&#13;
th » othe r day found a sraall mud&#13;
turtl e frozen iu the ice. I t is&#13;
though t tha t the turtle , iu swiroiug&#13;
to th e surface for air, swam&#13;
into slush ice and was caught in&#13;
Jack Frost' s icy grasp before it&#13;
could escape.&#13;
iFran k Bigelow, a fifteeu-yearold&#13;
Albion boy, has been caught&#13;
in the act of counterfeiting .&#13;
Although he commeuce d on a&#13;
small scale—that of makin g pennies&#13;
for working slot machines —&#13;
he has counterfeite d nickles, dimes&#13;
quarters , and dollars, and a quan -&#13;
tity of spuriou s coin is floating&#13;
about town.&#13;
I n the village of Manchester ,&#13;
when the stores close at th e regular&#13;
hour , th e nightwatc h takes&#13;
charge of all horses standin g on&#13;
the street and sees tha t they are&#13;
well cared'for . The owner pays&#13;
the expense when he wants his&#13;
horse. This plan if adopte d in&#13;
othe r towns would save man y a&#13;
faithful anima l hour s of suffering.&#13;
Boys with hat s on th e back of&#13;
thei r head s and long hair hangin g&#13;
down over thei r foreheads , and&#13;
cigarette s and smutt y words in&#13;
thei r mouth s are cheape r stuff&#13;
tha n an old worn-ou t shoe; nobod y&#13;
wants them at any price . Men&#13;
will not emplo y the m girls will&#13;
not marr y them . The y are not&#13;
worth thei r keepin g to any one ,&#13;
and they will never be able to&#13;
keep themselves.—Mt . Clemen s&#13;
Press. -&#13;
Wm. Arnold' s gravel bed west&#13;
of town is bette r tha n a Klondyke .&#13;
A numpe r of years ago he sold a&#13;
gravel hill to the Michiga n Centra&#13;
l for several thousan d dollars&#13;
and last week he sold to th e same&#13;
compan y 18 acres at th e gr&amp;vel&#13;
bed for $8,000 and a life pass for&#13;
himself and family over th e companie&#13;
s lines. I t is4 reporte d tha t&#13;
the gravel will be used ia corncompletin&#13;
g the double trac k between&#13;
Dexte r and Tpsilant i this&#13;
summer .&#13;
I t is announce d tha t th e biggest&#13;
buildin g in the world is soon to&#13;
be .erecte d in the business centr e&#13;
of New York City, site not yet&#13;
divulged, by the Merchants ' Asso-&#13;
Firs t come first served so inarc h&#13;
up and pay back dues on th e&#13;
DISPATC H and a year ahead .&#13;
Thi s will secure tha t good little&#13;
paper , th e Far m Journal , five&#13;
years withou t any furthe r pay.&#13;
Shall we hear from you within&#13;
one week?&#13;
CL T- TJ.&#13;
Edited by the W.C. T. V. of&#13;
Continued f out la«tw«c|i.&#13;
SOCIAL.&#13;
This departmen t aims to iuter -&#13;
est th e conservative social classes&#13;
of society by the use of conservative&#13;
Social means . The meeting s&#13;
are held in homes , th e audienc e&#13;
gathere d by iuvitation . Th e&#13;
method s must vary to meet th e&#13;
varied characte r of social demands .&#13;
Religiou s services, tnusic , a brief&#13;
address, conversationa l discussion&#13;
distributio n of literatur e and circulatio&#13;
n of autograph y pledge&#13;
books are recommended . Gentl e&#13;
men may be invited and honorar y&#13;
membershi p solicited . Refresh -&#13;
ment s add to the social characte r&#13;
of th e hour .&#13;
FLOWER MISSIO N&#13;
Thi s departmen t aims to graft&#13;
our gospel work upon a beautifu l&#13;
form of philanthropy . Bouquet s&#13;
are to be tied with white ribbon s&#13;
and a scriptur e verse or suggestion&#13;
relative to temperanc e to be attached&#13;
: our literatur e to be circu -&#13;
lated to accompan y tne flowers,&#13;
and the tota l abstinenc e pledge&#13;
offered at appropriat e times.&#13;
STATE AND COUNTY FAIRS&#13;
Thi s departmen t aim s to brin g&#13;
temperanc e idea s an d practice s in&#13;
contac t with th e peopl e at fairs&#13;
an d othe r great holida y gather -&#13;
ings by mean s of a boot h (suitabl y&#13;
designate d . by mottoes , picture s&#13;
an d othe r decorations) , wher •&gt;&#13;
will make the m despise phyiscal&#13;
combat , and will lift the m t o a&#13;
plan e where th e weapon s are&#13;
arguments , parliamentar y usage&#13;
and law;all of these having above&#13;
the m th e "sword of th e Spirit, "&#13;
tha t weapon which is, above all&#13;
others , worthy of reasonabl e and&#13;
responsibl e beings.&#13;
Th e departmen t also contem -&#13;
plate s Internationa l Arbitration ,&#13;
as th e metho l tha t shall universally&#13;
replac e war, and in thi s interest&#13;
, literatur e will be circulated,&#13;
public meeting s addressed ,&#13;
petitions , and co-operatio n with&#13;
the Peac e Societie s of thi s and&#13;
othe r nation s sought.&#13;
County Farmer' s Mee t&#13;
Report of the Special Meeting of the&#13;
Lirln^stou Co., Association of Far*&#13;
mers' Hubs held ia the Court&#13;
Houso at llowell February 25th.&#13;
temperanc e drink s ar e dispense d&#13;
an d literatur e circulated ; also to&#13;
secure , if possible, favorable referenc&#13;
e to th e subject of temperauc e&#13;
in publi c addresses , mad e eithe r&#13;
by thos e appointe d by authoritie s&#13;
of th e fair, or if thi s be impracti -&#13;
cable , presentatio n of th e subject&#13;
by ou r own speakers . Thi s departmen&#13;
t protest s against th e&#13;
sale of intoxicant s on holida y occasions&#13;
, an d make s systemati c effort&#13;
to secur e th e enactmen t an d&#13;
enforcemen t of laws to thi s end .&#13;
LEGISLATION AND PETITIONS&#13;
Thi s departmen t aims to secure&#13;
prohibitio n by constitutiona l and&#13;
statuor y law in eveay state and&#13;
territor y and to secure a prohibi -&#13;
ciatio n of New York. I t is proposed&#13;
to inaugurat e th e new centur&#13;
y by holdin g a great industria l j a B t h e m a u i f o l d w o r k °f t h e W C&#13;
bitor y amendmen t to the Nationa l&#13;
Constitution . Methods are varied&#13;
Again the associatio n meetin g&#13;
suffers in attendanc e from almost&#13;
impassible roads, bnt representa -&#13;
tives from Howoll, Marion , Hart -&#13;
land , Deerfiel d and Geno a clubs&#13;
arrived in time for an afternoo n&#13;
session. The presiden t called th e&#13;
meetin g to order and in the abseuce&#13;
of tbe recordin g secretary ,&#13;
D. M. Beckwith was chosen to act&#13;
and th e meetin g proceede d to busness&#13;
at once . On accoun t of the&#13;
absence of some of th e partie s assigned&#13;
work on th e regular program&#13;
and the shortnes s of time ,&#13;
the regular program was abandon -&#13;
ed and such portion s of the same&#13;
was taken up as time would permit.&#13;
The repor t of the legislative&#13;
committe e was given. The suhject&#13;
of appropriation s was taken up&#13;
and discussed and the general&#13;
opinio n was in favor of neede d&#13;
appropriation s economicall y used.&#13;
H. "R. Thompso n introdnppr l the&#13;
subject of delinquen t tax law&#13;
which was quit e thoroughl y discussed,&#13;
the result of which was&#13;
the following resolutio n being&#13;
unanimousl y adopted :&#13;
Whereas, throug h th e opera -&#13;
tion of the delinquen t tax law,&#13;
thousand s of dollar s are unequal -&#13;
Blimark'i Iron Nerve&#13;
Wat the result of bis splendid health.&#13;
Indomitable will and tremendous&#13;
energy are not fonnd where stomach,&#13;
liver, kidneys and bowels are out of&#13;
order. If you want these qualities&#13;
and tbe success they bring, use Dr.&#13;
King's New Life Pills. They develop&#13;
every power of brain and body. Only&#13;
25c at F. A. Siller's drug store.&#13;
ly assessed upon th e citizen s of&#13;
the state, aud&#13;
Wheras, th e expense of repeate&#13;
d attempt s .to collect said&#13;
taxes in man y cases is frequentl y&#13;
largely in excess of th e actua l&#13;
valuatio n of th e propert y and with&#13;
tho good of th e individua l tax&#13;
payer iu view of th e Livingston&#13;
count y associatio n of Farmers '&#13;
Clubs.&#13;
Resolve, tha t we condem n th e&#13;
presen t system of uncollectabl e&#13;
delinquen t taxes upon the rolls&#13;
and tha t our legislators use thei r&#13;
utmos t efforts eithe r to introduc e&#13;
a bill or in suppor t of a bill, the&#13;
object of which shall be to make&#13;
such incollectabl e delinquen t revert&#13;
to state ownership .&#13;
COMMITTEE .&#13;
A motio n prevailed favoring&#13;
the resolutio n adopte d by th e&#13;
board of supervisors and sent to&#13;
th e Hon . J. B. Tazsma u relative&#13;
to change s in our drain iaw. A&#13;
motio n was carrie d favoring the&#13;
Kimmi s bill.&#13;
The following resolution s ir&#13;
regard to equal taxatio n were&#13;
adopted :&#13;
Resolve: Tha t we the member s of the Livingston&#13;
Count y Association of Fa r mere* Clubs, do&#13;
deman d of the presen t legislative a law which&#13;
will insur e equal taxatio n upon th e whole of the&#13;
propert y of the state accordin g to its true cash&#13;
value with th e exception s embodie d Iu the Dudle y&#13;
bill.&#13;
The meeting then adjourned to&#13;
meet in the court house at Howell&#13;
the first Saturday in August, 1899.&#13;
Ten Ml), to* Wfceelme«.&#13;
It is stated by Gompettat authority&#13;
that there are tea, million people in&#13;
America who are btfl^ile riders.&#13;
Probably each one gets an*average ot&#13;
one hurt in a season and that is jost&#13;
when Henry &amp; Johnson's Arnica A&#13;
Oil Liniment tiets in its vood work.&#13;
Nothing lias ever been made that will&#13;
cure a bruise, cut or sprain so quick&#13;
lv. Also rdtuohes pimples, sunburn&#13;
tan or freckles. Glean and nice to&#13;
use. Take it with YOU. Costs 25c&#13;
J per bottle. Three times as much in a&#13;
50c bottle. We sell it and guarantee&#13;
it to jjfive Rood satisfaction or money&#13;
refunded.&#13;
F. A. Sitfler.&#13;
Railroa d Guide .&#13;
tfrand Trunk Railway System.&#13;
Tim e Table in effect, Februar y 5, 1899&#13;
a &gt; u&#13;
TOLED O rv&#13;
NNARBOjY.&#13;
•/NORT H MICHIGA N&#13;
RAILWAY.&#13;
M, A. L. DIVISION-WESTBOUND .&#13;
No . 27 Pusenper . Pontia o to Jackso n&#13;
coiiLectio n from Detroi t 9 41 a ai&#13;
No . 48 Mixed. Leno x to Jackson&#13;
connectio n frotn Detroi t 4 45 p m&#13;
All train s daily except Sunday .&#13;
EASTiOUND .&#13;
No . 80 Passenger to Pontla e and Detroi t ft 1,1 p hi&#13;
No . 44 Mixed *o Pontia c and Leno x 7 5."» a ni&#13;
All train s daily except Sunday .&#13;
No . 30 connectio n at Pontia c for Detroit .&#13;
No 44 connectio n at Potatla c for Detroi t and&#13;
for th« west on I&gt; A M R R&#13;
E.H . Hughes , \V. J. hla*k,&#13;
A G P AT Agent, Agent,&#13;
Chicago , 111. 1'incknev .&#13;
STATE OF MICHIGAN , Count y of Livingston&#13;
IB.&#13;
At a seenion of th e Probat e Cour t for waid coun -&#13;
ty, held at tlie probat e office In t)i»&lt; village of&#13;
How?ll on Frida y tlm 10th day of lVliruasy ia&#13;
the yeur oco thousand , eight hurnlm l and ninet y&#13;
nine . I'resent : Alhird M. Davis, Judge of Pro -&#13;
bate.&#13;
In the matte r of the estate of Otis I'orul , d&lt;&gt;&#13;
ceased,&#13;
On readin g and fllinK the petition , duly verified,&#13;
of Fran k Con I prayin g tha t administratio n&#13;
of said estate may he j;ranttn i to Klmer Van Hu&#13;
ren or some othe r suitable purson .&#13;
Thereupon , it is ordere d that Frida y the 101 h&#13;
day of Marc h next at 2 o'cloc k tn ttrtafternoon ,&#13;
at said Probat w Office, bo aaeigtied for the hear&#13;
ing of said petition .&#13;
And it is fnrthe r ordere d (ha t a copy of thin&#13;
orde r be publishe d In th t Pinckue y DMPATCJM I&#13;
newspape r printe d and eirculatJoo g in euid conn&#13;
ty, thre e bucceefke weeks previous to Raid day of&#13;
hearing . /.?.nnu &gt; M. 1&gt;AYIX, Judye of Piobnt«&lt; .&#13;
[A tru e copy ]&#13;
WAYNE HOTEL, DETROIT&#13;
AMERICAN AND EUROPEAN PLAN.&#13;
• * TO $3 BO 07.00 TO&#13;
MEALS, BOO. UP TO DAT* CAP**&#13;
Popular route for Ann Arbor, To _&#13;
ledo and point s East, South , and lor ( B ^ m f SEWING M^№l)N"EAfiTi&#13;
Howeii, owosso, Aima, Mt Pleasan t Direct to tnc coDsomcrdtficlorypricea&#13;
Cadillac, Manislee, Traversa City and fHtllBCRTY * —&#13;
points in Northwestern Michigan. ***tmiywe«s.*«« .&#13;
W. H, BEXNKTT,&#13;
G. P. A. Toledo&#13;
OMOturiL V m t stsr tucc ^&#13;
№ Sftwtm *2O.05 IMWCHMMM K&#13;
expositio n in it. Thereafter , however,&#13;
it is to remai n a permanen t&#13;
instition . The site will, it is said,&#13;
cover eight city blocks, and the&#13;
buildin g will be at least sixteen&#13;
time s as large as tha t of Madiso n&#13;
Squar e Garden , th e convergin g&#13;
street s and a street railway to&#13;
traverse it. I t is hope d to complete&#13;
it by 1902, when th e proposed&#13;
exposition is to be held.&#13;
Story • ! aoisrre .&#13;
To be bouud hand and toot for jean&#13;
by tbe chains of dieease is tbe worst&#13;
form of slavery. George D. Williams,&#13;
• f Manchester, Mich., tells how such *&#13;
slave was made free. He says: "My&#13;
wife has been so helpless for five yean&#13;
that she could not turn over in bed&#13;
done. After using two bottles of&#13;
Electric Bitters. *be is wonderfulyl&#13;
improved and is able to do her own&#13;
work." This supreme remedy for female&#13;
diseases quickly care* nervoug-&#13;
MH , sleeplessness, melancholy, head-&#13;
MW. fcackacbe, fainting cad dizzy&#13;
•ytlii . This miracle- working nwdi-&#13;
*-* n a godsendWweafc, udtij, r*«&#13;
ptopto. B?«y bottle r.&#13;
T U. As all roads ouce led to&#13;
Rome , so every purpos e and plan&#13;
point s to th e consummatio n defined&#13;
unde r this all-embracin g&#13;
aim. Specifically, petition s to&#13;
legislative bodies, systematic efforts&#13;
to enforc e existing laws and&#13;
a course of study and readin g for&#13;
local union s are include d unde r&#13;
thi s departmen t&#13;
FRANCHISE&#13;
Thi s departmen t aim s to aid&#13;
th e state s tha t desire to utilize&#13;
th e schoo l ballot for temperanc e&#13;
purposes , is alread y confered , or&#13;
to secur e in whole or in part , th e&#13;
ballot for woman as a weapon of&#13;
protectio n to thei r home s from&#13;
th e liquo r traffic an d its attendan t&#13;
evils. Methods—Circula r letter s&#13;
with instructions , forms of petitions&#13;
, etc. , distributio n an d sale&#13;
of appropriat e literature , article s&#13;
to th e press, correspondenc e an d&#13;
publi c addresses.&#13;
PEACE AND INTERNATIONA L ARBITRATION,&#13;
: Thi s departmen t aim s to&#13;
secur e such trainin g in home ,&#13;
•and* ? school , publi c schoo l and&#13;
Lojol Temperance Legion, M&#13;
FHC FAVORITE&#13;
BIGGLE BOOKS A Farm Library of unequalled value—Practical,&#13;
Up-to-date, Concise and Comprehensive—Handsomely&#13;
Printed and Beautifully Illustrated.&#13;
B y J A C OB B I O G LE&#13;
No. 1-BIOQLB HORSE BOOK&#13;
All about Horaet—a Common-Sense Treatise, with OTCT&#13;
74 Illustrations, a standard work. Price, 50 Cents.&#13;
No. 3-BKKJLE BERRY BOOK&#13;
All about growing-. Small Fruits—read and learn bow ,&#13;
contains 43 colored Hie-like reproduction* of all leading&#13;
varieties and 100 other illustrations. Price, 50 Cents.&#13;
No. 3-BKJQLE POULTRY BOOK&#13;
All about Poultry ; the best Poultry Book in existence«&#13;
tells everything ; wlthaj colored life-like reproductions&#13;
of all tbe principal breeds; with 103 other illustrations.&#13;
Price, 50 Cent*. :&#13;
No. 4-BKK1LE COW BOOK&#13;
All about Cows and the Dairy Business: having a great&#13;
sale; contains 8 colored life-like reproductions ofeach&#13;
breed, with 13a other Illustrations. Price, 50 Cents.&#13;
No. 6-BKKJLB SWINE BOOK.&#13;
Just out. All about HORS—Breeding, Peedins, Butchery,&#13;
Diseases, etc. Contains over 80 beautiful half*&#13;
tones and other engraving!. Price, 50 Cents.&#13;
South. Every one who keeps * Hone. Cow, Roc or&#13;
Chicken, or grows fimstt faults, ought to lead right&#13;
•wa y far the BKMLB BOOKS, ttt FARM JOURNAL tm«4e for youd toowdn n,holtt t*h etnniasifll-t.o ni&lt;th tes4t&gt;s years&#13;
Para and Household paper to&#13;
* ? « * * 1 the United State*&#13;
aaillionsada-hslfrtfi&#13;
M r ORB «f Ike BKGLB BOOKS, and the FARM JOUtHAL&#13;
50 YEAR8'&#13;
EXPERIENCE&#13;
TRADE MAIM S&#13;
DCSION S&#13;
COPYRIGHT* 4C.&#13;
Anyone* sending a ske&lt; eh and description may&#13;
Quiokly ascertain onr •pinio n fraa wn«tn«r am&#13;
Invention u probably pntontAble . Commnnlea*&#13;
ttons strictly confidential. Hirndboo k on Patent*&#13;
sent free. ()l&lt;1e*t npenc y fnr Mourin n patent*.&#13;
Patents taken throup h Mnn n &amp; &lt;'o. reostv*&#13;
tpeeialnotice, without char m In th e Siifi r i peeialnotice, without Scientific A handsomely Ulnctnu^ d v •&#13;
calation of any scienUue l&#13;
year: tonr months, $1. &amp;o&#13;
ty. I areast&#13;
- vl- "'«rt"g,&#13;
«il nowsdnal&#13;
TteDavtoMacMneCa.GMcaoo.&#13;
y&#13;
Carriages&#13;
sat1&#13;
H ^h^s^s§&#13;
i ; * - • • ? ? • * • * • - . " • • " . /&#13;
• a'&#13;
BRITISH&#13;
MEDICAL INSTITUTE 8 0 3 E. Main St., JACKSON, MICH.&#13;
TREATS ALL DISEASES&#13;
OF MEN AND WOMEN.&#13;
UfPilf UPU restored to vigor and&#13;
WWCnn men vitality. Ortfuns of&#13;
tbe body which have been weakened&#13;
through d.sease, overwork, excess or&#13;
inditereiiona, restored to full power,&#13;
strength and, vigor by our new and&#13;
original system ot treatment&#13;
l//fJtf/)0/r/)C of testimonials bear&#13;
**«/#?•/#» *&gt;*/»# evldenoe oi tjie good&#13;
results obtained from our method of&#13;
treating all forms of ohronio disease.&#13;
WE TRE1TIND CURE&#13;
Cstarrh, Heart D»c*w, liver Complaint.&#13;
Syphifit, Tuanoft,&#13;
s&#13;
Sciatica,&#13;
Lumbito,&#13;
FcmalcWi&#13;
Bronchitis.&#13;
RheuaMbsm, Sterility, SkmDiseaKS,&#13;
BUoerTrauble, EloodDiKws,&#13;
Lost of yWirr. Youthiul Error*.&#13;
Dytpepsis. N ' T 0 1 " T"***«*&#13;
rv^tjfjriww, wefkotsi d Men.&#13;
ooasciTiTioi n u . CHABUS aoonun.&#13;
DR. HALE IN PERSONAL CHARGE.&#13;
sncUL HOtlCSi Those unable to call should send&#13;
stamp for question blank for horn* treatment.&#13;
Council Proceedings.&#13;
For The Tillage of Ptaekstty.&#13;
STYLISH, RELIABLE&#13;
ARTISTIC-**&#13;
Reconm«ndtd by Leadlaf&#13;
Drtstmaktrs. £ £&#13;
Th«y Vw&#13;
MS CALL&#13;
M BAZAR, \ PATTERNS&#13;
NONB BETTER AT ANY PRICE&#13;
Pf*lhti« ptiterm art «otd In nearly&#13;
fvtry city and town in ih« I'mted State*.&#13;
!( » cur de»l«f doit not kerp them tend&#13;
direct la hi I One :tnt uampi received.&#13;
your nearest point.&#13;
THE McCALL COMPANY,&#13;
13810 U6W Uth Strut; Nl» York&#13;
1IUNCB OflCEl !&#13;
180 Filth Ave., Chicago, and&#13;
1051 Market SU, Sao Francisco.&#13;
CALLS&#13;
MAGAZINE&#13;
50&#13;
YEAR&#13;
Brightest Magtilns Published&#13;
Contains Rnutiful Colored Plate*.&#13;
Jllumraie* Latest Pattern*, Fashions,&#13;
Fancy Work.&#13;
Ajemt wanted lor thia mafatlne in rverr&#13;
locality. Beautiful premiums for a llttl*&#13;
work Writ* for lerma and other particular*.&#13;
Sub»cript&gt;r&gt;n only fiOo« par y«a/i&#13;
including a F R E E Pattern.&#13;
Addr THE McCALL CO.&#13;
I J 8 to 146 W. 14th St., N*w Y*rk&#13;
Regular, Feb. 6, '99.&#13;
Couucil convened and called to&#13;
order by Pres. Sigler.&#13;
Present: Trustees, Erwin, Bea-&#13;
SOD, Thompeou.&#13;
Absent: Trustees, Teeple Jackson,&#13;
Monks.&#13;
Minutes of previous meeting&#13;
read and approved&#13;
The following bills were presented:&#13;
Francis Carr, lighting lamp*, ft 15&#13;
W K Murphy, chlwume, t&gt;tc, 81&#13;
Wm, Mclotyre, 1 trip snow plow, I 00&#13;
£ L Thompson, r* \&gt;. OKI^M, 8 00&#13;
D W Murta, service*, 6 25&#13;
Reaaon * Shehan, oil. 7 88&#13;
Total, |24 84&#13;
Moved aud carried to accept&#13;
bills as read and orders be drawn&#13;
to pay the same.&#13;
Electric light project deferred&#13;
until the February 20th meeting.&#13;
Council adjourned.&#13;
R. H. TEEPLE, Clerk.&#13;
Special, Feb. 20, '99.&#13;
Council convened and called to&#13;
order by Pres. Sigler.&#13;
Present: Trustees, Thompson,&#13;
Erwin, Jackson, Monks, Teeple,&#13;
and Reason,&#13;
The Electric Light question&#13;
dropped for the present.&#13;
Moved by Thompson and Jackson&#13;
that the Treasurer deposit a&#13;
check for the amount of principle&#13;
and interest of scraper notes in&#13;
Bank, and to take up said notes.&#13;
Carried.&#13;
Council adjourned.&#13;
R. H. Teeple, Clerk.&#13;
m m m&#13;
A Liberal Offer&#13;
We have made arrangements where&#13;
&gt;*y we can give our subscribers the&#13;
Karra Journal for five years free on&#13;
ilie following conditions:&#13;
All new subscribers to the DISPATCH&#13;
WHO pay one year in advance.&#13;
I All old subscribers who pay up&#13;
i r r e ars a n doneyearinadvance -&#13;
i All 15c subscribers who send in&#13;
I i\ w'ul receive credit for one year&#13;
rom the time their present subscripion&#13;
expires.&#13;
Tbe Farm Journal is a 24 page&#13;
uonlhly paper drtvoted lo the iuterr.at&#13;
)t the tarra and farmers aud will he&#13;
i good one for reference.&#13;
Subscribe quick as we only have 100&#13;
•it, our disposal at the above terms.&#13;
Call and see bam pie copy.&#13;
^^^a^^^k^^^v^^^v^^^v^^^vp^^vp^^«^^^*j^^^^^^^*^^ ^S^^^V^^^V^^^V^^^'J^^^'^&#13;
We Make&#13;
The Eldred&#13;
* $5O.OO&#13;
the Belvidere&#13;
4O.OO&#13;
Superior to all others Irrespective&#13;
of price. Catalogue tells you&#13;
why. Write for one.&#13;
NATIONAL SEWING MACHINE CO.&#13;
330 BROADWAY.&#13;
N«w York.&#13;
Factory.&#13;
BBLVIDBRE, ILL.&#13;
"&#13;
ijPTIVE". F0IICIT0R8 WANTKD EVFR i&#13;
f»B hiVT f«r " I t f Plery of tbe IMHptpes'&#13;
»yK11 rat l)«Ute»d, eon tfiifaioDrd by tl&gt;«&gt; Govern&#13;
n«ut M &lt; flolsjl xlWh'Hsr totlw War I^jmrtment&#13;
s* vitttSB ID (beam? rsnip* at 8aa&#13;
FrssVir&lt;Q. &lt; n thy I atiflc *itb (-eceral Merrlt, 1«&#13;
l»l» st HoDOloKOii B M I KoBfr, in th«&#13;
*#a)1ol&gt; _ aM£»&#13;
r oft tbe battji s&#13;
B r a t ^ for agent*. Mattel&#13;
CUT UP THE WRONG HAT.&#13;
How a Scotch University Profesaor W l l&#13;
FooUd by a Htvdoat.&#13;
A Scotch university professor, Irritated&#13;
to find that his students had got&#13;
Into the habit of placing their hats and&#13;
canes on his desk, instead of in the&#13;
cloakroom, announced that the next&#13;
article of the kind placed there would&#13;
be destroyed. Some daya later the&#13;
professor wac called for a moment&#13;
from the classroom. A student slipped&#13;
Into his private room and emerged&#13;
with the professor's hat, which he&#13;
placed cooAffeuously on the desk,&#13;
while his f*?t»W8 grinned and trembled.&#13;
The professor, on returning,&#13;
saw the hat, thought some rashly obstinate&#13;
student had been delivered into&#13;
bis hands, and, taking out his knife,&#13;
he cut th*» offending article to pieces,&#13;
while vainly attempting to conceal the&#13;
smile of triumph that olayed about hit&#13;
countenance. He was In a very bad&#13;
temper the next day.&#13;
Item i ikable Rra'rue.&#13;
Mrs. Michael Curtain, Plainfiald III.&#13;
makes the statement, that she caught&#13;
cold, which settled on h«r lung?; she&#13;
was treated for a month by her family&#13;
physician, but grew worse. He told&#13;
,&gt;be was a hopeless victim of consumption&#13;
and that no medicine could cure i&#13;
her iler druggist autftrebted Dr. '&#13;
Kings New Discovery for Consumption;&#13;
she bought a bottle and to her&#13;
delight found herself benefit ted from&#13;
first dose. Sbe continued iU use and&#13;
after taking six bottles, found herself&#13;
aoand and well; sow does her own&#13;
boost work\,apd fe as well as sfat ever&#13;
wat.—free trial bottles of thia Great&#13;
Dinoovery at F. A Bipier's Drag Store.&#13;
Only ftOeeaU tad $1.00, *IHJ bottU&#13;
Additional Local.&#13;
We understand that county school&#13;
eommisbioner WdlUea was ia tows&#13;
one day last week bat be neither made&#13;
this office oi tbe school a visit.&#13;
Bicycle ^dealers are startiaur oat tbe&#13;
season on a larwe scale. We counted&#13;
24 advertisement in one edition of a&#13;
daily paper recently. Prices are&#13;
ranging lower that ever before.&#13;
We are plea&amp;ed to note that Wm.&#13;
Ferguson has bean hired for another&#13;
year t&lt;&gt; ha?e charge of tbe county&#13;
poor (arm. That U WAS a uood choice&#13;
gO3s without saying as the farm was&#13;
never ubder better management.&#13;
Already t.h« subscriptions begin to&#13;
oome in and all ask that the Farm&#13;
Journal be sent. Tbe number allotted&#13;
to tbe DISPATCH will soon be gone&#13;
so get in your $1 quick and get tbe&#13;
Farm Journal free fur five years.&#13;
"Success," a weekly magazine pub&#13;
lished at New Yo'k, is a bustler and&#13;
is much read bv the young of today.&#13;
In the issue of March 4, WHS an ex-&#13;
O^Penr write-up and several half&#13;
tone cuts o( Governor Hazen S. Pingree&#13;
as welt as other celebrities.&#13;
Saturday and Sunday occured about&#13;
th* wor&gt;t snow storm that has visited&#13;
this section for some time. The wind&#13;
blew, the snow sntw, arrfTtue flake&#13;
flew until somrt of thi roads and walks&#13;
we.e almost iinpassiblejnnd others did&#13;
not have a particle ol tbe beautilul on&#13;
them. Enough snow fell to make&#13;
good sleighing but it did not stay in&#13;
the right place.&#13;
That Electric Railway.&#13;
••Icawle p&#13;
Are grand, but okiu eruptions rob&#13;
life of joy. Bocklen'b arnica salve&#13;
cures them; also old, running and&#13;
favor sores, aleere, boils, felons, oorns,&#13;
warts, cats, braues, burns, scalds,&#13;
chapped band*, chilblains, best pile&#13;
care on earth, drives out pains and&#13;
aches. Only 25c a box; care guaranteed.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, druggist&#13;
UNDERTAKER&#13;
AND EMBALMER.&#13;
J.G.SAYLES.&#13;
PLAINFIELD, MICH.&#13;
I hold a certificate from&#13;
the Champion Embalming&#13;
College of Springfield, Ohio&#13;
and am prepared to do embalming&#13;
of all kinds.&#13;
A lady assistant for "embalming&#13;
women and children.&#13;
A great many papers throughout&#13;
the stHte published tbe clipping last&#13;
week from tne Tribune stating that&#13;
the Lansing, Dexter &amp; Ann Arbor&#13;
Railway was an assured fact and work&#13;
won Id im oegun at once on both ends.&#13;
We saw the article but did not wish&#13;
to mislead anyone so did not publish&#13;
it.&#13;
Part of the statements were trie&#13;
but the road is not built yet and some&#13;
-tall hustling will have to be done il it&#13;
i* completed in time for the managers&#13;
to collect the notes as it was to be&#13;
completed oy Dec. 1899, or the notes'&#13;
were null and void. We certainty \&#13;
would be «lad to see the line in ^&#13;
operation this year but it still looks&#13;
as if we should see another year be&#13;
lore its completion. That it will be j&#13;
built sooner or later is no question in !&#13;
our minds and the sooner the better.&#13;
Dr.Cidy'd Conditioa Powders are&#13;
just what a hor^e n« ids when in bad&#13;
condition. Tonic, bl tod purifier and&#13;
venaituge. They ace not food but&#13;
merlicine and the b"&gt; in use to put a&#13;
horse in prime condition. Price 25c&#13;
per package. For sa n by F. A. Sig&#13;
er&#13;
METROPOLITAN HOTELS.&#13;
The DUfereno* Between the Hontelrtet&#13;
of New York and Chicago.&#13;
Here are some new facts in regard&#13;
to hotel life. One of ttie leading New&#13;
York papers a short time ago made the&#13;
humble confession that Chicago had&#13;
surpassed the proud eastern metropolis&#13;
In hotel population—that is, people&#13;
who make public caravansaries their&#13;
permanent abode the year round. Wellinformed&#13;
hotel men in Chicago are at&#13;
a loss to understand New York's confession&#13;
in this matter, for it is undoubtedly&#13;
the American city having&#13;
the greatest number of hotels and hotel&#13;
residents. The admission is accounted&#13;
for on the hypothesis that New York,&#13;
by the absorption of Brooklyn, Staten&#13;
Island and other territory, gained tremendously&#13;
in population, but lost, relatively&#13;
speaking, in hotel prestige.&#13;
Brooklyn is a city of homes; &gt;i has&#13;
few hotels. Thus New York, in increasing&#13;
its population by annexation&#13;
from 1,800,000 to 3,300,000, increased&#13;
the number of its bona fide hotels only&#13;
from 240 to 300, so that its hotel population&#13;
was diminished relatively in&#13;
consequence. "IL.Chicago's hotel population&#13;
exceeds that of New York,"&#13;
said E. Willis Rice, publisher of the&#13;
National Hotel Reporter, "it is only&#13;
as to the ratio of Inhabitants in the&#13;
two cities. That is a matter I have&#13;
never figured out. The fact remains&#13;
that New York has more hotels—good,&#13;
bad and indifferent—than any other&#13;
American city. Here are two statements,&#13;
however, which can be made&#13;
without fear of successful contradiction:&#13;
First, New York gets $2 to $2,25&#13;
out of every hotel guest, permanent or&#13;
transient, where Chicago gets $1; secondly,&#13;
the business traveler or the&#13;
pleasure-seeking tourtBt, who almost&#13;
invariably sets up a vigorous kick&#13;
and howl over a question of $S In&#13;
hotel charges in Chicago, goes to New&#13;
York and pays $6 for accommodations&#13;
no better without a murmur. The maa&#13;
who has reached the honor and distinction&#13;
of arriving at a New York&#13;
fcotel and ot having tnat fact duly&#13;
dferbslelwd la the papers feels an IMportaaot&#13;
that causes his hotel Mil to&#13;
4wia41t&#13;
CUumtorlutn'N C'n.tiU Remedy&#13;
This remedy is ant tided especially&#13;
tor coughs, colds, v oup, whooping&#13;
rniu-b and influenzi. It has become&#13;
famous for it.scurn-: -A these djne.ases&#13;
over a large p i r *&gt;f the civilized&#13;
worM. Tha most H -Bering testimon-&#13;
MI&gt; have bejn rectr &lt;\ giving account&#13;
of its urood work; it the. aggravating&#13;
AU&gt;\ persi&gt;tent coiu'l;- if. has c.ired; of&#13;
!-tMere rold&gt; ttat hiivn yielded prompt*&#13;
ly to its soothing * fleets and of the&#13;
dinu'erous attack- of croup it h^s&#13;
cn»*ed, otfen saving the life of the&#13;
child. The-extensive use of it tor&#13;
whooping cough has shown that it&#13;
robs disease of all dangerous consequences.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Si&#13;
AC'TIVK SOLICITORS 'VVNTO EVSr{Y&#13;
W H ES KE for "Tne S orv of th« Phillppinra. '*&#13;
by Murat Halacead, commissioned by thn iiovern.&#13;
ni«&gt;nt as Oitt&lt;rial HUtoriia to f-he War DepartiD&#13;
«nt, Th- book w&amp;* wriuan In a,-my camps at&#13;
San Francisco, on the Pacific with (Tt»n*&gt;rsl Merrltt,&#13;
in the hosptUi* at Honolulu, in lloai Koti:, in&#13;
the American trenched at Maai.l*. ia the iniurg*&#13;
nts camps with Aguinaldv &lt;&gt;n the d^uk oi the&#13;
Olymf&gt;ia with D^wey. aiul in the roar of the battle&#13;
attheial or Manilla Bonanza fur agents. Brimful&#13;
of pictured tiken by government photogiaphers&#13;
OQ the Bp&gt;t. Lanje twok. L &gt;w prlos. Bi?&#13;
profits. Krtliiht paid. Credit eWen. Drop all&#13;
trashy nnotUcial war books Outflt free. Address,&#13;
F. T. Barber, Sec'y. Star Insurance Bldg, Chicago.&#13;
1 have (&gt;e«n afflicted with rbeuma&#13;
tisra for fourteen years acd nothing&#13;
seomed to give any relfef. I was able&#13;
to be around all the time, bat constantly&#13;
suffering I had tried everything&#13;
I could h«?ar of' an i at last was&#13;
told to try Chamberlain's Pain I3;ilm&#13;
whn-li I did and was immediately relieved&#13;
and in a short time cured. I&#13;
am happy to say thnt it has not since&#13;
returned.—losh Edsjar, Gerinantown,&#13;
Oal For sale by P. A. Siller.&#13;
Act on B sew prtaciple—&#13;
x«gulaU) CAO aver, fUf&gt;macb •nd bowel* through tk$&#13;
r*rws 1)&amp; Ucar Pnx»&#13;
s Ml&#13;
tpttdito&#13;
torpid li»»r w&amp;A&#13;
Rev. £. Ed .vards, pastor of tbe&#13;
h Baptist church at Minersville.&#13;
Pa., wb«D suffering with rheumatism&#13;
was advised to try Chamberlain's Pain&#13;
Bain. He says: "A flew applications&#13;
of thia liniment proved of (Treat service&#13;
to ace. It subdued tbe infiamation and&#13;
relieved the paia. Shoo Id any sufferer&#13;
profit by imag pain halm a trial ii&#13;
will pUaee mt." For salt hf F. A.&#13;
aoaauw IT I&#13;
FRANK I.. ANDREWS&#13;
Entered at the Poetofflc* at Ptacknej, MlchltM«&#13;
as »#coo&lt;l-cla*« matter,&#13;
rate* nude known oa application.&#13;
Bu»ln«M Cards, $4.00 per year.&#13;
reath and marrlue notice* published torn.&#13;
•anounceioenta ot entertaiameata may be patt&#13;
tor, if desired, by preeeating the office with ticket*&#13;
of admleeiOD. In caeetiektetaare notbroogat&#13;
to the oAtee, regular rate* will be charged.&#13;
All matter in local notice column will be chart&#13;
ed at 5 cente per line or fraction thereof, tor each&#13;
Lneertioa. Where no time it specified, all notice*&#13;
will beioMrted aatll ordered oiaconUaaed, aai&#13;
«iU be charged for accordingly. i ^ \ l l change*&#13;
of advertlMmenta MC8T rea:h thU office aa early&#13;
aa TUMDAY morning to lnaore aa insertion UM&#13;
tame week.&#13;
In all Ita branches, a specialty. We have all kiada&#13;
and the latest »tyle« of Type, etc., which enable*&#13;
aa U&gt; execute all kinds of work, men as Books,&#13;
Pampleta, Posters, Programmes, Bill Heads, Not*&#13;
Heads, Statements, Cards, Auction Bills, ete., la&#13;
superior styles, upon the ahorteat notice. Price*a*&#13;
o v &lt;m tood work can be aone.&#13;
f t«sr of SVUHY&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIRECTORY.&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PBIDIDIMT . » « ....~.. Claade L. Slrler&#13;
TitcsTBSs (ivo. ti;idoa Jr., O J. r«Hule, f *&#13;
Jackson, R. il. tn*ia, £. L. Thompson, Alfred&#13;
Mouka.&#13;
CL*KK R. H. Teeple&#13;
THKASORIB « ." U. W. .Murta&#13;
AHMKMSOH - W. A Carr&#13;
Sracrr CoMwastoNca Qeo. Burch&#13;
t&gt;. W, Murta&#13;
or. H. K. jiUler&#13;
~ . W. A. Oarr&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
ETHODiaT BPISOOPAL CHDRCH.&#13;
ifX Rev. Chas. Simpson, pastor. Service* 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;
Ing service. F. L. Andrews, Supt.&#13;
p O CifUttCH.&#13;
\J Kev. C. W. Kice pastor. Service every&#13;
Sunday morning tt 1U:«O and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:0C o'clock. Prayer meeting Phnnid&#13;
»y evenings. Sua-Uy school at cloae of inora-&#13;
Ing service. R. H. People , S lot. Rua itaaJ, -iec&#13;
ST. MAltY'S 'JAI'&#13;
Kev. \t. J. Comuiirford,&#13;
every Sunday. Low uias* at 7:30 o'clock&#13;
bigli mass witti sermon «tt 9:10 a. m. Uatechlsm&#13;
ato:0o p. iu., vespers ana benediction at 7:^0 p.m.&#13;
SOCIETIES;&#13;
The A. O. U. Society of this place, rneeu every&#13;
third Sunday in the Kr. Matthew llall.&#13;
John McGutuest,County D&lt;legite.&#13;
pinckney Y. P. S. G. E. Meetings held every&#13;
[rtuuday evening in Ooa^'l ctiarcu tt ft )) »'ol &gt; ;'&lt;&#13;
Mits Beewie Cordley, r*res Muble I)^ker Sec&#13;
LEAGUE. Meets every Sunday&#13;
K at 6:(X&gt; oclock in the X. E. Cnurcli. A&#13;
cordial invitation is extended Co erery'ioe, especially&#13;
youug people.Mrs. Stella Graham I'retJ.&#13;
Junior Epwortn L..?»^ue. Mt-.Ms every Sunday&#13;
afterno.jn at l:W o'cloolc, at M. E church. All&#13;
d J afternojn at l:&#13;
cordiuliy invited.&#13;
Mi&#13;
Kdith S'un^hn, Siiperintendent.&#13;
The C. T. A. and a. Suciei/ jf this p&gt;ace, meet&#13;
eve// third Saturuay eveniae in the r"r. Matthew&#13;
Hall. John Uonohue, Hresident,&#13;
KNIGHTS OF MAUCABBES.&#13;
Meet every Friday evening on or before full&#13;
of the moon at their ball in th« Swarthout bldg.&#13;
Visiting orotberd are cordially indted.&#13;
C . IUNPBKLL, Sir knltiht Commander&#13;
I" ivlngaton Lodge, No.7*., » 4 A. M. K-^iar&#13;
J j Communication rue^day evemu^, oa or Det'ore&#13;
tuelull of ine uioou. Alexander dcliuyre, W , M.&#13;
ORDEKOF EASrEti.V .SL'Ati ineetaeaca month&#13;
the Krlday evening follu.viu^ tue fe,Mi*r b\&#13;
. meeting, Mtu. MAKY KP:.\D, &gt;V. &gt;l.&#13;
LADIES Of THE -MACiJAU^ai. jio*t cvor&gt; let&#13;
and 3rd Saturday of eachuiomh at -t.iij p ui. at&#13;
K. &lt;). i'. M. h ^ l l . V i s i a u ^ J..itJti o j i ' i i ^ i i y i a&#13;
vited. Li LA CONIVVA/ L,&lt;tdy Com.&#13;
KNIGHTS OF THE LOYAL GLT&#13;
ine^t every second Wednesday&#13;
eveulux of every moutainthe K.. U.&#13;
T. M. Hail n» ;:V)o'clock. All visiting&#13;
Guards welcome.&#13;
ARNKLL, Capt. (re&#13;
I^HE' W. C. T. U. meets th» tirst Friday of each&#13;
month at ?:&amp; p. tn. »t t &gt;e h&gt; an of Dr. H. F.&#13;
Sigler. Everyone interested in temperano'* is&#13;
coadially invited Mrs. '^eal Siller, Prea; Mrs.&#13;
Ktta Durfee, Secretary.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
H. F. SIQLER M. 0- C, L, SIQLER M. D&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
Physicians and Sur^e &lt;its. Ail oaiU proutptl&#13;
attended today or night. Otttoe oa Vain sir&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
DR. A. B. GREEN.&#13;
r—Every Thursday aud Friday&#13;
Office over Si^ler'-i l)ru^ Store.&#13;
For $9.50 W* Can make to&#13;
your measure a&#13;
Fia*. All-Wool SMt&#13;
Latest City 3tyi— [&#13;
You can be a well-dressed man&#13;
if you know how. Write as for&#13;
Samples and Booklet "Harm to Loot WtU, Drtu Weil, and&#13;
SovvMoaty."&#13;
Tte LUVIS MACWNe c a&#13;
Besf Hotel in Detroit&#13;
•, f;&#13;
• n * •&#13;
-M&#13;
* ' • " '&#13;
a&#13;
• * * .&#13;
: . * . • • If'&#13;
;v&#13;
№ . * . "&#13;
FRAXK L. ASDKKWS ,&#13;
PIKCKXEY , MICHIGAN.&#13;
The pace tiiat Lills is oiieu a "&#13;
runnin g race.&#13;
Swallowing eage tea is one way to&#13;
drin k is wisdom.&#13;
If it wasn't for th e grip the cable&#13;
would be tfooraed.&#13;
TALMAGE'S SEEMON .&#13;
'HOME " TH E SUBJEC T OF LAST&#13;
SUNDAY' S TA1.K*&#13;
From the First Book of Timothy, Chapter&#13;
*«• Vers« S, m* Pi low*: *'L*t Them&#13;
Flrttrto-Wiow r u ty at How*"&#13;
in \Vht«fc to ttcxr* UoU&#13;
A Kcntuckia n says waterproo f ccat s&#13;
are all right for the stomach .&#13;
Few men can- keep .heir good resolution&#13;
s and a diary at t^e same time .&#13;
Peopl e would havo fewer trouble s if&#13;
Durin g th e summe r month s th e&#13;
tendenc y is to th e Selds, to v lei tat ton ,&#13;
to foreign travel and the waterin g&#13;
places, and th e ocean steamer s are&#13;
Pronged ; but in tlie winter it is&#13;
rathe r to gathe r in domesti c circles,&#13;
and durin g these month s we spend&#13;
man y of the hour s within doors, and,&#13;
the apostle cornea to us and says tha t&#13;
we ought to exercise Christia n behavior&#13;
amid all such circumstances .&#13;
the y spent less time ia talkin g about j L e * them learn first to show piety at&#13;
home .&#13;
Ther e are a great man y people longing&#13;
for some grand spher e in which&#13;
to serve God . The y admir e Luthe r at&#13;
the Diet of Worma, and only wish&#13;
tha t the y had some such great opportunit&#13;
r in which to display thei r&#13;
Christia n prowess. The y admir e Pau l&#13;
makin g Feli x tremble , and the y only&#13;
_ ,1 H 7 '• • , A i w i s i l t n a t Travelin g often take s ta e concei t out the y had some such gran d o c c a s i o n l n w W c h t Q e a c h h t e o u s .&#13;
of a man , but comin g hom e put s twice n e s g ) t e m p e r a n c e a c d j u d g m e n t t 0&#13;
come . All the y want is an opportunit y&#13;
•i to exhibit thei r Christia n heroism .&#13;
Now, th e apostl e practicall y says: 'I&#13;
will show you a place where you can&#13;
exhibit a!2 tha t is grand and beauti -&#13;
ful and glorious in Christia n charac -&#13;
ter, f.nd tha t is th e domesti c circle.&#13;
Let the m begin first to show piety at&#13;
hciae. " If one is no t faithful in an insignificent&#13;
spher e he will no t be faithful&#13;
in a resoundin g sphere .&#13;
If Pete r will no t help th e&#13;
tiiexn.&#13;
It' s a poor kind of repentanc e tha t&#13;
•doesn' t insure against a repetitio n of&#13;
th e offense.&#13;
What a jolly old-worl d this would be&#13;
If everythin g on eart h was as attrac -&#13;
tive as the shop windows.&#13;
as much cf it in him again.&#13;
Some men resemble posta^ r stamps ;&#13;
the y stick to one thin g unti l they get&#13;
there—but you've got to lick them first.&#13;
Col. Leiter will find it difficult to hold&#13;
:the milk trust in shape so long as&#13;
;water and chalk are not in the comt&gt;&#13;
ine .&#13;
Representativ e Joh n M. Mitchel l of&#13;
No w York city is known as the Adonis&#13;
of congress and the handsomes t man&#13;
in public life.&#13;
"Dewey must be a regular cannibal, "&#13;
remarke d old Mrs. Grigsby, "who said&#13;
cripple at, the gate of th e Temple , he&#13;
will never be able to preac h thre e&#13;
thousan d into the kingdom at the Pen -&#13;
tecost . If Pau l will not take" pain s to&#13;
instruc t in tho way of salvation the&#13;
th e read tha t ne recentl y ate a Filipin o \ jailer of the Philippia n dungeon , he&#13;
with a young lady.&#13;
A revolutio n is in progress in Nic -&#13;
aragua. No reason is given; but reasons&#13;
are not necessary for revolution&#13;
s down tha t way.&#13;
Ther e will be no racin g at Washington&#13;
Par k club this year, as the menTbers&#13;
do not wish to have any mor e&#13;
troubl e over pool selling. This decision&#13;
would seem to indicate tha t the&#13;
club doesn' t care so much about racin g&#13;
as g/bout gambling. The officials might&#13;
tr y the one withou t tho other , even&#13;
it it loses the revenue from the bookmakers&#13;
.&#13;
The time seems to be approachin g&#13;
when the various trust s will have a&#13;
complet e grip upon the nation . At&#13;
presen t only eleven commoditie s aro&#13;
fcutsid e the pale ot the voraciou s mon -&#13;
ster whicli threaten s to do to the coun -&#13;
try what the blightin g insect does to&#13;
th e grain fields of the . farmer . With&#13;
the power of combine d capita l th e&#13;
trus t octupu s is attackin g the very&#13;
basis of the country' s institutions , and&#13;
takin g away, we might say, the right&#13;
of the commo n people to exist unless&#13;
the y go to the exactin g trust and pay&#13;
its exactin g price for the necessarie s&#13;
cf life. - _.&#13;
Now tha t the legislative' bill to prohibit&#13;
the immodes t use of the female j&#13;
face and form in advertisin g is ad- j&#13;
vanccd to a third rendin g it seems high J&#13;
tim e for somebod y to thro w a protect -&#13;
ing arm aroun d the quiverin g sensiblli- !&#13;
ties of million s of men who have been J&#13;
outrage d by indiscriminat e displays of&#13;
th e male flgure for the base purpos e of j&#13;
helpin g oii the sale of malt extracts ,&#13;
bitter s and othe r thing s supposed to be&#13;
necessar y to the v/ell being of man .&#13;
"What is more disagreeable to a gentleiman&#13;
whose own limbs ere knobby and&#13;
•bia s tha n to see an Aiiollo Belvedere&#13;
depicte d on every billboard to catch&#13;
th e admirin g glances of brazen people&#13;
of thp opposit e sex? If th e rqp.le figure&#13;
s must be shown in advertisements ,&#13;
let only the "before taking " ones, be&#13;
used.&#13;
Coroner s of t.fc.e state of Illinoi s will&#13;
presen t to tho legislature thi s session&#13;
a bill fct an act makin g it a raisde-&#13;
KM&amp;uor for any person to remove tke&#13;
body, of a person meetin g unexpecte d&#13;
or "violent death from the spot whfcre&#13;
it la fbund, except for th e purpos e oC&#13;
'&lt;rz.r\si$zr\ng the corpse to th# nearett t&#13;
suitable Shelte r fo*^r$retfdj a from&#13;
weather or cdt^tjWSl"olfc-fram.c 'the&#13;
ia aimed -at the Chicago&#13;
police ,and, the undertakers who have&#13;
Had the benefit*, ot tha* police ftyiUjfn,&#13;
which permitted &amp;e removal of the&#13;
body to toe nearest sadertakin*'"establishment&#13;
Under the proposed (bill&#13;
the coroner, on Lis arrival at tfie&#13;
place where the tody is, after ejqjRpf-ti&#13;
"nation, is obliged to order It taken&#13;
to a morgue, and after the inquest 10&#13;
turn the body over to friends, or, tn&#13;
the event no friends appear, to have it&#13;
buried at county charge. This provision&#13;
is Intended to stop the practice,&#13;
said now to prevail among undertakers,&#13;
of preparing the body for burial&#13;
aa toon as it comes to their possessloa&#13;
then insisting upon payment by&#13;
will never make Felix tremble . He&#13;
who is not faithful in a skirmish would&#13;
not be faithful in an Armageddon .&#13;
The fact is, we arc all placed ln just&#13;
the position in which we can most&#13;
grandly serve God , and we ought not&#13;
to be chiefly thoughtfu l about some&#13;
f-fepbere of M&amp;ef uln^ss whieh—we may&#13;
after a while gain, but the all-ab -&#13;
sorbing question with you and with&#13;
me ou£i;t to be, "Lord, what wilt&#13;
thou have me now and here to do~?"&#13;
There is one word in St. Paul's adjuration&#13;
around which the most of&#13;
our thoughts will revolve. That word&#13;
is "home." Ask ten different men the&#13;
meaning or that word, and they will&#13;
give you ten different definitions.' To&#13;
one it means love at the hearth, plenty&#13;
at the table, industry at the workstand,&#13;
intelligence at the bcoks, devotion&#13;
at the altar, ln that household,&#13;
discord never sounds its war-whoop&#13;
and deception never tricks with its&#13;
false face. To him it means a greeting&#13;
at the door and a smile at the&#13;
chair, peace hovering like wings, joy&#13;
clapping its hands with laughter. Life&#13;
!s a tranquil lake. Pillowed on the&#13;
ripples sleep the shadows. Ask another&#13;
man.what home is, and he will&#13;
tell you it is want looking out of a&#13;
cheerless fire grate, kneading hunger&#13;
in an empty bread tray. The damp&#13;
air shivers with curses. No Bible on&#13;
the shelf. Children robbers and murderers&#13;
in embryo. Obscene .songs their&#13;
lullaby. Every face a picture of ruin.&#13;
Want in the background and sin staring&#13;
from the front. No Sabbath-wave&#13;
rolling over that door aill—vestibule&#13;
of the pit, shadow of infernal walls,&#13;
fagots for an unending funeral pile.&#13;
Awful word! It is spelled with curses;&#13;
it weeps with ruin; it chokes with&#13;
woe; it sweats with the death agony&#13;
of despair. The word "home"" in ono&#13;
case means everyttiiug bright; the&#13;
word "home" In the other case means&#13;
everything terrific.&#13;
I shall speak now of home os a test&#13;
of character, home as a refuse, home&#13;
aa a political safaguard, home as a&#13;
school, and home as a type of heaven.&#13;
And in the first place, home ia a powerful&#13;
test of character. The disposition&#13;
in public,nviy; be In gay costume,&#13;
while !a&lt; private it is dishabille.&#13;
As play actors may appear in oue&#13;
way on tte.btage and may appear in&#13;
another way behijid the scenes, teo private&#13;
character mcy be very eiifferent&#13;
from public character. Private character&#13;
is often public character turned&#13;
wrong side cut. A man may receive&#13;
ycu into his parlor as though he were&#13;
a distillation of smiles, and yet his&#13;
lieart may be a swamp pX nettles.&#13;
There are business men wiw^li day&#13;
long arc mild and courteous aa4 genial&#13;
a wretcned stuck of goods. There is&#13;
many a man who is affable in public&#13;
life and amid commercial spheres, who&#13;
ln a cowardly »ray takes his anger and&#13;
his petulance home and drops them in&#13;
the domestic circle. The reason men&#13;
do not displcy their bad temper in&#13;
public is because they do not want to&#13;
be knocked down. There are men who&#13;
hide their petulance and their irritability&#13;
just for the same reason that&#13;
they do not let their notes go to&#13;
priest—it does not pay; or tor tto&#13;
cuvue reason that they do not want u&#13;
man in their stock company to sell&#13;
his itcck below par, lest it depreciate&#13;
the value.&#13;
As at sunset sometimes the wind&#13;
rises, so after a sunshiny day there&#13;
may be a tempestuous night. There&#13;
are people who in public act the&#13;
philanthropist, who at home act the&#13;
Nero with respect to their slippers&#13;
and their gown. Audubon, the great&#13;
ornithologist, with gun and pencil,&#13;
went through the forests of America&#13;
to bring down and to sketch the beautiful&#13;
birds, and after many years of&#13;
toil and exposure completed his manuscript&#13;
and put it in a trunk in Philadelphia,&#13;
and went off for a few days&#13;
of recreation and rest, and came back&#13;
and found that the rats had utterly&#13;
destroyed the manuscript; but without&#13;
any discomposure and without any&#13;
fret or bad temper he again picked up&#13;
his gun and pencil and visited again&#13;
all the great forests of America and&#13;
reproduced his immortal work. And&#13;
yet there are people with the Tenthousandth&#13;
part of that loss who are&#13;
utterly irreconcilable; who, at the loss&#13;
of a pencil or an article of raiment,&#13;
will blow as long and loud and sharp&#13;
as a northeast storm. Now, that man&#13;
who is affable in public and who is&#13;
irritable in private is making a fraudulent&#13;
and overissue of stock, and he&#13;
is as bad as a bank that might have&#13;
four or five hundred thousand dollars&#13;
of bills in circulation with no specie&#13;
in the vault. Let us learn to show&#13;
piety at home. If we have it not there,&#13;
we have it net anywhere. If we have&#13;
not genuine grace in the family circle,&#13;
all our outward and public plausibility&#13;
merely springs from the fear&#13;
of the world, or from the slimy, putrid&#13;
pool of our own se'f.jiiness&gt;. I&#13;
tell you the home is a mighty test&#13;
of character. What you are at home&#13;
sins anu tsorrows and troubles? Ore&gt;&#13;
whelmed in the Red Sea of death .while&#13;
they pass through dry-shod. Gates of&#13;
pearl, capstones&#13;
of dominion do not stir my soul so&#13;
DOINGS OF CONGRESS.&#13;
The President has approved the folthrones&#13;
lowlnK" hills: For the investigation of&#13;
jleprosy in the United States; for the&#13;
much as the thought of home. Once f.11™1.1** o f s \t e * ior P u b l i c b u i l d i u S a t&#13;
there, let earthly sorrows howl like&#13;
storms, and roll like seas. Home! Let&#13;
thrones rot and empires Vither.&#13;
Home! Let the world die in earthquake&#13;
struggle and be buried amid&#13;
processions of planets and dirge of&#13;
( tty, Joppliu, Mo., Seattle,&#13;
Wash., Oakland, Cul.. Iteaumont, Tes.,&#13;
Abilene, Tex., Salt Lake City, Utah,&#13;
F FFulllls, Minn., Blair, Neb., El-&#13;
^in.Jll., Jackson, Miss., Menominee,&#13;
Mich.: increase cost at Omaha, Neb.;.&#13;
spheres. Home! Let everlasting /addition to building at Canton. 0 . .&#13;
ages roll in irresistible sweep. Home! [Dubuque, la., Hot Spring, Ark.. Kan-&#13;
No sorrow, no crying, no tears, no fsas City, Kus., Monmouth, 111., Joliet,&#13;
death—but home, sweet home, beaulf- j m., Minneapolis, Minn.; additional&#13;
ful home, everlasting home, home wUa j property for uso of postotlicc at Clinton,&#13;
:.i.; also an appropriation of $20,-&#13;
000,000 to carry out provision of peace&#13;
treaty with Spain.&#13;
ln the senate three or more of minor&#13;
each other, home with angels, home&#13;
with God!&#13;
One night, lying on my lounge, when&#13;
very tired, my children all around&#13;
me, in full romp and hilarity and&#13;
laughter—on the lounge, half awake&#13;
and half asleep—I dreamed this&#13;
dream: I was in a far country. It&#13;
bills were pas»,ed, the calendar being"&#13;
cleared entirely of private pension bills&#13;
and of measures correcting military&#13;
anil naval re ords. Two measures of&#13;
was not Persia, although more than i national importance were passed, the- 1 fortifications appropriation bill and&#13;
the bill providing" a code of criminal&#13;
laws for the district of Alaska. A&#13;
provision for the hij^h licensing1 oi liquor&#13;
tralHc in the latter measure Wu&lt;*&#13;
defeated by a decisive vole. The conference&#13;
reports on the census and naval&#13;
personnel bills were agreed to. The&#13;
bill appropriating" S5')0,0'J0 for the iiuffalo&#13;
exposition, which passed the&#13;
Oriental luxuriance crowned the cities&#13;
It wus not the tropics, although moiu&#13;
than tropical fruitfulness filled the&#13;
gardens. It was not Italy, although&#13;
more than Italian softness filled the&#13;
air. And I wandered around looking&#13;
for thorns and nettles, but I found&#13;
that none of them grew there; and I&#13;
saw the sun rise, and I watched to&#13;
see it set, but it sank not. And I j i l o u s e , was also possi-d, and all these&#13;
saw the people in holiday attire, and j measures now LTO to the President.&#13;
I caid: "When will they put off this&#13;
and put on workmen's garb, and again&#13;
delve in the roine and swelter at the&#13;
forge?" But they never put off the&#13;
holiday attire.&#13;
And I wandered in the suburbs of&#13;
the city to find the place where tho&#13;
dead sleep, and I looked all along thi&#13;
line of the beautiful hills, the place&#13;
The semite is rapidly clearing1 its&#13;
desks for final adjournment. The&#13;
nuval appropriation bill, which ordinarily&#13;
consumes the time of the senate&#13;
for several days, was passed after less&#13;
than live hours' debate. Oi;u important&#13;
amendment was made to the bill&#13;
making1 a reduction of the amount&#13;
agreed upon by the house to be paid&#13;
where the deed might most peacefully for armor plate $GO0 per ton, or 81 ir»&#13;
l I l&#13;
and good-natured in life.&#13;
damming back their irritability and.&#13;
tthheii r pettull ance and tthheii r i&#13;
but at nightfall the dam tomks,, attd&#13;
scolding pourfc forth in floods and&#13;
freshets. Reputation is only the shadow&#13;
of character, and a very small&#13;
house sometimes will cast a very&#13;
long shadow. The lips may seem to&#13;
drop myrrh and cassia, and the diapofcition&#13;
be as bright and warm as a&#13;
sheath of sunbeams, and yet they may&#13;
be a magnificent show window for&#13;
are everywhere,-w-fec-t-her —-youdemonstrate&#13;
It or not.&#13;
• * *&#13;
Oh, make your home the brightest&#13;
place on earth if you v/ould charm&#13;
your children to the high rath of virtue&#13;
and rectitude and religion. Do&#13;
not always turn the blinds the wrong&#13;
way. Let the light, which puts golu&#13;
on the gentian, and spots the pansy,&#13;
pour into your dwellings. Do not ex*&#13;
pect the little f:ct to keep step to a&#13;
dead march. Do not cover up your&#13;
walls with such pictures as West's&#13;
"Death on a Pale Horse" or Tintoretto's&#13;
"Massacre of the Innocents."&#13;
Rather cover them, if you have lectures,&#13;
with "The Hawking Party"&#13;
and "The Mill by the Mountain&#13;
Stream" and "The Fox Hunt" and the&#13;
"Children Amid Flowero" and the&#13;
"Harvest Scene" and "The Saturday&#13;
Night Marketing." Get you no hint&#13;
of cheerfulness from grasshopper's&#13;
leap and lamb's frisk and quail's whistle,&#13;
and garrulous streamlet which,&#13;
from the rock at the mountain top&#13;
clear down to the ineadow ferns under&#13;
the shadow o£ the stcsp, comes&#13;
looking to see vr'icre it can find the&#13;
steepest place to leap off at, and talking&#13;
just to hear itself talk? If all&#13;
tha skie3 hurtled with tempest and&#13;
everlasting stcrm wandered over the&#13;
sea, and every mountain stream were&#13;
raving mad frothing at the moulh&#13;
with mud foam, and there were nothing&#13;
but z&gt;imoor.s blowing among the&#13;
hills, and there were neither lark'3&#13;
carol nor humming-bird's trill, nor&#13;
waterfall's dash, but only bear's bark&#13;
a?.tf panther's scream and wolf's howl,&#13;
then you might well gather into your&#13;
homes only tlie shadows. But when&#13;
God has strewn the earth and the&#13;
heavens with beauty and with gladness,&#13;
let us talte into our hone circles&#13;
all innocent hilarity, all brightness&#13;
and good cheer. A darV-. iion*:2 makes&#13;
bad boys and bad girls in preparation&#13;
for bad men and bad worten.&#13;
Arcin, home is n type of.heaven. At&#13;
our best estate we are ouly pilgrims&#13;
and strangers hero. "Heaven is our&#13;
home." Death will never knock at the&#13;
door of that mansion and in all that&#13;
country there i- not ». single grave.&#13;
HOT? glad parents are in the holidays&#13;
to gather their children home again.&#13;
But I have noticed that there is almost&#13;
alwayi a con or a daughter a.bj&amp;&#13;
evit—absent from home, perhaps absent&#13;
from the Country, peyhAfr abitnt&#13;
from "the world. OK how glad crqr&#13;
Heaveniy Ftther wiil fee when he gets&#13;
all hit children home with him in&#13;
heaven. And how delightful it will&#13;
bo for brothers and sisters to meet&#13;
after long separation! Once they&#13;
parted at the door of the tomb; now&#13;
they meet at the door of immortality.&#13;
Once they saw only "through a glass,&#13;
darkly;" now it is face to face, corruption,&#13;
incormption, mortality, im- _&#13;
mortality. .Where arc ttow all tiMir [iel*|!oa.&#13;
sleep, and saw towers and castles,&#13;
but not a mausoleum or a monument&#13;
or a white slab could I see. And 1&#13;
went into the chapel of the great town&#13;
and I said: "Where do the poor worship,&#13;
and where are the hard benches&#13;
on whi&lt;:h they sit?" And the answer&#13;
was made to me: "We navy no poor&#13;
in this country." And tl;&lt;ip. I wandered&#13;
out to find the hovels of the destitute,&#13;
and I found mansions of ainfcer&#13;
and ivcry and gold, but not a tear&#13;
could I see, not a sigh could I hear.&#13;
And I was bewildered, and I sat down&#13;
tmder the brarteftes-of a great tree and-&#13;
I said: "Where am I, and whence&#13;
comes all this scene?" And then out&#13;
from among the loaves and up the&#13;
flowery paths and across the broad&#13;
streams there came a beautiful group&#13;
thronging all about mo, and aa I saw&#13;
them come I thought I knew their step,&#13;
and as they shouted I thought I knew&#13;
their voices; but then they were so&#13;
gloriously arrayed in apparel such as&#13;
I had never before witnessed that I&#13;
bowed as stranger to stranger. But&#13;
when again they clapped their Iia.:d3&#13;
and. shouted "Welcome! welcome!" tho&#13;
mystery all vanished, and I found that&#13;
time had gone and eternity had come,&#13;
arid we were all together again in our&#13;
new home in heaven; and I looked&#13;
around and I £&gt;aid: "Are we all here?"&#13;
and the voices of many generations rasponded,&#13;
"All here!" A2:d while tears&#13;
of gladness were running down our&#13;
cheeks, and the branches of the Lebanon&#13;
cedars were clapping -their&#13;
hands, and the towers of the great city&#13;
were shining their welcome, we all&#13;
together began to leap and shcut and&#13;
"Ing, "Home! Home! Horns!"&#13;
RIGHTS OF PEW-HOLDERS.&#13;
/Vre Sit tin sn to lie Considered P«r«&#13;
•onal or Rent Estate?&#13;
Some interesting points regarding&#13;
the rights of pewholders have been&#13;
brought up in Boston in connection&#13;
with the question as to whether a deed&#13;
for a church iiH/ must bear an internal&#13;
reveni\g, B^amp. Ixi r.c-n\&amp; suites&#13;
pews ln churches arc declared by statute&#13;
to be real estate, and in other&#13;
states personal ostai.0. In Boston pews&#13;
have always been considered to be&#13;
personal estate, and pews in churches&#13;
of public worcLin throughout Massachusetts&#13;
are made personal property&#13;
by statute. "There ia a close analogy&#13;
between a pew-right and the rJ^l.t of&#13;
burial '.a a public burying ground or&#13;
.cemetery," says Acting CommissioneV&#13;
Wilson of the intern-i revenue bureau,&#13;
"and t!iO interest wbich a pew-ho!der&#13;
has in his pew Js held by English&#13;
-.•ourts V&gt; be of in i-.icospcreal nature&#13;
ouly. It is in the nature of an ease-&#13;
.7'ont, and the holder of the pew or&#13;
seat Is not deemed t^e owner of so&#13;
much of the *ite of the church as is&#13;
comprised within the ar*a of such pew&#13;
or scat It has been held that a pewholder's&#13;
rigJH is onljT|tfifeht'to occupy&#13;
his pew during pnil№ worship.&#13;
This view of the question W^ards pews&#13;
as personal property, wadL therefore,&#13;
d i &amp; t h i W&#13;
required'to. pay the war tax.&#13;
are not&#13;
Frlvat* Gr»T*74rd« In China.&#13;
There are no large cemeteries In&#13;
China. Every family has its own&#13;
graveyard, as spacious aa possible, and&#13;
thus a large part of the best land is&#13;
given up to the dead, t)m worship of&#13;
whose ia the first principal la CUnasc&#13;
less tha n th e amoun t fixed by the ,&#13;
bouse, an d in th e event armo r plat e&#13;
manufacturer s refused to sell at tha t&#13;
figure, to procee d to th e constructio n&#13;
of an tirmo r factor y at a cost of $l.fi(&gt;3, -&#13;
000, an d placing" in tho secretary' s con -&#13;
tro l 9^co;&gt;.oo o with which to operat e&#13;
tlie governmen t plant .&#13;
In th e house th e senat e bilfccarrying"&#13;
Sl.OO.OO O for n new "building"&#13;
for tlie departmen t of justice, was&#13;
pnsscd an d two public buildin g bills&#13;
attache d by th e seuat e to bilis for public&#13;
building' s in othe r cities were agreed.&#13;
to, on e appropriatin g S^.'.o.oo n for a&#13;
buildin g nt Los Angeles, lal., and "the"&#13;
othe r §75.000 for a buildin g at Ne w&#13;
Brighton, * Pa. Th e senat e bill appro -&#13;
priating " §148,000 to purchas e ,120.000&#13;
acre s of land, in accordanc e with th e&#13;
provisionso f th e treat y with th e Lower&#13;
Hrul e Indians , was passed.&#13;
After bix hours ' race against th o&#13;
clock th e Mcnoininc e public buildingbill&#13;
passed unde r th e wire in th e hous e&#13;
j-ttst-fr i minute s before-th e expiration —&#13;
of th e tim e limit tha t would have disqualified&#13;
it. Gran d Haven was practi -&#13;
cally left nt th e post, not'having - been&#13;
favorably acte d upon by th e hous e m&#13;
committe e of th e whole. It was an excitinj?&#13;
da y for all member s with public&#13;
buildin g bills at stake.&#13;
After a contes t tha t will be memor -&#13;
able in th e histor y ol' th e senate , th e&#13;
compromis e arm y reorganizatio n bill&#13;
was pnsscd. Mr. Gorman / of Mary -&#13;
land , insisted tha.t_^Jrrs'aincndment 1 providin g tha t th e arm y should no t h e&#13;
increase d permanentl y or beyond Jul y&#13;
1, 1001, be incorporate d in th e measure.&#13;
A warm debat e followed, ou t&#13;
th e amendmen t IU a slightly modifie d&#13;
form was finally accepted .&#13;
A favorable repor t on th e propose d&#13;
constitutiona l amendmen t prohibiting 1&#13;
polygamist s from bi-incf electe d to con -&#13;
press ha s been mad e in th e house by&#13;
Hep . Capron , of Rhod e Island , in behalf&#13;
of th e committe e on electio n of&#13;
presiden t and vice-president . I t refers&#13;
to th e case of Ren.-elec t Brigham H .&#13;
Roberts , of Utah , as on e of th e causes&#13;
for renewing" attentio n on th e subject.&#13;
The average man seem* to thin k tha t&#13;
other s expect too much ot him.&#13;
Years of suffering" relieved in a night *&#13;
Itching " piles yield at once to th e cur»-&#13;
propertie s of loan' s Ointment ,&#13;
tfever fails. At a&amp;y drug1 store, 50&#13;
•vrts .&#13;
cauliflower cam e from Cyprus .&#13;
Buikln uj&gt; t.»:e system, put s pure , rich&#13;
blood iii th e veins; make s men an d&#13;
wdinen stron g and healthy—Burdoc k&#13;
\Jloo d Hitters . At an y dru g store .&#13;
leave ingratitud e to man .&#13;
No mat-o r how long you have had th e&#13;
cough ; ii it hasn' t alread y developed&#13;
into consumptio n Dr. Wood's' Norwa y&#13;
Pin e Syrup will cure it.&#13;
To choose tim e is to save time .&#13;
NEURALGIA&#13;
• •&gt;,&#13;
Lord llerahell Dead.&#13;
Lord Ilerschell, one of the high&#13;
joint commissioners from Great Britain,&#13;
died at Washington recently. He was&#13;
sent to the United States because of&#13;
his eminent attainments to talce a&#13;
leading part in the negotiations designed&#13;
to settle nil existing differences&#13;
between the U. S. and Canada. Heart&#13;
failure was the immediate cause of bis&#13;
death.&#13;
Uruguay'• New TroAldent.&#13;
Sonor Cnestas has been elected president&#13;
of Uruguay. Cuestas was president&#13;
of the Uruguay senate at the time of&#13;
the assassination of President liorda&#13;
in August, 1S07, and assumed the presidency&#13;
ad intenuin. He was afterwards&#13;
appointed provisional governor&#13;
of Uruguay.&#13;
Dying of Scurvy.&#13;
Advices from Dawson City, Wash.,&#13;
any that men are dying of scurvy in&#13;
the suburbs of that cily. Recently a&#13;
man wus fotind almost dead in a tent&#13;
on Victoria gulch. His food was gone&#13;
and he was waiting for death, unable&#13;
to do anything to help himself.&#13;
TELEGRAPHIC BITS.&#13;
A quarrel over some fence rails resulted&#13;
in the death of Rev. J. C. Rexford,&#13;
a Baptist minister of Lewis&#13;
county, \V. Va.&#13;
The entire street railroad, system of&#13;
Buffalo has been bought by New York&#13;
and Philadelphia capital. The sale involves&#13;
some $25,000,000 of capital.&#13;
Wages of Illinois and Wisconsin Federal&#13;
Steel Co. workers, numbering J5,-&#13;
0f)0, have been raised 8 per cent. Alabama&#13;
miners are also gladdened by an&#13;
increase.&#13;
THIE MARKETS.&#13;
LIVE;&#13;
New Y o r k -&#13;
Best grade*...Si&#13;
Lower grades.i&#13;
Chicago—&#13;
Best cradles.., ,S&#13;
lx&gt;wer grades.3&#13;
Detroit—&#13;
Pest grades.... 3&#13;
Ix&gt;wer grades.3&#13;
Buffalo—&#13;
Beat grades....4&#13;
liOwer grades..3&#13;
Bent grades.... 4&#13;
J^owor grade*..*&#13;
Lower gradesi..3&#13;
Plttsbarg—&#13;
"Best grades... 5&#13;
STOCK,&#13;
Cattle Sheep Lambs&#13;
1 9 / i 6&#13;
3*»^ 5&#13;
9)^4&#13;
00Q&amp;&#13;
0014&#13;
»£4&#13;
U0&amp;3&#13;
B0(ft4&#13;
Lower grade&lt;t»l 2&amp;34&#13;
w1&#13;
J&#13;
IS&#13;
61&#13;
7i&#13;
4)&#13;
OJ&#13;
01&#13;
»&#13;
8.&#13;
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M3&#13;
4&#13;
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*&#13;
4&#13;
4&#13;
43&#13;
'a&#13;
4&#13;
W&#13;
A*&#13;
tJi&#13;
8)W&#13;
IS&#13;
00&#13;
00&#13;
Ml&#13;
74.&#13;
5&#13;
4&#13;
3&#13;
4&#13;
3&#13;
54&#13;
4&#13;
3&#13;
4&#13;
5&#13;
0J&#13;
75&#13;
2)&#13;
B0&#13;
7&gt;&#13;
C5&#13;
10&#13;
0)&#13;
8J&#13;
SU&#13;
J 0&#13;
Hoys&#13;
f I3&#13;
8&#13;
3J&#13;
43&#13;
8&#13;
3&#13;
*&#13;
3&#13;
43&#13;
U&#13;
8&gt;&#13;
V)&#13;
W&#13;
8)&#13;
CO&#13;
9)&#13;
50&#13;
.»»&#13;
n&#13;
W h e a t Corn. Oats.&#13;
Nft i red No. i mix No. * w h i t e&#13;
N e w York ««*8oft 4.V&amp;4W S7Q37 S&#13;
Chicago •Tt&amp;VIM » t39&#13;
-"Detroit 71.174* * .-.3(9*04 29 12V&#13;
Toledo " "&amp;&amp;&#13;
81&#13;
&lt;H«v«i«nd 79&#13;
Plttaburg&#13;
Baffalo •- 'TDri.T^f ' 87^&lt;47H&#13;
'•Detrolt-Hav .No, 1 tlmothv, •&lt; M per ton.jj&#13;
Potatoes, tfftc per bu. Live Poultry, spi'&#13;
lhldfcedfe.8*rp«rib:f&lt;J%U.7vtc; tttrxers,&#13;
duckx. Me. Effff*. strictly fr,eth. S8c per d o t&#13;
Butter, best dairy, 18c per ib; creamery, tic.&#13;
STATE LEGISLATURE.&#13;
Rep. Chamberlain's temporary relief&#13;
l&gt;ill for the aid of «x-s&lt;jUUer* and marinea&#13;
of the Spanish-American war was&#13;
finally patched up so a* to meet the&#13;
•pprora^.pf both houses and was approved.&#13;
The conference committees&#13;
from both houses withdrew the Uiflerent&#13;
amendments which would have&#13;
made the bill inoperative, Under its&#13;
present provisions it will run until&#13;
August 1. Other bills passed in the&#13;
house as follows: Legalizing the taxes&#13;
-assessed in the township of Ithaca,&#13;
•Gratiot county, for 1898; providing for&#13;
the assessment aud levy of taxes upon&#13;
the property of railroad, express, telegraph&#13;
and telephone companies and&#13;
the collection thereof. Passed in the&#13;
senate: A bill making a new judicial&#13;
circuit (3&lt;"&gt;th) out of Cass and Vau&#13;
liuren counties.&#13;
The biji amending the constitution&#13;
so as to permit of an additional circuit&#13;
judge in St. Clair county was passed&#13;
by the house, given immediate effect,&#13;
and has gone to the governor; also one&#13;
legalizing certain bonds of Urooks&#13;
township, Newaygo county, to the&#13;
amouut of $0,000, and one authorizing&#13;
Gladstone to rebond for 835,000 for&#13;
water .works were passed by the senate&#13;
and given immediate effect, and&#13;
gone to the governor.&#13;
The Atkinson bill did not have such&#13;
easy sailing in the senate as was expected.&#13;
The bill was sent to the general&#13;
taxation committee. A resolution&#13;
calling on the committee to report out&#13;
this and ail other similar bills in a few&#13;
days was defeated. The plan of the&#13;
antis is to hold a caucus and if the immortal&#13;
19 can agree as to be amendments,&#13;
the bill is to be amended and&#13;
sent back to the house.&#13;
After weeks of shouting and bluster&#13;
on both sides the antis gave in and the&#13;
Atkinson bill finally passed the house&#13;
by a vote of 72 to 2:i. Gov. Pingree&#13;
was a silent spectator of the climax.&#13;
Newfoundland Wants Reciprocity.&#13;
A movement has been set on foot at&#13;
St. Johns, N. F., for an extensive reciprocity&#13;
scheme between Newfoundland&#13;
and the United States, including fish j&#13;
for the West Indies market, lumber,&#13;
pulp, mineral and other valuable products&#13;
of American industry. It is regarded&#13;
as extremely unlikely that the&#13;
joint high commission will ever resume&#13;
its sessions.&#13;
How* ThU?&#13;
We offer OJIKHundred Dollars Reward fqrany&#13;
of Catarrh that cannot i&gt;e cured by HulTj&#13;
Cutu-rh Cure&#13;
F. J. CHKNEY &amp; CO., l»rops., Toledo. O.&#13;
W . the undersigned, have Unuwn Y. J,&#13;
Ch-'fiy tor the la-st 15 vears. and believe hha&#13;
pei'Uytiy honorable In all business truusuctlous&#13;
uml .nunclaliy able to curry out any obligations&#13;
mud»&gt; by their tirm.&#13;
WJSST&amp;TIU'AX. Wholesale Druirtflsts.Ttriedo.Q,&#13;
WALDIMJ, Ki.\NAN«Si MAKViNVVliuicsale Druj&lt;-&#13;
Kists. Toledo, O.&#13;
Hail's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, actinir&#13;
directly upon the b)&lt;*od aud mucous surfaces of&#13;
the*ystom. Priw &lt;T&gt;c. per bottle. Sold by uU&#13;
Drujftfistx. Testimonials free.&#13;
Hull's Family Pilk; uro the best&#13;
The man who acknowledges that he&#13;
is a chump has begun to acquire wisdom.&#13;
AN AGED VETERAN.&#13;
A Detroit Veteran Talk* of the War and&#13;
aud a Legacy it Left Him.&#13;
When the annual reunion of the&#13;
G. A. K. is held, Michigan is always'&#13;
well represented. Around the camp&#13;
tires of the encampment our boys tell&#13;
of the hardships they have gone&#13;
through and the listener who knows&#13;
nothing of war will wonder how they&#13;
lived to tell the tale. Few men who&#13;
followed old glory and escaped the&#13;
shot and shell returned home without&#13;
some legacy as a constant reminder of&#13;
their war days. Our representative&#13;
found vetera"n O. F. Nevvcomb, of Detroit,&#13;
at his place of residence, No. 237&#13;
Second street. Mr. Newcomb told him&#13;
how the little conqueror had rendered&#13;
him invaluable service. We give his&#13;
account here and some words of advice&#13;
tersely told. He said:&#13;
'•A lake covering about two acres in&#13;
extent, containing the dead bodies of&#13;
20 mules, is not tempting water to&#13;
drink, but I was one of many who&#13;
drank it, and all of us would have done&#13;
so if we had known there was death in&#13;
every swallow. This illustrates but&#13;
one of the many hardships and privations&#13;
passed through during the civil&#13;
war, and it is no wonder that G. A. R.&#13;
men suffer from aches and pains. The&#13;
most prevalent of these being due to&#13;
kidney disorders. I am pleased to note&#13;
a great many others who passed through&#13;
as trying ordeals as I. have now learned&#13;
how these troubles can be mitigated.&#13;
When I say Doan's Kidney Pills will&#13;
cure them I not only speak from experience&#13;
but from observation. To all&#13;
old soldiers or anyone suffering from&#13;
kidney complaint my advice is to try&#13;
that remedy.'1&#13;
Doan's Kidney Pills for sa!e by all&#13;
dealers. Price 50 cents. Mailed by&#13;
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y., sole&#13;
agents for the IT. S. Remember the&#13;
name Doan's and take no substitute.&#13;
COMFORTING WORDS TO WOMEN. a Co. 2:.&#13;
DISCOVERY: i&#13;
_ _ riutcai rt-liot tin 1 cuifd worK&#13;
&lt;J fur booK of tmiimuniaU oml lUdaUTS*&#13;
t r e a t m e n t jrxeo. l»r. U.iL«lU(«&amp;&gt;ttoOM. AUaata7tfa»&#13;
A GOOD.GARDEN Is a pleasure and u profit. Gregory1! soe&lt;l book dlre^&#13;
ta » rluhc b^jfinotuK. Gregory'* &amp;e«d liMuratb*&#13;
most aucceniui ending. O«t tbe book sow {('• free.&#13;
JAH£» J. ti. GSifiQBr frSSN, Marb!ehe*4.&#13;
Whiskers Dyed&#13;
A Natural BUtok by Buckingham's Dye.&#13;
Price 30 cent! of aU druggists or&#13;
K. P. Hail &amp; Co., Nashua, N. H.&#13;
Tho Sursrioal Ohcir e^id its Tortures May be Avoidod by Women "Who START WAIL O^DER RCSINESS. W»&#13;
H e e d Mrii. P m k h a z n 8 AdvLco. j write *•«u. iMKaiiiL co., »u.«i« T««»W,&#13;
"Woman's modesty is natural; {t is charming.&#13;
To many women a full statement of their troubles to a male physician ts almost&#13;
impossible. The whole truth may be told to Hi's. PiuUhiun because ehe&#13;
is a woman, and her advice is freely&#13;
offered to all women sufferers.&#13;
Mrs. O. E. LADD, of 19th and N&#13;
Sts., Galveston, Texas, whoso&#13;
letter is printed below, was&#13;
completely discouraged whea&#13;
she first wrote to Mrs. Pinkham.&#13;
Here is what she says:&#13;
'•DEAHMBS. PINKHAM:—I&#13;
wrote to you some time ago,&#13;
tilling1 you of my ills, but&#13;
now I write to thank you&#13;
for the good your remedies f&#13;
have done me. I have used&#13;
two bottles of Lydia E.&#13;
Pinkham's Vegetable Corapound,&#13;
three packages of&#13;
Sanative Wash, and one box&#13;
of \Liver Pills, and to-day I&#13;
calj myself a well woman. I&#13;
suffered with backache, constant&#13;
headache, whites, sick&#13;
stomach, no appetite, could not&#13;
sleep, and was very nervous. At&#13;
time of menstruation was in terrible&#13;
pain. Your medicine is ' . \***~*&#13;
wortn its weight in gold. I never / /A&#13;
can say enough in praise of it. I have&#13;
recommended it to many friends. If only&#13;
all suffering women would try it, there would be&#13;
more happy homes and healthy women. I thank&#13;
you for the change your medicine has made in me.&#13;
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and Mrs. Pinkham's advice, have&#13;
saved thousands of women from hospital operations.&#13;
The lives of women are hard; whether at home with a ceaseless round of domestic&#13;
duties or working at some regular employment, their daily tasks make&#13;
constant war on health. If all women understood themselves fully and knew&#13;
how exactly and soothingly Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound acton&#13;
the iemale organs, there would be less suffering.&#13;
Lvdla £. Wnktiam's Vegetable Compound; a Woman's Remedy for Woman'sIIk&#13;
DR. MARTEL'3 FRENCH&#13;
FEMALE&#13;
PILLS ParttorilMt s a d temlmouialsID&#13;
plain aesletl&#13;
letter MAJZJU&gt; FMEB.&#13;
FRENCH DflUO CO.. 3 8 ! A 3 8 3 Pearl St., Kt»York&#13;
FOR WOMEN&#13;
CHEAP FARMS DO YOU WANT A HOME?&#13;
ACRES Improved an&lt;J&#13;
provf Uiunuaii: lands&#13;
to be divided aud&#13;
t&gt;old on long time and m*y payment*, a little&#13;
each year, ('ometind s.e u.» or write. THE&#13;
TRUMAN MOSS STATE DANK, Sanilao&#13;
Ceoter, Mich., or&#13;
THE TRUMAN MOSS ESTATE,&#13;
Croswell, San Mac Co* Mldfe&#13;
— IrHxonduet is t4rree-fourths of-li-fe-th«~trUhea-. Answering Advertisement*&#13;
other fourih must be good clothes.&#13;
DIRECT&#13;
FPEIGItr PPEPAIA&#13;
Pcicts.&#13;
ife Oirccf To 73 Bo,\D 3 T .&#13;
Mention This Taper.&#13;
14 CENTS&#13;
WHEAT&#13;
FIELDS&#13;
.iainthi»jear200,0C0&#13;
KPW customer*, ami hfebce olfer&#13;
1 Pice U Day Kadi»b, luc&#13;
1 Pkg. Early Ripe (Jat&gt;b«ce» 10o&#13;
' " EnriiMt S i d Br*%» loo&#13;
1 fialM«Bert Lttucp,&#13;
1 M Cfclifomia Fie Tomato,&#13;
1 " Early Dinner Onion,&#13;
Brilliant glower Seeda.&#13;
Worth »1.OO, ferlAeenta,&#13;
Above 13 pkga. wono 9L00, wswill&#13;
mail joa froe, tocetbqr w;'n our&#13;
(rest Plant and Seed Catalogue&#13;
npon receipt of this notice 4 14c&#13;
postage. We inTit« yotir trade and&#13;
Know when you onoe try Haizer's&#13;
•eedsyonwillneTor get aloDgwith-&#13;
$: oat thnm. Onion Keed 68c. and&#13;
op * | b . Potatoes a t »I.«O i&#13;
•. Bbl. Catalog alone 5o. No.«t&#13;
LA CROHSC, MIS.&#13;
Of "Western Canada, and their vastness and&#13;
productiveness, and t t e broad expanse of the&#13;
Grazing Plains east of the Koeliy Mountains as&#13;
well as the beautiful rewards for toil of the&#13;
husbandman, was what impressed the Wisconsin&#13;
Editors en thtir trip through that country&#13;
[i last summer. Free homes c;va be had there,&#13;
and particulars obtained frrm the Department&#13;
of the Interior. Ottawa, Canada, or&#13;
M. V. Molcnes, No. 1 Merrill Block, Detroit,&#13;
Mich.; James Grieve, Mt. Pleasant, Mich., or&#13;
D. I* Caven, Bad Axe, Mich.&#13;
PfSO'S- CURE FOR&#13;
Beat Cough Syrap. Tastes Good. U N I&#13;
In time. SoldbTj&#13;
. C QNS U MPTJON.&#13;
TAKE&#13;
BROMO-QUININE TA This Signature&#13;
SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS IN&#13;
TEE UJUTEI1 STATES&#13;
AND CANADA.&#13;
is on every box of LAXATIVE 6R0M0 QUININE TABLETS. Accept DO substitute represented to be "just as good/1&#13;
GRIP CURE thai DOES CURE! Druggists refund the money&#13;
if it fails to cure.&#13;
PRICE 2 5 CENTS&#13;
Why is&gt; blue grass invariably preen '.'&#13;
^ Try Graln-o! Try Graln-o!&#13;
Ask your grocer today to show you a&#13;
package of GRAIN-O, the new food&#13;
drink that takes the place of coffee.&#13;
The children may drink it without injury&#13;
as well as the adult. All who try&#13;
it, like it. GRAIN-O has that rich seal&#13;
brown of Mocha or Java, but it is made&#13;
from pure grains, and the most delicate&#13;
stomach receives it without distress.&#13;
One-fourth of the price of coffee. 15c.&#13;
and 25c. per package. Sold by all&#13;
grocers.&#13;
Want of tact is an incurable infirmity.&#13;
Coujrhlog Leads to Consumption.&#13;
Kemp's Balsam will stop the cough&#13;
at once Go to your druggist today&#13;
and get a sample bottle free. Sold in&#13;
25 and 50 cent bottles. Go at once; delays&#13;
are dangerous,'&#13;
Oh That Uellelona Coff««l&#13;
Costs but lc per 1b. to grow. Salier has&#13;
the seed. Get man Coffee Berry, pkg. loc;&#13;
Java Coffee pkjt. lbc. Sailer*! New Am*&#13;
ertcan Chicory 16c. Cut this out and send&#13;
ttc for any of above packages or send&#13;
Mo and get all S pkg*, and great Catalogue&#13;
free to JOHN A. SALZER 8KED&#13;
CO., LA Crone, Wls. tw.n.J&#13;
"I suffered for months from sore&#13;
throat. Eclectric Oil cured me in&#13;
twenty-four hours," M. S. Gist, Hawes*&#13;
ville. k&#13;
If your fowls nve not looked after, do not expect&#13;
too much from them.&#13;
Health for Ten Cents.&#13;
C&amp;ficarots make bowels and kidneys act&#13;
naturally, destroy microbes, cure headache,&#13;
billiousness and constipation. All druggists.&#13;
Muuy cases of sickness in poultry may be&#13;
traced to inefllcem&#13;
i WAXTE1&gt;-C«e of bad beaTtn that IM-P-A-F-S&#13;
will not henetit. Send 5 cenu to liipans Chemical&#13;
Co., New York, for lu samples and UiWO lesllmoaiaia.&#13;
JOHN W.RIOBRaU&#13;
TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAT&#13;
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablet.', All&#13;
druggists refund the money if it fails to *nre.&#13;
•5c. The genuine has I* B. Q. on each tablet.&#13;
Sand is an important ingredient in successful&#13;
poultry keeping. *&#13;
Carter** Ext. » « » r t Weed&#13;
Will cure a cold Jn one nlsrht: will onre sore&#13;
throat In a few hours. Acts Quici. Sure cure&#13;
for Catarrh in every 2Sc bo'.tle.&#13;
Ix&gt;ta of men who aren't bigamists have one&#13;
wife too many.&#13;
Mrs. Wltulow's Soothing Syrup&#13;
For children teettiing.iofienn the trumi'.rednc** tnfli&#13;
U , ali*jr« pain, curea wind colic. Si cent** bottM.&#13;
The most successful trainers are the tirelem&#13;
workers.&#13;
I shall recommend Piso's Cure for Consumption&#13;
far and wide.—Mrs. Mulligau, Plumsteatl,&#13;
Kent, Englund, Nov. 8. 1996.&#13;
All men who known how to love women love&#13;
horses.&#13;
"There are no cross babies or Kick babie* in&#13;
famUlc* that use Brown H Teething Cordial"&#13;
Isnottbla Mutetneat worth lareatt?atiBf, If jou&#13;
have »friend suffering from any Kidney dUem*e?&#13;
N'ot a ptt«nt medicine; neither lapalieni obliged to&#13;
rume to New York for treatment. If iat*reste&lt;i,aend&#13;
tor further Informailoa. namtpK tbia paper, to&#13;
^ ^ . 1300 Bro»dwaj. New York City.&#13;
Do not feed grain as an exclusive diet&#13;
There's&#13;
Only&#13;
One&#13;
Standard&#13;
of&#13;
Quality&#13;
in Athletic Goods-&#13;
"Spalding." Accept no&#13;
sustitute.&#13;
Handsome Catmlogne Free.&#13;
A. G. SPALDING * BBOS.&#13;
New York. Caioairo. Denver.&#13;
rraiaeinl wax. IS adlodicktiag rUuna.attr aiiMW. NEU-ROT-I'CO TEA Toii&gt;trodae«oarTea a.w H W i • w • mm We will mull oae fall&#13;
aize iiarkageoB receipt of 4 twtx-ent »t«mp«.&#13;
Oaaranfeed to cure Coaatlpatloa and Headai-be.&#13;
A Nenre Tonic. *V. » packase. Ncuroiicu MeOlcia*&#13;
Co., Horne;i»tl!!e. X. V.&#13;
SEEDS ft IH*S wtarraitrf to t&#13;
W. N. U.—DETROIT—NO. 9^*&#13;
WHAT ALABA8TINB IS.&#13;
Alab&amp;atine is the original and only durable&#13;
wall coating on the market. It is&#13;
entirely different from all kalsomine&#13;
preparations. Aiabaatlne Is made ready&#13;
for use in white or twelve beautiful&#13;
tints by the addition of cold water. It Is&#13;
put up In dry powdered form, in fivepound&#13;
packages, with full directions on&#13;
evewy paokage*. It takes the place of&#13;
scaling; kataomlnos. wall paper and paJnf&#13;
for walls. AlabHstlne can be used on&#13;
piaster, brick, wood or cam**, uad A&#13;
ehild can brush it on, .. .&#13;
WHAT ABB.&#13;
Kalftomlnes are chef.p and temporary&#13;
preparations, manufactured from whiting,&#13;
chalks, clays, etc. They are stucVc on&#13;
the: walls with decaying animal gloe. AlabaaUne&#13;
Is not a katsomlns. It Is a rockbase&#13;
cement, which sets, and it hardens&#13;
with age. 11 can be re-eoatvd and redeoqratsd&#13;
without bavins to wash and&#13;
scrape oft* Its old coats. Beware of M&#13;
larfe* four-pound package of light kalsomine,&#13;
sold to dealers for four pounds and&#13;
offered to customers u a fiv«-pound&#13;
packafa.&#13;
CBUBCBB3 AND HCHOOLHOUSBft.&#13;
The interior walls of churches, schoolhouses&#13;
and all public halls shoud never&#13;
be coated with anything but the durable&#13;
and pure .Alabastlne. So evident has this&#13;
fact become, that hundreds of tons are&#13;
used annually for thl^ work. The genuine&#13;
Alabastlnc does not rub or scale off.&#13;
It Is eleanry during rhe long-period of Its&#13;
usefulness. Every owner of. a building&#13;
should use It. Awk your paint dealer or&#13;
druggist for card of tints, and write for&#13;
free copy of our piper. AUbastlne Era,&#13;
to AlatasUne Co., Grand Rapids, MicJx,&#13;
BEJJCCT THE "JVST AM GOOD.-&#13;
• The dealer who teUs you that he can&#13;
soil you the "Sams thing" as Alabastlne&#13;
or "aoaethrng yjBt as good." either is not&#13;
posted or is trying to deceive you. In otferinc&#13;
something he has bougiu cheap&#13;
and Is trying to **U on Alabastine's demaoAs.&#13;
be may a*t realise the danger to&#13;
himself as well as to you. Beware of&#13;
all new substitutes. Dealers risk 4&#13;
suit for damages by selling and consvmers&#13;
by using an infringement. AiAbastlMa&#13;
Co. own the right to make nod swi wall&#13;
coatings adapted to mix wltt cald&#13;
V-J\ &gt; - • •&#13;
SILVER LAKE ITEMS.&#13;
Mrs. John Houghs is very sick&#13;
with pneumonia.&#13;
There was a dance held at Will&#13;
Thurstons on Wednesday of last&#13;
week.&#13;
1 H. K. Bierce has rented the&#13;
Mark Bell house and will move&#13;
there as soon as Mr. Bell vacates.&#13;
Sid Thurstons ' two daughters&#13;
who were visiting him from Battle&#13;
Creek last week, returned home&#13;
this week.&#13;
Thos. Birkett sold his farm&#13;
known as the Jim Tiplady farm to&#13;
Mark Bell. Mr. Bell will take&#13;
possession about the middle of&#13;
March.&#13;
John Myers Sr. came to this&#13;
place Saturday with a load of&#13;
goo els and started to return Monday&#13;
but found the roads so bad&#13;
that he was obliged to turn back.&#13;
UNADILLA. v&#13;
The winter term of school&#13;
closed last Friday.&#13;
Adeline Bunker is working for&#13;
Mrs. Byal Baruuui.&#13;
Jay Bullis, of Handy, visited&#13;
relatives here last week.&#13;
There were no services here&#13;
Sunday owing to the storm.&#13;
Don Harris will work for Mr.&#13;
Platt, o^ Waterloo this summer.&#13;
C. W. Allen and family expect&#13;
to move to TUKIIIHIKI this week.&#13;
Bicliflrd Me&lt;Mnder 1J«S hired&#13;
to Fred Stow* for i he summer.&#13;
A. G. Laoe caught two coon&#13;
last week, one of them being&#13;
black.&#13;
James K'ugyon, Soots Scriptu,&#13;
re end Elmer Barton and their&#13;
'families movecT to Xake~€o. last&#13;
week.&#13;
Bert Hause and family spent&#13;
Sunday at Geo. Brown's.&#13;
Hiss Foseie Lewis spent last&#13;
week with friends in IOECO.&#13;
Mrs. D. M. Bodgemao, of Oak&#13;
Grove, is the guest of relatives&#13;
here.&#13;
Fred Lake and wife have been&#13;
spending the past three weeks at&#13;
Ionia.&#13;
Chat*, and Henry Hicks, of&#13;
Jackson Co., visited their parents&#13;
at this place laBt week.&#13;
CHAPEL ITEMS&#13;
Robert Caskey has sold his&#13;
farm to W. J. Bull.&#13;
Jhon Gardner visited his parents&#13;
in Detroit last week-&#13;
Homer Wassou commenced to&#13;
work by the month for James&#13;
Foster last week.&#13;
Robbie Burns, of Handy,&#13;
visited his grandparents, A. Herrington&#13;
and wife one day last&#13;
week.&#13;
Some of the young people of&#13;
tbis place attended the birthday&#13;
party of Miss Jessie Merrenger&#13;
March 2.&#13;
The wedding of Geo. Mitchel,&#13;
formerly of this place, aud Miss&#13;
Lyda Boy ho, of Dansville, occnred&#13;
on Monday, March 6.&#13;
They have the best wishes of the&#13;
communit}.&#13;
Bin. James Darkee has purchased&#13;
the Jam ©a Bosohe home&#13;
and expects to move in the near&#13;
future.&#13;
A party was given in honor of&#13;
MissLeda Stephenson at her home&#13;
on Friday evening last it being&#13;
her birthday.&#13;
L. E. Wilson Sundayed with&#13;
Frank D. Eaman in Ann Arbor&#13;
and attended the oratorical conj&#13;
test on Friday evening.&#13;
The Auderson farmers' club&#13;
will meet ou Saturday, March 11&#13;
at the home of Henry Whipple&#13;
and wife. The following program&#13;
is being prepared and a cordial invitation&#13;
is extended to all.&#13;
Husio Chas. and Led a Rfephneson&#13;
Recittttoa Li am Led rid re&#13;
Duett Roht Iioff a d VrtfL Durkw&#13;
Paper Why sm I satisfied hecaute&#13;
lam a farmer's son L E Wilson&#13;
Dtsscuaaion Kirk Van Winkle&#13;
Paper Why am I satisfied W i u » e '&#13;
1 am a farmer's daughter Editb Wood&#13;
DI'BCussion Nina Yonnghve&#13;
folo Eibet Durkee&#13;
Paper J. Donahue&#13;
B citjttlon Pade Uoff&#13;
InsUsolo Edith Wood&#13;
R«citation Mary Donahue&#13;
Polo L. E. Smith&#13;
PARSHALLVILLE.&#13;
Pbilip Doi mire ie quite sick at&#13;
this writing.&#13;
Jklre. Towle visited her sister&#13;
nera White Lake the past week.&#13;
Mrs. Mat Cornell has been very&#13;
sick the past week but is much&#13;
better at this writing.&#13;
Mrs. Helen Gustine and two&#13;
children, of Penn(«yvanta,are visiting&#13;
her father, Geo. Dodds.&#13;
There were no church services&#13;
Sunday on account of the heavy&#13;
snow stoim, which came on Saturday&#13;
night&#13;
HAMBURG. *&#13;
Buben Seely is not expected to&#13;
live.&#13;
ANDERSON.&#13;
Floyd Durkee Sundayed in&#13;
Un ad ill a.&#13;
Miss Matfkiw Birnie is visiting&#13;
friends at Williamsvilie.&#13;
Miss Edith Wood spent the&#13;
first of last week" with" relatives in&#13;
Gregory.&#13;
Mrs. Chas. IIoff returned the&#13;
first of the week from a visit with&#13;
Lansing friends&#13;
—Mm—hr~,E;—Howlett and son,&#13;
Wilson, are visiting relatives here&#13;
and in Gregory.&#13;
Mrs. John Birnie had the misfortune&#13;
to slip on the ice one day&#13;
last week aud receive a slight&#13;
injury.&#13;
Arola Steiner has gone to&#13;
Howeil to spend a few weeks&#13;
with her parents.&#13;
Walter Me Names, the operator&#13;
at the T. eud A. B. R. depot was&#13;
married on Wednesday last to!&#13;
Miss Lin a Sanborn. '&#13;
Seimour Van Sickle was found !&#13;
deed in his bed last Thursday. !&#13;
The funeral was held oo Saturday.'&#13;
He was about 65 years old and&#13;
died of heart failure.&#13;
Died, at her home in this village&#13;
CB 11* ifcil £t) tiltlitsry, M*.&#13;
JaatfB Starks. Mr. Starke was&#13;
well known and highly respected&#13;
by all who knew him. Be leaves&#13;
a *ife to mourn MB loss. Eev.&#13;
Hicks preached she funeral sermon&#13;
on Friday afternoon at 1&#13;
o'clock.&#13;
CAST PUTNAM. Y&#13;
liiae Grace Lake is on the sick&#13;
list&#13;
Gay and Flo Hal were in&#13;
Howeil on Blooday last&#13;
Him Mary Boacbe closes her&#13;
winter school here &lt;m Friday cf&#13;
ibia week. This i* tfce fourth&#13;
ten Jtfias Roecbe km taoght in&#13;
Help...&#13;
Nature Babies and children need&#13;
proper food, rarely ever medicine.&#13;
If they do not thrive&#13;
on their food something is&#13;
wrong. They need a little&#13;
help to jet their digestive&#13;
machinery working properly.&#13;
COD LIVER OIL WfTHtfYWHOSPHfTESoFLMESSODA&#13;
MORE LOCAL.&#13;
Jesse Barton is the gaest of J. J.&#13;
Teeple and family tbis weak-&#13;
Mnch farm help is in demand and&#13;
the wages range from 115 to $20 per&#13;
month.&#13;
South Lyon aufferel from a 15.000&#13;
fire on Tuesday morning—small insurance.&#13;
T. W. Brewer of the Livingston&#13;
Herald was a caller at this office on&#13;
Th ursday.&#13;
The M. A L ran their snow plow&#13;
over the road twice the first of tbe&#13;
week to clear th« track.&#13;
Mrs. S. P. Yountf, ot Detroit, was~&#13;
tbe ^uest of her imny friends and&#13;
relatives at Ibis pla e 'this week.&#13;
The So. Lyon Ex&lt;^l&gt;ior came out&#13;
on pink paper last weH&lt; in honor of&#13;
entering vol. 19. I] w.ts tbe ''pink of&#13;
perfection "&#13;
On Thursday last several of the immediate&#13;
friends of Miss Maud Only,&#13;
of Pettysville, took tet with, her and&#13;
enjoyed a very pieisam time.&#13;
E. A. Mann, who ha heen spending&#13;
over a year ia Colorado, returnee&#13;
borne on Wednesday ot this week and&#13;
is busy Bbakinir hands with old friend*&#13;
Tbe village treasurer's report is in&#13;
our bands but it was impossible to&#13;
print it thi* week. T F ^ l l Le printed&#13;
ia the next issue, hownvHr, and in tbe&#13;
meantime anyone desiring to look it&#13;
over can do do at this office.&#13;
The morning mail train Tuesday&#13;
got stalled in the snow near Sbeban 8&#13;
and did not arrive here until about 4&#13;
p. m. or 6 hour* late. Tbe east bound&#13;
freight remained here until Wednes&#13;
day morninir. The snow plow did&#13;
not faro over tho line Monday night to&#13;
clear tbe track.&#13;
A mass convention ot the Prohibi&#13;
tion party of this county will be held&#13;
in the Salvation Army barracks at&#13;
Howell, Friday evening, March 17,&#13;
for the purpose of nominating a candidate&#13;
tor aehnoi commissioner and&#13;
transacts** other business, there will&#13;
be fcood speakers present from abroad.&#13;
"A Pointer for You.&#13;
will generally correct this&#13;
difficulty.&#13;
If you wiH put from onefourth&#13;
to half a teaspoonfc!&#13;
in baby's bottle three or lour&#13;
times a day you %wH soon sec&#13;
a marked improvement For&#13;
larger children, from half to&#13;
a teaspoonhi, according to&#13;
age, dissolved in their milk,&#13;
if you so desire, wfll very&#13;
soon show Us great nourish'&#13;
ing power. U the mother's&#13;
milk does not nourish the&#13;
baby, she needs the emul*&#13;
skm. H will show an effect&#13;
at once both upon mother&#13;
and chad.&#13;
SCOTT ItSOWUE, NcwVbrte.&#13;
Mr. R. I. Pocock, the English natoraJlst,&#13;
tells an Interesting story of tht&#13;
apiders which dwell in the flower of&#13;
the pitcher-plant ot India, and Australia.&#13;
This flower is an insect-trap.&#13;
Around its upper edge it is brilliantly&#13;
colored and sweet with honey. Lower&#13;
down the walls are waxy, and so&#13;
i-] ooth that no Insect can gain a bold&#13;
upon them. The bottom of the pitcher&#13;
i* filled with a liquid, containing several&#13;
acids, which possesses Ue power&#13;
of digesting organic matter. The&#13;
IvcUess Insect* which fall into,thit&#13;
liquid are gradually absorbed by the&#13;
plant. But while most insects cartfully&#13;
avoid this death-trap, a particular&#13;
species of spider chooses it as ft&#13;
dwelling place. By spinning a little&#13;
«eb like a carpet over a part of th*&#13;
waxy interior of the pitch**, it is enabled&#13;
to stay there in safety. Theee&#13;
spiders have apparently chosen their&#13;
singular hoe* Just because of Its dangen,&#13;
in such a place they are protected&#13;
against their enemies. If alarsfted,&#13;
ts* jpMir drops into the liquid at&#13;
the bottom of the plant and remain!&#13;
there until 1U «aemy has disappeared,&#13;
escaping afterward, probably by neane&#13;
of a sllfcea cable trtOch it had spun&#13;
sekfetL A,sWrtttrtiwntto&gt;&#13;
«s met&#13;
See IVivs&#13;
mon&#13;
Si..&#13;
The place to buy&#13;
HARDWARE,&#13;
WAGONS,&#13;
CARRIAGES,&#13;
SURREYS,&#13;
HARNESS,&#13;
Light and Heavy&#13;
is AT&#13;
T E F Q I P I J E and&#13;
Milburn, Lansing and Webber Wagons&#13;
Deering Binders and Mowers and&#13;
a line of spring and spike&#13;
tooth harrows, the&#13;
choice of all.&#13;
TEEPLE CA DWELL.&#13;
HORSE-SHOEING&#13;
GENERAL REPAIRING,&#13;
^ C " £ i Coatracted feet are helped&#13;
5 5 ^ HI andhorsea do not interfere whea&#13;
I do the work. Call and gir»&#13;
me a trial. Shop on Mill street&#13;
"north^of Opera. House.&#13;
1LBKB? I&#13;
AT L H. FIELD'S&#13;
Our new west room is proving to fill a long-felt need.&#13;
Its just what we needed.&#13;
Its just what you needed. For we can show yon is&#13;
Ample room and&#13;
Our fine stock of Beautiful daylight&#13;
Spring Suits,&#13;
Spring Jackets,&#13;
Shirt Waists,&#13;
Muslin Underwear,&#13;
Corsets.&#13;
The attractions of this room will be so&#13;
great that you will all get to feel at&#13;
home there. «&#13;
We believe in expansion as our business&#13;
warrants it, and shall soon hare&#13;
some further story to teJl you along&#13;
this same line.&#13;
L. H. FIELD.</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 March 09, 1899</text>
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                <text>March 09, 1899 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1899-03-09</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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well&#13;
as weiiasanjr'-afl woolapd wi t_. - _ . ^ —at %,»&#13;
' V ' Scvpeir^dViil buy&gt;fheavy cotton carpet, excreHent!^d - ^ s ^ t t ^ 1 u a&#13;
car^^vlo^bearpg^n^ •;&lt; r&#13;
*Tbe&#13;
^x. \. ~&#13;
• • &gt;&#13;
wish anything in lac* curtails?&#13;
I in brass curtains ai^d ^ash rods&#13;
i;«pCillg&#13;
the&#13;
b«&#13;
.. I Marc|k ^5" Ma ^ v26. &gt;jft«. Ujfy*xto&#13;
ptmijpfi ejd&lt;4;j will, be/^rewnt %tid&#13;
Call e«yii*ndjsafe mouey.^-^I.- Y '-:% DO : V1&gt;'-&#13;
* • • ' •&#13;
• • • • • &amp;&#13;
tba&#13;
•r&#13;
"A.':.&#13;
We&#13;
p ^ t ^ , ^&gt; on oaoe&#13;
ft«inr^ are faaivg in -tb«ijf*^&#13;
| &lt;n^« ,4t* ajfre*a%v;dia5apoio idrf t&lt;^|&#13;
Jnd ttjat iew^^^lt potat^a are&#13;
|ro»« tba« tKfey expected. O!|jtv fi(rffre*&#13;
a|fM- Po«|pac W wa* n^twtf&#13;
^io baare ^ 4 2 ^ *r ^000 bwak&#13;
^ay^tftatWlt&#13;
:;*• Tf;.5-&gt;- nap&#13;
f.\. }toich i n o n ^ » oat na^e^Ua^ ;sfKM-at our,vV? "r -•^'ft y&#13;
^:"4;^^.:^#ri-&gt;^^..:Y.^&#13;
^ , * - ; ! Y, \ * : ^ : - : - : ^ . f&#13;
; Y *&#13;
• • . - ^&#13;
• * •&#13;
s of the Week Recorded in a&#13;
'•_ "Brief Styfc V&#13;
CONCISE AND INT£fi€ST!NG.&#13;
_&#13;
by «u Kqgla« Mud Killed&#13;
of the&#13;
&lt;WuU&#13;
t u Operetta W TT&#13;
^ b y IM&gt;&#13;
1'he biff snowstorm «u.s&#13;
for Lhtj death of uuc iut4u a.ud the syrlon*&#13;
uiaiuHU£ of another at Tort Uuruu.&#13;
A ifiintf of men were t*uy aged in shoveling&#13;
suow from ihe trucks in the tumid&#13;
yard When u yard engine bore down&#13;
upon three of them— Charles Sheinan,&#13;
Otis 1&lt;ila;*key and Charles Ourtl Hhuinan&#13;
was killed ius»tautly, Polatzkcy's&#13;
was broken and he received internal&#13;
injuries which are likely to&#13;
prove fulfil. , Tlie other man sustained&#13;
injuries to his spine and legs. Sueiut&#13;
№ w |» Itiwibly Jiiaxi^letl, U\ o&#13;
vf the tender i»uK^iug oviT his body.&#13;
years &gt;&#13;
, a Matteso n townshi p&#13;
) fArnjer, • dnrin p th e&#13;
d or used at hom e&#13;
p Fo r th e first five&#13;
fob hen s an d th,e n increased&#13;
Ih e flo«k to over. 300. Durin g&#13;
th e montho f Februar y he gat here i ITid&#13;
ens on th e aver'&#13;
are a most profitabl e featur e of&#13;
farming1.&#13;
Got* a 01,ii35 Verdict.&#13;
l*erry 0. Snyder , a' prominer t farmer&#13;
of Bflookfield township , Eato n eounty .&#13;
awarded damage s against Marsh«i&#13;
, of Eato n Rapids , to th e amoun t&#13;
of $1,225. Stum p aiTefited Snide r on a&#13;
•charg e of drttrttkeilDess . SnydeT claime d&#13;
he was no t intoxicate d enmig- a to warrtuat&#13;
aa arrest and brough t suit against&#13;
Stum p for false imprisonmen t and&#13;
tnttticiou s pr&lt;&gt;secution .&#13;
• While Congressnia n H: 0. SuWr, of&#13;
Por t Austin, was retttrtlW ^ froml^ash -&#13;
injfton he ha d his wallet stolen or lost&#13;
it.whil e qh,aiigin ^ car s a t Toledo . Fol -&#13;
lAwllog is a li$t of the,cfrt»tents ; JStiiMB^y&#13;
djoifars in cash, G. T. ^ . K. pa^s-boolf ,&#13;
R" K. j&gt;ass-bopk , LOftO-mil e&#13;
M. t^f^, tw^ ^00 U, ,S, reg-&#13;
The state board of ^duc^^knj&#13;
rantwi If^i l'feaebe^'!c«!littffl«ittfes&#13;
Thr LMf^f^^i honcoitt:&#13;
Telephony Co., w£th a&#13;
^ r O i ; ^&#13;
, fti*»r Hv«vy llttti CMWned I H i&#13;
Mttbulle K. Wal'aee, aged :.*«, a wellktioivn&#13;
Voung lady, m-ddiug in; B*sdfdrd'township,&#13;
Ciilhoun .county, died&#13;
Iron .a iinyular cuubt. . Shu had a&#13;
Boost luxuriant and heavy #r&lt;wth of&#13;
hair, tvhlch was Y1; feet long. The&#13;
weight of hair vva* so givat that it had&#13;
anVeftpct, \*l&gt;vn )\Q\ hea,d *HU4 brain,&#13;
which %rt'ally thire'w hw into brain&#13;
fev«rfrr#«ult;TJ# in , h ^ .^atfc. The&#13;
hair was so tine and so rnueli admired&#13;
by all beholders that she-.refused to&#13;
have it cut.&#13;
- • - - - • . . . .&#13;
( All KKx-trlc Rind HO Afll«» Long.&#13;
A. A. Talmage &amp; Co., of ftew York;&#13;
gmntees of a franchise for an electric&#13;
road at Flint are hustling" feff franchises.&#13;
They announce thai, they will&#13;
"build a road from Flushing to Flint,&#13;
thence south to Urand Blatuv where&#13;
branches will pro east to Atlas and&#13;
PonlriW. and a west road to Lorvg Lake&#13;
and Kenton, The total distance is &gt;*&gt;0&#13;
miles, anti the estimated cost #1,001),-&#13;
000. ' 'Phis company beat out the!&#13;
A very-Davis concern.&#13;
30th Mlvh. Wants to he Transferred.&#13;
Majs. Kanholx and Knox, of Uhe liojth,&#13;
Michigan volunteers, announce that it&#13;
is their intention to arrange, if possible,&#13;
for the transfer of "he regiment&#13;
to the new volunteer service, authorised&#13;
by the recently enacted army bill.&#13;
However, such a move on the part of&#13;
the President is. not likely, as it is&#13;
known he has already adopted a line&#13;
of policy that would not admit of such&#13;
a transfer.&#13;
R. R. Taxes Will Reach S I ,00O,OOO.&#13;
CommLsHioner Wesselius reports that&#13;
the Michigan earnings o'f railroad companiett&#13;
for -December were $8,75O,97W,&#13;
an increase ot $383,737 over Deeember,&#13;
1897. The total Michigan, e a r n i n g of&#13;
the year, ware 831,6*6,879, an:increase&#13;
of iSa.305,402, or 11.9 per cent over IWft.&#13;
It is esthn&amp;ied that t^»e increase in&#13;
taxes will Be'TS1 per,vcefltv making the&#13;
total revenuftthihyear aWut %J,10O,()O0.&#13;
K. M.&#13;
(Branch&#13;
past'10&#13;
has&#13;
to&#13;
the fnnotyta^ pftWwmy. •fofratf W. Lucia,&#13;
&lt;iranri Rapfltf*; ''Anna E.-'Bief, Monroe;&#13;
flarriet C. Bedford. Marietta, E. F.&#13;
Clark. {ft;4&lt;JfaP*№ H - •* " Ci«»ent,&#13;
Boyntw Cftytfl^M. Fuller, Ui% Jlapitis;&#13;
n4im&gt;*fl*le: Bfliiett^ Clarkv&#13;
of o^rKOflO. w i ^ % 1 ; ; ^ pkA In,&#13;
he company hats «. ZS^faurWrmttiklfie&#13;
bf tke C««eor&lt;i Tiiliasre coun-&#13;
The Une will ««t4UMl about the&#13;
Th e couditiott - of • wftea*. eoanp a&#13;
with a u avemge *MT*Mttrc h 1 was for&#13;
&lt; A&#13;
not .&#13;
f&#13;
14 pen&#13;
now&#13;
; it j ^ t oliiu»tio&#13;
for&#13;
t wheat is dmiuag'ei badly or&#13;
nut. The auxouuk of wheat ia the&#13;
r&amp;jrmers 1 h&amp;uda, tor tha state, in 54V per&#13;
cent Of the crop of ib'Jb, Tbe per «WBt&#13;
iu th« handj* gf the. farmers vl the&#13;
southern couu'wito U 33 ^erceoV^ ol tke&#13;
central oouuties, K6 per Qpnt, an4 &lt;rf&#13;
the aenhuru eoUOtietti 44 «^*» - ottDU&#13;
Tlic total uuruber gf bubhels «f wheat&#13;
reported luarktttecl by fartaerti lu February&#13;
at the iltmring mills 1»&#13;
aud at the eletatonj&#13;
, or a total gf !,$:#,&amp;-M&#13;
iu tke tiviven month*, w ^ y ,&#13;
ibe amuunt marketed in ..Il,8y7,&amp;a4&#13;
bushels, or №8J3 4 buaRtiU iuore than&#13;
reported marketed iu the haine mottUn&#13;
io#t year. At 105 iulllh and elevators&#13;
from w hi all report* have iL&gt;ettn i d&#13;
iliere wuu no wheat marketed ia, ^&#13;
ruurj. The total amount of wheat&#13;
shipped by railroads frojn tbe variona&#13;
utationai, as reported for .Jangary, V»&#13;
7&amp;&gt;, №7 bushels. No dieetuses raporlod&#13;
K live stock.' Condition, for the&#13;
e, of horses and sheep iai&gt;00 per&#13;
, of cattle t»4 pef cent and of uwine&#13;
\&gt;?\ per cent. . ' •'&#13;
Faanck Ilia ChHdrea.&#13;
ICarl y last i,um,we v th e wity.of Rich -&#13;
ard Uueuke , of Dushvjlle, desertet j&#13;
him takin g th « two childre n with her ,&#13;
llatmk«&gt; ^ft}&gt; auxiou s to recoyer th e&#13;
ehUdw ) aad uaaiie HoveraA unhuoceaa f uj&#13;
t&gt;earehe s for thew; Receatl y he Ixeard&#13;
tha t th e childre n hiul^juoH ; place d w» a&#13;
children 1* hora e in, Toled o and hedos t&#13;
no tiijaein •jjfoinj r there , lie was r^»&#13;
warded, for hia efforts an d th e little&#13;
were as happ y a* th e fathe r when&#13;
^were turne d QVQF to hipa. Th e&#13;
whereabout s ol th e inoth w i» a&#13;
roy.stery.&#13;
^ Sl» t MIcVlKHM Ci&gt;mJnf liunae.&#13;
The aist Michiga n regimen t wij|l be&#13;
starte d homewar d as noon as it, cap be&#13;
relieyed f(om dut y pnd transport s pro-&#13;
Tided. Unel e Koin is; alread y engaged&#13;
in reeuiting 1 a larger regular army, and&#13;
it Ls lioped tha t th e volunteer s will all&#13;
be out of Cuba by April 1. Those belon^&#13;
iu^ - t&lt;.» yoluntoe r regiment s can.re -&#13;
enlist in th e regular arm y as yoon as&#13;
niwatere d out i( , the y phoo&gt;e , vyith th e&#13;
assuranc e thiit the y will be sent !&gt;y&#13;
Manila . , , .,&#13;
A S700.0U O Land Deal.&#13;
A W. Bloom , of MCenominee , has reti^&#13;
rne d froia Ne w York, associated *&#13;
with easter n capital^L ^ he will pur -&#13;
chase ',J0,OOO acre s of Minera l an d tinjocr-&#13;
land s in Hoo^hton , Keweenaw ,&#13;
Uara# a and Marquett e counties . Th e&#13;
consideratio n is over $700,000. Th e&#13;
oorptfratVoni s t o be org»nize&lt; l with a&#13;
capita l stock of $Moo,ooo . Prospec -&#13;
ton s are at work, an d coppe r mjne i are&#13;
being lo«ated .&#13;
Th«w&gt;nf by&#13;
Electrician s Walch and&#13;
Lightliall , of Chelsea , dW a clever job&#13;
ir thawin g water pipes by electricit y&#13;
tha t have been frozen for four weeks&#13;
or more . The y ut&gt;e(\ a dirpc t e%rren t&#13;
of 180 ampere s at 320 voltage. On fche&#13;
first job of 80 -feet- of pipe the y consumed&#13;
14 minutes , and on ibe next one&#13;
the y were but 10 minute s thawin g out&#13;
150 feet of pipe.&#13;
Df«d From Uv*r Kxentim.&#13;
Clay Urn R Farmer , a well-know n&#13;
youn g man of Battl e Creek , aped 19,&#13;
while in compan y with * numbe r of&#13;
youn g me&amp; who were lifting weights&#13;
and attempt!* ? to outd o e»oh othe r in ,&#13;
U»e feat, straine d hi*, spine and died in&#13;
lour days of upiniti.meningitis .&#13;
Bavkworth&#13;
At th e Democrati c Stat e convention ,&#13;
held at Kalamazoo , Thoma s E, Rark -&#13;
woith , of Jackhon , Mras nomiuaUi d for&#13;
justic* of th ^ supreme ? ofeurts an d Edwin&#13;
T. Lv Geodre , of Cain met , aftd&#13;
Stanle y K. Parkhill , of Owosso, for regent&#13;
s of th e University -&#13;
STATE&#13;
y is-goin g to toav£-a new pnper.&#13;
Vcrmontville is a«iin withouta flour&#13;
mill.&#13;
The business* portion., of South Lyon&#13;
has bepn visited 1 &gt;y a45.*W lire. ''*'&#13;
The Detroit Su^ar Co,.has bcguii'tbe&#13;
construction of its Hew fftctoay at&#13;
Rochester. *&#13;
in the one iown«l^p.ef I/ya^on, in&#13;
Wa&amp;htenaw county, there are by actual&#13;
cpunt 183 lake*.&#13;
The Grand Central hotel bam. ,at&#13;
Lake CMenma has bsrtied. Loss, 91,000.&#13;
Incendiarism&#13;
The French y p&#13;
b\nld a new *hurcl» tne&#13;
mer. at a cost of $20,000. •* " ^&#13;
. - * , • ' • • Frederick W. Mayrve, cf Clvarlevoix,&#13;
wft.s noiaioatad! a&lt; ^ui(M of the 13th&#13;
jndicial circuit on the i2&lt;l ballot. • \&#13;
Latter day aaints baptized two can*&#13;
didatea Vu;ti»ee» Hoatinf cakes, of ice&#13;
in th»river at«Mt. ('lair the other day.&#13;
JsfaVshali has pledjped itself tc sub-&#13;
Rcrlb© ?40.ooo of the stocl^ of the new&#13;
Columbus, Marquette 4 ^Jjjorthfveatera&#13;
r o a 4 - , . . . • r • • •&#13;
The fine r«ild«nee * J W. W60dworth&#13;
»t Kalamazoo was *den|iMjfed by&#13;
flra, entailing a lo*» of »U),i00^ I t «tvae&#13;
well i n i u r e i • ': '&#13;
of wUdcai*, waica are&#13;
i» that&#13;
has l&gt;ee» established, at&#13;
Maeomh county, seven miles&#13;
at titooaea, a»d - James M.&#13;
JUotmer has ^te^^oogunisalwied post'&#13;
£. 0 KatJf, of Branch county, boasts&#13;
ot having the finest fioek of ewes iu&#13;
n Michigan. He baa but. 24,&#13;
they roeently pitjsented him with&#13;
John Haxes, of I?ovl, aged 60, u&#13;
farmer, suicided by hangiug himself.&#13;
He had b«fcn;*ilt and'' despondency&#13;
oaMB^d the u)Lr t i e leaves a widow&#13;
and twe? chttdr^n,&#13;
J ngg ^^ , ?g 4lJt&#13;
alpue at. SqpttA^le^ a railway&#13;
nine uiuee southeast .of St. ph&#13;
cuuiipitVad suicide with a raizdr^' No&#13;
eauae for the deed ia kno^a, . , .&#13;
The Cedar KiverCoal Co., "with »10,-&#13;
000 capital, has been organized to&#13;
the mioeJi »^ AV^UijiiD^tofi. The&#13;
JV» , Sag}ja%w pertiys.&#13;
Work has already QQiuujencfed.&#13;
Miss Theodora Van Houghton,&#13;
25, employe&lt;l at the Kalamazuo&#13;
ary a» elevator girl, was crushed to&#13;
daatli betweaa- the top beam of the&#13;
elevator and.th*T joist of tke root '&#13;
•A'lsaoH Ste. Marietaanrecently shpt&#13;
what is bald to be the largest bear ever&#13;
killed ta'Chlppewa county. It weighed&#13;
800 pounds, and five bullets were necessary&#13;
to put an end to Us existence.&#13;
Thirty.-five acres pi land between the&#13;
Kularriasoo river and T^aWe Michigan&#13;
lias been purchased, ttpoii wHkh to&#13;
ereot b^ildfibgs for a sumrner outing&#13;
schooT for the poor children ofi&#13;
go \ '&#13;
In thy suit of fcdwaad I»ahlan, of&#13;
Icfnia/ajofiA'nst the D., G. FT. &amp; M.';R. R'.&#13;
Co. the plaintiff got a judginetit fe»r&#13;
^7,000 (Vmages fcit injuries i^ec'eived&#13;
while iu their employ. The case will&#13;
be appealed.&#13;
The tk'liool population of Menominee&#13;
has grown so that the, present aocommocWtiontf&#13;
are insufficient, and another&#13;
school building will be erected at a&#13;
cost of $12,000.'&#13;
All insurance compahicB doing business&#13;
in the state Have filed their annual&#13;
reports and paid their taxe$ fy&gt;&#13;
Commissioner Ca"rapbell. The aggregate&#13;
Hmount paid was $2'3$j£12.'4O.&#13;
,. The-jury found George -f^ew^s, of&#13;
Ann Arbor, guilty of assault, with intent&#13;
to commit criminal assault, and&#13;
Judge Kinne imposed, a sentence of 10&#13;
y^ars at v)Jaeksoji, the fu^ll ptjnAlty,&#13;
uppu the defejiilant. , ,.&#13;
Don Olds, aged_ 15, oldest son of, Fred&#13;
Olds, uf Oaondaga, while trying to&#13;
catch a ride on a Michigan Central&#13;
way freight, to retur/f.home, fell under&#13;
the pars, the wheels passing,over him,&#13;
killing him inntajatly. ,&#13;
. The con/structioii of *n ej^otrio railroad&#13;
between . Lansing aud Grand&#13;
Ledge m, contemplated, and the: old&#13;
mill and water p***ve* at Delta Center&#13;
have been pui«oAS«d* for&#13;
of furnishing power 4 ^ the&#13;
A big bauk bare on plan Harvey's&#13;
place in Porter townsfctipvCaas county,&#13;
ivas burned, and with it 70 sheep and&#13;
BO head of choice blooded horses&#13;
cattle. The los* will reach&#13;
thousand dollars, with only $800 insurance.&#13;
;- &lt;&#13;
A Sand Lake woman met with a pcauliar&#13;
accident recently. Hhe had&#13;
made some tea i&amp;: a close covered tin&#13;
paiL, aud while? rtfnoovmg it from tne&#13;
stove it exploded. The hot liquid was&#13;
thrown. Jn»her face and neek, ijafticting&#13;
very gainful burns. •&#13;
John W. Prior, the colored'man who&#13;
too*?:. Celia Mondary, a 16-year-old&#13;
whUe--^W; from Detroit to Windsor&#13;
and married Uer,4iaa been found guilty&#13;
in the Essejt county, Ont., court of&#13;
perJvy^aad sentenced to four years&#13;
imprisonment ia the penitentiary. .&#13;
Oalh6u0a eouaty has ?8,608- acres of&#13;
swamp covered with small tiittber and&#13;
hrniiK. Clarendon towrwhip te the&#13;
most swampy, having fi,7f&gt;4 acres,&#13;
wlii^t JMareago has non« whatever.&#13;
Thetfe i» but one acre of pins'lh th«&#13;
county, that being in Freonia- township*&#13;
A tidal wave of morality has struck&#13;
Mason. . All gambling houses and&#13;
©tfcer reports mn-1n violation f&gt;i the&#13;
law have tx*n oiosed, the clot maohiofeA&#13;
removed from the 'saloons and&#13;
the liquor laws are teeihg m strictly&#13;
enforced that tft-get a driok after the&#13;
legal closing hour or on Sunday is a&#13;
l o s t art. -• • • • * • *&#13;
According to estimates by a reliable&#13;
authority the n*mj*er of men employed&#13;
in the cf»ppef mine*' of Houg-hton&#13;
cv+Lg, at the ptetent tita«-* is 12,006,&#13;
against le^OO^isst, year and 7.300 ha&#13;
1W0. &lt; The sama authority places the&#13;
total of «*en-employed in the atinen of&#13;
whole^of the copper ooantry, wiich&#13;
Keweanaw and (/ntomigoti&#13;
cpontic*.*« iv«ll aaUoughton, a^1.r*.Q00.&#13;
•.&gt;Johl Bell, who was rm trial for killitt^&#13;
r Jas. tioodvvin at Detroit, agaiust&#13;
vrhow thttM was very iittle direct «vjdetitaattd&#13;
who all oonseeted with the&#13;
cast&gt; thought would bfc a^Mitted. came&#13;
o«t blunt &gt;an1ft acfenbwtadged haviog&#13;
His attorney «tttl betbsoease.&#13;
"bet)««1a^t Bail's confession tx&gt;&#13;
¥e a stwttff \&amp;*\oktUJn tksK i u is not&#13;
ipentallt&#13;
wi of the Day as Toftl Ovlr'th*&#13;
io&#13;
DOMESTIC AND FOREIGN NEWS&#13;
Ghl«f ef of&#13;
on&#13;
Fifty people on a Chlqafo street cat&#13;
narrowly craped death by the car&#13;
betag ruu into aa open bridge. Tfce&#13;
oar was #tth|n a few feet ol the river&#13;
when the mdlorman noticed the,brid|f«&#13;
was open,- U« immediately put on the&#13;
brakes and at the same time reversed&#13;
the elootrio current, and the ear1 oatee&#13;
to a trtop juet a# the front trucks ran&#13;
upon the abutment*.' Another foot&#13;
further and it would have plugged into&#13;
the river 30 feet below. The inotOrsotan&#13;
jumped into the river but was&#13;
rescued, and a few other casuaHtteb&#13;
among the panic atriaUen passengers&#13;
\va* reported. • •&#13;
Killed ami Tbep.bumped In the Hlver.&#13;
Details, of tiie insurrection in the&#13;
eentral provinoea ol China, received by&#13;
the Kmpress.of India, .state the rfcW&#13;
force and the imperial- troops met in a&#13;
pitched battle in January, and the&#13;
latter were d^eute«l*vvith great slaughter.&#13;
Hundreds were killed, &lt;a&lt;ad their&#13;
bodies after being mutilated, were&#13;
thrown into the river untU the stream&#13;
was like a log htmmed ureek. It is&#13;
said 200 men', women and children fell&#13;
in the struggle attending; the. capture&#13;
of Kauehou. It is feared a great famine&#13;
will follow the insurreot3Oft« fpr so&#13;
terrified are the natives that the qrops&#13;
have all been left standing and will&#13;
not bo harvested.&#13;
Survived *n KIect,rJo Shock.&#13;
Joseph' Hampbel, an employe at a&#13;
cp.ble power house in New York:. City,&#13;
while working A,t his jjvv.itchbqard, ieoeived&#13;
and survived an electric shock&#13;
of about 2i000..vqlts. The man's.body&#13;
was burned blhcsk from bead.. £9' foot;&#13;
every stitch of clothing,"^airtor^ from&#13;
him und he fell Renseless through a&#13;
hole, instantaneously burned'In the&#13;
floor by the terrific e\ectrica} power&#13;
The doctors who attended him say&#13;
there is no case on record of a' man&#13;
withstanding a shK^lar shock..,&#13;
TTr© FhkUpfMMib Camt*U*Um. '&#13;
The President hereafter will be represented&#13;
In the* Philippine islands by&#13;
the following commission; Ja«6b (J.&#13;
t&amp;hurmun, Adniiral George Dewey,&#13;
Maj.-Gen. El well S. Otis, Chas, Denby&#13;
and Dean C. VVoreester. The temporary&#13;
government" of the1 islands ia latrusted&#13;
to this commission and will&#13;
continue until congress shall determine&#13;
otherwise. It is expected that1 the&#13;
eoawnis&amp;fon will redder vakiatele service&#13;
in many ways. * '&#13;
\y»i not&#13;
The general conference of the National&#13;
Unioa Reform party, held at&#13;
Cincinnati* wa* not a howling success.&#13;
Its organization preparatory to nominating&#13;
an independent presidential&#13;
ticket nejet year, wili be completed in&#13;
executive committed at Huffalo, June&#13;
29. The effort' to amalgamate the&#13;
Populists, Silver Republicans,.. Socialist&#13;
Labor, National Liberty parties and&#13;
other scattering elements wag knocked&#13;
out for,the present.&#13;
f .—, _ _ _ _ _ .&#13;
K.OOO Mea Idle In HantUxo.&#13;
There are nearly 3,000 mea Idle in&#13;
the province, and 700 in Santiago, ^as a&#13;
result of Gen; Brooke's recent order&#13;
disallowing the February; estimates.&#13;
Although Gov.-Gen. Brooke has wire's&#13;
830,000 required for the .February pay&#13;
rolls, there ia $till a deceit of nearly&#13;
820,000, and the orders (j*om Havana&#13;
ej-ill hold, ;flood limiting the expenditure&#13;
during the month of March for&#13;
the entire province to $10,000.&#13;
FotrA«r MftK*zfitae Blew Vp.&#13;
A special dispatch from Paris says it&#13;
ia rumored that one of the soldiers who&#13;
perished in tbe explosion of the powder&#13;
magazine near Toulon had a long t^m'e&#13;
past been a victim of systematic perfceottiten&#13;
"npon the part of a corporal, and&#13;
had defc^mimed to be ar^ngetl Thffe&#13;
%rxan is snspected of having blown vtp&#13;
thVtnagaafae. Aboutt ^0 corpses have&#13;
bteen recovered from 4he scene of&#13;
' ' • ' ' • ' • * "&#13;
Cycloae at&#13;
- A terrific cyclono passed ov.er a&gt;&gt;pot&gt;&#13;
tion of &lt;. rMadisonviljb aad Monroe&#13;
county, with dlsastWHis results. A t&#13;
Madisonville 3'perHOfks 'vere killed and&#13;
10 or 18 others /were injured. Mauy&#13;
were tie»troyed.&#13;
follow&#13;
He? of sick, dito&#13;
» of the late Spanish-Ap&#13;
4can war, to authorise, th* oitj of&#13;
f^ladMane, Deltii c«u«^» to rolund&#13;
water vvftrks bpj^ds; i o legalia* b&amp;t#fo&#13;
issued by the aity of Gladstone; to,legalise&#13;
bonds i{)H9«d bjf itrook* township,&#13;
N v ^ f o C a j toorovMe a probate ragfar&#13;
Bei4-i«T«ou»ty; vaaaiing the&#13;
t ft q&#13;
sleeted in St&#13;
j&#13;
(a&gt;j(iUor9&#13;
l j ^ of&#13;
to hold a special s|e&lt;&#13;
question oi,&#13;
cjeed WpO.^iOO-to complete&#13;
ofvihj«( J^ftyae 'county&#13;
incorporate, the&#13;
Mates wood&#13;
., The house in&#13;
agreed to Rep. UaH's joint&#13;
a.uth^r.ijtin(j" the state&#13;
tq examine into ufl[d&#13;
Wo, T. DensiuoJCpt&#13;
badly injured1 fcjp ,i)i4e' pr^ikftture&#13;
o/a&gt; eanQQo while seirrUifif as&#13;
member,of tht&#13;
v^nye ,t.hen.&#13;
himself arid'his wife by *ruao|wiog&#13;
&gt;r^»u ahoutthe state,&gt;u^ he is&#13;
\ old that h^W» unabfe; to flo it.&#13;
Atkinson biU&#13;
^ a v p ^ e o ^ S V tof,o;&#13;
amended hf the ant is,&#13;
the AXftewon^entB in any ^vay&#13;
'injure.the indent, the yalid^&#13;
ity or the effective^ita. of the bill is&#13;
s t i l l « que&amp;tiun, as poonelias.had time&#13;
to throughly.^ufest*' ihwa." ,KOMI the&#13;
to permit that body to&#13;
p e house&#13;
consider the&#13;
Rep. (MJlam's amendment to the gen*&#13;
Aral tax law, ptqvidii^g .th&amp;t puersonal&#13;
property may be., seized by the state&#13;
for the non-payment of taxes on real&#13;
estate, uo matter in what oounty the&#13;
perspnaj.property is located, vc'as agreed&#13;
to. The law as it now stands allows&#13;
the seizure of personal property only&#13;
in the county where.tht? j:veal estate is&#13;
located, or in an adjoining county.&#13;
V-overs in Detroit this sprjug will&#13;
have u»^U 8^ o'clookjiin th« evening1, instead&#13;
of 5..o'clock, to oast theip-'baUpts*&#13;
if the.senate concurs in the action of&#13;
the huuse,\n parsing Malc9lm J. Mebill&#13;
to that effect.&#13;
Senator Maitlaud:s bllj requiring&#13;
railroad cora,punies to submit to the&#13;
railroad^eonimiswjoh maj^s »J. crossings&#13;
tliey propose to inak$, with .other roads&#13;
was agreed to by committee of the&#13;
whole in the senate^ .&#13;
Uep. Heineman's bill for the protection&#13;
of sidewalks and sidepatha was&#13;
passed in the bouse after being* slightly&#13;
amended. The bill jp ,one, bt the measures&#13;
askedVor by thje L. A. W.&#13;
Senator Bfakeslee^s bill to reorganize&#13;
the judicial circuits in Cass, Bjerriap.&#13;
Kalaraa^oo and Va^n JJureu counties&#13;
passed in the hou^e by a'vote* of&#13;
~Z to 26.' * "' "":&gt;'" U '&#13;
The Atkinson bill with the senate&#13;
amendment has passed the house, and&#13;
all it now lacks to become a law is his&#13;
excellency's signature.&#13;
Rep. Sheridan J. Colby, of Detroit,,&#13;
holds the championship by loftg odds&#13;
ftwr-having introduced itnore "bills or&#13;
j61rit*reftolutidn» 'than anjKo1ftier'*meni- -&#13;
ber of the house this session. Accovdto&#13;
the recerd ju«t made-up by the&#13;
cletk,' Cdlby-has 4ptroduce&lt;t 5(5, and the&#13;
next*uioat enterprising member in this&#13;
is Kep. Gnstin, of Alpe-na, who introduced&#13;
40. Rep, fleineman', of Detroit,&#13;
comes a close third with "$?/' £$&gt; member"&#13;
neglected to introduce at least one&#13;
bill, but six rttembefs irftrochiced only&#13;
one eexih, Th^yi are: Babfcoak, Hofmeister,&#13;
Nash, ' Randall, Weter and&#13;
Wing. Most o;f the ^Vayne members&#13;
did very wftllv as follows: Bryaa, 17;&#13;
Btirch, 21; Cheever/ 93j» Dickinsont 14:&#13;
Eikh^ff, 34;/Goodell, 13; HlcLeod, 18;&#13;
Stewart, 1«; I^atzetjbMhle*, &amp;t Aldrieh,1.).&#13;
. Four Ju&gt;u»e employes.haVe handed m&#13;
their reisgnation* They are quitting&#13;
because their terms of office was dit&#13;
d d i a half-session,, by SpeaH«r&#13;
The spieaVer '^ t r a d b rtd&#13;
Abau T h pieVer did Wot haye&#13;
jobs enou'p^i to gorarotfhd ib rttvidad&#13;
theBed*io»n inlA^f* in orde? tB ive all&#13;
j p g i a&#13;
the-Bed*give a l l&#13;
his supporters"a«han&lt;ie.' &gt;'•- '&#13;
TELEGRAPHIC&#13;
Latest advices froaj I^on^e says Pope&#13;
o*&amp;condft^bn 4&amp; Jsoijje t&gt;et|ier '&#13;
news&#13;
Ktpllng'*&#13;
Josephine, the 6-year-old daughter .&#13;
©f Mr. and Mrs. Rudyard Kipling is&#13;
dead- . The father he.v not. been. {&amp;-&#13;
fornae^^^kf ^hi» dauybter's. opath Apd&#13;
may no.t'Vc unttl^he be^mea stronger^&#13;
,JDreyfus is said&#13;
tijat bis returnio .fiaisis&#13;
.. A.H,the sj^roatx^^ in vlvwituckjf are out&#13;
6i their banka and ar* ^pins/ great&#13;
damage. . „»• - , v t&#13;
A veted Chinese relifct am? desperado^&#13;
Ntti, was captured aifd ;.5^&gt;follon$;ers&#13;
Jn the provincj^of Xgap Hooi&#13;
Hungarian elevators at Denver,&#13;
Cola, wherein 300,'SOftbnlhelso/ wheat&#13;
was stbred"has been eonatimUid by fire.&#13;
Lost,&#13;
. r . , &lt; , »&#13;
Germany is reported Ul have renewed&#13;
otiations to* the purchase of Abe&#13;
.but. ^2 cat^ft on&#13;
doelres th» March t^rm of cos^rt ill&#13;
tthe s£ are Don-iurv&#13;
.mm _ * •"&#13;
y&#13;
for ffonolniu to visit a son&#13;
whop-is largely intcreatM'fn ^&#13;
"ft re*^&#13;
n'^yy, 4n«w&#13;
straeted&#13;
Will)&#13;
i&#13;
1cruisers&#13;
nnmhfir&#13;
r e a d /&#13;
her&#13;
be #oasailors&#13;
and other Kentudcy towns.&#13;
I&#13;
* * * * * *&#13;
J l ' r » * t&#13;
fL&#13;
f&#13;
or, The Adventures of&#13;
Eton &amp;6y... i "4. -.&#13;
y,^i*0yw&gt;i+^f*r**ft*y~*s^&lt;*&gt;***m~*~^&#13;
iCHATKR tflllr-H v , -.&#13;
"What" are ytiu aboutT" aake4 Woa-&#13;
S ths sling of the&#13;
sir."&#13;
' • O ^ t 0 thought you&#13;
hay, you lire ao slow about i t&#13;
have b«*n sta&gt;(ng* aAlad'^or tbe* last&#13;
twenty minutes, at Jeaat."&#13;
"Becaus^l U4nk I see something,"&#13;
said the! s«amaQ, annoyed by tbe nau-&#13;
Ucait*»nV' N&#13;
"Something*" reiterated Weston.&#13;
"What it JVT ^ church or a windmill&#13;
going hefoYe Vx% wind?"&#13;
"Neither, air—but a boat adrift."-&#13;
"How does it bear, Ned?" asked&#13;
Hislop, starting Into tbe rigging,&#13;
"On' the starboard bow, about two&#13;
miles off /*&#13;
Oa hearing this the telescope was&#13;
resorted to, .and we coulh plainly&#13;
enough gee k waitev object, which the&#13;
Intervening waves, a» they rose and&#13;
fell, hid from us at tittle; and there&#13;
was a great diversity of opinion, for&#13;
one of the crew nwilnt&amp;lned that it was&#13;
a barbof buoy adttf tf.&#13;
"It must have drifted a long way to&#13;
have come here;*' retorted Carlton,&#13;
"and If you have your grandmother's&#13;
^ spectacles about you, wipe them, clean,&#13;
* put them on, and. look again—for I can&#13;
see plainly enough.that it Is a boat."&#13;
"Theft wte shall -overhaul It," said&#13;
Weston; "Hislop, prepare to lower&#13;
ours.and to lay tjis tote-yard abacli.'1&#13;
The Bugenle'a course was shaped toward&#13;
It, and'^hen within a quarter of&#13;
a mile the fdrearfll waB laid to the&#13;
mast, tbe brig" hove In the wind, and&#13;
the stern boat lowered; HiBlop, Tom&#13;
Lambourne, two other Hands and-" I&#13;
manned her and put off to Inspect&#13;
and report upon what we could discover.&#13;
' And so, with many surmises as&#13;
to wrecks, boats getting adrift or being&#13;
washed away from their davits,&#13;
and so forth, we pulled swiftly toward&#13;
her, all Btrlpped to our shirt ftiseves,&#13;
for a hot West Indian-sun was blazing&#13;
In a cloudless sky, an* the air seamed&#13;
"till and breathless.&#13;
CHAPtER XIV.&#13;
Antonio eliCubanb.&#13;
As the strange boat pitched about oil&#13;
waves some of our men asserted&#13;
that at times they could see a man's&#13;
head above the gunwale. Others expressed&#13;
their doubts at this, and in&#13;
the midst pi such discussions we&#13;
sheered-alongside., Kit?lop caught the&#13;
bow by the boat-hoo'lt, and walle retaining&#13;
his hbld, fended off, to prevent&#13;
her being dashed against ours.&#13;
In the bottom of the boat, which&#13;
was evidently the clinker-built' skiff&#13;
of a merchant vessel, and was all&#13;
painted yellow, as a preservation from&#13;
the sun In a warm climate, there lay&#13;
under the thwarts a max*, either asleep,&#13;
In a sfcapor, «r dead—at first we knew&#13;
not which; but he was pale enough to&#13;
have passed for the last.&#13;
By Els tawny visage and coal-black&#13;
beard, his long scarlet cap and ^ s h ,&#13;
In which -a sheathed knife was stuck,&#13;
and also by the rings, in hlg ears, we&#13;
recognfted him to-be a Spanish seaman.&#13;
He was a ma* naturally of a&#13;
tall and powerful frame, hut of forbidding&#13;
aspect—of. great personal&#13;
strength, bat wasted apparently by&#13;
toil, by exposure and famine.&#13;
A dark an* coagulated crust of something&#13;
like blood appeared on his baked&#13;
lips, and thick mustaches, on the blackness&#13;
of which*the saline- particles of&#13;
the sea foam^dried by the tropical s n ,&#13;
glittered white aa hoar frost on a bush&#13;
In winter, •&#13;
Aa. we roused htm he grasped his&#13;
knife-instfntlvely and repulsively, but&#13;
relinquished it, and then stared wildly&#13;
at us, muttering in imploring tones:&#13;
"Aqua, aqua, for axnor de Dios!"—&#13;
(water, water, for the love of God).&#13;
"Mteerieoirtla! 6V •eaores—0 Ave&#13;
Mafia, mlaerlcordlar A •&#13;
"Here, JlWfc Spaniard, ship a drop of&#13;
this; it trreatifcrnaiky," said Tattooed&#13;
Tom, ptmrtos between the parched lips&#13;
of fhe Spaniard some mm, which likely&#13;
had been **t 1k t*» boat by the foiw-&#13;
•lght of Hlslo*&#13;
The black'eye» of t&amp;* *ast*way dilated&#13;
and hashed %8 the spirit perited&#13;
nl*v Testortag his watsd energies,&#13;
and brinfin* a fceetfo color td his&#13;
eheeto.&#13;
"Betay vwr,M «aM Tom: "you must&#13;
get some Thames water from the brig&#13;
before yoti tike more of thfe"&#13;
"Mucfcoi graclaa—K*!^, many&#13;
thanks," emld ^ e Spaniard, la tone* pt&#13;
Xaouffc t»* tts,t—stow your slack,&#13;
ami come on b«art if you cm," said&#13;
Ton, teatiif, M M bad sulky reooalectktfis&#13;
• of mut' aHrentores ' at, the&#13;
6 l C t ^&#13;
by the vno\rtWul of aloohtA.&#13;
tbe g»mlaK •te^ejtml tip, but&#13;
vitt tatapltrt %M$ tlken v* d&#13;
by the sun, w«r« on h4s person and&#13;
the-Iftwide of the h^at, w^eeiaily on&#13;
r&#13;
lop, with aji Imperceptible, shudder,&#13;
, Tbe Spauiaid t»U/ted and became, if&#13;
possible, paAer at tb« question,. a» )ve&#13;
nervoualy. clotcbtfd. thy gunwale Of bis&#13;
boat with both bjantfs, and aaid,. ia&#13;
broken accents;&#13;
"My4o&lt;i s^norea; I killed a do* that&#13;
was witfc me^ because it went mad Jn&#13;
tbe ho^ sunshine, *ptl being -without&#13;
water." '&#13;
"Why did you »»t throw it Jnto tb«&#13;
sea?"&#13;
"It would have bitten me; senor. and&#13;
might perhaps have come into the boat&#13;
again."&#13;
•TLllely enough," muttered one of&#13;
our men.&#13;
"You could have knocked It over&#13;
With an oar," said Hislop'Vbut &lt;"&lt;*&#13;
your dog wear this?" he added, fishing&#13;
up with the boat-hook a cap that&#13;
lay in the bilge water under the stern&#13;
sheets of the skiff.&#13;
• "That cap Is "mine," said the Spanlard,&#13;
i n a husky voice, while closing&#13;
his eyes, as U wearied or appalled.&#13;
"Have you two beads?" ask*3 Hlslop,&#13;
Bternly. *&#13;
"Noyse.nor; but—but-—"&#13;
"A man may b*ve two caps, for all&#13;
that."&#13;
Perceiving that he was oft the point&#13;
of sinking again, Tom Lambourne&#13;
poured'some mdre of the rum into his&#13;
mouth, and we dragged him Into our&#13;
tsoat, setting the skiff, which was quite&#13;
useless to us, adrift once more.&#13;
"What was jnonr ship?" asked Hlalop,&#13;
who spoke, Spanish fluently.&#13;
"The Marshal Serrano—a Spanish&#13;
brig from Cadir"&#13;
"From the Canaries laet?1"! inquired&#13;
hastily.&#13;
"Yes; bound to Costa Rica."&#13;
Tom. Ivaraboume gave me a rapid&#13;
glance, as he spat on his bands and&#13;
pushed his oar through the rowlock.&#13;
"She foundered and went down with&#13;
all ba#ds on board," continued the&#13;
famished &gt;Spaniard, in a broken voice&#13;
and *lth quivering lisa.&#13;
reiterated HWoi), sternly and&#13;
that io««i of&#13;
"All »&lt;ave myself, senor," replied the&#13;
other, hesitatingly, and. lowering his&#13;
hollow eyes. "} escaped in the skiff.1'&#13;
"With your dog?"&#13;
"Si.senor."&#13;
"In what latitude, did th(9 to^c&#13;
place?"&#13;
Without a raomentls hesitation, the&#13;
Spaniard gave us the latitude and&#13;
longitqde. * ;&#13;
"I can't make out this fellow's story&#13;
In any- way," said Htslop In English.&#13;
"By the theory and law of storms, we&#13;
should have had a touch of the same&#13;
gale which fomu3«c«&gt;d his brig—if such&#13;
a gale existed. He has deserted, or&#13;
been marooned. I don't believe a word&#13;
he says. What la your aame?" he&#13;
asked in Spanish.&#13;
"Antonio,"&#13;
I started on hearing it, tor my suspicions&#13;
were becoming more and more&#13;
confirm e l # t&#13;
"Anton}o? What more?"&#13;
"El Cubaxio, or the Cuban; for so&#13;
^ay shipmates termed me, and I have&#13;
no other name."&#13;
"Qfuick, my lads!" safd Hislop. "Laj&#13;
out on your oare."&#13;
We were eoon alongside the Eugenie,&#13;
and had our castaway hoisted on&#13;
board, when, for a time, an end was&#13;
put to our queries but riot to our&#13;
surmises, by his becoming insensible.&#13;
We had questioned him already perhaps&#13;
too much, considering the weakeae&#13;
of his condition.&#13;
K» adhered to hlg original story In&#13;
every particular when examined by&#13;
Weston and Hislop a day or two after—&#13;
that he belonged to the Spanish&#13;
merchant brig Marshal Serrano, the&#13;
same craft which had worked with as&#13;
out of the roadstead of SaAta^Cnu;&#13;
that she bad foTmdered to a storm, being&#13;
overmasted and overladen, and&#13;
that he alone escaped of all the crew;&#13;
that when his l o g became mad tie had&#13;
stain the antaui' and eaattlM carcass&#13;
Into the sea, and that 'be haft&#13;
been floating about fn an opea boat,&#13;
without food and wlthoot * aught to&#13;
cftol hlB parched tongtt*. save the&#13;
heavy tropical dew ot heavefc, wlere&#13;
we found him; and to the truth of all&#13;
this be was ready to swear over two&#13;
crot«ed knives, in the fashion of his&#13;
country.&#13;
In short, we were obliged to content&#13;
ovrselve* with hta narratlpe,which&#13;
Bistop duly MigroMed In tbe ship's&#13;
loc, while expressing great disbelief as&#13;
to Ks autbeatlcity.&#13;
X* the first place, our mate denied&#13;
that any soeb storm at that la which&#13;
the Cub** alleged hts brig had por-&#13;
Mbed hfel ever Mttted: amd he 6e*&#13;
fuood from h4s Hftorlte theory (that&#13;
w« were, and had beoa, la the^lrwrt&#13;
fo of aneh a»uw», anil&#13;
Hemee we thought It&#13;
thai the man had&#13;
perhaps In consequence •€ oosBBBtttiug&#13;
seme crime, or foe tbeissjts veaeoat be&#13;
had been tuuvonee! and set adrift, •&#13;
Tke.erew were AKids* ls&gt; -epfsJea,&#13;
and Tom £ * » bovwae opetxljr expressed&#13;
his disbelief that the blood whU*&#13;
ej*4 th« elothea ol the £ub*f&#13;
thwart of the boat ever, came&#13;
vejnjtof. a dog, «nd others&#13;
ixs must have quarrjled wltf*, aa&#13;
fortunate shipmate aftd kUJbe4 Ws», or&#13;
had,.perhaps, aqs&amp;afllnated himJa hla&#13;
sleep tor the horrible purpoee of prolonjjlBg&#13;
nib own assistance,&#13;
Amid tht^e ueyleasaat swrqaiues (AS&#13;
to hlu character and pu^tkjn^ Hx, a fey&#13;
days tbe Spaniard joined to* crew in&#13;
working the »hlp, and pruvoi hlmaell&#13;
to be a steady, lnduatrlocs" and able&#13;
seaman, and as three of our haada were&#13;
on the sick liBt, his services were the&#13;
more valuable.&#13;
• vOjr remarking this to,Tom Lambourne:&#13;
,&#13;
"It Is all very true, sir," he replied;&#13;
"but I don't like a seaman who eannot&#13;
look his snipmitte right In the&#13;
face."&#13;
"You are a physiognomist," I «uggeuted.&#13;
"Don't know what kind of a mist&#13;
that may be, Master Rodney; but this&#13;
I know- there Is always s^aeAblng&#13;
cunning and dangerous In a tallow who&#13;
looks over your &amp;bouldekv;as that Span*&#13;
lard does, when be shouW look at your&#13;
eyes.*1&#13;
Antonio had an excessive dislike for&#13;
deck duty by night He exhibited a&#13;
strange dread of being left alone, and&#13;
could scarcely be prevailed upon to&#13;
look over the vessel's s^de, always&#13;
shrinking back as If he expected to sed&#13;
something hideous rise out of tbe sea.&#13;
Weston suggested that perhaps hje recent&#13;
suffering had unmanned and readered&#13;
him nervous, but the crew&#13;
thought otherwise.&#13;
In his sleep Antonio frequently disturbed&#13;
the men ljn the forecastle bunks&#13;
by hie muttering*, hU wild dreams,&#13;
outcries, and sonorous Spanish male.*&#13;
dictions.&#13;
I was at the wheel on a calm and&#13;
lovely night (It was the 13th of January),&#13;
when we were off the beautiful&#13;
shore of Hlspaniola. I remember well&#13;
that Cape Samanna bore west by&#13;
south, and Cape Cabron west by north,&#13;
for my task of steering was new to&#13;
me, afid We«ton'^ orders were "to keep&#13;
her full and by"—that 1B, as t\om to&#13;
the wind aa possible without making&#13;
the canvas shiver. .&#13;
I could see the lights that glittered&#13;
In the distant villages that studded tne&#13;
low but fertile peninsula of Samanna.&#13;
All was stllh and qnlet In the ship and&#13;
atound It. Soothed by the solemnity of&#13;
the bour atid the vast solitude of the&#13;
«ea, my heart was full, and busy memory&#13;
brought before me loved faces and&#13;
voices, pla*ts and scenes, that were&#13;
far away, hi dear old England.&#13;
The brig was gliding through. t£o&#13;
water rapidly, but Imperceptibly, and&#13;
{"almost without a sound; the men of&#13;
the watch were leaning over tfie bulwark&#13;
to Ieewajpd, and the air, the sea&#13;
and all aloft and below seemed fa&#13;
sleep in the moonlight; not a reef&#13;
point pattered on the taut canvas, and&#13;
scarce- a wav«let rippled save In the&#13;
dead water ••'tern that marked tile&#13;
white waVt of the Eugenie.&#13;
Suddenly a shrill and piercing cry&#13;
rang out upon the nlgnt. and Antonio&#13;
the Cuban rushed out from the fore*&#13;
castle with the N wildest terror ex*&#13;
pressed In his black eyes; his visage&#13;
was pale and ghaMly, and the perspiration&#13;
glittered like bead drops on his&#13;
clammy brow. With hla bare feet he&#13;
stumbled over the chain cable, whkh&#13;
la's coiled up op the deck, for on that&#13;
afternoon we haft hauled It up and&#13;
bent It t* the working anchor.&#13;
He came running* aft In his shirt,&#13;
brandishing a knife in his haad, and&#13;
exclaiming in fierce and then Imploring&#13;
accents:&#13;
"Who says I did it? Who dares to&#13;
say so?"&#13;
"Then, lotting his arms drop as he&#13;
slunk back to his bunk, we heard him&#13;
groan out;&#13;
"El cuehlllo—el cuchtllo!" (the knift&#13;
—the knife.)&#13;
Hence, uftder such circumstances, It&#13;
may easily be supf&gt;osed that among&#13;
the crew there Mated strange and&#13;
dark surmises as to the past Ufs ol&#13;
Antonio el Cubase&#13;
CTo be eouttauMd.)&#13;
ADJOURNED.&#13;
Ktl«««U« foe IJttt* Boy* In ft&#13;
Sing not within thy, mouth*, hum&#13;
ming to thyself, naless thou be alone;&#13;
In such sort as thou caaat act he&#13;
heard by others. Strike mot op a 4mm&#13;
with thy fingers or thf fee*.&#13;
When thou blowest at thy nose take&#13;
heed thou blow not as fhildre* do.&#13;
Sat not in the streets, prrtcipaJty&#13;
in th« town, beest thou akme mot in&#13;
company; nor in tho house o«i of sesaon&#13;
and in the presence of stnacera&gt;&#13;
Behavior.&#13;
There are some curious&#13;
coneerniag waves. The A**h satlojra&#13;
beUsve th*t the hlgft seas 99 the eoast&#13;
of AsyesinU ore&#13;
tkey recite verses&#13;
have a *en4—ry,l&#13;
wMeh they&#13;
f w tut folfcm*&#13;
Adsdhrml&#13;
the -U^ifcl Stasiea u*v v to&#13;
%U pmdntmd *o thew by the&#13;
Mount&#13;
ol&#13;
the u»fy |*WJ*OUU«1 bill;&#13;
iiuri*lflg tbe. coa«tructjon&#13;
c; JtMiiidingu ut Norwich,&#13;
Abk? Ano»j»U«,&#13;
, U.;&#13;
la.; titrtator,&#13;
Roiwe, » . . ¥ . ; LeadvSllek C&#13;
rt; Vt.; New ttwri*. La,; Cmri'Ky,}&#13;
Freeport, 01.; \Vinston,&#13;
. C.x and eAlargiu^pobli^buUo^i at&#13;
, Go. Vov Ukinrf tbe twelfth&#13;
; the Buffalo expouitiou bill) to&#13;
rehnbume f^vvernoraof ftt^tenand ter*&#13;
ritorieji for tixp«s«ea incurred in .tbe&#13;
Spanish "war; providing a new buildlag&#13;
for the department ol juatjoe in&#13;
Wa*hiogtun; making approprUtioo*&#13;
for furtificaUon« tfrd oiier w«»k« of&#13;
dcfe&amp;be; for a bridge acru^ tbe Misboor!&#13;
river at Yaukton, S. D.; for the&#13;
relief of the international cotton prvss&#13;
company. New Orleaoh; to unable the&#13;
ulty of Albuqaerque, N. M., to crtm&amp;e&#13;
i»debt«^lne(«ii providing for the allowance,&#13;
of certain claims reported by the&#13;
accounting officer* of the treasury; for&#13;
public buildings, additions, etc, as^ follows:&#13;
Cleveland, 0.; Baltimore, fid.&#13;
custom house; New Brighton, Pa.|&#13;
TiOckporfc, P(L; Stockton, CaL; boa Angeles,&#13;
CaK, an4 also those authprisingr&#13;
First Llent. Jne. ft. Williams, 3d il&#13;
lery; Col. Victor Vl^quain, 3d&#13;
volunteers, and Ue*t B. A. Bates,&#13;
U. 3. volunteers, to accept certain.decorations&#13;
and honors from foreign potentates.&#13;
The closing day of the 65th congress&#13;
was characterized by excitement, confusion&#13;
and disagreements In both the&#13;
house and senate. However, the army&#13;
appropriation bill was agreed to ard&#13;
passed, and this and the rivers and&#13;
harbors bill hav« gone to the President,&#13;
but the armor pl»fe amendment&#13;
hung up tbe naval appropriation,&#13;
measure.&#13;
The naval nominations, wive confirmed&#13;
by the senate without opposition.&#13;
T^hese are the promotions resulting&#13;
from the naval personnel bill.&#13;
It settles fcbe&gt; Schley-Sampson controversy&#13;
by making each a rear admiral,&#13;
with Schley two numbers in advance&#13;
of Sampson.&#13;
The best estimates available place&#13;
the aggregate of1 tbe appropriations of&#13;
the fi5$j oongress at 3675,885,489.&#13;
WAB&#13;
A change in the command of the&#13;
Rhited States force*at Iloiloi will occur&#13;
011 March S? resulting from the retirement&#13;
of Gen. Marcus Miller wbe on&#13;
that date reaches the u#e limit of 64&#13;
years, (ien. Miller's compulsory retirement&#13;
is a matter of regret to the&#13;
war department He will be succeeded&#13;
in the natural order 0/ promotion by&#13;
Col. Thomas M. Anderson, who now&#13;
ranks a&gt;: &amp; brigadier-general of volunteers.&#13;
The Filipinos made an unsuccessful&#13;
attempt to capture the water works&#13;
six miles from Manila. The attack&#13;
was repulsed with a loss to the rebels&#13;
of 17 killed and many wounded, "in&#13;
a second scrap, near the reservoir the&#13;
Americans flanked the enemy killing&#13;
30 and wouudiu*? a small number. The&#13;
Americans had two wounded in this&#13;
engagement&#13;
Another engagement has taken place&#13;
near Manila* Gen. Hale, determined&#13;
to clear away the enemy from the right&#13;
froot of his whig, met with fiere&#13;
fighting but (he American ^aaoalties&#13;
are light. It is estimated that at least&#13;
250 rebels-were kilted and 19 insurgent&#13;
sharpshooters laid down their arms&#13;
withouVfiring a shot and were taken&#13;
prisoners.&#13;
It is a gratifying toot' to the war department&#13;
to know that all of the reinforcement*&#13;
to Gen. Otis now are regulars,&#13;
supplied with the caliber 30&#13;
rifle, commonly known ac th*&#13;
•Torge&amp;sen gtm of long range!&#13;
THE MARKETS.&#13;
LIVE STOCK.&#13;
York— battle Sheep&#13;
Best grades...It ~.iw»*i 94 «&#13;
U 4 S 4034 45 3 m&#13;
4 r »&#13;
4 30&#13;
vi Difficult* *&#13;
The first fUp it Spring&#13;
should be to cleanse Nature's&#13;
house from Winter** Jkccomss-&#13;
Ution$. Hood's S*rs*pdrUU&#13;
does this work castip. Jk v&#13;
America's Greatest Spring&#13;
Medicine* It purifies the blood*&#13;
as mittons of people say.&#13;
It make* the weak strong, ai uervou*&#13;
men and vomen fladly testlfr. II&#13;
cures all blood diseases, u tboutMutds&#13;
of cured voluntarily write. II it ju«t UM&#13;
medicine- (or you, as you wUi gladly&#13;
after you bavs given it a (air trial.&#13;
» l » A b T&#13;
I $ut ^horutvfhly well. It « u&#13;
bottles of Hood's Sarwparlll* that&#13;
s * «o sfter'tpeudliif over 98) la&#13;
atten4*oc&amp; My trouble was a raw&#13;
my snkte," MM. LOUISA fcUfOB&#13;
Btxeet, LOWMU, Hma».&#13;
lor— ~" After worrytaf tear&#13;
g»v« my cb)kUtm Hopd'i 8 u n - Sirllls and it cured tUem ol running KMMS.&#13;
ood'o Pills oureA me U dyflpepila end&#13;
eoostipatioa.* Mma. Xxf f l THOMAS, U&#13;
Governor St, AwuipoUs, Md.&#13;
Oqraumpttvv Cough-"P»«* r«*n&#13;
af9 I had a conauxaptiTe ooogh vblch reduced&#13;
me to a skeleton. Was advised to&#13;
take Hood's SanapertUa wbicn I did u t f&#13;
neovered normal healths I have been well&#13;
eve» »\i\6t.n H^tthok ^ u m n r m m Cqr.&#13;
Pearl aod Chettmit »ta., Jen»ncsnriUe, Intf.&#13;
Km Hit,&#13;
Tbe Burlington route, adtertlsiBsT&#13;
from its office la Omaha recently, offered&#13;
a casa prii* of HOO'to tbe person&#13;
who would send them U* beat plasv&#13;
for encouraging Immigration to Nebraska.&#13;
Among tbe letters received&#13;
was the following:&#13;
"Republican City, nob., January 17,.&#13;
1899. J. trances, g p: I saw yo.aer ad*&#13;
ln your paper asken advise of bow to&gt;&#13;
settle nebraska, (or my 20 gears' sxptt»&#13;
rlence that tbe grats part^jf nebratk*&#13;
Js old balenoa and air longen for •&#13;
wife or a housekeeper and tbe eastsrm&#13;
world Is full of old mad.es and widoss,&#13;
now if the railroads wood trasport&#13;
the old mades and wldoes to ttetiraskSv&#13;
free theair woodsnd bee no further&#13;
truble about settlers. I lei] you tV&#13;
wimen healr tbftt hain't (ngags4 air&#13;
scarli then heo.es teath and most of ifceglrlea&#13;
roarey when tbeair 15, now if&#13;
theaa old madis and* old batehus go to&#13;
keepen house* and tbe men hesjr tkat&#13;
all the wldoes hestr sbla to nebrask*,&#13;
you felowes wood Just balf to put OB&gt;.&#13;
extra tralnea to esrray tbe. me*.&#13;
' • ' T T ' " " » It isn't what a sum gives, but tbe&#13;
way he gives it that shows his tnte&gt;&#13;
eaaracter.&#13;
A woman should never, try to bttay&#13;
(ier hair by igniting tbe powder on •&#13;
her face. .&#13;
v&gt; 40&#13;
I SO&#13;
Best erase*.....&amp; tiO\ ft&#13;
4 00&#13;
SSO&#13;
vBeBtprade«....«»a» 40 4 so , *v&gt; S »i&#13;
Lo«er«r«dei t i*m n ' 3 50- ^ 4 W f 60&#13;
Buffalo —&#13;
8e«tfra44»....4ooa4 4« 4 » fcSS * w&#13;
Lower frartfts I 2&gt;34 flu 4 tt&gt; 4 10 S O&#13;
..i^ueo «ao 4oo %m WwcVfrradtR. SOJ^J » a oo sao » «&#13;
B«iKtfrad«t 4 W in 400&#13;
6 4 « S ID 4 0OUower&#13;
trades..I tOQ4 W 3 75 &amp; 00 t 7 i&#13;
^ &lt; OKAIH, BTC.&#13;
Wheat. Corn, -Oat*.&#13;
NairttS Na f mix N&lt;k*wbttc&#13;
N«wT(Mt tvaS&gt;S4 «i#43« SDsW&#13;
7IO74S4&#13;
/. frx I timothy. SI 00 per „&#13;
Potatoes 4ftc per i»u _L.lTe_Pkulurf. »prU(t&#13;
ducts, Butter se. Eg«, fOrlctly trtmtu We I*r * rt&gt;e«t aLrz. T*cter,lV; creamery, Me&#13;
IB WOiMt« STOOP OF 3 B&#13;
is doe not only to the originality and&#13;
simplicity of the. combination, but also&#13;
to the care and skill with which it to-&#13;
BNumfsesored by scientific processes&#13;
known to the CAUPOSSIA Fie S n w r&#13;
Co. only, aad we wish to impress apon&#13;
all the importance of purchasing the&#13;
true and original remedy. As ths&#13;
genuine Syrup of Figs is nuMnxfsctraed&#13;
by the CALivofuna, FM» STBOF C&lt;k&#13;
yl Lofuna, FM» STBOF&#13;
only, a knowledge of that fact wQt&#13;
assist one in avoiding the worthless&#13;
imitations mgmutactored other pa»»&#13;
h t d i f th &lt;U&#13;
d by oth&#13;
ties. The high standing of the &lt;Uxi&#13;
TOSXIA FIG Bnxff Co. with the medical&#13;
profession, «nd the astisfaetkaswhich&#13;
the geratns Syrap of Figs has*&#13;
fiven to mttlkms of families, matesv&#13;
the name at tbe Compsjsy a guarasvty&#13;
of the excellence of its remedy. It fc&#13;
far in adranoe of all other laxattvea.&#13;
ss it sets on the lddne|s» liver S J »&#13;
bowels wttbodt faritatiof or weakening&#13;
them, and it does not gripe nor&#13;
navseate. In order to gg*its beneficial&#13;
effesta, please remembf r the name C&#13;
the Company—&#13;
CAUPORKU HG STOOP COThere's&#13;
Only&#13;
One&#13;
Standard&#13;
of&#13;
Quality&#13;
In Athletic Co*d«-&#13;
"SpaUtlng.'9 Accept Aa&#13;
ltt&#13;
A. a SPXLDIMO a&#13;
York.&#13;
r&#13;
Trea»urtrt Report. W&#13;
'•: s&#13;
To&#13;
COHTHMI: vr&#13;
b t?umiaoii&#13;
^&#13;
« * • • . •&#13;
» - : •&#13;
I •&#13;
! ' •&#13;
• A&#13;
: ^&#13;
• # ? '&#13;
ixr «&#13;
*v.*-&#13;
r. • .&#13;
» . • . ' , -&#13;
; v&#13;
I . 4 ,&#13;
l£;&#13;
for UH.' year&#13;
2.- № 8 - H M#i*cii&#13;
M Iroiu A.,&#13;
f roio T:&#13;
-.4.* -&#13;
W. A'.'O&#13;
P.&#13;
MX)&#13;
.f&#13;
anil t&#13;
K&#13;
h ACarr,&#13;
M&#13;
&lt;v *&#13;
K&#13;
'I&#13;
1 00&#13;
Sgfht,vt&gt;ittfc.il' w i t ^ S M ^ i e ^ p^ £ W.'li«Sbu5-rttt' tbe gentk, *nV on,, iVrniYyd ^f&gt;k,*^pJ&lt;m^Bi.^^ v&#13;
fectiioo jj* ' «f&amp;f c$l »*t«^&gt;$li. ;W%4 elexxpp$^vv.t.etedd;&gt;;. graeliuji^fri cojf*c«i*a; V*PmUW№ ; b» • greatl? pU«j &lt;?«u«••D»',a«rMi: ^&gt;i f r $W a bo,*,, , '&amp; .&#13;
*-»• * kh« fruaViiiai ?«l&gt;AieHi HM&lt;F'&lt; ) b m f f c (3 t o . ^ e &gt; t o , o t lw^nou^H)ld&#13;
;, ^0«i Jpcfft, , o t M a i - from. Bmofcin t clgnretjieM n hep pr^J -&#13;
lu«Ti to^ l i e i£ar. F r i o u l cuce. TWfe «.tflooltedvtor'! lutfj£aUQU,*&#13;
E&#13;
IBS&#13;
v&#13;
.1. * top'&#13;
Hi liarlo«,&#13;
' .. i oo '&#13;
It) 78&#13;
^ ^ ^ ^ ^&#13;
up courage to&#13;
4&#13;
' &gt; * •&#13;
u». is aoquaiateq cW«a permitted&#13;
" the continental, courta;&#13;
T i- ^ . . v . , . . • . v « narcotfo 6efb, born la the purple,&#13;
the &gt;»t]ro, neld^oi vi«ion ^ttre ^ dowager czartna and he.r&#13;
gives tbe sfcatiowarf 8pectaU)r ph* W, ihe.-Prfngess .Thyra, dac^ept. ._ N d . . ^ ^ , ^ r Jack1ioo that he lrim^t iB^bertand. a« .ell &gt; &gt; the *rlnce« ^ * M ^ ; . ! S 2 S £ S S&#13;
we sit m, « j OHfenr^ of Prussia, born Princess Iren#&#13;
iuotieiU«?flB ira,in attdaucrtlier train to t4»e&gt; reigning&#13;
and the Bhlftt. owiv slater&#13;
crof train&#13;
, it Beems that it is&#13;
pf all .the&#13;
defereapoints&#13;
out tiiat Marta Chrlgti&amp;jh ^ ° - 4 4&#13;
regent of Spainj "Cartnen S?l- Aytratue&#13;
queen of . Roumanla, ^ awl&#13;
48" |T ra&#13;
TKB Palace of tbe .MareovHnia, * ° B e n ^ Portugal, aa well #s many,&#13;
and&#13;
A.&#13;
'A.&#13;
If.&#13;
Jtia. f'i&#13;
W. A.'rarr&#13;
F. J.&#13;
itontt&#13;
t:&#13;
• ^ 4 . 0 0&#13;
•Wm&#13;
- ' 1 -&#13;
1000&#13;
4.W&#13;
-.00.&#13;
«.5O&#13;
Danow&#13;
55&#13;
7.V&#13;
14 2:&gt;&#13;
W&#13;
r l " .&#13;
Tlnne^^.&#13;
Graha&#13;
5.00f&#13;
•»'i&#13;
m&#13;
Lacflb, vv^ill be «i|nat»d on the • smokers, To this eategory, moreover,&#13;
de MaTSj* betweeti t b e l ^ 6 ^ 1 1 ^ 6 * ^ ^ ^ ^ 1 ^ the Husaian court&#13;
•• ' ; - \ - J iL M 1- &gt; " ilafliee jnay not be aware of*the ta.ct-': awer aiidtte ^ o n h n e ^ U h ^ ^ ^ M d lntref)W t0Tm^ ^ ^&#13;
ieni. I t will b e lli» ftet m j of Naples, Marie Voo Witt»i»bacn,&#13;
length, X\i flet iu width and 7H;tfh* to&lt;^t an a«1ve ^art la the a^^nse&#13;
IQ . A n i terrape, " e t a wearing the undress iHilform&#13;
at Fodtlio fa*'&#13;
connection at VuOlltc&#13;
. . K.':.. .SOT&#13;
. iw.&#13;
&gt; • • • • • . .&#13;
'V&#13;
..., s . — ,-.„- bf her b^shand's orark infantry-j r •^'•'•^|:-'&gt;Tf^&lt;"iw~"Afsitj"&#13;
ii&gt;g ffa^iBtitirM bit«Qlure Bud ' rejgimenl*, and, especially when uude^ I iconver^&#13;
tf d intp a ban';i§g yarden, j ^re&gt;. wa« rarely seen wltlw*t a Itgn'ted \&#13;
ill be&#13;
alrW&#13;
L&#13;
irators;—Koi&#13;
' V, . , 1 D1OUD1 . V^tT I A J U U I W «A A 1 U 1 1 , Wflg f&#13;
through' two | lpsp^jjabitiial 'cigar ^moke/ than ehe,&#13;
t.VoVh r g e ele land po.jva* tbe counteas M -G'frgentV"&#13;
bV-AirjUi. an Infanta of Spain A« Jfor&#13;
the aocie^jr leaders and granges dasnef&#13;
de'-pur jle mondfi in Riissfa, j3ermimy,&#13;
Would&#13;
J. yf&#13;
.1, Monks&#13;
P. J.&#13;
i:&#13;
1*.&#13;
S.&#13;
lv Jttrpwn&#13;
.S. Sykes&#13;
W.B.&#13;
A. Moults&#13;
F. L.-&#13;
A. Wonke&#13;
Y. Kowers&#13;
L. Boff&#13;
J.&#13;
J-S. P.&#13;
K. C. Arnell&#13;
x;b«f». Mill*&#13;
L. Hoft •&#13;
J.JKl&#13;
1,00&#13;
HH.OS&#13;
28.8*&#13;
..VI&#13;
D. Mwrtii&#13;
H.&#13;
Francis Otvr&#13;
F K VV&#13;
U&#13;
,W E Murpliy&#13;
is Oari*&#13;
7 15&#13;
' 1 Op&#13;
s 2f&gt;&#13;
ui&#13;
Dr.'&#13;
Will M« In tyre v 1 U0&#13;
l^y «xc.ftj?s ot pall tax and&#13;
p_r&lt;»perty oorolf 19 §0'&#13;
Amylint returiiablft' , 2 37&#13;
Poll ta,x, uncountable. 2 00&#13;
Pd Austin &amp;'Western Co.,&#13;
notes 2\O:80&#13;
Jravw yoo^ i f&#13;
N»vV Life Pills.&#13;
of sufferers baye proved&#13;
Lbeir mite bless merit for sick tad ner-'&#13;
VOOJS lieWiiiebfls. They Qiake pnre&#13;
biootl axjd jBtroo^ ner^e^and build np&#13;
yonr.health. Easy to ta^e, Trf them.,&#13;
i eren hi the reaini of Britannia (i&#13;
th«ir Mihe. trf Upton. In the Turkish&#13;
smoUng i« even more tie rlgeur&#13;
than fn tlve 3*l*m^, for the wfvea&#13;
oi the welVto-do -fatthfal&#13;
few recreations lir*8ides inbailttf&#13;
the fw««s,6f yeHow Jenldjfe or K3rltand&#13;
nih\&gt;]Ai% what; hi • the&#13;
Only 25tv mope/ back if ndt en red. tnjetr a designation Itn partially&#13;
* 5 ^ feX^Z- "A^Sij^ar.Jdrriigwt^ ' • ' pl|e}l to c a n ^ . crjJJnfisi^.Iondiia&#13;
» &gt;m—&lt;•»&#13;
|t is b«tt*r. to keep' tvttil then to i&#13;
well, although wh#&gt;J one iV.sick' it U-\&#13;
^ a g tvrye^ , WbbeejjDn wo ccooo&#13;
sider that ej^ht:te»U-^ of t^ie ailments&#13;
tbat aftiicfc tfae American •^eopIe ar*&#13;
jialance,&#13;
1221 62&#13;
|145 HO&#13;
Dated Pt3bruary:{J3r4 1.899.&#13;
D: ft. MUBTA,&#13;
Village T^reasuror.&#13;
Teepie an*&#13;
W K Vnrphy,&#13;
George JJurch,&#13;
Thot Head, •&#13;
F J/ Aodrewa,&#13;
95&#13;
13&#13;
:&#13;
£ Haon,&#13;
•Binmi-it Mon 'be,&#13;
T&#13;
75-&#13;
iz^ why it is tbat BaxterV"&#13;
Tber« has ^e.^n an important whole-&#13;
Bale secession from t^ie Wlnktv of toe&#13;
- The. .entire Dorateicat&#13;
order =|n-EngJand has received permission&#13;
from Rorao to eat flesh four day&amp;&#13;
a we«k lnfttf-:ul of perpetually abstain-&#13;
JnI; as heratnft);^. In case» of illhealth&#13;
or specially hajd work meat i»&#13;
t^ to be allowed si!x da^s a week, Ttiia pqinfs t» N\)ithw«4ern&#13;
t Howeil,&#13;
•i^V if&gt;ufe lor A n n . \ r ! i - | , , "In-"&#13;
poini- E a y t , ' S o i i U t . \y\A ip.r&#13;
, T J H V ? ^ * ' City a n d&#13;
or if sick iJ&lt;n'Porta:"t •decision Ijas been arrived&#13;
? , at after the'closest medical and of-&#13;
Bitiers "&#13;
aoat№ t theui^ o «et well. ..,«„«, , . flciriJ ^ ^ ^ - f t s l o f h p € f f e c t g o f .,&#13;
MajjaVftke B i t t e r s c o r e s c a n s t i p a f i o n p ^ t u a l a b s t i n e j i ^ from " m e a t ifi a *&#13;
4 K&#13;
. n , UKINKTT,&#13;
s&#13;
Price'25b per bottio--W.by. »ot,^tpp in |VarlabliB climate like thai of En^lar^d.&#13;
andffeiaboiire'and by uVinu:ifc.l)e ' a s - ! T h e r e s u U }e f b a t veKfitarlnnlam ha*.&#13;
* ? o l M € f l I witt good&#13;
Fran&gt; fa Cwi&#13;
Cain&#13;
John .Toffreye,' p&#13;
M&#13;
1 r»oel«&#13;
2 50&#13;
•I 7 5&#13;
One dt tlio attraction of t)i6&#13;
Pans Expoql^oo of^i^pO tfili be&#13;
if. Hugo ^Alesi's "M^rebrama,"&#13;
the pviucipal future bf «fhiefy will&#13;
consist of fi laiye ocean 'steamer,&#13;
tbe pansoiigeT '-flpon- whicH will&#13;
ynavc an oppovtunity of making a&#13;
voyage from Marseilles to C6nt&#13;
; thbt is tp^say, au ira-"&#13;
\ Iginnry, voyage, «inee the- vessel&#13;
'.I A titwi&#13;
Will&#13;
health (1&#13;
bot months. IV A sell i t end.&#13;
apteeit^o Wive djtisfac ion or n.on^ ; wAYNk HOTEL, DETROIT&#13;
• &gt; 1 AMERICAN A)*D EUROPEAN PLAN.&#13;
F. \ , ' S i t ! W , • » TO *i a© «!.&lt;» TO «2.OO g&#13;
50 o. Uif rp Ox re&#13;
.V)&#13;
A&#13;
Teankful \*pr4tfJ,^ frritten by Mr«.&#13;
K. Hart of'GrotOf, 8-* D. "Was&#13;
with a^bad &lt;old^ sra.ieh aetklid&#13;
on cpy Lunjri; feutft settled in and&#13;
finally t«rmfflaCe&lt;* in&#13;
| will nut aiovf'^Qtwa'rd at all, the&#13;
! illusion of ^ailitjgf'beii^ -j&#13;
I by arran^gemei"^ that has&#13;
1 Been employed upan the .&#13;
lip v^set, will be&#13;
npon a'Spherical pivot^&#13;
laud the only\ojottoneibat it will&#13;
^wiirbe tlrgse of"pitehicg ancj|&#13;
wfeieh wilK be f^i^en'it&#13;
T*r wiTJ '.tob fiurroti^ded&#13;
Wit^i ic«*iruio^ boiling,K»d foarnid^&#13;
water; a»fl ih the; Ventilators' will&#13;
, be placed ^ a n d algae,&#13;
Four doctors K*Te «». Up jaj^iff J&#13;
couH lire but jt short tim*.&#13;
if I could i&amp;t/Uay with-ta^frverie Ott^w\U bLcouoe • impregnated witfi&#13;
earth, I woii!^. nwiet^my a^Bettjt ooet&#13;
above. My&#13;
Dr.&#13;
me, God&#13;
and&#13;
free at&#13;
e^aiar&#13;
itoftOcaad 11, gqaraat©^ or prioa&#13;
4&#13;
I at*&#13;
Iwlthv&#13;
wa« adyiaed'tb - J h e speetjlfcprs/ at. tHe&#13;
fa*f t&lt;^r ather,' will &gt;aik "about, at&#13;
1 l t Vir piaitsuiv or V t at.eane in&#13;
pf a&#13;
th«&#13;
, vibrating funnel, and a cretr&#13;
'; f A Ssrra Lttrftry of unequalled Taluc— Practical,&#13;
Dp-t»-4atr, Concise and Comprehensive—Band*-'&#13;
&amp;omcly&gt;nole4 and BCamiftil^y liiustrttwl. ;&#13;
By JACO&amp;^fQQLe&#13;
No. l-BIOGLE HORSE UOOK .&#13;
; Alk»bout l^oraes—«.fotmqon-ftpT»e TreAtis^, with over-,&#13;
t ( 74^iu£tt3tjaus ,a»tafc&lt;tara work, P'rir*, 3»€«nU&#13;
No. a—aKWLfe teiwv BOOK&#13;
'„] contain* 43*olored liit-WWwr«prqd^tt4op*rf = n «*«*»!«»&#13;
Noa-BKKJLE P0UtT*Y BOOK&#13;
E&#13;
&gt; C:uts,&#13;
•principal bretd*;&#13;
Itic^i-so Cents.&#13;
NO. 4-BKKH.E COW BOOK&#13;
Weert&#13;
other l&#13;
topcs and other |&#13;
The BldOLB BOOK* r •#aw*nyUjii»iUl«-&#13;
i r e havme »,n&#13;
Soulh. Ivvery&#13;
Chi^aii, or Kf uwaylor tbe&#13;
aj3S BOOK • '&#13;
Aff about HoRR-^e&lt;#hJfc,.F»e&lt;iirK, B«»di.&#13;
wlioteepn k W*s^, Cow, ii )&lt;r''ot&#13;
L^ 00PKS. t S ™&#13;
»/&#13;
FARMJ0BPAI&#13;
&gt;^ -W&#13;
i B p A p r .&#13;
old; it k the&#13;
you A l l *&lt;** a M k . It3&#13;
irtowft, bU-tbe-n»1ton-tti&#13;
Far* add Household&#13;
ft ««e {« the iftjjt&#13;
^&#13;
«&#13;
BK0U&amp; BOf|)B. t«i&#13;
?/*"•** **• * ^ ^ 3 ' ^ l •*&#13;
^ • * fwuttwrm&#13;
• i&#13;
• . • &gt; * •&#13;
V &gt;&#13;
. :~»&#13;
" ^' v-n&#13;
» N&#13;
L ^ . ti!:- *&#13;
." •&#13;
* • • : •&#13;
v»-&#13;
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.' »' • i&#13;
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V .&#13;
' V.&#13;
r&#13;
i-7&#13;
*&gt;. , *c#&#13;
body ,wmc4 have- been* m ala-owi&#13;
tbrOug$ (iipease, uyerwork, excels or&#13;
loop, restored to full power, '&#13;
»»a viffor -by odr #ew uua&#13;
of&#13;
)O , o?i teftifmooiiOgf -tear&#13;
TV ©via«ao».(4 (n. good&#13;
wt TRElflin CJSE'&#13;
Tumors,&#13;
Kin.&#13;
S k b a n i n ;&#13;
Blood Dhow*&#13;
Youthful Bmw».&#13;
N T^U&#13;
• • • « • » * * 8.&#13;
W. HAL€ IN fEHWML CHARQfi&#13;
/ft 50T1OM TlK*e unable to call should send&#13;
t Question blank for home&#13;
.;'* -JMra^ Johur'.&#13;
ly Ue W*.&lt;\ T. U. *»i&#13;
V ' r&#13;
, ..Alcohol prev^uttt the&#13;
bip^'of t}ie «k*ail, lm* it&#13;
$ie decay of th« liviiig,&#13;
^JWin6 may multiply th«&#13;
.'IV&#13;
i» rtu , t ) i e Hr. B F. Oliv.t uf !jarc&lt;tati% Bptin&#13;
' •';•'• ' Jjpenda bid wiut,ei.i a t 4t§V*» 8 . 0 .&#13;
№ 'hire d tbW&gt;1I W a A k a w w h a d c a u w d * ^ p*inf&#13;
i n i , i in th « back ot his ii«n.J. On usi&amp;fjf&#13;
• " Elictri c Ditteis , Auieriea' a grettar t&#13;
O M g r i l l e markin g hi a &gt;miyal• • [ j U l 0 d a u d l i e r v B r f t i u e d v , air pain »oon&#13;
visit a t C h a r l i e JowuIlS : B o t h M ^ b i t him. He **ys this* « aud mediein i&#13;
-au d Mrs , Je«r«l a r e e n t e r t a i n i n g , J.S what his euunir y uewin. All Amerof&#13;
b^t it&#13;
of tbeiuojreases&#13;
th e&#13;
wid&#13;
iu thi s .&#13;
v curse wfeicbr&#13;
i;t4a&#13;
Rev,&#13;
o* ^and y is Iwgbly s&lt;&gt;ki iu&#13;
r autl btb w&#13;
tbwrfft. I t is eai&lt;t to be&#13;
i Germany , Gpd an&#13;
tha t it contain s propor -&#13;
tionatel y as alcoho l aft it&#13;
does beer. "&#13;
Th e influenq e of .all drugs&#13;
Irira. ica knows tha t il&#13;
J^icicJRea d ia inakin g p*?pari*-: ^ Rouble , puriftw tbe blood, ton.w&#13;
orjstt).buil d a large barn just BB&#13;
on^ a th e froat jsjetn out of. th e&#13;
Thtl^siqja , who has* beeu&#13;
with he r mothe r for th e&#13;
la»trsix&#13;
up tbe stomach , .^ttx-n^tben s th a&#13;
put s van , vitfOv iiiid a«w life iat o&#13;
every uiuwles, nerv e Mid or^s n of th e&#13;
[f weak, tried , or ailin g&#13;
FBANP C L&#13;
ICdiior ut&#13;
Ji$patch&#13;
ANDREW S&#13;
$1 In Adv«tm a&#13;
Advertising&#13;
BuelJMMB U&#13;
uwu uu ujjplicaUuu.&#13;
, J4.0U per year.&#13;
s l ivev ; ind kid- *' A»w&gt;onea»«ui«u(eut»i;taiamwiu»ii»i»)vtt&#13;
for, tf d««ti4A by pr«M«itiugtii«i uflk* with tickt&gt;&#13;
t&lt;* of itduUialou. Iu u4*e uckbta aro out brought&#13;
tu tUtt ofl^gi, jugular r«taa will u« .-iwtr^tf,&#13;
All ia*rt«f fn IDC^I uotlceciUuLuu vvllLbo CUITK&#13;
tnl nl 5 c»ntu iMixiiu« ur fr»cth&gt;u ttieMot, tor otu:k&#13;
wherwati tlmo la u[.tniitted, all ui&gt;tlc«»&#13;
tod xutll jrdtsrtd ji»vautiiiue(l, &lt;&#13;
ll U&#13;
nee d it. Ev«ry&#13;
onl y 50.VSoid by F. A. Siller ,&#13;
tu innurc auiuoiutlon&#13;
, returne d in Gran d f "&#13;
,e&gt; of Ann Arbor, calupo&#13;
n Will Cfytwk's family on e&#13;
dey lH^t-.Jw.eek.wbil o puttin g in u,&#13;
day fishing q» Portage .&#13;
One glance ai this lleaiiiilul iit-&#13;
JaWwud on e would feel th«t it&#13;
ha d bee n 'Rpp?aprlal^l j name d for '&#13;
it matter s u p t f r o m wh]o h way you&#13;
loo k or h&lt;»W, it always .'ha s t h a t&#13;
UNDERTAKER&#13;
AND EMBALMER.&#13;
J.G . SAYLES&#13;
PLAINFIELD, MICH .&#13;
JpB&#13;
i till uo hr»DcLiBo&#13;
1 uud tUu Iuicet atylt/b ftf'Vypv, "tsR., Wllluli&#13;
us la oitcuiu all ktfiii» at work, »ucla an lioutu,&#13;
^auipltaa, I'twlorB, l'ro^mujaiea, BUI iieiulx, &gt;ft&gt;»*&#13;
Hondo, Si-Uuuitjuis, (juiIJB, Auctluu ^ l l l s, 6tc- , l*&#13;
tttipej-lor biylta, upon ihe abutust uutlco. rric«» ea&#13;
o v Kfi :;uuU vvurk call Ijj uouo.&#13;
DIUliCTORY .&#13;
« - •&#13;
wlucli effects th e nervou s system white^dlvw- y color ; wlien worainust&#13;
be in th*.&lt;li*fcticm of disiu- |°&amp; »??» or evening, i£ it is still,&#13;
Mouka.&#13;
Ol.bUK.. .&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
. . . » . . . &lt; ' i . i u d ' i L . S i r l i : r&#13;
&lt; &gt; ! ' &lt; » , i i . ; . i - M &gt; : i . F i , 1 . , '-'• t . f t i - . n . i . - , l ( t . •&#13;
, K. l i . L i ^ i n , l\. L. rili^iupLioii. . U f l c *&#13;
. r]j}\6 he^ilthly mind&#13;
in cle'apr and noi;n)a.l..relations&#13;
wibh nature. I t feels paiu&#13;
as pnin. It feels a&lt;;tiou as plea'sure.&#13;
The dritg'wliioh conceal or&#13;
"it i has the eiajae look of;&#13;
\yhich \ye speak, while jutjt across j&#13;
th© road is one which migght he!&#13;
gaid to l&gt;e Vice versa; .tbi^ one is&#13;
called Black Cloud lake and, uuits&#13;
neighbcM*, is&#13;
' r i b t h f&#13;
black!&#13;
S"omo'attribute.thfs to the depth,&#13;
. lV'«J&gt;lo&#13;
51&#13;
W. A.&#13;
CoilMlhsIUNKlt. lieo,&#13;
li. W. -U&#13;
ut1 I'II.'Kii Ur. 11. K.&#13;
W. A. C a n&#13;
gives raise pleasure wneu pleas-4 ,, - , , u , ,,.-&gt; - * ,M&#13;
6 , . ,. J others to the trevs that surround!&#13;
are does not exist, forces a he upon i t B n t w e a r ^ inclined to think i&#13;
nervous system. The drng it irt neither. Althoir^h fiah abouud&#13;
pletifully iu botlj, tbe reason of&#13;
tlieir siinde and«okir wilV always&#13;
remain a tnyst0ry. &gt;We have alt38to&#13;
H 6 W. MU&gt;S}r»«l, New York&#13;
- 2 ; tSgVi.fiit'Aw., Chlcajro. and&#13;
*- j f 1051 Market a t . . Ssa&#13;
weiich deposes to reverie rather&#13;
than'to work, which makes us feel&#13;
wolf when we are not well, destroys&#13;
the sanity of life. All&#13;
stimulants,^narcotics, tonics which&#13;
atffect'th«V©fv0UR system iu whatever&#13;
Vay reduce the truthfulness&#13;
oj sensation, thought and action,&#13;
toward insanity all such influences&#13;
lead; and ' their efrw»t,&#13;
alight though it4bo, is of the same&#13;
nature afi manm. The man who&#13;
wotild see clearly, think truthfully&#13;
I hold a certificate from&#13;
the Champion&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
ETHOInST BPIStJOPAL OUCTftCH.&#13;
Hev. Ciiia. Simjitjon, y»ator. Servicoanv&#13;
uiurotn^ *i lUSkf, sad wery&#13;
at 7 *LK» o'clock. iJciiyt3r tueetina&#13;
iny eveDin^B. ^uaday aciiuol at C!D*« ul m-triiiii^&#13;
servue. I'. 1.. Andrews, Hupt.&#13;
M1&#13;
College of Springfield, Ohio]&#13;
ways noticed ho ^desolate a sim&gt;- ( a n d am p r e p a r e d t o do em- |&#13;
znor resort looks in the winter bat . . !&#13;
it will sooti be warm weaker! balmin^ ot all kinds,&#13;
again rt^d1 enrnpers will flock in&lt;&#13;
day avenin^e.&#13;
i L I&#13;
H«v. C. ,VV. Ktce yaator, Satvlce e v e r /&#13;
morning %i 1O:^U und erery HunrJay&#13;
at 7:0C o*ci JCW. Prayer, meeting Tttura&#13;
It. H.&#13;
y&#13;
scaool tit&#13;
.; , S.iut.&#13;
it CJOIKJ o i morn-&#13;
. K m K^i I, S'v&#13;
Hud act e,i!eciently&#13;
tbem ^11 .Emergency&#13;
from ol alotie, bat from all&#13;
^nerve poisous ©motioual excesses.&#13;
••.Professor D. 8/ JovcJon, in Pobf&#13;
ular iSci^nc©. Monthly.&#13;
To Til* Voter'&#13;
tlii* atif anrt tamnUUuy br day&#13;
j*MiJttji.iuiirtnur pti'owin^ lortct&#13;
.And Unuler still? A l», y ^ ' el»cti(it» (\o,f&#13;
^ p , aad t|ie laud is act on fire&#13;
Hy torclifft lijrhC^l at th? ^lowidj ilkute&#13;
J 1 &lt;)f hold ciithneiaaJti; pnrty filti/e&#13;
Ie waxing Perce a n d boti.' mi cahdidates&#13;
Walk cirrum«pfctJT."fjp»rln&gt;{ to offend.&#13;
lint har!&lt;! above the din a voice ro«oiind»,&#13;
i*i clear, whoae pverv wur I&#13;
\ j Brw»tl&gt;teflt loyntjy C" lumie ard&#13;
,' (.'hlliajt on Fiioav who dHrr nmio&#13;
nariva land;&#13;
nmiotaln the right&#13;
To &lt;in«o at thf ballot b&gt;tx and prove &gt;&#13;
Themselves, nof'ttraltorn bttac, l&gt;uf p.'iiL'i&#13;
^arty slaves wlif&gt; kis* tbe party rod&#13;
And p»&gt;;a hennatit it; nay hnt etf&#13;
\uioe of'fluty ami&#13;
• . • » *&#13;
of goi&gt;J&#13;
«,iy&#13;
ose hncr«»fl prft&lt;:iaQts pray&#13;
MAGAZINE&#13;
Beautiful' Colored PJate%&#13;
atei Lucat Pattern's, Fashions,&#13;
KiiiicViWork... • '&#13;
i c d f or this rnaptillie Jnerety&#13;
f l i p f U ly&#13;
Beaciufyl,Br«niurn« for « Uulft&#13;
i m* 4&#13;
/ y , « u r&#13;
-; 'Wrii e ftit term* an4 other particular*&#13;
SutJwcripfi^n anty^iOCi per&#13;
« F R E E lJ»ttenit&#13;
TiiEMcCALL CO.,&#13;
W&#13;
And help t l&#13;
•&gt;»rp»r1y lovp&#13;
MACHINE C0&#13;
BELVIDERE.&#13;
An&lt;l unto&#13;
*-=*-I IWt&#13;
Flow c*a you roodet to U10 Lord hi*&#13;
ayoid&#13;
, he&#13;
and make things lively.&#13;
ARMY GUE«7 NlCHT.&#13;
tow Visitors Are £ntevt»laed In iu&#13;
4&#13;
UrltUtt liftRlmental&#13;
A lady assistant tor (&#13;
j balming women and children. 1&#13;
S I". J U l t r s 'JA 1 ' i H n . t C C I 1 J K ' d -&#13;
e v e r y S u n d a y . L o w loame, at 7-.:k» i&gt;'.:lock&#13;
- i ^ l K l l u l * 8 a v v a l ) f l a r i n ( | t l i i l ^•.•Um.ui. C a t e c n i o m&#13;
at !i:OU p. in., v e a p e r e a u u i j e u e d i c t i o D at'-;:iu i'. t^.&#13;
Rt-ine«lyr&#13;
It 1B de rtgneur it every wei]-ordersd&#13;
regiment Oiat evary officer,&#13;
whether1 married or single, ptosent&#13;
with the regiment shouM dine at mess&#13;
on jgnest^niglits, and the party is jrwol-1&#13;
T h i s re.ne.lv i* .n-vaded&#13;
if»tlut'n/.?i.&#13;
SOCIETIES.&#13;
J o h n .\iH;uiu.-*.(:l &gt;l ;!ity I M e g i t e .&#13;
ft&#13;
K Tf&gt;T&#13;
. , * -i # i &gt; t « • " b o t n b y t h e p r i v a t e i r i e n d s o f t h e '. ' M t | '"• I H I « B&#13;
c o n n f t t s a f e l y f o r c e u p o n h i s « № r v - ! o f f i c e r 3 flnd b y a s p r { a k n n g o f t h e v v n r H T l [ J r t l (&#13;
O n e s y s t e m e v e n t h e s m a l l e s t l o c a l n o t a b i l i t i e s a s k e d a s g u e s t s o f \.\\&lt; l i a v u W.-n n&#13;
f a l s e h o o d . A n d h e r e l i e s t h e , . o u e j U l e m e * B - O n t h e i r a r r i v a l t h e g u e s t a ) l t ; , s t / 0 0 ( j W O K J &lt;&#13;
. _ n ' 4. i- We received by t h e i r own privat e host s ,&#13;
g r e a t u n a n s w e r a b l e H r K u m o a t t o r j ^ h y t h e ' c o m m a n d i n g office r o f t h e ; l l l ( 1 P » ' ^ . - » . ' "'&#13;
t o t a l a b s t f b &lt; H l c e ; n p t n b &amp; M n g n c o r e g i m e n t i n t h e a n t e r o o m , f r o m t v b l c h i V e i e r j ] d « t ' - a t&#13;
1 th'-'-e ii ixM-.e s , Miis&#13;
\ p i n * i ^ n uy V. I '. &gt; . &lt; ' . 1 . . M e h'*i.l I'vcr v&#13;
L K \&lt;i i 1; M , , t&#13;
t o it- &gt;ooi )i in&#13;
e n&#13;
I * ! « • * •&#13;
i : if. h . i s c t i t e u : »•'" : ^&#13;
i*. y i e l d e d p r o m p t - '&#13;
t-ff .Mils a n d o f i.h e ' '&#13;
a t t a c k - o t c r o u p i t u n s i t i i&#13;
&gt;,n-in . t h e life o f f'be !&#13;
' &gt; &gt; ! ' . i . • ' • • - I &gt; ••'•: . ) • - k , . i i . 1&#13;
• a.-&lt;l .&#13;
.\ J l - i - K . J i t u \ ' . 4 t : _ , l J ,&#13;
. rv y&#13;
•1 ' T l ' U f i&#13;
1 . -\ .1U- . I i . ,Vi. 111.J )f i&#13;
TS OK&#13;
a mov e is m a d e to th e messroo m whe n&#13;
d i n n e r ^ i s announced , th e compan y ir.&#13;
№an y regiment s movin g t o thei r f&#13;
to th e a i r of "Th e Roaa t Beef of . . . . .&#13;
E n g l a n d , " d i s c o u r s e d b y t h e h a n d of &lt;--lii!d . Ti.i« «»\IIMI M v«?. n . t ' of i i i u r j o r th e m.&gt;.. n at rh, . l r " tlt»u iu&#13;
t h e c o r p s p o s t e d i n a gallerj7 o r out - vvlioopniji cwu^rli i is &gt;liuw » t h a t i t ' v ' L l i t i n i ? l&#13;
i&#13;
1™*h*,"%|^r*'1.(^r&#13;
b u i l d i n g a d j o i n i n g t h e d i n i n g r o o m . r o i &gt; s dUea.M i &lt;»f al l d a n « e n ) m con.-e- j ' - ' A ' - * M P D l L l ' 1&#13;
On t h e d i a i n g . t a b l e arffl Ui e s i d e b o a r d , , , , . . o • , • \&#13;
^ t h e m e s a p l a t e i* d i s p l a y e d i n aTl i t s l I u e » ' - ^ - b " ! d ''&gt; " ; A. M k ' l e r . ,&#13;
j g l e a m i n g s p l e n d o r , th e h i s t o r i c a l n s s o - . _ ^ _ _, , _ ___ _ L L _ j&#13;
, c i a t l o n a c o n n e c t e d w i t h m a n y of t h e : * !&#13;
{ p r i n c i p a l piece * p o ^ i b l y c a l l i n g f o r t h ^ l ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ i L ^ ^&#13;
j a flow o f r e m i n i s c e n c e fro m th e s e n i o r lr&gt; MuratHaisjt^H^co.nm^sioa^ d&#13;
officer s an d a n y ol d m e m b e r s of t h e&#13;
t-V. Mt t&#13;
1 . . . 5"&#13;
H i * K r: i iy •&#13;
\i :&#13;
j i.&#13;
• • . ( . • : ! , t i . i&#13;
• r • , r K . I , -&#13;
A', AI.&#13;
V l i » t i i » t ; in t o t . h e ' W ar D t ' i m r i- : | i ' _&#13;
» was wriiwn in a^ my cainpw i t . K _ , " ^ &gt;j&#13;
_&#13;
- '••i'- ,) . 1 1 . . a&#13;
,8 true; P, T. , MecV. H!d«. Ohica^o.&#13;
• 0 Lord, hi tneiv.r lo«k Oponour&#13;
Thou set'rit it }}i\ «u o'er to d&#13;
The jum-Aefi'il irtalka at 'noi in our&#13;
r e g iment Who m&amp;y happPQ tO be *prrs- ; *- ; in ll"r:inKiMio. , o» the f'adHc « ii U G*»».T!T1^Merri'.L.&#13;
e a t w l l i rh Pfln Tint falV *n Ksxve -i r\o «O thf bospiUis At Honolulu, in lion- K.in.'. in&#13;
onw, ffimu t a u u ot i an 10 n a ve a pe- I tbe Arapriwn treoijlf^sat MBQIIIX, in tin- iDturc&#13;
u l i a r f a s c i n a t i o n f o r ' t h e i n t e r e s t s d «r»;«t 3 «w"P.s, w^'1 A«iun«iaiv on ti.H- .t-r k or tu e&#13;
civilian guest. In a conspicuou s place ,&#13;
if dinin g at an infantr y mess, will te f"i«t picmres c»k(&gt;n by&#13;
seen displayed th e color s of th e bat - iJofilT -PrUSf:»&amp; • SS'ft ^ v e n . 1 ' 1 ^&#13;
t a l l o n' Jn many case s "th© silk s^dly tf*iby unotticiHi war books outiit fret). -&#13;
deface d and tattere d by th e storm s of&#13;
man y , continents , ' th e lxonoret f em -&#13;
j blem s "bearin g on thei r folds th e recor d&#13;
-6f man y gallan t deeds , weJS calculate d&#13;
fto fire th e blo6&amp; ot yoilth o r t o quick -&#13;
j en 4he slackenin g puUi e otfb e old. A&#13;
'selectio n of musi c is played durin g&#13;
1 dinne f by th e ban d of th e regiment ,&#13;
progra m concludin g with th e&#13;
i. i i v i&#13;
"V in*1''' &lt;'vt-r\ si-&#13;
111&#13;
I\ -M. All&#13;
K &lt;)&#13;
i b a t e b e s n a t i l i c l - e *! v : th&#13;
-i n f(jr fV^ar^-ini r e a r s a r d&#13;
t'ine&lt;3l t o i f i v j r iv i-t'iftl. I W H S a b l e&#13;
Itf a r o i n vi ; i ll t l i e t i n i t1 , hut. . c n u-&#13;
1 niontl&#13;
i * &lt; &lt; i . J K i1 A n v i '. ; .&#13;
nth . . I I : l t t i i &gt; ( l r l l&#13;
Mr,&#13;
fc&gt;tt *&#13;
ji'.Taii f &lt; i«&#13;
J'rrt; M M .&#13;
t 0&#13;
n - I ha d r&#13;
i n a r ui a i i ' l i t la^ t w a s&#13;
.\r c teaipii'tl, led astray autt nrawis to&#13;
O)t l Tlifin hth'Dg(ti, to hr*;»k thoir &lt;&#13;
np; restrai n i&#13;
t h m gt i^&#13;
Then go (J*wn to'th*p«&gt;Hh, $&#13;
And,vot« (o let tlie wbtwkcy d«iain»&#13;
&lt;ff*ni&lt; n's* povn r.&#13;
iin l«Di.'fr be."&#13;
Us&#13;
wIm»fi i did an d was&#13;
i l B V M i an d in « short .&#13;
« hard; Uie war fry J.^&#13;
the stmfiixlit fi&lt;?kt&lt;t'n the honflft art? 8&#13;
i Thi»t hiftrt ifian to «h* tsfrty (*i his cliole^.-&#13;
Uut when lU'oOMSCleap^ wanis hlni fhnl.thj I.lni' M U * P * a Pill * «CH»&#13;
1 1 ' 1 tit him nPSi'iuiil »Dd. rc90luK»ly ttlrike&#13;
for \v?iii"h tii^ballol givestiiin [io\v&lt;- r&#13;
vot»T. f^'t'! the tight in on&#13;
r&gt;(.'h('-nnii w.&#13;
i [ Is lie. UR« rij;ht'.- Or, AS&#13;
imrrtixp&lt;l evil an'l&#13;
Until rottn'jy '. .. All* yju cjiiotetn ni&#13;
id ,&#13;
Queen. " or . in som e regiments ,&#13;
i " R u l e B r i t a n n i a . " After the deser t&#13;
h a s bee n place d on tho table , th e win e ,&#13;
is circulated , atrtf, all glasses b e i n s a i n h ' i V ^ u' &gt;A&gt; \ l l H t i r : | - 1 ^ l l&#13;
filled, th e officer s i t t i n g a s presiden t '''fturiu-d . - losh K J ^ a r . ^ f - n&#13;
rises from hl » chair , and . raisto g h i a Cal * Fo r silc hy K. -A. Siijltr .&#13;
' g l a s s, t a i l s out : "Mr . Vies-Presid^nt ,&#13;
th e •49neen^' * o n thi s al l rise, fclasgea&#13;
In kajtti ; th e f o u n g officer s i t t i n g a s&#13;
vjce-presfden t given th e i o a s t . "O«ntlcmea&#13;
, life Qn^en; " t h e hand , whic h&#13;
ha s hee n on th e lookon t for a s i g n a l&#13;
from tffe m^s s sergeant , crashe s o u t&#13;
th e nutWna l a « t h e m , an d th e h e a r t *&#13;
of t h e ^ s o v e r o i s a . d r u n l r with e n t h u s -&#13;
i i*sm, ft«ris t h e brief ceremony . t h «&#13;
flow of chaff, laughter , an d convprak -&#13;
(,tlon , momentaril y interrupted , b u r s t -&#13;
fort h a fresh.--Fro m " S o o h l U f e ' l n&#13;
jaritia h Army,'*-b y a Britis h of-&#13;
Jn Hurpfr' s Mngnzin e for Octo -&#13;
BUSlNbS S OAfMDS .&#13;
H. f . SiGLER M. D- :.. L. .ilGLEfl M, 0&#13;
•*t r&#13;
r-e- J'inokni&#13;
• '&#13;
f : - : • • V •! r - r i » v ; n ,&#13;
- For&#13;
Act&#13;
the&#13;
tptsddv cure I&#13;
torpid liver tad.&#13;
turn. 8ns)l««t,&#13;
We can ma)№ to&#13;
your meaMire a&#13;
Fine. All-Wuol&#13;
.SO&#13;
City 5tyH s&#13;
i ou c a n tuft&#13;
\ i&lt;u kfinvk' tio\v.&#13;
&gt; i x p l rs a nd A»IX»J&#13;
rllriis.fo r&#13;
t "ffbwfo&#13;
Pa. ,&#13;
t , I &gt; r . I* i J v ' s ( ' i) l'.i«m.i '&#13;
'.mil- , h l o o l ( M i i i t i&#13;
U \ e y A &gt; \ r i i i f, ! . '&#13;
f h » « I » * &gt; t i t i i ; - ; f t •&#13;
of Hie&#13;
i'!iu! c h a t A'&#13;
m&gt;4 vvith&#13;
t o t r y ( . " u a m b e r U u n ' s 1'Ain&#13;
^ \ ^ : " A (e*p Hpplt&gt; i a t&#13;
'. -.&gt;;• : Fash ion ,Pki« Cf^^f&#13;
Tbe DAVIS MAC№ « CO.&#13;
an d o f t | , i s t i n i m - n t jir."&gt;v»tl of' iir^t &gt;'rrvim&#13;
l»ut ( t o rre , If subdue d fh&lt;s inflamatio n a n d&#13;
^ •'• ^relieyiwl tim p t i t i . Shoul d an y sufferer&#13;
J&#13;
\&#13;
Fr *&#13;
e i v&#13;
I*&#13;
4 TA1.MAGE'S SKfiMON.&#13;
A \ ..MMi.tr&#13;
: J 111 i A i*.&#13;
U N U l . 1 O F •tiUNu.&#13;
WmL liuul. of tiaiUU*!,&#13;
or My&#13;
t 1 (M it l l i j Onct.&#13;
;&lt; !.'."&gt;.'/. t UL" r u !&#13;
am. Oh, what a. bundle, of life Abigail&#13;
of my t«xt saw in I&gt;aviidL and which we&#13;
otigUL to M*&gt; i» wflry. hum*n, y«a vat&#13;
mortal, being! , . .• -&#13;
ttUv&gt; that this bundle &lt;* lite&#13;
put.'.-.up wiiU great c^re.&#13;
merchant Wvi aimotift, ttay&#13;
will ull £t&gt;u&#13;
, \ J . , ni-(xaaa.ry lui&#13;
n. I.soli:-, a m horn&#13;
n t ' O n l 1 J H I L . .: i i •&#13;
i.r y i ) U ! i ( ; .&#13;
d U L 111&#13;
M u l l i&#13;
n|uau.&lt;t&#13;
wily ,LLi i l l J l l&#13;
• l l U . « ! . l U&#13;
the&#13;
' " ' ; &gt; . ' ! ' J ' V. I t !l&#13;
s 1 1 1 ' .&#13;
u.. to&#13;
• • ( ) ! ! i l l l 1&#13;
,'uuk a« if the&#13;
I (J g l . ) U V ( ) | ( l J ( !&#13;
Wh;U Hil« c o u n t r y&#13;
)ii vi-iu-d h e a t h e n iu&#13;
MM i.-y w o r k i n o u r&#13;
i ) i ( d ^ i s a f e w&#13;
do u littlt) ••.!.!;.••&#13;
m hs no truth in ilie rumor tiuil&#13;
1). Armour in to be made pie:;&#13;
of the Pure Kood&#13;
Mr. 1&#13;
A Pennsylvania, mlm -owner&#13;
there will bo no. anthracite coal after&#13;
LJ(JG:i. After that what will i H&lt;; trust&#13;
do?&#13;
It 1B nearly time for some enterprising&#13;
reporter to interview Mr Roberts&#13;
of Utah, regarding his "white man's&#13;
burden."&#13;
After Cerveni is convicted and genres&#13;
out his term, the best thing he can&#13;
do will he to come to the United States&#13;
and live among his friends.&#13;
i •&#13;
The palmist who has discovered that&#13;
Gen. Miles will become president some&#13;
day is not the one who figured Orover&#13;
Cleveland to be a three-time winner.&#13;
Statesmanship is probably needed In&#13;
the Philippines, as Df&gt;wey .said, but&#13;
just at present if ia hard to see how&#13;
any Is to be spared from Washington.&#13;
Young Senator-elect BeveHdge of Indiana&#13;
has several of the qualifications&#13;
which may some time make him a&#13;
president. He began his career by&#13;
driving a log team.&#13;
The report that Ambassador Choate&#13;
is negotiating for the Curzon mansion&#13;
in London looks as if he proposed to&#13;
dispense some choice hospitality when&#13;
he gets located over there.&#13;
Alger went to Boston with President&#13;
McKialey and was hissed. It&#13;
takes a good deal to make the Hubltes&#13;
forget their manners, but ignoring&#13;
baked beans as army rations is no&#13;
slight provocation. '&#13;
A telegram from Princeton, X. J.,&#13;
says Mr. Cleveland will be a candidate&#13;
for the democratic nomination in&#13;
L&gt;-miulul \ljifcail, in her rhythmic&#13;
1&gt;UU I W i h b ITaCHU Of hoi"&#13;
nnsluuiii, wl.u dnwi wllhiu&#13;
iidaicshcs David, ihu warrior, lu tho&#13;
words of this icii. She wuggWita thai&#13;
iiiri. lire, yhy^u-ully and intellectually,&#13;
aud aplrltuiill&gt;, ia u vuluubl* package&#13;
or bundle, Ltlvitit.lv buuml UJJ, i*nd tu&#13;
Uv. Ui vJni-1} iJj'otccUid.&#13;
That ijlU'Ubc, "buiidlt. of llta," I&#13;
ht'iird inuuy timws In my Juiiur'* taui&#13;
lly prayers. Kamlly i«ray«ris, you knuwi&#13;
huvu frequent rr^ijtiilaass, because Uay&#13;
by day they acknowledge about the&#13;
suirn* b leaning, und deploro abuut the&#13;
twmiu fralltifti, and sympathize with&#13;
u!)unl the sumo nih^fartuaet, und 1. do&#13;
nut know why those Who h a d household&#13;
devotions should tseek variety of&#13;
composition. Tlmt familiar prayer b^-&#13;
t:oinyb thu household liturgy. I would&#13;
\ not give OHO of my old fat her'a ^rayi;&#13;
ra for ttf.ty elocutionary supplications.&#13;
Again ami agulu, in the ruorning and&#13;
evening prayer, I heard thu reg,ueat&#13;
that \v(t might ull be bound up in the&#13;
' bundh, uf life, but .^ did nol know&#13;
until a few days ago that the phrase&#13;
waa a Hibh; phrase.&#13;
Now, the more 1 think of it, the&#13;
better I like it. The bundle,of life!&#13;
H is such u aimyle and unpretending,&#13;
yet expressive comparison. There 13&#13;
nothing like grandiloquence in the&#13;
Scriptures. While there are many&#13;
sublime passages in Holy Writ, there&#13;
are more passages homely and&#13;
drawing illustrations from common&#13;
observation and every-day&#13;
life. In Christ's great ssormons you&#13;
hear a hen clucking her chickens tog^&#13;
the^ and see the photographs of&#13;
hypocrites with a sad countenance and&#13;
hear of the grass of the field, and the&#13;
black crows, which our heavenly&#13;
Father feeds, and the salt that Is&#13;
worthless, and the precious stones&#13;
flung under the feet of swine, and the&#13;
shifting sand that lets down the house&#13;
with a great crash, and hear the, comparison&#13;
of the text, the most unpoetical&#13;
thing we can think of -a bundle,&#13;
Ordinarily it is something tossed about,&#13;
something thrown under tbe table,&#13;
something that suggests garrets, or&#13;
something on the shoulder of a poor&#13;
wayfarer. But there are bundles of&#13;
great value, bundles put up with great&#13;
caution, bundles the 1O8H of which&#13;
means consternation and despair, anil&#13;
there have been bundles representing&#13;
the worth of a kingdom.&#13;
* * •&#13;
Bundle of hopes, and ambitions also,&#13;
U almost every man and woman, especially&#13;
at the starting. What gains&#13;
he will harvest, or what reputation he&#13;
will achieve, or what bliss he will&#13;
reach, or what love he will win. What&#13;
makes college comrnenceiuent day &amp;o&#13;
entrancing to all of us as we see the&#13;
students receivo their dlploniae and&#13;
take up the garlands thrown at their&#13;
feet? They will be Faraday* in science;&#13;
they will be Tennysons in&#13;
Is it possible that the eminent gentle- j they will be Willard Parkers in surgman&#13;
is so thoroughly convinced of his&#13;
mission aa savior of the nation and&#13;
of the people's recognition ofMiim aa&#13;
such that he thinks they Will break&#13;
away from their old-established thirdterm&#13;
rule? It is almost certain, If&#13;
this 1B the case, that he overestimates&#13;
the general fear of danger.&#13;
Fifty girl s-tudents have this v°ar entered&#13;
upon a full scientific course of&#13;
fanning at the Agricultural College in&#13;
Minneapolis. Heretofore the opportunities&#13;
afforded girls for study were&#13;
ery; They will be Alexander Hamiltons&#13;
in national finance; they will be Horace&#13;
Greeleys in editorial chair; they&#13;
will be Webster? in the, senate! pr&#13;
3he will be a Mary Lyon in educational&#13;
realms; or a Frances Willard on reformatory&#13;
platform; or a Helen&#13;
Gould in military hospitals. Or .i&gt;he&#13;
will make home life radiant with helpfulness&#13;
and self-sacrifice, aad magnificent&#13;
womanhood! Oh, what a bundle&#13;
of hopes and ambitions! It is a bundle&#13;
of garlands and sceptres from&#13;
ueptNud» on t,hfc way u b/wdle Us bduad.&#13;
'Vim tout or IUIJU must be strong&#13;
ouuugk tu hold; the Imot must hv&#13;
wt-li tied. You Uuuw npt what rough&#13;
hamUi m u / toea tUut handle. If not&#13;
ly- put tuRiiher, though it may&#13;
your hauua in good order and&#13;
heron* it reaches its&#13;
.viuu*! destination ii niuy b« ioustmed&#13;
iu r.rugni(!B№ fur t h e wind * to scatte r&#13;
or tiitj rai l tra m t u lone .&#13;
NuW.l have iu te-11 yju tha t thi s bun -&#13;
dle of lift! ia well p u t togethe r th u&#13;
hudy , th e mind , th e #QUi . WTio bu t&#13;
th e Uiunippten t Go d C&amp;uld bittd auc h&#13;
a bundle ? AntitoHrtfets j&#13;
physicists, Jogiciajii&#13;
declar e tha t we are fearfully and wonderfully&#13;
made . Tha t we are a buudle&#13;
well pu t togethe r I prove by th e&#13;
amoun t o j journeyin g we can endur u&#13;
withou t damage^ by th e amoun t of&#13;
rough handlin g we can survive,"by th e&#13;
fact tha t th e vaat majorit y of us go&#13;
throug h life withou t the loaa of an eye,&#13;
or th e cripplin g of a limb, or th e destructio&#13;
n of a single energy of th e&#13;
body or faculty of mind . 1 bubpoeu a&#13;
for thia trial tha t man in yonde r view&#13;
seventy"or eighty years of age, and ask&#13;
him to testify tha t after ail the storm s&#13;
ancf accident s und vicissitudes of a&#13;
long life he still keeps his five senses;!&#13;
and thoug h all toe lighthouse s as old&#13;
as ho ia have been reconstructe d or&#13;
new lantern s put in, he has in unde r&#13;
his forehea d th e same two lantern s&#13;
with which Go d starte d him ; and&#13;
thoug h th e locomotive s of shcty years&#13;
ago were long ago sold for old! iron,&#13;
he has th e origina l powers of locomo -&#13;
tion in the limbs with which God start -&#13;
ed him ; and thoug h all the electri c&#13;
wires tha t carrie d messages twentyfive&#13;
years ago have been torn down,&#13;
his nerves bring mes.-a:-:c s from all&#13;
part s of his body as wtT]! as when God&#13;
strun g them seventy-five years ago.&#13;
Was ther e ever s^cK a complet e bundle&#13;
put togethe r ae • huma n being?&#13;
Wfcat a factory! \ ^ a t an engine !&#13;
WH«t a mill-race ! Wb&amp;T. a lighthouse&#13;
! What a locomotive ! What an&#13;
electri c battery ! What a furnace !&#13;
What a masterpiec e of the Lord God&#13;
Almighty! Or, to emplo y th e anti -&#13;
I'Hma x and use th e figure of th e text,&#13;
what a bundle !&#13;
* * * *&#13;
Know, alyo, tha t this bundl e of life&#13;
will be gladly received when it corne r&#13;
to tht i door of th e Mansio u for which&#13;
it waa bound and plainly directed .&#13;
With what alacrit y and glee we await&#13;
some package tha t has been foretold&#13;
by letter ; some holida y presentation ;&#13;
somethin g tha t will enric h and orna -&#13;
men t our home ; some testimon y of admiaatio&#13;
n and affection ! With what&#13;
glow of expectatio n we unti e th e knot&#13;
and take off th e cord tha t holds it together&#13;
in safety, and with what glad&#13;
exclamatic m we unrol l 'th©.&gt; covering,&#13;
and see th e gift or purchas e in all its&#13;
beauty of color and proportion . Well,&#13;
what a day it will be when your precious&#13;
bundl e of life shall be opene d in&#13;
the "House Qf Man y Mansions,' " amid&#13;
ealntl y and angelic and divine inspecgreeted&#13;
in Uie a«*venly world. If by&#13;
tb« pardoning and protecting f*4c« of&#13;
Got'we come to t l d k&#13;
W* uhall hart U t«B Uu&gt;u» UE&#13;
metvf *M4fcB.tl*t^we hav* y»«*e&#13;
the way «0xvu wild *•*«,*iw&amp;d amid&#13;
Caribbean cyclone*, it *U1 be like&#13;
&lt; ur arrival somf years +tf» from New&#13;
Zealand at Sydney,&#13;
MEEIT AIWAY* WIN&amp;&#13;
p&#13;
tha t wf, got \n at all, b#«aua e&#13;
we wwe iwo daye fate an d sojne of&#13;
Uu- ships expeet*d had gone t o tH»&#13;
und we had pasued derelict *&#13;
abandone d crafts all up anil dowu&#13;
ihat awful channel, - t&gt;ur arrival ja&#13;
all the wore rapturousl y trulbectiUBe&#13;
of th e doub t ae tu&#13;
whethe r we would ever tjet ther * at £ll.&#13;
Onye there it will be fuinni that tb*&#13;
sutety of that prwclouft buudlte of life&#13;
wus assured bucauae it was bound up&#13;
with the life of GotJ in Jesu* Chrjat.&#13;
Heaven could not afford to have&#13;
bundle lust, because it had ttatrn&#13;
in regard u&gt; its transportation&#13;
safe arrival, "Kept by&#13;
and&#13;
ol&#13;
through faith uuto complete salvation."&#13;
The veracity of th« aeavena&#13;
KS Involved in its arrival. If&#13;
w nich 1 would not take one sprig of-]&#13;
tion! The bundle may be spotted&#13;
with the marks of rmieh exposure; it&#13;
may bear inscription after inscription&#13;
'to tell through what ordeal it has&#13;
passed; perhaps splashed of wave and&#13;
scorched of flame, hut all it has within&#13;
undamaged of the journey. And&#13;
with what shouts of joy the bundle of&#13;
' life will be greeted by all the voices of&#13;
the heavenly home circle!&#13;
In our anxiety at laat to reach heaven&#13;
we are apt to lose sight of the glee&#13;
or welcome that awaits us if we get&#13;
in at all. We all have friends up there.&#13;
confined to the few week, of summer : mignonette nor extinguish one apark&#13;
vacation allotted to the male students,&#13;
but this-, year, as In others to come,&#13;
one may assume they are to enjoy full '&#13;
privileges with the men. It is sttppos- i&#13;
ed, if the experiment proves successful,&#13;
that other states may be induced&#13;
to follow the example set hy Minne- i&#13;
sola, and &lt;hat henceforth farm life [&#13;
may present, such unwonted attractions&#13;
to farmer lad* a&amp; to induce them '•&#13;
to stay at home.1&#13;
of brilliance. They who atart in life&#13;
without bright hopes and inspiring&#13;
ambitions might as well not start at&#13;
all, for every utep will be a failure.&#13;
Rather nsould I add to the bundle, and&#13;
if I open it now it will not be because&#13;
to take&#13;
mar put&#13;
and hosannas.&#13;
it, but ! surciy&#13;
it more coronets&#13;
p&#13;
They will somehow hear that we are&#13;
coming. Such close and swift and&#13;
constant communication id there between&#13;
those up-laads and these lowlands&#13;
that we will not surprise them&#13;
by sudden arrival. Jf loved ones ofi&#13;
earth expect our coming visit and are&#13;
at the depot with carriage to&#13;
will be met at the shining&#13;
by old" friends now sainted and&#13;
- ~" ,—"T' , Bundle of facult^ie s in every man and ]i „ki„ndred now glorified. It then* were o««^t -.« ^ ^ J *^ ^ - - - - •&#13;
The retaliation clause In the agricultural&#13;
bill before congress provides&#13;
that "thp secretary of agriculture,&#13;
whenever he has pea«o» to belike that&#13;
articles dangerous to the'.hMtttl'of the&#13;
people of the United State* af% being&#13;
imported from foreign cfenntrltfl. gh*ll&#13;
make a reqtiRKt upon tbe decretory of&#13;
thp treasury for from the&#13;
every -woman! Power to think—to&#13;
think of the pant aad through all the&#13;
future; to think upward and hlghe'r&#13;
than the highest pinnacle o/ heaven,&#13;
or to think downward until there is&#13;
no lower aby«a to fathom. Power to&#13;
think right, power to think wrong,&#13;
power to thlttk forever; tar, ouoe having&#13;
befun to think, there shall be no&#13;
terminus for th»t exercise, and etR»»-&#13;
nitjr itself shall have no power to bid&#13;
bhould rail to Keep Hib promise to&#13;
Juat one jan«ouued BUUI the pillars of&#13;
Jehovah's throne would fall1, aad the&#13;
foundations of the eternal city would&#13;
crumble, and infinite poverties would&#13;
&lt;labh down all the chalices and close&#13;
all the banqueting halls, and the river&#13;
of life would change its course, sweeping&#13;
everything uwitb desolation; and&#13;
frost*wouM blast all the gardens, and&#13;
Immeasurable sickness slay the immortals,&#13;
and the new Jeruealera become&#13;
an abandoned city, with no&#13;
chariot wheels on the streets and no&#13;
worshipers in tbe temple—« dead&#13;
Pompeii of the skir:, a burled Herculaneum&#13;
of the heavens. Lest any one&#13;
should doubt, the God "who cannot lie&#13;
smites His omnipotent hand on the&#13;
side of His throne, and takes affidavit,&#13;
declaring, "As I live, saith the Lord&#13;
God, I have no pleasure in the death ;&#13;
of him that dleth," Oh! I cannot tell i&#13;
you how I feel'about It. the thought is&#13;
so glorious.. Bound up With God.&#13;
Bound ^p with infinite mercy. Bound&#13;
up with ihfinlte Joy. Bound up with&#13;
infinite purity. Bound up with infinite&#13;
might. That thought te more beautiful&#13;
and glorious than was the heroic Abigail,&#13;
who at the foot of the crags uttered&#13;
it—"Bound in the bundle of life&#13;
with the Lord thy God!"&#13;
Now, my hearer and reader, appreciate&#13;
the value of that bundle. See&#13;
that it is bound up with nothing mean,&#13;
but with the unsullied and the immaculate.&#13;
Not with a pebble of the&#13;
shifting beach, but with the kohinoor&#13;
of the palace; not with some fading&#13;
regalia of earthly pomp, but with the&#13;
robe washed and made white In th^&#13;
blood of the Lamb. Pray aft yo*) nev«r&#13;
prayed before, that by divine chlrography&#13;
written all over your nature,&#13;
you may be properly addressed' for a&#13;
glorious destination. Turn not over&#13;
a new leaf of the old book, but b.y ihe&#13;
grace of God open an entirely new&#13;
volume of experience, and pat into&#13;
practice the advice contained in tne.&#13;
peculiar but beautiful rhythm, of some&#13;
author whose n-anqe I know not:&#13;
If you've any task to do, ""&#13;
Let me whisper, friend, to yo&gt;»&#13;
Do it.&#13;
If yo«'ve anything to say,&#13;
True and needed, yea or "nay.,&#13;
Say it.&#13;
If you've anything to love,.&#13;
AB a blessing tveva above,&#13;
Love it.&#13;
If you've anything to give, •&#13;
That another's joy may live,&#13;
Give it.&#13;
If some hollow creed you doubt,&#13;
Tho' the whole world hoot and shout,&#13;
Doubt it.&#13;
If you've any debt to pay,&#13;
Rest you neither night sor day,&#13;
Pay it.&#13;
If you've any joy to hold.&#13;
Near your heart, lest it grow old&#13;
HoM i t&#13;
If you've any grief to meet,&#13;
At * loving Father's feet,&#13;
Meet it.&#13;
If you know what torch to Kght,&#13;
Gliding others in the Bight,&#13;
A -if UCCB98P&#13;
BASE&#13;
tew&#13;
flk Xu woffld-wlde&#13;
be.n«flcUl la affect ^ ^ v l B&#13;
tion to- u4l{ton« of p«igi?le ev&#13;
tnl most tnrilnent 3it«tt'tt&#13;
3i l ^^n ayaUn, ^&#13;
great ca$ml«ta;&#13;
ma^.i&#13;
nit ¥ig Syrup"&#13;
lmltatlonB and j , y&gt;&#13;
of Fig» i« neruian^tly h e a t # l a | In* ltjp&#13;
%ff»«t8, and therefore Hvea a i 4&#13;
moiea good health, while Infqrlai;&#13;
aratioan aax/aa being,c ciuiurrtt . aside a&#13;
In olden tirotia K a, remedy&#13;
far* temporary relief to ,lniUvWu*l#&#13;
here and there,,**. ,wa» thoughtvKoodi&#13;
hut now^-n-days a laxative remedy&#13;
mu«t g(v« ^atiafactiop to all. If yoy&#13;
hayrn^T^r^ttBed Syruto. bt Figs, glv« it&#13;
» trlaVtfi&amp;W* w&amp;itt pftitfed with it,&#13;
and wtU recommend it to your friend*&#13;
or tp atfy wlo^j^fer from&#13;
or ifom c&#13;
headaches,&#13;
uulttogfrom attMtuttttyoer condition&#13;
cold%&#13;
of&#13;
«a-&#13;
Ifr the pcoceis x&gt;£ mJnuiacturin^ UMI&#13;
pleaeant family Ui*H*fe made bjr the&#13;
California Fl$ Syrup Cc*v«hd named&#13;
&amp;7W9ot Fig}, f f s are Ra^d, a%t&gt;ey ara&#13;
pleasant to tfcetfaate; but thomedUiuOl&#13;
properties of tnt, remedy&#13;
from an excellent,.^.&#13;
plaftts known to be&#13;
tiv«a and to act most fty. „ A&#13;
the true and original remedy, nam«4&#13;
Syrup of Figs, 1B manufactured by tljf.&#13;
Caltfornia Fig Syrup Co. only, a knowR&#13;
•dge &lt;-(( that fact will assist in avoid*&#13;
Ing the worthies* imltaUons manufactured&#13;
by other parties. The company&#13;
has selected for years past tbe leading&#13;
publications of 'Tbe United States&#13;
through which to Inform the feublic of&#13;
tbe merits of Its remedy, and among&#13;
them this paper Is Incftided, as will ba&#13;
seen by reference to its advertising columas.&#13;
liquor question staggers the intemperate&#13;
IBUD more tha^n any other.&#13;
Tne jamn who haa to&gt; struggle fora&#13;
living-acquires.* swfH»oar e*4ao»tio»t "-*&#13;
TESTS PATIENCE.&#13;
The Moot Patient People Mast Show 4«*&#13;
DOJ/*MM* *t Tlm*a.&#13;
Nothing spoils t% good disposition&#13;
quicker.&#13;
Nothing taxes a man's patience&#13;
Like any itchiness of the skin.&#13;
Itching ;&gt;iles almost drive you crazy.&#13;
All day it makes you miserable.&#13;
All nig-ht it keeps you awake.&#13;
Itch. Itch. Itch. With no relief.&#13;
Just the .same with eczema.&#13;
Can hardly keep from'*Jcratehing it.&#13;
You would do ao but yoa know it&#13;
makes you worse.&#13;
Such miseries are daily decreasing'.&#13;
People are learning they can be cured.&#13;
Learning the merits of Doan'.s Oint-&#13;
Light i t&#13;
no angel of God to meet us and sh."&gt;w&#13;
us the palaeee and guide ua to our&#13;
everlasting iealdence, these kindred&#13;
would show us the way aad point out&#13;
the splendors and guide us to oor |&#13;
celestial home, bowered, and fountained,&#13;
and arched, and Illumined by&#13;
a Btm that never **&gt;ta. Will 1t not be&#13;
glorious, the going in and the nettling&#13;
down after all, the movin* about and&#13;
of earthly experlenet. We&#13;
original packages ofi* such articles for •&#13;
y p o bd&#13;
it halt. Faculties to love— filial love, j w l u . 8 o o n k n o w ' a11 o u r&#13;
and annlysis, atad the&#13;
retary of the treasury in authoriiced&#13;
to open suet packages and deliver gam*&#13;
pies to the secretary of agriculture lor&#13;
the purpoM mentioned, giving notice&#13;
to the owner or consignee, who may&#13;
he present and have the right it Introduce&#13;
testimony. The secretary of the&#13;
Treasury, with the approval of the preBident,&#13;
may refuse to deliver to the&#13;
consignee any goods' which the secretary&#13;
of agriculture finds to he adulterated&#13;
or otherwise dangerous 'to •&#13;
health, and shall proceed acalnst&#13;
•ooo* under tbe law."&#13;
conjugal k»ve. paternal m&amp;ternai | k l n * l v a needy, prcnhetl.*. apostolic.&#13;
love, IOVP of country, love of 0*4. Fac- j seraphic, archar gellc. The precious&#13;
nlty of Judgment, with scales so deli- ! kindle of lifp &gt;pened amid palaees.&#13;
cate and yet so migHtf that they ran i &amp;Tid\ grand march**, and anelaroatlons.&#13;
weigh arguments, weigh emotion*, j They will all he so glad we have ffot&#13;
weigh worlds, weigh heavea and hMl. i P***1* through. They Raw ns dawn&#13;
Faculty of will that can climb moun- here ft the struggle. They sa» us&#13;
tain*, or tuntrel thorn, wade seas or when we lost our wa* They knew&#13;
bridge them, accepting eternal enthronement&#13;
or c.hoofllsjr everlasting&#13;
exile. Oh. what it Is to be a matL Oh.&#13;
what K It to be a woman! Sublime and&#13;
infinite 'bundle of fa«ult*«*? The&#13;
thought ot It *tanrerp me fwaup* nw&#13;
•tans sat. bewilders nse, overwheJvw&#13;
M*«sulit*f't Appalling Memory.&#13;
The Jater Henry Reeve, for&#13;
years leader writer of tbe London&#13;
Timer, was dining one aight at a house&#13;
where the other guests lccicrded Jtfa-&#13;
: Plenty of proof tb*ktDoau'»&#13;
will cure piles, eczema, or any itchiness&#13;
of the skin.&#13;
Read tho testjmpnj^ &amp;f a liatj,l§ Cxeek^&#13;
cftizen. ' '&#13;
Mr. A. O. Ayers, bookbinder of 167&#13;
West Main street, Battle Creek, says:&#13;
My hand* became ao sore from eczema&#13;
that It was with difficulty I could bend&#13;
my fingers. The skin cracked open,&#13;
large scabs formed and in addition to&#13;
the spota being tender they itched&#13;
intolerably. I tri*d everything I could&#13;
hear aboot or get hold of to stop the&#13;
trouble but I was unable to do so until&#13;
I procured Doan's Ointment. I had&#13;
heard it spoken ahemat by several people&#13;
but as I thought it would act like&#13;
all the other preparations which I tried&#13;
I waited some time until I was com*&#13;
pelled from the condition of my hands&#13;
to do something. Doan's Ointmentcured&#13;
me. Up to date, and this is somej&#13;
months after I stopped tbe treatment&#13;
I hare had no indicatfcm of any return.&#13;
Doaxu» OinUneat for sale by all&#13;
dealer*, Price 50 cents. Mailed by&#13;
Foster-Milbttrtt «&amp;, Buffalo, N. Y/, solo&#13;
agent* for th* tL &lt;&amp; SeoMmWr J*io&#13;
•Q»me Dbfcn'ft and lahe no substitute.r&#13;
WT»at sons* people dou't know&#13;
are always tanriBg about.&#13;
e*te«r«loa&#13;
agez, Boom H, Areadt, Centvrj B&#13;
•rTtisco Tleket Office, Ji6. 10ft H.&#13;
way. m L U&#13;
Open« F*fcru*r*r BBrtL&#13;
ciTTaea jaa- | '&#13;
csulay and Sydney Smith. Macaulay j ery&#13;
was at t&amp;at trme laying society waste&#13;
wltli hta waterspouts of talk. At&#13;
length, dinner being over, - $rdney&#13;
Smith, Reeve aad a few others went&#13;
away by themselves and immediately&#13;
got on the overpowtriag t-raojeet of MacanJary.&#13;
"He confousrds coliloQuj- and&#13;
colloquy," said Reeve. "He in a book&#13;
In breeches," Smith declared. "Tbe&#13;
very worst feature In M&amp;canlayR character&#13;
is hin appal Ha* mesaory," saffl&#13;
Reeve. "Aye, indeed" smid Sydney store, 50cent*.&#13;
Smith; "why, he eon Id repatzt the&#13;
whole 'History tf tbe&#13;
p&#13;
tlMputT vte&#13;
P T '&#13;
A true friend \m one who&#13;
throws things up to you.&#13;
Itohineas.of theaki^jborri^ plagvcL&#13;
Itoat everyb^7*JBictedJa&lt;&gt;ttP V.ay&gt;«r&#13;
another. Only ofte M^, Bever *f&#13;
cure— Doen's Ointmeat. At any&#13;
•peat the&#13;
m BITS*-&#13;
when WP got off the right course, j Coat Boy,' in tkra* volumes, post 8vo.,&#13;
of the thirty-two ailing that -en» i without a Blip." After a tf overdue at Ntw York harbor 4* the 1 of eonslderatioft, tbe witty dtrine addstorm&#13;
of week before la#t were greeted ed: "lie Khott^N) tak« two tablespoon&#13;
BO heartily by friends, on the dock, or fula of the waters of Lethe ev«ry&#13;
t*|e Bteaeo tug.i that went out to meet mo -*ataf to correct kl» ret^atWe powthem&#13;
at Sandy Monk, as we Will ba «rs!*'&#13;
Trtriii &gt;»atraayer thas fiction.&#13;
I&gt;ve«7 fairily «hoald hwrt i U hottsehotd&#13;
&amp;«itt-4nB»beat, aod the ftrat botIS&#13;
THIS&#13;
YOUR&#13;
1. A&#13;
btd&#13;
Imn omrpylc&#13;
and wn&amp;t food't tit &lt;dta&#13;
m«. I bite « tartr Wf ragfn&#13;
my »wmath. J yet *?tt!ng so&#13;
•fid IOT ncnrds at^ *)l ujwrunjj.&#13;
I aifi f etting pate* ind twq. 1&#13;
am «s tired Jto'ujf jroorning *a&#13;
Wnat"M6fe»your doctor say?&#13;
** Y6u are queering frorft&#13;
trorc blood."&#13;
'" "WtJjrt i^Jii* remedy? '&#13;
You must not have constiated&#13;
bowels if you expect the&#13;
^arsapafflU tb do its Bestwork,&#13;
Buf Ayef's trills ctrfe constipatloT&#13;
e havfe a boot on paleness&#13;
Weakness yvhich you may&#13;
ve for the as&amp;ing.&#13;
WMi» tm •**- Doctor:&#13;
Perhaps you would like to consult&#13;
eminent physicUus about your coudi.&#13;
ti«a. Write tu freely ail the particular*&#13;
In your cue. You will receive a prompt&#13;
rani*.&#13;
DR. J. C.^frER,&#13;
Lo»*&gt;ll. 2UM.&#13;
OP FD5.&#13;
OQOO JOKES, OSIQINAWANO&#13;
oJf Uaai&#13;
,&#13;
B«hoj&#13;
The t&#13;
Gloat&#13;
At t&#13;
&lt;3 m e ,&#13;
InK o v e r&#13;
tliti inurt&#13;
ba 1&#13;
•nd!&#13;
my&#13;
•And&#13;
Wit.&#13;
triumphs.&#13;
to OOItltt,&#13;
GOVERNOR&#13;
c« All GMattfe&#13;
Ho*. Myron H. McCord, ex-goterno/&#13;
• I N«w Mexico, in «, l«tt«ir t« Dr. Hartoian,&#13;
from Waj»hiDgton. J&gt;, €., uay»:&#13;
O«DUcuitn—At the aufgeetlon of »&#13;
friend I waa advlaad to ttlo Pe-ru-n»&#13;
fur eaturrU. and afUr oiing ou* botU«&#13;
I b better 1« «very vw&gt;. i t&#13;
Cur,i&gt;4&#13;
Aftit Hit tuujjle, open n&#13;
a dtt'cortiuve wreatk.&#13;
(Jr teUa u atury or .&#13;
OUurw(b ft n&#13;
clap and&#13;
&gt;luiJ&#13;
utter&#13;
n «ncor»&#13;
so on.&#13;
There's qot to&#13;
Or tht&gt; wttow&#13;
1 won't let it.&#13;
I'll beat uty- bit&#13;
T t t i 1 and Mturnii and&#13;
1( 1 want to,&#13;
If j got UruJ 1 U'tta,&#13;
Oye urm on th« w m of thu ueat&#13;
Anijl clap with slow, loud&#13;
;T1U 1 iret my Hecox»4 wind,&#13;
Thtn 1 let t»iyai;lf lyO»«&#13;
Again,&#13;
I'm after my momy's worth, and&#13;
Usuully I'Kct It,&#13;
And. 1 dun't &lt;,tut- 11'&#13;
Do aUre.&#13;
There's another song&#13;
Now "watch me make 'em&#13;
DcMt ail over&#13;
Again!&#13;
What! They won't?&#13;
Oh, I g-uesff yesf&#13;
Ju*it wait till I get my urms&#13;
• Lopse und bt'Siii^ to&#13;
Work, Just&#13;
Watch!&#13;
Different,&#13;
B&gt;T loessl »pyilv«iloli» u.-&gt; they ctutubl tei^oU the&#13;
duenaedl portion of the ear. There u ualy uuc&#13;
way U&gt; &amp;txv dtttfucM, aud that in by otmfttltu&#13;
ikmbl rtloedlt* t&gt;©*f«w»a i* o*u»*l by^ia luflaro^&#13;
d oooditlou uJ, the uuMxjua lining ot the&#13;
Eu«UwaUn Tube. Whoii nu» tuLo tf«tauxflumeJ&#13;
you h a t e » ruiiibhziK Houud oi l.ui\&gt;orl*cX lifsw&#13;
, ttOT When u Is out 1 rely uloaed, &lt;Je*fneti8 is&#13;
iiilVAo^ uuioM tLu iu4w»ujation-ci«i bv&#13;
out and thli v»ii&gt;f \vaun&lt;d u&gt; itsnurmal&#13;
fl, hwrlntr will bi- destroyed for«vet,&#13;
ntMP CM»«a out vt leu iii&lt; ouuxd by uaUwrli,&#13;
which is uotJjloK but an ijiflivuiu! condltton of&#13;
the tDUOuui) fiurtucvH.&#13;
Wo will givg Opo Jluutir«;d Uullura for uuy&#13;
cttbBtrf Di;iirn»;sjj(cttust-il byoaturj Ui thutc»n*aot&#13;
1x3 CUred by H i i l l \ t'i»uuird.Cuii-. Scent for I'lii&#13;
V, J I'liKNIOY Jit i '&lt;&gt; . '1VU:&lt;1&lt;.., O.&#13;
by DruKKlst-N, 76c.&#13;
F 1 the l*:M.&#13;
U9riKllt Uilujf la thw&#13;
« la thfrttiy.&#13;
to&#13;
voan wlxo w o i h s h i m s ^ i r t o d e a t h i r y i i i n&#13;
xuriunti uuly il('i"iiuiilviU.-3 u&#13;
U u l o u 8»ctl t&gt;«v m d Up »&#13;
^Uti lulls how U&gt; uruw !&lt;;!» bus.&#13;
as tiiihtly as 1UU bubhdrt. L&#13;
of Kuri:est Vt;K»'tabl'.a and&#13;
i^urliu^t vt;^t!lubl&lt;m ttlwiiy.s&#13;
Salacrti. Sci-ilh pruOui*: them wt;ekb&#13;
of otliarw. ('yfreo Bt-rr'j icx: in;r lL/.&#13;
to«M *|-^0 a LMJi&#13;
The grteat bell of Moscow weighs&#13;
860 tons, and th« value of the hell&#13;
metal alone, not counting th« gold and&#13;
silver ornamenta which were thrown&#13;
Into the pots as votive offerings, Is&#13;
estimated af ahnut g£3Fi.OOO.&#13;
Hou. M- H. McCord.&#13;
e p ine in mauy reapectsL I was&#13;
troubled with, colds, coughs, sore&#13;
throat, etc., but us toou ap I l)ad t ken&#13;
your medicine I begaa to Improve add&#13;
soon got well. I take pleasure in recomme&amp;&#13;
ding your great remedy to all&#13;
who are afflicted with catarrh.—M. H.&#13;
McCord.&#13;
Thdusauds of cases of chronic catarrh&#13;
have been cured by P«-ru-u»&#13;
during the past winter. In spite d&#13;
changeable weather, inapite of the natural&#13;
set-backs from catching cold, and&#13;
confinement to illy-ventilated rooms,&#13;
the great catarrh remedy—Pe-ru~na—&#13;
has effected these cures. But now&#13;
spring is here. The days are longer,&#13;
the Bun is warmer, and the blizzard is&#13;
gone for another year. This pre^-nts&#13;
a much more favorable opportunity for&#13;
tho permanent cure of chronic catarrh,&#13;
especially old, stubborn cases. Now&#13;
is the time to begin treatment. Other&#13;
things being equal, one month's treatment&#13;
in the spring Is worth two&#13;
monthB' treatment during the inclement&#13;
weather of winter Insist upon&#13;
having Pe-ru-na, There are no successful&#13;
substitutes for this remedy.&#13;
Send to Dr. Hartmaa, Columbus, 0,,&#13;
for a free catarrh book. ,&#13;
IN THE GREAT NbRTHWEST.&#13;
UUt thla uut and suml will* liu for&#13;
HXHI lidwer KCI-CI quv&lt;jUl(-s iy J O H N A&#13;
SALZK1C SRKt&gt; i;i»M!'\NV t'.A CUONSJ:,&#13;
WISCONSIN'. ' |v. n . J&#13;
i n u v k i i i » v * i n * !i-.iv, i &gt; u i ) i i » u-ii.'J&#13;
U &gt; a p y t n i ) f r o m h i : f c l i ; &lt; . : i c c&#13;
N e a r l y a l l m e n a r c M I - ; [ I 1 I \ ' ; I I , « u x ' ! r i ' - a r 1 ; ,&#13;
A wheelman's tool bag isn't complete&#13;
without a bottle of Dr. Thomas' Eclectric&#13;
051. Heals cuts, bruises, stings.&#13;
sprains. Monarch over pain.&#13;
Variety's the very spice of life.&#13;
Women love a clear, healthy complexion.&#13;
Pure blood makes it. Burdock&#13;
Blood Hitters makes pure blood.&#13;
The best efforts of the cnairtnaker&#13;
are constantly being- sat upon.&#13;
''You say h'e married a woman of independent&#13;
means?"&#13;
"No, I said he married an independent&#13;
woman of means."&#13;
Wheels In His Pootry.&#13;
' The editor ran his eye critically&#13;
over the manuscript the young poet&#13;
hfld tendered. "It occurs to me," he&#13;
asttd, "you tse a faulty form of speech&#13;
-when you apostrophize the 'brave old&#13;
yeats.' What is there brave about th«&#13;
years?"&#13;
'"Well," replied the young poet, with&#13;
some stiffness, "there are comparatively&#13;
few peopJe who can make a century&#13;
run."—Chicago Tribune.&#13;
Try Grain=O!.&#13;
Try Grain«O!&#13;
k&amp;k. yon Grocer to-day to show you&#13;
a package of GRAIN-0, ,tho new lood&#13;
drink ^hat takes t l \ place &lt;?{ coffee.&#13;
The children may drioik it without&#13;
injury as well a* tbe adult. All -who&#13;
try it, like ;t. "-GBAIK-O has that&#13;
rich seal brown of Uoclia or Java,&#13;
but it ia mad« from pure graizis, and&#13;
fhe most delicate stomach reoeifes it&#13;
without'distress. | the price of coffer1.&#13;
15 cents and 25 cents per package.&#13;
Sold by aU grocers. J&#13;
Tastes like Coffee J&#13;
Looks Uke Coffee J&#13;
Inairt that joargnocer gives you QRAIN-O ^&#13;
Accept noinduthw.. 4&#13;
• • • • • • • » » » • • • • • • • • • » » » • • •&#13;
Ot Coat-EC They Bar*.&#13;
Smith-—Did yc-'i notice that peculiar&#13;
fen on the door we }ust passed?&#13;
Jones—No; what was it?&#13;
Smith—Orphans' Court.&#13;
Jones—I fail to 6»e anything peculiar&#13;
about that. Orphans have as much&#13;
right to court as other people, baven't&#13;
they?—Chicago News.&#13;
The Remedy. j&#13;
"I am in favor of giving the Filipino* j&#13;
independence," said one debater.&#13;
"So am I," answered the other. "And •&#13;
1 I'm satisfied that the United States'&#13;
controls tire only reliable brand, and&#13;
that if we can get them to hold still&#13;
and try it they will lika it."—Washington&#13;
Star.&#13;
Not to lie Daunted.&#13;
A Colorado gentleman advertised for&#13;
a weil-pr?served skeleton, and shortly&#13;
after the paper was out an old maid&#13;
of his town appeared in her best bib&#13;
and tucker and as"ked If his intentions&#13;
were honorable.—Denver Evening&#13;
Post&#13;
Slur*&#13;
EXCUR&#13;
SIONS. .MaMBtafi ROC settler* ftr \he &lt;wh«t&#13;
l&amp;lkta of wMtern C*QM)&amp; over t*« princtjtal&#13;
Hnoft of railway onr€ t&gt; week, .For&#13;
particular* mpply to tfc« Itepartnoekt ot&#13;
th loterior. Ottawa, O&amp;nadn, or to&#13;
V. Melftfttt, Hf 1 MerriU. Uloefc, DetTrtt,&#13;
b.; Jatoos Oriow, Wt Pleasant,,MichLat&#13;
IX I*. Cavcn, Bad Axe. Mich.&#13;
fTn*--Brff Ct-f&#13;
Ctfftfi YtOftSCLFf&#13;
of tnucoun mctt&#13;
J I I *oa not&#13;
«kpr«M, prepaid,&#13;
m, or RttnttJua, |2.7S.&#13;
wok&#13;
From the Kittiiiu wild IV»br»»k»&#13;
Delegates to iDHupblti.&#13;
Prince Albert, Sa&amp;k.,&#13;
17th August, 1898.&#13;
WilTiam McCreary, Esq., Immigration&#13;
Commissioner, Winnipeg, Man:&#13;
Sir—We, the undersigned delegates&#13;
from Jtansas and Nebraska, U. S. A., in&#13;
reporting the results of our trip to&#13;
Dauphin, and subsequently to Hegina,&#13;
Prince Albert and the middle Saskatchewan&#13;
country, beg to say that our&#13;
tickets were limited to 21 days, and as&#13;
we had other large regions to visit, we&#13;
could only epend a short time in the&#13;
Dauphin couotry. We examined, however,&#13;
the, principal cultivated areas in&#13;
the southern parts of township 25,&#13;
range 19, the great wheat fields of Wishart,&#13;
Buchanan, Owen, Smith, Ross,&#13;
Sinclair, the Whltmores, Drinkwaters,&#13;
etc., and subsequently, othtrs to the&#13;
north, and never, in our experience,&#13;
have we seen finer grain. The whole&#13;
country is watered by numerous&#13;
streams flowing from tbe slopes of&#13;
Ridftg Mountain, and excellent well&#13;
water is found everywhere at from 9 to&#13;
18 feet. Extensive forests of spruce&#13;
and tamarack cover the northern parts&#13;
of the mountains, from which timber&#13;
is manufactured in Dauphin and elsewhere,&#13;
and sold at $12 a thousand&#13;
at the mills. Wild bops arid wild fruits&#13;
are abundant, and ripen in the open&#13;
air. Vegetation throughout ia surprisingly&#13;
luxuriant, and without, hesitation&#13;
we would rank the whole region&#13;
amongst the best grain growing areas&#13;
of the continent. The output of wheat&#13;
last year was about 75,000 bushels, but&#13;
this year it is estimated at over a million.&#13;
Westward lie the "homestead&#13;
lands which now, and when fresh surveys&#13;
are completed, will afford comfortable&#13;
homes to thousands of diligent&#13;
families. . The great Gilbert&#13;
Plains, also, we wert; unable to visit,&#13;
where grain growing has been conducted&#13;
with the best rrsult^ for years, and&#13;
which will become a vast wheat field&#13;
a« soon as a bracch railway reaches&#13;
there. Settlement is speeding in all&#13;
these regions, reminding us indeed of&#13;
the early -days in Dur own states; and,&#13;
as we have ^xamioad, sicce our visit to&#13;
DftophLn, a portion of the great country&#13;
lying south and east of Prince Albert,&#13;
we can readily imagine the tida&#13;
of Imtnferation which will soon flow&#13;
into tb&lt;» Canadian wr&gt;st.&#13;
(Signed) George s. Bennett, Hairs'&#13;
Suaamit, Kaa.; S. W. Bennett. Hall's&#13;
Summit. Kan.: E. F. Brook*. Westphalla,&#13;
Kan.; John FJannery. Stuart.&#13;
Neb.&#13;
Carl Brown, Koa-i»-lnw of i.enrml&#13;
Coxry, of "army'1 fa-me, is orgunijdnjf&#13;
j what he calls "The coming" nation societies11&#13;
throughout the country.&#13;
i Brown and family are travel ing1 over the&#13;
; country in a prairie schooner which- i*&#13;
painted to rcsowblc » k&gt;i? cahia.&#13;
"3.*. £&#13;
you knqjr that Lori Fitzabout&#13;
to visit us*&#13;
* i &gt; | i ; I ,.ha»rd jattwdajr&#13;
thtf yoor Cfttlier.jMd rigmed a contract&#13;
with fcim —Harp#r'a Basar.&#13;
Home Smoker*' 4 heap Kxcumiop*.&#13;
The Norta-Western Liue will sell&#13;
home seekers exc/ajr&amp;iou tickets March&#13;
7 and £1, with iavorable time limits, to&#13;
numerous points itl the West and South&#13;
at «*peption»llr k&gt;w ritks. Vor tickets&#13;
and full infornaatMHi apply U&#13;
Chicago A North-W«8tern IL'y.&#13;
When a loafer jrete out ot the beaten&#13;
path he pujactur*^ rua.^ire.&#13;
U, doesn't, ^a4tet)|, » i&gt;ungrj man to&#13;
niaice him laugh.&#13;
A YVOIMait U",t;r&#13;
sh«' wei/jis f o r&#13;
About th(; uuly&#13;
l is hia uwii b&#13;
H e a l t h f o r T « n T&#13;
muko bowfls and kiduoyw a c t&#13;
naturally.il(«&gt;lroy mifrohtvi,&lt;ru&#13;
b i l i i d i'i;ji^li|Dii ion. .All&#13;
liltUxI_y&#13;
T6'CTTRK A COLD IN ONE BAT&#13;
Take IJaxativo Bromo Qutuino Tablets. Al'.&#13;
&lt;iniftgihln refund the iiioiit-y if it falls to curt,&#13;
&lt;J5c. ' The genuine h a s L. U. ij. on each laliltt.&#13;
T h e other half h a s "to livrf.ti wfwt the bt.-f.trr&#13;
h?ilf is u l i e to couk.&#13;
Dropsy tr«utiHi free by Ur. LI. IL (3men's&#13;
Sons, of Atlanta, &lt;&gt;a. l\w i/rcatcsi dropsy&#13;
specialists tu t h e world. IWad their uUvert&#13;
in auuthi'c column oi Uiis"pui't'r-&#13;
1 Scorchers anil p 1 oth&lt;;r people down.&#13;
FITS PeriasnentlyCun-u. PolJiuor uervoaacosaaftrt&#13;
lirnt day's u&gt;o of Ur, Kline's Grtat N^rTe Kostoror.&#13;
band lar P H E B 9'4.00 trial buUle and trcati&amp;o.&#13;
DB. I t I I KLl.VE.itd, 931 Arub Ht., Pbila4uli&gt;h&gt;, 1**.&#13;
Serene coiafort aud huppiuesa In ad*&#13;
vnucvd y v*M"8 &amp;re realized by coiupjarttlively&#13;
few women.&#13;
lives, their Jmbility tottciruublcs&#13;
uu account of their;&#13;
liar orjjuuism und their profound!&#13;
i ru-ucc uouccrumg ihcitiMelvea, all&#13;
1 blue Lo ishorLen tile pcriutiuf li&#13;
and UJ'. their Interyeara with;&#13;
Imailuiw uiuch to juitko&#13;
bijo liu.ij g i v e u iidvico&#13;
t o m a n y tii&lt;±t litih tiiiuwn L!I.»;IU 1H&gt;\Y LO.&#13;
a^tliuat Uthca^t; uiitl rcLiliu vigOXkettltix&#13;
iu oitl u^c. i'rum K verj&#13;
of tiiO OJirtii Lht;i-c iw ki iii.-aanll v&#13;
thtS UllASt CollviuciU^ oLULiJUi;ilt^&#13;
! from women, showing tin; cili«;a».&gt;v &lt;5*&#13;
Ijyiliit 10. l ' i u k Jjiiiii ii Vi.j.ji.L.iljtL» C o m -&#13;
pounti Iu. overcoiuiug IKUMIC L 1 I.s. Here&#13;
ifiu.lci.Ler from Mrs. J. &lt;A Oi-m;-&gt;, «&gt;f :::\j&#13;
lloruut" bt. .j Joliubtuvvu, l'a., \vlii'.:ii *JS&#13;
', cu&gt;nu:bL and titruight tt&gt; tho £Hjiut :&#13;
I "IJii.iitMiiM. I'lifiuiAtf:-".! fi-et it my&#13;
duty to tell all surforiu^ women that I&#13;
tbluk youi* reiuetlicJ* UJ'C wonderful. 1&#13;
liitd trouble witb. uiy head, dizzy bpc-IIa&#13;
! ami hot flu^lies. Feet and haiid.'i vvero&#13;
; cold, was very nervous, could not asleep&#13;
well, had kidney tronljLe, pain iu&#13;
ovaries uud congestion of- the womb.&#13;
taking yoiu- re/iiedies \ am better&#13;
way .My head trouble, is all&#13;
have no pain in ovarLca, and. urn&#13;
cured of womb trouble. 1 cau eat mid&#13;
bleep well and urn gainin&lt;,» m He &gt;h. I&#13;
coiibiiiev your nn-dii'Ine the ht-.A, f.&lt;j bo&#13;
ii.ld for female Croul&gt;le^.&gt;J&#13;
"i'/ie present Mis. I'iukhuui'ii eiperitut'c&#13;
in treating- female ills is unparal-&#13;
; lei led, for years «hc worked side by&#13;
j bide with. Mrs. Lydia K. i'inkluun, and&#13;
for flo^etirne pa.st has had hole ehticyo&#13;
of the correspondenee department of&#13;
her great business, treating by letter&#13;
at&gt; many as a hundred thousand ailing&#13;
women during a single year.&#13;
DO YOU&#13;
DONT DELAY&#13;
» are el ten reierrL'd lu us '1'hP&#13;
C a r t e r ' * 2:«t. Xmnrt « &gt; e r t&#13;
Will civre ;i cuic&lt; In OMO ai^rht: will vnn- sure&#13;
Uircmt in ;v few hours Acls &lt;iui(.'&amp;. Surf cure&#13;
for Catfvrrh in every 'l.*&lt; Ixjttl*,-.&#13;
Thfi tailor's },'ooss has a larger bill than any&#13;
otlier by-il.&#13;
BALSAM&#13;
M r s . W l B s I o w ' s S o o t h i n g S y p&#13;
For rhllctrt-ji tei-tlji»g.soften* the gurns.reduce* Inflanv&#13;
i L s pjuu, '-'UIL-.- wind r jltt. ~"5 tents* i&gt;otti&lt;.&#13;
Bad resolutions y.r«&gt; good ones that have been j&#13;
broken, \&#13;
It Cures Colds, Couiha, Sor« Throat, Croup, \nfluefua.&#13;
Whooping Cough, BfonchttuandAitkmi.&#13;
A certain eyre for Consumptian in firtt stag«i,&#13;
pad a aure relief in advanced stages, iiieatonce.&#13;
You will «e« the excellent effect after taking th«&#13;
. lr«t tftse. Sold by dealers e«trjrwher«, LarM&#13;
bottJes 25 cent* and BO cent*.&#13;
lie^'e Piso's Cure i.s the onl vtripdirinc that •&#13;
will euro eoiiStin.plion. -Anna. M Kos^, \\ril- ;&#13;
l i t , l'a., N'uv, \-±,&#13;
ormmmrj»ur*tnrm*4. SearchfrO4k&#13;
( u l l i m c r &amp; Co. 234 5 F Bt., Wash. D . C&#13;
"When the sculptor rnako-&gt; a cast he tisbes for •;&#13;
fame.&#13;
c aie iu&gt; cinss babies or Mck babies in&#13;
that use Brown's Teethinjp Cordial. "&#13;
An empty Lend is synoi:&gt;n:yu3 w tii j\ittle- bor.&#13;
WANTED-Caee of bad be*JUi ttat R-I-P-A-N-S&#13;
win not benefit. Seud 5 tents to Klpans Cbetolcai&#13;
Co., New York, for iu h*mp;es and l.JUO te»Umcciala.&#13;
Po«ltJve*»riired»tH«&gt;i»e. Havecured thoa.&#13;
gft[Kl-ofthu disease. Will cure j-wu. JOday«,&#13;
trial fret. H. M. Aas'n, 4«01 Chain plain Arc, Chlcafo-&#13;
C T 1 R T MAIL O ^ D K B BUSINESS. W*&#13;
w I Mil 1 farourt &lt;"ireulars.names. b&lt;xik«, aoveltieav&#13;
Wrile KOfAL rULXlOL CO., l u m l i TcMpI&#13;
An Old Crooked Stick&#13;
A held up a hobbling man after SPRAIN&#13;
S T . J A C O B S OIL5 aghtenedhn p sound and cured. \&#13;
D R O P S Y TCW DISCOVERT:&#13;
&gt;d l o r of&#13;
&lt;ytlck relief and cures * o r » Get your Pen s!«B&#13;
DOUBLE QUICK&#13;
NI!EU-B0M-C0 TEA l:K?fSSJJa' •Ue parkajreon reoefpt of -i tw^cent stamp*.&#13;
Ouurtinteed to cure Constipation and Headacoe.&#13;
A N'erve Tunic. 2ir. &gt;» package. NeuroUco Mtollcln*&#13;
Co.. Horaellevme. X- YAdvcrtiseaects&#13;
ftetttr&#13;
PENSIONS Write CAPT. O'PARRBLL, Pension&#13;
1425 New York Avenue. WASHINGTON. D.&amp;&#13;
A GOOD GARDEN&#13;
»isa I'.oasurc and aprttl!. Grcstorr'a seed book ilrect*&#13;
a rk'Lt beKiianliiK- (ire^ory's Peed lntnre tb«&#13;
ii-i«*t euccet sf al ending. Oct ihe t&gt;ook ',ow it's fre«.&#13;
JAMES J. H. GREGORY &amp; SON, Marblehead, M a n .&#13;
•'THERE IS SCIENCE IN NEATNESS.*&#13;
BE WISE AND USE POLIO Vfcea inswcog MYcrtlscm&amp;ats Kindly&#13;
Mention&#13;
Mwii smoked &gt;n » f ^w hours i»ith&#13;
K8AUS£RS- UglUD EXTRACT OF 5MCK£.&#13;
Mad« from hickory WIMKI. Cheaper, r&#13;
•waotrr, indMirvt than th«i otd M ; . SUnd&#13;
curi:ufc«. * , K Ii VIJSJLIK 4i BUO., MUtua. I'm.&#13;
COOD&#13;
enough&#13;
FOR&#13;
And (food e&gt;noufch for von. Thrre i* ninr* j&#13;
UNCLE SAM&#13;
than of all other mako- put g . j&#13;
It eo8tfi you no more than :he poorest— [&#13;
« i * f or i* • •*&#13;
FOR 14 CENTS We wi«h t&#13;
13 t»«y iUdisii,&#13;
lirtrt K&lt;«d B»»rt,&#13;
0^00&#13;
offar&#13;
IOC&#13;
l&lt;to&#13;
10c&#13;
Cucumber 10«&#13;
otnia&gt;'ig Tomato, SDo&#13;
f D Onion, lo«&#13;
Bruilant Fkiwer Saeda, 16c&#13;
mail j . a free, toffythur with oax&#13;
t I'.int nad M&lt;M1 C&amp;Uilojtia t' o*i.it his aatlre dM, f 4« r B«A*Ki^ U'&lt;| invite jronr trad*ana&#13;
• W o i wlwnynn oaoe try . !&#13;
U&#13;
X. BaJJCKR A W CO., U C M S . W8.&#13;
k ' n n n r b o o k l e t " R n * t o Mufc^ i n k : o t n n » » "&#13;
CARTER'S &gt;NK CO , Boston. Mass. CHEAP FARMS 30 YOU WAIT I HOME?&#13;
ff n A HAH A.i^O'CfirTmprorftrt and 11)11, UUtt ftbnbb on l o u g t l i n P and «*w«y p a y m e n t * , K 1 tfln&#13;
v M r Coene and »fte «A o r wrl*^ TflF.&#13;
T B C M A V MO*H STATK WANK.&#13;
Tttt TRWffAN MOSS ESTATE,&#13;
l, S«nll«c C o .&#13;
W. N.U --t&gt;ETFOrT--N'0.10 -&#13;
Vhcc Answerioq Advert iscmeots&#13;
Mentioa This&#13;
h .*:•&#13;
V&#13;
" &gt; " . - . . / •&#13;
\&#13;
'^ &lt;&lt;&#13;
,&lt;• *&#13;
tor i\l i -. MurriHs. ' ^ oatidnmth&#13;
PARSHALLVILLfe. V&#13;
!. (.4. (,'iumill jh improving in&#13;
i li. a&#13;
a,&#13;
.-1.,&#13;
Mrs. C««o. M O D tuft&#13;
i in)'' to &gt;!i|M&gt;n tlii) it&#13;
and hus tiHHti .xtnftMB to&#13;
Helen ('.i^kfv fuvs&#13;
•&gt; i i&#13;
Tliursjay&#13;
Edittj O&#13;
od wit.h&#13;
r ''other&#13;
J jew is "£ j"n ;'f&#13;
. the Hpriny.&#13;
H. P. Andrew* • I:;&#13;
poorly tin-- pant week.&#13;
J u l m B e r k l e y hi'i.i «,'')!]»•: I D H ^ ' W H I J&#13;
t o w o r k i r i t h e m i l k f . u - i n v .&#13;
« } &lt; l ( o h ( 1 ! ' ) &gt; w i i i &lt; i i &gt; l i a v i i i j . ; ,\ n t * \ i ( i u &gt;&#13;
t i i n t t w i l l ; t i i l h u n . i ) m i l n i i l i e r \ H ^ .&#13;
l i e n . \\ »-lit'r lifts b f t u y h ! . • t l j e o l d&#13;
n i ' o i v n i i t g l a i i n i n O c e o l a . a n d w i l l&#13;
S ( ) U l l ( 1 1 1 ! V f ) I | | &lt; J ! C . ;; ** &gt;&#13;
" KP\ . J. li. VV^IkVp Htnl rlaiwln*' vis ; 11'is r m n o r w l tlnvt vveildiujBj'&#13;
itH {it Albert. Paluuer'.s in H*Vtl;uid: will soon r h j ^ in t h i s v i c i n i t y .&#13;
"lie (lay last week. , TV iT i&gt; I I Y&gt; I r*&#13;
: * j \&gt; ill \\'ck a n d v l t o b G^1 '&#13;
Mv.s. Day 'of Howdl hsis come lo ; w e r e in J i r i i ' l i t o n t h e p a s t w&#13;
...:iu i ) . . . . i. A. . \ i . I I T / s • ^ *&#13;
m&#13;
-.^Hudt1 (July in&#13;
a n p r a p n :.Mib S ^t n i 4 &lt;&#13;
™ * iuf this p'«|&#13;
Ai'chie Glover httSflu'ld h i s nrilk- »el(is*ns el ^i&#13;
route to , 8 m i t h b r o t h e r s au&lt;jl will of hardship&#13;
h b e ' r v i l l e ; tliHfK&gt;Q.i*er i.&#13;
the discussion , . , * ' * •&#13;
.s in of&#13;
first&#13;
herpateiito,&#13;
Wood&#13;
Miss Mabel&#13;
who has&#13;
* • * • • ; • nor ohanga; ttie trials of&#13;
of Mariou f'*rm l»'e;t«M.ph a youu# map patience,&#13;
^ t h e home j 1 * °^»a c l e 8 in(1»&lt;'« iWvevance^ its&#13;
f «duc&amp;t^oua4 adv»nUtf«fc .show&#13;
Mrs. Estiier Oordley, 'who ^&#13;
n lintel1 iho !).'« care tho past&#13;
k i l | b t&#13;
Mrs. Bell Hartsuff, of \ F o r t J^.Q^UI olAlidiigan" wa*/an II&#13;
Wayne, Ind,, well known in this Uod edifyin"u account *)f tl.e «r«&#13;
vicinity and Unadilfe wae umted 'our sttfe. Tin/ was iollow&amp; »:•&#13;
^ r, \ . - , n i itation^ by 'Hlabftl PiuitJ) a n d tl:&#13;
4paper&#13;
stay wilh h e r d a u g h t e r . Mrs. VV. ('.; u ••&#13;
\ V n I v n r t n n H J I I J I S i n vvv n / m i h p a l l l i S t o v e V f t u H o r n H l l d w i t V ' W C J V I ----- --- - - a - ?--- -, ^ . ., . . , • . .&#13;
rp, -,, o i ' i , . , | quests at J^ci Hail s last S a t u r d a y . ' of h e r uncle, rltrtiry \V nipple for r, • , *n . «/&#13;
In« bpwortii Leayne htsld a lit«r- i # J rf ^*^ him-theiv vame: Mis^ Anna Warper&#13;
ary w)oial at the home ol Mar^aretf-i School clptifd h j ' t b ' i (&lt;«irllyy seyerel O.ayS^ ratufued to oei' j/ave a lecitation nnd /Ffurenue H&amp;ff&#13;
Walker, Tuesday 'evening o( this j district lft«t FrfUay f i r two weeks home ou m 1~- '" ' ' "^ ' " ''&#13;
week. ' i vacation.&#13;
HAMBURG.&#13;
C h a r l i e m\d L o u D a - W o l f e v i ^ i t e l i n i • : ' - i i LI&#13;
WilHamston ) * * week. " week, m naicd l e t t e r .&#13;
••Heirt-y Hunt \Vint of Williamston.! B l a d e s ' m i l k r o u t e for the H a u l -&#13;
visaed friends hpre last week, ') btii'« cheese foctory npw extends&#13;
ry, ,,«v . . . „ xl . ; HS fur west as 8. G. Teeplos.&#13;
i h e M e t r a l e e s t i v e o n e of t h e i r T- •&#13;
of March. i \Vill A!erc«r and wife visited&#13;
&gt;"" f\&#13;
v ' '.«."•&#13;
Ward,&#13;
r fra. War&#13;
D' dab»s0n 4th&#13;
W&#13;
^60 V&#13;
'icinuy ... .. .._._ .,&#13;
ni marriage on, luesday, Mat%;h 7 j&#13;
to a M-ri Cherry of CfeicagoV M&#13;
' h i s a t a part^ of&#13;
the iirst of this.&#13;
.'y a reethe&#13;
proa&#13;
daet-*;J*y Mr,' and&#13;
The next&#13;
••I. .1. Donohue's,&#13;
popular bails the&#13;
Mary C&gt;tl{l«n wan obliypd to W I W&#13;
the sriljoo! on account &amp; her health. ! ^ a s ^&#13;
V urn on&#13;
sp+Miding a&#13;
Cora Olsavei&#13;
rw&#13;
(:°°i'a£d.,. **?*№.":^!*\ ^ ( 4 l t Hooke r hp* returne d from'}school.&#13;
Clarence , Clar e Co. , where he h a s&#13;
^ _ been worliiug in a s^w-mill t&#13;
Hube n SetUy passed from tbtr^ife ; p^pt mt&gt;»%k.&#13;
'Wai&#13;
' aH were c4Jt oflf'tVoji* one ti&#13;
H e first ihree**-p the aldermen ,&#13;
'd.two yeftr\^WPil e thft Qthev&#13;
|iave that.bo^oy Jr^6t&#13;
, 1 t? a- VL I J I wui De Dow aj;M. fi. uonoliae's , 4pmi I JB«K reie^ted . fn&gt;e vilUfee&#13;
Mrs . Eugen e Smit h closed a{8iKl.Hje&gt;«eti D j!.to open prom{rtly\a t Liflfef the m^a^man t ofyc&#13;
feucceseful ter m o£ school iu thisv] two o'clock. . . ffor t^e pa*t two year^ andtoaay iradistrict&#13;
on Friday last Irubehalf&#13;
of the pupil she was presented&#13;
liutler of Dimondale is! Tbe'mfiny i'riondp of John V«ui | wifcH a very nice book as ^a token&#13;
fi'.yt dayir.witb his cousin,' Ho#rfjr ot New J.eraey, wili be t^lfid of her esteem and a mark of appe-&#13;
'"• J \ Ito-leorn thath'M-? oiivaleseftnfc. ciation of her Ruccesti in the&#13;
extra ^ood farm of 65 acres for ; ^ t h e iD.eoniing&#13;
oi Iefic s xjnquie QI A , U . " H r ^^ bacltwac&lt;t* in'&#13;
helm. Anderson, Mich. , Box 3G. i ^ ' i n t e r e s t s .Cf t h e v i l l a ^ ^&#13;
•tbfifir&gt;toM e week&#13;
-r jjell&#13;
Only one more week before vaoa t g firwin&#13;
, at his honie in thi^ pl.ac'e after-a'short, , . , , , . &gt; t!OU.&#13;
illne^p on Thursday last. • Funerakwa*: S. (I. Teeplt'e' n ^ u t l y received . , ,&#13;
held at fi'e'M. E. chtuch Sarwiav' $200 from the A. A: Ity. Co., for.i The labatory is now nicely fitted trp j&#13;
vl»v Hev. Peavce. .injuries caused by mi accident at i and the seniors are earnestly a t work, j&#13;
^ ^ ,• B e r l i n s c r o B w ^ O a a t springy I 0n b ekDown to f rof. Dar'^e" his pro- j&#13;
, • . . " • • • ' Ilir\ci^:"/-»M~" v ! file is beinsr carried around on l)r.(?)'*&#13;
Warv J^nriou has a n e w c^rriaKf . - A N D E R S O N . « ^&#13;
• ' v ' ( T ' I P l)Pf«i iiicktu-s are at-work ^'*&lt;on&gt; medicine case, k . |&#13;
W^ljJ) WerfQ^day. ! a^ain after a t h r e e veee&gt; vacation. \ Mesdame?, Vaugbn, iiead and 'SIJ?-&#13;
r&#13;
: - - ••] AT;~. v ,,.rt ,. ^ \ t i T^ i ! ler were callers at school Thursday.&#13;
Honcr Iv.-&gt; spenf Sunday with' - U l s s A ( &gt; I A a u ( i alastef t r e d J&#13;
' J&gt; m Anu Arbor. , Dtirkee w e n in I k n v e i r o u T u e s - Miss EdUU-&lt;,arr, teacl^r ot th^&gt; Inn&#13;
• * • ! • ! '• ,i»x, ternaediato department, spent&#13;
&lt;&gt;rv Knwtt t? uut Hpr^in after a &gt;e-,. ( l a y ' •- r • i&#13;
,,' To-Bent'- •:&lt; &lt; ^ — - ^ » -&#13;
• " • • • • - ' ' - • • • - - , , ; ; • • « • • ' *&#13;
P o t t l e $treetsr-' A p p k to (J. At Sipler wilh b* delVv^d to 3'ow'&#13;
Mills. free&#13;
atUv.k&#13;
Suuda-v i&#13;
\A at son Ijane ha«&lt; secured' the rnai]&#13;
roole hom litre to GiTgory.&#13;
Mr.&lt; Flora WatsconVifcited her son&#13;
-Ioho, at ('hflsea, lai»t week".'&#13;
Mabel Hartsuff is awistibg in the&#13;
Ijnusf iiulcl At Will Mar^hajl&#13;
.lohn Duiyin^ and liobi. Bond&#13;
'filled thei,rice hou^e* last^eek. 1&#13;
Quarterly uieetrner at tbe H . E. |&#13;
church, Sunday evening, Marcn 26u !&#13;
Tee annual meeting of the Presby-i&#13;
terian church was held Wcdjief-day. !&#13;
Tbe L. A, S. clu&gt; voteo to hav« an- j&#13;
other entertainment in (he near fu&#13;
ture. - . j&#13;
Mr-. Ed&amp;on May returned home!&#13;
Monday from a viMt 1o relatives in"*&#13;
Leslie. •- ft.&#13;
J . D. W a t s o n and wife of Chelsea,&#13;
aie pptndintr a few day? with th^ir&#13;
parents at this place. ^ • ji&#13;
Percy Daniels was called home trgrn |.&#13;
ypsilariti the pa&gt;t week on account of&#13;
the fclrknese cf h\&gt;. grandfather. #&#13;
MisSi Dell Qnnker e\' MuniUi, Spentt&#13;
Saturday and Sunday wiLb iier^Jster,:&#13;
Adeline'ftt K. Barnum'-s. j.&#13;
The YPKCE met lafd'Sptuvday and&#13;
eier-tpd thh loiJowinjr rfficfi-s: PresM&#13;
Emory Rowe* JSe^tr.. Frank&#13;
Treas!, JJab'ei Wan"»«ffl&#13;
Dr. Kyan of Ypsilanti wili&#13;
l e c t o r at the M. JS. church, Monday&#13;
evening, March 27,• autject: "From&#13;
Jop^a" to tbe J o r d a j and Beyond."&#13;
CHAPE1, ITEMS \/&#13;
Kvpvy oue in W&gt;is place •'has a cold&#13;
or LaOrippp.&#13;
Mts. J. VV. Sheets Visi^ejl at D«niel&#13;
tWi^bt'e Sirtiday. &gt;&#13;
Lottie Valuer, of Plajnfiekr, vi&#13;
at Daniel Wrights last&#13;
t, Wood ami won C,&#13;
»™"* wi&#13;
with Miss Edith Woodst Anderson.&#13;
Matritrrcny seems to be uppermost&#13;
, in in tbe minds M some oi tbe worthy&#13;
Seniors and Fresboiea.&#13;
Archie and El'.eryx J)nrfe« spent&#13;
Sunday with, their grandparents in&#13;
' Fowlerville.&#13;
GENERAL&#13;
Coutracfc^f feet are' helped^&#13;
andhorses do IJO^ iriterrere whe»u&#13;
me a triai. Shop on Mill sfcredt&#13;
north of Opera Ho.pee. „&#13;
THE BUSY BEE HIVE&#13;
Do yon take cold with'&#13;
every change in t h e&#13;
weather? Does&#13;
feel r a w ? And&#13;
pains dart&#13;
chest?&#13;
Don*&#13;
throat&#13;
sharp&#13;
your&#13;
TJae&#13;
5rt&#13;
to buyr&#13;
!S&#13;
J. P. sheets ar&gt;d'John Gardner&#13;
breaking oplta lor K pastime.&#13;
TVe P* M. of this place r«p«rts'&#13;
s of the effiie ii&#13;
Mrs. A . T i . Rotkwood afld&#13;
•were tbe puesU -of Mrs.&#13;
Wd&#13;
A Hie Uro.wley farturned wentj&#13;
atter ^entfXny a ^«#*1c writk&#13;
relative* i« So- Lyaa and ftfcckney. \&#13;
£k{X Va^Burpc is th* «dmti&gt;istraof&#13;
the Oti-i Pond e^te:v)ob* Heild&#13;
Ct»*e. MiiJer are the ap&#13;
on know these are&#13;
danger signals which point&#13;
to pneumonia^ broothitls, or&#13;
' consumption itself? * v&#13;
If you are aflinft and have&#13;
lost flesh lately, they are&#13;
certainly danger signal*. The&#13;
question for you to decide U,&#13;
«'Have i the vitality to throw&#13;
of f these diseases ? "&#13;
Don't wait to try SCOTT'S&#13;
EMULSION « u i last resort."&#13;
There is ao remedy&#13;
equal to It for Xo*ttfylngthe&#13;
system. PrevonUon is easy.&#13;
Scotia&#13;
Emulsion&#13;
proventa rnnmnyUun an4&#13;
hosts of other dtfcwwri Wnlrfi&#13;
attack the weak aad fllopr&#13;
mith poor blood.&#13;
y &amp;CQTVS BWUL&amp;tON ^U&#13;
thsone stand«n] rejnatfy for&#13;
inflamed throats Mxf hmgst&#13;
for csolds, bronchttjs^d co«-&#13;
MtruptkM. It bailfotpJ modi*,&#13;
cine of nmaricaMe poVer. A&#13;
foed,hoxa«aeH&#13;
«m*se it&#13;
| MOEK LOCAL.&#13;
j .Miss Ethel, Read, ol Ann Arlior, I&#13;
[ speat Sunday with her parenti b e « . i&#13;
Rabe Wright and wife are .visiting"!&#13;
friends in Dansvilie and \Vhiiu Oak.&#13;
Anstin, Walter?, of Anaerson, will&#13;
work the coming &amp;omin.er for Leonard ;&#13;
Gilkt near Hovreli.&#13;
Cards are out announcing1 ttie mar&#13;
ria»e6f Mi^ AiUe^rpwn and.Arthur | j j ^ s t men ^ve'fco wear t h ^ m a n d most m e n w h o w e a r ' t h e m&#13;
Schoenhais to take place at the botne ^ - — — ^ * • »•&#13;
of the bride'^ inotber in t$el J^utoaha i&#13;
on VVpdnesd,ay, M^rcb 22 '•"' i&#13;
}OT.S'^ church.Sunday, morninfir,&#13;
6abject. "The i*pw»ryof an Imprieoaed ]&#13;
Life.'* This is the second oi % series i&#13;
oi .-^rmonsr ou the Epistle to t^e Pbilippians&#13;
Evening subject, "A-Noble&#13;
Ohristian. Endea.vor at&#13;
XL vUt?4" l o U U V U I X L U K uixciV _ __&#13;
it is to gQt into au^ill-fitting,short-sleerv^di short-tailed shiri&#13;
to wearing the v&#13;
Perfect-Fitting * &gt;&#13;
BiUs-n"-u«d from this office&#13;
j amiou'rw R,Q auction lgia.le on&#13;
[farm L-u'-n ^ tbe^Crofoot farm,"&#13;
£ mijferinrth aft&lt;3 \ noil&#13;
son, HI; ;'hafs(Ja$r'" QJ&#13;
MarcM 23 8, W. Macktaclfr.&#13;
sell at 11: l n'rfni,. his i&gt;erson*l property&#13;
a* be •&gt;. ITMHI? into other fan%iness.&#13;
Th*- '\fii«fs Boyle and H*Utead&#13;
hav^jnirt rnhir'aed ftdm Delroit and&#13;
Tojiedi, vc^i« tttey, purchased a- tuH&#13;
lines ot &lt;8pnn#vaod hammer iniiliaei^&#13;
and ciHrduHy .{i'HVit«; the ladiea oi&#13;
nn«i vicinity te'. caft and&#13;
their yo»djj before going&#13;
li«n&gt;embe* rhe , 'date of&#13;
Jaolson, wt^lre&#13;
can be&#13;
is jjjift as good a« the "Cromwejft^ i t is a prbtfcy&#13;
...V .-/ .,&#13;
rollifl the ahandArd u p to which &lt;&amp;fclher ahitt oj^keca^fy to ~ ^ f • &gt; j&#13;
*la«'s Colored Shunts .,-, v-&#13;
29 anfl * ^ 5 •.•* Men'« Colored §hirt§ wijjr&#13;
Jtor&#13;
•Titan&#13;
i and -Attached cuffs' Spedjal price, 60c. [&#13;
' - . • - . . • ' • » . • ' • • • " • ' . ' . • . Very beg$J?«roale Shirt, 'white bands, two j&#13;
Abont one onndrsd-titty&#13;
an/Tfriends of tbe A»6er»oa&#13;
CltM.met at tbe innne of Mr", and Mrs,&#13;
Hent* VThir^le; Jdarch-11. ^ n elo-&#13;
«MH dinner wa« swrved^ad Ae&#13;
inv whiao krfteired it&#13;
decided to^ispennnrirtj t b e ^ i a&#13;
*er ttjpm tetl ra'eeimjr. ^Af t*f Um&#13;
••Hi'&#13;
''A: '&#13;
0&#13;
v&#13;
"K&#13;
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>OL r. PINCKNEY, LIVINaSTON CO., MICH., THrjRSDAY, MARCH 23, 1899. No. 12.&#13;
Her« w e ; i ' again with deep cut prices. Just think of&#13;
what you can buy at F, E. Wright's on Saturday, March&#13;
25, 1899.&#13;
20 1b (ivhx'" i' ^ u ^ a r ,&#13;
23 S&gt; Nio* ' ' itrown Su^ar,&#13;
1 IbXXXX r.,,n&#13;
1 c a n S M " ; M ; . U • ..-&gt;,&#13;
1 can Pium*-,&#13;
1 can Best (Hi i&#13;
1 can Best Tomatoes,&#13;
1 BE) Swfut ('in Lt T o b a c c o&#13;
1 Vb Old Cut i&gt;in;•nor S m o k i n g , .&#13;
4 p k p s Fie-;it (iftr'den Seeds.&#13;
75c Willow Clothes Basket,&#13;
50c Willow Clothes Basket,&#13;
1100&#13;
1.00&#13;
.09&#13;
03&#13;
.03&#13;
.08&#13;
08&#13;
.42&#13;
.19&#13;
.05&#13;
.55&#13;
.40&#13;
1 14 qt Tin Pail,&#13;
i 10 qt Tin Pail,&#13;
1 2 qt Tin Cover Pail&#13;
J doz f/ood tfa spoons,&#13;
£ doz Table Spoons,&#13;
1 Wash Bowl and Pitcher worth&#13;
$L25&#13;
1 doz ^ood Dinner Plates,&#13;
24 good Envelopes, •&#13;
1 "iSo Niekle Plated Coffee or&#13;
Tea pot,&#13;
.15&#13;
.09'&#13;
03 and .04&#13;
.20&#13;
.25&#13;
.78&#13;
.60&#13;
.04&#13;
.50&#13;
are&#13;
In fact everything goes at the same Cut Price for we&#13;
to Reduce our ^tock. All&#13;
sales are CASH. Butter and Eggs will be taken at cash&#13;
values, so do not ask credit at these prices.&#13;
F. E. WRIGHT.&#13;
A SUCCESSFUL PLAY&#13;
WAS "CAPRICE" UY H I E COLUMBIAN&#13;
DRAMATIC CM1 II.&#13;
Every Fart a Complete S&#13;
The comedy-drama "Caprittb1" as&#13;
rendered by the Columbian Dramatic&#13;
Club on Friday evening last was a&#13;
success in every particular. Although&#13;
the niflht was stormy the opera&#13;
crowded and ail standing room&#13;
at par.&#13;
Owing to the storm the band could&#13;
not give an out-door conceit but c.autw&#13;
in and rendered, betor« and during&#13;
the play, some very fine selections.&#13;
Mi hael and Mary Ruon as Jack&#13;
Henderson and Mercy Baxter were&#13;
both stars and won' the applause of&#13;
the audience. We would not depreciate&#13;
any pi the actors as all carried&#13;
tbeir parts like professionals and&#13;
would do oredit to a much larger and&#13;
better opera house and stage. The&#13;
part of the old farraar, Mr. Baxter&#13;
was carried by Lincoln Smith in excellent&#13;
style. Rill MonKs as Jake&#13;
Baxter, Lester Dunn as Philander&#13;
Potts, James Harris as Harry Woodthorpe,&#13;
James Carroll as Walla Henderson,&#13;
Julia Brady as Edith Henderson,&#13;
Matrix Braiy as Mrs. Henderson&#13;
anrhMabel Monks asEmma—each carried&#13;
their parts to perfection and deserve&#13;
great credit.&#13;
During the changing of the scenes&#13;
songs were enderwd by Mr. Miserly&#13;
. . . , . . , , . .. „ , . .of Bav City, Will Kennedy 'of. Stock-&#13;
A large, easy, spring rocker, upholstered in the finest of covers b n d " L i n c o ! n S m i t h o f A n d e r&#13;
for $3.25, worth 16.00.&#13;
Sastor »&#13;
inmhh.&#13;
A fine line; call and see them.&#13;
TUBE-&#13;
,D0NT READ THIS&#13;
Unless you are out hunting for bargains in FlIRNI&#13;
y°u are a them every time&#13;
"at my store. Large and Complete stock to select from.&#13;
Good bargains all along the line in every department. You&#13;
can find any piece of Furniture you may be looking for.&#13;
Think of t h i s . . . . . .&#13;
EGG DYES,&#13;
All the colors of the Rainbow,&#13;
ONLY 5C A PAGKAGE.&#13;
WALL PAPER,&#13;
We have the latest designs and patterns.&#13;
PRICES ARE RIGHT.&#13;
A FULL AND COMPLETE LINE OF&#13;
D R U G S ,&#13;
PATENT MEDICINES,&#13;
TOILET ARTICLES,&#13;
PERFUMERY,&#13;
— - __ - _ _ _ — ETC.&#13;
A $16.00 Bedroom Suit for only $1050.&#13;
White Enamled Tables for 50 cents each.&#13;
I will sell high back, cano seat diners in oak at $3.75 and $4.50&#13;
per Bet. :i&#13;
A fine assortment of Foot Rests and Hassocks at cost ranging&#13;
from 50 cents to one dollar.&#13;
A good tufled and bound mattress at $1.98.&#13;
Finest line of Easles and Screens in stock to be found in the&#13;
county. All goods sold at these prices are warranted as represented.&#13;
Keep an eye on me still next week.&#13;
SIGLKR,&#13;
and Miss NHIi* Gardner of Pinckney.&#13;
Each bad to respond to an encore. Mr.&#13;
Smith, in ht&gt; uCoon" son^s, brought&#13;
down the hou^e.&#13;
Altogether WH think the play the&#13;
best ever SHHU tn-Hte opera house and&#13;
that is say in : a tr^at, deal. We do&#13;
not know wh rher i he Club intend to&#13;
put the plav tn MIH boards anywhere&#13;
else or not, l&lt;ut it th«y do we promise&#13;
the people 4 i'aiv treat.&#13;
We und'•••»!and that they cleared&#13;
over |100 fW the society.&#13;
AT THE CORNER DRUG STORE.&#13;
F. A. SIGLER.&#13;
The place to buy&#13;
HABDWARE,&#13;
Come and select your&#13;
arpets from the largest&#13;
Assortment ever shown here.&#13;
11 gradevS in 1899 patterns.&#13;
Richardson's Superlative Carpets,&#13;
ock bottom prices.&#13;
Positively give satisfaction and&#13;
lease our customers every time&#13;
Everyboby should see the fine line,&#13;
ach pattern a gem,&#13;
Tell your neighbors about&#13;
hese New Carpets. We&#13;
Save much waste in matching, and&#13;
urely can please you all.&#13;
Special pricevS in every department, in&#13;
our store for Saturday, March 25, 1899.&#13;
THi: NEXT LECTURE.&#13;
Monday niglit, March 27, Rev. E.&#13;
B. All4n,ot Lan&gt;intf, will deliver his&#13;
lecture, "A Talk with the Toilers'1 at&#13;
the opera hou^e under the auspices of&#13;
the lecture oourse. Mr. Allen is&#13;
well known here and will draw a full&#13;
house. He is an eloquent, forcible&#13;
speaker and is certainly a winner.&#13;
Come and hear him.&#13;
ALL GOODS CASH.&#13;
Mi.&#13;
QUIETLY MARRIED.&#13;
Claude Hause and Mi&gt;s Vida Ashman&#13;
were married at the home of&#13;
Rev. N. W. I'ieroe, of Marion, on&#13;
Wednesday, March 15. The younsr&#13;
couple are well known here and will&#13;
mak« it their home in this village,&#13;
having rented the Ned Chub house.&#13;
Although they did not have a regular&#13;
wedding they were remembered by&#13;
many or their friends with valuable&#13;
and useful presents.&#13;
The&#13;
Democratic Caucus.&#13;
Democratic Peoples Union&#13;
tne township of&#13;
WAGONS,&#13;
CARRIAGES,&#13;
ROAD WAGONS&#13;
SURREYS,&#13;
HARNESS,&#13;
Light and Heavy&#13;
IS AT&#13;
RJPL.I3 and CAPWELL'S.&#13;
THEY ALSO HAVE THE BEST&#13;
STEEL RANGES ON EARTH FOR&#13;
r „ „ • , #S5.OO.&#13;
Call and see it and save money&#13;
TEEPLE &amp; CA DWELL.&#13;
Silver Electors of&#13;
Putnam, will meet in the Town&#13;
Hall in village, of Pinikney, on Saturday&#13;
the 25th day of March. A. D.&#13;
1899, at two o'clock p. m , tor the purpose&#13;
of placing it. nominaiion. a township&#13;
ticket and for the* transaction of&#13;
such other business as may come be&#13;
fore the meeting.&#13;
Mar. 18, 1899. BY order of Com.&#13;
NOTICE.&#13;
The re^alar examination of applicants&#13;
for 1st, 2nd and 3rd grade certificates,&#13;
will be held at the Cential school&#13;
buildinjj, in Howell, on Thursday&#13;
and Friday, March 30 aud 31, 1899.&#13;
As the examinations will coratttnioe&#13;
promptly at 9 «.. 00. it is hopefat&#13;
that ail applicants will be ready&#13;
to commence work at that time. .&#13;
JAMES A. WALLICB.&#13;
Count/ Comaii&amp;ioiief of School*.&#13;
Shoes for old Men, Shoes for young Men, Shoes for Ladies&#13;
Misses and Children. Shoes of all grades, styles and&#13;
prices, from 4 O e a pair up to $ 3 . « &gt; O . We&#13;
are showing a lanre line of Ladies1 Shoes in&#13;
Black and Tan in the new Co-n Toe at&#13;
prices that will astonish you. Our&#13;
S2.00 shoe is a hummer for the money.&#13;
Mens\ Boy's, Misses, and Children's Shoo.*in a&#13;
large variety and at prices to correspond with the times.&#13;
In Lace Curtains we are showing the latest patterns ^n low, medium&#13;
and high grade goods.&#13;
We have just recieved ft full line of Hats. Soft liats ranging&#13;
from 50c to *-\50. Nobby things in Derbys at *t.5O, $2.00 and $3.00.&#13;
If you want a good hat, and price all rij/ht, see our styles,&#13;
^ Our Dry Goods and Grocery stock is complete and prices ara&#13;
down to Bed iiock.&#13;
This week we wjll close a few pattern* in Table Oil Cloth at 10c.&#13;
A few odd patterns in Ladies Wrappers at 75c.&#13;
2 Cans good Salmon for 17c.&#13;
All odds and ends in Shoes less 25 per cent F- G. 3ACKSON-&#13;
\ '&#13;
-.a&#13;
"'•^M'-™- '•\""-"y :~f-«'• •'•:l*'r\*.*'"""&#13;
!&#13;
K*.&#13;
. ' &gt; • •&#13;
of the Week Recorde d in a&#13;
Brief Style.&#13;
CONCISE AND INTERESTING .&#13;
l&gt;«atb Bate for February In the&#13;
»UC« the ],we«tt yet imported by&#13;
Cbe KegUtrar Synteai—1UU»&lt;iale I'u-&#13;
«trrt»ker 8ol«I Out ami Skipped Out.&#13;
MICHIGAN NEWS ITEMS .&#13;
Tekonsha hi s&#13;
volumes.&#13;
a public librar y of&#13;
3,7 78 Death* la Mich I c m In February.&#13;
. Accordin g to report s filed with th e&#13;
«№eretar j of stat e ther e were 3,778&#13;
&lt;lmathH! o Michiga n durin g th e mont h&#13;
o f February . Thi s is th e largest num -&#13;
be r of death s recorde d since th e opera -&#13;
tio n of th e registratio n law, an d it corresponds&#13;
to a rat e of -0.7 per 1,000 population&#13;
. Ther e were 7.?7 death s of infoat&#13;
e unde r 1 year of age; 212 of child&#13;
r e n aged 1 to 4, an d 1,303 death s of&#13;
person s aged tJ5 an d over. Th e largest&#13;
numbe r of death s was from influenza ,&#13;
721; pneumonia , 032; consumption , 1W&gt;;&#13;
tuberculosis , 55; typhoi d fever, :?S; diph -&#13;
theri a an d croup , 44; scarlet fever, (J;&#13;
measles , 16; whoopin g cough , 10; diarrhea&#13;
l diseases, 45; eerebro-spina l men -&#13;
ing-it is, 74; puerperzt l septieemia , 23;&#13;
&lt;.*»Dcer, 107, an d 102 from violence .&#13;
Skipped Oat ana Left Kin Family.&#13;
4 O n th e 10th of Februar y Charle s W.&#13;
Bocles, of Hillsdale , left home , tellingi&#13;
t s wife tha t he was going to Clevelan&#13;
d an d would be back th e next&#13;
night . Nothing 1 ha s been hear d from&#13;
hi m by an y one since tha t time . Mr.&#13;
KccU' s was an undertaker , and a shor t&#13;
tim e before he went away lie sold ou t&#13;
hi s business an d engaged to superin -&#13;
tend the business for his successor. I t&#13;
w as ascertaine d tha t he did no t go to&#13;
Cleveland , but instea d went west, lie&#13;
marrie d his wife ia Ililisdale , an d she&#13;
i$ left with two small children .&#13;
. T m RuMlana ArroateU »t Kalamazoo.&#13;
" "Isaac Silverstein an d Meyer Iluk -&#13;
m&amp;nn , two Russian s who ran a bicycle&#13;
repai r sho p in Kalamazoo , have been&#13;
arreste d by secret service men , charge d&#13;
i making &lt;v»inft»ifi*it nickels and&#13;
pennies . Thei r lay-ou t was confiscate d&#13;
r%ud also a large amoun t of bogus mone y&#13;
was found . The y are held fur tria l in&#13;
th e sum of $5,000 each at Gran d Rapid s&#13;
nex t October . The y purchase d th e&#13;
Hhee t Germa n silver in Chicag o an d&#13;
were followed to Kalamazoo .&#13;
: Attackod lilt Wire with Shears.&#13;
. Robt . Thompson , of Thre e Rivers, in&#13;
a fit of temporar y insanity , attacke d&#13;
hi s wife with a pair of shear s inflictin g&#13;
seriou s injury: H e the n mad e a desperat&#13;
e attemp t t o kill himself. He&#13;
was finally secure d by off cers and take n&#13;
t o th e cit y jail. Thompso n is an experfc&#13;
machinist , an d it is though t tha t&#13;
overwor k an d stud y ha s unbalance d&#13;
hi s mind . Hi s wife is restin g as comfortable&#13;
as coul d be expecte d unde r&#13;
th e circumstances .&#13;
Yaviiir is workin g to secure a potat o&#13;
Hou r mill industry .&#13;
Fre e mai l delivery has been inau -&#13;
gurate d at Marshall .&#13;
Every effort is hoin g mad e at San d&#13;
Beach to lan d u beet sugar factory .&#13;
Stoe h Lubricatin g Co.. of Chicago ,&#13;
will remov e thei r plan t to Por t Huron .&#13;
Marshal l will vote on a 82."&gt;,O00 bond -&#13;
ing propositio n for th e constructio n of&#13;
sowers.&#13;
The thir d case of smallpo x in two&#13;
weeks ha s develope d neu r liento n&#13;
Harbor .&#13;
The Michiga n Democrat , a Sturgi s&#13;
newspaper , ha s absorbe d th e Time s of...&#13;
tha t place .&#13;
A pape r devote d to th e beot sugar&#13;
trad e will be starte d at Hay City in th e&#13;
nea r future .&#13;
Farmer s nea r KH lama zoo are suffering&#13;
severely from th e ravages of sheepkilling&#13;
dogs.&#13;
Gras s Luke is experiencin g a building&#13;
boom—two now business blocks&#13;
are bein g erected .&#13;
A postofiice ha s been establishe d at&#13;
lienthelm , Allegan county , with Joh n&#13;
liulst as postmaster .&#13;
A block of six store s in th e business&#13;
portio n of Dor r has been destroye d by&#13;
tire at a loss of §3,000.&#13;
Gran d Have n ha s fine prospect s of&#13;
securin g a large cannin g faeiory tha t&#13;
will emplo y 4U0 hands .&#13;
Guar d »!t Koivoord' s flour mill, two&#13;
miles east of Keen City, burne d at a&#13;
loss of S17,."i00, with no insurance .&#13;
"L. A. Sherman , proprieto r of th e&#13;
Por t Huro n Dail y Times , ha s been appointe&#13;
d postmaste r at Por t Huron .&#13;
Th e Michiga n IJell Telephon e Co.&#13;
will erec t a buildin g for th e use of th e&#13;
company' s business at Por t Huron .&#13;
A case of smallpo x is reporte d at&#13;
Kalamazoo . Th e victim was a ragpicker&#13;
in th e Wolverine pape r mill.&#13;
The stock for th e beet sugar factor y&#13;
at Kalamazo o ha s been subscribed an d&#13;
work on th e factor y wiljl begin at once .&#13;
Rcthrvitte—t*—ffoin^—to—Iva4?«—» newbank&#13;
, called "Th e Han k of Belleville."&#13;
I t will no t be incorporate d at present .&#13;
An electri c car on th e D., P. A N.&#13;
railway left th e trac k nea r Wayne an d&#13;
lande d wron g side up in th e ditch . Sev-&#13;
| era I passenger s were injured .&#13;
The cases of suppose d scarlet fever&#13;
amon g schoo l childre n at Hillsdale ,&#13;
which caused considerabl e alarm , have&#13;
turne d ou t to be onl y measles.&#13;
Gov. Pingrc e ha s been asked to mak e&#13;
a speech for th e Indianapoli s Centra l&#13;
Labo r unicn , to help alon g th e fight&#13;
for a-rpnt, *tri&gt;ot. rniKvny fnrps&#13;
Chestv r townshi p in Ottaw a county ,&#13;
ha s been organize d since 1848 an d hu»&#13;
had onl y six different supervisors.&#13;
One supervisor, lleorge V. Porter , hav*&#13;
ing served his townshi p JO consecutiv e&#13;
years.&#13;
Th e propositio n to pay a furnitur e&#13;
factor y a bonu s of 81,000 per year for&#13;
10 years to remov e to StamUs h was decided&#13;
favorable by ballot . Th e com -&#13;
pan y are to do th e pumpin g for th e&#13;
village.&#13;
So man y jH*tty burglarie s have occurre&#13;
d ut llill&gt;di\l e of late tha t u coupl e&#13;
of nigh t watchme n have been appointe&#13;
d by th o city counci l aud it is&#13;
hope d thi s will pu t a stop to th e depre -&#13;
dations .&#13;
Joh n O'Urien , of Albion, aged SI,&#13;
bed-ridde n an d almos t helpless, secure d&#13;
a razo r and attempte d suicide . He&#13;
said afterwards : " I trie d to do a good&#13;
job, but luck was ugaiust me. ' llo cunno&#13;
t recover .&#13;
The stat ^ militar y authoritie s do no t&#13;
fancy th e bill of Rep. Howell , of Lenawee,&#13;
which provide s for th e creatio n&#13;
of a medica l departmen t in th e Na -&#13;
tiona l CiiKird . The y -say it propose s to&#13;
creat e n czar.&#13;
Mrs. Forbes , formerl y llatti e Mar -&#13;
chant , committe d suicide at he r hom e&#13;
in Kaiamazo o by. hangin g herself on&#13;
th e top of a doo r by a cord . She had&#13;
been desponden t of late an d was left&#13;
alon e onl y a shor t tiiue.&#13;
Mrs. C. IJirk , an old woma n living a&#13;
mile east of Ne w liuitalo , was found&#13;
dead iu bed th e othe r day. She is supposed&#13;
to have beeu dead for over a&#13;
week. She feared witche s an d drove&#13;
1,000 nail s in th e doo r to keep the m&#13;
away.&#13;
Arthu r Iirazzleton , colored , IS years&#13;
old, is in jail at Jackso n suffering from&#13;
insanity . He is uncontrolabl e if no t&#13;
given narcotics . Th e cause of his insanit&#13;
y is said to be th e grip. He&#13;
will be sent to th e asylum at Kala&#13;
inn zoo.&#13;
Two hundre d fishermen in thei r&#13;
shantie s on Saginaw bay were recentl y&#13;
carrie d ou t on th e ice, where the y were&#13;
obliged to remai n for several hours .&#13;
Had it no t been tha t th e wind calme d&#13;
down an d finally shifted all would have&#13;
perished .&#13;
11 cosT Gran d 11 aven"~?^rtTG.trrt o TTTI T&#13;
its municipa l electri c light plan t last&#13;
year, an d th e receipt s were Sv\.r&gt;Sl.S7.&#13;
News of the Day as Told Over the&#13;
Slende r Wires,&#13;
DOMESTI C AND FOREIGN NEWS&#13;
000 Chlncae Kebela aud Muny Soldlem&#13;
Killed In » Itloody Uattle In Chlut*&#13;
— Our Military Urouuda lu Liuwall—&#13;
Si»uulah Uoverau? Murdered.&#13;
moody Wattle In China.&#13;
Th e steame r Victoria brings news&#13;
from Nanki n tha t 10,000Chines e rebels&#13;
have crossed th e Anhu i border s int o&#13;
Honan , ther e joining1 th e rebels, thei r&#13;
combine d forces cumberin g over ,0,000.&#13;
Thu s combined , the y marche d against&#13;
and capture d Shouchun , th e secon d&#13;
city of th e Anhu i province , badly defeatin&#13;
g Gen . Kuo and th e imperia l&#13;
forces. The y secure d large quantitie s&#13;
of arm s and have sent out a body of&#13;
raider s int o Hona n to secure ammuni -&#13;
tion . Th e telegrap h lino s in Nort h&#13;
Anhu i have been cu t and th e imperia l&#13;
troop s are graduall y bein g hemme d in.&#13;
Th e latte r have reoccupio d but no t&#13;
capture d Cuyang . Five hundre d rebels&#13;
and man y soldiers were killed iu th e&#13;
battl e in Nort h Kiangsu between th e&#13;
rebels and th e combine d forcoisof Gens .&#13;
Kuo, Wo and Liu. Several rebel leaders&#13;
wore taken , but th e mai n body of&#13;
the rebels escaped and starte d for&#13;
Anhui .&#13;
A Slick Swindler.&#13;
A few days ago a strange r struc k&#13;
Uttot , announce d tha t he was an interna&#13;
l revenu e officer, an d hunte d up&#13;
several me n who palle d off a cock fight&#13;
t h e r e a few weeks ago. H e claime d&#13;
t h e y bad failed t o pay th e revenu e demande&#13;
d on cock fights an d when he&#13;
threatene d the m with arrest , several&#13;
of th e partie s conghe d up $7.50 apiece .&#13;
I t no w transpire s th e fellow was no t&#13;
a rereaa e officer, an d th e partie s were&#13;
cleverly don e up .&#13;
3O*fc Can't be Transferred as a Regiment.&#13;
Secretar y Alger ha s informe d Majs.&#13;
lianholtz , Kno x an d Lieut . Chapman ,&#13;
o f th e 35th Michigan , tha t ther e is no&#13;
**n%y by which th e regimen t can be&#13;
"transferre d to th e regula r arm y in a&#13;
body , bu t tha t men who desire to enl&#13;
i st from th e regimen t ma y do so individually&#13;
. Maj. Banholt z think s 50&#13;
p e r c e n t of th e regimen t will volunt&#13;
e e r if allowed to serve together , and&#13;
"75 per cen t if given a 10 days' furlough .&#13;
Railroad Company Censored.&#13;
The coroner's jury, which investigated&#13;
the death of Charles Seneiman,&#13;
&lt;»f Port Huron, returned a verdict centhe&#13;
railroad company for negliholding&#13;
the company partly rebl&#13;
for his death. He was killed&#13;
white at work in a snow drift by an&#13;
««»gine. The testimony conflicted in&#13;
regard to whether the bell was rung&#13;
or not.&#13;
i»&#13;
Big New Cement Plant.&#13;
Messrs. Hu^eel &amp; Mann, of Ann&#13;
Arbor, who own 17$ acres of land just&#13;
north of Zukey lake, will, in the near&#13;
fntvre, erect a cement factory there.&#13;
I t is said that the Land comprises some&#13;
of the best marl in the country. The&#13;
tsVatum is 34 feet deep and a chemical&#13;
analysis shows that 00 per cent of it is&#13;
.available lor cement.&#13;
Got SO Tear * Bach.&#13;
Hannifan brothers. Robert and&#13;
the Detroit boys who »hot&#13;
aad killed Frank Edwards, in Lansing,&#13;
Dec. 5, last, w«re2ound guilty of tnwrdfr&#13;
to the second, degree. . Robert ad -&#13;
aufcted the shooting, and pleaded selfdfcifenae.&#13;
They were each sent to Jackfor&#13;
90 years. ,&#13;
* jTbe Michigan '*&gt;lepuone Co. re-&#13;
« w W a mortgage worth $5,000,00 0 in&#13;
Hurpa county, requiring 82,500 io rev-&#13;
•«an c stamps.&#13;
A water famin e and a reign of dark -&#13;
ness will prevail at Sout h llaven for a&#13;
few days. Th e chimne y to th e power&#13;
hous e mus t be tor n down an d rebuilt .&#13;
A Churc h of Chris t society ha s been&#13;
organize d at Copemis h an d a buildin g&#13;
purchased , which is to be transforme d&#13;
int o a churc h for holdin g regula r services.&#13;
Brazil Marvin , aged fiO, a prominen t&#13;
residen t of Ovid for 30 year&amp;, commit -&#13;
ted suicide by putting - a 38-calibr e ball&#13;
throug h his head . Il l healt h caused&#13;
th e rash act .&#13;
The tunne l schem e at Por t Huro n is&#13;
so muc h of a success tha t th e Canadia n&#13;
Pacific an d th e F. &amp; P. M. rairoa d people&#13;
are contemplatin g buildin g on e at&#13;
For t Gratiot .&#13;
The deadloc k in th e 33 judicia l conventio&#13;
n at Petoske y vras broke n on th e&#13;
397th ballot by th e nominatio n of Rep .&#13;
Fran k Shephard , of Cheboygan , for&#13;
circui t judge.&#13;
Miss Minni e Jordan , of Coldwater , a&#13;
woman of th e street , committe d suicide&#13;
at llento n Harbo r by th e morphin e&#13;
route . He r chose n lover, it is said,&#13;
jilted he r recently .&#13;
Wm. Trubey , of nea r Colon , was recentl&#13;
y smothere d unde r a stra w stack.&#13;
His 6-year-ol d son was caugh t unde r&#13;
th e falling stack with him , but was&#13;
alive when remove d&#13;
Negotiation s are in progress for th e&#13;
erectio n of a new oper a hous e at Ann&#13;
Arbor. Manage r Whitney, of th e Detroi&#13;
t oper a house , is said to be th e&#13;
leade r of th e scheme .&#13;
Nearl y 2,000 women in Detroi t mad e&#13;
up thei r min d the y wante d to vote for&#13;
a schoo l inspecto r thi s spring, an d accordingl&#13;
y consente d in revealin g th e&#13;
secret of thei r ages by registering .&#13;
Word ha s been received at Nile s tha t&#13;
Georg e Taylor , alias Hultz , th e brute l&#13;
murdere r of Mar y Comley , in tha t city,&#13;
Dec. 7, 1892, is going insan e in Jackso n&#13;
prison . Taylo r is serving life sentence ,&#13;
The oper a hous e at Copemis h ha s&#13;
change d hand s and ha s been converte d&#13;
int o a warehous e for buggies an d agricultura&#13;
l implements , and as a conse -&#13;
quenc e th e village is withou t a publi c&#13;
hall.&#13;
Th e shortag e of freight car s through -&#13;
out th e stat e is growing worse I t is&#13;
very difficult to get car s for shipment s&#13;
of furniture , vehicles, agricultura l implement&#13;
s and othe r manufacture d product&#13;
s&#13;
The snow storm of th e 11th inst fn&#13;
th e uppe r peninsul a was th e wprse of&#13;
th e season. At man y place s alon g th e&#13;
railroad s snow plows encountere d&#13;
drifts from lo to 2) feet high , an d in&#13;
man y instance s had to be shoveled out .&#13;
.. _ -m... • • .&#13;
Up to last year th e city paid $4,(500 for&#13;
its stree t lights to a privat e corpora -&#13;
tion . Thi s year th e plan t will ne t a&#13;
profit to th e city.&#13;
A littl e girl name d Cclia Smith , of&#13;
Owosso, was playin g in th e basemen t&#13;
of th e schoo l buildin g when she accidentall&#13;
y fell, runnin g a penci l she&#13;
had in her pocke t throug h th e wall of&#13;
her abdomen . If blood poisonin g docs&#13;
not set in she may recover .&#13;
Lan d valued at «t.t)W,00O-adjointTrp r&#13;
th e Isle Roya l Coppe r Co., nea r Ilough -&#13;
ton , was recentl y conveyed to th e&#13;
Minere s Coppe r Co., and lan d valued&#13;
at 5000,000, formerl y owned by th e St.&#13;
Mary' s &amp; Hungaria n Coppe r Co., was&#13;
conveyed to th e Arcadia n Coppe r Co.&#13;
W. H. Kirby, of Quincy , ha s com -&#13;
mence d shippin g cucumber s from his&#13;
sprin g crop . • On accoun t of th e freezeup&#13;
in th e sout h cucumber s comman d a&#13;
fancy price , Mr. Kirby ha s also raised&#13;
and shippe d a good man y radishe s thi s&#13;
winter . He ha s an extensive hothouse .&#13;
The recent , storm in th e uppe r penin -&#13;
sula pu t th e D., S. S. &amp; A. R. R, out of&#13;
business for thre e days. Th e storm&#13;
consiste d of rain and sleet, followed by&#13;
snow an d cold weather , which forme d&#13;
int o thre e or four inche s of solid ice&#13;
on th e rails an d completel y blocked all&#13;
trains .&#13;
Word ha s just been received at Cassopolis&#13;
tha t Ralp h Schall , who went&#13;
from tha t place to th e Klondik e in&#13;
February , 1898, with a part y of seven,&#13;
othe r Cassopoli s men , ha s struc k it&#13;
rich nea r Dawson , and is no w takin g&#13;
out $400 a day in a claim which he is&#13;
workin g for half.&#13;
Oliver Blakeslee, a farme r living between&#13;
Lansin g an d Gran d Ledge, ha s&#13;
mad e two unsuccessfu l attempt s to&#13;
commi t suicide durin g th e past few&#13;
days, while suffering from grip. Ho&#13;
tried to cut hi s throa t with a case&#13;
knife, an d afterward s hun g himsel f to&#13;
a rafte r in his barn , but was cu t down .&#13;
Safe-cracker s blew open th e safe in&#13;
Charle s H. May &amp; Co.' s ban k at Clio,&#13;
and secure d nearl y $2,000. After the y&#13;
had secure d th e plunde r the y went to&#13;
a livery stable and got th e ma n in&#13;
charg e to drive the m ou t thre e miles&#13;
to a large piece of woods. When the y&#13;
had gone as far as the y wante d to go&#13;
the y covered th e driver with revolvers&#13;
and bade him stop, and the y mad e for&#13;
th e woods.&#13;
Up nea r Ludingto n is an old man&#13;
who ha s on e of th e queeres t habita -&#13;
tion s to be foun d anywher e in th e&#13;
state . Hi s hous e consist s of an old&#13;
hollo w tree , which ha s been cu t off&#13;
abou t 10 feet from th e groun d and&#13;
roofed over with boards . A doo r and&#13;
windo w have been cut an d th e inside&#13;
floored, aad with several seats and an&#13;
oil stove th e old cha p ha s as comfort -&#13;
able a hom e an one migh t wish, althoug&#13;
h a trifle limite d as to floor space.&#13;
Coun t Von. Uiedenfel d ha s been acquitte&#13;
d of Hie jnurde r of Cha«. McDon -&#13;
ald by a Chicag o jury.&#13;
Secretar y of War Alger is contem -&#13;
platin g an early inspectio n tou r of all&#13;
th e western arm y posts. Several staff&#13;
officers will accompan y him .&#13;
Five Killed in a Row.&#13;
As a result of an electio n row at Ho t&#13;
Springs. Ark., Uve were killed an d anothe&#13;
r may die. Th e row which led to&#13;
a shootin g alfray grew ou t of th e mayoralt&#13;
y campaign . Th e sheriff of th e&#13;
town was a warm supporte r of th e regula&#13;
r Democrati c nominee , while thre e&#13;
other s were hustlin g for th e oppositio n&#13;
candidate . In th e afternoo n th e thre e&#13;
by chanc e me t the'sherif f an d his two&#13;
sons an d a battl e with revolvers . followed.&#13;
No on e can tell who tired th e&#13;
tirst shot , for in a momen t ther e was a&#13;
genera l fusillade, an d as a result th e&#13;
thre e citizens , on e of th e sheriff 's sons&#13;
and a non-combatan t were killed out -&#13;
right . ~™~&#13;
Culuin CensuM.&#13;
Th e administratio n ha s decide d to&#13;
tak e i\ censu s of th e island of Cuba , as&#13;
complet e and carefu l as tha t take n in&#13;
th e Unite d States . A censu s is found&#13;
necessar y to determin e who are citizens&#13;
an d qualified electors , before an&#13;
electio n is held to establish a represen -&#13;
tative government . Thi s ceusu s will&#13;
not be take n by any organizatio n&#13;
claimin g to be representative s of th e&#13;
Cuba n people , but by th e militar y&#13;
authorit y of th e Unite d State s government&#13;
, assisted by such civil officers as&#13;
may be necessar y to carr y on th e work.&#13;
U. 8. Government Land lit&#13;
After matur e consideratio n of th e&#13;
subject th e war departmen t ha s decided&#13;
to take advantag e of th e provision&#13;
of th e act by which Hawai i was&#13;
annexe d to th e Unite d State s transfer -&#13;
rin g th e public land s to th e genera l&#13;
governmen t to acquir e such tract s in&#13;
th e island s as may be necessar y for&#13;
militar y purposes . To thi s end an officer&#13;
or officers will go to Honolul u&#13;
with prope r authorizatio n and begin&#13;
th e work by takin g possession, injthe '&#13;
nam e of th e war department , a consid -&#13;
erabl e trac t nea r th e capital .&#13;
Holled Hid Wife's Remains.&#13;
Sausageraake r August A. Becker, of&#13;
Chicago , ha s confessed tha t in a quar -&#13;
rel he !*»ruck his wife a fatal blow on&#13;
th e hea d with a hatchet , knockin g her&#13;
brain s out . He the n cu t up th e remain&#13;
s and boiled them , buryin g th e&#13;
few bone s left in th e prairi e nea r his&#13;
hom e after tryin g to bur n the m in a&#13;
red-ho t stove. Thi s all happene d Jan .&#13;
27, he says, Polic e foun d a piece of&#13;
calico and a fragmen t of a lun g in a&#13;
barn , told Becker, and he weakene d&#13;
and gave up his ghastly secret .&#13;
Free Janket for Rlxtjr.&#13;
A part y of some 00 member s of congress,&#13;
senator s an d representatives ,&#13;
will accep t an invitatio n extende d b}f&#13;
gentleme n representin g th e Panam a&#13;
cana l interest s and will lake an ocean&#13;
voyage to inspec t th e Nicaragu a and&#13;
Panam a cana l routes . Tito part y will&#13;
leave New York abou t Marc h 23. Th e&#13;
retur n tri p will be by way of Santiago ,&#13;
where th e part y will visjit th e San&#13;
Jua n battlefield .&#13;
Alleged Counterfeiter* Arrested.&#13;
After more than tive months of careful&#13;
work, U S. secret service agents,&#13;
assisted by the Boston police, took Into&#13;
custody 10 Italians, who, they have&#13;
every reason to believe, have been issuing&#13;
a great amount of counterfeit $!i&#13;
treasury notes and arc the Boston&#13;
agents of one of the largest and most&#13;
crafty gangs of counterfeiters that&#13;
have operated in this country.&#13;
Import* of Tes, ftufst and WooL&#13;
The monthly statement of the imports&#13;
of, lea, sugar and wool issued by&#13;
the bureau of ktatisttcs show that during&#13;
February the imports of tea&#13;
amounted to $780,078 , as against 8655,-&#13;
9(J$ for February, 1808. The sugar import*&#13;
aggregated 85,501,200 , as against&#13;
$•»..*&gt;:•,544 ; wool, 81,023,31s , as against&#13;
•••',113,261 . ... .&#13;
V/AR NOTES ,&#13;
Th e work of repairin g th e three !&#13;
ibh gunboat s raised at Manil a is&#13;
reporte d to be progressin g rapidl y at}&#13;
Kong* Kon g unde r th e directio n of&#13;
Constructo r Capp s and Assistant Con -&#13;
structo r Ilobson . Th e vessels are said'&#13;
to be iu excellen t conditio n as t o machiner&#13;
y and even before the y went&#13;
int o dry dock to be repaire d th e .Isla&#13;
de Luzon an d th e Isla de Cub a mad e 13&#13;
kuoU unde r thei r own steam . aud t&lt; \he&#13;
Don Jua n de Austria was onl y abou t a&#13;
kno t behind . Th e constructors ' report&#13;
s to th e navy departmen t bho w&#13;
tha t th e othe r Spanis h warship s were&#13;
so badly damage d as to no t be wort h&#13;
th e cost of raisin g and repairing .&#13;
Regardin g th e attac k to destro y Manila&#13;
in January , a membe r of th e 14th&#13;
infantr y writes hom e how th e rebel s&#13;
planne d th e work: "Th e insurgent s&#13;
trie d to tak e th e city by mukin g an&#13;
attac k in th e front , and have th e citi*&#13;
zens mak e an attac k in th e rear , so in&#13;
orde r to do thi s it was necessar y for&#13;
the m to get arm s int o th e city. Vf&amp;&#13;
notice d the y were havin g a large num -&#13;
ber of funeral s from a churc h iu Paco .&#13;
One day ther e were 73 coffins take u in.&#13;
When some of our boys were detaile d&#13;
to inspec t the y found tha t thes e coffins&#13;
containe d guns, and in thi s way wo&#13;
capture d 1,200 of thei r weapons. "&#13;
It is said to be th e intentio n of th e&#13;
navy departmen t to send 1,000 marine&#13;
s to Cavite to tak e car e of th e&#13;
navy's interest s there . Thi s seems t o&#13;
be a very large numbe r of marine s t o&#13;
statio n at one navy yard, but th e explanatio&#13;
n is tha t th e Cavite statio n is&#13;
th e largest in th e possession of th e&#13;
Unite d States , includin g abou t 71)&#13;
squar e miles of Inn d with 13 miles of&#13;
water front . On th e governmen t land s&#13;
are man y squatter s and wine small&#13;
towns, and a large numbe r of men will&#13;
be require d to thoroughl y police th e&#13;
territory .&#13;
The governmen t havin g requeste d&#13;
th e Red Cross to tak e up th e hospita t&#13;
work in Cuba , shelterin g th e homeles s&#13;
and caring- for th e sick, a Red Cross&#13;
staff has embarke d to join th e Red&#13;
Cross agent s alread y there . One of&#13;
th e first matter s tliut will engage thei r&#13;
attentio n will be th e establishmen t of&#13;
a hospita l in Havan a for th e use of&#13;
AraeTican s and'othe r efv-tVia-tre—wbere^~&#13;
the y can receive th e same attentio n&#13;
tha t the y would in thei r own countries .&#13;
Gen . Corbi n ha s been makin g arrangement&#13;
s for th e retur n of th e dead&#13;
soldiers in Cub a and Port o Rico, with&#13;
a view of providin g for thei r inter -&#13;
men t at such places na th e relatives'&#13;
aud friend s of th e decease d may desire.&#13;
In orde r to do thi s it i.s necessar y tha t&#13;
th e relative s or friend s of th e dead&#13;
shoul d furnish th e departmen t with.&#13;
th e nam e of thei r decease d relative an d&#13;
where the y want th e body sent for interment&#13;
. __ ,&#13;
Rea r Admira l Iligginson ha s decline&#13;
d th e promotio n offered him by&#13;
th e departmen t oh th e groun d tha t his&#13;
services have no t been of such conspic -&#13;
uou s meri t as to warran t it. Lieut .&#13;
Aaron Ward has also decline d promo -&#13;
tion becaus e he would by acceptin g it&#13;
preven t his classmat e from ever reach -&#13;
ing ilag rank .&#13;
Durin g Wheaton' s engagemen t with&#13;
the Filipino s at Pasig heavy fighting&#13;
was encountere d at all times , yet ho&#13;
succeede d in whippin g 2,000 rebels,&#13;
capture d and now occupie s th e town s&#13;
^f^Patero s an d Pasig an d hold s 500&#13;
insurgent s as prisoners . Th e American&#13;
loss is small. . '&#13;
An orde r ha s been issued by th e war&#13;
departmen t increasin g th e age limit&#13;
for enlistmen t from 30 to 35 years.&#13;
The youngest age at which a ma n can&#13;
be enliste d is 18 years. Th e result s so&#13;
far for enlistmen t of troop s is very encouraging&#13;
.&#13;
After four hour s of har d fightingonr&#13;
soldiers finally capture d Cainti . a welldefende&#13;
d village of 700 inhabitants ,&#13;
but no t unti l 100 rebels ha d been&#13;
killed. Th e America n loss was two&#13;
killed and 13 wounded . ~j&#13;
Eear-Admira l Hiehbor n report s 51&#13;
vessels of variou s types rangin g from&#13;
battleship s to torped o boats , no w in&#13;
proces s of constructio n for additio n t o&#13;
the navy. ^&#13;
Morot hit* Risen Against 8ps»l n.&#13;
Advices by th e steamshi p Victoria&#13;
from th e orient , s&gt;tate tha t Spanis h&#13;
avarice and misrul e have again stirre d&#13;
up a rebellion . Th e insurgen t Moros ,&#13;
of Palawa n island, one of th e insur -&#13;
gent group nort h of Uorneo , murdere d&#13;
the Spanis h governo r of Pajawan , residing&#13;
at Por t Koynlist , nn d killed hi s&#13;
assistants , A churc h an d othe r Span -&#13;
ish building s were burned , after whicli&#13;
th e rebelliou s Moro s retreate d to th e&#13;
hills of Palawan , carrying , with the m&#13;
several men . women an d ehrldren , all&#13;
Spaniards , as prisoners . '-&#13;
Japa n HI » Mtxtor n Nation . ' &gt;&#13;
Extensive change s in t1 )^ relation s&#13;
betwaen th e Unite d State s arid Japa n&#13;
will Ve brough t abou t Jul y 17, when&#13;
th e ne w treat y between th e two nation&#13;
s goes, isto effect. I t wast negotiate&#13;
d some years* ago, &lt;but avtua l oper -&#13;
atio n was deferre d t o g*»© tiro«'## r adjustin&#13;
g affairs t o eha*g«d • conditions .&#13;
Simila r treaties - hat e been mad e by&#13;
Japa n with most of th e othe r first-class&#13;
powers. Thei*'essentia l featwre. U-tt o&#13;
give Japa n a statu s as a moder n ttatkm.&#13;
Th e Presiden t ha s appointe d Herber t&#13;
Putnam , of Boston , Mass., to be librarian&#13;
of congress.&#13;
DICK RODNEY;&#13;
or. The Adventures of&#13;
An Eton Boy,..&#13;
BY JA/WES GRANT.&#13;
i*i&#13;
CHAPTE R XV.&#13;
The Water-Spout .&#13;
As th e sun increase d in heat , not -&#13;
withstandin g th e season of th e year, 1&#13;
was soon sensible of th e comfor t of&#13;
whit e clothing , wteea contraste d with&#13;
dar k woolen or Jwoadcloth , as th e latte&#13;
r absorbs, an d th e forme r repels,&#13;
th e rays of t !» sun.&#13;
Mar c Hislo p illustrate d thi s to me&#13;
by ignitin g pape r with a bu-ning -&#13;
glass; whenever th e focus was brough t&#13;
to bear upo n (lark places, such as&#13;
printe d letters , the y were instantl y&#13;
Qousumed .&#13;
We ra n alon g th e coast of Ilispanlo -&#13;
ta, an d saw th e wavy ridges of its&#13;
•nountain s tha t tower int o th o clouds ;&#13;
we sighted Tortuga , a rocky island covere&#13;
d with palm tree s an d sandalwood ,&#13;
bu t surrounde d by reefs an d shoals;&#13;
and , roundin g Cape St. Nicholas , stood&#13;
t o th e southwar d between th e great island&#13;
s oT Jamaic a an d Cuba , but withou&#13;
t eceln g eithe r of the m a t tha t&#13;
time .&#13;
Fo r thre e days we ha d dar k an d&#13;
«loudy weather .&#13;
About"3'o'cloc k p. m. on th e 24th of&#13;
Januar y a small spock, which appeare d&#13;
t o th e westward on ou r weathe r beam ,&#13;
grew rapidl y int o a gloomy cloud , an d&#13;
swiftly, as if on th e wings of a de-&#13;
*troyin g angel, it traversed th e thick -&#13;
enin g air an d th e agitate d sea, which&#13;
^darkene d beneat h its shadow ; and so&#13;
•thi s speck cam e on, unti l it grew aa&#13;
•awfu l thunder-cloud .&#13;
"Boar a han d fere an d aft! Hurry ,&#13;
TOy lads!—make all snug before th e&#13;
tempes t breaks!" were th e cheerin g order&#13;
s of Weston, Hislo p an d Lambourn o&#13;
a s th e brig was prepare d to encounte r&#13;
m heavy squall.&#13;
Th e rain soon fell in torrents , impedin&#13;
g th e men at thei r wprk_of_clos e&#13;
Trteffng, furTThgHan d stowing away some&#13;
•&gt; f th e heavier canvas, an d in tightl y&#13;
belaying th e runnin g rigging, for when&#13;
loose rope s are flying abou t in a tem -&#13;
*pe«t, an d crackin g In men' s faces like&#13;
coach-whip3 , the y becom e sufficiently&#13;
bewilderin g to imped e th e workin g of&#13;
th e ship.&#13;
Ude r th e lower edge of th e approacli -&#13;
tn g cloud , when abou t twelve miles&#13;
distant , we beheld an object which&#13;
filled us with wonde r an d awe.&#13;
I t was a tremendou s spout , or o l -&#13;
timn , of water, connecte d with th e&#13;
&lt;Hkrad above-an d th e sea—betew&#13;
sea, from which a circula r wind ha d&#13;
cucKe d it upward) , tha t was now visible.&#13;
•'i'lil a colum n was like a solid mass of&#13;
-White breakers , approachin g with In -&#13;
credibl e speed over waves tha t began&#13;
t o rise in shor t and pyramida l peaks.&#13;
Hi8to p was too busy clewing up&#13;
canvas, sendin g yard3 down from&#13;
aloft, belaying and ordering , and so&#13;
lou t a famou s opportunit y for expatiating—&#13;
as no doub t he would have don *&#13;
—on th e theor y of thes e spouts , for&#13;
thi a phenomeno n filled us with th e&#13;
.greatest tlarm , lest It migh t swoop&#13;
down upo n th e Eugenie , dismast an d&#13;
•destro y he r like a child' s to y ship.&#13;
Atoni o el Cubano , being th e most&#13;
powerful an d muscula r ma n on board ,&#13;
w-as ordere d to th e wheel.&#13;
Across th e sea thi s colum n seemed&#13;
t o pass with th e cloud , boiling, foamin g&#13;
imd with th e sound of a might y cascad&#13;
e pourin g int o a deep valley, but&#13;
yet ^maintainin g a positio n quit e perpendicular&#13;
. Aroun d It s base th e waves&#13;
•eeme d in (dreadfu l commotion , rising&#13;
an d f i l i n g, seethin g an d glitterin g in&#13;
the lightnin g which shot at time s from&#13;
th e gloomy bosom of th e cloud tha t&#13;
fliwrteti&lt;averrthem.&#13;
A* thi s terribl e phenomeno n approache&#13;
d from th e westward, Captain .&#13;
Weston conceive d tha t we migh t escap&#13;
e it s influenc e by alterin g th e brig's&#13;
course , an d so passing it, I have&#13;
hear d nrf water-spout s being dissipate d&#13;
t&gt;y th e effect of theavily shotte d guns,&#13;
bu t we toad no -such appliances—a t&#13;
least we 3iad no shot on board .&#13;
Th e breeze, whioh was blowing fresh&#13;
an d had t»ot as yet becom e a gale (to&#13;
(ti8 a t leaat) , veered northwesterly ; so&#13;
we shoo k th e reefs ©ut of ou r topsail s&#13;
en d trimme d -shar p toy th o wind.&#13;
; "Luff, luff—keep yewr luff—keep he r&#13;
to," were the Incessant orders of Western,'&#13;
and' the Eugenie flew through the&#13;
water' like a raoe home; held by the&#13;
powerful hand* of Antonio, ghe never&#13;
yawed an Inch, and by especial Providence&#13;
fhe got. to the windward of that&#13;
dreadful phenomenon, which passed&#13;
lit, oloud and all, about S!K mfles&#13;
astern, when, a* it changed color from&#13;
artyUh greon to white, it presented a&#13;
ac«n* so. sublime and terrible that&#13;
"the, boM*«t held big breath for a&#13;
time;1 and Antonio, who was blanched&#13;
white with terror, though he had frequently&#13;
seen such spouts as these In&#13;
Ilia native seas, assured me, with chattering&#13;
teeth, that he had never befc&#13;
«ld one of such magnitude, and, it&#13;
was long before he could be certai n of&#13;
our safety, an d ceased to mutter :&#13;
"0 mal a ventura—mal a ventura! "&#13;
(literally , bad luck.)&#13;
Fro m white th o water-spou t becam e&#13;
dusky purple , when a gleam of th e sun&#13;
fell on ! ^ an d th e waves at its base&#13;
glittere d in all th e color s of th e rain -&#13;
bow.&#13;
"Than k heaven ! tha t is past, " said&#13;
Weston.&#13;
"Ay, sir,** said old Roberts , th e man -&#13;
o'-war' g man ; "it is enoug n to mak e&#13;
one' 3 ha'. r stan d on end for a week."&#13;
"Ha d tve been, twent y minutes ' sail&#13;
asten) , rre could no t have escaped it!"&#13;
said Hislop ; "but we have handle d th e&#13;
brig beautifully . Tha t ugly Spaniar d&#13;
at th e wheel was wortt i his weight in&#13;
gold jtist now!"&#13;
Fo r nearl y an hou r th e sea was&#13;
greatly agitated ; but as th e Eugenie ,&#13;
still brace d shar p to th e wind, fi&gt;w&#13;
from on e long roller to another , we&#13;
rapidl y got int o smoot h water. Th e&#13;
baromete r rose quickly; th e vapors dispersed&#13;
; an d when th e settin g sun gave&#13;
us a partin g smile from th e far hori -&#13;
zon th o storm-clou d an d its water-spou t&#13;
had disappeare d togethe r or melte d&#13;
away in th e distan t sea.&#13;
Th e little eddie s of wind which oa&#13;
a fine summe r mornin g may be seen&#13;
whirlin g up th e dust an d dry leaves&#13;
in circles on a road ar e exactly on th e&#13;
same principl e as thos e might y phe -&#13;
nomen a which becom e tornadoes , cyclones&#13;
, an d water-spout s when tho y&#13;
reac h th e ocean , where they may easily&#13;
dismast an d perhap s sink th e largest&#13;
line-of-battl e ship.&#13;
'Thes e spout s rise from th e sea exactl&#13;
y like th e movin g pillars of sand&#13;
which th e whirlwind s sweep from th e&#13;
hot an d arid desert s of Africa an d&#13;
ATabia. '&#13;
About six bellsTT&#13;
6'c!ock"p7"mT&#13;
thi s escape was follcwed by a dead&#13;
calm , which lasted till midnight , an d&#13;
durin g tha t tim e we. talked of nothin g&#13;
tout th e skill with which we had got&#13;
th o weathergag e of tha t colum n of&#13;
foam. As th e sun set, with a, rapidit y&#13;
peculia r to these latitudes , th e bril-&#13;
Itan t tint s he shed on sea an a sKy&#13;
change d with equa l speed from golc*.&#13;
to saffron, from tha t to vivid purple ,&#13;
and from them e to th e hu e of saplihire&#13;
.&#13;
The sensO-tio n of v*aellness which&#13;
th e departur e of th o bun-e-are&amp;eg-ia-th e&#13;
breast of a landsma n at sea Is peculiar&#13;
; but thi s was soon change d from&#13;
min e h? th e splendo r of th e rising&#13;
moon , which change d th e sapphir e&#13;
tint s of sea an d sky w liquid silver&#13;
an d th e clearest blue.&#13;
Above, no cloud no r even th e tinies t&#13;
shred of vapor was visible. Sea bi-*adec&#13;
n*th sky at th e horizon , an d seemed&#13;
to m«r:t int o each other , so tha t no line&#13;
was traceable . Save a plane t or two,&#13;
twinklin g with less light tha n usual,&#13;
ther e seemed to be n c star s in heaven ,&#13;
for th e glui/ of th o full-orbe d moo n&#13;
eclipsed the m all; hev !t?ht fell bright -&#13;
ly on th e white sails jf th e Eugenie ,&#13;
ami in It th e feature s of ou r faces were&#13;
distinc t as at noonday , an d now it&#13;
was the. noo n of night .&#13;
About 12 o'cloc k a fresh breeze&#13;
spran g \\j t an d th e ship' s course was&#13;
resumed .&#13;
"By .keepin g th e weathergage , an d&#13;
beyont i th e circle of th e spout' s attrac -&#13;
tion , we escape s withou t shippin g a&#13;
dro p of water!" said Weston, for th e&#13;
tweirtlet h time . "Let me see how you&#13;
ente r all thi s in thv. log, Hislop. "&#13;
"Iiiism o uncommo n thin g for a craft&#13;
at sea :to be deluged by a spout of&#13;
fresh water, which th e whirlwind ha s&#13;
tor n *up 'from an Inlan d lake, " said&#13;
Hislop ; "and houses , far in-shore , have&#13;
in th e same fashion been deluged by&#13;
salt water absorbe d from th e sea—and&#13;
henc e th e showers of dried herrings ,&#13;
of wklefe &gt;we have hear d so muc h a t&#13;
timts . Now , Rodney , you will perhap s&#13;
be atrprter t when I tell you tha t it is&#13;
th e wiads •jfoic h produc e a calm like&#13;
that we hmm had tonight."&#13;
"The wtefc!" I reiterated, surprised&#13;
at such a paradox from our theorist.&#13;
"Yea. The opposition of the winds&#13;
will at times produce a perfect calm,&#13;
and then wtoen rain falls it is always&#13;
gentle and suable; but when clouds&#13;
teem to move against the lower winds,&#13;
or whem streams of air denote a variety&#13;
of the aerial current, and conseqoeatly&#13;
the approach of rain—"&#13;
??Wa*t strange sound is that ahead,&#13;
or, at l«*ft, forward?" said Weston, intefrvptlat;&#13;
Hislop, who would perhaps&#13;
hatt theorired tor an hour.&#13;
"It Is Antonio, groaning in his sleep&#13;
la t№Jftreca*tle/ ' said Ned Cariton,&#13;
who we* at the wheel.&#13;
"1 w1s% the ship were rid of him and&#13;
hie dreaflfes," added Hislop, testily.&#13;
"Well. *» I WM saying, when the advme-&#13;
awremeota of the clouds seem&#13;
to&#13;
I "Light ahead! " cried a voice from&#13;
th e bow.&#13;
"Is tha t you, Roberts? " asked Weston&#13;
, while Hislo p stampe d with vexation&#13;
a t th e secon d interruption .&#13;
•'Yes , sir."&#13;
"Ho w does It bear? "&#13;
••East-north-east. "&#13;
"The n it is Cape St. Antoni o light.&#13;
th e most western poin t of Cuba, " said&#13;
Weston. "I though t 1 coul d smell th e&#13;
lan d with th e first cat' s paw, before th e&#13;
breeze freshened. "&#13;
Th e light, dim an d distant , like a&#13;
star, was now seen to twinkle amon g&#13;
th e waves a t th e horizon .&#13;
Fo r mor e tha n an hou r I remaine d on&#13;
deck, with my eyes fixed upo n tha t&#13;
feeble bu t increasin g beacon , which indicate&#13;
d a foreign shore ; the n I went&#13;
below an d turne d in, with a sigh of&#13;
pleasur e tha t th e voyage was nearl y&#13;
over, an d a hope tha t when I tra -&#13;
versed thos e waves again I should be&#13;
en my retur n home—hom e t o my&#13;
fathe r an d mother , to Sybil a a i Dc*—&#13;
to th e old rectory , with its shad y ca k&#13;
grove, its green lawn an d th e masses&#13;
of ivy, woodbin e an d honeysuckl e tha t&#13;
shade d its time-wor n walls.&#13;
CHAPTE R XVI.&#13;
Cuba .&#13;
When day dawned we ha d rounde d&#13;
Caybo San Antonio , an d were runnin g&#13;
alon g th e norther n shor e of Cuba .&#13;
I was up early, by eight bells, or a&#13;
little after 4 a. m., an d with deep interes&#13;
t I surveyed th e coast of tha t&#13;
beautifu l island, th e first an d no w th e&#13;
last portio n of tha t vast empir e beyond&#13;
th e seas which Columbu s bequeathe&#13;
d to Castil e an d Leon .&#13;
"Da t is my country , senor, " said Antonio&#13;
, who was at th e wheel, an d thi 3&#13;
remark , with th e repulsive aspect of&#13;
th e Spaniar d an d his mysteriou s char -&#13;
acter , served to dissipat e by momen -&#13;
tar y enthusiasm .&#13;
"Tha t is Caybo Buen a Vista—and&#13;
th e breaker s on th e weather-bow, " he&#13;
continued ; "'mar k th e Collorados , a&#13;
lon g reef of rocks. Th e blue shark s&#13;
are as thic k ther e as th e star s in th e&#13;
sky." % We were no w in th e Gul f of Flor -&#13;
ida.&#13;
The sky was cloudles s an d blue, and&#13;
now it seemed as if th e welkin above&#13;
and th e almos t wavelets sea below&#13;
were endeavorin g to outvie each othe r&#13;
4n^calmness , 4n-beautyandinthe_gior/ _&#13;
of thei r azur e depths . Th e wind was&#13;
off th e land an d rathe r ahead , but th e&#13;
sails were trimme d to perfection , an d&#13;
we ra a throug h th e gulf on a tau t bowline.&#13;
I have so muc h mor e to narrat e tha n&#13;
my limite d space permit s me to give in&#13;
full detai l tha t I mus t compres s int o&#13;
on&lt;» chaptet r all tha t relate s t o my&#13;
visit to Matanzas .&#13;
Our ru n throug h th e gulf was delightful,&#13;
an d on th e 29th of January ,&#13;
just as a rosy tin t was stealin g over&#13;
th®. Eea and th e rocky shor e of Cuba ,&#13;
aftor th e sun had set beyond th e water&#13;
* of th e Gul f of Mexico , we saw Ha -&#13;
vana light, bearin g sout h by west, an d&#13;
distan t abou t fourtee n miles. So we&#13;
passed in th e night th e wealth y capital&#13;
of Cuba , so famed in th e annal s of&#13;
our victories—La Habana , or th e har -&#13;
bor—of which, from ou r being so far to&#13;
seaward, we could see nothin g but th e&#13;
th e great revolving light wnich burn s&#13;
so brightl y o:« th e high rvelc of th e&#13;
Morro , or Castell o de los Santo s&#13;
Reyes; an d before dawn we descried&#13;
th e light of Sant a Cru z on ou r waterbow.&#13;
Weston drew my attentio n to it, add -&#13;
ing, "Tha t is th e beaco n which so&#13;
scared me when it shon e throug h thf*&#13;
stern windows of th o empt y polaee a&#13;
brig."&#13;
Nex t day, after encounterin g a hea d&#13;
wind, against which we tacke d frequentl&#13;
y between th e Pa n de Matanza s&#13;
an a th e wooded poin t of Sumberella ,&#13;
at 10 o'cloc k In th e mornin g a Span -&#13;
ish mulatt o pilot cam e on board an d&#13;
too k th e brig in charge .&#13;
We ra n safely int o th e harbor , an d&#13;
by 11 o'cloc k cam e to ancho r at a place&#13;
recommende d by Antonio , half a cable's&#13;
length from th e castle of St. Severlno&#13;
. In half an hou r after th e sails&#13;
were all unben t an d stowed below, an d&#13;
preparation s were mad e for "breakin g&#13;
bulk"—to unloa d th e vessel, whose cargo,&#13;
I have state d consiste d of steam&#13;
machiner y and coals, for th e sugar and&#13;
coffee mills.&#13;
Gang s of Spanis h mulattoes , negro&#13;
porter s ar&gt;d jumpers , In red shirt s an d&#13;
wfcUs drawers, with broa d straw hats ,&#13;
and nearl y all with rings in thei r ear3,&#13;
cam e on board In quest of employment ,&#13;
an d the n all was confusion , garlic,&#13;
dirt , jabberin g in Spanis h an d Congo ,&#13;
singing, swearing an d smokin g cigar-&#13;
Itos .&#13;
I was now at libert y t o go ashore ,&#13;
and after th e first bustle was over&#13;
Weston left Hislo p in charg e of th e&#13;
brig and accompanied me. Matanzas&#13;
presented nothing new to him, but I&#13;
surveyed with interest, not unmixed&#13;
with wonder, the new world In which t&#13;
found myself.&#13;
The city of Don Carlos de Matanzas&#13;
occupies a gentle eminence between&#13;
the Rivers San Juan and Yumuri,whlch&#13;
roll into the bay from the mountain.&#13;
ou» ridge that traverses all Cuba. Its&#13;
name, Matansas, signifies the place of&#13;
murder, because In that bay some of&#13;
the Spaniards of Columbus were stain&#13;
by tfce native Indians.&#13;
(To bt continued.) &gt;~&#13;
CTAT E LEGISLATURE .&#13;
Th e Atkinson bill is no w read y Aa&#13;
go down on th e statut e books, Uov.&#13;
Pingre e havin g signed it.&#13;
Th e following big batc h of appoint -&#13;
men t were mad e by th e governo r immediatel&#13;
y after he signed th e Atkinson&#13;
bill: Member s of th e boar d of asbe&amp;&#13;
sors unde r th e Atkinson bill—Col.&#13;
Edwin M. Irish , of Kalamazoo ; Geo .&#13;
H. Horton , of Frui t Ridge, Len a wee&#13;
county , an d Rober t Oakraan , of De -&#13;
troit . H. T. Harvey , of liattl c Creek ,&#13;
Calhou n county , membe r of th e stat e&#13;
boar d of examiner s in dentistry , for&#13;
th e ter m of thre e years from an d after&#13;
Jan . 1, 181)'.). Josep h L. Cox, of Battl e&#13;
Creek , Calhou n county , commissione r&#13;
of labor , for th e ter m of two years&#13;
from an d after Marc h 1, ltOO. Cale b&#13;
D. Randall , of Coldwater , Branc h&#13;
county , membe r of th e boar d of con -&#13;
tro l of th e stat e publi c school , for th e&#13;
ter m of six years from an d after Jan. -&#13;
1. 1899. E. O. Grosvenor , of Monroe ,&#13;
Monro e county , oft ice of dair y an d food&#13;
commissione r for th e ter m of two 3'ears&#13;
from an d after Jan . 1. ISO'J. Milo D.&#13;
Campbell , of Coldwater , Uranc h&#13;
county , to th e office of commissione r of&#13;
insurance , for th e ter m of two years&#13;
from and after Jul y I, 1S00. Chas e S.&#13;
Osborn , of Sault Ste. Marie , Chippew a&#13;
county , commissione r of railroads , for&#13;
th e ter m of two years on an d after Jan .&#13;
1, 181)9. Jabe z C. Cu.swell, of Ha y City,&#13;
Bay county , to th e otlice of stat e salt&#13;
inspecto r for th e ter m of two years&#13;
from an d after Jan . "JG, 1S9(J. Amos S.&#13;
Mussel man , of Gran d Rapids , Ken t&#13;
county , membe r of th e boar d of con -&#13;
tro l of th e stat e hous e of correctio n&#13;
and reformatory , for th e ter m of six&#13;
years from an d after Feb . 15, 1899.&#13;
•Wir t P. Doty , of Detroit , Wayne,&#13;
county , membe r of th e Michiga n&#13;
boar d of pharmacy , for th e ter m of five&#13;
years from an d after Dee . 31, 1893.&#13;
Samue l N. Biekerstaff, of Kalamazoo ,&#13;
Kalamazs o county , membe r of th e&#13;
boar d of trustee s of Michiga n asylum&#13;
for insane , for th e ter m of six years&#13;
from and after th e secon d Tuesda y of&#13;
February . 1S9'J. Charle s F. Backus, of&#13;
Detroit , Wayne county , membe r of th e&#13;
boar d of trustee s of th e Norther n&#13;
Michiga n asylum for insane , for th e&#13;
ter m of six years from and after Jan .&#13;
1. 1809. Win. Judscn' , of Ann Arbor,&#13;
Wash ten aw county , to th e office of&#13;
stat e oil inspector , to tak e effect at th e&#13;
exoiratio n of th e ter m of T. R. Smith .&#13;
Gran t M. Morse , Ionia , to tlie ottic e of&#13;
stat e pain c and fish warden to succee d&#13;
Chas e S. O.sboin , when th e latte r become&#13;
s railroa d commissioner .&#13;
Th e committe e on educatio n will&#13;
tak e a junke t to th e uppe r peninsul a&#13;
to look a t norma l schoo l sites. Th e&#13;
committe e who will thu s be wined an d&#13;
dine d an d generall y feted an d jollied&#13;
from one en d of th e uppe r peninsul a&#13;
to th e othe r ur e Shisler, -Whitnej' ,&#13;
Scully, Hal l and Waterbury . Th e senat&#13;
e committe e on educatio n or norma l&#13;
school s or bot h may go too .&#13;
Rep. McLeod' s til l requiring 1 all&#13;
electri c stree t railwaj's in th e stat e to&#13;
equi p thei r car s with air brake s was&#13;
sent back to th e labor committe e to&#13;
preven t it from being1 killed by socalled&#13;
unfairness .&#13;
Th e governor s appointment s of&#13;
Robt . Oak-ma n an d Col. E. M. Iris h&#13;
were rejecte d by th e senat e in executive&#13;
session. Th e vote by which Oakman&#13;
was turne d down was 20 to '-;&#13;
Irish , 24 to 4.&#13;
Rep. (Justin' s fish bill, repealin g th e&#13;
closed season Jaw which was passed&#13;
two years ago, went throug h th e hous e&#13;
with flying colors . Tlie vote for th e&#13;
open season in th e great lakes stood&#13;
74 to 15.&#13;
Th e bill for an additiona l circui t&#13;
judge in Wayne count y was knocke d&#13;
out in th e senat e by a vote of 14 to 10.&#13;
I*ep. Colby's bill for an additiona l&#13;
circui t judge in Wayne count y passed&#13;
th e hous e by a vote of 64 to IS.&#13;
A mob of maske d men storme d th e&#13;
littl e hous e doin g service as a jail a t&#13;
Palmetto , Ga. , nn d shot nin e negroes .&#13;
Fou r were killed outright , an d th e&#13;
othe r five were seriously wounded .&#13;
The negroe s were held for th e burnin g&#13;
of th e town , thre e fires sinoo .Tan . 1&#13;
havin g nearl y completel y destroye d it,&#13;
TH E MARKETS .&#13;
LIVE STOCK .&#13;
New York— Cattl e Sheep Lambs Hogs&#13;
fiesi craitc s .?; tfi&gt; Ji5 7» t i T« *i nO 11 25&#13;
Lower crude s • 40&lt;£4 -tJ 3 5.) j 3J 4 IJ&#13;
" Out of Sight&#13;
Out of&#13;
In other months %Dt forget&#13;
the harsh winds of Spring-1&#13;
*But they have their use, as&#13;
some say, to blow out ihc\&#13;
bad air accumulated after.&#13;
Winter storms and Spring'&#13;
thaws. There is far more&#13;
important accumulation of,&#13;
badness in the veins and ar-]&#13;
teries of humanity, which&#13;
needs Hood's Sarsaparilla. 1&#13;
This great Spring Medicine clarifies&#13;
the blood as nothing else can. Ii core*&#13;
scrofula, kidnev disease, liver troubles,&#13;
rheumatism and kindred ailmenta. Thn»&#13;
it gives perfect health, strength and a p -&#13;
petite for months to come. ;&#13;
Kidneys - " M J kidneys troubled me*&#13;
and on advice took Hood's Sarsaparills&#13;
which gave prompt relief, better appetite.&#13;
My sleep is refreshing. It cored my wife&#13;
! also." MICHAEL BOYLZ, 3173 Denny Street,&#13;
Pittsburg. Pa.&#13;
D y s p e p s i a - " C o m p l i c a t e d with Jlrer&#13;
and kidney trouble, I suffered for year*&#13;
with dyspepsia, with severe pains. Hood's&#13;
Sarsapariiia made me strong; and hearty.1*&#13;
J. B. EMERTON, Main Street, Auburn, Me. I&#13;
Hip Disease—" *•}•© running sores o n&#13;
my hip caused me to use crutches. Wa»&#13;
confined to bed every winter. Hood's S«rsapariJla&#13;
saved mj life, as it cared me perfectly.&#13;
Am strong and w*!L" ABJ»I*&#13;
HOBEET. 40 Fourth StM Fall Bitsr. Mass.&#13;
Hood* PHI* core HTW IU», th» ao^trrtftfMg mmMi&#13;
the only cathartic to tmfc* »ltb B«*d*» Strnpurtlk.&#13;
Give the right man wings and he will&#13;
known what to do with them. '&#13;
There Is a Clan of People&#13;
Who are injured by the us© of ooffee.L,&#13;
Recently there has been placed in nil&#13;
the grocery stores a nevr preparation&#13;
called GRAIN-O, made of pare grainey&#13;
that takes the place of coffee, Themcw^&#13;
delicate stomach receives it witbonfc&#13;
distress, and bnt few can tell it fpow&gt;-&#13;
coffee. It does not cost over one-fonrtl*&#13;
as much. Children may drink it witl*&#13;
great benefit. IS cents and 25 ceotHper&#13;
package. Try it. AsJc forGKAlN-CL,&#13;
Ten thousand demons gnawing i w i y&#13;
at one's vitals couldn't be^ nfuch worse'&#13;
than the tortures of itching piles. YeV&#13;
there's a cure. Doan's Ointment nevcar&#13;
fails. j&#13;
It's all work and no piay&#13;
who pumps the organ.&#13;
the&#13;
MRS. COOPER.&#13;
The Host ram ova gcmljitrw l&#13;
World, Entirely Cored fcy Pe-rm&#13;
Mrs. If. C. Cooper of the Royal&#13;
emy of Arts, London, England, is&#13;
doubtedly one of the greatest&#13;
sculptora. She hat modeled busts «f&#13;
half the nobility of Engl&amp;od, and *t&#13;
now in Washington making busts os?&#13;
distinguished Americans. Mrs. Cooper&#13;
has just completed a host of Mrs. BeJva&#13;
Lock wood, which is now l a te&#13;
Hesi t r a d e s "&gt; SVH'i&#13;
Lower grades..:* hj^4&#13;
Detroit —&#13;
n e s t g r a d e s . . . . 3 rsfftl&#13;
Lower grades, i otX&amp;J&#13;
Buffalo —&#13;
Hc*lgrades 4 iWfti&#13;
Lower grades 3 ij»^4&#13;
Cleveland —&#13;
B e s t s h a d e s .'4 R&gt;^»&#13;
Lower KT&lt;"Jd&lt;?s..3 VJ&amp;I&#13;
nnrlnnttl—&#13;
Best grades .4 .V^5&#13;
Lower grades..? 5Jj,4&#13;
tMttsbnrg—&#13;
Bestprades ..5 4"MM&#13;
Lower grades.."J *t&amp;.\&#13;
91 4 81&#13;
9&gt; 4 JO&#13;
V. 4 VI&#13;
7&gt; 3 7:&gt;&#13;
40 4 «&gt;&#13;
00 3 U&gt;&#13;
8"» 4 11&#13;
0J S 1&gt;&#13;
SI 4 M&#13;
35 H 6J&#13;
to 4 75&#13;
tJ 4 6)&#13;
URAIN, ETC.&#13;
Wheat.&#13;
No t red&#13;
New York 8248;*f&#13;
CMWMTO 70^70*&#13;
'Detroit 7jft72tt&#13;
Toledo 7237 'M&#13;
Claelaaatl 73 J 7.1*&#13;
Cleveland 73»7J&#13;
Plttabarg ?4&amp;74Vt&#13;
Buffalo 7i3?3&lt;4&#13;
•DetroU-Hay. No. 1&#13;
Potatoes. *c per bu.&#13;
Corn.&#13;
No. t mix&#13;
S7 147)&#13;
tltnothr. 1&#13;
•V&#13;
4&#13;
,S&#13;
4&#13;
ft&#13;
4&#13;
5&#13;
4&#13;
h&#13;
4&#13;
ft&#13;
4&#13;
?r&gt; 23&#13;
IS&#13;
bJ&#13;
SO&#13;
00&#13;
00&#13;
3"t&#13;
5)&#13;
50&#13;
2b&#13;
3 So&#13;
3 J U&#13;
4 00&#13;
3 I&gt;J&#13;
1 0 )&#13;
S 3o&#13;
S 9'»&#13;
S 0&gt;&#13;
4 "ft&#13;
3 9&gt;&#13;
Oat*.&#13;
No. * while&#13;
ii&#13;
»&#13;
i&#13;
i&#13;
II&#13;
Live Poultry&#13;
chlchen«9Mcperlb fowla.gyte: dtcfc*. He EjrjjH, atrktly fresh.&#13;
liutter, beat dairy. Ik&#13;
86'&#13;
S2im&#13;
s&lt;&lt;&#13;
SK&#13;
S3,&#13;
per&#13;
tarker» l«c per&#13;
: per lbi creamery&#13;
IX&#13;
№ 7 *&#13;
J3- *&#13;
»ttf*&#13;
&gt;3I*&#13;
IJ I&#13;
| M «&#13;
l««&#13;
ton.&#13;
rln *&#13;
lie;&#13;
d o c&#13;
,tl c&#13;
Mrs . 11. C Cooper .&#13;
Corcora n Art Gallery . Raskin ,&#13;
great artist.place d Mrs . Coope r aa&#13;
of th e greatest sculptor s an d paiirtcr y&#13;
of thi s century . Mrs . Coope r Is a n Arden&#13;
t friend of Pe-ro-n * an d in a le*t*x&#13;
date d Januar y 24, writte n from&#13;
ington , says t h e following: " I&#13;
pleasur e in recommendin g Fe- i&#13;
for catarr h an d 1&amp; grippe. I have&#13;
fered for month s an d after th e&#13;
on e bottl e of Pe-ru-n a&#13;
well."—Mrs, M. C. Cooper .&#13;
Send for a free book on catarr h&#13;
title d kkIIealU&gt;an d Beauty. " Thi s&#13;
is writte n especiall y for women ,&#13;
will be fonn d Uf be, of {Treat •alp © t o&#13;
every woman . ' Address pr. H t&#13;
Columbus , O.&#13;
A dee p thinke r is ap t te&gt; incUtlg e&#13;
vestibule trai n of thoofrbt .&#13;
AMOWO run M V K UI AMI&#13;
RHEUMATISM&#13;
MfhtealstiM * St. Jacobs Oil&#13;
• * * •&#13;
-.1 «• &lt;&#13;
ft.'A&#13;
0&#13;
(•V •&#13;
• - - . » v - I&#13;
1&#13;
1&#13;
Aft; .&#13;
' ' &amp; ' •&#13;
'"•jr&#13;
• i&#13;
• * •&#13;
•.-.• i .&#13;
- 1 . ! * ( •&#13;
' • • ' \ - ' ! ' . '&#13;
i 1 ••:.&#13;
' ' : . : • &gt; '&#13;
•iv&#13;
.-•At&#13;
gbuhttq&#13;
F. L. ANOREWS EDITOR.&#13;
THURSDAY, MAR. 23, 1899.&#13;
FROM CUBA&#13;
PLACET AS. PROVINCE OF&#13;
Cubans in the midst of a trove&#13;
of cocoanut trees and as there&#13;
was no water nor wood anywhere&#13;
we were very much discounged,&#13;
little and am taking lessons of an A Political Scheme and an&#13;
American who has been here six&#13;
years. He organized a class in&#13;
the compam and we are getting ' A&#13;
One fur the State.&#13;
U on foot in&#13;
but they soon sent us a good along nicely, and claim a person ial»ture to create in this state&#13;
supply of both and in a few days - 1 ' - • - - - "»« »««•— • »- i««_ l»m t i a « °™e where all the&#13;
another company arrived nnd 1Hthe&#13;
L«Ka&#13;
state&#13;
snail be done instead of by&#13;
ter on another until&#13;
r e g i m e n t W H S w i t h&#13;
the whole&#13;
us in the&#13;
who tries, can master the language&#13;
inside of six or eight weeks.&#13;
What we mias most is our&#13;
mail. The service is very crude iu.jt^iakr it to a vote throughout the&#13;
contract a&amp; at. the present time. 01&#13;
court** that cannot be done without&#13;
Mar. 1, 1899.&#13;
Friend Bob:—&#13;
Your letter dated Feb.&#13;
20th reached me today. Of&#13;
course you read in the papers the&#13;
account of our stormy voyage.&#13;
most dreary and forsaken place I and we go two or three days »it a s t a t e an&lt;j w e ^ n o t |) H |je Y H that&#13;
ever saw in my life, with great time without receiving a letter, i«nth of the farmers, or others, would&#13;
palm trees giving it uufamilar then suddenly four or five sacks ever vote for such a change when the*&#13;
oniiH undnrHtand that it I* not only a&#13;
political scheme but would prove ah&#13;
p gg&#13;
S A N T A C L A U A , CUBA. ! b a c k - g r o u n d , t h e a i r filled with '&lt;&gt;f " m i l come.-?, some of t h e mail&#13;
counties uumbers of buzzards, being two weeks on the way.&#13;
of how few of your i I presume I would have 8L&gt;t expensive luxury as has already been&#13;
own people are about you, and here and wrote the balance of the the states which have tried&#13;
how cut off they ar,, how depend- night if -taps" had not Bounded, l ^ { ^ ^ ^ ^ ^&#13;
ent upon one another. The finest you know that means Wights u U t i o n o f 1Jiljhii?ai|f o w n b a n d o p e r&#13;
pluce I ever saw to give a man a out," so I must closn. Well Jiob, a t e s i t s prjntiu&gt;r otfice a t a cost ot&#13;
o p e r .&#13;
y y g&#13;
Landing at Centifugas, a quaint' goo \ dose of hoim• hicknewi and I wish you could, seo the nighta $150,000 * pur year—three times&#13;
Spanish town of about 12,000 in-jtho blues was there mid I was' we have here. They are so much as Michigan pays for similar&#13;
habitants, narrow, filthy streets not sorry when on last Saturday,, light, dry, and so cool that.one services. This shows the difference&#13;
houses, low shacks with tile roofs; Feb. 20th., a rush order was re-&#13;
DO windows, merely holes with&#13;
bars across them. The Cubans&#13;
lazy dirty specimen of the human regiment, this time for good, and&#13;
race, and will steal anything that assigning us tor duty at Placetas. fold*1&#13;
to go to bed, but set up and between a political niachine and the&#13;
ceived from Gen. Bates again de-| enjoy it.&#13;
tatching our company from the'Adchess&#13;
has two eudb to it and we hnve to We got ewny from the regiment&#13;
Write when convenient,&#13;
llyiG&gt; ««'•« of Co. A&#13;
FRED.&#13;
hld*'&#13;
of the contract on competitive&#13;
be constantly on tlie watch to pre- ns soon ns possible, back over the.&#13;
vent them frem carrying off trnil to Eodrigo taking '^5 wagon&#13;
ligan. U. S. A. "In tho *a ^nnsyavania the state printing&#13;
is don* by the state superintendent of&#13;
printing, and costs, according to bis&#13;
Ja&gt;L annual report, about $223,000 per&#13;
year, in Alidiigan, under tbe con-&#13;
Two of the teachers of chemis- tract system, the stat.e printing costs&#13;
everything in the camp. AVhen loads of rations, tents, nramuni- try in the University have just about $50,000 per year.&#13;
we landed at Centihigas we tiou, clothing and iu fact every been called away by better sula- Iu the event of the state owning its&#13;
found the town filled with Spanish thing we will need for the next ries paid in industrial ohemistry own printing office, the union would&#13;
soldiers who just cuiue in from GO days. AVe again put in two One was H. E. Brown, B. S.'OG* sui'-'y dictate the waflres paid the men&#13;
the interior to embark for home. • days of misery getting 07 miles assistant instructor in the chenii- «»U'l«&gt;y*H. »nd no one doubts that the&#13;
There were five tnnif-ports in the lover a narrow gauge even worse c&amp;\ laboratory for the last three weekly scale would not b&lt;&#13;
i i r ii i ,i ,i i e vears who lias taken t h e olace of $-0 for ei^ht hours work&#13;
harbor waiting lor them to come . than the one we were on before. J™1*: " IIU M"H llthtMJ... , . *JI , tJI . . . . , „ .&#13;
, , „„ , , I _ . . . , chemists for the Michigan Ce- as is now paid in the government ofaboard.&#13;
lliey were a clean, neat , But anything in prefer, nee to m e n t C o m p a n y &gt; manufactures of ft*, at Washington. Farmers, how&#13;
lot of fellows and u.ed us h k e A m a n . We found this place a Portland cement. He will b« m a n y of yo. make half this sum «ach&#13;
gentlemen, being far ahead of the oniot little burg of about K'OO in- with Dr. Garlach, the chief cheni- w ^ k foi. wort&lt;jn,y IQ a n j 15 []ours p e r Cubans in every respect. O u r habitants, mostly Si&gt;«iiin?&lt;ls who ist, at the C o k W t e r works, for&#13;
"• •'' - * ' f h e w i l l . , , .&#13;
at ^ • u t l l (&#13;
Was tbe result ot I)is splendid health.&#13;
Indomitable will and tremendous&#13;
energy are not lound where stoinaob,&#13;
liver, kidoeyti and bo we. la are out ,of&#13;
order. If ^ou want these qualities&#13;
and the success they brin»r, use Dr.&#13;
Kind's-New Lite Pills. rJ^i«y develop&#13;
every power of brain and f Only&#13;
25o a t F. A. r's dvnj/&#13;
Railroad Guide.&#13;
ttraud Trunk Kallwar System.&#13;
Time Table in effert, Ktbrimry fl, 1899. ,&#13;
M, A. L. DIVISION WKS1 HOUND.&#13;
No, 2? Passenger, Pontluc to Jackson&#13;
oonuoctlon f roui Detroit 0 44 a&#13;
No. 43 Mixed. Lenox to Jucknun&#13;
cuunecliiiti truin Detroit 4 45 p m&#13;
All trains dally except Sunday.&#13;
No. SO&#13;
EASTiOUND.&#13;
to Pontiac and' Detroit 5 11 p&#13;
No. 44 Mixed *o Pontiac and Lenox 7 55 a ta&#13;
less than&#13;
tbe same&#13;
the Cu-&#13;
"n v v l n e cy.&#13;
ii(^_long_ R m i&#13;
every&#13;
itifn^a^ wne rl'ort nrd ( r.sk for protecion from&#13;
sweet. We went into ennip, in ans who don't seem to !&#13;
our_ shelter tentn, on the Plazaop- 'Waris .over. We w_eiv imt_ long B m ] s \ «iden ts&#13;
polite the Palace.' Here the first • in getting unloaded and getting Brown could&#13;
night we were serenaded by a our camp settled. We were the&#13;
Spanish band. In return our first American troops tliis town&#13;
band played a number of Ameri-. had seen and you s-lmnld have&#13;
day du. i n - y o u r b u s y season?&#13;
^ t i c a e v . , ^ far . n . o B h&#13;
University both teachers&#13;
The&#13;
is&#13;
regret that&#13;
not remain.&#13;
tPMclier w h o h a s ^&#13;
W. A. Nivling,Ph. C. '07,&#13;
tant instructor in qualitative&#13;
He goes as chemist, for&#13;
ean nirs and as per custom fiu-, heard them "jnbbcr." We have the Sicux Starch Works, in Iowa,&#13;
ished the concert by playing "My been in the field so long we dont having been for some titito eu-&#13;
M'icTiigan." Of course this was i mind moving, and in two hours we&#13;
greeted with cheers Bud yells were nicely Fettled and had a hot&#13;
from our men but the Spaniards meal for the men. Our cninp in a&#13;
mistook the piecp for nnr "Na-' beautiful prove oi n ( nf&#13;
to take the position as&#13;
soon ns the works should commence&#13;
operation.&#13;
tional Air" and immediately un- smooth, level ground tud water&#13;
covered their heads and stood handy for the first time since we&#13;
quiet at which we were very much landed on the island. 1 his place&#13;
amused. The people did everything&#13;
they could for us to show&#13;
how glad they were we came, but&#13;
it was amusing to see them at our&#13;
camp as neither could understand&#13;
the other. What talking we did&#13;
was done by "high signs."&#13;
After a stay of about a week at&#13;
is all right; clean, neat and&#13;
healthy in vast contrast to filthy&#13;
Kecp« Folk* Well.&#13;
It is lii'tt«»r to keep well than to /&#13;
well, althoui/h wb*»n one is sick it&#13;
desir8hle to ^ e t well, When we con&#13;
is&#13;
to come to a vote, WH hope every m a n&#13;
will put a black eye on tbe scheme by&#13;
voting N O .&#13;
The Farm J o u r n a l has nearly two&#13;
million readers each issue; it is puttiny&#13;
j n a new press that will print 200&#13;
copies H m i n u t r ; it is fhe best farm&#13;
pajter in America, and i t pleases the&#13;
women folio nil to pieces. We have&#13;
j mad °a special a r r a n g e m e n t by which&#13;
j we a r e al&gt;le to send the Kami Joujrna 1&#13;
five years to every subscriber ot the&#13;
Di-jpntcii who pays all arrearages a n d&#13;
a year in advance; also to all new subscribers&#13;
who pay a year ahead.&#13;
Centifugas. We have&#13;
very easy here, there&#13;
;?ider that eight-tent! s» ot the ailments&#13;
that afflict the American people are&#13;
o caused i&gt;y constipation, we shall realize&#13;
wby it is that Baxter's Mandrake&#13;
nothing to do but a little guard Bitters "ke^ps folks WHII" or if&#13;
duty and Le ready to quell any enabl«s them to get well. IU&#13;
disturbance that might come up. Mandrake Hitters cures constipation&#13;
The people take kindly to us; Price 25c per bottle—Why not step in&#13;
Volcanic Eruptions&#13;
Are grand, but skiu eruptions rob&#13;
life of joy. Bucklen'b arnica salve&#13;
cures them; also old, running and&#13;
T?L f " 1 * e v e r 80l'ftj&lt;» ulcers, boils, felons, corns,&#13;
warts, cuts, brumes, burns, scalds,&#13;
F.&#13;
Centifugas we were ordered into | and try to learn us their language land cret a-bottle and by nsinir it Im asthe&#13;
interior where the guerrillas ' as well as "catch on" to ours. Its, sured of good health through th« try&#13;
were playing sad havoc with w'lat ' amusing to hear the jabbering be- i n « b o t months. We sell it and tfunrlittfe&#13;
there is left on tl.e islnad in j tween them when we fail to .com- a n t e e }t t o *i v e s a f i s f a c i o n o r m o n e J&#13;
stiRpe of plantations, burning the;prehend. We have no trouble in r e u n&#13;
buildings and running off the exchanging our money for Spanstock.&#13;
Our designation, Rodrigo, ' ish. They usually offer from&#13;
is 55 miles from Centifugas. Thej *I.'~&lt;J to $1,30 but with.a generous&#13;
trip was made over a narrow amount of ''eh* wing the rag" nnd&#13;
gauge road which was very much "high signs" some of the boys&#13;
out of repair. We had quit a bit haw been able to get £1.00 at the&#13;
of trouble in getting our stuff all same time spending pool checks,,&#13;
loaded. They could run by day-1 canteen chips, confedeiate monlight,&#13;
the road having only a lim- ev • t c , and getting change back,&#13;
ited number of cars and engines, but they are getting on to them&#13;
go we were 13 dayP getting every ii"W. The man is a good one&#13;
thing moved. Rodrigo is merely that "does" one of them. Our&#13;
a masB of ruins; what was on e lu'HJth in much better than when&#13;
a fashionable Spanish watering WH wnr»» in camp in the south and&#13;
place. We cleaned a number of a 1 we ask is to stay here till&#13;
porcelain pools to bathe iu and w;nni weather sets in. We do&#13;
also found the water very nice to nut-want to come back now as it&#13;
drink. At Rodrigo my company would kill half of us. The heat&#13;
was detatched from the regiment V H&lt;»meiiiing awful, but the cool&#13;
and sent on special duty 15 miles \ nights and heavy dew, which we&#13;
away to Aman,to guard a large ctu-U in a rubber blanket and&#13;
•ugar-mill that was just starting drink, is the only thing that keeps&#13;
up. in alive. We~~are now under di-&#13;
The trip overland was a bad r&lt; (;t &lt;&gt;&gt;(^r« from Gen. Bates, so&#13;
one. Our wagon train consisted &lt;!.• m.t. expect to rejoin the regiof&#13;
twelve wagons and the poor ^«J"t till we return home, but we&#13;
mules had a hard time of it as HIH Tiot *OTh ** ^ makes life&#13;
well as the men. Under-brush n i u r h e a s i e r M w e ©scape the&#13;
•actus, etc, higher than your head ht*av.v ^ U R l d 8 n d f a t i g^e duty of&#13;
and the heat something awful. 1 l l e tvgi"Jeut, also the drills. We&#13;
Mercury stands from 80 to 130 in&#13;
the shade bat at last we got there&#13;
moj» dead than alive and found&#13;
tbt town inhabited by 60 or 60&#13;
and about 400 dirty&#13;
Alt trains daily except Sunday.&#13;
No. 30 connection at Pontiac for Detroit.&#13;
No 41 connection at Pontiac for Petrolt und&#13;
for lliu went on h A .M K 1&#13;
JJ.H. Hughes, W. .J. hiaek,&#13;
A O l ' i T A«eut, A^euf. .&#13;
Ciilougo, IU. 1 jjickney&#13;
TOLEDO p .&#13;
NNARBOIY&#13;
AND&#13;
KQHTH MICHIGAN) &lt;&#13;
RAILWAY.&#13;
Popular i onte for. Ann Art". , T o -&#13;
letio an&lt;J points East, South, an i tor&#13;
Howell, Owoss&lt;t, Alma, Mt l'l.a-^ant&#13;
Cadillac, Manistee, Travels^ City a n d&#13;
points in Northwestern ilichitran.&#13;
W. l i . HENNKTT,&#13;
0 . P . .V. Toledo&#13;
rnEDAVI5 MACHINES chapped hands, chilblains, best pile&#13;
cure on earth, drives out pains and&#13;
Only 25c a box; cure guaran-&#13;
Sold by P. A. tidier, druggist "JELL THE BEST SEWING MAOtlNES ON EARTH&#13;
—."-•-:-—_-..--—_-:•--•-r.:••--.".-rz &gt;ircct to the coD5amcrd(k(oryprice5.&#13;
WAYNE HOTEL, DETROIT THEijBERTY $2Z.6O&#13;
AMERICAN AMD EUROPEAN PLAN, ! anougu-v n* «ST M*M&#13;
TO 00 : THE 5TERL1N0 ^20.85&#13;
SINGLM MEALS, 6OO. UP TO OAT* GAPMS A nut wen CA&amp;DC MACFUNC&#13;
THE DESCENT 6 1 8 ^&#13;
are getting along much better&#13;
tliHti any campany in the regiment&#13;
Hud we will be perfectly&#13;
if they will only let us&#13;
up some Spanish.. I talk it a&#13;
BIGGLE BOOKS A Farm Library of unequalled value—Practical,&#13;
Up-to-date, Concise and Comprehensive—Handsomely&#13;
Printed and Beautifully Illustrated.&#13;
B y J A C O B B I Q Q L B&#13;
No. 1-BIGQLE HORSE BOOK&#13;
All about Horses—a Common-Srnae TreatiM, with over&#13;
74 illustration* , a standard work. Price, y&gt; Cent*&#13;
N o . 2—BK1QLE BERRY BOOK&#13;
All about growing Small FmlU—te»d and tearu how .&#13;
contains 43 colored lile-like reproductions of all \e uing&#13;
varieties and 100 otlrr illustrations. Price. 50 Cents.&#13;
No. 3—BKWLE POULTRY BOOK&#13;
AH about Poultry ; the best Poultry Book in existence v tells every tbinyr; with33 colored life-like reproductions&#13;
of all the principal breeds: with 103 other iUustrsaion*.&#13;
Price, soCeaU.&#13;
No. 4—BIQQLB COW BOOK&#13;
All about Cows and the Dairy Business t having a xrest&#13;
uale; contains 8 colored life-like reproductions of f-ach&#13;
' breed, with 133 other illustiations. Price, 50Cent*.&#13;
No. 5—BIQQLB SWINE BOOK&#13;
Just out. All about Hogs—Breeding, Feeding, Butchery,&#13;
Diseases, etc. Contain* over 80 beautiful halftones&#13;
and otner engravings. Price, 50 Cents.&#13;
ibeBtOOLE BOOKS are unique,origirtil,u»efttl-you sever&#13;
saw anything like them—»o practical.KOKenj-ibU '1 liry&#13;
are having s o enormous sate—East, Went, North and&#13;
South. Every one who keeps a Horse, Cow. Hog or&#13;
Chicken, or grows Small Fruits, ou*ht to send nght&#13;
away for the BKMLE BOOKS. The FARM JOURNAL&#13;
VERY. LIBERTY WAPPENTED10 YEARS&#13;
m Oil) L5UNJSMED ANP CtliAW MoUfiC. ""SluZu?9&#13;
50 YEARSEXPERIENCE&#13;
'ATENTS&#13;
TRADE MARKS&#13;
DCSIGNSAc&#13;
Anyone sending a skrtflh and description may&#13;
quickly ju«oortaln oar opinion free whether urn&#13;
invention i» pix&gt;bably p uentable. Coirmunloa*&#13;
tlnnn strictly i-rmfldenMnl. Handbook on Patents&#13;
•oif. t'rae. (Miost n«enry for ftecurtnjr pntenUi.&#13;
PiitentB taken tnrooiih Mann St. Co. reoeivt&#13;
tptnial rMicc, wltlioat clixrye, In tbe Scientific Hmericam A hnnrinnmely UlaNtrat«d weekly. Lftrsest e*r-&#13;
(T '.)•• v.u of any sclentiflc Joamil. Terms, t&amp; a&#13;
fior nionths, | L Sold bvall newidealer*.&#13;
raoch Offloe. 62ft F BL, Washlu^ton, D. C&#13;
not • *ai«nt. it&#13;
l&#13;
of America—having-over a miUioa«ada«ijali regul&#13;
Axy OMB * the BIGGLE BOOKS, ant tbe FARM JOURNAL&#13;
^^d^Eafy?£Tt$O*№№E2 t i^8** •9° i •• * ^S * ^ ^ ** «»t by «Ml&#13;
•unpltofFAW* f^lflfiil •nrtrirnihtfflMwIiiiiii fUtMi*&lt;&#13;
ATcnnoM. A M na WA&#13;
Tlss Davit MacUtt 0a, Oilcaoo.&#13;
Baby&#13;
Carriages&#13;
CkUaV W.&#13;
$3.50&#13;
• . ' « ; . • • • * • •&#13;
, • &lt; * • &gt;&#13;
BRITISH&#13;
MEDICAL INSTITUTE 803 E. Main 8»M JACKSON, MICH.&#13;
TREATS ALL DISEASES&#13;
OF MEN AND WOMEN.&#13;
WFAK MFN restored to vigor and&#13;
PTC/IA JITCfT vitality. Organs of&#13;
the body which have been weakened&#13;
through digftatie, overwork, exeefis or&#13;
indiscretions, restored to full power,&#13;
strength and vigor by our new and&#13;
original system of treatment&#13;
HUNDREDS o f nununGISV ev idteesnticme oonfi athlse gboeoadr&#13;
results obtained from our method of&#13;
treating all forms of chronic disease.&#13;
WE TREATAND CURE Gferro,&#13;
Aathmt,&#13;
Broochitk,&#13;
Sheu&#13;
Neural*.&#13;
bMO.&#13;
akV.&#13;
Heart DJaea*,&#13;
Syphilfc,&#13;
Varkccck,&#13;
Sterility,&#13;
Bladder Trouble,&#13;
Low of Vitality,&#13;
T lai&#13;
Tumor*.&#13;
Piles, Fafcila,&#13;
S k J D b&#13;
Female wssfcneas, Cooatiprtoo,&#13;
aw.&#13;
Blood Dtsram,&#13;
Youthful Errors,&#13;
Nenreua Trouble*&#13;
WeakoewciMca&#13;
QOIBUtflTIOI n t n . CHA1GZ8 K0DXR1T1.&#13;
U—t% i n k Rat O H * Budijfi,&#13;
OR. HALE IN PERSONAL CHARGE.&#13;
m c u i / i o n c i i Tbow on able to call ahonld send&#13;
•tamp for question blank (or home treatment.&#13;
STYI ,&#13;
ARTISTIC-^&#13;
Recommended by Leadlag&#13;
Preismakcrf. £&#13;
They V w t y s&#13;
MSCALL&#13;
rt BAZAR, \ PATTERNS&#13;
•g NONE BETTER AT ANY PRICE i&#13;
'• *)»»« pattern! «re told In nearly&#13;
•v ?• y ci' / knd icwn in ih« United States.&#13;
11 i c JI dealer does not kcrp I hem send&#13;
-^t :a J I One cent t u m p i received.&#13;
AiM-?»« yojt nearest point.&#13;
THE McCALL COMPANY,&#13;
130 to USW 14th Street, New York&#13;
HIUKCB orrjcf-s :&#13;
iSg Fifth Ave., Chicago, and&#13;
1051 Market St.. Sao FrancUco.&#13;
c-CALLS&#13;
MAGAZINE&#13;
501&#13;
tEAR&#13;
brightest Magazine Published&#13;
Contains Beautiful Colored Plates.&#13;
Illustrates Uitfst Patterns, Fashions,&#13;
Fancy Work.&#13;
Agents wanted for this m t c t i t n e Jnerery&#13;
locality ^ Beautiful premium* (or a little&#13;
work Write lot irrm* &amp;nd other particulars,&#13;
Subx'ripiir.n Or.ly 5 0 c . PCI y«AX,&#13;
including a F l l K E Pattern. '&#13;
Adurw THE McCALL CO.,&#13;
138 to 146 W. 14th St.. New York&#13;
M " f l •WMWAWMW&#13;
We MakeWHEELS&#13;
I MILLER P.0DE0NE2093 MILES IN 132 HOURS&#13;
If&#13;
OE4ited&#13;
by the W.C. T. U. of PinckJwy.&#13;
On account of the inclement&#13;
weather the regular meeting was&#13;
| postponed from 1st Friday in the&#13;
month to the 3rd., and met with&#13;
Mrs. Leal Sigler with a good number&#13;
in attendance and held a&#13;
mother's meeting. The following&#13;
is a part of the program:&#13;
Mother Never Dt«s.&#13;
" There is something in maternity&#13;
unlike anything else. • "%&#13;
The love of a mother never dies&#13;
Jout and in fact it nmy be said:&#13;
Mother never dies; she just goes&#13;
away. To every man the dep&#13;
a r t e d mother is as real as ever,&#13;
, though gone from sight. S h e&#13;
lives in his thoughts; she visits&#13;
in his dreams; she comes to&#13;
him in times of sickness, and he&#13;
hears her voice—sweet voice,&#13;
that never dies.&#13;
All she ever said to him passes&#13;
in review, though he may not&#13;
have harkened to it, as he should&#13;
have done, but her words are&#13;
writteu upon the tablets of his&#13;
memory. When far away, out of&#13;
hearing of that kindly vo:ce, out&#13;
of that pleasant smile, we still&#13;
hear, we still see her with the eye&#13;
of the soul. She is uot dead;&#13;
Coumil Proceedings,&#13;
temper will always have triends b«t&#13;
Fur The Wlago of Ptneknej. QQ© w n o would be attractive arntt&#13;
keep her health. If she is weak, tieklj&#13;
Regular Meeting, Mar. 6. a n d all ran down, she will be nerrotw&#13;
Council convened and called to; and irritable. If she has constipation&#13;
order by Pres. Sigler. Present, or kidney trouble, her impure blood&#13;
trustees Teeple, Thompson, Monks| will cause pimples, blotches or skin&#13;
eruptions and a wretched com pies ion.&#13;
Electric bitters \% the best medicine in&#13;
the world to regulate stomach, liver&#13;
and kidneys and »o purify the blood.&#13;
It ^ives strong nerves, bright eyes,&#13;
smooth velvety skin, rich complexion.&#13;
It will make a good looking, charming&#13;
Jackson; absent, Reason, Erwin.&#13;
The following bills were presented&#13;
and allowed:&#13;
FrancU Carr, lighting larupn, f 7.15&#13;
DWMurta, service*, US.68&#13;
W K Vurpliy, feeding tramp*, 25&#13;
W Mclntyre, running enow plow, 8.60&#13;
Dr. H V Sigler, health officer, 10 00&#13;
Total, 33.53&#13;
Bill of W Bates for damages Incurred&#13;
iiy washout, 81.M)&#13;
Report of finance committee&#13;
and treasurer read and approved.&#13;
President Sigler appointed and&#13;
Couucil approved the following:&#13;
Board of Registration:&#13;
E L Thompson, Geo, Reason J.-.&#13;
Election Iuspectora:&#13;
C J Teeple, F. U. Jackson.&#13;
" Commissioners:&#13;
Gate KeepKe rHs: Teeple, W A Carr, Goo. Reason, Jr. Wm Uoff, t; L Sykes.&#13;
R. H. TEEPLE, Clerk.&#13;
love.&#13;
Absent or gone on a journey to&#13;
the skyes her love still remains,&#13;
her interest in us seems to be still&#13;
ftlive, and when-agood action or a&#13;
new aud better m &gt;ve is made, we&#13;
often ask ourselyes: "What would&#13;
mother say?"&#13;
Her wordy, her life, though she&#13;
has gone to rest, follows us to the&#13;
j^rnve; leads us nearer and nearer&#13;
vo the eternal throne. Her influence&#13;
environs us, do what we will;&#13;
ihcse permeate our bearing; they&#13;
lead us back to II^L1 knee, where&#13;
slu* taught us so lovingly to way&#13;
"Our Father-" and "Here I lay me&#13;
down to sleep."&#13;
However wayward a boy is, the&#13;
black sheep of thn flock he may&#13;
Be sure and read our ^reat offer of&#13;
the DISPATCH for a y«ar and the Farm&#13;
Journal five years, all lor the price of&#13;
our paper alone. Just walk up to the&#13;
captain's office and draw tue greatest&#13;
prize you ever drew.&#13;
Mrs. Geo. Hull of Hamburg died&#13;
last Wednesday niKbt. Mrs. Hull&#13;
was among the earliest settlers in that&#13;
township. Mr. Hull was absent at&#13;
tbe time of her death, heing on a visit&#13;
woman of a run down invalid. Only&#13;
5Oo at F. A. Siller's drug store.&#13;
UNDERTAKER&#13;
AND EMBALMER.&#13;
J. G. SAYLES,&#13;
PLAINFIELD, MICH.&#13;
I hold a certificate from&#13;
resting"troTii her~ labor— of -at-a-daa^bierV^n Denver* Colo. __B_e__&#13;
was wired and returned immediately.&#13;
Miss Viola Allen, the "star" of Hall&#13;
Caine's dramatization of his popular&#13;
novel, "Christian," has always aspired&#13;
to be an antbor. She lias said that&#13;
tbere are two thingswHTch&#13;
rather do than act; write a book, or be&#13;
a trained nurse. She will now make&#13;
her literary debut in an article which&#13;
she has written for the Ladies Home&#13;
Journal, reciting and explaining fully&#13;
College of Springfield, Ohio&#13;
and am prepared to do embalming&#13;
of all kinds.&#13;
A lady assistant for 'embalming&#13;
women and children.&#13;
Dispatch&#13;
PUBLUatD IVBST TUUUPAY M0RWI«« BY '&#13;
FRANK. L. ANDREWS&#13;
Editor amd Proprietor.&#13;
Hubecrlptlon Price $1 In Advance.&#13;
* tu6 r OttOolCtf at&#13;
as aecoaU-claaa matter.&#13;
Advertising rates made known on application.&#13;
Business Cards, t-LOQ per year.&#13;
J^eaih and marriage uotlcea published free.&#13;
Announcements ot entertainmentt may be paid&#13;
for, If desired, by preventing the office with ticket*&#13;
of admiaeion. In case tickets are not brought&#13;
to tae office, regular rates will bo ctiarjjed.&#13;
All matter in local notice column will be&#13;
ed at 5 cents uer Hue or fraction inereot, tor&#13;
insertion. Where uo time IH *pncia»d, all notice*&#13;
will be inserted until irdert-d lidcoatlnaed, ao4&#13;
will be charged for accordingly. — •• •&#13;
c&amp;v« »r each&#13;
of adrertiaemenU MUST reah thlsotfice as earlj&#13;
aa TuKdUAT morning to iueure an inaertlon the&#13;
name week.&#13;
JOS Pft WV'f/AG ?&#13;
In all its branches, a specialty. We haveall kind*&#13;
and tbe latest styles or i'ypv, etc., wuich enable*&#13;
us to execute all kind* of work, aucb as Books,&#13;
famulets, Posters, Programme*, Bill Head*, NoU&#13;
Ueada, SUtemenU, Cards, Auction BilU, elc.,i«&#13;
superior style*, upou tbe shorten notice. Price*M&#13;
o'V aa iiuod work can be&#13;
«LL BILLS VA.XXHL&amp; I'lttiT &gt;&gt;if I / K i t *&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIRECTORY.&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PKEBIDBNT.. ..- Alex. Mclntyre&#13;
TttUaTEKH E. L. Thompson, Alfred Mouka,&#13;
Daniel Kicharae, &lt; 1 eo. Bowmau, aamael&#13;
fykes, V. D, Johnson.&#13;
CUBRK . . . B . H. Teepls&#13;
TUEABCBBB W. E. Murphy&#13;
A«8BHrtou... W. A. Oarr&#13;
STBBUT COMMISSIONKH Geo. fiurok'&#13;
MAIWAUL D. W. Murta&#13;
lit. H. K. Siller&#13;
W. A. Carr&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
V f ETHOD1ST EPISCOPAL CHURCH.&#13;
JLl Hev. Cbas. Simpson, paator. Service* every&#13;
Sunday morning at U):3o, and every Sanday&#13;
eveuing at 7 ;LK» o'clock. Prayer meeting Thursday&#13;
evenings. Sunday school at cloee of mornservice.&#13;
F. L. Andrews, Sapt.&#13;
C Kev. C. W. Hlce pastor. Service every&#13;
Suuday ruornln; at 10:80 and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:oc o'ci&gt;c'c. Prayer meeting Thursday&#13;
evenings. Sualiy school at cloee of morn-&#13;
U i B U T yl S R H d S&#13;
B. U. Teeple , Sapt. Head, See&#13;
S'r. . \ i A u r s ' j . \&#13;
Uev. \£. J. Couaunrtord, Pastor,&#13;
every Sunday.&#13;
, Ser Ices&#13;
Low mass at 7:30 o'clock&#13;
at 9 ::)G a. m. Catechism&#13;
"What the Life of an Actress Means."&#13;
Half Kates To Detroit.&#13;
CUiim burl Vila's C J U ; I&#13;
This remedy is inten ;-&#13;
for coughs, "otd^i, ci't.ii&#13;
coueh and influenza.&#13;
famous for its cures of&#13;
The Grand Trtink Rail way System ; 0 V e r a laV^e part of&#13;
will issue excursion tickets to tlie "&#13;
I" 'ia&gt; b e c o m e&#13;
g _&#13;
at a :M p. m., vespersana benediction at^7::iy p.m.&#13;
SOCIETIES;&#13;
\. o . II. Society of this place, nnoets every&#13;
SutKlay ia the Kr. Matthew Hall.&#13;
John Mcliuiuesa,County Delegate.&#13;
niimy f. P. s, C. E. Meetings held erery&#13;
i &lt;y '.'V*»ui'ii{ [ri OOQ^'I c h u r c h i t (j:l» j'cli)f!k&#13;
n-^si*; (,'ordley, 1'rei Viable t&gt;eirker See&#13;
V^e part&#13;
w o r j ( J | T l i " m o &gt; t f l i t i&#13;
to Detroit and return at a sinprle [ o [ i t s U0Q(i w o r k . o f t})&#13;
fare tor the round trip on .icrount of&#13;
public from all its stations iu Mirb- iii^: account&#13;
the Mohawk Club banquet at Detroit,&#13;
March 30t i. Ticket? will be sold for&#13;
a n d peit&gt;istent cou-hs ir&#13;
s e v e r e&#13;
l)«j, t h e one whom the stout m a n of I all train*-on- March 29th, and for t h e&#13;
I)7 to it?&#13;
the house closes the door against.&#13;
mother's love&#13;
How Christ&#13;
like. There would never have&#13;
increases the&#13;
Tor her castaway.&#13;
cross had Eden&#13;
Shut the door&#13;
been a call to the&#13;
not been closed,&#13;
of the home against a mother's&#13;
boy, however bad he may be, and&#13;
all the yearnings of a mother's&#13;
heart will fellow him always. I t&#13;
'may be to the penitentiary, the&#13;
gallows and the grave; she may&#13;
act aud move, and go and come,&#13;
afterwards, but her hear.t has&#13;
ijone to the grave with her boy.&#13;
Do we blame her? lVs, some do,&#13;
and yet, she cannot help it. 'Why'&#13;
on all trains up to&#13;
Marnli 31th 1899.&#13;
morning trains "of March 30th, and&#13;
valid to return&#13;
and including&#13;
This gives an opportunity to visit&#13;
Detroit at a cheap rate and the public&#13;
should avail themselves ot this oiiportunity.&#13;
(1- tl.:at have y&#13;
OOihinij eftVc&#13;
attacks u!&#13;
clived, often saving t!&#13;
child. The exteu-hv&#13;
whooping COULTI) h.is&#13;
s cured;of&#13;
•ie \ prompt-:&#13;
Hiid of tbe&#13;
I ' l i u p i t h . i S&#13;
lite of tlie&#13;
e of it for&#13;
it.&#13;
K&#13;
cut&#13;
J1&#13;
TI! • £&#13;
1&#13;
w ; i : l Lli.Mil'l']. Meets every -SunJay&#13;
1;-.; tt frir\ oclocli in the M- K. Cuurch. A&#13;
. iifitatiou a exteailei t&lt;j everyone,&#13;
• j;i,r p^opte. Mra. Stella G h&#13;
r '-'.,1 '.'.irln :.'Ai{ue.&#13;
• ' • • * ' ' • » - i - ; : &gt;&gt; j V - u o&#13;
i y i u v i i i ! &lt; l . ;&#13;
Mmt* every Sunday&#13;
M .M. [•: cliareh. All&#13;
Saperiateuleut.&#13;
T. A. a n i 11. society jf this place, me«t&#13;
uJ Saturday evouiui/ IQ t i e f r . Mat-&#13;
Juhu L&gt;ou'&gt;hue, President.&#13;
i i r s o y MACCA.BEES.&#13;
v«v&gt;;rv Friday evening on or before fall&#13;
u* IM)JII at ttie 1 r hali iu the Swarthout bldg.&#13;
tu^; i&gt;rolueri -tre cordially invited.&#13;
1.HAS. LJ^HPu^ti., sir kuieht Comutander&#13;
Distrusted With Polities.&#13;
A large delegation of Brighton-' ?&#13;
ites went to Ho well last Thursday&#13;
to do what they could in furthering&#13;
the interest of a former Livingston&#13;
Co. man (who by choice profit&#13;
was our genial towns-man, B. T.&#13;
0* Clark,) in the judicial convention&#13;
for circuit judge of this 35th&#13;
robs disea&gt;e ivi:i.'itun Lod^e, No.7",&#13;
1 j *.'uLuiuuuica;ioQ Tuesday evening; oa or before&#13;
t .Jii\'A ut ihti uiuuii. Alexander McLutyre, W. M.&#13;
t-:it &lt;&gt;[•• K A s m i x .s&#13;
f)lli)\vin^&#13;
.Vl^. M.viiv&#13;
1.1 •' Fruluy eve moath&#13;
re 'UUr F. A ' l l V i :&#13;
W i l l - t i l ;&#13;
bv Murat ll;t'.-:&#13;
li;t'lit a s .&#13;
: i i « U t . M l - K m l i A&#13;
, ,&gt;n ti:•&#13;
i l l t h t : s | &gt; i t a&#13;
tr,^r&#13;
^ r l i i i | H w i t h .-\u&#13;
• A i .-?&#13;
i v . • &gt;. 1 ' . - I . n ^ i l .&#13;
LiuOi.Miv.i;&#13;
KNit',UTS OK THE LOYAL GL&#13;
iiie t every i K O&#13;
with &gt;&#13;
o r M . t : t i l i . i&#13;
Kn-i^Ut |&gt;ud&#13;
t r a s h y u a &lt; &gt; t l i i ' i : i l w a r t&gt;.&gt;nk-j &gt; i t r i t frt»&gt;.&#13;
V. T. Burlxjr, Sec'y. .Si^r Insurance Mdg.&#13;
ry second Wedne»aay&#13;
ii of every nioutn in tho K.. O.&#13;
1. .\1. iUli at ;:.J0 o'clock. Ail&#13;
d&#13;
she exclaims, "should my boy be judicial district. Mr. relost?&#13;
Jesus loved him, why should c e i v e d t b e 8 o Ji d e } e v e u Livingston , ^ ^ ^ ^&#13;
$40.00&#13;
r to all others irrespective&#13;
of price. Catalogue tells you&#13;
why. W rite for one.&#13;
NATIONAL S£WIN(i MACfllNE CO.&#13;
339 KROAOWAY; Faotory.&#13;
New York. BBLVIDBRE, ILL. ,&#13;
I not low him? Jesus died to&#13;
save him; I would die to save him;&#13;
I will take his place in the penitentiary,&#13;
go iu his stead to the&#13;
8'attold; I'll go through the grave&#13;
for inn.:'&#13;
.Concluded next wo; k.&#13;
His Kile W A « SaTed&#13;
Mr. J. £. Lilly, a prominent citizen&#13;
1 have been afflicted with rbeutnatisra&#13;
for fourteen years atd nothing&#13;
seemed to give any relfef. I was able&#13;
all the ti'me, hut coa-&#13;
I had tried everyof&#13;
an \ at last was&#13;
ARNKLL, Oapt. (re&#13;
K W. C. T. U. most* thf tir^t Friday ot eack&#13;
at &gt;:l j&gt;. in. ;it t ie li&gt; ne o f Or. U. F.&#13;
Siller. Kveryone iiULTOsted i u t&lt;;iu;)erane* ia&#13;
coacliiilly iiivi;.Ml .Mrs. V a l Sijjltfr, Pres; J£ra.&#13;
Ktta l &gt; f 5&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
stantlv suffetini?&#13;
thintf I could&#13;
votes on the first ballot, but&#13;
Shiawassee had 15 (aud they were&#13;
for b. F. Smith,) and as it was t o l d t 0 t r y chamberkvn's i&#13;
impossible to beat that number&#13;
Mr. Smith carried of the plum.&#13;
.iin&#13;
d and in a short&#13;
Bilm&#13;
y retime&#13;
cured. I&#13;
There was much feeling against am happy to say tti it it ha* not since&#13;
Shiawassee playing the swine act returned.—Jo?li Ediiar. Germantown,&#13;
year after year and no few were ^Hl For sals by F. A. S;gler.&#13;
heard to express themselves in&#13;
favor of an honest Livingston Co&#13;
M. F. SIGLER M-0- C. I , SIGLER M, D&#13;
, DRS. SIGLER Si SIGLER,&#13;
rhyaknius &lt;iad S u i . « i.s. Ail calls prompt]&#13;
attetiaod tod.ir or night. Ofiice o u M a i o s t r&#13;
l'inckue\. Mi«:li.&#13;
DR.&#13;
over S ^I&#13;
B. GREEN.&#13;
Tmrsday and Fri;Uj&#13;
z Store.&#13;
Dr. Miles' Pain Pills. "One oent*&#13;
ot Hannibal, Mo., lately had a wonder- j representative and we presume&#13;
tul deliverance from a frishtlul death, that means Hon. W. P. VauWinlii&#13;
telling:of it he .ays: »I was taken j k l eX-piosecuting Attorney and&#13;
with typhoid fever, that ran into pneu- , . , * &lt;• ^ • i&#13;
l,u,o™ni;a/ . 'MMy» lIu«n«g s&gt; ube^c na me uha rAde neJd . Ic ,a ndidate for. c, ir,c uit, .ju .d i,ce ou the&#13;
'l;l 1 was so weak I conld not even set up democratic ticket—Brighton Ar-&#13;
For&#13;
•A&#13;
i»3&#13;
fOJ.JdTOFP W/KTKD FYER T&#13;
P&gt; 11 f«T '"1 he \*\miy of ih* Fhtllpinfa'&#13;
'f1 I f1''"^- cor BU*ei( nrd by tlw (W.veri&#13;
IP i •ff'tisl Ilivtoriat) to t)&lt;e ^&gt;r I&gt;p|&gt;»rtwnit&#13;
^k vaf «titi«n in tti* army cnJupi*«» S a i&#13;
i, on tlie }»dflc*lf* &lt;-^*«t-«V Marat,* ID&#13;
H A D R S M I T , l a the&#13;
if&#13;
tlM&#13;
lit&#13;
in bed. I expected to die soon of con-! ^u s - T n a t i s ri^llk» [)°y*&gt; y ° a C R n&#13;
sumption, when I heard of Dr. King's ' uofc d o better that support a Liv-&#13;
New Discovery. One bottle gave r«- uigstou county gentleman for this&#13;
lief. I continued to use and am office.&#13;
now well and strong and I can't&#13;
say too much in its praise." This marvelous&#13;
medicine is the surest and&#13;
qwcMeat care in the world for all&#13;
throat 40d lunjr trouble. Regular&#13;
Act or.&#13;
ana bo&#13;
spttdily a.re fc&#13;
torpid 11 TOT sod&#13;
tioa. l&#13;
l&#13;
W« can make to&#13;
ypor measure a&#13;
Fine, All-Wool&#13;
.50 Suit ouspft&#13;
r..llc.&lt;»6i 2&amp;t Latest City Styles&#13;
F. A.&#13;
50c and 91. Trial UotMei ire* at&#13;
every bottU&#13;
Dr. Cady's Condition Powders are&#13;
just what a hor&amp;e need* when in bad&#13;
condition. Tonic, blood purifier and&#13;
Termifase. They are not food but&#13;
medieine and the beet in use to put a&#13;
norae in prime ottf&amp;itioa* Price 25c&#13;
per paokace. For taU «y F. A. Big&#13;
er.&#13;
Rev. E. Edwards pastor of tbe&#13;
English Baptist cbuich at Minersville.&#13;
Pa., when suflfering with rheumatism&#13;
was advised to try CbAmberlwnV Pain&#13;
Balm. He s&amp;ys: "A few applications&#13;
of this liniment proved of great service&#13;
to«r.e. It sabdaed the infUmation and&#13;
relieved the pain. Should any wofferar&#13;
profit bj giving painftbalm a trtal it&#13;
will please me." For sale by F. A.&#13;
Too can be a well-dressed man&#13;
if you know how. Write \i« for&#13;
Samples and Booklet "Bow to&#13;
Lco£ W«ily Dress Welt, and&#13;
t*&#13;
Large Fashion Plate&#13;
and Samples&#13;
MACHINE CO.&#13;
Besl Hotel in Detroit 4o mi mat* «mywi ^ n * ^ ~f «MlitrMe» gjTajgjjra.'5a£ga5&#13;
"i&#13;
• -ir&#13;
&gt;&amp;&#13;
K1.1&#13;
, . / . . « • - • . . / • ,&#13;
&lt;r&#13;
V.''.:&#13;
! • * • • : * '&#13;
&gt; • &gt; &gt; •&#13;
• •&#13;
w *&#13;
F. L. ANDREWS EDITOR.&#13;
THURSDAY , MAR . 23, 1899.&#13;
FROM CUBA&#13;
Cuban s in th e midst of a grove&#13;
of cocoanu t tree s aud as ther e&#13;
was no water nor wood anywhere&#13;
little an 1 am takin g lessons of an A 1'olltical Scheme and an Expensive&#13;
America n who has been her e six&#13;
years. H e organize d a class in&#13;
One to r the State*&#13;
we were very much discounted , th e compan y and we are gettin g&#13;
but the y soon sent us a good&#13;
supply of both and in a few days&#13;
anothe r compan y arrived and later&#13;
on anothe r unti l&#13;
regimen t was with&#13;
the whole&#13;
us in th e&#13;
alon g nicely, and claim a person&#13;
whi o&#13;
A movemen t h on foot in the Le# -&#13;
t(&#13;
tbe state&#13;
islature to creat e in this state a tatat t&#13;
t c a n m a s t e r t, .h e iI a n - pri.nt.in.g . o,rn,ee. w. here all , printin g shall be don e inste aAd&#13;
Frien d Bob:&#13;
guHKe inside of six or eight weeks. c o n t n w t a &amp; a f , | ) H p n J s e n f c ^ O f&#13;
What we mias most is ou r floaraB t b f t t c a n n o f c b e d o n e w i , u o u t&#13;
mail. Th e service is very crud e i,rirf«in^-i t to a vote throughou t the&#13;
most drear y and forsaken place I ami we go two or thre e days at a state and we do not .ImfieyB tha t onei&#13;
ever saw in my life, with groat tim « withou t receivin g a letter , tent h of the farmers, or others , would&#13;
PLACETA S PKOVINC F OF palm tree s giving it nnfamila r the u suddenl y four or five sacks ever vote for su«h a change when tbej&#13;
SANT A CIAU A CUB A ' background , th e air filled with 'of '"nil comes , some of th e mail one* under-tan d that , it i* not only a&#13;
' ' ' countie s number s of buzzards , 'bein g two weeks on th e way. ] politica l »ou»m» tu t would prove aft&#13;
I presum e I would have set ^pensive luxury as has already l&gt;een&#13;
Mar. I , 1899.&#13;
wwit^h uha ^ n u^f „ho„w„ f„ew„ „of ,y„o„u r , - r - - - - — - - p r o v e n by tbe states which have tried&#13;
own peopl e ar e abou t you, aud her o aim wrote th e balanc e or th e r J&#13;
how cut off the y are, how depend - nitfh t if "taps" ha d no t sounded , C a l U l ) ; . n i w i t h a b o u t h a | f t h e p o p&#13;
lights u | a | i o n Michigan , owns an d operoffice&#13;
at a i^ost of&#13;
Your lette r date d Feb .&#13;
20th reache d me today. Of&#13;
cours e you read in the paper s th e&#13;
accoun t of our storm y voyage.&#13;
Landin g :at Centifugas , a quaiu t&#13;
Spanis h town of abou t 12,000 in- th e blues was ther e and I was we have here . The y are HO much as Michigan pays for similar&#13;
habitants , narrow , filthy street s not sorry ,when on last Saturday , | light, dry, and so cool tha t one services. This shows the difference&#13;
i i i i M i'i * -ni i n«ii I i . c ,, . hates to tro to bed but set uo and between a political machine and the&#13;
houses , low sbatks with tile roofs;, Feb . 20th. , a rush orde r was re- , «»j«» l u hu l u U™1&gt; UHl a v i u r &gt; " "" , ^&#13;
. , i i i • . i • &lt;• » y-» -rt , • 7 flm'/ni i f W r i t e urlio n pmu'otiiPh ^ Jetfini ^ OI *U0 COQl.r&amp;Ct OQ 01&#13;
no windows, merel y hole s with ceived from Gen . Bate s again d e - | e n J ° yl c - write wneu couvtnienr .&#13;
t j i e ' Address me here , caie of Co. A&#13;
ent upo n on e another . Th e finest you know tha t mean s&#13;
plac e I ever saw to give a man a out, " so I must closo. Wfcll Bob, a t e s p g&#13;
goo 1 doso of lionu-sickneP H and , I wish you could seo th e night a $150,000 per year—three times us&#13;
bars across them . Th e Cuban s&#13;
lazy dirty specime n of the huma n&#13;
competitiv e&#13;
tatchin g our compan y from&#13;
regiment * this tim e for good, and&#13;
field. 1&#13;
Michigan . U. S. A. "In the&#13;
FRED .&#13;
ing&#13;
bids.&#13;
In Pennsyavani a th e stat e printin g&#13;
is don « by the stat e superintendent ; of&#13;
printing , and costs, accordin g to his&#13;
last annua l report , abou t $223,000 per&#13;
y«ar. in Michigan , unde r th e conrace&#13;
, and will steal anythin g that ; assigning us fo&gt;* dut y at Placetas ,&#13;
ha s two eud s to it and we have to "We got eway from th e regimen t&#13;
be constantl y on tlie watch to pre- ns soon as possible, back over th e&#13;
vert the m frrm carryin g off trai l to Eodrig o takin g 25 wagon j Two of th e teacher s of chemis - trac t sjst«m, Hie state printin g costs&#13;
everythin g in th e camp . When loads of rations , tents , nmmuni-tr y in th e Universit y have just about $50,00.0 pm-year .&#13;
we lande d at Centiluga s we tiou , clothin g an d h i fact every ' been called away by bette r sain- . In the event of the *tate ownif- 'Lfoun&#13;
d th e town filled with Spanis h thin g we will need for th e next ries paid in industria l chemistr y own printin g office, the unio n i&#13;
soldier s who just c«nie in frou GO days. We again pu t in two On e was K. E . Brown , B. S.'96f »ur«"y dwtare the waiies paid the&#13;
th e interio r to embar k for home , days of misery gettin g G7 miles assistant instructo r in th e ehemi - «i"l'loyed. and no one douW* tba ttie&#13;
• i J ^ o o i , i . . _ . e n I i i i w e e i uy s c a le w o u ld n o t be l e s s t h an&#13;
In tlie event of th e s&gt;tate ownin g its&#13;
would&#13;
men&#13;
employed , and no one doubt s tha t&#13;
• i i « . i i A&#13;
TLer e were five trniiFport s in th e \ over a narro w gauge even worse cai laborator y for th e last thre e&#13;
. . „ ,f . ; . , , - years, who has taken th e place of *- u r o r e '^" t uourn worK—ine same&#13;
harbo r waiting for the m to come ; tha n th e on e we were on before.. ^ | f m . t h e M i c h i ^ f t n C e . as is now paid in the governmen t ofaboard.&#13;
- The y were n clean , nea t jB u t anythin g in preferenc e t o m e i l t Company , manufacture s of "ti,V« at \\ aslnngton . Farmers , tow&#13;
lot of fellows an d need u s HkelAman . We foun d thin |)lace a Portlan d cement . H e will be many of yoi make half this sum each&#13;
w-H.k for war Urn ^ 10 and 15 hour s per&#13;
dciy dui irjt^ your busy seasou?&#13;
If the questio n cw.r ^mU far enoug h&#13;
to eome to a vote, we hop e every man&#13;
r - wiil~|&gt;«l-a44acJ k eye on the schem e by&#13;
Th e voting NO .&#13;
—ou -rpolit&#13;
e th e Palace . Her e th e first in gettin g unloade d and gettin g Brown&#13;
nigh t we were serenade d by a ou r cam p settled . We were th e ?!, J&#13;
Spanis h band . I n retur n c«r ( first America n troo})s thi s town t a j "f&#13;
ban d plnyed a numbe r of Ameri- , had seen an d you FIIMU M have w o r | -&#13;
trts&#13;
could&#13;
regret—thn t&#13;
no t remain .&#13;
'etche r who ha** t^on e is&#13;
Nivlincr , Ph . C. '07, ftssisinstruefq&#13;
r in qualitativ e&#13;
py Me ggoes as chemis t for&#13;
ean nirs an d as per custo m fin- hear d the m "jabber." We have th e Sicux Starc h Works, in Iowa,&#13;
iehed tlie concei t by playin g "My been in th e field so ]ouu we don t havin g been for some tim e en-&#13;
Michigan. " Of cours e thi s was 'min d moving, and in two hour s we d » t k th i t i n a&#13;
K i i&#13;
g&#13;
greete d witli cheer s en d yells; were nicel y get tied and hnd a ho t&#13;
from our men bu t th e Spaniard s i mea l for th e men . Our cmiip in a&#13;
mistoo k th e piece for ou r "Na-, 1 beautifu l grove of &lt;•« coa-nuts ,&#13;
tiona l Air" an d immediatel y un - smooth , level groun d m, d water&#13;
covered thei r head s an d stood hand y for th e first tim , since we&#13;
quie t at which we were very muc h lande d on th e leland . 1 In s place&#13;
h l d&#13;
soon as th e works&#13;
m e i R . e o p e r a t i O I J .&#13;
shoul d coni -&#13;
Keep* FolkM Well.&#13;
It is fitte r to keep well than to&#13;
well, alfl'outf h when one is sick i t i a&#13;
amused . Th e people did everythin&#13;
g the y could for us to show&#13;
how glad they were we came , but&#13;
it was amusin g to see them at oar&#13;
cam p as neithe r could understan d&#13;
th e other . What talkin g we did&#13;
was don e by "high signs."&#13;
After a stay of abou t a week at&#13;
is all right ; clean , nea t an d&#13;
health y in vast contrac t to filthy&#13;
Centifugas .&#13;
very easy&#13;
nothin g to do but a little guard ( Bitters^"ke^p s folk^ well" or if&#13;
dut y an d be reed y to quell any&#13;
disturbanc e tha t migh t com e up.&#13;
We&#13;
here,&#13;
have&#13;
ther e&#13;
Centifuga s we were ordere d into | and try to learn us thei r language&#13;
th e interio r where the guerrillas ! as well as "catch on " to ours. It s&#13;
were playing sad havoc with w'lat ! amusin g to hear th e jabberin g belittle&#13;
ther e is left on (he islnad in j tweeii them when we fail to .com -&#13;
shape of plantatioiiB , burnin g the'prehend . We have no troubl e in&#13;
building s and runnin g off the : exchangin g our mone y for Span -&#13;
stock. Our designation , Rodrigo , !ish. The y usually offer from&#13;
ie 55 miles from Centifugas . The j *1.2D to $1,30 but with a generou s&#13;
tri p was mad e over a narro w amoun t of "'clu wing the rag" and&#13;
gauge road which was very much "high signs" some of th e boys&#13;
out of repair . We had quit a bit ha\ e been able to got $1.60:at the&#13;
of troubl e in gettin g our stuff all: same tim e spendin g pool checks,&#13;
loaded . They could run by day-joantce n chips, confedeiat e mon -&#13;
light, tbe road having only a lim- ' ey ••tc , and gettin g chang e back,&#13;
ited numbe r of cars and engines, bnt they are gettin g on to them&#13;
BO we were 13 days gettin g every ! n"W. Th e mRii is a good on e&#13;
thin g moved. Bodrigo is merel y tha t "does" on e of them . Our&#13;
a mass of ruins ; what was once healt h i« much bette r tha n when&#13;
a fashionabl e Spanis h waterin g w* wen'i n cnm p in the south aud&#13;
place. We cleane d a numbe r of a1' porcelai n pools to bath e in and&#13;
also found the water very nice to&#13;
drink . At Rodrig o my compan y&#13;
wasdetafcehe d from th e regimen t&#13;
and sento n special dut y 15 miles&#13;
away to Aman,t o guard a large cti&lt; h in H rubbe r blanke t aud&#13;
sugar-mil l tha t was just startin g /'rink , is the only thin g tha t keeps&#13;
us alive. We are now unde r dir&#13;
r C t o ( ] e r f l f r o m Gen . Bates, *&gt;&#13;
expect to rejoin th e regiiill&#13;
we retur n home , but we&#13;
** J t&#13;
. eiaht-tent l .« oi th e ailment s&#13;
itbatafflift th e America n peop' e are&#13;
caused i&gt;y constipation , we shall realg&#13;
ize wby it is tha t Baxter's Mandrak e&#13;
sick&#13;
enabla s them to get well. Baxter's&#13;
Mandrak e Hitter s cure s constipatio n&#13;
Th e peopl e tak e kindl y t o us ; Pric e 25c per bottle—Why no ' step in&#13;
and ffet a bottl e and by nsint? it be assumed&#13;
of good healt h throug h tlie, tr.y&#13;
The Fur in Journa l ha.s nearl y two&#13;
million reader s each issue; it is put*&#13;
tin y in a new press tha t will prin t 200&#13;
H minnfr.-i f is th e best farm&#13;
• in America, an d it pleases th e&#13;
women toli&lt;&gt;.il l fo pieces. We have&#13;
mad a special arrangemen t by which&#13;
j we are able to send the Far m Journa l&#13;
five years to every subscriber of the&#13;
l)i-:pritcl ) who pays all arrearage s an d&#13;
a year in advance ; also to all new subscribers&#13;
who pay a year ahead .&#13;
Volcanic Ernptlon*&#13;
Are jarrand, but skiu eruption s rob&#13;
life of joy. Bucklen't . arnic a salve&#13;
cure s them ; also old, runnin g and&#13;
lever sorfts, ulcers, boils, felons, corns ,&#13;
warts, cuts, bruises, burns , scalds,&#13;
chappe d bands, chilblains , best pile&#13;
cure on earth , drives out pain s and&#13;
aches. Only 25c a box; cure guaran -&#13;
hot months . We sell it and&#13;
t to tfive satisfac ion or&#13;
F. A. Si trier.&#13;
Was th e resuli ot'liis splendi d health .&#13;
Indomitabl e wili an d ttbioendoa s&#13;
energ y ar e no t found where gCouiaob ,&#13;
liver, kidney s an d bowels ar e out,o f&#13;
order . I f ^rou wwit tu«se qualitie i&#13;
and th e success the y brintf, use Dr.&#13;
Kin«VNe w Life Pills. i W develop&#13;
nvfliry power of brain an d bixiy. Onl y&#13;
25o afc F. A. 8iyflf»r'a i]rn# stove.&#13;
Railroa d Guide .&#13;
ttraudTruak Railway System.&#13;
Time Table in effect, Februury 5, 1H!&gt;9. '&#13;
M. A. L. DIVISION --&#13;
No. 27 Paa9eni'er, Pontiac to Jackson&#13;
cunuectioa froui Detroit D 44 a »&#13;
No. 43 Mixed, Lenox to Jncknon&#13;
counectfctii from Detroit 4 45 p m&#13;
All trains daily except Sunday.&#13;
EAST; OL'ND .&#13;
No. 80 PasaeDjjer to ^dntlac and'DHtroU 5 1 1 pm&#13;
No. 44 Mixed'o Pontiac and Lenox 7 5 5 a m&#13;
All trai/je dally except Sunday.&#13;
No. SO connection at Pontiae for IVtroit.&#13;
No 41 connection at Pontiac for Pet ruit anJ&#13;
1 - ....fo r tbw wt'bt on I' A M R 1&#13;
E . H . Hughei, W. J. Wank,&#13;
A G I* A T .^ent, Ayeut,&#13;
Cblcugo, ILI. I&#13;
TOLEDO n NN ARBOK.&#13;
AND&#13;
MICHIGAN) tf&#13;
&gt;&#13;
Popula r rout e for Ann Ay'"-, To -&#13;
le&lt;Jo an d point * East , South , an i lor&#13;
Howell , Owo&gt;so, Alma, Alt H^asan t&#13;
Cadillac , ManisLee , Travers e Cify an d&#13;
point s in Northwester n MicW;m .&#13;
W. H . BEKNKTT ,&#13;
G. P . A. Toled o&#13;
rnEDAVI5 MACHINE S&#13;
Sold by P. A. ftgier, druggis t &gt;CU THE BC5T .SEWING MAOIINES 6N EARTft'&#13;
me [iBERTY $22.80&#13;
AUOt-UTfL V TMtKS T MAM&#13;
№ $WL№ ^20.85&#13;
fHEAESCENTSlS^1&#13;
WAYNE HOTEL, DETROIT&#13;
AMERICAN AHO EUROPEAN PLAN.&#13;
ma r o 03 ao 91-00 TO %a.oo t&#13;
SINGUM MCAUS. GQo. UP r o DATE CAP*9&#13;
we ask is to stay&#13;
her e till&#13;
warm weathe r sets in. We do&#13;
i"1' want to com e back now as it&#13;
W ( ' n l ( 1 kill half of us. Th e hea t&#13;
» noinHMn g nwful, but th e cool&#13;
inulit s HU&lt;1 heavy dew, which we&#13;
The trip overlan d was a bad&#13;
one . Oo r wagon train consiste d&#13;
of twelve wagons aud th e poor&#13;
mule s ha d a har d tim e of it as H r H " o t mr*y&#13;
well as th e men . Under-brush , l n u ( h e a s i e r&#13;
m a k e 8 l i £ e&#13;
escape the&#13;
eactnft, ete higher than your head • ll^lVV « u w d 8 n d f a t i ^ e d u t y o f&#13;
and the heat something awful. t l i e regiment, also the drills. We&#13;
Mercury stands from 80 to 130 in ftre g**ttilJg a l o «g much better&#13;
U&gt;6 fthade but at last we got there tllH!1 any campady in the regi-&#13;
A . , . . _. __ ^_ hattBfied if they will only let us&#13;
towa maabited by 60 or 60 Bi&amp;y tere. The boys are picking&#13;
- • ' - and gbont 400 dirty up some Spanish. I talk it a&#13;
BIGGLE BOOKS A Farm Library of unequalled value—Practical,&#13;
Up-to-date, Concise and Comprehensive—Handsomely&#13;
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AH about Horses—a Common-Sense Treattoe, iritb over&#13;
74 illustration*, a standard work. Price, 50 Cents&#13;
NO. 2—BIQQLE BERRY BOOK&#13;
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contains 43 colored liie-like reproduction* of all le &gt; uing&#13;
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tellacverytbine ; with33 colored life-like reproductions&#13;
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Just out. All about Hojrs—Breeding, Feeding, Butch,&#13;
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FTC A A lirciv vitality. Organs of&#13;
the body which have been weakened&#13;
through d'.Bflabe, overwork, excess or&#13;
Indiscretions, restored to full power,&#13;
strength and vigor by our new and&#13;
original system of treatment&#13;
Ui/IJnDCno of testimonials bear&#13;
nvnuncuv evidence of the good&#13;
results obtained from our method of&#13;
treating all forms of chronic disease.&#13;
WE TREATIND CURE Catarrh,&#13;
Aathma,&#13;
Broochitia,&#13;
Rbcu&#13;
Tumor*,&#13;
Pikt, Fitful*&#13;
Sterility, SkmDaeam,&#13;
Bladder Trouble, Blood DiaraKa,&#13;
Loat of Vitality, Youthful Error*&#13;
Dyspepsia, Nervout Troubles,&#13;
Cooatipitioa,&#13;
Sciatica,&#13;
Lumbago,&#13;
Female weakncaa,&#13;
COISUITATIOI r S U . CHAIG18 H0DIRAT1.&#13;
B««n 9 U 8. Hot Otm 8m»itjt.&#13;
OR. HALE IN PERSONAL CHARGE.&#13;
triCULKOTicli ThoM anabletocallihoald send&#13;
stamp for queatloa blank for home treatment.&#13;
. O- T.&#13;
Edited by the W.C. T. U. of Pinckaey.&#13;
On Account of the inclement&#13;
weather the regular meeting was&#13;
postponed from 1st Friday in the&#13;
mouth to the 3rd., and met with&#13;
Mrs. Leal Sigler with a good number&#13;
in attendance and held a&#13;
mother's meeting. The following&#13;
is a part of the program:&#13;
STYIJ5H, RELIABLE&#13;
ARTISTlC-%.&#13;
Recommended by Leadlag&#13;
I'rejjtnaktr*. £ £&#13;
They V « i y s Please.&lt;%••&#13;
MS CALL&#13;
•PATTERNS&#13;
5 NONE BETTER AT ANY PRICE&#13;
fif" '. h'tt pattern! art told In nearly&#13;
*^e \' r r y ana icwn in the United Slate*.&#13;
Il i r. jr deiier doet not kcrp them tend&#13;
-Lt -o JI Out ;«nt «t*mp» received.&#13;
Au.:-5» yojr nttreic point.&#13;
THE McCALt COMPANY,&#13;
133 to U S W 14th Street, Ne» York&#13;
189 Fifth Ave., Chicago, and&#13;
103.1 Market St.. San Fraoclaco.&#13;
£ CALLS,&#13;
MAGAIINE&#13;
50*&#13;
Brightest Magazine Published&#13;
Contains Beautiful Colored Plate*.&#13;
Illustrates Latfit Patterns, Fashions,&#13;
Fancy Work.&#13;
Agent* wanted for this magazine (nevery&#13;
locality Beautiful premium* for a little&#13;
work Write lor irrmi and oihcT particr.&#13;
Un. Si,b«fip.ii n only 3 0 c . per y«art including a F K E E Pattern,&#13;
Adams THE McCALL COM&#13;
138 to 146 W. 14th St.. New York&#13;
We№ WHEELSj1 1 Too!;:&#13;
MILLER RODE O N E 2 0 9 3 MILES IN 1 3 2 HOURS&#13;
e Eldredge&#13;
&gt; * ...jt&#13;
$40.0 0&#13;
iL&#13;
jjpci'Io r t o all other s irrespective&#13;
of price . Catalogu e tells you&#13;
why. Write for one. i&#13;
NATIONA L SEllh' a MACHIN E CO . jj&#13;
New York. BBLVIOBRE, ILL. |&#13;
Mothe r Never 1№I *&#13;
' Ther e is somethin g in maternit y&#13;
unlik e anythin g else.&#13;
Th e love of a mothe r never dies&#13;
\ out an d in fact it may be said:&#13;
Mothe r never dies; she just goes&#13;
away. To every ma n th e de-&#13;
\ parte d mothe r is as real as ever,&#13;
thoug h gone from sight. Sh e&#13;
lives in his thoughts ; she visits&#13;
him in his dreams ; she come s to&#13;
him in time s of sickness, an d he&#13;
hear s he r voice—sweet voice,&#13;
tha t never dies.&#13;
All she ever said to him passes&#13;
\ in review, thoug h h e ma y no t&#13;
have havkene d to it, as he should&#13;
have done , bu t he r words are&#13;
'. written upo n th e tablet s of hi s&#13;
memory . When far away, out of&#13;
hearin g of tha t kindl y vo:ce, ou t&#13;
of tha t pleasan t smile, we still&#13;
hear , we still see he r with th e eye&#13;
of th e soul. Sh e is no t dead ;&#13;
ouly restin g from "irer laboir of&#13;
love.&#13;
Absent or gone on a journe y to&#13;
th e skyes he r love still remains ,&#13;
her interes t in us aeeuas to be still&#13;
.ft}iye_., and_wh_e_nj|..&gt;4OjKl_actio_ n or a&#13;
new aud bette r m 've is made , we&#13;
often ask ourselyes: "What would&#13;
mothe r say?"&#13;
He r words, he r life, thoug h she&#13;
has gone to rest, follows us to th e&#13;
grave; leads us neare r an d neare r&#13;
vo the eterna l throne . He r influence&#13;
environ s us, &lt;lo what we will;&#13;
these permeat e on r bearing ; the y&#13;
lend us buck to her knee , where&#13;
alu1 taugh t us so lovingly to way&#13;
"Our Father " and ' i l e r e I lay me&#13;
down to sleep."&#13;
However wayward a boy is, th e&#13;
black sheep of th ^ flock he may&#13;
be, th e one whom th e stou t man of&#13;
the hous e closes th e doo r against ,&#13;
onlj increase s th e mother' s love&#13;
for he r castaway. Ho w Chris t&#13;
like. Ther e would uever have&#13;
been a call to th e cross had Ede n&#13;
not been closed. Shu t th e doo r&#13;
of th e hom e against a mother' s&#13;
boy, however bad he may be, an d&#13;
all th e yearning s of a mother' s&#13;
h^ar t will fellow him always. I t&#13;
'tun y be t o th e penitentiary , th e&#13;
gallows an d th e grave; she may&#13;
act anil move, an d go an d come ,&#13;
afterwards, bu t he r hear, t ha s&#13;
non e to th e grave with he r boy.&#13;
Do we blam e her ? Yes, some do,&#13;
and yet, she canno t help it. 'Why'&#13;
she exclaims, "should my boy be&#13;
lost? Jesu s loved him , why should&#13;
I no t lo w him ? Jesu s died to&#13;
save him ; I would die to save him ;&#13;
I will take his place in th e peni -&#13;
tentiary , ^o in his stead to th e&#13;
scaffold; I'l l go throug h th e grave&#13;
for hin;.' *&#13;
C«included next wot k.&#13;
;Council Proceedings.&#13;
Fur The Village of Pinckaej.&#13;
Urn Blfffct *• Vgl&#13;
A woman lovely in face, fora and&#13;
tampe r will always have triend s tat&#13;
ooe who would be attractiv e most&#13;
keep her health . If she is weak, tieklj&#13;
and all ran down, she will be nervon *&#13;
and irritable . If she has constipatio n&#13;
Regula r Meeting , Mar . 6.&#13;
Couuci l convene d an d called t o&#13;
orde r by Pres . Sigler. Present , j or kidney trouble , her impur e blood&#13;
trustee s Teeple , Thompson , Monk s will cause pimples, blotche s or skin&#13;
eruption s and a wretche d com plosion .&#13;
Electri c bitter s is the best medicin e in&#13;
the world to regulate stomach , liver&#13;
and kidneys and so purify th e blood.&#13;
It gives &amp;trong nerves, bright eyes,&#13;
smooth velvety skin, rich complexion .&#13;
It will make a good looking, charmin g&#13;
woman of a run down invalid. Onl j&#13;
50o at F. A. Siller's drug store.&#13;
Jackson ; absent , Reason , Erwin .&#13;
Th e following bills were pre -&#13;
sente d and allowed:&#13;
FriiH'ia t'arr, lighting lamps, % 7.15&#13;
D W Murta, service*, 18.6 8&#13;
W h N.urphy, feeding tramps, 25&#13;
W Mclntyre, running snow plow, 8.50&#13;
Dr. H K Sigler, health officer, 10.0 0&#13;
Total, 83.58&#13;
BUI of W Bates for damages incur-&#13;
TH&lt;I liv washout, 81JJA&#13;
Report of finance committee&#13;
and-treasurer read and approved.&#13;
President Sigler appointed and&#13;
Council approved the following:&#13;
Board of Registration:&#13;
E L Thompson, Geq. Reason J r.&#13;
Election Inspectors:&#13;
C J Teeple, F. G. Jackson.&#13;
" Commissioners:&#13;
H H Teeple, W A Carr, Goo. Reason, Jr.&#13;
Gate Keepers: Wm Hoff, O L Sykea.&#13;
R. H. TEEPLE, Clerk.&#13;
Be sure and read our great offer of&#13;
the DISPATCH for a year and the Farm&#13;
Journal five years, all for the price of&#13;
our paper alone. Just walk up to the&#13;
captain's office and draw the greatest&#13;
prize you ever drew.&#13;
Mrs. Geo. Hull of Hamburg died&#13;
last Wednesday night. Mrs. Hull&#13;
was among the earliest settlers in that&#13;
township. Mr. Hull was absent at&#13;
the time of her death, hem? on a visit&#13;
afeadaughter's in_Qenyer, Cofo. He&#13;
was wired and returned immediately.&#13;
Miss Viola Allen, the "star11 ot Hall&#13;
Caine's dramatization of his popular&#13;
novel, "Christian," baa always aspired&#13;
to be an author. She has said that&#13;
tberearetwrrthingswbie-h&#13;
ratber do than act; write a book, or be&#13;
a trained nurse. She will now make&#13;
her literary debut in an article which&#13;
bke has written tor the Ladies Home&#13;
Journal, reciting and explaining fully&#13;
"What the Life of an Actress Means."&#13;
a&gt; • m ' —•&#13;
Half Rates To Detroit.&#13;
The Grand Trtrntr Railway System&#13;
will issue excursion tickets to the&#13;
public from all its stations iu Michigan&#13;
to Detroit and return at a single&#13;
fare tor the round trip on account ot&#13;
tbe Mohawk Club banquet at Detroit.&#13;
March 30t i. Tickets will be sold for&#13;
ail trains on March 29th, and tor the&#13;
morning trains of March 30th, and&#13;
valid to return on all trains up to&#13;
and including March* 31th 1899.&#13;
This gives an opportunity to visit&#13;
Detroit at a cheap rate and tbe public&#13;
should avail themselves of this opportunity.&#13;
UNDERTAKER&#13;
AND EUBALMER.&#13;
J. G.SAYLES,&#13;
PLAINFIELD, MICH .&#13;
I hold a certificat e from&#13;
the Champio n Embalmin g&#13;
College of SpringEelci , Ohio&#13;
and am prepare d to do embalmin&#13;
g of all kinds.&#13;
A lady assistant for&#13;
balmin g women and children .&#13;
futrftwy&#13;
•VB» T THUUPAY XOSJTIXa VT !&#13;
FRANK L ANDREWS&#13;
Editor and IHroprUtor.&#13;
bubtcrlptloa Price $1 la Ad vane*&#13;
•vntere c at the Postoflce at PincJuejr, MIchi«a».&#13;
aa second-class matter.&#13;
Advertising rates made known on application.&#13;
Business Cards, $4.00 par year.&#13;
reach and marrlase notices published tree.&#13;
Anooanceiaea.1t of entertainment* may be paM&#13;
for, If desired, by presenting the office with tickets&#13;
of admission. In case tickets are not brought&#13;
to tne ottloe, regular rates will be cn*rt(ed.&#13;
All matter in local notice culunan will be cnarg&#13;
ed at &amp; cent* per Hue or fraction tnereot, for eacl&#13;
Insertion, where no time is dpociaed, all notice*&#13;
will be inserted until irderid aiacontinaed, aa4&#13;
will be charged for accordingly. *W *U change*&#13;
of adTerUaetoeat* MUS T rea-h this oince as eatlj&#13;
as TVISOAT morning to insure an insertion to*&#13;
same week.&#13;
JOB PSlJYtWG/ '&#13;
In all Us branches, a sueciaity. We have all kind*&#13;
and the latest styles or Type, etc., wuioh enable*&#13;
us to execute all kinds of work, such as Books,&#13;
Pamplets, Posters, Programmes, Bill Heads, Not*&#13;
Heads, Statements, Cards, Auction Bills, etc., in&#13;
saperier styles, upon the diiortest notice. Prices as&#13;
o'V aa guod work can be aonu.&#13;
BILL* PAVAMLB FIB^T 0 * E/tCtt f&#13;
TH E VILLAGE DIRECTORY .&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PBBBIDBHT . .. ~ - . Alex. Mclntyr*&#13;
TuDSTSSfl E. L. Thompeon, Alfred Monks,&#13;
Daniel Richards, &lt;&gt; eo.. Bowman, Samuel&#13;
fcykee, F. D.Johnson.&#13;
C U B E R- HT. Teeple&#13;
W. E. Mivrphy&#13;
B W. A. Carr&#13;
COMJIISSIOSK H Geo. Burok&#13;
D. W. Murta&#13;
B K A L T Ho m e ga Dr-**i r*. Sl«let&#13;
ATTOBNBV — W. A. Uarr&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH.&#13;
Kev. Chas. Simpson, pastor. Service* every&#13;
Sunday morning at lU:3u, and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:*iocl&lt;&gt;ck. Prayer meeting Thursdtty&#13;
evtjoings. bumlay scaool at close of morniug&#13;
service. F. L. Andrews, Supt.&#13;
r\0&gt;'UrtBQAfI0N\ L CHURCH.&#13;
Kev. V~W. Kice pastor. Service every&#13;
Sunday morning at 10:30 and every Sanday&#13;
evening at 7:0C o'ci JC'*. Prayer meeting Thorsdn&gt;&#13;
evenings. SuaJiy school at clo*e of mornservice.&#13;
K. li. T&lt;»«ule , 6ml. R&gt;&amp;» Head, Sea&#13;
Si1.&#13;
iitav. M. J. Ooinm-iriord, t'ASCor. Service*&#13;
every Sunday. Low mas* at 7:30 o'clock&#13;
higli mass witu sermon at 9::lGa. m. Catechism&#13;
* ™ * - * « * » wrM ^ 7:uo p.m.&#13;
SOCIETIES :&#13;
'las tyecome&#13;
Thi s remed y is mten&#13;
for coughs, colds, cro&#13;
coutfh and influenza . I&#13;
famou s for its cures of&#13;
over a itirg« p£r4- of&#13;
world. Tba mo&gt;t fl-itln&#13;
ials have be-»n received ;&#13;
of its firood work ; of th.&#13;
and persistent coughs ir&#13;
severe cold.* t^at have y&#13;
ly to its' soothing effec:&#13;
dangerous attacks ot&#13;
cured, otten saving t!&#13;
child. Tbe extensive&#13;
whooping cough has «hoivn that&#13;
robs disease of all dangerous con&#13;
quences. Sold by F. A. Sik'ler.&#13;
U. if. Society at tbls place, mMU every&#13;
iiv ia the Kr. Matthew Hall,&#13;
John McGuinesa.Couuty Delegate.&#13;
Piii \ '*y V. P. 8. C, E. Meetings held every&#13;
•^'i/i i.i; I'veni'i^ia Caajj'lcUurob it ii:i &gt; o'clock&#13;
Mi i d MMablle D Sec&#13;
civilized '_ (V&#13;
co r&#13;
mil.&#13;
J'&#13;
eor't.&#13;
j s e&#13;
^ i rig account&#13;
aggravating i&#13;
ts cured; of&#13;
&lt;ie i prompt-1&#13;
Hud of the;&#13;
fi)up it hag&#13;
1 i I'e Af t b e ,&#13;
of it for&#13;
it;&#13;
(&lt;:ilil Lli\GL'K. Meets every Sunday&#13;
ouiiJit^ffclWjK-lock in tii» M. K. Cnurch. A&#13;
is ex"i«hTte'ir~to~e"VB"ryo'n'e1 people. Mrs. Stella UriUnui I*re*.&#13;
• r : i &lt; &gt; d . i ; • &gt; : •&#13;
kiy iuv11.,•&lt; 1.&#13;
every&#13;
l&#13;
Sunday&#13;
M. b All&#13;
LMitu Van^bd, Superiuttiudeut.&#13;
Hi'-&#13;
•*».'. T. A. anil'b.&#13;
&gt;*iy '.aird&#13;
flail. Jotm&#13;
this p!*c*», mt«t&#13;
evemajr ta t i e Fr. M»t-&#13;
, Preeidoat.&#13;
K:; ot&#13;
MACCABBES.&#13;
&gt;ie«i«v«fv t'ridiiy evening on or before fail&#13;
tue tuooa at tbetr bill in the Swart bout bldg.&#13;
iMrutuern ^r« cordially invited.&#13;
Sir Knight Commander&#13;
;e- T iviQ^'ston Lodge, No.7"-, V &amp; A., M. K^-il»r&#13;
XJ CuiuuiuuicaUaa Tuesday evening, on or before&#13;
of ilie uioon. Alex»aJer Mclut/re, \\'. SI.&#13;
= 0 ) EVJ-ViY&#13;
Disgusted With Politics.&#13;
A large delegation of Brightoniies&#13;
went to Howell last Thursday&#13;
to do what they could in furtherbv&#13;
i&gt;&gt;vern.&#13;
rTIVK SOLICITOUS V V N n&#13;
WUKKKfur ":Tne s orvof th«&#13;
Murut Halj'teMiL, co;r.ttu&gt;3ioa-d l&gt;y ih&#13;
as DiH'-.ial liUturiin to the War&#13;
| mtfiit. Thn i\&gt;ok wa&lt; vvri't^u in .1 my camp* at&#13;
Saa tvrar.cis&gt;co, on the Pacitic withtt^uerisl Merritt.&#13;
i in tile hospital^ at lloixiluht, iu llon^ K.011 ;, in&#13;
the American treuctiui* at NUniili. ia tht. intur-&#13;
, gents camp* with .AiiiiinaUl &gt;. '&gt;n the d-vfe ol tlie&#13;
Olymjiia with D^vrey. an i in tlif roar of thebattla&#13;
, at t IIH al or Manilla Bui.in/. 1 fur a^^nls. Brim- ID Or t h e i n t e r e s t Of a f o r m e r LlV-'f«'(»f pictures tnli-a hy -&gt; -rnnieat photorfia-&#13;
* . 1 . pliers DD tlit* sp &gt;t. Lar^e ln&gt;ok. L &gt;w priC'-s; JJ'i;&#13;
C o . m a n ( w h o b y Choice profits. Krei^tit p^iil. Creilit irivea. Drop all&#13;
trashy untitticial war biRtks outfit fret*. Address,&#13;
F. T. Barber, Sdc'y. Star lusarauce Bldg. Chicago.&#13;
OUUBK OF KASl'KitX .Sf.Vii ia&lt;*Ht»6aoa moath&#13;
tuu Friday eveaiaj; following tin ru'iiUr t'.&#13;
AA.M. meetia^, Al»ts. MALIV lt£^o, sV. M.&#13;
LAL&gt;H'&gt;; OF r t u : .MAC^'AUtl^S. ^odt every 1st&#13;
aad .ii'd suidi'diiy &lt;J( trucuuiauia at Z'-'i1) p in. at&#13;
K. «*. 1". Si. u^il. Viiinuj !i.»t.jij o r l i a a y in&#13;
LILA CONIWAI' Uady Com. »&#13;
was our genial towns-man, B. T.&#13;
O. Clark,) in the judicial convention&#13;
for circuit judge of this 35th&#13;
judicial district. Mr. Clark received&#13;
the solid eleveo Livingston&#13;
votes on the first ballot, but j&#13;
Shiawassee had 15 (and they were&#13;
I have been afflicted with rheumatism&#13;
for fourteen years acd not bins&#13;
seemed to £ive any relief. 1 was able&#13;
to be around all the ti'm?, hut coostantiv&#13;
suffering I had tried everything&#13;
I could I)far ot an 1 at last was&#13;
SIGHTS OK THE LOYAL GU i.RO&#13;
me t every second Wednesday&#13;
g of every moutaiutho K. O.&#13;
M. Hall at ;M o'clock. Ail visiting&#13;
AKNELL, Capt. Ge&#13;
I^HK W. C. T. f. meets the first Friday of eaoa&#13;
luonth at ;}.'•! j&gt;. m. at t &gt;e ti&gt;n&lt;? of t)r. H. F.&#13;
Siller. Kveryone iateretct^l iu ternperano* ie&#13;
coartially iuvited &gt;[rs. '^eal Sijjler, Pre»; Mrs.&#13;
Ktta Durtee, S t&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
for S. F. Smith,) and as it was t o l d t o t r j chamberlain1* Pain B.ilm&#13;
re-&#13;
I y C b P&#13;
impossible to beat that number :wbiL-b I did and was immedwtp'y&#13;
Mr. Smith carried of t h e plum, j Jieved and in a short time t-art-d. I&#13;
There was much feeling against am happy to say tu it it has not since&#13;
Shiawassee playing the swiue act, returned.— Jo&gt;bi Eduar. Geruiaatown,&#13;
H. F. SIGLER M. 0- , C, L. SIGLER M, Ct&#13;
DRS. SIGLER a SIGLER,&#13;
riijrjkiajis an-; Su;. e m . \u calls prompt I&#13;
att&lt;?!idiy[ to da? or mght. Oftire ou Main sir&#13;
1'inckuev, Mich.&#13;
B.&#13;
i f T H F i-OJinTOEK W/KTEP KVKRT&#13;
'A Y PHI frT'lh* ftmty of the rbi&gt;ipln«e(&#13;
cv V\ i*» V-thn ^d, ct'H «4i*iriied by tl&gt;»* CJ«-v«ri&#13;
'fnVnt DM • c l » l flirtoriat &lt;o •!&gt;• * »r rvpjrrtnwit,&#13;
Th N k iti in the army minn* m Sa«&#13;
flrtpj&#13;
Th* Nfk var «&gt;itim&gt; in the army minn* m S&#13;
h l d f l * l t h U^Ber* M«rm&#13;
aH, ir&#13;
t&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
toe Uljr»•&#13;
ffi&#13;
His l-lf« W«« Saved&#13;
Mr. J. fi. Lilly, a prominent citizen&#13;
of Hannibal, Mo,, lately had a wondertul&#13;
deliverance from a frightiul death,&#13;
in telling of it be says: "I was taken&#13;
with typhoid fever, that ran into pneo*&#13;
monia. My lungs became hardened,&#13;
1 was so weak I ronld not even set op&#13;
in bed. I expected to die soon of eon*&#13;
Mimption, when I heard of Dr. King's '&#13;
New Discovery. One bottle gave relief.&#13;
I continued to use and am&#13;
now well and strong and I can't&#13;
Bay too mach in its praise/1 This marvelon*&#13;
medicine is the surest and&#13;
quickest cure in the world for all&#13;
throat and lunjr trouble. Regular&#13;
8iMt 50c Md ?1. Trial bottfet free at&#13;
P. A.&#13;
year after year and no few were&#13;
heard to express themselves in&#13;
favor of an honest Livingston Co&#13;
representative aud we presume&#13;
that means Bon. W. P. Van Winkle,&#13;
ex-piosecuting Attorney and&#13;
candidate for circuit jud^e ou the&#13;
democratic ticket.—Brighton Argus.&#13;
That is right, boys, you can&#13;
not do better that support a Liv.&#13;
ingstou county gentleman for this&#13;
office.&#13;
Cal For sale by P. A. Sigler.&#13;
Dr. M1W Pain Pllla, -On* Oftnt» dflM."&#13;
over S.^!'&#13;
GREEN.&#13;
T—Kvery Thursday and FricUy&#13;
Urui Store.&#13;
For&#13;
. . . . t'rui i ii -.r ..&gt;:-&#13;
Ac; or. a re-.*&#13;
i* i&#13;
iiujia Pnxe and bov&gt;&lt;3&#13;
mroet. Ditpttdilv&#13;
nr$&#13;
torpid liver Baa co-»tip»«&#13;
W« can make to&#13;
yonr measure a&#13;
Fine. All-Wool&#13;
.50&#13;
Soft&#13;
Latest City Styks&#13;
Dr.Cady'e Conditiou Powders are&#13;
just what a hora« need^ when in bad&#13;
conditiop. Tonic, blood purifier and&#13;
•ermitnsre. They are aot food but&#13;
medicine and the be*t in use to pnt a&#13;
bom in prime oonditioa. Price 25c&#13;
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er.&#13;
Rev. E. Edwards, pa«tor of the&#13;
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PaM when suffering with rheumatism&#13;
was advised to try Chamberlain's Pain&#13;
Balm. He says: "A few applications&#13;
of this liniment proved of great service&#13;
to&lt;re. It subdoed the inflaatatio* aid&#13;
relieved the pain. Shoaki any&#13;
fi i&#13;
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Samples aad Booklet "Haw to&#13;
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PINCKNEY, • * • MICHIGAN.&#13;
The sherry cobbler is ono kiud of -&#13;
she*-horn.&#13;
Most meu are too modest fc. edm't&#13;
the 6lze of their faults.&#13;
Some men's charitable contributions&#13;
are confined to suggestions.&#13;
TALMAGE'S SERMON.&#13;
"THE STAR WORMWOOD" LABT&#13;
SUNDAY'S SUBJECT.&#13;
*Thor« ¥W1 • Qtmt fttur treat ••**•••&#13;
Baralac aa It W«M M A It F«U&#13;
the Third P*rt of th« Blwrt, K&#13;
, A bit in a horse's mouth doesn't prevent&#13;
him from getting hungry.&#13;
The courtship of Romeo and Juliet&#13;
discloses&#13;
genius.&#13;
a spark of Shakespearean&#13;
Some people can't see what pleasure&#13;
those who mind their owa business&#13;
find in living.&#13;
the happiest man in the&#13;
world is tho oue who has Ju3t invested&#13;
in his first wedding ring.&#13;
France has uo vice president, and&#13;
jrobably doesn't know that this country&#13;
is blessed with such an official.&#13;
In attacking monopolies Gov. Pingree&#13;
carefully refrains from including&#13;
his political monopoly in Michigan.&#13;
Whatever country lands troops onJ&#13;
the Philippines must make up its mind&#13;
to encounter a long list of&#13;
troubles.&#13;
robust&#13;
The sad reninant of American Indians&#13;
might get together and pass resolutions&#13;
that would be instructive to th»&#13;
Filipinos.&#13;
' Owing to the great distance Mr.&#13;
Cleveland U from the democratic party,&#13;
his" wigwagging signals cannot be&#13;
made out&#13;
An Ohio man is seeking a divorce&#13;
because his wife refuses to talk. Some&#13;
men haven't sense enough to 1st well&#13;
enough alone.&#13;
To meet the demands of the hour&#13;
somebody should invent a blemish powder&#13;
that will remove green whiskers&#13;
from embalmed beef.&#13;
It didn't take Gomez very long to&#13;
come down out of the mountains after&#13;
be became assured that the $3,000,000&#13;
could really be collected.&#13;
Agulnaldo takes himself seriously.&#13;
according to Consul Wildman.&#13;
remains for Otis to take the&#13;
man by the nape of the neck.&#13;
It now&#13;
young&#13;
' A rate war has been started by the&#13;
Atlantic steamship lines, but it has&#13;
not as yet reached a point where a&#13;
fried oyster is given with every&#13;
ticket.&#13;
The Indians who are about to abandon&#13;
the comparative civilization of the&#13;
Indian Territory for the savagery of&#13;
their ancient state in a Mexican wilderness,&#13;
it is said, are buying bicycles&#13;
on which to make the journey to their&#13;
new hunting grounds. And an enterprising&#13;
company is building a trolleycar&#13;
line from Cairo to the Pyramids.&#13;
. The most daring humorist&#13;
never conceived a fancy more grotesque&#13;
than those two Item3 of actual&#13;
news.&#13;
Topeka &lt;*iapntches state that the&#13;
Kansas legislature has determined to&#13;
add to the state penitentiary a manufactory&#13;
for the production of binding&#13;
tirlne. A committee was sent to Minnesota&#13;
to see how the twine factory&#13;
was conducted there, and it returned&#13;
trith the most flattering reports. The&#13;
action of the legislature meets with&#13;
the hearty approbation of the Kansas&#13;
farmers, for t3»*7 have been buying a&#13;
great deal of btnaing twine in the last&#13;
two years. There is no twine made in&#13;
the state, so that there would be no&#13;
competition with free labor in Kansas,&#13;
whatever it might be on the outside.&#13;
The plant will turn out annually about&#13;
3,000,000 pounds of twine. The annual&#13;
coz'juziption of the state is taV.-&#13;
inated to be 25.OW.0O0 poands.&#13;
One of our consuls In China reports.&#13;
to the state department that labor-saving&#13;
devices .are not wanted in that&#13;
•country. There i* no £qr&#13;
wheelbarrows, eifi&amp;pt' occasionally for&#13;
the conveyance b? p^afifnferij fee says.&#13;
JSarth, or any hesry substance, i«&#13;
6tnarUy carried by a coolie la twotoricets&#13;
hung on the ends of » bamboo&#13;
zod ba^aiMMd oft his nhoaider*. $ucfe&#13;
* coenje, working; from s%nria» to «emmei.&#13;
receives what would be in our&#13;
money about eight cents a day. A man&#13;
It therefore cheaper than machinery.&#13;
It is economy to supply the high-priced&#13;
laborer with good tools in order that&#13;
fete efforts may «o a* far' as possible.&#13;
U the nattsms &lt;£jtyp wojf#&#13;
Patrick and Lowtb, Thomas Scott,&#13;
Matthew Henr/, Albert Barnes aud&#13;
some other commentators say that the&#13;
star Wormwood of my text was a type&#13;
of Attila, king of the Huns. He was&#13;
so called because he waa brilliant as&#13;
a star, and, like wormwood, ha embittered&#13;
everything he touched. We have&#13;
studied the Star of Bethlehem, and the&#13;
Morning Star of Revelation, and the&#13;
Star of Peace, but my subject calls us&#13;
to gaze at the star Wormwood, and my&#13;
theme might be called Brilliant Bitterness.&#13;
A more extraordinary character history&#13;
does not furnish than this man,&#13;
Attila, the king of the Huns. The&#13;
story goes that one day a wounded&#13;
heifer came limping along through tho&#13;
fields, and a herdsman followed its&#13;
bloody track on the grass to see where&#13;
the heifer was wounded, and went on&#13;
back, further and further, until he&#13;
came to a sword fast in the earth, the&#13;
point downward as though it had&#13;
dropped from the heavens, and against&#13;
the edges of this sword the heifer bad&#13;
been cut. The herdsman pulled up&#13;
that sword and presented it to Attila.&#13;
Attila said that sword must have dropped&#13;
from the heavens from the grasp&#13;
of the god Mars, and its being given to&#13;
him meant that Attila should conquer&#13;
and govern the whole earth. Other&#13;
mighty men have been delighted at being&#13;
called liberators, or the Merciful,&#13;
or the Good, but Attila called himself,&#13;
and demanded that others call him,&#13;
"The Scourge_of God/^ _ _&#13;
At the head of seven hundred thousand&#13;
troops, mounted on Cappadocian&#13;
horses, he swept everything, from the&#13;
Adriatic to the Black sea. He put his&#13;
iron heel on Macedonia and Greece and&#13;
Thrace. He made Milan and Pavia&#13;
and Padua and Verona beg for mercy,&#13;
which he bestowed riot. TEe~ Byzantine&#13;
castles, to meet his ruinous levy,&#13;
put up at auction massive silver tables,&#13;
and vases of solid gold. When a city&#13;
was captured by him the inhabitants&#13;
were brought out and put into three&#13;
classes: The first class, those who&#13;
could bear arms, must immediately en-1&#13;
list under Attila or be butchered; the&#13;
second class, the beautiful women,were&#13;
made captives to the Huns; the third&#13;
class, the aged men and women, were&#13;
rohhgri *&gt;f everything and let_go^j)ack&#13;
to the city to pay a heavy tax.&#13;
It was a common saying that th«&#13;
grass never grew where the hoof of&#13;
Attila's horse had trod. His armies&#13;
reddened the waters of the Seine and&#13;
the Moselle and the Rhine with carnage,&#13;
and fought on the Catalonian&#13;
plains the fiercest battle since the&#13;
world stood—300,000 dead left on the&#13;
field. On and on until all those who&#13;
could not oppose him with arm3 lay&#13;
prostrate on their faces in prayer; then&#13;
a cloud of dust was seen in the distance,&#13;
and a bishop cried, "It is the&#13;
aid of God;" and all the people took&#13;
up the cry, "It is the aid of God." As&#13;
the cloud of dust was blown aside, the&#13;
banners of reinforcing armies marched&#13;
1B to help against Attila, "the Scourge&#13;
of God." The most unimportant occurrences&#13;
he used as a supernatural&#13;
resource. After three months of failure&#13;
to capture the city of Aquileia,&#13;
when his army had given up the siege,&#13;
the flight of a stork and her young&#13;
from the tower of the city was taken&#13;
by him as a sign that he was to capture&#13;
the city; and his army, inspired&#13;
with the same occurrence, resumed the&#13;
siege and took the walls at a point&#13;
from which the stork had. emerged. So&#13;
brilliant was the conqueror in attire&#13;
that his enemies cculd not look at him,&#13;
but shaded their eyes or turned their&#13;
h»ad3.&#13;
Slain on the evening of his marriage&#13;
by his bride, Ildico, who was hired for&#13;
the assassination, his followers bewailed&#13;
him, not with tears, but with blood,&#13;
cutting themselves wiU knives and&#13;
lances. He was put Into three coffins,&#13;
the first of iron, the second of silver,&#13;
and the third of gold. He was buried&#13;
by night, and into L:s grave "was&#13;
poured*. the&lt;»asfc-Vitl«hDle «0im*&#13;
it fell upon the third part of the riven,&#13;
and upon tta fountains of waters,&#13;
and the name at the star is called&#13;
Wormwood."&#13;
Have you ever thought how many&#13;
embittered lives there are all about us,&#13;
misanthropic, morbid, acrid, saturnine?&#13;
The European plant from which&#13;
wormwood is extracted, Artemisia absinthium,&#13;
is a perennial plant, and all&#13;
the yoar round it is ready to exude itu&#13;
oil. And in many human lives there&#13;
is a perennial distillation of acrid experiences.&#13;
Yea, there are some whose&#13;
whole work is to shed a baleful influence&#13;
on others. There are Attilaa of&#13;
the home, Attilas of the social circle,&#13;
Attilas of the church, Attilas of the&#13;
state, and one-third of the waters of&#13;
all the world, if not two-thirds of the&#13;
waters are poisoned by the falling of&#13;
the star Wormwood. It is not complimentary&#13;
to human nature that most&#13;
men, as soon as they get great power,&#13;
become overbearing. The more power&#13;
men have the better, if tnelr power&#13;
be used for good. The less power men&#13;
have the better, if they use it for evil.&#13;
Birds circle round and round and&#13;
round before they swoop upon that&#13;
which they are aiming for. And if my&#13;
discourse so far has been swinging&#13;
round and round, this moment it drops&#13;
straight on your heart, and asks the&#13;
question, Is your life a^benediction to&#13;
others, or an embitterment, a blessing&#13;
or a curse, a balsam or a wormwood?&#13;
Some of you, I know, are morning&#13;
stars, and you aro making the dawning&#13;
life of your children bright with gracious&#13;
influences, and you are beaming&#13;
upon all the opening enterprises of&#13;
philanthropic and Christian endeavor,&#13;
and you are heralds of that day of Gospelijsation&#13;
which will yet flood all tho&#13;
mountains and valleys of our sin-accursed&#13;
earth. Hail, morning star!&#13;
Keep on shining with encouragement&#13;
and Christian hope!&#13;
Some of you are evening stars, and&#13;
you are cheering the last days _pf_old&#13;
people; and though a cloud sometimes&#13;
comes over you through the querrulousness&#13;
or unreasonableness of your&#13;
aged father and mother, it iv. only for&#13;
a moment, and the star soon come3 out&#13;
clear again and is seen from all the&#13;
balconies of the nalghborhood. Ths&#13;
old-people- will forgivo your occasional&#13;
shortcomings, for they themselves&#13;
several times lost their patience with&#13;
you when you were young, and perhaps&#13;
whipped you when you did not&#13;
deserve it.\ Hail, evening star I Hang&#13;
on the darkening sky your diamond&#13;
coronet. • * *&#13;
What is true of individuals is true of&#13;
nations. God sets them up to revolve&#13;
os stars, but, they may fall wormwood.&#13;
Tyro=-the atmosphere of the desert,&#13;
fragrant with spices coming in caravnns&#13;
tn her JairjLu_ftll_Bea3_cjeft into&#13;
precious stones, amounting to the&#13;
wealth of a kingdom,&#13;
gers and those who&#13;
The grave dlg-&#13;
•ssisted at the&#13;
cainery and other labor-ajitflr) aj devices&#13;
have reached their hUhest developit,&#13;
the laborer is himself most&#13;
veined and comae*** i t * high**&#13;
If It weifr pot seV the&#13;
cfctaery wool* not have n*» eatted&#13;
feto existence.&#13;
burial were massacred, so that It would&#13;
never be known where so much wealth&#13;
was entombed.&#13;
The Roman empire conquered the&#13;
world, but Attila conquered the Roman&#13;
empire. He was right in calling&#13;
himself a scourge, but Instead of being&#13;
"the Stoorge of God," he was the&#13;
•co«rg*uf bell. .&#13;
Because of bis brilliancy&#13;
the&#13;
bitterwell&#13;
have suppeeed him to be tfctt star&#13;
Wormwood of the text A* U « regions&#13;
he devastated were parts moat&#13;
opulent with fountains aad&#13;
fivers, you aee how&#13;
text is: "There fell a great star&#13;
Jbeaven, burning as It were a laaj, aad&#13;
foam by the keels of her laden merchantmen;&#13;
her markets rich with&#13;
horses and camels rom Togttrmah; the&#13;
bazaar filled with upholstery from Dedan,&#13;
with emerald and coral and agata&#13;
from Syria, with mines from Helboa,&#13;
with embroidered work from Ashur&#13;
and Chiimad. Where now tho gleam of&#13;
her towers? where the roar of her&#13;
chariots? where the masts of hsr ships?&#13;
I«et the fishermen who dry their nets&#13;
whoro once she stood; let the sea that&#13;
upon the barrenness where&#13;
once Bhe challenged the admiration Oi&#13;
all nations; let the barbarians who sec&#13;
their rude tents where onco her palaces&#13;
glittered, answer the questiona.&#13;
She was a star, but by her own sin&#13;
turned to wormwood, and has fallen.&#13;
Hundred-gated Thebes—for all time&#13;
ti&gt; be the study of antiquarian and&#13;
hieroglyphlst; her stupendous ruins&#13;
spread over twenty-seven miles; her&#13;
sculptures presenting in figures of warrior&#13;
and chariot the victories with&#13;
which the now forgotten kings of&#13;
Egypt Fhook the nations; her obeliski&#13;
and columns; Karnuc and Luxor, the&#13;
stupendous temples of her pride! Who&#13;
can imagine the greatness of Thobc3&#13;
in those days, when the hippodrome&#13;
rang with her sports and, foreign roy- ,&#13;
alty bowed at her shrines, and her&#13;
avenues roared with the wheels of processions&#13;
in the wake of returning conquerors?&#13;
What dashed down the vision&#13;
of chariots and temples and&#13;
thrones? What hands pulled upon the&#13;
columns of her glory? What ruthlessness&#13;
defaced her sculptured wall and&#13;
broke obelisks and left her indescribable&#13;
temples great skeletons of granite?&#13;
What spirit of destruction spread&#13;
the lair of wild beasts In her royal sepulchers,&#13;
aad taught the miserable cottagers&#13;
of today to build huts in the&#13;
courts of her temples, and sent desolation&#13;
and ruin skulking behind the&#13;
obelisks and dodging among the sarcophagi,&#13;
and leaning against the columns,&#13;
and stooping under the arches,&#13;
and weeping in the waters which go&#13;
mournfully by, as though they were&#13;
carrying the tears of all ages? Let&#13;
the mummies break their long silence&#13;
and come up to shiver in the desolattoa,&#13;
and point to fallen gates and&#13;
shatter** •fcatuea- **4 defaced sculpture,&#13;
responding:"T|teMM built not 4*9&#13;
temple to Go*. Tfcebe* hated rfekioouaoess&#13;
and loved aia. Thebes waa&#13;
a star, but she turned to wormwood&#13;
and V*&#13;
a nation. The council-fires of the aborigines&#13;
went out in the greater light&#13;
of a free government. The wwnd.of&#13;
the war-whoop was exchanged for the&#13;
thousand wheels of enterprUe and&#13;
progress. The mild winters, the fruitful&#13;
summers, the healthful skies,&#13;
charmed from other lands a race ot&#13;
hardjr juea* who loved God and wanted&#13;
to be tree. Before the woodman's axe&#13;
forest* fell, and rose again into ships'&#13;
masts and churches' pillars. Cities oa&#13;
the banks of the lakes began to rival&#13;
cities by the sea. The land quakes&#13;
with tho rush of the rail car, and tha&#13;
waters aro churned white with the&#13;
steamer's wheel. Fabulous bushels o£&#13;
Western wheat meet on the way fabulous&#13;
tons of Eastern coal. Furs from&#13;
the North pass on the rivers fruits&#13;
from tho South, And trading in the&#13;
same market are Maine lumberman,&#13;
and South Carolina rice merchant, and&#13;
Ohio farmer, and Alaska fur dealer.&#13;
And churches and schools and asylums&#13;
scatter light and love and mercy&#13;
and salvation upon seventy millions 0'&#13;
people.&#13;
I pray that our nation may not copy&#13;
the crimes of nations that have perished;&#13;
that our cup of blessing turn&#13;
not to wormwood and we go down. I&#13;
am by nature and by grace an optimist,&#13;
and I expect that this country will&#13;
continue to advance until the world&#13;
shall reach tho millennial era. Our&#13;
only safety is in righteousness toward&#13;
God and justice toward man. If we&#13;
forget the goodness of the Lord to this&#13;
land, and break his Sabbaths, and improve&#13;
not by the dire disasters that&#13;
have again and again come to ua as a&#13;
people, and wo learn saving lesson&#13;
neither from civil war nor raging epidemic,&#13;
nor drought, nor mildew, nor&#13;
scourge of locust and grasshopper; ff&#13;
tho political corruption which has&#13;
poisoned tho fountains of public virtue,&#13;
and besllmed the high places of&#13;
authority, making free government at&#13;
times a hissing and a byword in all&#13;
the earth; if the drunkenness and li»&#13;
centlousness that stagger and blaspheme&#13;
in the streets of our great cities&#13;
as though they were reaching after&#13;
the fame of a Corinth^aiid ft Sodoa,&#13;
are not repented of, we will yet&#13;
the imoke of our nation's ruin; the pillars&#13;
of our National and State Capitolsjs'lll_&#13;
fall-moro.disastrously than&#13;
when Samson'pulled down Dagon; and&#13;
futuro historians will record, upon th&lt;5&#13;
page, bedewed with generous tear3, the&#13;
story that the free nation of the West&#13;
arose in splendor which nr*de the&#13;
world stare; It had magnificent possibilities.&#13;
It forgot God. It hated Justice.&#13;
It hugged its crimes. It haltei&#13;
on its high march. It reeled under the&#13;
blow of calamity. It fell. And as it&#13;
was going down, all the despotism* of&#13;
earth, from tho top of bloody thrones*&#13;
began to shout: "Aha! so would we&#13;
Do not think for a tingle&#13;
moment thtt consumption wilt&#13;
ever strike you a sudden blow*&#13;
It docs not come that way.&#13;
It creeps its way along.&#13;
First, you think it hi a llttio&#13;
cold; nothing but a little hack«&#13;
iH£ cough; then a little loss in&#13;
weight: then a harder cough;&#13;
then the fever and the night&#13;
sweats.&#13;
The suddenness comes when&#13;
you have a hemorrhage.&#13;
Better stop the disease wUil*&#13;
it is yet creeping.&#13;
You can do it with&#13;
You first notice that you&#13;
cough less. The pressure on&#13;
the chest is lifted. That feeling&#13;
of suffocation is removed. A&#13;
cure is hastened by placing one of&#13;
Dr. Ayer's Cherry&#13;
Pectoral Plaster&#13;
over the Chest.&#13;
ABook Fr\3Ot&#13;
It Is on the Diseases of tile&#13;
Throat and Lungs.&#13;
¥Mlm urn Fpttfy.&#13;
It you have »ny '.'omplalnt wftatara&#13;
fcod aettre the bwt medical advlco you&#13;
ckn poMtbty receive, writs the doctor i&#13;
freely. You will receive a prompt reply, f&#13;
Without eott. Adrtraii,&#13;
__ DR. J. fl. AYER. Lowell. llaJL.&#13;
A Woman's understandintr h»* ft great deal to&#13;
do with her ideas o'f dre*s reform.&#13;
Lead* to ContumptlMl*&#13;
- Kemp's Balsam will stop the cong-h&#13;
at once. Go to your druggist today&#13;
and get a sample bottle free. Sold in&#13;
25 and 50 cent bottlca.&#13;
lays are dangerous.&#13;
Go at once; de-&#13;
Mt!" while struggling—and opprcssed&#13;
peoples looked out from dungeon&#13;
bars, with tears and groans, and&#13;
cries of untold agony, the scorn of&#13;
those, and the woe of these, uniting in&#13;
the exclamation: "Look yonder!&#13;
'There fell a great star from heaven,&#13;
burning as It were * lamp, aud It fell&#13;
upon the third part of the rivers, and&#13;
upon the fountains of waters; and the&#13;
name of the star is called Wormwood!"'&#13;
^&#13;
Women wan mode before mirror**-*nd she&#13;
kept be/ore them ever since.&#13;
MEXICO'S SIGN LANCUAOB.&#13;
£.•&#13;
grin* Fathers and ffte Huguenots 1B&#13;
other lands, Ood set upon these storo*&#13;
IU gliadtng* and Sag-geetIon* Are D««&#13;
yond All Translation.&#13;
Mexico ie a land of many tongues;&#13;
but above tho Indian dialects and&#13;
Sparish there is oue univerpal language,&#13;
the language cf sigus, says&#13;
Modern Mexico. It Is the most expressive&#13;
of all; the Mexican eye and(&#13;
hand are eloquent members. It Is'&#13;
capable 0! infinite variation; its shadings&#13;
and suggestions are beyond all&#13;
translation. But there are certain gestures&#13;
that have a fixed meaning, a signification&#13;
well understood to every nation&#13;
and every tribe from Guatemala&#13;
to Texas. A general upward movement&#13;
of the body, shoulders shrugged,&#13;
eyebrows raised, lips pouted, the palms&#13;
cutfe^read vary in meaning from "I&#13;
don't know and I don't care" to a most&#13;
respectful, "Really, eir, I do not understand&#13;
you." Tho index finger moved&#13;
rapidly from right to left, generally&#13;
before t&gt;&gt;e face, means, "No more," or&#13;
elzaply "No." To move the right hand&#13;
palm outward from the body toward&#13;
another person means, "Just wait; I'll&#13;
be evan with you yet." The index flngti'&#13;
on the temple, moved with a boring&#13;
twist means, "He's drunk." The right&#13;
hand held to the lips three fingers&#13;
doubled/thumb and little finger erevt,&#13;
varies from "He drinks" to "Hare one&#13;
with me." To move the open hand&#13;
over the cheek in imitation of a razor&#13;
hai reference to the idiom "playing&#13;
the barber" and means "to flatter." Ail&#13;
four fingers and the thumb held points&#13;
together and moved toward the mouth&#13;
means "to eat." The right hand held&#13;
before the face, the two middle fingers&#13;
moving rapidly, is a familiar saluta-&#13;
—TPr.-Woud'a Noi way Pipe Syrup •oonnj&#13;
especially adapted to the needs of the,&#13;
children. Pleasant to take; soothin?&#13;
in its influence. It is the remedy of&#13;
All remedies for every form of throat&#13;
aad lung troubles.&#13;
The man who is employed by his wife's father&#13;
don't worry about losing his job.&#13;
• There 1B more Catarrh in this soction of toe&#13;
country than all other diseases put together, and&#13;
until the last few years was supposed to be incurable.&#13;
For a (rreat many years doctors pronounced&#13;
it a local dSnease. and prescribed local&#13;
remedies, and by constantly failing to cure with&#13;
local treatment, pronounced ft incurable.&#13;
Science has proven catarrh to be a constitutional&#13;
disease, and therefore requires constitutional&#13;
treatment, nail's Catarrh Cure, manufactured&#13;
by F. 4. Cheney &amp; Co., Toledpv Ohio* is the eely&#13;
constitutional cure on the market. It Is taken&#13;
internally In doses from 10 drops to a teospoonful.&#13;
It acts directly on the blood and mucous&#13;
surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred&#13;
dollars for any ease it falls to cure. Send for&#13;
circulars and testimonials. Address, .&#13;
P. J. CHENEY &amp; CO., Toledo, a&#13;
Srid by Druggists, 75c.&#13;
Hall's Family Pills are the best. •&#13;
i In yellow Journalism what they hit ia history&#13;
end whut they rate* is mystery. - x&#13;
Spalding's&#13;
Trade Mark&#13;
Means&#13;
"Standard&#13;
of Quality"&#13;
on Athletic Coods&#13;
Insist upon Spalding'p&#13;
Handsome Catalogue Free.&#13;
A. O. SPALDING * 9KO3.&#13;
New York. Cfclsajg* Denver.&#13;
Two comnssyejal tra&#13;
paring notes.., *I naval&#13;
'^f erf comt&#13;
three&#13;
I have&#13;
beats&#13;
_&#13;
weeks," e e i ^ ^ e flitt? "&#13;
only got tear tordeYtf ;£?b*t beats&#13;
law." j*44 the otter. -I kive bean oat&#13;
tbor weeks. «s4 Mre only got ene&#13;
order, amif that's (roam the firm to come&#13;
SEEDS&#13;
• V •&#13;
, , - • &lt; • . . . v . . * ; ,&#13;
OUfi £L9tiEX OE FU&amp;&#13;
3OME QOOCf JOKES. ORiqjfrJAs&gt;&#13;
4*] a s EVICTED. ^ (&#13;
* • )&#13;
{&#13;
Original i * * * Sejeesed—MatM« u d&#13;
JeUara from tbe Tlue oC liuiaor—&#13;
Witty&#13;
* A IWck Yarrt right.&#13;
They met on top of the backyard&#13;
fence—an unconventional pluce—&#13;
.And* each one felt rather shy, upon see*&#13;
ing the other's face.&#13;
"I didn't know that the fence was.yoursj&lt;&#13;
Doirou live in the big house there?"&#13;
Buuthe little girl hugged her pussy cat.&#13;
An&lt;i\gave him a vacant stare.&#13;
•T\j» got a beautiful dog," Bald he, with a&#13;
«look full of scorning at&#13;
The bundle of gray that the small girl&#13;
held—&#13;
Her\*beautiful pussy cat.&#13;
And/. tk»n tbe little girl found her&#13;
*4Pusay can scratch and bite,&#13;
Andiif your dog is worth anything,&#13;
Why. couldn't they have u fight?"&#13;
The tittle boy grinned from ear to ear; |&#13;
tt wasn't the tntng to do,&#13;
But maybe you would have grinned yourself,&#13;
If thU little boy'd been you.&#13;
"He'll kill your cat, but If you don't care&#13;
It'll be,all right with roe."&#13;
And he went to fetch the dog, with a&#13;
heart&#13;
That was brimmlns o'er with glee.&#13;
The* at it they-flew, with teeth&#13;
And the little boy cried, "It's fun."&#13;
Till he saw the cat was beating Ills dog,&#13;
"Who'd nothir.ff to do but run.&#13;
"Nojv, isn't he brave?" the little girl&#13;
laugne&lt;l,&#13;
Ae she klckot her heels on the fen&lt;v\&#13;
And' tho little boy ft It two inches tall&#13;
And'dreadfully short of aense.&#13;
• » Then down he climbed, In hla own backyard,&#13;
And the world felt very flat,&#13;
And he wished instead of a frighteiied&#13;
dog.&#13;
He hnd owned a pussy cat,&#13;
But such is the way of the wor4dT alas.&#13;
And you'd beat be sure you're right,&#13;
When you make a statement, but, best&#13;
* of all,&#13;
Keep out of a backyard fight!&#13;
—Mary Brent Whiteslde.&#13;
It Wat All&#13;
"I hear Tom was well insured,"&#13;
"Yes, we've thai comfort, anyhow!&#13;
The poor dear's worth more dead than&#13;
he ever was alive."—Ally Sloper.&#13;
Modern Science Recognizes&#13;
&gt; RHEUMATISM —&#13;
&amp;s &amp; Disease of th&amp; Blood&#13;
There t&amp; &amp; popuUr idea, thdt thi*&gt; di*&gt;*^&gt;*&#13;
ia caused by exposure to cold, and th&amp;t&#13;
some loce^liticb oxc infected with it more&#13;
th&amp;n others Such conditions frequently&#13;
promote the development or the disease,&#13;
but from the fact th&amp;t this ailment runs&#13;
in certain families, it is shown to be hereditary,&#13;
and consequently a disease of- the&#13;
blood. ^ '&#13;
Among the oldest sad best known residents of Bluffs, 111., Is Adam&#13;
Vangundy. Ue has always been prominently identified with the interests&#13;
of that place. He was the first President of the Board of Trustees, and for&#13;
r long time has been a Justice of the Peace. He says: "I had been asuf«&#13;
lerer of rheumatism for a number of years and the pain at times was very&#13;
intense. I tried all the proprietary medicine* J could think or hear of, but&#13;
received ao relief.&#13;
"I finally placed my case with several physicians and doctored with&#13;
them for some time, but they failed to do me any good. Finally, with my&#13;
hopes of relief nearly exhausted X read an article regarding Dr. Williams'&#13;
Pink Pills for Pale People, which induced me to try them. I was anxious&#13;
to get rid of the terrible disease and bought two boxes of the pills, I began&#13;
using thenvabout March, 1897. After I had taken two boxes I was com*&#13;
pletely cured, and the paiu has never returned. I think it is the best medicine&#13;
I have ever taken, and am willing at any time to t*«tify to its good&#13;
dcriU."—Blujf* {III.) Timn,&#13;
The genuine.&#13;
sold only&#13;
in packages&#13;
Uke&#13;
tffis. 50*&#13;
per box&#13;
W/LLIAMS&#13;
INK ..."&#13;
tLLS&#13;
POR V 5:&#13;
ALE:&#13;
EOPLE c&#13;
tWTetttt&#13;
At drug •&#13;
gists or&#13;
direct iromj&#13;
DYiitl&#13;
Schejmt&amp;dy.&#13;
CAN9Y CATHARTIC&#13;
As BlacK&#13;
as DYE&#13;
YourWhiskers A MaUwalBlaok with&#13;
Buckingham's Dye*&#13;
SO eU. ©HruggUti or R.P.Hall It CcNsshua, N.H.&#13;
IsnoitbU sutemeat worth laresUirailiur, If yun&#13;
have a friend suffering from any Kidney disease*&#13;
Not instant medicine; neither is patient obliged 10&#13;
come to New Turk for treatment. Examination and&#13;
test of urine free of charge. 8«nd 4 oss., exp. paid.&#13;
TompkiM'Corbln Co.. 1300 Broadway. New York City.&#13;
CURE YOURIEIF!&#13;
Use Bit €» for onnatorsi&#13;
discharges, inflammations,&#13;
irritations or ulceratioaa&#13;
of m u c o u s membranes,&#13;
Painlets, and not astria*&#13;
l«nt or poisonous.&#13;
sent In plain wrapper,&#13;
' express, prepaid, for&#13;
,0ft, or 3 hoHleeT«*.fc.&#13;
rcolar sent ea roouss*&#13;
TO THE&#13;
FKKK OHA.M' L A N D OP W K S T K B K&#13;
C A N A D A . During the mouths of March and April,&#13;
excursion* will leave ublu and Mich gun points for&#13;
Western Canada, on Monday &lt;&gt;i each week.&#13;
These txuunlons will be accompanied by agents of&#13;
the Government, and sptuUl car* will be provided&#13;
*»r the through trip.&#13;
For particular* an tn how to obtain 160 acre* of&#13;
lttnd free aud railway rates for settler*, apply to tbe&#13;
Superintendent of Immigration. Ottawa, Canada, or&#13;
to Jar Grieve, Mt. Pleasant, Mich , I). L. Caven, Bad&#13;
Axe, Mica., or M. V. Mclnoeo, Detroit, Mlcb.&#13;
n § y P If V •ecurrd or&#13;
F A l t i l CoUamer*Co. Search frsa,&#13;
WAKTSP-Cats&gt; of t a * health ttat IM-P-A***&#13;
win not benefit. Send S cents to Ulpans Cbenlea)&#13;
Co., New York.for lu sajaples aud UXU tesHmoaiUs&#13;
f«4«rrk Positively Cared st Home. Have eared tbssj,&#13;
bllllIIsasd*i&gt;Uhtsdisease. Wllleureyou. 15days&#13;
trial free. U. M. Ass'n,«S91 CfcsnptsJa At*., GWes«»&gt;&#13;
n D H D Q V new DISCOVERY: •»••&#13;
iJf | % \ 0 " 9 1 i k llt&#13;
quick relief aou tur«t w&lt;&#13;
book of testimonial* aad 1 0 days*&#13;
IJOHN W.IHO1&#13;
laakattuc vlaiaw, *W j siuesw CHEAP FARMS DO YOU WANT A HOME?&#13;
100,000 ACRESImproved and unimproved&#13;
farming land*&#13;
to be divided and&#13;
wold on long time and «**y payments, a little&#13;
each year. Come and sae us or write. THE&#13;
TRUMAN MOSS STATE BANK, Sanllao&#13;
Center, Mich., or&#13;
THE TRUMAN MOSS ESTATE,&#13;
Croswell. SanilocCOw Mfctb&#13;
FOR 14 CENTS "We wish to tain this year SOOJOO&#13;
now wutomvt*. and u«&amp;et&gt; oBef&#13;
1 Pksr. id i&gt;*y HadUb, lue&#13;
WBBSSffBB«ii^^ 1122&#13;
Long Llghtn'f:Cucainb«rHie&#13;
8 l &lt; l B t X t t Ue&#13;
arlfyo rOmis*n Ferig O Tnoimoaa,to, SSue&#13;
rililant flower See&#13;
Above 10 pkgs. worth |L0O,w»will'&#13;
m»U yon free, together witb oar '&#13;
a* Plank and Beed CaUlocoe 1&#13;
opon receiptt of thhis ai e1t i c e m r144c 1&#13;
post***. W e invite jrosr trade aaa 1&#13;
u o w when yon one* try H a l s e r ' s&#13;
awvasroawnl never get along-with*&#13;
ontth.n-. Oaton Heed 6 8 c . end &lt;&#13;
BssWaB&#13;
IOUX A. SALKBA U l »&#13;
alone Bo. _ .&#13;
LA CftOSSB, W &amp; &lt;&#13;
Vhei Aosweriag Advertlsenefits Kindly&#13;
Meatioa This Taper.&#13;
TAKE&#13;
AXATIVE QUININE TA Tills Signature&#13;
SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS IN&#13;
TBE UNITED STATES&#13;
AND CANADA.&#13;
is on etery box of LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE TABLETS. Accept no substitute represents! to bi "jist as good.'1&#13;
A GRIP CURE that DOES CURE! Druggists refund tbe money&#13;
if it fails to cure.&#13;
PRICE 25 OENT8&#13;
Ellcitloff the PsteU.&#13;
"How long have you been married.&#13;
htrn. Ashlelgh?"&#13;
"Eleven years. You wouldn't believe&#13;
it, would you?"&#13;
"Kot after seeing your husband."&#13;
"He is so young. The fact Is that&#13;
we ran away from school together and&#13;
were wedded."&#13;
'Ob. Then he must have been one&#13;
of those boys we read about who are&#13;
always falling in love with their teachers."—&#13;
Chicago News.&#13;
' Mr. McCall—That'sh unquestionably&#13;
the fines' punch-bowl I've sheen today.&#13;
Hi#» Young-^I exAtfJder your approval&#13;
avsj^sy grtai compliment, Mr. Mc-&#13;
Call, for ra,«*re you must have seen&#13;
almost a hundred!—The Jewelers'&#13;
Weakly.&#13;
VHs&gt; Cbaplskln at Omdaraaaa.&#13;
Alongside one of the English batultiona,&#13;
rode Uva Pretrhyteriaa cbapialn,&#13;
mounted—oh, tell it not in the kirk,&#13;
neither publish it among the elders—&#13;
upon a looted pony!—From the "Downfall&#13;
of the Dervishes/'&#13;
The ri|stf«f mt Thtaga,&#13;
Lots of men sympathize with the&#13;
moon when it reaches it's last quarter.&#13;
Worth makes the man, and it is often&#13;
figured in dollars and cents.&#13;
lie is strong who never does wrong.&#13;
KNOWING HOW PAYS.&#13;
The Moral of This Old, Old Aoocdote&#13;
vTlU Save a Hsap of Trouble&#13;
and a PU« of Money.&#13;
Something had gone wrong with&#13;
some simple part of a stationary engine&#13;
and the stoker could not fix it. After&#13;
spc&amp;ding a day or two on it he was&#13;
forced to ask the aid of a more competent&#13;
workman. He failed also, and&#13;
someone suggested the employment of&#13;
a local celebrity, a sort of aUakeratany&#13;
mechanical job. There is generally&#13;
one in every locality. He gave two or&#13;
three raps with his hammer and&#13;
touched up a rod or two, when the&#13;
pounding, or whatever ailed the machine,&#13;
ceased. When asked to make&#13;
out his bill, it read as follows:&#13;
To Fixing Enrtne t .60&#13;
To Knowing Sow 10.00&#13;
This anecdote clearly demonstrates&#13;
that it pays to know how. Engineer&#13;
J. J. Jeff eries, of the Royal Cycle works&#13;
at Marshall,. Mich., residing in that&#13;
city at No. 141 8. Marshall St., tells in&#13;
the following of his experience with&#13;
the little conqueror; it Will pay you to&#13;
know how he got rid of a troublesome&#13;
companion. He says:&#13;
My kidneys troubled me more or less for years&#13;
rod finally became so bad that 1 was compelled&#13;
to give up soeomotive engineering on account of&#13;
the Jarring of the train, and seek employment&#13;
as a stationary engineer. When the attacks of&#13;
kidney complaint occurred I could not rest or&#13;
Ue comfortably tn any position and often in the&#13;
morning after a restless night I wan more&#13;
tired and worn out than when I went to bed.&#13;
When the attacks were at their height X was&#13;
unable to stoop or lift anything and despite the&#13;
use of every remedy that came to my notloe.&#13;
preparations recommended to me by my acquaintance*,&#13;
numerous plasters of all kinds&#13;
worn day and night. I was unsuccessful In procuring&#13;
anythmgto help me until I died Doan's&#13;
tKUtaeyPUlkTheltmbjox helped me I steadily&#13;
lmproTed while taking the second aad I&#13;
stopped th«ti*ianeot when 1 had finished the&#13;
. third as I eoastidered there was no more neoes-&#13;
' Sity for continuing the remedy.&#13;
Doaa'a Kidney Pills for sale by all&#13;
dealers. Price 50 cent*. Mailed by&#13;
?»oster-MilbumCo., Buffalo, K. Y.. sole&#13;
agMsttfor the U. &amp; Remember the&#13;
name Doaa'a and take no substitute.&#13;
Stolen sweets are the best&#13;
It is better to fail in trying to do&#13;
good than not to try.&#13;
Lane's Family Medicine.&#13;
Moves the bowels each day. In order&#13;
to be healthy this is necessary. Acts&#13;
gently on the liver and kidneys. Cures&#13;
sick headache. Price 2.r&gt; and 50c&#13;
God never gave any man tbe right to&#13;
hate his brother.&#13;
Burdock Blood Bitters gives a man a&#13;
clear head, an active brain, a strong,&#13;
vigorous body—makes him fit for the&#13;
battle of life.&#13;
Half the troubles of life are imaginary.&#13;
Croup instantly relieved. Dr. Thomas*&#13;
Eclectric Oil. Perfectly safe. Never&#13;
fails. At any drug store.&#13;
Wounded pride uses dignity for a&#13;
salve.&#13;
TO CUBE A COLD IK O 9 B D A *&#13;
Take Laxative Bromo ^ulaic* Tablets. AS&#13;
druggists refund the money i! tt falls to cure.&#13;
ttc. The genuine has L. B. Q, on each tablet&#13;
Root beer ought to be a popular beverage&#13;
among base ball cranks.&#13;
Carter's l i t .&#13;
Will eure a cold In one nlrbt; will cure sore&#13;
throat In a few hour*. Acte quick. Sure cure&#13;
for Catarrh In every » c bottle.&#13;
A theatrical stage is not an airship bocanae&#13;
it has wings and files.&#13;
Mrs. W1ASIOW*S BAotbinjr. syrap&#13;
Tar e U M m t«*thlng&gt;.aoft*M the K"m&gt;.r«dac««te(Uia.&#13;
sMiioa, allays pain, ours* wiadoottc. » eaatsa beetle.&#13;
The earth is the first revolver of which we&#13;
have any record.&#13;
Health for T*a Cssto.&#13;
A lively u&gt;er. par* fe&#13;
feet k*aJth~Caaea.r&#13;
aad seeara thesa Hrety Urn. blood, elcaa *kin. brlgat eyes, per-&#13;
" K*r*t« Caadr Cathartie wUI obtain&#13;
for&#13;
you. AQ dro«u(isU, Me, at*, ate.&#13;
A man's pride would be vanity if&#13;
by his neighbor.&#13;
I never used «o quick a ewe as Ptao'a Cure&#13;
for Consumption.--J. B. Palmer, Box 1171. Seattle,&#13;
Wash.. Nov. &amp;. UK&#13;
Half a loaf Is&#13;
to loaf at alL&#13;
better taaa ao coatee&#13;
"There are no cross babies or sick babies la&#13;
families that use Brown's Teething Cordial"&#13;
Flowers always go to waist when worn la a&#13;
girl's halt.&#13;
The Moat Ifficlent Blcyole Ever Oevlaed la the&#13;
CHAINLESS&#13;
That is, it shews tie hlf hatt ratie el asefai vert M&#13;
For scientific design, thoroughness °* ©oastractioa and elegance of&#13;
finish OUT new&#13;
COLUMBIA CHAIN-DRIVEN MODELS&#13;
are uneqnaled among bicycle* of the chain type. The most thorough&#13;
laboratoriat and practical tests have proren them to be structurally&#13;
perfect. H A R T F O R D 8 hare ermry advantage of most bicycles thai&#13;
©oat more. V E D E T T E S are the best bicycles that it is possible to&#13;
offer for their price.&#13;
PRICES: Chainlet* Models 50 and 60, $ 7 5 , Chain Colunbias,&#13;
Models 57 and 58, $ 0 0 . Hartford*, $ 3 5 . Vedette*, $ 2 5 (men's);&#13;
$ 8 0 (ladies'). To close oat the balance of onr 1806 models, the leaders&#13;
of last season, we offer them ss follows: Columbia Model 46 (ladle*1)&#13;
$*15; Models 45 and 49, (men's) $ 4 O ; Hartford*, Patterns ? and 8,&#13;
$30 and $31.&#13;
See our Artistic&#13;
New Catalogue. POPE MFC. CO., Hartford*, Conn&#13;
'CGCX&#13;
'WHERE DIRT GATHERS, WASTE RULES.1&#13;
GREAT SAVING RESULTS FROM THE USE OF SAPOLIO&#13;
*rsr» tletct te 73&#13;
fAHTE*-A neat aad lateUlgeat young&#13;
Wone acquainted with the bus! nity el this town preferred. Address Tm» J.&#13;
Bfarons Co.. IS &amp; Fourth Su, P«iladelpaia,»a&gt;&#13;
an • BBBssfisi a a v ^ s x ^ a i • ^av ^ a \ aaasjM1 sar ^ «&#13;
ntSSTpSSSttm^raeetpt of 4 two esa&lt; susmsa,&#13;
^r S&gt;21S^B1BSSS^SB\ P dB^^sT * ^ a ^M^g^a^Hm •^^SfesaiSBsyt *ssS^s&gt;a^sSBk aaaa^s) eja^g^^*^^k^^«^s^^-^&#13;
A GOOD CARDEM&#13;
W. N. U . — D E T R O I T — N O . I I — I S O *&#13;
'Merely a gentle rttmindar&#13;
';•&gt;'•-, v&#13;
Aiabastlo*. tae only durable wall coat'&#13;
sag, takes thaplao* of scallaf I _._. _&#13;
wail aaner and M I M for wafts. It can be aa ala—tr. artck, vawri er oaavas,&#13;
Alabastlne can lie usw4 over paint er&#13;
paper; paint or paper can be used over&#13;
Alabastlae. Buy only la ft*** aeeuad paok- ae av4nutKCa&gt;&#13;
Bvarjr eherea and school botsse saouM be&#13;
coated *&gt;aly wkh Alabasttae Muadreda&#13;
M«f tte as usedd yearlly ffo r tthhiis workk. Q*&#13;
IskA A !• t^iails^ a^^a nAi MSB&gt; MMA «M«kast&#13;
.1&#13;
• • • &gt; ' •&#13;
.1&#13;
•'HA&#13;
^ ^ ^ / " ^ ; ; * -. :h\&gt;&gt;V^\* ^yKiy1 ', ^&#13;
r. V.0,- -&#13;
• * ' ( ' • • ' '&#13;
frfe&#13;
№*.&#13;
ifc* . • . •&#13;
L- f ' •!&#13;
; • * , *&#13;
r " V&#13;
UNADILLA.&#13;
Minnie Mills has a new bicycle.&#13;
Mrs. Frank Bernie is sick with&#13;
la grippe.&#13;
Thomas Farrel and wife have a&#13;
new baby.&#13;
Charles Hartsuff and wife, of Ypsilanti,&#13;
were home last week.&#13;
LimeHadley purchased a fine pair&#13;
of two year old colts last week.&#13;
Mr*. Clymenia Shepard has gone tc&#13;
Belle Oak to visit ber daughter.&#13;
Ed^ar Reed starts for Los Angeles,&#13;
Cal., the first part of this week.&#13;
Will Secor moved into his house,&#13;
purchased of S. Noble, last week.&#13;
Miss June Pyper, of Chelsea, spent&#13;
Sunday at her home in this place.&#13;
Miss Dora Taylor difd at her home&#13;
two miles north of Gregory, March 18.&#13;
Remember tbe lecture at the M. E.&#13;
churcb Monday night next. Admission&#13;
lOcts.&#13;
Halden DuBois has moved near&#13;
Eaton Rapids where he will work lor&#13;
his father-in-law.&#13;
Mrs. Dr. DuBois received news of&#13;
the death of ber brother, Carlos&#13;
Holden of Mason.&#13;
Rev. Williams, of Ann Arbor, assisted&#13;
in the Presbyterian services&#13;
Sunday morning.&#13;
Fred Roepcke was seriously injured&#13;
Monday by a falling limb of a tree.&#13;
There is hopes of his recovery,&#13;
Henry Hartsuff and wife, of How-&#13;
_el), attended the funeral of bis&#13;
mother, at this place last Friiay.&#13;
Gilbert Daniels an old pioneer of&#13;
this township, died at his home ID&#13;
Gregory, March 14. Age 75 years.&#13;
It is reported that J. D. Watson,&#13;
cashier of Chelsea bank, will have to&#13;
give tip his position on account of ill&#13;
health.&#13;
Ryrl Barnum's team ran away last&#13;
Tuesday breaking the wagon tongue&#13;
and driving a sliver about three&#13;
inches into one of the borees legs.&#13;
The remains of Mr a. Luke Hartsuff&#13;
accompanied by Dan Sullivan and&#13;
wife from Columbus, Ohio, were&#13;
brought here for burial, March 17.&#13;
There will be no meeting in the&#13;
Presly. church next Sunday evening&#13;
owing, to quarterly meeting in the&#13;
M. E. church.&#13;
There will a donation for the benefit&#13;
of Rev. Dunning, Wednesday evening,&#13;
Mar. 29. Every one come and&#13;
have a good time.&#13;
The L. M. society elected the following&#13;
officers last week:—Pres., Mrs.&#13;
Sarah Pyper; Vice Presi, Mr9 Lane;&#13;
Secy., Mrs. Dunning; Treas., Sarah&#13;
Hadley.&#13;
At the annual meeting of the Presbyterian&#13;
churcb, the following officers&#13;
were elected:—elder, Frank Bernie;&#13;
trustees. Geo. E. Marshall and Wm.&#13;
Pyper; organist, Kittie Livermore.&#13;
EAST MARION . V&#13;
Archie Gorton expects to go to New&#13;
Mexico this spring.&#13;
Fred Fish, of East Putnam, called&#13;
on friends here Tuesday,&#13;
Rev. N. W. Pierce attended the&#13;
funeral of Mrs. Geo. Hull, at Hamburg&#13;
last Sunday.&#13;
The Ladies aid met with Mrs. Montague&#13;
last Tuesday for dinner. A&#13;
goodly number were present and enjoyed&#13;
the occasion.&#13;
SILVER LAKE ITEMS .&#13;
Mrs. Ransom Ferris is on the sick&#13;
list.&#13;
Sanford Reason recently moved to&#13;
his farm 8 miles south of Silver Lake.&#13;
Mrs. Coas. Voorbes has a aiee new&#13;
organ, bought of parties in Ann Arbor.&#13;
Tom Clark had the misfortune to&#13;
cut his toot qnite badly, one day last&#13;
week.&#13;
Mrs. Mary Welsh will rent her farm&#13;
near this place and go to live with her&#13;
brother John Smith1.&#13;
Old Mrs. McCabe died very suddenly&#13;
last week Wedn^day while in Dexter.&#13;
She was burried Saturday.&#13;
Miss Bertha Myers who has been&#13;
keeping bouse for her brothers, has&#13;
gone, home and left the boys to batch&#13;
it.&#13;
Many in this neighborhood have&#13;
their years wood sawed and nothing&#13;
speaks more for the ugude mon" of&#13;
the house than a nice wood-pile.&#13;
CHAPEL ITEM S ^&#13;
Old Mr. Fox is very low at this&#13;
writting.&#13;
Mrs. Mary ~3ea~corcli s sick of&#13;
rheumatism.&#13;
Mrs. E. D. VanBuren is under&#13;
the Dr's. care.&#13;
Mrs. Alta Miller spent last Saturday&#13;
night in Dansville.&#13;
Paul VauKeureu, of Grand&#13;
Rapids, is visiting friends in this&#13;
place.&#13;
Miss Maud Ward is to teach the&#13;
spring term of school iu the Foster&#13;
district.&#13;
Miss Dora Taylor, daughter of&#13;
Alfred Taylor, died Saturday&#13;
morning of La Grippe.&#13;
v&#13;
GREGORY. ^&#13;
Mrs. Hopkin's new residence is&#13;
nearly oompleted.&#13;
Mrs. Betsy Marshall has purchased&#13;
a house and lot of W. H. Marsh.&#13;
The Unadilla Athletic club met&#13;
with the Gregory club last Thursday.&#13;
Bullis &amp; Kubn recently purchased&#13;
500 bushels of beans of Jas. Burden.&#13;
Fred Daniels and Frank Ovitt exchanged&#13;
property in this village re*&#13;
•ently .&#13;
F. V. Fist, of Pinckney, formerly of&#13;
this place, was in town Thursday and&#13;
Friday last.&#13;
The funeral of Gilbert Daniels was&#13;
h*ld last Thursday from his home in&#13;
this village.&#13;
Carl Boliinger returned Monday&#13;
from East Putnam, where be has been&#13;
relatives for a few days.&#13;
It's Easy&#13;
To Take Thin, pale, anauni c girls&#13;
need a fatty food to enrich&#13;
their blood, give color to&#13;
their cheeks and restore their&#13;
health and strength . It b&#13;
safe to say that they nearly&#13;
all reject fat with their food&#13;
Daniel Wright and wife ride in&#13;
a new carriage*&#13;
Dan'l Wright has rented his&#13;
farm to John Collier. Mr. Collier&#13;
will Boon move into the tenent&#13;
house.&#13;
Married at the home of the&#13;
brides parents, Miss Cora Isham&#13;
and Natheu Watters on Wednesday,&#13;
March 22.&#13;
A brother of Mrs. Silas Wassou&#13;
of Kansas, visited her last week&#13;
and looked at many farms while&#13;
here with the intention of buying&#13;
but did not do so.&#13;
Last Friday evening about forty&#13;
persons, both old and young,&#13;
met at C. L. Bowman's for a Burprise,&#13;
but on reaching there,&#13;
found that they were the ones&#13;
surprised as Chas. Hartford had&#13;
been there and told them all&#13;
about it. All had a pleasant time.&#13;
PARSHALLVILLE. f&#13;
Miss Oliver is visiting at John&#13;
Bristol this week.&#13;
Grandma Kirk is staying at&#13;
Frank Kirk's this spring.&#13;
Thos. Taylor has bought the&#13;
Joe. Cole farm west of here.&#13;
Mrs. Gee. Cornell spent last&#13;
week with relatives in Olivett&#13;
Will Conine and wife, of Oak&#13;
Grove Sundayed at her father's,&#13;
A. White's.&#13;
The Aid Society met with Mrs.&#13;
A. C. Wakeman on Wednesday&#13;
afternoon of this week.&#13;
The W G T U w i l l - m e et with&#13;
Mrs. Lottie Hetchler the last&#13;
Friday in the month. A fine program&#13;
has been provided.&#13;
Tuesday evening, the chimney of&#13;
the baptist parsonage burned out,&#13;
and caused quit an alarm, as it&#13;
took fire in the wood causing a&#13;
lot of damage and a good deal of&#13;
excitement. There was no insur-&#13;
Tuesday was a very, VERY stormy&#13;
day.&#13;
Peter Morgan, of Ypailanti, was in&#13;
town the last of last week, calling on&#13;
old friends.&#13;
F. E. Wright and wife attended&#13;
the funeral of Mrs. Wrights sister&#13;
near Chelsea, last Sunday.&#13;
, On Wednesday robins and blackbirds&#13;
were heard singing, which sounded&#13;
like spring—quiet a contrast to the&#13;
howling wind of the day before,&#13;
Grandma Hause has baen suffering&#13;
for several weeks with the, grip and&#13;
she is 93 yeais old. It is thought&#13;
that she will never be much better.&#13;
Miss Mame Sigler, who has been&#13;
spending a few weeks with her sister,&#13;
Mrs. B. K. Pierce, in Chesaning and&#13;
relatives in Detroit, returned home&#13;
last Thursday.&#13;
The local division of the A. O. H.&#13;
is considering the mattei of bringing&#13;
Father Kelly, of Lapeer, to lecture&#13;
upon one ot his regular subjects&#13;
during April or May.&#13;
Wm. E. Robb, of DeerBeld township,&#13;
candidate for county school com*&#13;
missioner on the democratic ticket,&#13;
was in this place a couple of days&#13;
last week. He spent some time in&#13;
visiting the school while here.&#13;
Third quarterly meeting of M. E.&#13;
society will be held at the courch in&#13;
this place on Sunday morning next,&#13;
conducted by Rev. E. W. Rvan, oi'&#13;
Ypsilanti. Love feast at 9:30 a. m.;&#13;
regular preaching at 10:30; quarterly&#13;
conference on Saturday evening at&#13;
the borne of Dr. H. F. Sigler.&#13;
Our stock of new sprint? and summer&#13;
hats is complete and ready for&#13;
inspection, March 29. You will tind&#13;
all the latest stlyes in sailors, walkehUdrens&#13;
school hats, at&#13;
fteaeelltrauu&#13;
Albert Mills mitedtho High School&#13;
last Fridav.&#13;
Francis Oarr was in Howell one&#13;
day last week.&#13;
School closes this week Friday for a&#13;
one weeks vacation.&#13;
Rev. Unas. Simpson vibited the&#13;
High Shool and Grammar departments&#13;
last Friday.&#13;
Rill Monks and Lester Dunn of the&#13;
High School department, were in&#13;
Howell last Thursday. . ,&#13;
Green ribbon was profusely displayed&#13;
by the scholars last Friday -in&#13;
honor of St. Patricks day.&#13;
County School Commissioner Jas.&#13;
H. Wallace visited the different departments&#13;
on Friday of last week.&#13;
Extensive preparations are being&#13;
made for commencement which will&#13;
take place the latter part of Jnne.&#13;
Thirteen will graduate this year.&#13;
Caoous&#13;
The Republican Electors of the&#13;
TowneOip of Putnam are requested to&#13;
meet at the town-hall in the village&#13;
of Pinckney on Monday, March 27&#13;
A. D. 1899, at two p. m. for the purpose&#13;
of nominating a Township&#13;
Ticket and transacting such otbef&#13;
business as may come before the meeting.&#13;
Ladies, call and see our beautiful&#13;
line of pattern hats, prices, always&#13;
the lowest, at Boyle and Halstead's.&#13;
An extra good farm of 65 acres for&#13;
sale or rent. Enqure of A, J. Wilhelm,&#13;
Anderson, Mich. Box 36.&#13;
To Rent&#13;
House and two lots, corner of Howell&#13;
and Mortage streets. Apply to&#13;
RrEfwTnratrPiirokttey-Milte—.&#13;
ance.&#13;
LOCAL NEWS.&#13;
A great masy are moving this sea-&#13;
.—Henry Bowlett will move into&#13;
tU kcmm oeaopod by Chas. McGee;&#13;
Joe 0a«k«0«r*»d mother will more&#13;
mi* th4kmm&lt;m Main St., owned by&#13;
€ « j Wifiwj Cka*. IMfce will move&#13;
o«to tl» Hoary flowfett farm where&#13;
IM «rpeeta to «torfc th» czmiug jear;&#13;
a * t * to too&#13;
t*o&#13;
COD UVER OIL&#13;
WmtHYPOPHOSPHtTESOfUMHSODA&#13;
b exactly what they require;&#13;
It not only gives them the Important&#13;
element (cod-liver oil)&#13;
in a palatable and easily digested&#13;
form, but also the hypophosphites&#13;
which are so valua-&#13;
We in nervous disorders that&#13;
usually accompany aiwtmia.&#13;
SCOTTS EMULSION b a&#13;
fatty food that Is more easily&#13;
digested than any other form&#13;
oftet A certain amount of&#13;
flesh b necessary for health.&#13;
You can get it in this way.&#13;
We have known per*&#13;
sons to gain * pound a&#13;
day while taking it&#13;
Mrs. M. Lavey has been on the sick&#13;
list the past week.&#13;
Mark Wilson and wife visited Mason&#13;
relatives the past week.&#13;
L. M. Teeple has resumed his business&#13;
on the road this week.&#13;
W. S, Swarthout is moving into the&#13;
Silas Barton house, on Unadilla St.,&#13;
this week.&#13;
Misses Boyle and Halstead will&#13;
open millinery parlors, in Pinckney,&#13;
March 29, in rooms over the bank.&#13;
Frank Johnson moved his family to&#13;
the Joslin farm in Unadilla this week&#13;
where he will work the coming season.&#13;
The many friends of Miss Bertha&#13;
Donaldson are glad to here she is able&#13;
to be out again after five weeks of&#13;
sickness.&#13;
Teeple Sc Cad well are selling several&#13;
of their steel ranges advertised in&#13;
tbeir space—they delivered another&#13;
on Wednesday,&#13;
The members of the OE&gt;S will please&#13;
bear in mind that the chapter will&#13;
open promptly at 7:30, Friday evening&#13;
of ttris week.&#13;
Miss Jalia Brady will close her&#13;
term of school in the Lakin district&#13;
Saturday April 1, with an exhibition&#13;
in the evening. Admission 5cts.&#13;
At high noon Wednesday, occured&#13;
the marriage of Miss Altie Brown and&#13;
Arthur Subo*nh&amp;U, at the home of&#13;
the brid«« mother, by Rev. N. W.&#13;
Pierce. The young couple have the&#13;
bett wishes of their many friends.&#13;
The n«xt communion services of the&#13;
Cong'l church win bs held April 2, at&#13;
Pinckney and North Hamdorg. Easter&#13;
service* wi*l be observed in connection&#13;
with thwue sevices. The regular&#13;
eervie«* next Sunday morning.&#13;
Union services at the M. E. church in&#13;
tie evening.&#13;
TbepuhliHhertofthe&#13;
HORSE-SHOEING&#13;
GENERAL REPAIRING,&#13;
Contracted feet are helped&#13;
andhorseado not interfere when&#13;
I do the work. Gall and give&#13;
me a trial Shop on Mill street&#13;
north of Opera B o nee.&#13;
ALBERT E. BROWN.&#13;
TRUTH IN ADVERTISING&#13;
It is rare but not unknown. A truthful&#13;
man will have a truthful business, and a truthful business wilt be as&#13;
particular as to what it says in the newspaper as though the proprietor&#13;
of thatx business was telling you facts face to face. The Busy Bee&#13;
Hive has built its business on honest goods truthfully advertised.&#13;
We have at this store many things to help us do business.&#13;
The largest and lightest store in town, the best and brightest set of&#13;
help, the largest and most varied stock of goods, ample capital to buy&#13;
everything for spot cash; but above all what we consider our greatest&#13;
help and of more value than, our capital, we have the confidence of&#13;
the people of Central Michigan. This we prize above all and will&#13;
guard and protect it in every instance.&#13;
Now Let Us Talk: Aftoat Carpets.&#13;
Detroit Free&#13;
ftGOTXJtSOWME, Yoft.&#13;
Preat will give, absolutely free to all&#13;
8abecribftr* and purchaser* of th* ttaa*&#13;
day Fn* Fetm of April 2, a haodaoat&#13;
oolorat MippiemeBt, us* 8x12. NotwittoUndififf&#13;
tb* jrnMt ezpeiM of&#13;
fitting oot this beautiful pi«ture BO&#13;
toreaa* will be bade is tat prio* of&#13;
paper a«d oo«ai*q«*«4lj there will U&#13;
M eaoroMoi deouad. We would&#13;
Mdtim Mil wbo w'uk to jftt oae to pUet&#13;
Have you got to carpet one of your rooms this&#13;
spring? If you have, come to us and see the largest and the finest&#13;
stock of Carpets that has ever been shown in Jackson. The stock is&#13;
surprisingly large and varied. The prices, on the hand, are surprisingly&#13;
small. We have every kind of Carpet, every variety of coloring,&#13;
every style of pattern that you might wish to see. We shall be&#13;
pleased to have you compare our stock with whatever else may be&#13;
shown, and we shall expect to have you tell us, as many others are&#13;
telling as each day, that oar prices are, for quality such as we show,&#13;
quite under anything else shown in Jackson.&#13;
IN DRESS GOODS&#13;
Oar showing is remarkable. At every price&#13;
from the lowest up to the finer goods we have a very large range. We&#13;
have bought very generously thss year of every kind of good Dross&#13;
Goods, and we will shew you a tremendously strong line to select&#13;
from. In justice to yourself we would advise you to look at the&#13;
different lines shown in Jackson. Other stores in Jaokaon have good&#13;
line* aa well a§ ourselves; look at them, bat look at oars for sure.&#13;
Then yoa will be in aiwtter position to judge of oar statement that&#13;
we have the largest, the most desirable and the lowest priced line of&#13;
Dress Goods, quality considered, of any house in Central Michigan.&#13;
L. H. FIE LD.&#13;
0.'&#13;
.A.;.</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 March 23, 1899</text>
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                <text>March 23, 1899 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>VOL XVII^— PINOKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MI#HM THURSDAY, MAROH 30, 1899. No. 13.&#13;
THE APPAREL&#13;
MAKES&#13;
THE&#13;
MAN&#13;
Eipedalty ff ft is the&#13;
Apparel MADE-TOMEASURE&#13;
by : : : :&#13;
Fred Kauffmann&#13;
The American Tailor&#13;
CHICAGO&#13;
K. H. CRANE,&#13;
Local Agent*&#13;
CLOTHING !&#13;
This seasou we represent&#13;
Fred Kauffnann, one of&#13;
Chicago's best tailors. All&#13;
goods from this housfi are&#13;
guaranteed to be strictly&#13;
MADE to MEASUBE—&#13;
Also a PERFECT FIT.&#13;
This house makes suits to&#13;
to measure for boys as well&#13;
as men. We will make silk&#13;
vests a specialty, they are&#13;
the. style. From $3.60 up.&#13;
Suits from $12 up.&#13;
We also reprosent the Celebrated&#13;
Work Brothers, of&#13;
Chicago, for ready made&#13;
Clothing, the latest in style&#13;
and thoroughly well made.&#13;
For Mackintoshes for men,&#13;
and rubber capes and rubber&#13;
capes and skirts for Ladies*,&#13;
we represent the Dundee&#13;
Rubber Co., of Chicago. We&#13;
shall always be glad to show&#13;
jou our samples in all these&#13;
lines, and solicit your patronage.&#13;
K. H. CRANE. ^&#13;
For Circuit Judge&#13;
William P. VanWiHkUyi Hewell,&#13;
the Van. j&#13;
I I&#13;
-Ihave-just-^eceived-theJargesilineof _ __&#13;
PARLOR TABLES&#13;
ever shown in this vicinity.&#13;
Prices from 50c to $5.00 Each.&#13;
Don't Fail to See This Line,&#13;
as well as the many other bar gains&#13;
never shown you before in PINCKNEY.&#13;
Those 50c Enamel Tables are HUMMERS,&#13;
SEE THEM.&#13;
More Bargains Next Week.&#13;
GK A. 8IGLKR&#13;
Are you in want of Shoes?&#13;
Can suit you all in Price and Quality&#13;
Men'&amp; Heavy Oil Grain shoes from&#13;
$1 to $2.50&#13;
Boys' Heavy shoe from $1.50 to $2&#13;
Ladies' shoes from 75c to $3&#13;
Misses shoes from 75c to *2&#13;
If it ever comes spring you will want&#13;
Wash Goods. Can show you a fine line&#13;
to select from.&#13;
Prints Dark and Light.&#13;
Dark and Light Ginghams.&#13;
Madras Cloths, Percales,&#13;
Satins and Welt Piques.&#13;
IN NOTIONS.&#13;
Fou will want a few Embroideries and&#13;
Lares. I have a good line 6( them, also Fancy Buckles&#13;
for draws trimmings, Fancy Belt Buckles, Rubber Hair&#13;
Pin* and Leather Belts.&#13;
Gall and see our line of Lace Curtains&#13;
,and Window Shades—have lots of them.&#13;
GROCERIES&#13;
1 can sell you the best 20c Coftee in the&#13;
couaty—call and get a sample.&#13;
The Royal Tiger Tea is the finest for&#13;
v tba n-oney—50c per pound.&#13;
If you want the finest can of Peas you&#13;
. ever tasted, call and get one for 10c&#13;
ALL GOODS CASH.&#13;
•v; . \D. TSatwarfc*&#13;
We are not, nor never have we tried&#13;
to issue a "party11 politioai paper, but&#13;
oar aim has always bees to support&#13;
the man we thought be»t qualified&#13;
for the office, irrespective of party&#13;
affliations. We are now supporting&#13;
W. F. Van Winkle for judge of the&#13;
35th judicial circuit for tbe very&#13;
reason that we believe biro to be a&#13;
peer in legal learning and ability, in&#13;
integrity, in bonesty, and in morality.&#13;
Besides that, he is a Livingston&#13;
County man, having spent all bis life&#13;
in our midst, helping to build up&#13;
both town and county. He is a young&#13;
man—only 41—and shonld receive&#13;
tbe support of every loyal lover of&#13;
justice and right. Do not wait until&#13;
after election and then wish you had&#13;
went aad voted for him—it will be too&#13;
late—but go to the polls Monday&#13;
April 3, and do your duty towards&#13;
a fellow townsman, and when Mr.&#13;
Van Winkle is elected, never fear but&#13;
that he will administer justice in tbe&#13;
courts of this district, that, the same&#13;
would be done without unnecessary&#13;
delay and to the least possible expenset&#13;
ojtta e _t axp_ay_ers of J be _jcoiintry^&#13;
The following are some of the good&#13;
words said of him in the newspapers&#13;
of the two counties:&#13;
Prom what one can hear from every&#13;
direction the people are becoming&#13;
more and moie awake to the fa&lt;t that&#13;
the circuit jud^eship should not be&#13;
a political position any lhore than&#13;
many other offices which are still unfortunately&#13;
put forward in that light&#13;
for inatancH, supi erne judge, judge of&#13;
probate and register of deeds. It is&#13;
conceded by all consistent people that&#13;
only the most, able should occupy&#13;
these positions and that politics should&#13;
be aa foreign to them as is black from&#13;
white. L'firhaps this is why the majority&#13;
of all parties in this judicial district&#13;
are apprantly unanimous in the&#13;
support of W. P. Van Winkle for our&#13;
next circuit judge; at least it looks&#13;
very much that way.— Iiri«hton Argus.&#13;
His nomination wa9 in no way the&#13;
result of an understanding with political&#13;
rings and bosses, but came in the&#13;
form ot* a well deserved compliment&#13;
paid by his party, which is tbe minority&#13;
in the 35th judicial circuit, making&#13;
tbe selection of the very best candidate&#13;
available the partie's only hope&#13;
for success. Mr. Van Winkle deserves&#13;
the hearty support of all silver&#13;
men in Shiawassee county, in which&#13;
event he will be elected and tbe&#13;
people may rest assured that tbe duties&#13;
imposed will be discharged without&#13;
fear of favoritism.—Durand Express.&#13;
In the nomination of William P.&#13;
Van Winkle for the office of judge of&#13;
the 35th judicial circuit, the Democratio-&#13;
Ugion-Silver party selected a&#13;
candidate who is particularly well!&#13;
fitted for the position. He is in the •&#13;
prime of life, being 41 years of age,,&#13;
stands at the head of his profession in&#13;
Livingston county, and is rated a*&lt;&#13;
one of the brigbest lngal lights in central&#13;
Michigan.— Owoseo Reporter.&#13;
William P. Van Winkle has servei&#13;
the people of Livingston county, as'&#13;
their Prosecuting Attorney, fur &lt;&#13;
period of four years. The&#13;
service he rendered them in that j&gt;o&#13;
sition 13 not forgotten, and the ability&#13;
and integrity with which be sarvrt&#13;
the people, led him to t\ie prominence&#13;
he has reached in bis profession&#13;
Tbe peoble should cooly and deliberately&#13;
make their choice guided by intelligent&#13;
inquiry and c&amp;retul ccn&gt;Herat&#13;
ion. Having done this, tbe Livingston&#13;
Herald* without mental reservation,&#13;
eoansels tbe electien ©i William&#13;
P. Van Winkle to tfafe office of tbe&#13;
next circuit judge ol tttii judicial cir-&#13;
Cards&#13;
A fine line; call and see them.&#13;
EGG DYES,&#13;
All the colors of the Rainbow,&#13;
ONLY 5C A PAGKAGE.&#13;
WALL PAPER,&#13;
We have the latest designs and patterns.&#13;
PRICES ARE RIGHT.&#13;
A FULL AND COMPLETE LINE OF&#13;
DRUGS,&#13;
PATENT MEDICINES,&#13;
TOILET ARTICLES,&#13;
PERFUMERY,&#13;
ETC&#13;
AT THE CORNER DRUG STORE.&#13;
F. A. SIGLER.&#13;
STEEL RANGES&#13;
The best steel ranges on earth for&#13;
Are at Teeple and Cadwell's Hardware Store.&#13;
Having sold a number of them which have been working&#13;
successfully for a year or more, proves them good.&#13;
We warrant them to bake as quickly and with as little&#13;
fuel, either coal or wood, as any range made, and we&#13;
know they will hold fire over night as well as any air tight&#13;
stove which proves them to be well and substantialy made.&#13;
Do not fail to examine these ranges. No trouble to show&#13;
them.&#13;
VERY TRULY YOURS,&#13;
TEEPLE &gt;.. CA DWELL.&#13;
The latest things in Ladies' Neckwear.&#13;
The latest styles in Dress Silks.&#13;
The latest styles in Shoes.&#13;
A large assortment of Dress Goods, Dress Ginghams,&#13;
Percales, Prints. Piques, India Linons and Ribbons for the&#13;
spring trade.&#13;
Parasols in the new shades and new style tops.&#13;
A fine line of Ladies' Crash and Sateen skirts at 98c,&#13;
grnnd $1.25, $1.50, $1.75 and $2.00.&#13;
Floor mattings ranging from 15 to 3oc per yard.&#13;
Extremely LOW PRICES on Gent's Furnishing,&#13;
Our line of Cotton and Wool Pants, working shjrts&#13;
and jackets can't be beat. , .. ,,'.&#13;
THIS WEEK WE OFFER&#13;
SJ Cans Salmon 17o •&#13;
25c Can Corn Beef ....19o&#13;
A Good Bleacbed Cotton...... 6o&#13;
F- G. 3ACKSONSj&#13;
!(1&#13;
. . i • (. i&#13;
• \ ' *&#13;
.TV.-*.}&#13;
' * ' --&#13;
vry&#13;
c ; ,• k' •&#13;
t&#13;
I ' "&#13;
• •&#13;
I&#13;
P•ft:.**.-&#13;
i.c'.'(&lt;&#13;
i:V:SI-&lt;&lt;&gt;••'&#13;
sit&#13;
Mott Cowardly Murder CoaaUttoi by&#13;
» Dotroiter - The Chore*&#13;
sbtp of the SUt» —Two&#13;
Injured la • J»«tmtt ftae*&#13;
miUe&lt;t IIU Wife Witk a&#13;
* John Dean, aged 26, a bricklayer of&#13;
"Detroit, while in a fit of jealousy&#13;
Jctlled his pretty, young wife with a&#13;
fiatiron while she was leaning over the&#13;
kitchen sink with her back towards&#13;
Itiax The couple had been marrred&#13;
five years and had one child, Harold,&#13;
xrho is 2 years old, but the parents had&#13;
lived apart for some little time Mrs.&#13;
Dean supported herself and child by&#13;
doing- domestic work and sewing-.&#13;
•Since Dean's return from Mexico, some&#13;
months ago, the couple had quarreled&#13;
at almost every meeting. It is said he&#13;
often accused his wife of infidelity&#13;
Storing their quarrels which provoked&#13;
her into living uway from him. There&#13;
was no eyewitnesses to the terrible&#13;
tragedy, but after Dean's arrest he admitted&#13;
the crime.&#13;
MICHIGAN NEWS ITEMS.&#13;
Marshall is to have a new $20,030&#13;
opera house. ","&#13;
Doings of the Week Recorded in a ,. Th_e new 40foot d a m a t Bciieraie&#13;
n &gt; j&gt; OA i i entirely washed away.&#13;
Brief Style* The 31st Michigan expect to leave&#13;
^ J Cuba by May 20, reaching home June 10.&#13;
CONCISE AND INTERE$Tltei. The daa/^ro* t W W s * * * at&#13;
Ceresco was taken out by the recent&#13;
high water.&#13;
There have sheen 20 interments in&#13;
the Constantino ^Village cemetery since&#13;
Jan. 1, 1809. \&#13;
Mrs. Dan Ross, of Deckerville, has&#13;
given birth to twins which weigh \%&#13;
pounds each.&#13;
Thieves broke into the Plainwell depot&#13;
and secured u large quantity of&#13;
merchandise.&#13;
A postoffice has been established at&#13;
Ina, Osceola county, Adalbert Kanouse,&#13;
postmaster.&#13;
A postonice has been established at&#13;
Case, Presque Isle county, Christopher&#13;
C Smith, postmaster.&#13;
Allcgan's central school building&#13;
has been destroyed by fire. Loss, $30,-&#13;
000; insurance, $12,000.&#13;
Marl beds have been discovered at&#13;
Ypsilanti and a company is being&#13;
formed to develope them.&#13;
A stock company with a capital of&#13;
35,000 has been organized at Yale to&#13;
put in an evaporatiug plant&#13;
Mrs. Lily B. Ronan, of Monroe, has&#13;
been reappointed assistant state librarian&#13;
for four years from April 1.&#13;
Henry Peterson was ground to pieces&#13;
by a moving train at Calumet from&#13;
which he was attempting to alight.&#13;
Gea Padgett, a Dentons farmer,&#13;
lights his heusu and barn with electricity,&#13;
the power being a windmill.&#13;
Mrs, Edward Kring, of Muskegon,&#13;
tried the morphine route, but the&#13;
timely appearance of a physician saved&#13;
her.&#13;
Huron county poorhouse has at present&#13;
six inmates who are over 80 years&#13;
old, of whom five are seriously ill with&#13;
I'ccallnr Explosion at Bay CUy.&#13;
• Three men, Robt. Ridler, Jr., Fred&#13;
Seekell and Cuas. Trombley were badly&#13;
burned as a result of an explosion in&#13;
the forge room of Sraalley Uros. &amp;&#13;
Ox's machine works in Bay City.&#13;
Seekell and Trombley were trying to&#13;
unloosen a nut on the end of a piston&#13;
nead of a steam saw feed, used in saw&#13;
mills. For this purpose they placed it&#13;
in a forgo in order to burn away the&#13;
rust, when suddenly the piston head&#13;
exploded, throwing the fire from the&#13;
forge to all parts of the room, burning&#13;
three men and setting fire to the building.&#13;
The fire was quickly extinguished&#13;
by other men in the building. The&#13;
injured men will recover. A second death from smallpox is reported&#13;
at Wajtervliet. The victim was&#13;
the 10-year-old daughter of Jos. Whitmore.&#13;
Croswell citizens will enjoy the&#13;
privileges of a local telephone exchange&#13;
as soon as the wires can be&#13;
strung.&#13;
-,v r.,, »»iT"*—»T~ *" Hough ton will have a big cold storother&#13;
ohildren of the family were , „. t , . B .&#13;
* « ^ ~ «f a « n _ ^ *i^ - ! . , . , „ . a S e Pl »n t this summer, a company having&#13;
been organized for the purpose&#13;
with 960,000 capital.&#13;
The old universalist church at Corunna&#13;
has been sold and will be converted&#13;
into a warehouse. It is-a landmark&#13;
of that section.&#13;
Secretary Baker, of the state board&#13;
of health, is after physicians who fail&#13;
to report communicable diseases, es*&#13;
Mother and Child&#13;
By the explosion of a gasoline can&#13;
by mistake in kindling a fire for&#13;
the evening meal, Mrs. Ellis Gutenberg&#13;
and youngest child, of Detroit,&#13;
were fatally burned and the husband&#13;
is at the hospital suffering much pain.&#13;
at the store at the time of the aecident&#13;
and escaped injury. The father is&#13;
still ignorant of the death of his wife&#13;
and child, as the hospital authorities&#13;
iear the shock would be too much for&#13;
him.&#13;
Deaerted UU Bride*&#13;
Arthur J. Snyder, the son of a wellknown&#13;
tailor at St. Joseph, is locked&#13;
mp m the city pribuu at 81 Joseph.1t~|~pec?a&#13;
is charged that a few days ago he was&#13;
secretly married at Fort Valley, Ga.,&#13;
to Miss Etta Lee. The next night&#13;
after the marriage he managed to get&#13;
hold of his bride's purse containing&#13;
*&gt;0. tt is alleged that he immediately&#13;
departed and deserted his bride, who&#13;
. tiaa returned to her home griefstricken.&#13;
Oot Her Heart and • t o o la&#13;
Frank Rich, of Avoca, made love to&#13;
Mrs. Esther Squires, of Lexington, and&#13;
won her affections to sueh an extent&#13;
that she advanced him 1200 to pay for&#13;
Jtia wedding garments. The next day&#13;
Rlek and the 8300 were mUsing, leaviajr&#13;
Mrs Squires to mourn both her&#13;
lacerated heart and empty purse, so&#13;
•he sent the sheriff after the two.&#13;
Bkhr VMM arrested and taken back to&#13;
Lexington to "settle."&#13;
» * , , . • •&#13;
A PltMUftot Surprise. ,&#13;
, About 13 years ago Paul Rivard, of&#13;
~Weat Bay City, and a man named Durlcee&#13;
worked together in the woods and&#13;
a close intimacy sprang up. After a&#13;
time they separated, Durkee going to&#13;
Wisconsin. A few days ago Rivard received&#13;
a letter from his friend inclosing&#13;
a check for 82,000. Durkee amid he&#13;
-was on his deathbed and having no&#13;
living relatives decided to aend Rivard&#13;
the money.&#13;
Taken Violently I&#13;
" Bev. Chas. A. Carter, pastor of the&#13;
Strut A. M. E. church at Benton Harbor,&#13;
who suffered a slight stroke of&#13;
anomentary insanity a few days ago&#13;
while walking upon the street, has&#13;
went violently insane. For safety of&#13;
bis family he was locked up. He was&#13;
acknowledged to be one of the ablest&#13;
colored men in southwestern Michigan.&#13;
{ Kaook«*l 30 r~t hf m Tfeata.&#13;
t Win. Hayden, age* S3, residing in&#13;
Saugatuck, while walking on the rmilraad&#13;
track near Holland dswiag a&#13;
*eavy snow storm, was straek '*f a&#13;
express on the C. ft W. M. R. R.&#13;
was thrown 25 feet Th« train&#13;
•topped and the trainmen nicked&#13;
Aim np, but he died as the train reached&#13;
«ke outskirts of the city,&#13;
t . ^ ^&#13;
'^ OMtntry ROMU Ifftcti nMa1naa|, •&#13;
r Tne terrible condition of tbe roads&#13;
+n Michigan the past few weeks has&#13;
pad a bad effect on the business of&#13;
iamerohanU in the smaller pta*es,who&#13;
iaepend largely on the country tradV&#13;
liar support, the farmers net tfoiftft W&#13;
any more than is absolutely neehd&#13;
&gt;&#13;
M at.presenU&#13;
y consumption.&#13;
Marshall is to experience a building&#13;
boom this summer. Plans for 10 new&#13;
dwellings to cost from $2,000 to 810,000&#13;
apiece have been drawn.&#13;
The St. Johns Table Co's plant, of&#13;
St Johns, has been damaged to the&#13;
extent of 850,000 by fire. The loss is&#13;
fully covered by insurance.&#13;
Mrs. Clara Thayer, of Mason, who&#13;
was recently convicted of forgery, has&#13;
been sentenced to five years in the&#13;
Detroit house of correction.&#13;
The population of Hillsdale county&#13;
is increasing rapidly. In the past 60&#13;
days five pairs of twins have been born&#13;
within six miles of Camden.&#13;
County Treasurer G. R. Rovejoy, of&#13;
Macomb county, has commenced a$10,-&#13;
000 damage suit against the G. T. Ry.&#13;
Co. A broken kneecap is the cause.&#13;
Niles people are nightly terrorized&#13;
by a ghoulish being in the shape of a&#13;
man, dressed as a woman. Attempts&#13;
will be mode to capture the prowler.&#13;
A water famine and a reign of darkness&#13;
will prevail at South Haven for a&#13;
few days. The chimney to the power&#13;
house must be torn down and rebuilt.&#13;
One death from smallpox is reported&#13;
from Watervllet. The victim is the&#13;
father of the girl who contracted the&#13;
disease while sorting rags at the paper&#13;
mills.&#13;
Ann Arbor will eonstrntt 88,000&#13;
worth of storm sewers, which will&#13;
complete the system for oarrying away&#13;
surface water off the flat portion of&#13;
the city.&#13;
Because a Grand Rapids policeman&#13;
did not assist a lady whom he had seen&#13;
fall on a slippery walk to her feet&#13;
again, he was suspended from duty by&#13;
the police board.&#13;
Sheep shearing is booming around&#13;
Vernon. There are four men who&#13;
have already sheared over 4.000 sheep&#13;
since last January and they have about&#13;
as many more to shear.&#13;
The ioe fn Lake Hnron is as firm as&#13;
ever, and extends as far as the eye can&#13;
reach from Middle island. Vesselmen&#13;
predict that boats will probably not&#13;
be running before April 18.&#13;
Edward # McHugh. of Fenton, has&#13;
purchased over 3,500 head of cattle and&#13;
sheep of the farmers in the vicinity of&#13;
Holly In the past three weeks. He&#13;
paid nearly 82o,jQQi&gt; for. them..&#13;
In a mlx-up 'between a D^ G. H. &amp;&#13;
M. freight and a C, 8. Jb M. mixed&#13;
trail* at Owojtso, several cats were demolished&#13;
as a result of a *far&lt;end writ&#13;
Itsfou. The Wreckage caught fire and1&#13;
: • • . , ! '&#13;
The Ilillsdalo county'board of super*&#13;
visors is considering the matter of incorporating&#13;
the vilUtfe of Camden.&#13;
Petitions have been preseuted asking&#13;
for incorporation, and other petitions&#13;
opposing such action.&#13;
All the furniture factories in Owosso&#13;
are working 12 or 14 hours a day and&#13;
are then unable to keep up with orders.&#13;
Such a season of prosperity so&#13;
tar as the factories are concerned was&#13;
never before known there.&#13;
The general store occupied by S. M.&#13;
Gage at Walled Lake, together with&#13;
contents have been destryed by fire.&#13;
The residence of Mrs. Dr. Hoyt and&#13;
the office of the Michigan Bell Telephone&#13;
Co. were also burned.&#13;
The state game warden, it is claimed,&#13;
has the names of 200 men and boys&#13;
who have been doing illegal spearingon&#13;
the St. Joseph river during the fall&#13;
and winter months. Most of the offenders&#13;
are from Constantine.&#13;
Lytuan McNeil, of Atlas, recently&#13;
died in Jacksonville, Fla, A search of&#13;
his trunk revealed 81,400 in cash, which&#13;
made his total assets $47,000. His wife&#13;
was cut off with $5, but will have&#13;
about 820,000, by order of the court.&#13;
In a heavy fog a bad rear-end collision&#13;
between two regular southbound&#13;
freights on the F. it P. M R. R. occurred&#13;
at New Boston. One killed,&#13;
two injured and the company's finest&#13;
engine completely demolished was the&#13;
result.&#13;
The state fair authorities have decided&#13;
to abandon the system they have&#13;
followed for years of advertising the&#13;
big- fair by means of dodgers and lithographs,&#13;
&lt;ind to spend all the money set&#13;
aside for this purpose in newspaper&#13;
advertising.&#13;
A Deckerville farmer is the owner of&#13;
a lamb which boasts of six feet—four&#13;
in front and two behind. The freak,&#13;
which was born only a few days ago,&#13;
seems to be as healthy as any ordinary&#13;
lamb which has only fore feet in front&#13;
and two behind.&#13;
Prominent peach growers around&#13;
Buchanan, now that they have had&#13;
ample time toexamine their trees since&#13;
the big freeze of February, say that&#13;
the trees have been killed without&#13;
doubt. One grower losses his entire&#13;
orchard of 1,500 trees.&#13;
The Reading Telephone-News says&#13;
that a seamstress of that village carelessly&#13;
left a needly in the back of a&#13;
young- lady customer's dress, and now&#13;
a particular friend of the latter's family&#13;
is going- around with his arm done&#13;
up in arnicated bandages.&#13;
Last week a Miss Davis, aged 19,&#13;
daughter of a farmer near C&amp;ss City,&#13;
cashed a forged order for 83 at a business&#13;
house. »The merchant called on&#13;
her parents for a settlement and they&#13;
in turn reprimanded the girl. Later&#13;
the yoiing woman placed strychnine in&#13;
a cup of tea and drank it, death resulting.&#13;
Reports to the state board of health&#13;
HfflE OF M If MPH&#13;
News of the Da) as Told Q**r rtbe&#13;
Slender Wires*-&#13;
DOMESTIC AND FOREIGN NEWS&#13;
Treasury Receipt* for V*hramry — Our&#13;
Cap* Town Trad* Worries England&#13;
—A Kansas Father Uordars Jlls Five&#13;
Children and Fires His Home.&#13;
Internal Reveaae Beeelpts.&#13;
The monthly statement of the collections&#13;
of internal revenues shows that&#13;
the total receipts for February, 1899,&#13;
were 819,648,206—an increase as compared&#13;
with February, 1898. of 87,062.-&#13;
445. The receipts from the several&#13;
sources of revenue are given as follows,&#13;
together with the increases as compared&#13;
with the same month in 1898:&#13;
Spirits, 88,024.767, increase 81.034,500;&#13;
tobacco, 84,348.233, increase 81.686,409;&#13;
fermented liquors 8,787.531, increase&#13;
81,625,253; oleomargarine, 81S9.724, increase&#13;
$40,587. Miscellaneous 33,203,-&#13;
492, increase 83.230,377. Of the first&#13;
amount 83,211,484 was received from&#13;
the sale of documentary and proprietary&#13;
stamps. Mixed flour, S37S; bankers,&#13;
86*635; billiard rooms, 84,083; stock&#13;
brokers, 80.9(36; commercial brokers,&#13;
S3,730. Airgreg-ate of special taxes,&#13;
830,240. For the eight months of the&#13;
fiscal year the total receipts from internal&#13;
revenue sources were 8r78,78 ,-&#13;
084, increase as compared with the&#13;
same period in 1898 of 868,299,058.&#13;
WAR NOTES,&#13;
show that rheumatism, influenza, bronchitis,&#13;
neuralgia and tonsillitis, in the&#13;
order named, caused tho most sickness&#13;
in Michigan, during the past week.&#13;
Consumption was reported at 119&#13;
places, scarlet fever at 56, measles at&#13;
38, typhoid fever at 23, diphtheria at&#13;
17, whooping cough at 13 and smallpox&#13;
at 6.&#13;
The farm house of Silas White, of&#13;
Thetford township, Gencsee county,&#13;
burned to the ground. He and his&#13;
wife ore deaf mutes. They and three&#13;
children escaped, although the father&#13;
was badly bnrned. In the excitement&#13;
a 4-year-old child was left in&#13;
the house and burned to death.&#13;
The charred remains were recovered&#13;
in the ruins.&#13;
W. Rennike, an old soldier living&#13;
about two miles from Battle Creek,&#13;
has been trying for some time to secure&#13;
a pension. Recently he received word&#13;
that his claim lmd been rejected. He&#13;
was very poor and in need of the&#13;
money, and brooded over the rejection&#13;
until it shattered his mind and he became&#13;
violently insane. He has been&#13;
sent to the Pontiac asylum.&#13;
A Hillsdale schoolboy found a piece&#13;
of unslacked lime while on the way to&#13;
school the other day, and put it in his&#13;
jacket pocket. Later on he stuck u.&#13;
wet sponge in the same pocket. The&#13;
scared school teacher thought the boy's&#13;
pocket was on fire, and sho thrust her&#13;
hand into it and grabbed hold of the&#13;
lime. She now has a very sore hand&#13;
and the youngster won't soon forget&#13;
the fatality.&#13;
A Muskegon youth beat the county&#13;
out of 10 cents last week because the&#13;
city clerk didn't know mice heads from&#13;
sparrow heads. The boy brought in a&#13;
lot of heads for the bounty, and as&#13;
they were pretty well seasoned, the&#13;
clerk counted them at the end of a&#13;
yardstick held In one hand while be&#13;
pinched hi* olfactory organ with the&#13;
other. After the boy had secured his&#13;
order on the county treasurer the deception&#13;
he practiced was discovered.&#13;
May Reeves, of Albion, a high school&#13;
pupil, tried to commit suicide by the&#13;
morphine route in school. Some time&#13;
ago it was noticed that she and a girl&#13;
named Harvey w«ro spending money&#13;
recklessly at various city greenhouses&#13;
and elsewhere, and it was proved that&#13;
the money was stolen from the girl's&#13;
teacher. The disgrace was too much&#13;
for the Reeves girl and she took several&#13;
Urge doses of morphine whiLa sitting&#13;
at cn«r desk. She will probablj&#13;
live. - '.. .- . . ....'... - • • • . . . '&#13;
The liritUh are Much Alarmed.&#13;
The English merchants have been&#13;
startled by the heavy inroads being&#13;
made, by Americans into their trade&#13;
with the British colony of Cape Town,&#13;
and there is much talk of combination&#13;
to repress this. Two orders for American&#13;
rails and tubing amounting to&#13;
82.500,000 have been placed at a price&#13;
20 per cent below British quotations&#13;
and, the Scotch makers refusing to&#13;
make the tubes as long as required,&#13;
the order went to America. A large&#13;
match factory is being erected in Cape&#13;
Town to use American machinery.&#13;
Large shipments of barbed galvanized&#13;
wire are being made to Natal by Americau&#13;
manufacturers, also at prices 20&#13;
per cent below English quotations.&#13;
A consignment of 3,000 tons of Pocahontas&#13;
coal from Virginia has just&#13;
reached Cape Town. Commercial travelers&#13;
are obliged to pay a tax of 848.33&#13;
in Natal under penalty of heavy fine&#13;
and imprisonment and in Cape Town&#13;
8121.60.&#13;
Father'* Atrocious Crlnie.&#13;
When the coroner came to remove&#13;
the bodies of the five children from the&#13;
partiaily burned home of John Moore,&#13;
at Ilutchinson, Kas., an atrocious crime&#13;
was revealed. It was at first thought&#13;
that the little ones had been suffocated&#13;
by smoke, but it was found that thn&#13;
skull at each child was deeply indented&#13;
and badly fractured. All but one of&#13;
the children had been stabbed in the&#13;
neck. The throat of the little 3-yearold&#13;
boy had been slashed so deep that&#13;
the spinal column had been severed.&#13;
While the building was still burning&#13;
the father hitched np his horse and&#13;
drove away. When arrested he said&#13;
the children must had died by the explosion&#13;
of a lamp, and explained his&#13;
leaving the burning house in the manner&#13;
he did, by saying he was going&#13;
after his wife.&#13;
Hotel Fire.&#13;
The Windsor hotel in New York City&#13;
has been destroyed by fire. The fire&#13;
originated on the second floor of the&#13;
building from the igniting of a lace&#13;
curtain, and 10 minutes later the flames&#13;
were roaring through the interior of&#13;
the hotel cutting off all means of escape&#13;
by stairways and elevators.&#13;
While the fire raged women congregated&#13;
at windows and upon the roof of&#13;
Iho burning building, and as the heat&#13;
and stuoUc became more and more intense&#13;
many jumped to the stone pavement&#13;
below, preferring death in this&#13;
manner rather than to be burned.&#13;
This list of casualties so far reported&#13;
are: !6 dead, 43 missing and ii injured.&#13;
Many of the injured have since died.&#13;
The Clalaia to be 8etU«fl.&#13;
The treasury department has begun&#13;
the settlement of claims against the&#13;
government for which appropriation&#13;
was made in the omnibus claims bill&#13;
passed at the last session of congress.&#13;
Warrants aggregating about 8250,200&#13;
already have been isiued to the beneficiaries,&#13;
and it is expected that the&#13;
whole amount carried by the act, approximately&#13;
83,000,000, including the&#13;
French spoliation claims, will be liquidated&#13;
within the next month.&#13;
t ttottteawat.&#13;
The British, German and American&#13;
ministers at Pekin have addressed notes&#13;
to the tsung 11 yamen demanding settlement&#13;
of the Shanghai foreign extension&#13;
questions, the French miniates,&#13;
M. Pichon, agreeing to withdraw the&#13;
protest of the French consul against&#13;
the extensions, on the condition that&#13;
the proposed extensions do not include&#13;
that portion of the land forming the&#13;
immediate hinterland of the present&#13;
French concession.&#13;
The following has been received from&#13;
Admiral t)ewey; "I believe the Tar&#13;
..gajo^insurrection is .already breaking"&#13;
UD. Jiea. Wh«aton4f oluftm eould take&#13;
Maloloi by \ good Wash! TW main&#13;
part of the insurrection lies between&#13;
Manila and Malolos. There's practically&#13;
no opposition to United Stales&#13;
authority in tho southern islands.&#13;
The natives there hate the Tagaloe&#13;
and are really anxious to welcome&gt;na.&#13;
The Tagalos are half devil and half&#13;
child. Eradicate the devil and von)&#13;
have only the child to govern. The7&#13;
strength of th« enemy haetoees greatly1&#13;
overestimated. We ave aWpng enough&#13;
to hold these islands without a foreign&#13;
alliance. With the Oregon,,&#13;
Monterey and Mood nock we could&#13;
any possible complication." .&#13;
It is reported that Aguinaldo\ Is&#13;
taking extreme measures to suppress&#13;
signs calculated to cause, a&#13;
cessation of hostilities. Twelve ad'&#13;
herents of the plan of independence,&#13;
residents of Manila, have been condemned&#13;
to death because they wrot*»&#13;
advising surrender. Recently Gen.&#13;
Lagarda visited Malolos for the purpose&#13;
of advising Aguinaldo to quit*&#13;
He argued with tho insurgent leader&#13;
and attempted to convince him of the&#13;
folly of persistence in the face of overwhelming&#13;
odds. Aguinaldo was furious&#13;
at the advice and ordered Gen.&#13;
Lagarda to be executed immediately.&#13;
The unfortunate general was promptly&#13;
decapitated.&#13;
Another hard fought battle hastakete&#13;
place between Gen. Wheaton's forces&#13;
and the insurgents at Taguig. about&#13;
1% miles south of Pas,ig. The post&#13;
held the enemy in check, while the&#13;
fire of the rein^orooicg companies repulsed&#13;
them, driving them across to an&#13;
island formed by the estuary. They&#13;
were thus in front of the 22d regulars.&#13;
On discovering that they were en».'&#13;
trapped the rebels fought desperately,&#13;
aided materially by the jungle and the&#13;
darkness, but they wero finally completely&#13;
routed, losing 200, after two&#13;
hours fighting. The Americans had 3&#13;
killed and 20 wounded.&#13;
Thomas Carroll Boone, the telegraph&#13;
operator in the war balloon in the operations&#13;
before Santiago, died recently&#13;
at the Massachusettes general hospital,&#13;
as the result of an operation on a&#13;
wound received in the fall of the balloon&#13;
after it had been shot to pieces&#13;
by Spaniards during the battle of San&#13;
Juan hill, lioonc and two government&#13;
officers performed heroic work in the&#13;
great airship at Santiago. Calamity&#13;
has now overtaken all three of the&#13;
men who were in the ill-fated balloon.&#13;
One of the officers died as the result of&#13;
his injuries, while the other is an inmate&#13;
of an insane asylum.&#13;
The American army and gunboats&#13;
now command the lake, and Gen. Otis&#13;
estimates that SSOQJWO worth of property&#13;
belonging to the insurgents has&#13;
been destroyed.&#13;
Anofehe* Explosion In Part*. &gt;&#13;
The series of explosions in govern*&#13;
ment ammunition depots which commenced&#13;
with the terrible disaster at&#13;
La Goubran, near Toulon, followed&#13;
with explosions at Bourges and Marseilles.&#13;
The latest explosion occurred&#13;
in a laboratory of explosives attached&#13;
to the war department, where experiments&#13;
were being made with a new&#13;
kind of gunpowder. Chief Engineer&#13;
Veil, Assistant Engineer D'Ouville,&#13;
and a third official were injured-. AH&#13;
tlic windows in the neighborhood were&#13;
smashed and considerable oiher damage&#13;
was done. Although it is not believed&#13;
that the explosion was the result&#13;
of foul play, great excitement followed.&#13;
&gt;&#13;
Ten Killed by a Cyclone.&#13;
As a result of a cyclone in Tennessee&#13;
10 deaths and many fatalities is reported.&#13;
The path of the storm was&#13;
about 200 yards wide and it traversed&#13;
the country for 12 miles, beginning in&#13;
the northern part of Cleburne county, v&#13;
near Iron City, and moved southward.&#13;
Those who saw H say that there wals&#13;
an immense conical cloud and that J t&#13;
bounded along like a rubber ball, rising&#13;
at intervals and leaping for several&#13;
hundred yards without doing any damage.&#13;
Then when It descended it would&#13;
pick up houses and crush them to&#13;
pieces, uproot trees or twist them off&#13;
level with the ground and sweep all&#13;
before it.&#13;
The Cuban army Dumbers 13.210 men&#13;
exclusive of commissioned&#13;
«od Coll&#13;
In the course of a discussion of England's&#13;
policy in China, Win. St John&#13;
Broderick, parliamentary secretary for&#13;
the foreign office, defended the plan of&#13;
dealing direct with the tsung II yamea&#13;
and declared the suggestion that Great&#13;
Britain should Instead "go straight to&#13;
other powers*1 absolutely untenable ia&#13;
the present condition of affairs. Referring&#13;
to North Chljsa he jaid Oreai&#13;
Britain was still hopeful of an asderstandlng&#13;
with Russia there and that a&#13;
friendly and conciliatory disposition.&#13;
existed on both sides.&#13;
Deatfet Keaa*djr «a TtfaL&#13;
Dr. S. J Kennedy, of New York, the&#13;
dentist accused of the murder of Erneline&#13;
C. Reynolds, Is on trial in taa&#13;
criminal branch of the supreme eoart.&#13;
••Dolly" Reynolds was found mtendered&#13;
in a room at the Grand hotel in that&#13;
city. Aug. Hvis69, , Voder the dead&#13;
woman's corset was found a check" ftp&#13;
flS.doo fclgned Dudlejr Green and, i&#13;
*W by Samuel 3f k d ;&#13;
• . ' . • • • • • • ' • ' • • • &lt; • • • . • • • * &lt; \ - « l , " . &lt; • • • • • '&#13;
DICK RODNEY;&#13;
Ort The Adventures of&#13;
An Eton Boy...&#13;
3&#13;
BY JAMES GRANT.&#13;
MWWMWV&#13;
t 1&#13;
i CHAPTER XVI.—(Continued.)&#13;
Moat of tfce bouse* are bmllt of good&#13;
•tone, but haVe all their windows&#13;
trdh-hafcoa without aaA barricaded&#13;
•within, for the population &lt;of which&#13;
our' shipmate Antonio was a striking&#13;
specimen) consists of about thirty&#13;
thousand olive-skinned Spaniards and&#13;
double that number of slaves and tree&#13;
taulattoes, all loose, reckless, fiery and&#13;
apt to uee their knives on trivial occasions.&#13;
There was not a ship lying there&#13;
tor "England, or any other craft by&#13;
which Western could have sent me&#13;
'borne. A Spanish steam-packet was&#13;
, tm the eve oT departing for Cadiz, but&#13;
being wearied by the monotony of my&#13;
long voyage, I was scarcely in a mood&#13;
for the sea again, and wished to spend&#13;
«a 'little more time on shore Instead of&#13;
leaving with her.&#13;
However, I wrote to my family by&#13;
.'the Spanish mall, acquainting them of&#13;
lay safety, with the strange incident&#13;
-which had so suddenly torn me from&#13;
them, and adding that I would return&#13;
lay the first ship bound for any part of&#13;
/England; ft possible, with the Eugenie,&#13;
which would probably be&#13;
freighted for London.&#13;
After the packet sailed with my letter&#13;
in her capacious bags, I experienced&#13;
an emotion of greater happiness&#13;
and contentment (dian I had ever done&#13;
since leaving home, for the sorrow&#13;
which I knew all thjere must have suffered,&#13;
and would .still be suffering,&#13;
hung heavily on,/ny heart,&#13;
As wo were returning to the brig,&#13;
which had now been warped alongside&#13;
the mole., when passing through the&#13;
street which contains the great hospital,&#13;
we heard the sound of trumpets,&#13;
and saw the glittering of lances with&#13;
long streamers above the heads of a&#13;
dense crowd of people of all shades of&#13;
color—black, yellow and brown—and&#13;
we had to doff our hats with due re-&#13;
•pect as they passed, for in the midst,&#13;
surrounded by a staff cf officers, epauletted&#13;
and aiguletted, their breast*&#13;
sparkling with medals and crosses, and&#13;
each of them riding with a cocked hat.&#13;
under his lefjt arm, came the present&#13;
Captain General of Cuba, a marshal of&#13;
the S_£anl8h_arxnx* Don Francisco-Serrano&#13;
de Dominguez, attended by an&#13;
escort of mulatto lancers, all mounted&#13;
on Spanish horses.&#13;
He was a Sne-looklsg m*n, and although&#13;
aged, had all the bearing of&#13;
what he was, or. I should say, is—&#13;
,a grandee of old Castile.&#13;
On returning to the Eugenie we&#13;
found Antonio the Cuban working&#13;
among the crew «** lustily and as actively&#13;
as any man on board. Weston&#13;
now offered him remuneration for the&#13;
time that be had been with us, with&#13;
a hint that he might find a berth elsewhere;&#13;
but our castaway evinced the&#13;
reluctance to leave the brig,&#13;
d h&#13;
* * * * * * * * * f r t t t • * * * * * * * * * * * *&#13;
lshed this record of their achievements&#13;
might be cast by the ocean on&#13;
the shore of some Christian land.&#13;
As I eat by the sounding sea that&#13;
rolled Into the bay of Matanzas, what&#13;
would I not have given to have seen&#13;
the waves cast that old cask, covered&#13;
with weeds and barnacles, at my&#13;
feet!&#13;
But now the plodding steam tug and&#13;
the rusty merchant trader ploughed&#13;
the waters of the bay instead of the&#13;
gilded Spanish caravels, or the long&#13;
war pirogues of the Indian warriors;&#13;
and where they fought their bloodiest&#13;
battle3 on the wooded shore, or in the&#13;
green savanna, where the painted cacique&#13;
and the mailed Castilian met&#13;
hand to hand In mortal strife, the&#13;
smoke of the steam mill, grinding coffee&#13;
or boiling sugar, darkened the sky,&#13;
and the sor»gs of the negroes were&#13;
heard as they hoed in the plantations,&#13;
or in gangs of forty trucked mahogany&#13;
logs, each drawn by eight sturdy oxen,&#13;
to the sea.&#13;
And EO, in a creek.of the bay—the&#13;
same place where the Dutch Admiral&#13;
Heyn sank the Spanish plate fleet—I&#13;
was wont to sit dreamily for hours,&#13;
with the murmur of the waves in my&#13;
ears, with the buzz of insects and the&#13;
voice of the mocking-birds among the&#13;
palmettos, while watching the sails&#13;
that glided past the headlands of the&#13;
bay on their way to the Bahama Channel&#13;
or the great Gulf of Florida.&#13;
This was my favorite resort. A wood&#13;
of cocoanut and other trees shaded the&#13;
place and mad/e it so dark that I have&#13;
seen the flre-flies glance about at noon.&#13;
The cocoas are about the height of&#13;
Dutch poplars, and are covered with&#13;
oblong leaves, which, when young, are&#13;
of a pale red. A» spring drew on, the&#13;
branches became covered with scarlet&#13;
and yellow flowers.&#13;
Over these the vast corral tree&#13;
spread its protecting foliage, whence&#13;
the Spaniards, in their beautiful language,&#13;
name it La Madre del Cocoa, the&#13;
smallest of which has at times a thousand&#13;
lovely scarlet blossoms.&#13;
and begged that he might be permitted&#13;
to remain on board, as three of&#13;
our best hands had been sent ashore,&#13;
stek, to tbe hospital.&#13;
So short-sighted ta man that Captahi&#13;
Weston, despite the dislike .of the&#13;
crew and the advice of Marc Hislop,&#13;
ordered that the name of Antonio be&#13;
entered on the ship's books as foremast&#13;
man.&#13;
Three weeks after our arrival the&#13;
t»rtg wa« careened to starboard, when&#13;
clear of all the cargo, and had her&#13;
copper scraped and cleaned, an operafipn&#13;
which the constant rain* of the&#13;
season greatly retarded.&#13;
There -was much in Cuba to feed&#13;
an imaginative mind, and mine was&#13;
full of the voyages, the daring adventures&#13;
and the vast discoveries of Columbus,&#13;
with the exploits of the buccaneers,&#13;
whose haunts were amid these&#13;
wild and, in those days, savage&#13;
shores.&#13;
I thought of the gaily plumed and&#13;
barbarously armed caefqnes whom Columbus&#13;
had rmet in their fleet pirogues,&#13;
or had -encountered in the dense forests&#13;
wfcieh clothe, the Cuban mountains—&#13;
fereete, ©Id, perhaps, as the&#13;
&lt;Uy§ of tbe &lt;detage-«o* tie yellow-&#13;
«klnned women with their long, flowing&#13;
black a*it and with plates of polished&#13;
gold hanging in their ears and&#13;
noses; of the fierce warriors streaked&#13;
•with sable war paint and armed with&#13;
•arrows shod with teeth'or poi-&#13;
I'fish boftet. that fen harmless&#13;
trttm the Spanish coats of maH; of the&#13;
wild Caribs, who devoured their pris-&#13;
CHAPTER XVII. " '&#13;
An Evil Spirit&#13;
We sailed from the-Bay ef-MatattMts&#13;
at 2 o'clock a. m., on the 3d of April,&#13;
bound for the Cape of Good Hope,&#13;
which we were fated never to reach.&#13;
The Eugeaie had been freighted for&#13;
that colony with a rich cargo of molasses,&#13;
sugar, coffee, and tobacco, and&#13;
arrangements had been made that from&#13;
Cape Town she would be chartered for&#13;
Lc cdoo. Thus I had a fair prospect of&#13;
seeiug hearty a half of this terrestrial&#13;
glob* before I repasted my good old&#13;
fathi fs threshold at Elsmere.&#13;
I earnestly hoped that we might&#13;
encounter no more waterapoats or tornadoes,&#13;
as they were not at all to my&#13;
taste; but from other causes than phesomething&#13;
vsfortunate ocewttd. Halyards&#13;
or braces gave way, br vhich ths&#13;
yards were thrown afcackjaad in one&#13;
instance the brig nearly lost her mainmast.&#13;
Standing ana running rigging&#13;
were found to be mysteriously fretted,&#13;
and even cut, as if by a knife; and&#13;
then the crew whispered together of&#13;
Antonio el Cubano—that horrid, dark,&#13;
mysterious fellow, whose character&#13;
none of us could fathom.&#13;
Twice our compasses went wrong,&#13;
and remained so for days! and before&#13;
the cause was discovered the Eugenie&#13;
had drifted far from her course.&#13;
This varying was inexplicable, until&#13;
Hislop, who set himself to watch, and&#13;
frequently saw Antonio hovering near&#13;
the binnacle at night, unshipped the&#13;
compass box and found there were conT&#13;
cealed near it an iron marlinsplke on&#13;
ore side and a lump of tallow on the&#13;
other, either of which was sufficient&#13;
to affect the magnetic needle.&#13;
After their removal the compas3&#13;
worked as well as before. The crew&#13;
were strictly questioned; all vowed total&#13;
Ignorance of the transaction, and&#13;
Antonio summoned every saint ia the&#13;
Spanish calendar to attest his innocence,&#13;
but none, however, appeared.&#13;
The crew now felt convinced that, inspired&#13;
by eome emotion of malice or&#13;
mischief, he alone was the culprit; and&#13;
if not loud, their wrath was dec?&#13;
against him.&#13;
These variations of cur compass set&#13;
the busy brain of Marc Hislop to work,&#13;
and in a day or two he declared that&#13;
he had discovered a plan for preventing&#13;
the repetition of tricks so dangerous&#13;
by insulating the needle so as to&#13;
protect the compass from attractions&#13;
false or dangerous.&#13;
I am uncertain whether he perfected&#13;
this experiment, Jbut Antonio soon&#13;
went to work another way; for one&#13;
day, when he was supposed to be busy&#13;
in the maintop, he shouted, "Stand&#13;
from under!" and ere Hislop, who was&#13;
just beneath, could give the usual response,&#13;
"Let go!" a heavy marlinspike,&#13;
the same which had been found in the&#13;
binnacle, slipped from the hand of Antonio&#13;
and fell crashing through the&#13;
topgrating. ^&#13;
The iron bar crashed Into the deck&#13;
at the feet of Hislop; whether this occurred&#13;
by inadvertence or design we&#13;
knew not, but the Scotsman thought&#13;
the latter.&#13;
"That rascally Spanish picaroon will&#13;
work us some serious mischief before&#13;
we overhaul our ground-tackle or see&#13;
the Cape," said Weston, who was enraged&#13;
by this new incident, and the&#13;
narrow escape of Htarterp, for whom he&#13;
had a great regard.&#13;
"Aye, he has a hang-dog look about&#13;
him that I never liked," replied the&#13;
latter. **Ho seems to be always down&#13;
by the head, somehow. We should&#13;
M&#13;
INDULQENT&#13;
MOTHERS&#13;
ANY a dutiful daughter pays In pain for her mother'*&#13;
ignorance or perhaps neglect.&#13;
The mother suffered and she thinks her daughter&#13;
must suffer also. This is true only to a limited extent. No&gt;&#13;
excessive pain is healthy. Every mother should inform herself&#13;
for her own sake and especially&#13;
for the sa|e of her daughter. Write&#13;
to Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass..&#13;
for her advice 4tboat all matters&#13;
concerning the ills of the feminine&#13;
organs*&#13;
Many a young girl's beauty is wasted by unnecessary pain at&#13;
time of menstruation, and many indulgent mothers withmistaken&#13;
kindness permit their daughters to grow carefes*&#13;
about physical health.&#13;
Miss CARRIE M. LAMB, Big Bearer, Mich., writes: " D E A *&#13;
MRS. PINKHAM—A year ago I suffered from profuse and&#13;
irregular menstruation&#13;
and ' leucorrhaea. My&#13;
appetite was variable,&#13;
stomach sour and bowels&#13;
were not regular, and&#13;
was subject to pains like&#13;
colic duringmenstruation.&#13;
I wrote you and began to&#13;
take Lydia E. Pinkham's&#13;
Vegetable Compound and&#13;
used two packages of&#13;
Sanative Wash. You can't&#13;
imagine my relief. My&#13;
courses are natural and&#13;
general health improved."!&#13;
MRS. NANNIE ADKINS,&#13;
La Due, Mo., writes:&#13;
"DEAR MRS. PINKHAM—&#13;
I feel it my duty to tell&#13;
you of the good your ( Vegetable Compound has&#13;
done my daughter. She&#13;
suffered untold agony at&#13;
time of menstruation before&#13;
taking your medicine;&#13;
but the Compound has&#13;
relieved the pain, given her a better color, end she feels&#13;
stronger, and has improved every way. I am very grateful to&#13;
yon for the benefit she has received. It is a great medicine&#13;
for young girls."&#13;
% • • % • •&#13;
' , : #&#13;
';''.'-i\&#13;
-'•ft&#13;
GET A BIG "AD" CONTRACT.&#13;
-with whom a battle was hat a&#13;
of a feast; and of tke fafighting&#13;
woapea—the terrible&#13;
of Gtaadaloupe.&#13;
of the story of Columbus&#13;
wrfdfc* the narrative of his wonderful&#13;
JlaeoverMs, his perils and adreatures,&#13;
*a a tett of parch t which be to otytiqth covered over with&#13;
fod ii a a lliittttlle easkk, aadd thhes&#13;
cast lttt» the ass, vita a prayer, and&#13;
fcopt Uut tf he aa4 hit COT parnomena&#13;
or the war of the elements it&#13;
was my fortune, or, rather, my mis^&#13;
fortune, to undergo such peril and suffering&#13;
as were far beyond my conception&#13;
or anticipation.&#13;
By 8 o'clock on the morning of our&#13;
departure the iijht on Piedras Key&#13;
was bearing south by east, sinking into&#13;
the waves astern, and going out as we&#13;
bade a long farewell to the lovely&#13;
shores of Cuba.&#13;
Three of our men had died of yellow&#13;
fever in hospital, so we sailed from&#13;
Matanzas with ten able-bodied hands,&#13;
exclusive of three ship boys, the captain,&#13;
first and second mates.&#13;
In the waters, after the rainy season,&#13;
the tt&amp;r is so cloudless in the forenoon&#13;
t&amp;&amp;t th* heat o&lt; the sun becomes&#13;
almost insupportable; thus we were&#13;
soon glad to resort to the use of windsails&#13;
rigged down the open skylight to&#13;
an awning over the quarter-deck for&#13;
coolness, and to skids for the prevention&#13;
of blisters on the sides of the brig;&#13;
but in the starry night the land-wind&#13;
which comes off these fertile isles,&#13;
laden with the rich aroma of their&#13;
spice-growing savannas, is beyond description&#13;
grateful and delicious.&#13;
Without any incident worth recording,&#13;
we ran through the sea of the&#13;
Windward Isles, thence along the coast&#13;
of South America, and when we approached&#13;
the calm latitudes, as that&#13;
tract of the ocean near the equator is&#13;
named, we became sensible of the overpowering&#13;
Increase of heat, while the&#13;
breezes were but "fanning ones," as&#13;
the sailors term those which, under the&#13;
double influence of the air and motion&#13;
of the hull, are just sufficient to make&#13;
the lighter canvas collapse and swell&#13;
We were soon aware of other annoyances&#13;
than mere heat, far now it&#13;
seemed as if there was aa evil spirit&#13;
oa board tae Eugenie, and taat nothing&#13;
went rlcat within or about liar.&#13;
Ths crew sulked and quarreled&#13;
aatong tfcMa*eto«i as if the Aeoon ef&#13;
have left him tn tie skiff, just as we&#13;
found him, like a bear adrift on a grating,&#13;
or a pis In a washing tuh."&#13;
On another occasion he Injured Will&#13;
White, on« of the crew, by letting the&#13;
topmaul faTl from the foretop, where&#13;
it usually lay, for driving home the fld&#13;
of the mast.&#13;
His dreams again became a source of&#13;
annoyance to all tn the forecastle&#13;
bunks; and on being closely and severely&#13;
questioned by Captain Weston&#13;
and the men its to whether he had&#13;
ever killed wny one, by accident or&#13;
otherwise, after being long badgered,&#13;
he drew his ugly knife from Its sharkskin&#13;
sheath and replied sullenly:&#13;
*t&gt;nly a Chmaman or so, when in&#13;
California."&#13;
"WeiU I wish you would elap a&#13;
stopper on your mouth when you go&#13;
to sleep, or turn ia out of earshot in&#13;
a topgallant studding saTl—&amp;B far off&#13;
as you choose, and the further off the&#13;
better," eaW old* Roberts, suITrily, after&#13;
the ravings of the Cubano had kept&#13;
him awake for several nights.&#13;
*Ton seem to dream a great, deal,&#13;
Antonio." saia Weston, with a keen&#13;
glance, beneath which the. Spaniard&#13;
quailed.&#13;
. "Si, Senor Capitano,** h« stammered.&#13;
MHow is this?"&#13;
"I am very fond of dreams," be replied,&#13;
with a. bitter «mTle on his lip&#13;
and a scowl in hte dark eye.&#13;
"Have you pleasant ones?"&#13;
"I cannot say that they are always&#13;
so. but I should like to procure them."&#13;
"Shall I tell you how to do «o?"&#13;
shipmate?"&#13;
"If you please, aenor," growled the&#13;
Spaniard.&#13;
"Go to ri*ep. If you can, with that&#13;
which is better than the formula of&#13;
prayers, which at times yon pay out&#13;
like the line running off a log feel."&#13;
"And what is it you m»£n, mio eapitano?"&#13;
**A good conscience," replied Weston,&#13;
with a peculiar emphasis.&#13;
A black scowl came over the Spaniard's&#13;
swarthy visage, as he touched&#13;
the rim of his hat, darted a furious&#13;
glance at his chief accuser, the whitehaired&#13;
seaman Roberts, and to end&#13;
the examination walked forward&#13;
(To be continued.)&#13;
Mt Advertlftng Contract Ever&#13;
in Chicago.&#13;
The N. K. Fairbank Company, whose&#13;
advertising amounts to sereral&#13;
dred thousand dollars per arm am,&#13;
has just completed arrangements to do&#13;
all its advertising through the Mahln&#13;
Advertising Company. This includes&#13;
all advertising in newspapers, bighclass&#13;
magazines, street cars, etc. John&#13;
Lee Mahin, the president of the Mahin&#13;
Advertising Company, is widely known,&#13;
and the securing of the N. K. Fairbank&#13;
Company contract is a compliment&#13;
to his ability. J. H. Snitzler, tae&#13;
secretary and treasurer has had a long&#13;
and honorable business career in this&#13;
city. Since opening their office Dec.&#13;
28 last they have secured, aside from&#13;
the N. K. Fairbank Company contract,&#13;
forty-eight—customers whose baslaew&#13;
will aggregate $200,000 per unom.&#13;
They will move from their pr«seBt&#13;
rooms to the fifth floor of the New&#13;
York Life Building into greatly enlarged&#13;
quarters, to accommodate their&#13;
rapidly increasing business.—Chicago&#13;
Times-Herald, Feb. 17, 1S99.&#13;
Ordinary household accident* bare&#13;
no terrors when there's a bottle of Dr.&#13;
Thomas' Kclectric Oil in the medicine&#13;
chest. Heals burns, cuts, bruises,&#13;
sprains. Instant relief.&#13;
A life spent worthily shovld to&#13;
measured by deeds, not years.&#13;
It's the little colds that grow into&#13;
big* colds; the big colds that end in&#13;
consumption and death. Watch the&#13;
little colds. Dr. Wood's Norway Pine&#13;
Syrup.&#13;
DONT&#13;
BALSAM&#13;
MV9 lOF VMMHQI0CTOII III I f t l&#13;
raa«fia advanced gtsae*. U&#13;
«astiM«atttt«iit elect after&#13;
StM fey feaia&#13;
t a i i BO costs.&#13;
AtSUa*&#13;
Man's inhumanity to man&#13;
countless thousands mourn. es&#13;
Eczema, scald head, hives, itch-ipeas&#13;
of the skin of any sort instantly relieved,&#13;
permanently cured, DOAH'B&#13;
Ointment. At any drug* stsre.&#13;
A lazy liver make*a lazy man.&#13;
dock Blood Bitters is the natural,&#13;
failing1 remedy for a lazy liver.&#13;
Bartever&#13;
Practice makes perfect. The older a&#13;
woman is tbe better she should carry&#13;
her age.&#13;
8paldingv8&#13;
Trade Mark&#13;
Means&#13;
"Standard&#13;
of Quality"&#13;
on Athletic Goods&#13;
Insist upon Spalding's&#13;
e Catalogue Fre*&#13;
SPALDINO * BKOfi.&#13;
Chlc&amp;ga&#13;
HOW TO DO IT.&#13;
CURE Pains and&#13;
THEN IT IS DONE,&#13;
WELL DONE.&#13;
SAVES MONEY,&#13;
TIME. AND&#13;
SUFFERING.&#13;
An&#13;
Tenant—Some of tbe plaster In my&#13;
kitchen fell down last night* and I&#13;
want you to replace i t Landlord&#13;
What caused it? 'The loan who occupies&#13;
the floor shore attested.** Landlord—&#13;
Well* some people think because&#13;
they pay rant they&#13;
ftOOO BICYCLES&#13;
•1«.&#13;
OBd baodwlMel*&#13;
B W . to&#13;
M* MM*, fttu* i&#13;
mischief Inrkad ia the ressal and dally j as if they lived la a hotel&#13;
THE SCHOOLS&#13;
Of Greater New York, Boston, and&#13;
many other places use Carter's Ink&#13;
exclusively and */on't use any othex.&#13;
Tfcat speaks-well for CARTER'S INK&#13;
and gir&amp;yoM food for H h&#13;
\ V •&#13;
: i ,1&#13;
ghuhntq&#13;
f. I. ANDREWS EDITOR.&#13;
THURSDAY, MAR. 30, 1899.&#13;
The pld coal-mine has been&#13;
opened up at Willifiroston and&#13;
coal in paying quauities was&#13;
found at a depth of only 12 feet.&#13;
A successful business is done&#13;
in Eastern coast towns by loaning&#13;
turtles to restaurants. They are&#13;
kept in a glass tank in the window&#13;
to sharpen the appetite of&#13;
prospective diners and thus do&#13;
service from one restrurant to another.&#13;
Last week the Hardings steam&#13;
dredge started work on the Slriawa&#13;
«se river west of Howell. The&#13;
dredge makes from 100 to 603 ft.&#13;
in 12 hours, and work continues&#13;
night and day. Th6 dredge is 16&#13;
feet wide and 75 feet long, with a&#13;
living boat, kitchen and sleeping&#13;
rooms traveling at the rear.&#13;
Within the memory of shoemakers&#13;
now living, to bottom&#13;
three pairs of shoes was considered&#13;
a good days work. Machines&#13;
are now in use which bottom,&#13;
each, 400 pairs a day. But little&#13;
more manual labor is required in&#13;
the business for the present 70,&#13;
OCX*, 000 population, than was required&#13;
one hundred years ago&#13;
with a population of less than 5,&#13;
000, 000.&#13;
Among the uses to which elecflotie*&#13;
To Trial Subscribers.&#13;
The time for which the DISPATCH&#13;
was sent on trial to so many new subscribers&#13;
is nearly expired and according&#13;
to agreement we shall discontinue&#13;
the paper. We hope we nave made&#13;
it interesting and profitable enough&#13;
to you so that you will desire to have&#13;
it a weekly visitor for one year.&#13;
We are now offering the DISPATCH&#13;
one year and the Farm Journal five&#13;
years, all for the price of the DISPATCH,&#13;
$1.00. We consider this one&#13;
of the best offers we have ever made.&#13;
Do not wait until we withdraw the offer&#13;
but subscribe at once and the&#13;
most and and best reading you ever&#13;
got for the money.&#13;
LOCAL NEWS.&#13;
Fred Campbell spent the first of&#13;
this week in Jackson.&#13;
.John McDonnell, of Detroit, spent&#13;
the past week a-ith friends here.&#13;
W. P. Van Winkle, of Howell, was&#13;
in town on Saturday of last week.&#13;
Mrs. Amanda LaRue went to Howell&#13;
last Saturday for a short visit.&#13;
Chas. Moran, of Jackson, spent the&#13;
past week with his parents at this&#13;
place.&#13;
T e C. E. society sent a large bundle&#13;
of religious literature to Cuba&#13;
one day last week.&#13;
W. H. Harris has sold his bouse&#13;
and lot in the eastern part of the village&#13;
to Orville Tupper.&#13;
U. L. Grimes and children are&#13;
spending the week with relatives in&#13;
Hoiveil aud FowJerviJle.&#13;
Mrs. E. 0. Joslyn and son, Gene,&#13;
and Herbert Lane, of near Howell,&#13;
called on friens here Sunday.&#13;
The Alices fclattie and Alma&#13;
Gnines, of Stockbrid^e, visited rela-&#13;
Township Election.&#13;
The Annual election of township&#13;
officers occurs next Monday&#13;
and already smoke begins to curl&#13;
up from the mouths of many&#13;
cannons which will benlch forth&#13;
on Monday next, the terrible fire&#13;
that will either win or lose. The&#13;
following are among the officers&#13;
(or would-he" officers) who are&#13;
leading the&#13;
another.&#13;
Business Pointers.&#13;
Oar stock of new spring and summer&#13;
bats is complete and ready for&#13;
inspection, You will find all tbe&#13;
latest style-in sailors, walking bats&#13;
and cbildrens school hats, at Boyle&#13;
and Halstead'g.&#13;
Ladies, ca11 and see our Jbeautiiul,&#13;
forces against one )ine of pattern hats, prices always tbe&#13;
lowest, at Bulye and HalsteadV&#13;
DEMOCKATIO TICKET.&#13;
Supervisor, C. V. VanVVJnlrta.&#13;
Win. Murphy.&#13;
O. A. Kjvet.&#13;
Edward A. Mitna.&#13;
Mac Monki.&#13;
J. White.&#13;
Mlcheal K-lly,&#13;
I'. Monroe,&#13;
John rhulker,&#13;
Il«nty Cohb,&#13;
J. Speura.&#13;
CWk,&#13;
Treasurer,&#13;
Justice,&#13;
Board of Review,&#13;
Hi&gt;{h-w;iy Com.&#13;
School luBpcctor,&#13;
'. let.,&#13;
«nd.,&#13;
3rd..&#13;
4th.,&#13;
An extra good farm of 65 acres foi&#13;
sale or rant. Enquire of A, J . Wilhehn,&#13;
Anderson, Mich, flox 36.&#13;
tnVity has been applied is that of J lives in this place tbe latter part of&#13;
hrating bakers' ovens At Niaga- last week.&#13;
ra ffills and at Buffalo, some ^0 Mrs. P. L. Andrews and daughter,&#13;
t*b away, most of the mauu- Florence, are spending a nouple of&#13;
REPUBMCAN TICKET&#13;
Supervisor, Charles L. Campbell,&#13;
Clerk, Harley K. Angell.&#13;
Treasurer, Hoy H. 'IVeple.&#13;
Blgh-way Com., John T. Chambers.&#13;
Justice, Kendrkk H. Craue,&#13;
Boart? of Review, two yre,,&#13;
8iU« K. Ftarton.&#13;
School Inspector, Geo. \V. Bowman.&#13;
Constable, Ist., Frank Newman&#13;
" 2ud., Geo. Hnrch.&#13;
" 3rd., Richard Baker.&#13;
" 4th. FloyU '-.Jackson.&#13;
K e e p * F*llt« W e l l .&#13;
It is better to keep well than to get&#13;
well, although when one is sick it is&#13;
desirable to ^et well, When we consider&#13;
that eiurht-tentl s of the ailments&#13;
that afflict the American people are&#13;
caused hy constipation, we shall r e s -&#13;
ize why it is that Baxter's Mandrake&#13;
Bitters '"Keeps folks well" or if tick&#13;
enables them to get well. Baxter's&#13;
MandraKe Hitters cures constipation.&#13;
Price 2-V per liottle—Wliy not step in&#13;
and yet H bottle and by u&gt;iny it be assured&#13;
»&gt;f jrood health tli'iinurb the trying&#13;
ho? months. We SHII it and guarantee&#13;
it to ^'ive satisfac ion or monej&#13;
refundi \.&#13;
F. 4&#13;
To Rent&#13;
House and two lots, corner of How&#13;
ell and Portage streets. Apply to&#13;
R. Erwin at Pinckney Mills.&#13;
The Farm Journal has nearly two&#13;
million renders each issue; it is puttinw&#13;
in a new press that will print 200&#13;
copies a minute; it is the best farm&#13;
paper in America, and it pleases the&#13;
women toli&lt;&gt; all to pieces. We have&#13;
raado i\ special arrangement by which&#13;
we are a!&gt;ie to send tbe Farm Journal&#13;
five years toevery subscriber ot the&#13;
Dispatch who pays all arrearages and&#13;
a year in advattiv; also to all new subscribers&#13;
who pay a year ahead.&#13;
Red H t From the Gun&#13;
Wia th&lt;* ball that hit G B Stead man&#13;
of Newark, Alien in tbe Civil War. It&#13;
caused horrible ulcers that no treatment&#13;
helped for 20 years. T en Buck&#13;
len's arnica safve cured him. Cures&#13;
cuts, bruises, bu ns, boils, felons, corns&#13;
and skin eruptions. Ues&amp; pile cure&#13;
in earth. 25c a box. Care guaranteed.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Siller, drujjlst.&#13;
f Nlffbt and Dmj&#13;
The hii*je»t and mightiest little&#13;
think tbat was "ever made is Dr.1&#13;
King's New Life Pills. Every pill is&#13;
suizar coated globule of htoitb, that&#13;
changes weakness into strength, list*&#13;
lessne.ss into energy, brain tag into&#13;
mental power. They're wondnrfpl in&#13;
'building up tbe health. Only 25o per&#13;
box. Sold l&gt;y P. A Siller, «l&#13;
Railroad Guide.&#13;
grand Trunk Railway System.&#13;
Time Table in effect, February 5, 1899.&#13;
M. A. L. DIVISION -WKSJ-.HOUND.&#13;
"No. 27 Passenger. Pontiao to Jacknoa&#13;
conuoction from Detroit 0 44 a •&#13;
No. 43 Mixed, Lenox to Jackson&#13;
.connection from Detroit 4 45 p m&#13;
AH trains daily except Sunday.&#13;
EASTi OUND.&#13;
No. SO Pataenger to Pontiao and Detroit fi 11 p »&#13;
No. 44 MIxea to Pontiao and Lenox 7 65 a m&#13;
All traiuB dally except Sunday.&#13;
No. 30 connection at Pontiao for Detroit.&#13;
No 44 connection at Pontiuc for Detroit and&#13;
for Hm west on D &amp; M K X&#13;
B.H, Hugbea, W. J. HJa^k,&#13;
AQP&amp;TAKent, Agent.&#13;
OnJcago, III. rlnc-tuey&#13;
WAYNE HOTEL, DETROIT&#13;
AMERICAN AND EUROPEAN PLAN,&#13;
%a TO I 9 B O 9t.oo r o 9a.oo f&#13;
tarn ALB, 6Oo&lt; UP r o OAT*&#13;
facturing concerns now use elec- weeks with relatives in Oceola and&#13;
trical power generated by tbe | P a r s b a l l v i l l e -&#13;
KiH^ra Fftllfl plant, it being very T b e 1Jrl?'uJo?. Argus entered its.&#13;
oii.-ap; and a large baking con-j2 0 t h &gt;'Par la s t w e e k - T h e Pr e s e n t&#13;
cein will shortly erect a batWy! o w n e r s a r e ffivin^ t h e p e 0 Pl e t b e&#13;
of new ovens to be h.ated&#13;
tliroughout by electricity. *&#13;
Henry Raen, who has been work-&#13;
Anthony Hope's new romance, in Howell for several weeks, Mt Bat-&#13;
.wliich lie baa just finished, is urday for Akron, Ohio, where he&#13;
"The Countess Emilia," has been engaged by a larjre hardand&#13;
most&#13;
contained.&#13;
news that&#13;
best&#13;
the Argus ever&#13;
culled&#13;
«nd has been purchased by the ware firm.&#13;
JjHf.lies' Home Journal, in which&#13;
perodical it will immediately begin.&#13;
The story is abonfc abeauti-&#13;
•• f•t&#13;
We wish him every sue&#13;
Hiils were printed at this effice&#13;
announcing an auction sale of nersonful&#13;
countess. She has quarreled 1 a' and household goods at the hom • of&#13;
with her husbard, and they have w - H- H a r r i s i n t h i s village on Sat&#13;
decided ttoo livfc in seclusion in&#13;
separate wings of the castle.&#13;
This tbey do until Captain&#13;
Dieppe, who becomes a member&#13;
of the household,!nadvertetftly&#13;
opens a door, through which are&#13;
revealed to him the apartments&#13;
the exiled Couutess, with the&#13;
nrday afternoon of tbis week, April&#13;
1st. Mr. Harris has sold his bouse&#13;
and lot and wants to dispose of his&#13;
household goods.&#13;
m i m • —&#13;
A LETTER.&#13;
Mar. 27, 1899.&#13;
To the Public:&#13;
Owinj? to a mistake&#13;
beatifnl occupant standing in aMn reading an item in the superdoorway.&#13;
The Captain falls in&#13;
love with the young woman, and&#13;
from this point there is not a&#13;
moment's cessation in the romantic&#13;
adventures which ensue in the&#13;
visors report of the Octobor issue in&#13;
regard to tbeDr's. 1-ill of Mrs. Etta F.&#13;
Wright (deceased), wife ot Frank J.&#13;
Wriyht, I would say that that bill&#13;
and all others appertaining to her&#13;
sickness and death were paid by her&#13;
castJe, its gardens and neighbor- b r o t b e r , John R. Murhn. Although&#13;
this notice is a linn late, this said&#13;
pill was presented in the county anbeknown&#13;
to me and having a friend&#13;
who told me, I ha'i it withdrawn and&#13;
ing places of rendezvous.&#13;
A comparison of our foreign&#13;
commerce with that of other nations&#13;
present some interesting&#13;
facts, both as to present conditions&#13;
and comparative growth. A&#13;
decade agoJFrance, Germany and&#13;
the United Kingdom exceeded&#13;
the United States in their exports,&#13;
those of the United Kingdom&#13;
being more than double oar&#13;
own. In 1897 those of the United&#13;
States were greater than either&#13;
France or Germany, and bat 26&#13;
per cent less than those of Great&#13;
Britian, while in tbe calendar&#13;
year just ended onr exportation of&#13;
domestic products actually exceed&#13;
the export of domestic proby&#13;
the United Kingdom,&#13;
and the products of&#13;
favieatton and meoiuurieal •kill&#13;
jftucfc enter very largely into tike&#13;
Jgnrea, and witfa the rapid increase&#13;
in demand for this ciejf of&#13;
paid it myself,&#13;
•John R. Martin.&#13;
PARSHALLVILLE V&#13;
Mrs. Y. T. C l e visited her&#13;
daughter in Owosao last week.&#13;
Rev. Platt of the Baptist church&#13;
has resigned his pastorate here.&#13;
Edd Dayton ban moved in the&#13;
house formerly owned by Mr.&#13;
Brock.&#13;
Walter Vai.Camp moved his&#13;
family to Teuton on Moaday of&#13;
this week.&#13;
W. C. Wolverton and wife&#13;
visited at S. W Birds in Gaines&#13;
a part of last week.&#13;
The little five months old child&#13;
of Frank Braveuder died at it*&#13;
home last Friday nigfct «B4 was&#13;
tmriad at tbe ZfeecfioM eemetry&#13;
Do you want all the news&#13;
uring the coming year?&#13;
]f so why not&#13;
nvest #1.00 in ths DISPATCH.&#13;
Q ubscribe immediately&#13;
po as to secure the&#13;
reroiutn of the Farm Journal&#13;
erectly FREE.&#13;
11 the home&#13;
nd farm news for ONE DOLLAR.&#13;
his is really&#13;
The best offer we ever made.&#13;
Can you do without when you.&#13;
an get so much for fcl.OO?&#13;
Hand in your dollar quick and&#13;
ave your name on the list. -&#13;
fOLEDO&#13;
*!N ARBO&#13;
AND I MICHIGAN) &lt;&#13;
RAILWAY.&#13;
Popular route for Ann ,&#13;
ledo and points Ensf, Souti^. rin«i (or&#13;
Howell, Owosso, Almrt, \M !''-'a&gt;'ant&#13;
Cadillac, Manist.ee, Tvaver-' City a n d&#13;
points in Northwt'slern . V n h ' , ; i n .&#13;
v^ . H . i JKNNV.TT,&#13;
a. p. i. r&#13;
&gt;Cli TTIC BEST SEWING MAflifNB ON CAfiflf&#13;
direct to the consumer dt fecforyprjcei&#13;
rtttlMRTY $22.60&#13;
BIGCLE BOOKS • Farm Library «f tmcqualled value—Practical*&#13;
Up-to-date, Conckie and ComprehftnsiTC—Handsomely&#13;
majol and Beautifully uitistrated.&#13;
B y J A C O B B I O O L B&#13;
No. 1-BKKU-E HORSE BOOK&#13;
AUaboot UonfB-e Cooanoo-SetMe Tremttoe, with otcr&#13;
94 iUtwtratlOM. * »tanda»d work. Price, so Cento.&#13;
products give an &lt;*M**i«etJ«ooi-\cm Scucidaf ia4&gt; ***, h L. Wai-&#13;
^ Newldtaa. I k lkiati '&#13;
No.2-BlOaUB A l f t o a t c&#13;
eonUtaft 43&#13;
vriti&#13;
Small Fniit* • ctid and learn bow,&#13;
Ule-Uke reptodnctlonaof all leatUaf&#13;
43c6 ether iUustnrtkma. Price, 90 Ceatt.&#13;
varieties atii&#13;
Mtw a-BKXttJS POULTRY BOOK&#13;
. All about Poultry; Hie beat Pooltnr Book hi eslate«oe«&#13;
teUacteryUiif.; wHh»a colored lifelike renroductiona&#13;
of «tt tb*principal bre«l»; with Mt other l&amp;tiatratioaw.&#13;
Htw 4-BKWLC COW BOOK&#13;
AH about Cow* asd tbe »a»ry BoriocM;[havtef a&#13;
aale; cotttaiw t colored HiWike rapcoductiowof&#13;
teaad* wfto r^o&lt;l»er llkwtrttlooa.Tpriot, 90 Cento Nav6-&amp;tGOL8 SWING BOOK&#13;
Juatout. 4B about Kot|»-4Medinf, F«edia«, B«teb&gt;&#13;
ery, Pfeeaoes, etc Cout«aa» over »o beaut£bt fealf*&#13;
tones aad other enfraviug*.,- Priot, 90 Oe&amp;tc.&#13;
IkeWOOLBBOOiCS^re 11aJlTlf.-n1i11ni.1r-M rn 11 never&#13;
^ ^ i t t ^ S ^ t . a e b t i b l e . They&#13;
S , Weat, North and&#13;
a Horae, Cow, Roc or&#13;
M, oujrht to aend n fM JOURNAL&#13;
ia/CMB at Ike BJGGLB B0«aaa« tte nOCM JO0UUI&lt;&#13;
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• 3 k .&#13;
TRAOC MARKS&#13;
DKSIONS&#13;
COPYRIOHT«&#13;
, . cb and daaoriptton may&#13;
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r • f pobnbljr pnt«ntable. Comraanksa*&#13;
-. '»« &gt;nOdwitUI. Handbook&lt;m Patenta&#13;
* &lt;e.«t iwency tor »eoniiti«Dat«ata.&#13;
; ii:en through Mann 4 Co. *eoafT«&#13;
. u if.hout chunta. In the ;?:fic American. ' *T t'i'.^trH»o&lt;l weekly. UurMat ctr*&#13;
• ; .r.v n».tdnt'«"." Journal. Tftrnit,Wa&#13;
' J.I' lUl&gt;&gt;. f U O- I d i.i7Ull j O j | e W y&#13;
- m » St. Waahiaatoo, D.&#13;
n e Davit Macbtos Co, GWcaoo.&#13;
Baby&#13;
: ' • • • • • * 1 * • • • / • • '&#13;
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TREATS ALL DISEASES&#13;
OF MEN AND WOMEN.&#13;
WFAK MFN restored to vigor and&#13;
rrc/iA men vitality. oi-Kuns of&#13;
h&#13;
ly.&#13;
the body which have been weakened&#13;
through disease, overwork, excess or&#13;
indiscretions, restored to full power,&#13;
strength aud vigor by our new and&#13;
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HUNDREDS ° ' testimonials bear&#13;
a v w f i f c v w evidence of the good&#13;
results obtained from our method of&#13;
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WE TREITlND CURE Catarrh.&#13;
Aathrat,&#13;
Bronchitis,&#13;
Rbeuoutiam,&#13;
Neuralgia,&#13;
Sciatica,&#13;
Lumbago,&#13;
FemakWi&#13;
Syphiik, Turner*,&#13;
Varicocek, FUM, Fntula,&#13;
Sterility, Skis Dtscatcs,&#13;
Bladder Trouble, Blood D» «*«,&#13;
Loa* of Vitality, Youthful Error*.&#13;
Dvfpepau, Nervou* Trouble*,&#13;
OpfTyifcvtiftfli Weakoen of Me&amp;&#13;
COI8ULTATIOI HUE. CRAB6I8 XODIBATE.&#13;
Hour* 9 U 8* l o t 0p«» 8amd*j%.&#13;
DR. HALE IM PERSONAL CHARGE.&#13;
BPXCIiL HOTJCIi Thote unable to call should «en4&#13;
•tamp for question blank for home treatment.&#13;
. CL T . TJ.&#13;
Eilted by'the WxT of&#13;
GontinuvUiaVruut l.u, I A&#13;
TheB remarkable gtatenx-nt1 of&#13;
Jutlije Thomas, of tbe United&#13;
States court, in the Cherokee nation,&#13;
wiiioh hf*R* been tfoiuLj the&#13;
louucls of the press, if true, shows&#13;
that a lira a never gets too high iu&#13;
official life or so far away from a&#13;
mother's love as to be insensible&#13;
! to it. A young man has tried for&#13;
murder in his court, so the papers&#13;
say, and tbe mother was a witness&#13;
for her boy. The boy was acquitted&#13;
on the mother's testimony. A&#13;
charge of perjury was lodged against&#13;
the motherl in the court.&#13;
When the court convened and&#13;
the cause of the United States&#13;
came on for trial before Judge&#13;
Thomas, a^aiusfc the mother for&#13;
5TYLI3H, RELIABLE&#13;
ARTISTIC-%.&#13;
Recommended by Leading&#13;
Pi es*m*kerf. £&#13;
They ^'wityt pleast.^fcy CALL&#13;
•PATTERNS&#13;
NONE BETTER AT ANY PRICE&#13;
J.lt~ ! ' i r s e p a t t e r n s i r &lt; t o l d i n n e a r l y&#13;
-&gt;«ry city i t i d ( o w n in t h e C m t e d S t a t e s .&#13;
l! &gt; C J I d e t l i r d o e i not k ' r p t h e m s e n d&#13;
• i i c c i n J I D n e ceui t t * m p * r e c e i v e d .&#13;
A j J r r * ) your n e a r e n p o i n t&#13;
THE McCALL COMPANY,&#13;
m to 1-.6W 14th Street. Htm York&#13;
BRANCH orrirrs :&#13;
fth Ave., Chicago, and&#13;
1051 Market 51., Sun Hrancisco. \ar&#13;
perjury, the attorney for the government&#13;
said: "I do not like to&#13;
prosecute this case against this&#13;
mother and I wish it could be dismissed."&#13;
" So do I,1' said Jndge&#13;
Thomas. "I had a mother once,&#13;
and no man has ever yet lived who&#13;
»vas able to fathom a mother's love&#13;
for her boy. I have not forgotten&#13;
that mother and her love, and never&#13;
in my court shall a mother be&#13;
tried and sentenced to the penitentiary&#13;
for perjury committed to savo&#13;
her boy's life. There was not a&#13;
dry eye in the room. The United&#13;
States attorney dismissed the case.&#13;
I do not know whether I have&#13;
piven the exact words or not, but&#13;
it is the substance as I remember&#13;
it. A heart o£ stone would have&#13;
consigned that mother to a felon's&#13;
cell; hut a heart in which mother's&#13;
love had not died out, turned that&#13;
mother over to the great Just&#13;
Jud^e who gave His only son that&#13;
such mothers might not perish,but&#13;
have everlasting life. Whether&#13;
thousands and thonandB of minds U »•« ilea rail&#13;
Victims to stomach, liver and kid.&#13;
that will help to make the world ney troubles as well us women,and all&#13;
better, boys better, fathers better, feel the result* in IOSB ot appetite, poi&#13;
mothers better, and the law bet-| sons in the blood, backache, ner?ou»&#13;
ter, aud the love of God greater! a*88* headaebe and tirwl. listless, tunin&#13;
the hearts of mankind. None i d o w n feelin** B u t t W e ' 8 n 0 n e e d *°&#13;
feel like that. Listen to J W Gardner&#13;
ot Idaville Ind, who says: 'Electric Bitters&#13;
are jast the thing for a man when&#13;
be is all run down, and don't cars&#13;
of us can discern the workings of&#13;
the heart of that judge. I t was&#13;
not the stern mind that set aside, j e , n a&#13;
in this instance, a law, but a whether he Jives or dies, it did more&#13;
heart that enfolded a mother's to give me new strength and pood ap&#13;
love aud beat heart to heart to petite than anything I could take. 1&#13;
that once mother's heart, whom can now eat anything and have a new&#13;
He so much venerated. Probab y lease on life." Only 50c at P. A. Bigbrightest&#13;
Magazine Published&#13;
Contain* fifainiful Colored Plates.&#13;
Illustrates Lurst Patterns, Fa&amp;h-&#13;
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Agents wanted lor i h u majjtzlne In every !&#13;
locality _ Hcajtilul preniu.itvs-fur a littla&#13;
woik Wcite for trrnn ar.d other particular*.&#13;
Subxerif fiiin only SOCt i&gt;Cl %W&gt;&#13;
including a F U K E Pattern.&#13;
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138 to 146 W. 14th St., New York&#13;
MILLER RODE ONE2093 MILES IN 132 HOURS&#13;
e Eldredg&#13;
loO.OO&#13;
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Superior to all others irrespective&#13;
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why. Write for one.&#13;
NATIONAL S E t ™ MACHINE CO,&#13;
M9 BROADWAY,&#13;
New York. ILL.&#13;
this story is true or not, the mind&#13;
that conceived it has paid a tribute&#13;
to the strength of maternal yearning,&#13;
though guilty, that does not&#13;
detract from the immeasurable&#13;
love of mother; for love ouly&#13;
could have lead her there.&#13;
After every law had been broken,&#13;
every admonition disregarded,&#13;
every injunction and commandment&#13;
violated and trampled&#13;
under foot, God so loved the&#13;
world that he had prepared a&#13;
sacrifice from the beginning, in&#13;
His only son, that the world&#13;
might still be saved. Can we&#13;
blame the mother for clinging to&#13;
her boy whose heart is defiled,&#13;
whose soul is blackened, when&#13;
God set the example by loviug a&#13;
world that was so lawless, and&#13;
that it was only fit to be eternally&#13;
damned, and gave His only son&#13;
whom He loved with a greater&#13;
love than any mother ever loved,&#13;
to be scourged, spit upon, nailed&#13;
to the cross, to die between two&#13;
culprits, that God's love for humanity,&#13;
through the death of His&#13;
dear son, might reconcile a whole&#13;
lost world to himself.&#13;
he called to his recollection that&#13;
prayer learned at his mother's&#13;
knee, "Forgive us our trespasses&#13;
as we forgive them that trespass&#13;
against us."&#13;
Let us withhold our criticism of&#13;
the judge and leave him where he&#13;
left the woman—in the hands of&#13;
God.&#13;
I remember another judge&#13;
who had a mother, and witnesses&#13;
accused a woman of a cr^ime before&#13;
him. They were sticklers&#13;
for the forms of law; they wanted&#13;
to stone her to death. That&#13;
judge said: "Yes, that's all right;&#13;
'He that is without sin let him&#13;
cast the first stone;" the finite&#13;
mind cannot fathom God's love&#13;
nor mother's love, God only&#13;
knows what mother's love is.&#13;
Let us listen to the voice of&#13;
mother's love, though she is laid&#13;
away in the tomb; it comes to us&#13;
yet, as does the voice of the sou&#13;
of God bringing to us a knowledge&#13;
of God's love for the world.&#13;
"Lord God of Ho8t,t&gt;e with ae yet,&#13;
Lest we forget—lest we forget,"&#13;
the love that never dies.&#13;
VAN BENNETT,&#13;
lers drug store. Every bottle gnar&amp;n*&#13;
temt.&#13;
UNDERTAKER&#13;
AND EMBALMER.&#13;
J. G. SAYLES.&#13;
PLAINFIELD, MICH.&#13;
PUBI4 * T&#13;
FRANK L. ANDREWS&#13;
S4iior and Prepriitor.&#13;
Subscription Prlc* %1 la Adrtmo*.&#13;
Entered a&gt;t the Pwtottce »t Placfcney,&#13;
raw* made known on application.&#13;
Business Cards, $4.00 per y«»r.&#13;
r«Mb and marriage uottcet publisbod ( m .&#13;
Aanounoem«nti« of ent«ruinmenu may be paid&#13;
(or, if de*lr«d, by pr«t«atlngtbe offlee with Ucke&#13;
u of aUmlMioa. In cjwe lickeu are not brought&#13;
ill b h l i c k u ar&#13;
to Uieo&amp;ca, regular raws will bn charK«&lt;i&#13;
«&#13;
All matter in local notice column will be cnarf&#13;
ed at 5 cent* M I line or traction thereof, for eaem&#13;
inattrtion. Vvoere oo time it apedded, allnocieee&#13;
will be inserted until ordered diecoatinaed, and&#13;
wlii be n»x»tg»d'or accordingly. iJT\Uch«ngea&#13;
ot adrertlaemeote MUST reach tUlaotflce a* earlj&#13;
ae TUVSOAT moraine to insure an insertion the&#13;
um« week.&#13;
JOB -PniJVJItfGl&#13;
In all its branches, a specialty. We have all kinds&#13;
and the latuei myiee or fype, etc., whioh enables&#13;
iu to execute all klad* of work, sucn as Books,&#13;
Pamplets, Posters, Programines, Bill Heads, Mote&#13;
Heads, Statement*, Cards, Auction Billa, etc, la&#13;
superior stylw, upou the »hort«et notice. Prices as&#13;
&lt;&gt; v «o .,.* &lt;U work can be aone.&#13;
fj VAULS emit o* ivitar Mosrrtf.&#13;
MONTHLY REPORT&#13;
Of the Pinckuey Public Schools&#13;
for the month endiug.&#13;
Grammar Department.&#13;
Whole number of days taught 20;&#13;
Krand total number of days attendance&#13;
613: average daily attendance&#13;
31; atftfivijate ' tardinflfes 78; number&#13;
pupils 35; neither absent nor tardy&#13;
during tbe month:&#13;
Louis Mo»kd Eugene Reason&#13;
Eva Grimes May Jeffrey&#13;
Mao Reason . Hazel Vuugbn&#13;
C. JL.GBIMES, TEACHEB.&#13;
I hold a certificate from&#13;
the Champion Embalming&#13;
College of Springfield, Ohio&#13;
and am prepared to do embalming&#13;
of all kinds.&#13;
A lady assistant for^embalming&#13;
women and children.&#13;
Cii tutfrerltilu'M C»u;li Itemedf&#13;
Thi-&lt; retn&amp;dy is t 1 d&#13;
for cMitfhs, cofds,&#13;
coui/h anci inftuenxi. (r h i s hecoine&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIRECTORY,&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PBESIDKNT ...~. Alex. Mclntyre&#13;
TiiD8TJS«« K. L. Tlioinpsua, Alcrud 4lo 1KB,&#13;
Daniel Rlcharuu, ieo. Bowunu, datauel&#13;
Sykw, f\ i). Joijnson,&#13;
CLB»K - . . K . H. Teenle&#13;
TKEASCKBB...^ W. E, Murpbjr&#13;
A^UBUBOU ~ W, A o*rr&#13;
STUBBT CuMsiiJisioNEu... (too. Burck&#13;
ilAiWAHi. D. W, MurU&#13;
aKALTHUPFicsK... Dr. II. K. ^l&lt;ler&#13;
ATTOIIXKY: ^ , W. A. Carr&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHUaCH.&#13;
Kev. Cha». Simpson, paator. Service* every&#13;
Sunday morning at U):&amp;J, and BT«ry Sandaf&#13;
evening at 7:ut) o'clnclt. Hrayer uieetingTharsdny&#13;
evenings. Sunday school at cluae of inorniag&#13;
service. i. L. Audrewa, Supt.&#13;
\J Kev. «J. NV. Kice pantor. Service every&#13;
Suud&amp;y ' morning at io::i) &amp;aii wvery Sundsjr&#13;
eveaini? ut 7:0C o'cijci. Prayer iud«tini&lt; Taurad.&#13;
iy tiveninga. Saal-iy dc iaul at eiuae ot mnro-&#13;
I i K. U. Teepli}, S.ipt. ii)H tidal, .*«&#13;
OT. AIAUV'rf 'JAi'HOLlO&#13;
O Uev. M. J. &lt;Jo4iui)rtml, i'*i,.&gt;r.&#13;
every Sunday. Low uiaas at 7:30o'clock&#13;
high masB witu serinua ut ii;:ii/ A. in. OatechUm&#13;
at '6:00 p. in., vespers ana oene dictian at T:i*u ^.m.&#13;
SOCIETIES;&#13;
The A. O. H. Socletv of tills ppla,c e, every&#13;
laird Su-ailay in tne Fr. \Utth»w flail,&#13;
- John McUuiuesa, Coduty D -legate.&#13;
Intermediate Department.&#13;
Whole number of days taught 20;&#13;
grand total number of days attendance&#13;
436J; average daily attendance&#13;
21.82; whole number belonging 23; a#-&#13;
Ki*e&gt;jat6 tardiness 32; pupils neither&#13;
absent nor tardy during tbe pa&amp;t&#13;
month:&#13;
Ellery Parfee Fred Bead&#13;
Bex l&lt;«»ad M or Icy Vtui^hn&#13;
Clyde Purrow Ethel Du:fee&#13;
Willie Jeffreys Norma Vaughn&#13;
Pupils neither absent nor Urdy&#13;
during tbe terra:&#13;
Fred llead Clyde Darrow&#13;
Ellery Durfee v Etlrel Darfee&#13;
Norma Vaughn&#13;
EDITH DARK, TEACHER,&#13;
for its cures ni&#13;
ever a lar^e pwt of&#13;
worl i. T i n mo&gt;t fl it -i&#13;
tils h.ive be n received&#13;
D\'\U s/ood work; of tl&#13;
and ]vrsi&gt;tnnt coughs i&#13;
severe cold- tbat hav.» \&#13;
\y to it&gt; r&gt;ooUiinjLj ^ff •&#13;
dan^'trous attacks&#13;
coved, ohen saving&#13;
child. Tile&#13;
c i v i l i z e d&#13;
u'lvinor account&#13;
Pinckney Y. P. 8. C, E.&#13;
^SuuiUyeTeaini{ ia Coii^'l cimruii it i;H &gt;'jl&#13;
erery&#13;
LEAGUE. .MtMitu every&#13;
at I'f.'U) ocluck in ttio M. I'). '&#13;
ciallyyouu6'people. Mrs. ituili* Ur.n&#13;
A&#13;
rob-; disease&#13;
quences. '^&#13;
(his cui^d; uf&#13;
' de J prompt-.&#13;
• aud of tbe&#13;
oi croup it bus&#13;
tun life of tbe&#13;
-iv- u&lt;e of it for&#13;
!ns -h )\vn tb.at it&#13;
of all &lt;I inufsrou.s conae-&#13;
Id by F. A. Siller.&#13;
Junior ti&#13;
cordially&#13;
Ivtitti Van-h,»,&#13;
\ A. and Ii. sue is i &gt;&#13;
third iituraij'&#13;
Halt. .lo!in It»&#13;
y y&#13;
-\i nc i. All&#13;
rt'acfl, tn*»t'&#13;
1^&lt;J t'r. .Vf*t-&#13;
I7"NIGUTSOK MACCAUBBS.&#13;
lV.Ueete.vdry Kriday&#13;
t h i&#13;
y ^ &lt;u ot before fall&#13;
it their h*li ib tlie&#13;
j Visiting brotUars irtj cordiitlly incited.&#13;
CC air k&#13;
LiviDgmon Lod^e, No.?-!,&#13;
ComuiuDicaiiuu T t&#13;
tue tuli of tUe IUUUU.&#13;
* A.&#13;
vr. M .&#13;
ACTIVK SOLICiTOUS W N C '*&gt; KVl'/tY&#13;
WUEUR for -Tne s orv of th» Philippines.''&#13;
by Murat HAl3te.nd.co.T,)ui»sii)ai'ii by tlumen&#13;
t a-s OlU-i;\t HUtori io t&lt;&gt; tlie War&#13;
tctut. TIM Kwlc was wrift»»a ja * i f l y&#13;
i^an Francisco, on tlie Paiutic with Gt»nersl Merritt,&#13;
in the hospit.tii* at Honolulu, in lion&lt;; Kou:, m&#13;
the American trencher at Manilla, in th« iniurxvuts&#13;
campus with Aguinuldo, on the dfi-tc ot the&#13;
Olympja with Dt-wey. ami in the ronr of thebattlb&#13;
at thft lal. or Matiilla. Boaaaza f o r i ^ u u . tirunful&#13;
of pictures taken by {»•)•.'-rameat puoto^iajihers&#13;
ou the spjt. Lar^e" lx»ok. L &gt;v prkvs. Big&#13;
prunta. Kreiuht p»id. Credit -riven. Drop all&#13;
trashy unulhtial war books Outfit fr»*s. Addrws,&#13;
F. T. 'Barber, Sec'y. Star Insurauce Bldg. Chicago.&#13;
OliUEK Ob'&#13;
'tile Friday e t'.&#13;
Aim;-: OK THE of&#13;
vited.&#13;
at ^:*; v&#13;
L&#13;
try 1st&#13;
ia. at&#13;
f iu&#13;
ber of days tauarht 19; grand&#13;
number days attendance 488 5; average&#13;
daily atteniar.ee 24.4; whole&#13;
Judj;e Thonios may not- have en- j number kelonu'in£ 27;.ai:Kve^ate tarforced&#13;
t h e law against perjury iu diness 34. Pupils neither ahseut nor&#13;
tardy dnrinjj tbe past mon^b:&#13;
Koy Moran Hel«n H«*a8on&#13;
bteve Jf ftrey* . Loyd Grime*&#13;
Orpiia Heudee Lucy Jeffreys&#13;
1 bave been afflicted with&#13;
tisnj for fourteen years acd nothing&#13;
«eeraed to #iv« any reilet. I was able&#13;
— j to be around all the time, but COQPrimarv&#13;
Department— NV bole num- stantlv suffering. I had tried everyth'ma&#13;
I could b«?ar of and at last was&#13;
T.&#13;
HTS or THE&#13;
v-t vvury second&#13;
i ot awry moutttiu tUe ti.&#13;
iiiil at ;.-.&gt;joVlock. All i i&#13;
welcome.&#13;
AUNZLL, Capt.&#13;
i&#13;
IV. C. T. V. wvi-ti&#13;
uiOQthat i:.i. p. m. d&#13;
.Siller, iireryoao iutc&#13;
i coadially tovitcKl Mrs.&#13;
KtU Durfee, secreUry.&#13;
total&#13;
told to trv CbamberJa.i.n's l*ain. Bal&#13;
wim-h I did and was&#13;
that instance, as many sticklers&#13;
for forms and ceremonies might&#13;
desire, but lie set forth a thought,&#13;
however much some may critisize&#13;
;t, that will euforce itself on&#13;
&lt;2ircn' Away&#13;
It is eertainly tiraliiying to the&#13;
public to know of one concern in tbe&#13;
land who are not afraid to be generous&#13;
to the needy and $&gt;uff?vinff. Tb«&#13;
m&#13;
immediately re-&#13;
' lieved and in a short time cusvd. I&#13;
; am hapjiy to &gt;ay th&lt;t it has not&lt; sine*&#13;
j returned.— lo&gt;b Ej^ar. (jeruaauto'.vn,&#13;
!Cai For sale i»v F. A.&#13;
tlw first frilar of e&amp;ck&#13;
t 1 ].• a &gt; a^ o; f)r. il. P.&#13;
r&lt;?s(^d i a t&lt;j;apj-»uo» la&#13;
'^eal ii^ler, er&lt;»; Mrs.&#13;
BUSINESS CAROS.&#13;
H. F. SIGLER M. 0. C . L, SIOLER M, 0&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER, aad iur.-e .us&#13;
itteudci lo liy or&#13;
Pinckaey, Mich.&#13;
Ail c*iU&#13;
O.tice &amp;Q Maia sir&#13;
DR. A. 3. GREEN.&#13;
CfSi.v OV.T S.,,^:&#13;
1'— '.wry r.i.irsday auJ K&#13;
s i 'ru; .&gt;iure.&#13;
Lncy Cttlhane&#13;
JESSIE GBKKX, Teacher.&#13;
Or. Miles' Pain PUla. "One For&#13;
Dr. Cady's Conditioo Powders are&#13;
just what a hor^e needs when in bad&#13;
condition. Tonic, blood purifier and&#13;
Termttu«e. They are not food but&#13;
proprietors of Or. Kings New Discov- medicine and the be».t in use to put a&#13;
nake to&#13;
are a&#13;
All-Wool&#13;
.50&#13;
SHit&#13;
Latest City Styfcrl&#13;
1nri»t I ' P U I &lt; &gt;&#13;
r &lt; JTrlnl |&#13;
Ji« story o f tho&#13;
in (V* jrrwy&#13;
Hone&#13;
at San&#13;
i in t*«&#13;
tneureent&#13;
h \&gt;l&#13;
ery for Consumption, Couprhs and&#13;
Colds, bare given away over ten&#13;
millions trial bottles, of tbw great&#13;
meJicine^and hare the satisfaction of&#13;
knowing it has absolateiy oared&#13;
thoaftiadfc of h^neless cases.&#13;
BrooctitU, Hoirwue^s and&#13;
of tb« throat, chest, and langi art&#13;
«ared bf i t CaU o »&#13;
trial hottW&#13;
Brtafsl&#13;
' pboto*&#13;
priti&#13;
horse in prime condition.&#13;
per package. For sal« by P. A.&#13;
er.&#13;
25e&#13;
Sig !&#13;
Harnden's&#13;
FerSale.&#13;
8«»ftd8 Grow. Don't&#13;
plant them too thick. 3 pAckajr*;. ie.&#13;
Rev. E. Edwards, pastor of the&#13;
English Baptist ehuich at Minersville.&#13;
Pa., when sutTering with rheumatism&#13;
wa* advised to try Chamberlain's Pain&#13;
Balm, fie says: »• A few appUeatioaji&#13;
of this liniment proved of great service&#13;
to We. It sabdaed tbe inflamatioo and&#13;
tiie pain. Shoald a s /&#13;
profit bjr gtf ia* paim$fcaJat a trial i i&#13;
a*." Par tak ay P. A.&#13;
Too can be »w _. .&#13;
if you know how. Write as lott,&#13;
Samples and Booklet "Jfetr U&#13;
Look Wtii, Dnu WtU, and&#13;
Sava Mo—y/'&#13;
Larje Fashion Plata&#13;
and ~&#13;
TaeDAVBMAOWECa&#13;
Tbo Best Hotel in D err oil&#13;
' " * • ' !&#13;
1&#13;
'A&#13;
- • M&#13;
• &gt; " : : '&#13;
• &gt; ; * ' .&#13;
•, • • J I ^&#13;
'£-\&#13;
"f&#13;
• &lt;» .&#13;
V^V/'VV-;:^ • ' / " ' . ' • - , :^^WV'*'Q"^ •,j; • . , ^ - , ; ' « i i . 1 ^ • • f r ' T M i ; - ' f - - ' . ^ 1 , ' " , ' ; ;'-.-"'';;,,•* - W C . ' ; ; „ " , , • . &lt; . ' • •&lt; y&#13;
I&#13;
k.&#13;
If •&#13;
r.P.,&#13;
' • • * • '&#13;
L. AXDJUCW^ Publttht*&#13;
PINCKNEY, • " 'V MICHIGAN.&#13;
The average woman's&#13;
la home rule.&#13;
Theoretical philosopher* 4Tft sometlmea&#13;
practical fools. .&#13;
Frankness raayt&gt;flto&gt; * oi*n, httt duplicity&#13;
always didfeaaori&#13;
The bigot is always dead iure of&#13;
comethlng he known notfciajr. about&#13;
Lots of writers who pvrsue a liters&#13;
•ry career are unable to catch up with&#13;
It&#13;
A bull and a bear together could introduce&#13;
many novel effects in a China&#13;
shop.&#13;
A cranky old bachelor says the mo3t&#13;
tiresome thing about a man is a&#13;
-woman.&#13;
It is a rank assumption to claim that&#13;
Kudyard Kipling is to be "raised" to&#13;
the peerage.&#13;
It is rumored that Uncle John Sherman&#13;
is about to have another attack o!&#13;
recollections. "*&#13;
A physician may speak but one&#13;
language and yet be familiar with&#13;
many tongues.&#13;
Eight thousand Filipinos have expressed&#13;
a preference for assimilation&#13;
as against extermination.&#13;
Sampson may have been technically&#13;
the winner of the Santiago battle, but&#13;
Schley continues to receive the medals.&#13;
An American firm is building 600 locomotives&#13;
for foreign countries. This&#13;
Is another evidence that trade will follow&#13;
the engine.&#13;
™-Agu4naldo's-ml8tak« lay chiefly in&#13;
the supposition that he could extort&#13;
a larger bribe from the United States&#13;
than that he received from Spain.&#13;
The court of inquiry complains of a&#13;
scarcity of beef witnesses. To break&#13;
the monotony of tho proceedings, the&#13;
«ourt might put some of the beef itself&#13;
on the stand.&#13;
Word comes from Hongkong that the&#13;
iriiipinos realize they have made ~HT&#13;
mistake. Their allies in the United&#13;
States are a little slower, but they are&#13;
beginning to arrive at a similar conclusion.&#13;
Already we have the best export&#13;
trade record with China of any country&#13;
in the world. In spite of all outelde&#13;
inducements the Chinese prefer to&#13;
bay of us. The treaty ports furnish&#13;
ample outlets for our exports. We do&#13;
not need any of the rejected renannts&#13;
not tak«n by the other pGAd*. ~/c&#13;
have better trade prospects with China&#13;
than all the European looters put together.&#13;
Why, then, should we Join in&#13;
'her robbery? Have we not already bitten&#13;
off in the east about all we can&#13;
chew?&#13;
' Tt appears that tb« young dancing&#13;
woman who embellished the announcements&#13;
of her public entertainment by&#13;
a long list of names of rery distinguished&#13;
"patronesses" did not go to&#13;
the trouble of asking the "patronesses'&#13;
" permission. Some of the patronesses&#13;
have publicly objected, and&#13;
as the announcements said rather more&#13;
about them than about the entertainment&#13;
it seems that they have some&#13;
right to feel aggrieved. It is difficult&#13;
to see what the "patronesses" hfcve to&#13;
do with this or a great many other&#13;
enterprises which they are said to be&#13;
patronizing, anyway. Possibly tt is a&#13;
comfort to some people who buy tickets&#13;
to the entertainment to know that&#13;
they a n patronizing a show which also&#13;
enjoys tto patronage of some rery&#13;
wealthy women; but It is dlflcalt to&#13;
see how it mak is the show any better.&#13;
The largest market of tte world for&#13;
American cottonseed oil is Marseilles,&#13;
France. la l«&amp;7 49,000/XK) kilo* of oil&#13;
were shipped thsr$ from the United&#13;
SUt£s, sfil the tofel for 180$ will be&#13;
rery xfluch higher. A B=Qb is 2.2&#13;
pound*. The oil is doctored so as to&#13;
test* like ,o7ive oil an* told as such all&#13;
IJls al«p used, for the&#13;
&amp; &amp;&#13;
Articles «f ioUet It&#13;
Is one of the largest indastries' of&#13;
France And, fess b#coss* «©' cfetqp -an*&#13;
r it i^drirtn* 4ot o t t e &gt; U s ,&#13;
the crashers of &lt;fli»glBitts'seeds,&#13;
market has been nearly destroy-&#13;
«d, are now trying to haye a prohibitive&#13;
diijr Imposed upon the American&#13;
article. The manufacturers of soap,&#13;
bomtrer, are resisting the movement,&#13;
a s * It Is probaMe that they wiU make&#13;
with thf toeai seed&#13;
whka the AsMrtc&amp;a ott&#13;
wta at rendered nnpslatabie by tht&#13;
ot&#13;
fit tiatuBflt )M&#13;
TALMAGFS SEEMON.&#13;
8PLENDOH AND WQg OP AMERICA'S&#13;
OREAT CITIES.&#13;
SH«&#13;
Hw&#13;
Ohrlrtteu.&#13;
We are all ready to llaten to the&#13;
voices of nature—the voices of the&#13;
mountain, the voices of the sea, ths&#13;
voiceB of the storm, the voices of tho&#13;
star. As In some of the cathedrals in&#13;
Europe, there is an organ at either&#13;
end of the building, and the one instrument&#13;
responds musically to the&#13;
to night, and flower to flower, and star&#13;
to star, In the great harmonies of the&#13;
universe. The spring time is an evangelist&#13;
in blossoms preaching of God'i&#13;
love; and the winter is a prophet—&#13;
white bearded — denouncing woe&#13;
against our sins. We are all ready to&#13;
listen to the VOICCB of nature; but how&#13;
few of us learn anything from tho&#13;
voices of the noisy and dusty street!&#13;
You go to your mechanism, and to&#13;
your work, and to your merchandise,&#13;
and you come back again—and often&#13;
with how different a heart you pass&#13;
through the streets! Are there no&#13;
things for us to learn from these pavements&#13;
over which we pass? Are thera&#13;
no tufts of truth growing up between&#13;
these cobblestones, beaten with ths&#13;
feet of toil and pain and pleasure, the&#13;
Blow tread of old age, and the quick&#13;
step of childhood? Aye, there are&#13;
great harvests to be reaped; and now&#13;
I thrust in the sickle because the harvest&#13;
is ripe. "Wisdom crieth without;&#13;
she uttereth her voice in the streets."&#13;
In the first place, the street impresses&#13;
me with the fact that this life&#13;
Is a scene of toil and struggle. By 10&#13;
o'clock every day the city is jarring&#13;
with wheels, and shuffling with feet,&#13;
and humming with voices, and covered&#13;
with the breath, of smoke-stacks, and&#13;
a-rush with traffickers. Once in a&#13;
while you find a man going along with&#13;
folded arms and with leisurely step, as&#13;
though he had nothing to_jk&gt;; but for&#13;
the most part, as you find men going&#13;
down these streets on the way to business,&#13;
there is anxiety In their faces, as&#13;
though they had some errand which&#13;
must be executed at tbe first possible&#13;
moment. You are Jostled by those who&#13;
have bargains to make and notes to&#13;
sell. Up this ladder with a hod of&#13;
bricks, out of this bank with_a roll of&#13;
bills, on thir dray with a load of goods,&#13;
digging a cellar, or shingling a roof, or&#13;
That is the man* that !• Uw&#13;
and'the blessing win come down upon&#13;
you at ChrUt thattiayr "I was hungry&#13;
and ye fed me, I was naked and ye&#13;
clothed me, I was sick and in prison&#13;
and yt visited me; Inasmuch as ye did&#13;
it ta tfeatfr^ftoor waifa.Of th*afreets, ye&#13;
did tt to me,"&#13;
A^ain, tns ttreet impresses me with&#13;
the fact taat all e&amp;uses and conditions&#13;
of society must commingle. We sometimes&#13;
culture a wicked exclusiveneaa.&#13;
Intellect depises ignorance. Refinement&#13;
will have nothing to do with&#13;
boorishness, Gloves hate the sunburned&#13;
hand, and the high forehead despises&#13;
the flat head; and the trim hedgerow&#13;
will have nothing to do with the wild&#13;
copBewood, and Athena hates Nazareth,&#13;
This ought not so to be. The&#13;
shoeing a horse, or building &amp; wall, or&#13;
mending a watch, or binding a book-&#13;
Industry, with her thousand arms and&#13;
thousand eyes, and thousand feet, goes&#13;
on singing her song of work! work!&#13;
work! while the mills drum It, and the&#13;
steam-whistles fife it. All this to not&#13;
because mer love toil. Some one remarked:&#13;
"Every man is as Lazy as he&#13;
can afford to be." But it is because&#13;
necessity with stern brow and with uplifted&#13;
whip stands over you ready&#13;
whenever you re'?.x y&lt;?"r toil to make&#13;
your shoulders sting with the huh.&#13;
Can it be that passing up and down&#13;
these streets on your way to work and&#13;
business you do not learn. anything&#13;
of the world's toil, and anxiety,&#13;
and struggle? Oh, how many drooping&#13;
hearts, how many eyes on the watch,&#13;
how many miles traveled, how many&#13;
burdens carried, how many losses suffered,&#13;
how many battles fought, how&#13;
many victories gained, how many defeats&#13;
suffered. Low many exasperations&#13;
endured—what losses, what hunger,&#13;
what wretchedness, what pallor, what&#13;
disease, what agony, what despair!&#13;
Sometimes I have stopped at the corner&#13;
of the street as the multitudes&#13;
went hither and yon. and It has seemed&#13;
to be a great pantomime, and as I&#13;
looked upon it my heart broke. This&#13;
great tide of human life that goes&#13;
down the street is a rapid, tossed, and&#13;
turned aside, and-flashei ahead, and&#13;
driven back—beautiful in its confusion,&#13;
and eo»6ised In Its beauty. In the carpeted&#13;
aisles of the forest, In the woods&#13;
from which ths eternal shadow is never&#13;
lifted, on the shore of the sea over&#13;
whose iron coast tosses the tangled&#13;
foam sprinkling the cracked cliffs with&#13;
a baptism of whirlwind and tempest, is&#13;
the best place to study God; but in the&#13;
rushing, swarming, raving street is the&#13;
Sesi pl&amp;oe ta study man.&#13;
Going down to your place of business&#13;
and coming home again, I charge you&#13;
to look about—see these signs of poverty,&#13;
-of wretchedness, of hunger, of&#13;
*in, of bereavement—and', as"&gt; you go&#13;
through ike streets, ao4.«om« back&#13;
through the street*!, .gather .JIB in.the&#13;
arms of your prayer all the sorrow, all,&#13;
the losses, all the sufferings, all the&#13;
bereavements of those wbfsn yea pass,&#13;
and present them in prayer before an&#13;
all-sympathetic Got. la ihe great day&#13;
of eternity there will be thousands of&#13;
persons, with whom you 4a this worW&#13;
never exchanged one WQXd, rise up&#13;
and call you blussud; amd"there will&#13;
be a theusaad lagers pointed at you in&#13;
heaven, atria*: T h a i is tae man,&#13;
Caat is the woma*. who helped me'&#13;
fc I was bfcAgrF. «ad sick, aad wand&#13;
fe&#13;
1 gat Ion. The surgeon must come away&#13;
from his study of the human organism&#13;
and Bet our broken bones. The chemist&#13;
must conjo away from his laboratory,&#13;
where he has been studying analysis&#13;
and synthesis, and help us to understand&#13;
the nature of the soils. I&#13;
bless God that all classes of people&#13;
are compelled to meet ou the street.&#13;
The glittering coechwheel clashes&#13;
against the scavenger's car.t. Fine&#13;
robes run against the peddler's pack.&#13;
Robust health meets wan sickness.&#13;
Honesty confronts fraud. Every class&#13;
of people meets every other class. Impudence&#13;
and modesty, pride and humility,&#13;
purity and beaatHness, frankness&#13;
and hypocrisy, meeting on the same&#13;
block, in the same street, in the same&#13;
city. Oh! that is what Solomon meant&#13;
when he said: "The rich and the poor&#13;
meet together; the Lord is the maker&#13;
of them all." x&#13;
I like this democratic principle of&#13;
the Gcspel cf Jesus Christ which recognizes&#13;
the fact that we stand before God&#13;
on one and the same platform. Do&#13;
not take on any airs; whatever position&#13;
you have gained In society, you are&#13;
nothing but a man, born cf the same&#13;
Parent, regenerated by the same Spirit,&#13;
cleansed in the same blood, to lie down&#13;
in the same dust, to get up in the same&#13;
resurrection. It fs high time that we&#13;
all acknowledged not only the Fatherhood&#13;
of God, but the bro±herhGQ_d__of&#13;
man.&#13;
• * • •&#13;
Again, thn street impresses me with&#13;
the fact that it is a great field far&#13;
Christian charity. There are hunger&#13;
and suffering, and want and wretchedness,&#13;
In tup country, but these evils&#13;
chiefly congregate In our great cities.&#13;
On everyi street crime prowls, and&#13;
drunkenness staggers, and shame&#13;
winks, and pauperism thrusts out its&#13;
me, and I am waiting for taem to&#13;
come." 0, yes, they are waiting for&#13;
you. Men who have money, men who&#13;
have tafluence, men of churches, men&#13;
of great hearts, gather them In, gather&#13;
them tn. It is not the will of your&#13;
Heavenly Father that one of these lit&#13;
tie ones should parjUih.&#13;
Lastly, the street impress*! me with&#13;
the fact that all the people ar&lt;a look&#13;
ing forward. I see expectancy written&#13;
on almost every faoe X meet. Where&#13;
you find a thousand people walking&#13;
straight on. you only find one man&#13;
stopping and looking back. The fact&#13;
is, God made us all to look ahead, because&#13;
we are immortal. In this tramp&#13;
of the multitude on thr&gt; streets, I hear&#13;
the tramp of a great hoet, marching&#13;
and marching for eternity. Beyond&#13;
the office, the store, the shop, the&#13;
street, there is a world, populous and&#13;
tremendous Through God's grace,&#13;
may you reach that blessed place. A&#13;
great throng fills those boulevards, and&#13;
the streets nre a-rush with the chariots&#13;
of conquerors. The inhabitants go up&#13;
and down, but they never weep and&#13;
they never toil. A river flows through&#13;
that city, with rounded and luxurious&#13;
banks, and the trees of life laden with&#13;
everlasting fruitage bend their brancnes&#13;
into the crystal. No plumed Vearse&#13;
rattles over that pavement, for they&#13;
are never sick. With immortal health&#13;
glowing In every vein, they know not&#13;
how to die. Those towers of strength,&#13;
those palaces of beauty, gleam in the"&#13;
light of a sun that never sets. Oh,&#13;
heaven! beautiful heaven! Heaven&#13;
where our friends are! They take no&#13;
census in that city, for it is inhabited&#13;
by "a multitude which no man can&#13;
number." Rank above rank. Host&#13;
above host. Gallery above gallery,&#13;
sweeping all around the heavens.&#13;
Thousands of thousands. Millions of&#13;
millions. Blessed are they who enter&#13;
in through the gate into that city. Ch,&#13;
start for it today! Through the blood&#13;
of the great sacrifice of the Son of God,&#13;
take up your march to heaven. "The&#13;
Spirit and tho bride say, Come, and&#13;
whosoever will, let him come and take&#13;
the water of life freely." Join this&#13;
great throng marching heavenward.&#13;
All the doors of invitation are open.&#13;
"And I saw twelye_gates, and the&#13;
twelve"gates were twelve pearls."&#13;
hand asking tor alms. Here, want is&#13;
most equalld and hunger is most lean.&#13;
A Christian man, going along a street&#13;
in New York, saw a poor lad, and he&#13;
stooped and gaid: "My boy, do you&#13;
know how to read and write?" The&#13;
boy made nc answer. The man asked&#13;
the question twice and thrice: "Can&#13;
you read and write?" and then the boy&#13;
answered, with a tear plashing on the&#13;
back of his hand. He said in defiance:&#13;
"No sir; I can't read nor write,&#13;
nether. Cod. sir, don't watst me to&#13;
lead and write. Didn't he take &amp;»ay&#13;
my father so long ago I never remember&#13;
to have seen him? and haven't I&#13;
had to go along the streets to get&#13;
something to fetch home to eat for the&#13;
folks? and didn't I, as soon as I could&#13;
carry a basket, have to go out anfi pick&#13;
up cinders, and never have no schooling,&#13;
sir? God don't want me to read,&#13;
sir. I can't read, nor write neither."&#13;
Oh, these poor wanderers! They have&#13;
no chance. Born in degradation, as&#13;
they get up from their hands and knees&#13;
tc walk, they take .their first step on&#13;
the sead to despairs/Let us go forth in&#13;
the name of the .Lord .Jesus Christ to&#13;
rescue them. Let us ministers not be&#13;
afraid of soiling our black clothes&#13;
while we go down on that mission.&#13;
While we are tying an elaborate knot&#13;
In our cravat, or while we are i s the&#13;
study rounding off some period rhetorically,&#13;
we might be saving a soul&#13;
from death, and hiding a multitude of&#13;
sins. O Christian laymen, go out on&#13;
this work. If you are not willing to go&#13;
forth yourself, then give of your means,&#13;
and it you are too lazy to go, then gfet&#13;
out of the way, and hide yourself in&#13;
the dens and caves cf the earth, lest,&#13;
when Christ's chariot comes along, the&#13;
horses' hods trample you into the&#13;
mire. Beware lest the thousands of&#13;
the destitute of your city, in the last&#13;
great day, rise up and curse your stupidity&#13;
and your neglect. Down to&#13;
work! LIfi them ui&gt;I One cold winter's&#13;
day, as a Christian man was going&#13;
along1 the Battery in New York,&#13;
he saw a little girl seated at the gate,&#13;
shivering in the cold. He said to her:&#13;
"My chi'd, what do you sit there for,&#13;
this cold day?" "Oh," she replied, "I&#13;
am waiting—I am waiting- for somebody&#13;
to come and take care cf me."&#13;
saM the man, "what makes&#13;
Hut* for Karly Spring1.&#13;
The selection of appropriate millinery&#13;
for the early spring months is decidedly&#13;
difficult. All interest has been&#13;
lost in even the late winter hats, and,&#13;
beside, they are apt to appear a II'.tie&#13;
paseee, as fashions, more th?.n anything&#13;
ejse, are liable to suddet: changes&#13;
with or even without the slightest reayou&#13;
think anybody will eome and take&#13;
cam of y o a r "Ob," afar aaid, "my&#13;
mother died last week, and I was crying&#13;
very much, and she said: 'Don't&#13;
cry. dfc«p though I A D *&lt;%ne and yoar&#13;
fatfcext la *«ne. tae Lprd win sand&#13;
somebody to take care of you/ Mj&#13;
mother « M r 4sU a lie; «•» ai#d&#13;
some oat woald «osae aat take cat* of&#13;
Then, again, there is a natural&#13;
hesitancy to rush in the light summery&#13;
creations on these fresh cool&#13;
days; so the subject now to be considered&#13;
is the unobtrusive but dainty&#13;
demi-saison hats that are shown in&#13;
beautiful profusion. A becoming "hat&#13;
or bonnet certainly adds more to a&#13;
woman's appearance than any other&#13;
single article of outdoor apparel, and&#13;
consequently should be selected with&#13;
great care as to shape, color and general&#13;
fitness.&#13;
Hats this season show a marked tendency&#13;
to return to the becoming downward&#13;
cant of last summer, and thus&#13;
afford a welcome shade to the eyes&#13;
during the bright spring days. The&#13;
hats, whoa tlU'i forward, are more&#13;
easily worn by the vast majority than&#13;
the flaring, fly-away effects so much in&#13;
vogue during the winter. Toques in&#13;
fibre cloth and cunningly woven straws&#13;
will be extensively worn with both&#13;
morning and afternoon toilets, while&#13;
tulle hats are chosen for theater and&#13;
reception wear.&#13;
The tulle hat ia deserving of much&#13;
consideration; it U unusually artistic,&#13;
and has a fluffy graceful effect that can&#13;
be obtained in no ether material. Ono&#13;
beautiful tulle hat was fashioned with&#13;
a small round crown and turned-up&#13;
brim upon the turban style, the whole&#13;
being made of small tuck-shirrings&#13;
that induced a soft, ruffled appearance.&#13;
Twisted pieces of tulle forsicd a bow&#13;
at the center ot the front, aid through&#13;
It were thrust two ornaments with&#13;
enormous let tops and amber pins,&#13;
which furnished all the decoration necessary.&#13;
This seemingly simple hat required&#13;
twenty yards of tulle in its construction&#13;
and severai days of most tedious&#13;
labor. A small hat of white tulle&#13;
was covered with jetted black net and&#13;
trimmed with long feather effects made&#13;
of steel paillettes and caught upon the&#13;
hat to the left of the center with a&#13;
large cut-steel and Rhinestone buckle.&#13;
Dainty soft tones of tulle are selected&#13;
and embroidered with steel, gold or&#13;
silver, or often brilliantly jeweled. Pale&#13;
blue tulle sparkling with myriads of&#13;
tiny Rhinestones was finished with two&#13;
soft- white feathers artistically arranged&#13;
in front, and running up the&#13;
stem of the feathers were narrow black&#13;
velvet ribbons upon which were fastened&#13;
at regular intervals small Rhlaestone&#13;
buckles.&#13;
la case Canada beuomay a part of the&#13;
United States, a native Missourian pro*&#13;
poees the state motto for greater Amerka:&#13;
"United wt stand, decided by&#13;
Niagara Falls."&#13;
A F A M O U S BQUGW FHPER.&#13;
Ba«k Taylor a»ya "Vft-ru-an U the BMSOAtavrh&#13;
COM on Karth—Cured M*" '&#13;
Sergeant Buck Taylor, one of the&#13;
famous Bough Riders, is a personal&#13;
friend of Governor Roosevelt of New&#13;
York. He accompanied Governor-&#13;
Roosevelt on hi* great stumping tour&#13;
through upper New York state. H«&#13;
was promoted through gallantry in thefield&#13;
during ths latt war.&#13;
The Sergeant has the following to*&#13;
aay ot Pe-ru-na: "I think there is no*&#13;
better medicine on earth than Pe-ruoa;&#13;
tor catarrh. It has cured tar. It&#13;
Sergeant Buck Taylor,&#13;
would take a volume to tell you all tho&#13;
good it has done me. . Pe-ru-na is ttia&#13;
best catarrh cure on^a/th, and I know,&#13;
for I,have tried nearly"JQVO! them.&#13;
Respectfully, Buck V. Taylor."&#13;
Winter weather causes catarrh.&#13;
Everybody knows this. But everybody&#13;
does not stop to think that winter&#13;
weather delays the, cure of catarrh. It&#13;
takes longer to cure a case of catarrh&#13;
in the winter generally, than In tho&#13;
warm season. Spring 1B here. Now is&#13;
the timo favorable to the treatment of&#13;
old and especially stubborn cases of&#13;
catarrh.&#13;
Send for book entltlei "Facts and&#13;
FaeeB." Sent free by The Pe-ru-na&#13;
Drug MTg Co., Columbus. O&#13;
If the hny trust will ouly put huy fevor beyoml&#13;
the reach cf mankind it will not have been&#13;
in vnlru "&#13;
If u mnn doesn't iausrh when he sees atflrl&#13;
tryioy to sharpen u ix'nc4iUci.s in love witii Jiotv&#13;
8100 Xlewurd, 9100.&#13;
The readers of this puper will be p'eased to&#13;
learn that there is ;it 'cast one drciwcl disease&#13;
thut science han been ublo to cure in all its sta*r*«&#13;
and thut Is Catarrh. HHII'K CiUurrh Cure is tho&#13;
only positive rure Known to the mud Leal&#13;
fraternity. Catarrh belnjr a constitutional disease,&#13;
requires a constitutional treutment. Hall's&#13;
Catarrh Cure is taken interptflly. acting directly&#13;
upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system,&#13;
thereby destroying the foundation of tho&#13;
disease, and giving the pattent stremfth by&#13;
bulldlne up the constitution and assisting&#13;
nature in doinu its work. The proprietors have&#13;
KO much faith In its curative powers, that tbej&#13;
otter One Hundred Dollar* for any c«so that it&#13;
"falll s ttoc~ucurrgg— ??^^ttuull ffuurr llii*&gt;&gt; of ToTiitmlmonli&#13;
Address. P. J. CHENEY &amp; CO.. Toledo, Ct.&#13;
Sold by dru?gi«ts. 7Ac.&#13;
Hall's Family Fills are the bc&amp;'~&#13;
Why should a bride expect a bed of roses?&#13;
Slit luia mrt beta ac^istoirietfto'lt at home.&#13;
93,000 for m New Corn.&#13;
That's what this new corn cost. Yields 318&#13;
bushels per acre. Hi? Four Oats SAO bushel8-&#13;
Salzer"s Kape to pasture shoep and cattle&#13;
ai i5c per arre yields &amp;o ton*: potatoes&#13;
11.20 per bbl. Bromus Inermis, the jrreate&gt;&#13;
t jrrass on earth: Be^rdlens barley 60 bushels&#13;
por acre; 10 kinda grtwases and clovers,&#13;
etc.&#13;
Send this notice to JoHN" A. SALZER&#13;
SEED CO.. I.A CROSSE. WIS., with Kto&#13;
stamps and receive free great Catalogue;&#13;
$3,000 Corn and 10 Farm Seed Samples.&#13;
i]&#13;
When n woman truly loves a in an. she believes&#13;
he can write better poetry than Byron.&#13;
CRESCENT HOTEL,&#13;
EUREKA SPRINGS, ARKANSAS,&#13;
Opcos February 23rd. In ihe&amp;zark Mountains.&#13;
Delightfttl climate. Beautiful scenery.&#13;
Unequaled medicinal waters. Cheap&#13;
excursion rates Through sleepers via&#13;
Frisco Lane. Adress J. O. Plank, Manager,&#13;
Room H, Arcade, Century Building-,&#13;
or Frisco Ticket Ofiice, No. 1№ N. Broadway,&#13;
St. Louis.&#13;
If you have learned to "know thyself" then&#13;
you are not apt to give thyself away..&#13;
TO CURB A COLD IK OWE DAT&#13;
e a x a t We Eromo Quinine Tablets. All&#13;
drugtriste refund the ia«ney if. it fails i? cure.&#13;
S The genuine has L- H Q. on each tablet.&#13;
If flsh is pood brain' food it seems a pity in&#13;
some cases to waste so much nsh.&#13;
Carter's Ext. Swart Weed&#13;
Will enre a cold in one niyhf, will cure 8OF© throat In a few hours. Act* quick. Sure cure&#13;
1or Catarrh In every lie bottle.&#13;
It is a doubtful compliment to tell a man you&#13;
always •stan d up for. him."&#13;
F)TS K'.&lt;flt.s or nerv&lt;nuneMAfv«c&#13;
first dn/« u»o of Dr. Klune't lircat &gt;erv« Ktmlorer.&#13;
bend for F R E E 84.O O tri*l buttle and trtatiae.&#13;
Us. a. U. KUSK. Ltd. 031 J*0fc &amp;*.. PiiUftdci^tu*. P*.&#13;
Met&gt; are becoming so shirtless t'aut you often&#13;
And jobs looking for men.&#13;
They Work Wblk You Me*p.&#13;
WMlovonr mind ami IKVIJT rr«r. CM'ekretrdin'fsj C».&#13;
tlminic iviMlryoiir tikifttfttioDi jour llv«&lt;r. jour toweU,.&#13;
put luoiu in perfect order, ml UrupgiMtii, 10c, £&gt;c, Mto.&#13;
If fn doubt n othdf4£w tot \ some&#13;
For rhtlcftpn t*Hsti»M%.««ttnT&gt;t tM&gt;wm».t«'&lt;n»&lt;i*» tntit&#13;
nation, all*y» pain, euro* wiudoalic. Uot&amp;toa bottMt&#13;
If a wteum i* pitUtf she «aor ttktti iifclst on.&#13;
her owu imjtprtcietlonH.&#13;
PINO'R Care for Ctonsumpj4oJiJ»9uronto m«dldoc&#13;
for cough* and coMfe—Mr*. C tMlU, 489*&#13;
e Me.. Denver. Col.. Nov. 8. UK.&#13;
ii yon would ivooeasfrUy argue wife •»&#13;
man just keep silent.&#13;
"Tner«49 no CQMS babto* or dak fcaMe* la.&#13;
f»mliyo»rt»Mi»e Bymi'aTeethtarOoqUi."&#13;
If in doubt aoout **•* Me* ttttfce ooMttlt*&#13;
a&amp;oiof muter.&#13;
PS^iPf^ i: j,'' "^&#13;
• • : - * ; - &lt; -&#13;
Spring. Unlocks^&#13;
The Flowers&#13;
To &lt;P+bti thtUvfihtng &amp;&amp;"&#13;
not4 etwi Nature would&#13;
allow the flowers to grow&#13;
and btossom to perfection&#13;
without $obd soli Now&#13;
Nature and people are much&#13;
-alike* the former must have&#13;
sunshine, tatter must have&#13;
puretj&gt;loo4t* order to have&#13;
perfect health.&#13;
Bo4l&lt;6 8art»pari lla "cores Wood Iron*&#13;
bltrW all sorta. It is to the boban&#13;
•yftera' what sunshine is to Nature—&#13;
the destroyer of disease germs. It&#13;
Miter disappoints.&#13;
P o o f Bk)Od-"Th9 doctor said tbera&#13;
were not svven drops of good blood in ray&#13;
body. Hood's JBarsaparllTa built rue up and&#13;
made me strong and well." 8pats JS. Baoww,&#13;
16 Astor Hill, Lynn, Mass.&#13;
DyapoptUb e t O . - " A complication of&#13;
troubles, dyspepsia, chronic catarrh and&#13;
inflammation of the stomach, rheumatism,&#13;
etc., made me miserable. Hadino appetite&#13;
until I took Hood's Saraaparilla, which&#13;
acted like magic. I am thoroughly cured."&#13;
H. B. SWLIY, 1874 W. 14th Av., Denver, CoJ.&#13;
Rheumatism —"My husband was&#13;
obliged to:give up •work on account of rbeumatisiu.&#13;
No remedy helped until he used&#13;
Hood's Sarsaparllla, which permanently&#13;
cured him. It cured my* daughter of catarrh.&#13;
I give it to the children with good&#13;
results." MBS. J. S. MCMATH, Stamford, Ct.&#13;
Hood'. Pills cure »»er Uli.the non Irritating and&#13;
the only cathartic to uke with Mood'* aar.apariUa.&#13;
Giant Japanese Soldier.&#13;
* A Japanese paper says that a sol-&#13;
41er of gigantic stature and enormous&#13;
strength recently had the honor of being&#13;
presented to the emperor. He is&#13;
Private Tamashita of the Third regiment&#13;
of Nagoya field artillery. He enlisted&#13;
in December and is now 22 years&#13;
ef age. HU muscular strength is so&#13;
great that he can carry a field ploco&#13;
on his shoulders and climb up a mountain&#13;
when horses are not available.&#13;
Yamaahita _regularly receives two&#13;
men's rations and his uniforms are&#13;
made to order.&#13;
The wife who chases her husband&#13;
with a poker rules him with a rod of&#13;
iron.&#13;
OTATE LBOIttLATURB.&#13;
The frorftrnor'a appointmento of&#13;
State Labor Commissioner Jos. L. Cox.&#13;
State Dairy and Food Commissioner E.&#13;
Q. Oro^venor, Chas, E. liackus, of Detroit,&#13;
aa a member of the board of the&#13;
northern Michigan asylum, and Caleb&#13;
Randall, of Coldwa,ter, as a member of&#13;
the board of the state public achool,&#13;
have beon confirmed in their position*&#13;
by the senate.&#13;
Robt. Y. Ojrg, secretary of the, Detroit&#13;
board of public works, is trying&#13;
i to induce Rep. McLeod to drop his&#13;
i election bill, providing for keeping the&#13;
' polls open until 8 o'clock in the even*&#13;
ing, and substitute7 another one making&#13;
election day a legal holiday.&#13;
The governor's appointments of&#13;
Robt. Oakman and Col. E. M. Irish&#13;
were rejected by the senate in executive&#13;
session. The vote by which Oakman&#13;
was turned down was 26 to 2;&#13;
Irish, 24 to 4.&#13;
Under strict gag rale, it is said, Mc-&#13;
Leod's city municipal ownership bill&#13;
was passed by the senate, given immediate&#13;
effect, and will become a }aw&#13;
as soon as signed by the governor&#13;
Rep. Howcirs resolution, proposing&#13;
an amendment to the constitution giving1&#13;
women the right to vote, came up&#13;
in the house on special order, and after&#13;
the usual speeches on both sides&#13;
the measure was tabled.&#13;
Rep. Dudley's pet tax bill, requiring&#13;
property owners to file sworn statements&#13;
of all their taxable property,&#13;
passed the house after being slightly&#13;
amended.&#13;
The appointment of Insurance Commissioner&#13;
Campbell and Wirt P. Doty,&#13;
as a member of the state pharmacy&#13;
board, have been confirmed by the&#13;
senate.&#13;
McLeod's Detroit municipal ownership&#13;
bill passed the house without a&#13;
word of dissent or a negative vote.&#13;
Gov. Pingree has issued a commission&#13;
to Robt. Oakman, of Detroit, as state&#13;
assessor.&#13;
ANN ARBOK SPEAKS.&#13;
Contractor Wooley, of Ann Arbor, Malta*&#13;
: a Public Statement.&#13;
Mr. Edward Wooley, contractor and&#13;
-carpenter of Ann Arbor, adds his voice&#13;
~fzv-«.li».&lt;. of ih«~Rgmy_Qf Michigflnjveortl^&#13;
who endorse the little conqueror. Our&#13;
representative found him at his place&#13;
of residence, No. 618 Fountain 8k. Mr.&#13;
Wooley appreciates "a good thing" as&#13;
4o most of our readers, and he does not&#13;
hesitate to tell his experience for the&#13;
benefit of others. Endorsement of this&#13;
kind baa made Doan's Kidney Pills a&#13;
household word throughout the state.&#13;
The good they have done has won them&#13;
many a title and such worthy names&#13;
Mtaong people as the "little conqueror&#13;
of kidney HW '^ittle enemies to back-&#13;
*che," "modenakw^der-workers," etc&#13;
Mr. Wooley says&#13;
"I was subject for years to attacks&#13;
of backache orlpains through the loins&#13;
*nd kidneys, generally of a dull, heavy,&#13;
aching nature, but often when the&#13;
weather changed or when I moved&#13;
awkwardly they became sharp twinges&#13;
of pain. As I was doing work which&#13;
required stooping it was very painful,&#13;
exceedingly so if I caught cold, which&#13;
as a rule, settled in my loins. I tried&#13;
various remedies but was never successful&#13;
in obtaining any permanent benefit&#13;
until I used Doan's Kidney Pills. At&#13;
the time my back was troubling me a&#13;
.great, deal but shortly after I began&#13;
~ the treatment the aching abated and&#13;
when-1 had finished it I was cured.&#13;
This is months ago and up to date&#13;
there has been no recurrence of the&#13;
trouble."&#13;
Doan's Kidney Pills for sale by all&#13;
dealers. Price 50 cents. Mailed by&#13;
Foeter-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y., sole&#13;
agents for the U. S. Remember the&#13;
name Doan's and take no substitute.&#13;
: Some men resemble dice—easily rattled&#13;
but hard to shake.&#13;
Go to your grocer to-day&#13;
and get a 15c package of rain It takes the place of coffee&#13;
at i the cost&#13;
Made from pure grains it&#13;
is nourishing and health*&#13;
fcL&#13;
Bills Signed by the Governor.&#13;
The following bills have been signed&#13;
by the governor:&#13;
, Amending the act under which St. Louis.&#13;
Grattot county, is incorporated; to provide for&#13;
pensioning the aged and disabled firemen of&#13;
Buy City: to provide for additional voting precincts&#13;
in Franklin township, Houzhton county;&#13;
amending the act allowing the village of Ontonajfon&#13;
to borrow money and issue bonds for&#13;
water works and an electric Uifht plant: to require&#13;
the township boards of Wnyneaad-Washtenaw&#13;
counties to publish itemized statements&#13;
of township finances; amending the act incorporating&#13;
JMt. Clemens, chjtnriog certain ward&#13;
boundaries: to authorize Elk ton. Huron county,&#13;
to issue bonds for public improvements; to vacute&#13;
Bcav«r Lake township, Ogemaw county:&#13;
to vacate Glencoe and Yates townships. Lake&#13;
county; Joint resolution authorizing the board&#13;
of auditors to ullow the claim of W. T. Densmore:&#13;
concurrent resolution to furnish new&#13;
compiled lawn to members of the last legislature:&#13;
to amend the law relating to primary elections&#13;
in cities of lf&gt;,000 to 150.000 inhabitants,&#13;
nxing the hours whoa the polls shall be opened;&#13;
authorizing Oliver township. Huron county, to&#13;
Issue bonds for public improvements: allowing&#13;
Escanaba. Delta county, to issue bonds to erect&#13;
a school building; to authorize the village of&#13;
Fremont. Newaygo county, to borrow money for&#13;
jmblic buildings, and other public 1 m provern^&#13;
nLl, um»M«1li»tf r»&lt;iPtnln t p r t m r w n f thp ytft in.&#13;
corporation Tmyei-sc City; for the ejection of a&#13;
school inspector in the 17th ward, Detroit.&#13;
England and Prance.&#13;
The convention between Great Britain&#13;
and France, delimiting their respective&#13;
frontiers in the valley of the&#13;
Nile, has boea signed by the marquis&#13;
of Salisbury and the French ambassador.&#13;
The signatories agree to equality&#13;
of commercial treatment from the Nile&#13;
to Lake Chad and between the 5th and&#13;
and 15th parallels of latitude.&#13;
The queen regent has signed the decree&#13;
giving Jules Cambon, French ambassador&#13;
at Washington, full power to&#13;
represent Spain at the exchange of&#13;
ratification of the treaty of peace with&#13;
the United States.&#13;
The Germans, of Samoa, have petitioned&#13;
the foreign office at Berlin, protesting&#13;
against the retention «f Chief&#13;
J ustice Chambers a»d a furtker maintenance&#13;
of the Berlin treaty, which is&#13;
characterized as no longer bearable.&#13;
While the lady Maccabees were in&#13;
session at Omaha, Neb., the building&#13;
caught fire and before they could get&#13;
out two were killed and about 20 injured.&#13;
Aside from the death loss the&#13;
fire was not a serious one. The total&#13;
loss will not exceed $50,000, which is&#13;
fully covered by insurance.&#13;
THE MARKETS.&#13;
LIVE 8TOCK.&#13;
Hew york— Cattle Sheep Lamba Hogs&#13;
Best grades. .$i7j.t^3J »i-»0 eV uu $i a&#13;
Lower grade*..s £5 $4 OS 4 W t&gt; *) 4 IB&#13;
Chicago—&#13;
Best grades.... * 8tQ6 Ort 4 8) 6 6) 4 00&#13;
Lower grades..3 60 (+4 73 a 75 4 *ft ' 8 0)&#13;
Detroit—&#13;
Bestgrads»....4 00A4 73 5 8) ft 4» 8 85&#13;
Lowergradea-.ie W&amp;l 73 4 li 4 fcl " 8 M&#13;
Haffate—&#13;
Best grades....4 10Q5 03 b 90 ft • ) 4 la&#13;
Lower grades..! «J*« tW 4 41 6 40 8 49&#13;
Beatgxade«....4 tt*4 fti 4 U ft ft) 4 00&#13;
Lowerxrafle»..8 0 * 1 UJ 8 ftj 4 Ml 8 56&#13;
Ctaelaaatl—-&#13;
Bestgrade* 4 I H S I 4t» ft •) 4 00&#13;
Low«r grade*..! K&gt;»4 J) *U 4 7* in&#13;
B*atgrade«.. .5 40*4 65 4 73 ft « 4 1«&#13;
Low£rtta4cs..SM*tti 4 M 4 fti S*J&#13;
UKA1N, ETC&#13;
Wheat. Cora, Oats.&#13;
N a t red N f t t n U N a t white&#13;
Mew T«rk ?833*K 40i«tx&#13;
Ohleaco 66160*&#13;
Otaolaaatl&#13;
Clavalaad 68&#13;
ssttm tf»Km&#13;
I8t&#13;
Bnffate&#13;
•Detroit-Hay, No. i timothy.IS oo per too.&#13;
Pouuoe*. &lt;7c per bu. AJv* Poultry, aprlac&#13;
&lt;hickeas, № c per »b; fowla. t*c; turkeys, tic;&#13;
duett*. *c Egg*, •trtctl f frcso, 18c per doe*&#13;
Butler, best dairy, lie per ti&gt;; twostcry, »tt.&#13;
pleasant method and beneficial effects of the well-known remedy, SYRUP OP FIGS, manufacture&#13;
by the California Fig Syrup Company, illustrate the value of obtaining the liquid laxative principle*&#13;
of plants known to be medicinally laxative and presenting them in the form most refreshing to the taste&#13;
and acceptable to the system. It is the one perfect strengthening laxative,&#13;
CLEANSING THE SYSTEM EFFECTUALLY ,DISPELLING&#13;
COLDS AND HEADACHES, PREVENTING FEVERS,&#13;
OVERCOMING HABITUAL CONSTIPATION PERMANENTLY.&#13;
Its perfect freedom from every objectionable quality and substance, and its acting on the kidneys,&#13;
liver and bowels^geatly yet promptly, withoufweakentng or irritating them, make it-lheideal Jlaxativei-&#13;
In the process of manufacturing figs are used, as they are pleasant to the taste, but&#13;
THE MEDICINAL QUALITIES ARE OBTAINED FROM SENNA AND OTHER AROMATIC PLANTS.&#13;
by a method known to the California Fig Syrup Company only. In order to get its beneficial effects, and&#13;
to avoid imitations, please remember the full name of the Company printed on the front of every package.&#13;
Consumers of the choicest products of modern commerce purchase at about the same price that others&#13;
pay for cheap and worthless imitations. To come into universal demand and to be everywhere considered&#13;
the best of its class, an article must be capable of satisfying the wants and tastes of the best informed&#13;
purchasers. The California Fig Syrup Company having met with the highest success in the manufacture&#13;
and sale of its excellent liquid laxative remedy. SYRUP OP FIGS, it has become important to all to have a&#13;
knowledge of the Company and its product. The California Fig Syrup Company was organized more than&#13;
fifteen years ago, for the special purpose of manufacturing and selling a laxative remedy wMchjwouldJbe&#13;
more pleasant to the taste and more beneficial in effect than any other known. The great value of the&#13;
remedy, as a medicinal agent and of the Company's efforts, is attested by the sale of millions of bottles&#13;
annually, and by the high approval of most eminent physicians. As the true and genuine remedy named&#13;
SYRUP OP FIGS is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Company only, the knowledge of that fact&#13;
will assist in avoiding the worthless imitations manufactured by other parties.&#13;
Fbr &lt;Sale by All Drus*i?iste , Pric e 5 0 $ Per BoMe .&#13;
Every Desirable New Feature is Embodied in&#13;
Hartfor d and Vedette Bicycles CotaaU a Ckaiiltts , Motels 59 ud 60 , . . ( 7 5&#13;
M r a M a Cfcala, Motet s 57 ud 51, . . . 6 0&#13;
Martftrtft , Pattern 19 u . 20 3 5&#13;
Vtdttte , fUtons 21 u i t l $25,2 8&#13;
Our 1«M Models were the leaders of last season. We are eloeinf \&#13;
out a limited number of Columbiaa, Model 4fl, (LAd^O at $4ft; Models ;&#13;
45 and 49 (improved) $40; Hartfords, Patterns ? a&amp;d g, at greatly re* &lt;&#13;
duoed prloet*&#13;
See ear New&#13;
POPE MFC * CO. , Hartford , Conn.&#13;
PATEIT •ccuwdo r&#13;
CoHamer*Co S945 Scare s f90a &gt;&#13;
W A K T O D - C IM of bid Health tbat R-I-P-A-T^fl wilt not Irene tit. Saod 5 eeau to Rlpaa* CbMBlra!&#13;
Co.. New York, for W sample* and 1 AW teaUaaoaiala.&#13;
n D A D f i V WEWWSCOVEmr: V l l V r Q Y quick r«Uefui&lt;ic«r«*.v«m&#13;
w t i H*+&amp; tor kowc of (oMiaoaUUand 1&#13;
NEH«BfiT»l*CO TEA TotatrodocoorTw&#13;
MM package on receipt of 4 two-cent stamp*.&#13;
Goareateectocurc OoatWpaiion aa4 Headache.&#13;
AKenrcToaic. 2V\ » package. KeuroUco Jledieia*&#13;
Co., HoraaU»TlU«. X. T". PENSIONSGety&#13;
DOUBLE QUICK&#13;
Writ* CART. O*PAJ№BLL&#13;
WAftffiNQTON .&#13;
"A PAIR FACE MAY PROVE A FOUL BARCAIN."&#13;
MARRY A PLAIN GIRL IF SH E USE S SAPOLIO&#13;
Hea l eate«a4 ia a few boerewttf e&#13;
MAttaUS ' LMMH EJfiBaCT O&#13;
CHEAP FARMS 0 0 YOB WAMT a HOKf&#13;
100,00 0 ACRES wold OB loom time an* —*y n y a w a t i,&#13;
eaeayear. Osme aad eae IU or write. Tmm&#13;
TRCJ4AN MOSB 9*ATS SANK. Saeilee&#13;
Ceater, Mtoav, er&#13;
TUB TRUMAN MOSS ESTATE,&#13;
EXCURSIONSwill&#13;
t«*v« uMoaae Mteh^aa&#13;
« « M * Caat4a. oa Moadar «f«Mh weak.&#13;
TIMM aaMntoM«mi a* aooMnaaaia**ar&#13;
fa r ta « tlm&gt;uc k trip , • • •&#13;
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4ie. moa.&gt;4&gt;r M. V. MvlaaM, fietMtt, M l o a . ^ ^ ^&#13;
W.N.U-.DCT1IOIT-.WO . 12 —&#13;
•'. ; r'Ji&#13;
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% * • •&#13;
ar"&#13;
UNADILLA&#13;
Inez Marshall is home from&#13;
Jackson on a vacation.&#13;
School commences in this disrict&#13;
next Monday, April 8.&#13;
Lou Lane and Emmet Hadley&#13;
have each got new bicycles.&#13;
The proceeds of the lecture&#13;
last Monday night amounted&#13;
110.45.&#13;
to&#13;
Wirt and Gratia Dunning are&#13;
Mrs. T. VanSyckle, who has&#13;
been 411 for the past two weeks,&#13;
is better.&#13;
E. T. Bash has purchased a&#13;
new machine for sawing wagon&#13;
spokes which he expects to ship&#13;
to Lansing. His son, Floyd, of&#13;
the Lansing wheel works, is here&#13;
over-seeing the work.&#13;
Gilbert Fox, who has been&#13;
suffering with several complicated&#13;
diseases, died last Wednesday&#13;
morning, age 82 years. His remains&#13;
were taken to Leslie by&#13;
is \ very&#13;
home on a vacation from the Aloia1 Undertaker J. G. Sayles for interschool.&#13;
' ment after services in theM. E.&#13;
Frel Koepcke who was severely church here,&#13;
injured last week by a falling tree,&#13;
is recovering.&#13;
Will Hopkins has purchased&#13;
the Larry Connor place and will&#13;
move there soon.&#13;
Eva and Ella Montague, of&#13;
Plainfield call on friends in this&#13;
place last Sunday.&#13;
Wm. Pyper and wife visited at&#13;
the home of Kev. Palmer, of Waterloo,&#13;
last Thursday.&#13;
Mies Pearl Hartsuff, of this&#13;
place, is visiting her brother&#13;
Charlie at AunArbor.&#13;
Wm. Smith who has been home&#13;
on a vacation, returned to school&#13;
at Albion Wednesday.&#13;
J. D. Coltou, of Jackson, is&#13;
spending a few days with Mrs.&#13;
Flora Wat6on of this place.&#13;
Mrs. Josie Stiner of Fowlerville&#13;
is spending a few days with her&#13;
mother, Mrs. Louis Hadley.&#13;
Bert Harris, returned home.&#13;
last Wednesday from Big Kapids&#13;
where he has been attending&#13;
school.&#13;
Harry Heatly has accepted a&#13;
position on the L. S. and M. S.&#13;
railroad between Jackson and F t&#13;
Wayne.&#13;
Griff Palmer has rented his&#13;
farm to his son-in-law for the&#13;
co ming summer and will move into&#13;
town.&#13;
EAST MARION. \J&#13;
C. Bennett spent Sunday with&#13;
Howell friends.&#13;
Master Lyle Hendee&#13;
sick with influenza.&#13;
John Rickett was quite sick&#13;
last week with LaGrippe.&#13;
Julia Benedict spent last Sabbath&#13;
with friends in this place.&#13;
Mrs. Claude Hause called on&#13;
Miss Edith Pierce on Sunday last.&#13;
John Hasseuscahl moved to his&#13;
new home near the Center yesterday.&#13;
Chas. Rolison aud wife, of&#13;
Hamburg visited with N. W.&#13;
Pierce and family last Thursday.&#13;
Roy Richards aud Jennie and&#13;
Kitie Montague went to Lansing&#13;
yesterday on an excursion with&#13;
the Howell high school.&#13;
School closes here Friday for&#13;
the spring vacation.&#13;
Mrs. Jay Sheban and son, of&#13;
Munith, are visiting at the home&#13;
of Thomas Shehan's.&#13;
The Hamburg and Putnam&#13;
Farmer's Club will meet at the&#13;
home of John Fohey next Saturday.&#13;
On Wednesday last a number&#13;
of the immediate friends of Miss&#13;
Nellie Cady took tea with her and&#13;
spent a v^ry ploapaut evening.&#13;
The Pettynville Glee Chib&#13;
gave a social hop at Travis hall&#13;
last Wednesday evening. Music&#13;
was furnished by the Larkin&#13;
orchestra.&#13;
"Mrs:&#13;
FETTEYSVILLfc w&#13;
Anna Robrgass was&#13;
Silas Smith has lumber sawed&#13;
out for his new house.&#13;
James Kirkurn, of McComb Co.,&#13;
is visiting at Frank Love's.&#13;
Arthur Wimbles died Saturday&#13;
night after a long and severe illness.&#13;
Chas. Cox is getting ready'to&#13;
bnild a barn on his farm when&#13;
spring comes.&#13;
E. S. Nash has the lumber&#13;
drawn for a basement barn on the&#13;
John Driver estate.&#13;
Wesley Witty is drawing stone&#13;
ready for the barn to be built on&#13;
the McPherson farm this spring.&#13;
A rare treat for the voters on&#13;
election day, as the Ladies' Aid&#13;
of Marion Centre church will&#13;
serve chicken-pie at the school&#13;
house. Bill, 15c.&#13;
Or. Wright Sundayed at Btookbridge.&#13;
Henry Howiett is maktag extensive&#13;
repairs on the Chas. Magee place p repantory&#13;
to moving.&#13;
HerWter Mrs. Gankrojrer and her&#13;
son Joe, oan be found in the Wagener&#13;
building down town. r&#13;
W. H. Marsh paid a visit to bis&#13;
son Stanley, Ht the U. of M. on Friand&#13;
Saturday of last week.&#13;
W. W. Willard, our genial postmaster,&#13;
left the deputy in charge and&#13;
visited the county seat Monday.&#13;
Mrs. A, Hopkins is moving into&#13;
her new house this week; and Lawrence&#13;
McClear is about to oooupy&#13;
her old one.&#13;
Mrs. Betty Marshall is to have extensive&#13;
improvements made on the&#13;
property lately bought of W. H.&#13;
Marsh next to the K 0 T M hall; a&#13;
wing is to be added and a part of the&#13;
building raised.&#13;
in&#13;
Lime and Harrison Hadley&#13;
loaded a car with beans at Gregory&#13;
last week for Aaron Birkhart&#13;
of Chelsea.&#13;
Mr. Kellog, who lives on the&#13;
Cunningham place received news&#13;
last week that he had fallan heir&#13;
to $10,000.&#13;
Albert Watson and Richard&#13;
Mackinder were initiated in the&#13;
K O T M of Gregory last Wednesday&#13;
night.&#13;
Alma and Mattie Grimes, of&#13;
Stockbridge, spent the latter part&#13;
of last week with friends in Gregory&#13;
and Unadilla.&#13;
Frank Hopkins is moving on&#13;
the farm ra^ntly purchased by&#13;
his brother George, five miles&#13;
west of Stockbridge.&#13;
Corporal H. S. Eeed of the 35th&#13;
Michigan is able to be about&#13;
again after a long and severe attack&#13;
61 typhoid fever.&#13;
L. E. Howiett and W. P. Van&#13;
Winkle, of Howell, were in town&#13;
the first of the week looking after&#13;
the interests of the Silver paity.&#13;
Mrs. Butler, who has been&#13;
staying with Janet Webb this&#13;
winter, started for Mason last&#13;
week, where she will visit for a&#13;
few days and then go to her home&#13;
at Alba, Emmett Co.&#13;
W irt Baruum of this place and&#13;
Miss Sarah Banker, of Munith,&#13;
were united in marriage at How-&#13;
•JB, Wednesday, Mar. 22, Eer. B.&#13;
B. Caster officiating. Many are'&#13;
tike good wishes for the newly&#13;
married couple.&#13;
The Silver party of this townatrfp&#13;
beaded their ticket with the&#13;
foH»wi&amp;g: Supervisor, James&#13;
Jtadeo; / Clerk, Andy Bocbe,&#13;
» • Republican party headed&#13;
with the following: Super.&#13;
F n * k Lvm; Clerk, Frank&#13;
Howell last Friday.&#13;
Rube Blade went to Toledo&#13;
last week to look for work.&#13;
The Ladies Aid will serve dinner&#13;
at the home of Steve Van&#13;
Horn town-meeting day.&#13;
Fred Jarvis 1ms moved into&#13;
the Nothard house near Hamburg&#13;
Junction where ho intends&#13;
to work for B^niiett Ice&#13;
this summer.&#13;
TooThin? If so, there must be some&#13;
trouble with its food. Well&#13;
babies are plump; only the&#13;
sick are thin. Are you sure&#13;
the food is all right? Chil-&#13;
I dren can't help h^t grow;&#13;
Jhty must grow if their food&#13;
nourishes them. Perhaps a&#13;
mistake was made in the&#13;
past and as a result the digestion&#13;
is weakened. If that&#13;
is so, don't give the baby&#13;
j a lot of medicine; just use&#13;
your every-day common&#13;
sense and help nature a&#13;
little, and the way to do&#13;
it is to add half a teaspoonful&#13;
of ^ ^&#13;
SCOTT'S&#13;
EMULSION&#13;
to the baby's food three or&#13;
four times a day. The gain&#13;
will begin the very first day&#13;
you give it It seems to&#13;
correct iht digestion and&#13;
gets the baby started right&#13;
again. If the baby b nursing&#13;
but does not thrive, then&#13;
the mother should take the&#13;
emulsion. K wfll have a&#13;
good effect both n m the&#13;
mother and child Twentyfive&#13;
years proves this fad.&#13;
at&#13;
~ — CHAPEtITEMS J "&#13;
Miss Allie Crowley visited&#13;
J. D. Sheets Sunday.&#13;
Geo. Ackley and wife ate diDner&#13;
at E. D. VanBuren's Friday.&#13;
Mr. Gardner, ,of Iosco visited&#13;
his brother at sDaniel Wright's&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. E. L. VanBuren was the&#13;
guest of O. X. Rockwood and family^&#13;
uesday. ..&#13;
MORE LOCAL.&#13;
Perry Blunt spent a few days in&#13;
Detroit the past week.&#13;
S. T. Grimes spent part of the vacation&#13;
with friends in Howell and Lansing.&#13;
The C. G. society of this place and&#13;
the society of East Putnam will exchange&#13;
leaders for .the Easter topic.&#13;
Everyone cordially invited.&#13;
The following are the services held&#13;
at the Congregational ohurch for the&#13;
coming week: Prayer meeting on&#13;
Thursday evening at 7:30. Preparatory&#13;
fievice Saturday afternoon at 2:&#13;
30; Any persons wishing to unite&#13;
with the church are cordially invited&#13;
to attend both of these meetings.&#13;
Communion and Easter services Sanday&#13;
morning. There will be special&#13;
music for the occa&amp;ion. Union services&#13;
in the evening.&#13;
W. W. Barnard has mo?ed into the&#13;
room over his store.&#13;
Archie Dorfoe is clerking for W«&#13;
W. Barnard this weak.&#13;
Prof. Durfoa, wife and daughter&#13;
are visiting in Foirlervilla this weak.&#13;
Easter will be observed bj the M.&#13;
E. Sunday school next Sabbath morning&#13;
at 10:30.&#13;
W. E. Murphy has purchased the&#13;
grocery stock of R. Clinton and Mr&#13;
Clinton will go out of baaintos.&#13;
Evidently many clocks were slow&#13;
Monday evening as so many people&#13;
did not get to the lecture until'about&#13;
8:30.&#13;
This ns vacation week in; school.&#13;
A number of the students and some&#13;
of the teachers are taking the examinations&#13;
at Howell this week.&#13;
We sent out several statements&#13;
the past week and all are responding&#13;
nobly. Thanks, friends, it does us&#13;
good to know we are appreciateb.&#13;
April 3,1899, for purpose of electing&#13;
officers, all members of the&#13;
Pinckney Driving Club are requested&#13;
to meet at the Hotel Tuomey in the&#13;
village of Pinckney.&#13;
The Cong'l Church and society will&#13;
serve meals at Mr. Clinton's building,&#13;
Election day, April 3. All who are&#13;
interested, please bring well tilled baskets&#13;
and lend a helping hand.&#13;
The lecture, "ATalk With the Toilers,&#13;
11 by Rev. E. B. Allen of Lansing&#13;
was largely attended Monday evening&#13;
and t&lt; very one seemed well pleased.&#13;
Mr. Allen ia a forcable speaker and&#13;
presents,his subject in a very pleasing&#13;
manner. The next lecture on the&#13;
course will be by Rev. Slodgett of&#13;
Detroit.&#13;
Mr. Howell, of Jackson, was&#13;
the guest of 6. X. Rockwood the&#13;
first of the week.&#13;
JG. D. VanBuren and wife, and&#13;
Frank Pond and wife spent Sunday&#13;
withr Mrs. Pond's and family&#13;
at Plaiafield.&#13;
Mrs. Hefferman, daughter and&#13;
grand-daughter, and Mrs. Merrels&#13;
visited at O. X. Rock woods one&#13;
day last week.&#13;
Misa Elva Mitchel was brought&#13;
home f Jom Dansville Sunday&#13;
She has been sick for a long&#13;
time and is still confined to her&#13;
bed.&#13;
J. D. Sheets had the misfortune&#13;
to cut his foot while cutting&#13;
wood in the woods Thursday.&#13;
The ax glanced cutting his right&#13;
foot an inch and a half long to&#13;
the bone.&#13;
HORSE-SHOEING&#13;
GENERAL REPAIRING,&#13;
Contracted feet are helped&#13;
andhora^s do not interfere when&#13;
I do the wib^k. Oall and give&#13;
me a trial. ( Shop on Mill street&#13;
"north'of OWa&lt;K&gt;ouse&#13;
ALBERT E. BROWN.&#13;
TRUTHNI ADVERTN&amp; SII&#13;
SILVER LAKE ITEMS. V&#13;
Chas. Voortu8 has rented the Pat&#13;
Lavey place for another year.&#13;
Edd Conors has been very bnsy the&#13;
past week&#13;
Pinckney.&#13;
The high&#13;
drawing btock wood to&#13;
water and cakes of ice&#13;
have rendered the road running past&#13;
Silver Lake impassible.&#13;
Mrs. Alfred Drew, of Dexter, is&#13;
taking care of her sister-in-law, Mrs.&#13;
Random Ferris of this place.&#13;
John My res, of this place, was&#13;
called back to his home in Lima last&#13;
Saturday to eare f c a sick horse.&#13;
Jim Tiplady has rented- the Andrew&#13;
Wilbelm farm of North Ander-&#13;
It is rare but uot unknown. A truthful&#13;
man will have a truthful business, and a truthful business will be as&#13;
particular as to what it says in the newspaper as though the proprietor&#13;
of that business was telling you facts face to face. The Busy Bee&#13;
Hive has built its business on honest goods truthfully advertised.&#13;
We have at this store many things to help us do business.&#13;
The largest and lightest store in town, the best and brightest set of&#13;
help, the largest and'most varied stock of goods, ample capital to buy&#13;
everything for spot cash; but above all what we consider onr greatest&#13;
help and of more value than our capital, we have the confidence of&#13;
the people of Central Michigan. This we prize above all and will&#13;
guard and protect it in every instance.&#13;
Now Let Us Talk Aboot Carpets.&#13;
son&#13;
week.&#13;
will take possession next&#13;
Miss Ellen Mae &amp;y*n, and her friend&#13;
A rubella Li gh thai] of Chelsea, are&#13;
i&#13;
I&#13;
1-&#13;
striding their spring vacation&#13;
Ryan's.&#13;
at W.&#13;
QftEOOftY&#13;
The kisse* Grimes, of Stockbridge,&#13;
were in town fctaaday.&#13;
Fred Roepeke is still in a preotriow&#13;
condition freai his aooJde&amp;t.&#13;
People jraMraUy made toed «ae of&#13;
SMI CHIB*&#13;
day&#13;
Have you got to carpet one of your rooms this&#13;
spring? If you have, come to&gt;us and see the largest and the finest&#13;
stock of Carpets that has ever been showtL in Jackson. The stock is&#13;
surprisingly large and varied. The prices, on the hand, are surprisingly&#13;
small. We have every kind of Carpet, every variety of coloring,&#13;
every style of pattern that you might wish to see. We shall be&#13;
pleased to have you compare our stock with whatever else may be&#13;
shown, and we shall expect to have you tell us, as many others are&#13;
telling us each day, that oaf prices are, for quality such as we show,&#13;
quite ander anything else shown in Jackson.";&#13;
IN DRESS GOODS ' •&#13;
; Our showing is remarkable. At every prioe&#13;
from the lowest up to the finer goods we have a very large range. We&#13;
have bought very generously thss year of every kind of good Dress&#13;
Goods, and we will shew you a tremendously strong line to select&#13;
from. In justice to yourself we would adrift* y o i to look at the .&#13;
different lines shown in Jackson. Other stores in Jackson have good&#13;
lines as well as ourselves; look at them, but look at ours tor sure.&#13;
Then you will be in a better position to judge of our statement that&#13;
we have the largest, the most desirable and the lowest priced line of&#13;
Dress Goods, quality considered, of any house in Central Miehigam.&#13;
L. H. FI&#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 March 30, 1899</text>
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                <elementText elementTextId="1621">
                  <text>Newspaper</text>
                </elementText>
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            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1630">
                  <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 XVII. PINCKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MIOH., THURSDAY, APRIL 6. 1899. No. 14.&#13;
THE APPAREL&#13;
MAKES&#13;
THE&#13;
MAN&#13;
Especially if it 2s the&#13;
App*rd MADE-TOMEASURE&#13;
by u * t&#13;
Fred Kauffmann&#13;
The American Tailor&#13;
CHICAGO&#13;
K. H. CRANE,&#13;
Local Agent&#13;
CLOTHING !&#13;
This season we represent&#13;
Frtwl KaufPmann, one of&#13;
Chicago's best tailors. All&#13;
goods from this hous* are&#13;
guaranteed to be strictly&#13;
MADE to MEASUREAlso&#13;
a PERFECT FIT.&#13;
This bouse makes suits to&#13;
to measure for boys as well&#13;
as meu. We will make silk&#13;
vests a specialty, they are&#13;
the style. From $3.60 up.&#13;
Suits from $12 up&#13;
We also represent the Celebrated&#13;
Work Brothers, of&#13;
Chicago, for ready made&#13;
Clottnng, the latest in style&#13;
aud thoroughly well made.&#13;
For M a c k i n t o s h e s&#13;
for men, and rubber&#13;
capes aud skirts for Ladies',&#13;
we represent the Dundee&#13;
Bubber Co., of Chicago. We&#13;
shall always be glad to show&#13;
j ou our samples in all these&#13;
lines, and solicit your patronage.&#13;
K. H. CRANE.&#13;
I I&#13;
I have just received the largest line of&#13;
PARtOBTABLES&#13;
ever shown in this vicinity.&#13;
Prices from 50c to $5.00 Each.&#13;
Don't Fail to See This Line,&#13;
as well as the many other bar gains&#13;
never shown you before in PINCKNEY.&#13;
HlOSe Sfln Fnamal Tahlfts ara HUMMERS,&#13;
SEE THEM.&#13;
More Bargains Next Week.&#13;
GK SIOLKR.&#13;
For 30 Day: Only.&#13;
With One Dollar in CASH Trade&#13;
We wiH give you a life-size Cravon Portrait&#13;
Call and see samples of the work.&#13;
Lots of new Spring Goods and at&#13;
Prices that will sell them.&#13;
A few odds and ends of Shoes in Ladies',&#13;
Men's and Misses—the price is so low&#13;
on these goods you can't afford to miss&#13;
them.&#13;
COTTONS:&#13;
Both Brown ano Bleached, I am selling at&#13;
the old price—these goods are much higher and will still&#13;
have another advance—it will pay you to buy what cotton&#13;
you are going to use for the next 60 days.&#13;
Specials for Saturday, April 8:&#13;
Best Alaska Red Salmon, per can, 9c&#13;
Men's Boston Sho* Polish per bottle, 15c&#13;
lVKuUr price 25c&#13;
1 Can of Rood Corn, ' 5c&#13;
Don't forget to try our BoyalTia^r Tea,&#13;
The Best in the county.&#13;
Our 20c Coffee is the finest—come and&#13;
Election Is Over.&#13;
• Large Ballot Cast all Over&#13;
A large ballot was cast this year at&#13;
the spring election, especially in Pat*&#13;
nam township, owing to several&#13;
causes. Several am meed men ts were&#13;
up that required the attention of the&#13;
voters. Much interest in the judueship&#13;
and several matters of local interest,&#13;
and an extra fine day caused the&#13;
people to all come oat.&#13;
A hard 6f?bt was put up by several&#13;
candidates but all was done in a good&#13;
natured way. and all accepted the result&#13;
with as good grace as was possible—&#13;
of course part had to'be defeated.&#13;
After the smoke bad cleared away&#13;
it was found that the democrats had&#13;
won everything in Putnam with the&#13;
exception of Clerk, K H. Teeple.&#13;
For .Judge, W. P. VanWinkle re&#13;
reived 52 majority and for School&#13;
Commissioner, W. E. Robb received&#13;
45 majority. All the am mend men ts&#13;
were lost in this township.&#13;
The following are the officers elected&#13;
w;tb their majorities:&#13;
Total Dunber of balota cart 348&#13;
Torown oat 8&#13;
Supervisor,&#13;
Clerk,&#13;
Treasurer,&#13;
Justice,&#13;
Board ol Review,&#13;
High-way Com.&#13;
School Inspector,&#13;
Constable, 1st.,&#13;
" tod.,&#13;
" 3rd.,&#13;
" 4th..&#13;
O. V. Van Winkle. 47&#13;
Wm. Murphy. SJ&#13;
rep. R H Tv«ple. 4&#13;
Bdward A. K i u , 91&#13;
Mac Monk*. 57&#13;
J. WhHes—»t-&#13;
Mlebeal Kelly. 68&#13;
P. Monroe, 48&#13;
John Ch&amp;lker. 48&#13;
BemyCobb, 11&#13;
J. Upe«rs. n&#13;
The board of supervisors will aland&#13;
11 democrats and 5 republicans. Toe&#13;
following are the townships and the&#13;
majorities given for judge. The&#13;
eleven democratic townships .will bo&#13;
given first and where Mr. Smith received&#13;
a majority, it will be marked&#13;
with an 8:&#13;
Brighton&#13;
COD way&#13;
Coiioctah, S.&#13;
Dnerlk-ld&#13;
Genoa&#13;
Hamburg&#13;
Ho well&#13;
Bnndy&#13;
Marlon&#13;
Putnam&#13;
Uoabilla&#13;
Green Oak, 9.&#13;
Hartland, 8.&#13;
Ioftco, S.&#13;
Oceola&#13;
Tyrone&#13;
118&#13;
78&#13;
12&#13;
80&#13;
69&#13;
09&#13;
860&#13;
117&#13;
14&#13;
68&#13;
16&#13;
68&#13;
19&#13;
38&#13;
tie&#13;
50&#13;
Wallace, for School Commissioner,&#13;
won in *u« county by 513. •&#13;
LOCAL tiEWS.&#13;
S&#13;
A fine line; call and see them.&#13;
Hou^e-cleanincj Jime ip H e r e&#13;
And you want to see our&#13;
WALL PAPER,&#13;
We have the latest designs and patterns.&#13;
PRICES ARE RIGHT.&#13;
A FULL AND COMPLETE LINE OF&#13;
DRUGS,&#13;
PATENT MEDICINES,&#13;
TOILET ARTICLES,&#13;
PERFUMERY,&#13;
ETC.&#13;
AT THE CORNER DRUG STORE.&#13;
F. A. SIGLER&#13;
STEEL RANGES&#13;
The best steel ranges on earth for&#13;
AD.&#13;
i s A p r i l . *••&#13;
Saturday WAS all-fool's day.&#13;
L. D. Brokaw was in town last&#13;
week.&#13;
Tbe supervisor will soon be making&#13;
bis round.&#13;
Miss Boyle entertained her sister&#13;
from L**lie tbe past week.&#13;
Misses Mocoo and Maud Teeple&#13;
were in Jackson Saturday.&#13;
Gre«n» of the D. of 11., was&#13;
home tbe first of the week.&#13;
Rev. Simpson and wife visited their&#13;
daughter in Mt Clec&amp;ens the past&#13;
week.&#13;
Rev. K. H. Crane and wife spent&#13;
part of the past week with relatives •&#13;
in Hartland.&#13;
Cha*. Root moved his family to&#13;
Hamburg tiie first of tbe week, where&#13;
he has taken a Farm.&#13;
Alf Ph«&gt;p* paid $730 for Mason&#13;
Nat wood at the J. V. N. Gregory sale&#13;
at Deit#r l*a£ week.&#13;
lira Reeves returned from Bay City&#13;
Saturday, where he hat been spendinjr&#13;
a Urn days with relatives.&#13;
Tat W C T U Utfiet vill meet at&#13;
tte home of lira. L*at SiirUr&#13;
afteraooo at 2 o'ocloek.&#13;
feotn cotoneactd the&#13;
of ashoui at Parker's Coraert&#13;
lor&#13;
Are at Teeple and Cadwell's Hardware Store.&#13;
Having sold a number of them which have been working&#13;
successfully for a year or more, proves them good.&#13;
We warrant them to bake as quickly and with as little&#13;
fuel, either coal or wood, as any ran^re made, and we&#13;
know they will hold fire over night as well as any air tight&#13;
stove which proves them to be well and substantialy made.&#13;
Do not fail to examine these ranges. No trouble to show&#13;
them. '&#13;
VERY TRULY YOURS,&#13;
TEEPLE CAD WELL.&#13;
tC&#13;
ADVio&#13;
We are showing a larger line than ever in ey^sy depart*&#13;
ment, and asortment, combined with right pricey&#13;
Sells Good*&#13;
F o r t h e M e n : * •.*"..&#13;
You will have heavy footwear for&#13;
The coming season. „ Z&#13;
We wish to sell you—' ~ 1V&#13;
We can't hope to sell "all, but to see f&#13;
Our sttxrk is to buy.&#13;
Ladies: -&#13;
We dove Shoes also for you&#13;
In strictly lat* t^tiy styles at reasonable prices,&#13;
Also old styIe* with corresponding pricwa.&#13;
You should see our Silks. From the gayest ol gay colon to th*&#13;
sober black, a pretty line may be found.&#13;
A Few Trifle*:&#13;
2GansSfilmoii..... ...17c&#13;
Plaid Buitintn* .6J©'&#13;
Good Browti Sheeting l e F. G. DA6KS0N. ;&#13;
A&#13;
• • • • a&#13;
&gt;&#13;
• • # - • « • •&#13;
• j&#13;
; -:x'.:".v-:V"v&#13;
'-. F.;; ;f .f&#13;
A " . ( •- '&#13;
&lt;• X ir&#13;
t , - ' . ' . • • • '&#13;
^ V&#13;
&amp;&#13;
!&#13;
LH&gt;:&gt;i, m&#13;
r&#13;
&amp;&#13;
№&#13;
. ^ r ' v . •&#13;
Irv-&#13;
&gt;••*'•&#13;
Doings of the Wsek Recorde d in a&#13;
Brief Style,&#13;
CONCISE AND INTERESTING ,&#13;
-JL C«}any of S t Luutaaji* Golnf U»v&#13;
B«tjr Land to Prepare for Ckrlat's&#13;
•4to«oli&gt; « — Michigan's Mart-&#13;
; A N U M Widow •3,00 0 Out.&#13;
Ready for the Coming of Christ&#13;
Tlie Dickiuson family, living1 in the&#13;
vicinity of St. Louis, Gratiot county,&#13;
IUM sold their worldly possessions in&#13;
thai neighborhood and the first week&#13;
l a May will start for the Holy Land to&#13;
ftmsd a colony, la the party will be&#13;
I^eroy Dickinson, his mother and two&#13;
larotaers; also James Nicola, Mr. and&#13;
Thomas Harrison, and Mr. and&#13;
James Emory. The colony will&#13;
enough money from the sale of&#13;
their St. Louis property to purchase&#13;
mbout 200 acres of land in the vicinity&#13;
of Jerusalem, and expect to make it&#13;
their future home. They are members&#13;
-of the Church of God, and it is their&#13;
belief that the people of God will all&#13;
be gathered together prior to the coming&#13;
of Christ, and that Jerusalem will&#13;
be the gathering1 place. They waut to&#13;
lie on the spot in time. It is the intention&#13;
of the party to engage in missionary&#13;
work and to devote moat of their&#13;
•tim e to religious services.&#13;
Old Han Found Dead Near Clio.&#13;
[, Alex. Marr, aged 64, who lived alone&#13;
o n the old Moore farm five miles east&#13;
of Clio, and was supposed to be a&#13;
taiser, was found dead on the floor by&#13;
John Boyer, a neighbor, who went&#13;
•ove r to see him, and on seeing no&#13;
tracks in the snow that fell during the&#13;
Might, tried the door, which was unlocked,&#13;
aud upon entering found the&#13;
body lying on the face. Abraham&#13;
Coodfellow, druggist and undertaker&#13;
there, went to prepare the body for&#13;
burial, when outside he* found a chloroform&#13;
bottle with his label on, and he&#13;
remembered selling- the bottle, to-r frether with a bottle of alcohol, the&#13;
night before to Wm, Spears, who had&#13;
been working &gt;ki this vicinity for several&#13;
months. 'Tlie same night of the&#13;
.accident Spears hired a livery rig,&#13;
which was 'also seen tied in front of&#13;
old man's house at a late hour.&#13;
was arrested at Kerch Run and&#13;
•take n to the county jail at Flint.&#13;
'Marl-Landi In Michigan.&#13;
I Prof. I. C. Russell, of the geological&#13;
•department of the U. of M., has recently&#13;
made an examination of marllands&#13;
in the southern part of the state,&#13;
land found remarkably favorable conttttiens.&#13;
The marl, mixed with ordijanry&#13;
«lay, is used in the manufacture&#13;
•o f Portland cement, and Michigan will&#13;
evidently take a leading place in this&#13;
industry. The marl occurs as a highly&#13;
calcareous or limy mud or ooze in the&#13;
bottom of lakes and in marshes. It&#13;
tonally contains shells and appears&#13;
Jight colored or nearly white on drylag,&#13;
but it sometimes darkened by&#13;
orpranic matter. The swamp - lands&#13;
where the marl occurs are usually con-&#13;
• nidered as of little value, but they are&#13;
tJy worth more per acre than the&#13;
of agricultural land, and at the&#13;
.present time are in demand.&#13;
•• " The Same Old Way.&#13;
• "Three months ago farmers in this&#13;
fctate could not get 25 cents per bushel&#13;
for their potatoes. Then came the big&#13;
Jreeze-up and the reports that all pitched&#13;
potatoes had been ruined sent the&#13;
r^rice np flying. Fifty cents was freely&#13;
'Offered by buyers, but many whose&#13;
^potatoes were in good condition re-&#13;
.Aued to sell at that price, although it&#13;
, double the top figure of a few&#13;
before. Now it is being found&#13;
• that the tubers in pits were not nearly&#13;
-.mt badly injured as was supposed, and&#13;
price has dropped again, and those&#13;
could have sold at 50 cents, but&#13;
out for a dollar, are doing some&#13;
tail thinking.&#13;
of Dead Soldiers Coming Home,&#13;
"It would," writes Chas. E. Kiplinger,&#13;
Michigan commissioner on the exting&#13;
of the bodied of the dead solfrom&#13;
this state, "be well to notify&#13;
-*sU persons interested, through the col*&#13;
-vnaasof toe press, that the steamer&#13;
taring on board all bodies of soldiers&#13;
wfeo died in Cuba, will arrive in New&#13;
York the latter part of ApriL" In a&#13;
report to Gov. Pingree, Mr. Kipllnger&#13;
«ays arrangements hare been made to&#13;
Hsnrpedite the work In wtytah he is en;&#13;
* Cuffed* it« progrfafto date Kiting been&#13;
alow. In all t25 bodie* have Bow been&#13;
•rimmed, of whifb 90 belonged&#13;
Sftta Michigan v*!t*Uer I ' a'.&#13;
O«t With a&#13;
Borne months ago Harry P. "Wail*,&#13;
of taeNiles band, jtu»pe£ *&#13;
leaving behind n«fea«rotts&#13;
A Nile* widow,&#13;
^ a year ag*t J^f&#13;
They wast to n u&#13;
ti went into* |&gt;&#13;
of&#13;
th« -woffjsa^-ukakis^.j»s&gt;r&#13;
r 6bc has returned to&#13;
It now dafalfQ^M that he,,has,&#13;
wiresaad bis right name Is Wedge,.&#13;
A Confederate Flag io be&#13;
At the battle of BeatoavUle, South&#13;
Carolina, on March "ljjj 1865, the H *&#13;
Michigan infantry'captured the flag of&#13;
the 40th North Carolina, regiment, aqd&#13;
ihe flag It stilt preferred as 9a* of the&#13;
treasured tfbpalw or the. rebellion in&#13;
the Michigan military museum. Th*&#13;
survi vors of the North Carolina regiment&#13;
have tried repeatedly for yearn&#13;
to get it back, and now, at last, they&#13;
seem to be likely to be successful. TUe&#13;
military committee presented a concurrent&#13;
resolution in the house,, which&#13;
was adopted under suspended rules to&#13;
return the same.&#13;
},450,«O0 POQD&lt;U of ft&#13;
To raise a sufficient amount of beets&#13;
to supply sugar for this state would&#13;
require 83,000 acres annually, or a total&#13;
of 335,000 acres, as beets should be&#13;
raised on land only once in three years.&#13;
It is also estimated that 28 factories,&#13;
with a capacity of over 5,000,000 pounds&#13;
each per year, would be required to&#13;
supply the demand. This, at the&#13;
present rate of bounty, would require&#13;
the payment of 81,4ft0,00i) out of the&#13;
state treasury.&#13;
STATE GOSSIP.&#13;
Gov. Pingree has named April 38 as&#13;
Arbor Day.&#13;
Amateur counterfeiters are worrying&#13;
the people of Copemish.&#13;
Hubbardston has pledged 915,000 for&#13;
the proposed railroad from Marshall to&#13;
Bay City.&#13;
Homer can get a cement factory giving&#13;
employment to 75 men if a bonus&#13;
of |ft,0OQ is forthcoming.&#13;
The Sterling house at Sterling, was&#13;
nearly destroyed by fire, caused by defeotive&#13;
flue. Insured.&#13;
Frank A. Keyser, of Lansing, took a&#13;
dose of laudanum after quarreling&#13;
with his wife. Pumped out and saved.&#13;
Hiram Sutton, the founder of Munith,&#13;
was arrested and taken to the&#13;
Kalamazoo asylum because he was&#13;
violently insane.&#13;
There is not a tfaoant house in&#13;
Homer and several families are ready&#13;
to move in as soon as acooramodiations&#13;
can be provided.&#13;
Navigation between Detroit and&#13;
Cleveland was opened Mar. 27, when&#13;
the City of Detroit _made the run in a&#13;
little over six hours.&#13;
Mrs. Clara Thayer, of Mason, who&#13;
was recently convicted of forgery, has&#13;
been sentenced to five years in the&#13;
Detroit house of correction.&#13;
The Ann Arbor Railroad company is&#13;
preparing to erect a steel bridge over&#13;
the Raisin river at Dundee, to take the&#13;
place of the woodon one now in use.&#13;
The Rapid Railway of Detroit has&#13;
applied for a franchise to build a road&#13;
from Detroit to Port Huron from its&#13;
Mt. Clemens terminal, through St.&#13;
Clalr. __&#13;
The postoffices at Clio, Elsie, Lawton,&#13;
Man ton, Rudyard and South&#13;
Haven, will be made international&#13;
money order offices on and after&#13;
April 1.&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Vansceiver, of Lapeer,&#13;
was terribly burned by throwing a&#13;
lighted match into the draperies of a&#13;
sofa. She was saved by rolling her in&#13;
the snow.&#13;
It has been given out from reliable&#13;
authority that the Michigan division&#13;
of the Cincinnati Southern is to be sold&#13;
within 30 days to the Detroit &amp; Lima&#13;
Northern&#13;
The Michigan National Guard association&#13;
is planning for a reunion of all&#13;
the officers concerned in the late war.&#13;
It will be held at Grand Rapids, probably&#13;
in May.&#13;
Horace Sutherby, 16 years old, fell,&#13;
off a straw stack onto a hayknife, near&#13;
his home, some distance from Flint.&#13;
The blade entered his throat and he&#13;
will not live.&#13;
Because a Grand Rapids policeman,&#13;
did not assist a lady whom he had seen&#13;
fall on a slippery walk to her feet&#13;
again, he was suspended from duty by&#13;
the police board.&#13;
Kalamazoo township board has&#13;
granted 30-year franchises for electric"&#13;
lines over the Silver Creek and Gull&#13;
roads. They must be In operation&#13;
within 18 months.&#13;
Sheep shearing is booming around&#13;
Vernon. There ace four men who&#13;
have already sheared over 4,000 sheep&#13;
since last January and they have about&#13;
as many more to shear.&#13;
For some time past chicken thieves&#13;
have been plundering farmers in the&#13;
vicinity of Willow. Wm. Tabian and&#13;
Isreal Grunda have been arrested&#13;
charged with being the culpits.&#13;
It has been announced that the proposed&#13;
traffic combine between the&#13;
Flint &amp; Pere Marquette and the Canadian&#13;
Pacific at Port Huron has been&#13;
accomplished, and will take effect&#13;
April 1.&#13;
Peter Kallonski, of Calumet, is&#13;
locked up for trying to kill Eric Kaari,&#13;
with an ax. Kallooaki became enraged&#13;
Hit Kaari and eat aU heaaopea. No&#13;
hype is entertained for Kaari't re*&#13;
oOvery.&#13;
Prof. W. B. Barrows, of the &gt;atate agricultural&#13;
college, declares the bounty&#13;
for killing English sparrows la unnee*&#13;
essary and injudicious. Ee atya the&#13;
sparrow* will not increase rapidly in&#13;
this eoW climate and if killing is neeeasary&#13;
a l l t t k poison would be&#13;
Iwaaane-and lees expensive.&#13;
AD organisation of the Past Noble&#13;
Grands mud Nobte (brands of the X. O.&#13;
O. F. lodges of Huron county has been&#13;
organized for the promotion of Oddfellow&#13;
ism in the Thumb,&#13;
Supervisor Barry Byerae, of Brevoort&#13;
township, NUekinae county, killed&#13;
three large wolves the other day and&#13;
one two weeks ago, near Brevoort&#13;
lake, There are many more in the&#13;
vicinity.&#13;
Joseph Kay and Mrs. Nora Keyser,&#13;
who eloped from Lansing last fall,&#13;
have been arrested at Jackson on a&#13;
charge of adultery preferred by Mrs.&#13;
Kay. Both left large families la&#13;
Lansing.&#13;
The «afe at the D., G. R. AW. railroad&#13;
depot at Howell, was blown open&#13;
and about $10 taken from i t The&#13;
safe was drilled from the top and the&#13;
door blown off, breaking the glass in&#13;
the otfiee also..&#13;
Lyons cltliens have subscribed $8,-&#13;
000 of the ?10,OOO asked for by a railroad&#13;
whied proposes to build a line&#13;
through that town, from Marshall to&#13;
Bay City. This will make the third&#13;
railroad for Lyons.&#13;
Mrs. John Harre, 74 years old, a&#13;
resident of Jackson for 50 years, living&#13;
alone, was foifnd dead in bed. She&#13;
was smothered by coal gas. She had&#13;
shut off the draft in the pipe and left&#13;
the stove draft .open.&#13;
The coroner and a number of citizens&#13;
of Marshall rushed to a piece of woods&#13;
on the report* that a dead body had&#13;
been found, but discovered that it was&#13;
that of a sheep. Their remarks will&#13;
not bear publication.&#13;
Hiram Sutton, an old man residing&#13;
at Munity, and who has onco been in&#13;
the asylum for the insane, is again in&#13;
jail at Jackson. He will probably be&#13;
sent to Kalnmazoo, as he is very violent&#13;
and wants to kill people.&#13;
The Pittsburg Coal Co., who are&#13;
prospecting near Sterling, struck coal&#13;
at a depth of 125 feet, but the vein is&#13;
so small it will amount to nothing.&#13;
They are going to drill deeper in. hopes&#13;
of finding a thicker vein.&#13;
Daniel Ross, a farmer living north&#13;
of Lapeer, is the proud parent of two&#13;
of the tiniest mites of humanity ever&#13;
heard of—a pair of twins weighing&#13;
less than two pounds. The mother&#13;
and children are doing well.&#13;
A vein of coal has been struck at&#13;
Fergus, a little hamlet north of Cheasaning,&#13;
that is proving to be a valuable&#13;
one. Thirty new tenement houses will&#13;
be erected at once as a result. Tiie&#13;
new village is to be known as North&#13;
Fergus.&#13;
State Inspector Trine has reported&#13;
the result of his investigation of the&#13;
orchards and nurseries of the state.&#13;
Out of the 2*0 inspected but 22 were&#13;
affected by the San Jose scale aud in&#13;
18 of these the pest is thought to have&#13;
been exterminated.&#13;
Since the passage of the homestead&#13;
8TATI&#13;
What Is to be known as th&#13;
Peaaaon inheritance tax bil^s a m&#13;
ufe that has been framed by the, Jjouse&#13;
committee on general taxation and reported&#13;
favorable. It is substantially&#13;
the same. th}ag as eaek 'Q( tW&gt;&lt; separate&#13;
bills introduced by Dingley and&#13;
Pearson, except that Ut places the&#13;
handling of the tax In the hands of the&#13;
auditor-general instead of the secretary&#13;
of state. In brief the bill provides for&#13;
a tax of 5 per cent on all legacies over&#13;
35,000, except whea it is left to a direct&#13;
relative.&#13;
Although the McLeod municipal&#13;
ownership bill passed through the&#13;
usual ordeal before becoming a law,&#13;
it now appears that the citizens of Detroit&#13;
proposes to have something to&#13;
say in the matter before the deal "is&#13;
finally effected, as it was deeided at a&#13;
mass meeting that the subject should&#13;
be submitted to a popular vote.&#13;
If there was any doubt that the fish&#13;
trust is using money to block the passage&#13;
of the. open, season bill tb^peshould&#13;
not be much after the following&#13;
statement, by Rep. Gustin Is read:&#13;
"Capt. Winegar, who represents the&#13;
fish trust and is lobbying against the&#13;
bill, told me be had 835,000 to spend in&#13;
fighting it."&#13;
'Maj. Buckingham, of Flint, has been&#13;
named by the governor as a member of&#13;
the state board of assessors- under the&#13;
Atkinson bill, and his name has been&#13;
sent.to the senate.&#13;
It's now a law, Gov. Pingree has&#13;
Bigned the municipal ownership MUr&#13;
and thus the quickest piece of legislation&#13;
on record has been accomplished.&#13;
The appointment of Maj. Geo&gt; W,&#13;
Buckingham, of Flint, as a member of&#13;
the state board of assessors, has been&#13;
confirmed by the senate.&#13;
The senate has confirmed the appointment&#13;
of H. J. Harvey, of Battle&#13;
Creek, as a member of the state dental&#13;
board.&#13;
44 One Swallow Does&#13;
Myriads of birds announce&#13;
the opening of bright days and&#13;
bring promise of renewed&#13;
health and strength. They,&#13;
teach us 4 Lesson—to set o*r\&#13;
human house in order by&#13;
thoroughly cte$nsing out&#13;
blood, making &amp; mew, pure&#13;
and bright*&#13;
The one specific wfch wjhtJQti t? %KA&#13;
coraplish this Is Hood'i Qareaparilla,&#13;
America's Greatest Spring Medicine..&#13;
Itf work if thorough, and gpod health&#13;
ia sure to follow.&#13;
Rh«urratltm~M Inflammatory jtmx.&#13;
raatlim caused me suffering so that I eoold&#13;
not aleep or walk. Had no appetite and&#13;
medicine seemed useless. Finally used&#13;
Hood'a SarsaparlUa whlcb took away all&#13;
pain." Mas. STELLA Noatit, Marion, Ohio.&#13;
Malaria- " I waa a&gt; soldier, and after&#13;
typbold fever I had- favor and ague, rheumatism&#13;
and nervous prostration so that I&#13;
oould not work. Nothing helped until&#13;
Hood's 8arsaparilla cured me completely&#13;
BO that I lose no time now/1 J,JJ. r&#13;
Cheltenham, Pa.&#13;
Hood'i&#13;
oily&#13;
cn&gt;» it v t t b g n t u t l&#13;
to t»k» with Hood'» S w a&#13;
Government, religion, property and&#13;
books are nothing but the scafioldiug&#13;
to build men.&#13;
law in '93 the state land office has&#13;
granted 3,3*0 certificates to homesteaders&#13;
who have made homes for themselves&#13;
in the northern par^ of the state.&#13;
The state still has 270,178 acres subject&#13;
to homestead entry.&#13;
Anna Riggs, aged lft, of Jaukson.&#13;
who was unable to secure her parents'&#13;
consent to her marriage, petitioned&#13;
the probate judge to appoint a guardian&#13;
for her so she could marry Fred&#13;
Bishop. This the judge did and Aona&#13;
is now a Bishop in spite of her parents.&#13;
Di^A^W. Crane, of Kalamazoo, who&#13;
attende&amp;*~* smallpox patient three&#13;
weeks ago in consultation, is now sick&#13;
with the disease, and is under strict&#13;
quarantine. His wife, Bev, Caroline&#13;
Bartlett Crane, is in southern California&#13;
for her health. There are now&#13;
two new cases in the city.&#13;
The habit of smoking among Lansing&#13;
high school pupils has impaired&#13;
the scholarship of the smokers to such&#13;
an extent, and set such a bad example&#13;
for the younger scholars, that the&#13;
board of education has authorized&#13;
Supt Laird to suspend all pupils who&#13;
fail to abstain from smoking.&#13;
While the Mt. Pleasant &amp; Beaverton&#13;
train crews were both attempting to&#13;
make a flying switch at once at Cole*&#13;
man they came together, and the&#13;
Beaverton coach was lifted from the&#13;
rails and thrown over on its side, Mrs.&#13;
Margaret O'Brien, who was a passenger,&#13;
was severely if not fatally injnred.&#13;
On complaint of Carrie Williams, a&#13;
15-year-old girl, Wm. Parsons, aged 65,&#13;
of Calumet, has been arrested on the&#13;
charge of assault with intent to raps.&#13;
The girl worked in Parsons home as a&#13;
domestic. He is a well-known citizen&#13;
and the case is a sensational one.&#13;
Parsons denies the charge and is out&#13;
on ball.&#13;
Michigan Methodists must raise&#13;
1750,000 as their quota of the amount&#13;
to be raised in the United States by&#13;
Jan. 1, 1901, for benevolent purposes.&#13;
The presiding elders of Michigan and&#13;
the trustees of Albion college were in&#13;
session at Lansing recently, discussing&#13;
how it could be done. The amount U&#13;
about 17 per Methodist.&#13;
John Anda, representing Earl Bros.,&#13;
wholesale produce dealers, of Chicago,&#13;
has procured a lease from Chicago A&#13;
Wast Michigan officials for a tit* OB&#13;
whiefc to build a branch house at Traverse&#13;
City. The firm Is to be known as&#13;
John Anda A Co., and" will buy all&#13;
kinds of fnriu,s Potatoes and applet.&#13;
The nru fxpact* V ¥*•• their buildings&#13;
comported « d tfe Tetdy l b l '&#13;
ness by June 1. .&#13;
Bllli Signed by the Governor;&#13;
The following bills have been signed&#13;
by the governor:&#13;
To amend act No. 448. local acts №97. to revise&#13;
and amend act Incorporating Bay City, as&#13;
approved Mar. 30, 1881. and May $&gt;, 1807: to&#13;
amend section 4 of act No. 448, local acts, 18»&gt;7,&#13;
being un act to amend to revise rtnd amend an&#13;
act to Incorporate Bay City, as approved Maren&#13;
90, 1681; to chanjje the boundary of PuUerville.&#13;
Euton county, by detaching certain territory&#13;
anfl adding tbeMam,* &gt;o tb« towoshtp pf Bernon;&#13;
to provide for the purchase of books and equipments&#13;
for the state library and tne Midfalgaa&#13;
traveling library.&#13;
Amend ing the aot providing for the formation&#13;
of corporation* for the purpone of owning,&#13;
malatainLui r and Jfliproviag land^. and athjer&#13;
property kept for the purpose of summer reports&#13;
or for ornament, recreation or amusement;&#13;
to reincorporute the First Universulist society&#13;
of Fairfleld, for SO years from Sept. ft, 1804. ana&#13;
making valid all acts of uaid society from Sept.&#13;
5, 18IU to Feb. 20, 1898; providing for Inspection&#13;
of illuminating oilH, manufactured from petroleum&#13;
or coal oils, repeating aot 197 of the laws&#13;
of 1878 and aot M of the laws of 18U3; amend ing&#13;
the act under which the city of Ann Arbor is&#13;
relnoorporated and to revise the charter of Hfrtd&#13;
city; authorizing the formation of corporations&#13;
for intellectual, scientific, aesthetic, spiritual,&#13;
llbeial cultnre or Inquiry, and to repeal&#13;
••an . act to authorize the formation of BH»Ociatlonw&#13;
for lntene'ctmn. sclenting, aesthetic.&#13;
How't ThU?&#13;
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for an v&#13;
case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's&#13;
Catarrh Cure.&#13;
F. J. CHENEY &amp; CO., Props.. Toledo,p.&#13;
We, the undersigned, have known F. J.&#13;
Cheney for the last IS yearn, and believe him&#13;
perfectly honorable in all business transactions&#13;
and financially able to carry out any obligations&#13;
made by their firm.&#13;
WWST&amp;TRUAX, Wholosalo Drusrgist8,Toledo.O.&#13;
WARDING, KlNNAN &amp;MABVIN, Wholesale Druggists.&#13;
Toledo, O&gt;&#13;
Hall's Cr.tarrh Cure 1st taken internally, actinst&#13;
directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of&#13;
the system. TefUtmonlnlR sent free. Price 76o&#13;
per bottle. Sold by all Druggists.&#13;
Hall'8 Family Pills are the best.&#13;
In the hour of adversity be not without&#13;
hope, for crystal rain falls from&#13;
black clouds.&#13;
spiritual, religious or liberal culture or inquiry.&#13;
approved May tt), 187V;" changing the date for&#13;
holding annual election and senool meeting for&#13;
the township of Crystal Falls. Iron county;&#13;
amending SAC. 1, chapter 1. acts 16, laws 1862,&#13;
being an act far the reorganization of the military&#13;
forces of the state of Michigan; repealing&#13;
the act to create a board of commlsKlonerH for&#13;
the purpose of securing for use In certain common&#13;
or private schools tsthe state, e&gt; uniform&#13;
series or text books, to nx a maximum price to&#13;
be charged for nald books and to make an appropriation&#13;
for. carrying* out provisions of Bald&#13;
act; for the publication, printing and binding of&#13;
10,000 copies of the history of Michigan organizations,&#13;
Chlokamaujra, Chattanooga and Missionary&#13;
Ridge, written, by Capt. Chas. &gt;E, Belknap,&#13;
and providing for distribution of same;&#13;
authorizing the trvwnship, of Burt, Alge*oounty.&#13;
to borrow money for public improvements and&#13;
to Issue bonds therefor t to change the name of&#13;
Frank Crawford to Frank Lull; makiig the&#13;
president of the village of Ontonagon, Ontonagon&#13;
eotiuty, ex-offlcio. member of the board of&#13;
supervisors of said county; organizing the union&#13;
school district of the township of Hawes, Alcona&#13;
county; vacating the village of Chose, Lake&#13;
county; authorizing the Oak Grove cemetery&#13;
association of Napoleon. Jackson sounty. to&#13;
convey the cemetery to the board of health of&#13;
Napoleon, to be used for maintains a cemetery;&#13;
detaching certain territory from the townships*&#13;
of Dafter. Rudyard and Plckford, in Chlppewa&#13;
countg, and u&gt; orgaaizs the township of Kinross&#13;
in said county; to amend the act providing for&#13;
the appointment and tlxing compensation and&#13;
denning the duties of stenographer for the probate&#13;
court for Lapeer county, and for the taking&#13;
of testimony on examination of persons charged&#13;
with criminal oflensen ta said county: amending&#13;
an act to incorporate the city; of Battle Creek.&#13;
Advices from Nicaragua say the people&#13;
are weary of continual fighting and&#13;
that the sentiment for annexation to&#13;
the Uuited States is daily growing&#13;
stronger.&#13;
Try Grotn-o! Try Graln-ol&#13;
Ask your grocer today to show you a&#13;
package of GRAIN-0, the new food&#13;
drink that takes the place of coffee.&#13;
Th« children may drink it without Injury&#13;
as well as the adult. All who ttry&#13;
it, like it, GRAIN-0 has that rich seal&#13;
brown of Mocha or Java, but it is made&#13;
from pure grains, apd tbeanost delicat*&#13;
stomach receives it without distress.&#13;
One-fourth of the price of coffee. 15c.&#13;
and 25c. per package. Sold by ail&#13;
grocers.&#13;
I ' HI M I ' i&#13;
The-aged who have studied In their&#13;
youth da not need to learn, birt frtterely&#13;
to recollect.&#13;
Are You i;«lnjr Allen'* Foot-Eater&#13;
It is th£ only cure for Swollen,&#13;
(Smarting. Burning, Sweating Fe#t,&#13;
Corns and Bunions. Ask for Allen's&#13;
Foot-Ease, a powder to be shaken into&#13;
the shoes. At all Druggists and Shoe&#13;
Stores, 25c Samples sent FREE; Address,&#13;
Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y.&#13;
The most dangerous acquaintance a&#13;
married woman can make Is the female&#13;
confidante.&#13;
Coughing Leads to {L'pniumptlon.&#13;
Kemp's Balsam, will stop the cough&#13;
at once. Up to your druggist. today&#13;
and get a sample bottle free. Sold in&#13;
25 and 50 cent bottles.- Go at once; delays&#13;
are dangerous.&#13;
. ,&#13;
THE MARKETS.&#13;
LIVE STOCK.&#13;
Hew York— Gattle ftheep&#13;
Best grades.. .t«74.4.641 »&gt; c&#13;
Lower grades..* S5&amp;4 60 4 25&#13;
ft 0)&#13;
2 76&#13;
16 25&#13;
0 U&#13;
Ho**&#13;
4 IS&#13;
Best grades..,. 5 8^Q* 8)&#13;
Lower grades..3 »j,4 U&#13;
Detroit—&#13;
Best grades.... 4 0TA4 7)&#13;
Lower grade*..* *&gt;£* 71&#13;
Baffalo—&#13;
Best grades ...4 1)QS W&#13;
Lower grades..^ 6 J * 4 «U&#13;
Cl«V*l»Bd—&#13;
Best grade«.... 4 «1«4&#13;
Lower grades..! 0JO*&#13;
Clartaaatl—&#13;
Bestgradea.. ,.4 rtftl f*»&#13;
Lower grates..* n&amp;*&#13;
BePati tgtrsabdtreg*—.... »*&gt; IS n Lower gra4ea.t4»fr4 4,&#13;
Eclipses of the moon were seen by&#13;
daylight in 1866, 1868, 1880.&#13;
Accidents come with distressing&#13;
quency on the farm. Cuts, bruises,&#13;
stings, sprains. Pr. Thomas' Bclectrio&#13;
Oil relieves the paia instantly. Btarer&#13;
safe without it.&#13;
Fishes can be frozen hard without&#13;
losing their vitality.&#13;
Half the ills that man is heir to eome&#13;
from indigestion. 'Burdock Blood Bitters&#13;
strengthens and tones the stomach;&#13;
makes indigestion impossible.&#13;
The worst pit of misfortune into,&#13;
which a man can fall Is the one he digs&#13;
himself.&#13;
Olaoteaett&#13;
Cleveleaa&#13;
New x-*rk&#13;
Okie****&#13;
*D«tre4l&#13;
\&#13;
• • • &gt; « • • ^r^'&#13;
• • # •&#13;
DICK RODNEY; —11&#13;
or. The Adventures of&#13;
An Eton Boy...&#13;
JAMBS GRANT.&#13;
CHAPTER 3tVn.—(Continued).&#13;
Soou after tftte, wtoh 'evening came&#13;
on we heard * &lt;noi8e in the forecastle,&#13;
and the voice of Hlalop exclaiming:&#13;
"Stand cle»r-8b^r off, Anto&amp;tol It&#13;
yoou come atthwhart tm e, 141 knock you&#13;
down with &lt;a&amp;an4apUte! What! you&#13;
grip your 'knife, io you1? Well, Just&#13;
do it asaJa^.and. ril-chtwic you overboard&#13;
llke'a bit of oW Junk."&#13;
"What Is .the matter now?" said I,&#13;
battening forward,&#13;
"Oh, this rascally Spanish creole hca&#13;
been swearing at the men again, antl&#13;
threatening old Roberts!1'&#13;
"He vows, sir, he will burn the&#13;
toftlp," said Roberts, who teemed considerably&#13;
excited.&#13;
"Burn the ship",*' -reiterated Wecton.&#13;
• 1 have a gi^at^miad to put him in&#13;
the ^Hboes naf* the' Vemafntler of the&#13;
v o y a g t , " : \ * . &gt;"&gt;- -,• • • ; ' •: : •&#13;
" 'Tweic Wai far all concerned, sir,"&#13;
Mid Tom Lmaabournc, touching his&#13;
forelock with his right band, and giving&#13;
the* dasJfc a icrape with his left&#13;
foot; "or «ct him adrift with some&#13;
provisions In the Jolly-boat."&#13;
"Come, eome, Antonto," said Western,&#13;
with greater severity than I had&#13;
hitherto seen expressed in his open&#13;
and honest countenance, "you must&#13;
haul your wind^-for some time you&#13;
have beeti going too far. I can't spare&#13;
my Jolly-boat, and, thank heaven! the&#13;
days of : marooning are past among&#13;
British sailors, hut bev/aro you, shipmate,&#13;
or the bilboes it shall be, and&#13;
we hai* a pretty teeavy pair below.;&#13;
And asffor you, Marc Hislop," h e'&#13;
added, to a low voice, when we walked:j aft, "take care of yuurself, for these&#13;
Spanish Creoles are as slippery and&#13;
treacherous as serpents."&#13;
"I'll I keep my w«ather eye open,"&#13;
.said EBBIOD.&#13;
"Yo« will requireto do so, I think."&#13;
"YOB do?" exclaimed the Scotsman,&#13;
growing anger. "If he proceeds&#13;
thus, XU1 break either his heart or his&#13;
neck."&#13;
Next morning, Roberts, the old mano'-&#13;
waTs man, who had always been&#13;
Antonio's chief ncanser concerning his&#13;
dreams, was nowhere to be found on&#13;
hoard!&#13;
All tithe hands wen turned up;. ta«t whole brig was searched, the forecaaU^&#13;
erths, the c*JJe-tier, and every&#13;
placet ib©low from tbe fore to the after&#13;
peak;!,but there wag mo traca of Robnrts,&#13;
save his old tarpaulin hat lying&#13;
crustedt and torn in the leo scuppers.&#13;
He was last seen when turned up&#13;
to take: the middle watch, which ex-&#13;
:Crndnirom 12 to 4 d'.clock a. m., and&#13;
Antomlo waB then in his hammock.&#13;
Roberts was entaetd in the log as&#13;
"havlsjg fallen overboard in the&#13;
night,-' but his loss cast a terrible&#13;
gloom over all the «hip. Suspicion&#13;
jrrew apace, and seemed to become con-|&#13;
flrmed,a№ open war was soon declared&#13;
Between:the crew and Antonio.&#13;
Everf.man was ready to take his&#13;
•trick"aat the wheel, either than trust&#13;
tae Etrgenie to his steering in the&#13;
night, test he might lei her broach to,&#13;
and lose, her spars, or do some other&#13;
mischief; ..and no man, if he could&#13;
avoid it,'would lay out on the yard&#13;
beyond titim. No man would walk on&#13;
the same eide of the feck with him,&#13;
or exchange a word, or a light for a&#13;
pipe, craise the same cup or plate; so&#13;
he wag generally to be seen, leaning&#13;
moodily uuad, alone, against the windlass&#13;
btttc, with his Trtaak eyes fixed&#13;
cm the horizon, as if he expected a&#13;
rail or. something else to heave in&#13;
sight.&#13;
We shal^BOon see how all UJis ended.&#13;
ceive him, with his hat in one hand&#13;
and a case-bottle of brandy in the&#13;
other.&#13;
Under an old swab, which had beea&#13;
well dried and curled to m$ke a wig&#13;
for the son of Saturn and Vesta. I&#13;
recognized the grotesquely tattooed&#13;
visage of my friend Tom ^amboorne.&#13;
A cutlass was «tuck in his girdle, and&#13;
he wore a huge paunch of canvas&#13;
stuffed with oakum.&#13;
In a gown made 1&gt;y the eallntaker,&#13;
Ned Carftoca officiated ad Amparitrite;&#13;
and "both deities were armed with harpoons,&#13;
as emblems of their -dominion&#13;
over the sea.&#13;
The attendant Tritons were got up&#13;
in the'same fashion, and all wore false&#13;
noses x&gt;f singular size and great brilliance,&#13;
with low wigs and long tails.&#13;
On Neptune and his goddess receiving&#13;
a dram and questioning the captain&#13;
about his crews tit was discovered&#13;
thttt Antonio and I were the only two&#13;
oa Aboard who had never crossed the&#13;
liao|,before; whereupon the Tritons&#13;
whooped and danced as they laid violent&#13;
hands on me. 1 submitted to the&#13;
usual shaving ana so forth with a&#13;
good grace, and' compounded, to avoid&#13;
•tfce r annoyances, for two bottles of&#13;
torandy, and ascending to the maincross-&#13;
trees without going through the&#13;
Rubbers' hole. But for the Cubano&#13;
there was neither, ransom, escape nor&#13;
•outlet ; -and'theaioor wretch, in consequence&#13;
of his myBterious antecedents,&#13;
was very roughly handled, the more so&#13;
that he had&gt;threatened to use his knife&#13;
If molested.&#13;
It wao Boon trundled out of his hand&#13;
-by one body of Tritons, while another&#13;
soused him weJI with salt water as he&#13;
was conveyed past the long boat,&#13;
Which was laslied amidships, and in&#13;
which they were stationed with buckets&#13;
readyfilled. ~~&#13;
Held fast em every side, he was&#13;
.brought.before the "goddess-barn" anfl&#13;
inexorable monarch of the mwn, who&#13;
ordered "the Lord Chief Barber At&#13;
once to shavelThim:"&#13;
Now, as Antonio had a rather luxuriant&#13;
beard taad mustache, the plentiful&#13;
application thereto of a compoanl&#13;
of tar and stash,-'such as we used for&#13;
-greasing the masts, was the reverse of&#13;
agreeable; but the stern orders of Neptune,&#13;
which ssr-ere bellowed hoarsefr&#13;
ihvough a tin trumpet, were faithfully&#13;
and elaborately obeyed, and the con-&#13;
*ents of a dirfcr Jrqn not&#13;
th h e k&#13;
ameareJ&#13;
CHAPTER XVIII.&#13;
Vte'Crotx the Line.&#13;
We were row in the latitude of burning&#13;
days, or flfcarry eights, and bright&#13;
blue seas. Hhe winds were light, and,&#13;
as usual, near the line, there was a&#13;
tremendous *well upon the ocean,&#13;
which'rose In long'and slbwly-fcieavlng&#13;
bille, without td&amp;ih or rfppie—emooth,&#13;
glaasy and wittoout sound,&#13;
On a lovely ^^|t&gt;t^when the •cea n&#13;
•eeme d to s,le«p In; the moonshine, we&#13;
crossed the equaAv. * " &lt; .&#13;
Eugenia | ^e running wfth the*&#13;
lee. dews ojf-^t"$*, with a flowing&#13;
jhdet—when ftffoip iNeptume came oex&#13;
boat d, and the^iMvjsl &lt;snpl*asflnfrpranks&#13;
wei«e played oo tteae who bod««eyer&#13;
.passed the girdWot ttfce wojUWttre.&#13;
Cfreat preparaUboe, had Dean *in&#13;
.•TOfren s *VL dfrj • • tbe fbreo&amp;aUe; and 1 these were perfected/' voder .cloud of&#13;
Alt th* crew %rer« en&#13;
• • mm*.&#13;
iMis|Kmt*|s««nover&#13;
the cheeks, beard and mouth of&#13;
the Cubano b,y Billy, a mischievous&#13;
ship-boy, with an unsparing hand.&#13;
"Demonio! /Maldtta!" was heard at&#13;
intervals, an &lt;; greeted with laughter;&#13;
but when he "attempted • to storm or&#13;
swear the brash—a reeking tuft df&#13;
oil, tar and every horrid grease—was&#13;
thrust Into his. mouth.&#13;
.The Lord, Chief Barber was now&#13;
commanded to remove this noisome&#13;
mess with his razor, and he scraped it&#13;
off with a piece* of hoop, which had&#13;
been carefully notched for the purpose&#13;
—a process whj*h, as it uprooted sundry&#13;
thick portions of Antonio's coalt&#13;
black bristles, caused him to yell and&#13;
tsputtrr out hos.sse Spanish oaths altiernatc.&#13;
iy.&#13;
i He was again deluged with salt&#13;
•rater ^ and greater sei-witiea were&#13;
ftbout to be practiced &amp;pon him, as&#13;
some of the Tritons e.*ied for "the&#13;
ghost of Roberts sto come out of tho&#13;
ma.)" others, to "atnoke him, by putfenshis&#13;
head in the hood of tho cook's&#13;
fw~uttl," when Wesson ransomed him&#13;
far two bottles of brandy, and he was&#13;
permitted to slink e*vay to his bunk,&#13;
breathing vengeance Against all his&#13;
tormentor 8.&#13;
tJrog was again served round, the&#13;
&lt;lo£k was cleared for a dance, and the&#13;
crew footed the hours away in a succession&#13;
rfjf hornpipes, while the grim&#13;
Cubano hay growling in ihe forecastle.&#13;
Three cheers for the Captain, awl&#13;
three more for Marc Hlstafi, terminated&#13;
the fun, and all but the watch retired&#13;
below.&#13;
"They ;h«-e gone too far with -that |&#13;
fellow, :as.«»ne of U3 may discover be- J&#13;
fore the voyage comes to setose," said&#13;
Hislop, when *ve were having &amp; parting&#13;
4glass in the cabin.&#13;
wife, nil little one, and taelr&#13;
"Ms all; hJto •hwt.anchor i n this&#13;
world, and his guide to tbe next," as&#13;
I oace heard aim wy» forcibly sxd&#13;
strangely.&#13;
"Yes," reflllftd We3ton; "he is a&#13;
dark dog, and (though I am net very&#13;
jrltiu I would give a hundred pounds&#13;
~to fathom the mystery of old Robert's&#13;
"disappearance. Well, here's to our&#13;
5wiv«a and. sweethearts at hom«.M&#13;
% "1 have neither jvreetheaxt nor wife,"&#13;
bat&#13;
»*tfM$kfa&#13;
&gt; i&#13;
ill White,&#13;
oa »&#13;
m&amp;r »om&#13;
Hislop. as be tossed off his glass;&#13;
;tut f have a peer old mother who&#13;
as we» as either "could 66."&#13;
s eye wandered to the portraits&#13;
of his wife* and child, to whom&#13;
he WAS tenderly attached, end tor&#13;
whom all his savings, by salary, ton-&#13;
«ag«, end hat-moner. were earefullf&#13;
for whom, poor follow, he&#13;
fempted tbe dangers of ta# great deep,&#13;
tbe war of Ue ekmeats, aad #soured&#13;
tts hardship* of % mitm* Bit—W«&#13;
CHAPTER p&#13;
The Cubano Unmasked.&#13;
Ai we kept the coast of South Africa&#13;
well aboard, a few days after we saw&#13;
Cape San Roque, or, as it is sometimes&#13;
called, Point Pelinga, the northeastera&#13;
extremity of Brazil, rising from&#13;
the blue water like a purple cloud.&#13;
But It diminished to a low black streak&#13;
oa ©«r weather quarter when the sun&#13;
set, and we found ourselves ploughing&#13;
the waves of the South Atlantic.&#13;
There fell a calm for a whole day&#13;
after this, and while the Eugenie&#13;
rolled lazily on the long glassy swellsf&#13;
with her topsails flapping, and her&#13;
courses hauled up, the sole amusement&#13;
of the crew consisted in catching albatrosses,&#13;
or In killing them, undeterred&#13;
by the Old superstition that it&#13;
was a bird of "good omen," or by the&#13;
story of the "Ancient Mariner," of&#13;
which they were probably ignorant.&#13;
A flock cf these gigantic sea-bird3&#13;
congregated ur.der our stern, where&#13;
they gobbled t?p everything that was&#13;
thrown over to them; so Hislop and I&#13;
proceeded methodically' to fish them&#13;
on board.&#13;
We procured strong lines, baited the&#13;
hooks with pieces of pork, lashing&#13;
thereto &amp; buoy formed of a common&#13;
cork, and lowered four of them over&#13;
the stern.&#13;
They had scarcely touched the&#13;
water, when amid a furious flapping&#13;
of heavy pinions, they were eagerly&#13;
swallowed; the hooks and lines began&#13;
to "be&amp;r taughtly, and we soon had four&#13;
gigantic albatrosses splashing the&#13;
water into froth In their ineffectual&#13;
efforts to escape.&#13;
We towed them in, hand over hand,&#13;
and after measurement found the&#13;
smallest to be eleven feet from the tip&#13;
of one wing to the tip of the other.&#13;
Though rank and fishy in flavor, the&#13;
flesh of these birds was made into&#13;
sea-pies, on which the crew were regaled&#13;
for two days after, and they partook&#13;
of it with great apparent relish.&#13;
But Jack is not very particular, especially&#13;
when at sea.&#13;
Though none of the crew shared the&#13;
superstition connected with the destruction&#13;
_oi_analbatross,and.prDba_bly_.&#13;
none, save Hislop and myself, knew&#13;
the splendid ballad written by Coleridge,&#13;
it would seem as if our misfortunes&#13;
commenced with that day's wanton&#13;
sport!&#13;
The huge sea birds became shy and&#13;
left us. The sun set amid saffron-colored&#13;
waves, and the western BkV was,&#13;
all aflame, when the calls began to&#13;
fill and collapse as the wind came in&#13;
heavy puffs, causing the masts to sway&#13;
from side to side, and the bellying&#13;
courses to crack and flap with a sound&#13;
like thunder.&#13;
the courses were left fall, and with&#13;
both sheets aft, for the wind was fair,&#13;
the^Eugenie once more walked through&#13;
the shining waters.&#13;
Pull, round, and silvery the moon&#13;
arose, and tipped with liquid light&#13;
every wave, that seemed to dance onward&#13;
with the brig, which in half an&#13;
houj/ had the snow-white foam flying&#13;
In Sheets over her catheads.&#13;
It was afcoct the hour of 1 in the&#13;
morning that the horrible events&#13;
which I am about to relate occurred.&#13;
I was in the middle watch, relieving&#13;
Weston, who, as the tropical dews&#13;
wers* heavy, always ordered Billy the&#13;
cabin boy to give me a glass of brandy-&#13;
and-water before going on deck, for&#13;
ifear of ague, and then he turned in.&#13;
The sullen Spaniard Antonio was at&#13;
tthe wheel. Tom Lambcmrne, Ned Carlton&#13;
and I were walking to and fro,&#13;
loitering at times, and looking at the&#13;
compass to see how she headed—now&#13;
aloft to observe how the sails drew—&#13;
anon over the side, where the water&#13;
babbled merrily past, or ahead at the&#13;
patch of blue and star-studded sky&#13;
wbjch was visible under the leach of&#13;
the tfore-course, as the brig's bow filled&#13;
every now and then, and she rolled&#13;
heavily from side to side, as all vessels&#13;
do when running before the wind.&#13;
All was very still, for, save the bubble&#13;
of ihe water in the wake astern,&#13;
or a gargle as it surged »up In the rudder&#13;
caae, the creaking of a block, or&#13;
the iron slings of the lower yards, not&#13;
a sound stale upon tho first hour of&#13;
the silent attorning.&#13;
Two of tike albatrosses we had&#13;
caught were hanging by the legs from&#13;
•the gallows-top abaft the foremost,&#13;
ftrheiy their peat extended wings&#13;
swung somewhat mournfully to and.&#13;
fro in the wind £nd by the motion r&gt;t&#13;
tto ship.&#13;
&lt;To be continued.)&#13;
€»•• Trl*4 on Train.&#13;
A few years ago a county court action&#13;
was triad on a train. The judge&#13;
could not complete the case In the ordinary&#13;
way, owing to the absence of&#13;
an, important witness, who was ex*&#13;
pected to arrive by the trait by which,&#13;
his honor was due to leave.' It was&#13;
therefore decided that the Judge and&#13;
advocates should travel with the witness,-&#13;
and try the case la tbe railway&#13;
earrlaie. This course was adopted,&#13;
aad the judge ultimately fara tbe verdict&#13;
la tbe Btatloamester'i priTatt&#13;
room a! a station far^bar (town tht&#13;
THE BEST&#13;
TONIC.&#13;
As winter passes ^way it leaves many&#13;
people feetind weak, depressed and easily&#13;
tired. This means that the blood needs&#13;
attention and sensible" people always taKe&#13;
a tonic at this time of year* Purgatives are&#13;
not the ridht medicine — they weaken instead,&#13;
of strengthening.&#13;
* Dr. Wim*ms? Pink Pills For Pale Pep pie are&#13;
the best tonic medicine in the world and do&#13;
not act on the bowels. They stimulate the&#13;
appetite, enrich the blood, strengthen the&#13;
nerves and make people feel bright* active&#13;
and strong.&#13;
No one 13 bettor cb!o to speak of th'« &amp;ct than Miss Hazel-Snider,&#13;
TL charming young womau or Arlington, InO. T&lt;xiay she .has rotjr&#13;
,cheeks, ipuruling eyes and » plump form, which prove taat she is&#13;
In food health. A year ago 111M ttnlder WUM very thin, her checks&#13;
pale, eye« sunken aad dulL 8he WM troubled wiiu uervouiufes*&#13;
. unU general debility. She *ajs:&#13;
"After Koveral moothu'treatment from the faintly physician w«&#13;
saw he could do no good. 1 was discouraged aud did not know&#13;
what to do, one day 1 read an lUin la a paper of the wonderful&#13;
curative qualities or J)r. William*' Pin tc Pllla for I'ale People. 1 tried&#13;
Hie medk-luo, and when nearly through wjtn the nt^cond bux noticed&#13;
a change for the better. After 1 hnd taken eight U&gt;xett I was cured,&#13;
und have had no occasion to take any kind of medicine since. I&#13;
owe much to Dr. Williams' Pink PilU for Pule People, probably my&#13;
life, and I advi«« any on« suflerinj with troubles »imflar to minci&#13;
to take Iheae pills." Mus HAZE. ~&#13;
Cfr&#13;
Sold by all druggists&#13;
or sent post*&#13;
paid by the Dr.&#13;
Williams' Medicine&#13;
Co.,Schenectady,&#13;
N.Y.,on receipt of&#13;
price, 5o*p*r box-,,&#13;
si* boxes, $ 2.5-2.&#13;
DF* W/ L Li A MS'&#13;
V) ILLS FOR ALE&#13;
EOPLE&#13;
The man who worries is not a bit&#13;
wiser than the one who barns down&#13;
his house.&#13;
Oh That Delicious Coffee! . '&#13;
Costs but lc per lb. to grow. Salzer has&#13;
the seed. German Coffee Berry, pkg. 15c;&#13;
Java Coffee pk»j. 15c. Salzer's New American&#13;
Chicory LV\ Cut this out and send 15c&#13;
tor any of the above packages or send 30c&#13;
and get all three pktrs. and great. Catalogue&#13;
free to JOHN A. SALZEH SEED CO.. La&#13;
Crosse. Wis. [w.n.J&#13;
More than 20,000 tons of candy is&#13;
eaten in the United States annually.&#13;
Lane's Family M«dlota«,&#13;
Moves the bowels each day. In order&#13;
to be healthy this is necessary. Acts&#13;
gently on the liver and kidneys. Cures&#13;
sick headache. Price 25 and 50c.&#13;
Tbe medicine known as metalli gallium&#13;
is worth 9100,000 a pound.&#13;
"Little Colds." Thousands of lives&#13;
sacrificed every year. Dr. Wood's Norway&#13;
Pine Syrup cures little colds, cures&#13;
big colds too, down to the very verge&#13;
of consumption.&#13;
Poor is the minister whose voic3&#13;
church and empties the pews. fills&#13;
CRK8CKNT HOTEL.&#13;
EUREKA SPRINGS,&#13;
Open* February 23rd. In the Ozark&#13;
tains. Delightful climate. Beautiful&#13;
cry. Unequulcd medicinal waters,&#13;
excursion rates Throufirh sleepers&#13;
Frisco Line. Adress J. O. Plank,&#13;
ttfirer, Room H, Arcade, Century gk&#13;
or Frisco Ticket Office, No. 102 N. Broadway,&#13;
St. Louis.&#13;
A woman's idea of strategy Is to spend *&#13;
in an eflort to save a nickel.&#13;
TO CURE A COLD IX ONE DAW&#13;
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. .&#13;
druggists refund the money If it fails to&#13;
S The genuine has L. li Q. on each *&#13;
Usually the more a man&#13;
himself, the colder he Is. Is wrapped op&#13;
Carter'* Ext. Saiart Weed&#13;
Will cure a cold in one nlrht: will ears&#13;
throat In a few hours. Acts Quick.&#13;
for Catarrh iu every He bottle. Sore&#13;
Easter will not again come in March&#13;
during this century.—&#13;
Itching piles? Never mind if physicians&#13;
have failed to cure you, Try&#13;
Doan's Ointment. No failure there.&#13;
50 cents, at any drug store.&#13;
It's a wise pMlosopher&gt;that knows when I&#13;
Is a brick under the out.&#13;
Mak« Your Llrer L.lv*ly.&#13;
Unguidi&#13;
Time.&#13;
Candy Cnhurti&#13;
, IH'IKMIU I ^ T H I SkTSTjT^ JWW 111 "^V\ T*^nt w i i e t t up to l.vvlr action with&#13;
' • '• AU UrufftfiaU, 10c, 25c, SOc&#13;
All gvnta&amp;es are more or less eccentric A&#13;
law have even been known to pay their debts.&#13;
Some (?irl8 change color because the fins &lt;&#13;
Is unsatisfactory.&#13;
Mrs. WInflow's Sootbln^ Srrvp&#13;
Por chllarrn toetMcf .ooftcmt the gum».r»u»»«»l&#13;
nuiUon, allays pain, cure* wludeotic.&#13;
My doctor said I would die, but Piso's Cure&#13;
for Consumption cured me. Amos Kelner,&#13;
Caerry Vailey. I1L. Nov. 23, *»5.&#13;
Money often wi&amp;i the first tattle, bat&#13;
the second.&#13;
' ' ' ' • I&#13;
Eve had her faults, but «he never went through&#13;
Adam «&gt; pockets while he was asleep.&#13;
"There are no cross babies or sick&#13;
families that use Brown's Teethiu? Cordial.'"&#13;
The man who is wedded to art should&#13;
model wlte.&#13;
SORROWS&#13;
OF&#13;
STERILITY&#13;
MOTHERHOOD is women's natural destiny.&#13;
Many women are denied the happiness of children&#13;
through some derangement of the generative organs.-&#13;
Actual barrenness is rare.&#13;
Among the many triumphs of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable&#13;
Compound is the overcoming of cases&#13;
of supposed barrenness. This great&#13;
medicine is so well calculated to regulate&#13;
every function of the generative or*&#13;
gans that its efficiency is vouched for&#13;
by multitudes of women.&#13;
MRS. ED. WOLFORD, of Lone Tree*.&#13;
Icwa, writes:&#13;
••DEAR MRS. PINKHAM—Before taking Lydia E. Pinkham'aV&#13;
Vegetable Compound I had one child which lived dnly six&#13;
hours. The doctor said it did not have the proper nourishment&#13;
while I was carrying it. I did not feel at all well during pregnancy.&#13;
In time I conceived again, and &gt;«^^ f&#13;
thought J would write to you for advice. d^BL.&#13;
Words cannot express the gratitude I feel&#13;
towards you for the help that your medicine&#13;
was to me during this time. I&#13;
felt like a new person; did my work&#13;
cp to the last, and was sick only a&#13;
short time. My baby weighed ten&#13;
pounds. He is a fine boy, tbe&#13;
joy of our home. He is now six&#13;
weeks old and weighs sixteen&#13;
pounds. Your medicine is certainly&#13;
a boon in pregnancy."&#13;
MRS. FLORA COOPER, of&#13;
Doyle. S. Dak., writes:&#13;
" D E A R MRS. PINKHAM—&#13;
Ever since my last child I&#13;
Buffered with inflammation of&#13;
the womb, pains in back, left&#13;
side, abdomen and froins. l l y&#13;
head ached all tae time. I&#13;
•ooM not walk across tb,e floor'&#13;
without suffering intense pain.&#13;
I kept getting worse, until&#13;
two years ago I wrote to you&#13;
for advice, and began taking&#13;
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. ^&#13;
I had not finished the first bottle before I felt hotter. I took&#13;
four bottles, and have been stsoag and perfectly healthy&#13;
•oxe, tod now bare *"~~ ~* •**--•-• - ~*&#13;
. , A 'A&#13;
' y.x&#13;
* •&#13;
? ('• •'•.•'-I i i ' - i&#13;
/ • • « • •&#13;
• ' * . . • : . • i • .«&#13;
»x, ' + • ;&#13;
• • ¥ • •&#13;
• v , .&#13;
It/&#13;
£;••..•••••• ;&#13;
V .&#13;
u , '•&#13;
• • • $ : • •&#13;
rjv^ ;v&#13;
B * &lt; i '&#13;
• j 1 . • ' •&#13;
(gbuhuq giftfMteif.&#13;
f. L. ANOREWS EWTOH.&#13;
THURSDAY, APR. 6, 1899.&#13;
Good Words&#13;
About A Former Plnckney Boy.&#13;
We clip the following fro»h a&#13;
Jackson (Neb.) county paper&#13;
which will be of interest to many&#13;
of our readers as Mr. Kearney&#13;
was once a Piuckney boy:&#13;
The Bank of Dakota County&#13;
put in this week, a very complete&#13;
electric day and night burglar&#13;
alarm system which will make&#13;
life a weary burden to the burglar&#13;
or robber who first attemps to&#13;
bold up the bank night or day.&#13;
It is a complete automatic electric&#13;
night alarm so arranged, that&#13;
no person can approach either&#13;
the outside safe or the vault or&#13;
the burglarproof chest within&#13;
the vault, without setting off a&#13;
large alarm bell in the bank and&#13;
also three other alarm bells&#13;
placed outside the bank in other&#13;
buildings where people sleep all&#13;
night. It is also arranged that&#13;
all the bells will ring continuously,&#13;
when set cff for 365 davB if&#13;
not stopped, something no self respecting&#13;
burglar could stand.&#13;
For day alarm, there are push&#13;
buttons for hands and feet scattered&#13;
all over the bank and in the&#13;
-vault,by touching any one of&#13;
which—the alarm bells will be&#13;
sounded in the three outside&#13;
places. The bank of Dakota Co.&#13;
is probably the very best protected&#13;
bank in Nebraska. It has&#13;
a vault of clinker brick 20 inches&#13;
thick all around, laid in best cenient,&#13;
with three steel doors and&#13;
3$ feet of solid cement and rock&#13;
in bottom. Inside iju&#13;
An Easter program was given&#13;
by the little folks at the M. E.&#13;
church Sunday. N&#13;
Mrs. Y. T. &lt;Jole returned last&#13;
Thursday from a visit to her&#13;
daughter in Owosso,&#13;
Mr. Taylor, from near Clyde,&#13;
has purchased the old Joseph&#13;
Cole farm, just west of town, and&#13;
moved his family there last week.&#13;
glar proof chest, which cost $1100&#13;
when bought. Outside is a fire&#13;
proof safe with burglar proof&#13;
chest and both this and the vault&#13;
safe are provided with best time&#13;
locks. In addition to the above,&#13;
the bank has a steel door and bars&#13;
at back of building and carries&#13;
burglar insurance which absolutely&#13;
insures against robbery day or&#13;
night &amp;sd now the eleotric&#13;
alarms fitting complete, makes&#13;
the protection absolute. The&#13;
depositers of the bank will appreciate&#13;
Mr. Kearney.s efforts to&#13;
spare no expense in protecting&#13;
the valuables of the bank.&#13;
Eugene Kearney of Sheldon,&#13;
la., nephew of Canker Kearney&#13;
has come here to work in the&#13;
bank. Mr. Kearney's business is&#13;
increasing to such an extent that&#13;
he requires a clerk.&#13;
PARSHALLVILLE- ^&#13;
Albert Johnson moved his family&#13;
to Trenton last week.&#13;
Miss Blanche Ayery, of Fenton,&#13;
visited in town the last week.&#13;
John Wolverton is much better&#13;
from the effects of a severe fall.&#13;
Miss Blanche A very, of Fenton,&#13;
visited relatives here the past&#13;
week.&#13;
Miss Lottie Lamb was home&#13;
from* Dansville for Easter vacation.&#13;
Mesdames A. C, Wakeman and&#13;
John Bristol visited in Detroit&#13;
over Sunday.&#13;
Rodman Bryant an old pioneer&#13;
of Livingston County died at his&#13;
home in this place,, Jiac . 28.&#13;
Funeral held at the Baptist&#13;
church and was conducted by&#13;
Bar. Pratt Mr. Bryant was' bom&#13;
in Jfew York state in 1819. He&#13;
!*«?&lt;• to poarn hi* loss a wife&#13;
who hi* been a loving ooaptnion&#13;
* ANDERSON. \/&#13;
Miss Bell Birnie was in Unadilla&#13;
a few days last week.&#13;
Born to Dave Smith and wife&#13;
of this place recently a daughter.&#13;
Samuel Wilson returnedto his&#13;
school duties in Mowell on Monday.&#13;
Edd Howlett; of Ann Arbor,&#13;
Sundayed in this vicinity and&#13;
Gregory.&#13;
Mike Ruen, of Pinckney, shook&#13;
hands with friends here on Friday&#13;
last.&#13;
Earnest Moore^ of Marion, commences&#13;
work for Jas. Marble the&#13;
first of April. '&#13;
E. L. Afflick, of Fowlerville,&#13;
made a business trip here the&#13;
first of 1 ast week.&#13;
Miss Nellie • Carpenter, of&#13;
Wright's Chaple',, called om&#13;
friends here last week.&#13;
Anderson supports one of the&#13;
Reason &amp; Shehan finest ranges&#13;
purchased by H. Whipple.&#13;
Miss Villa Martin was a guest&#13;
at the home of her sister] in&#13;
Pinckney a few days last week.&#13;
Dellivan Durkee,,who is workin&#13;
•forJW."l£. Place way "spent Sunday&#13;
under the parental roof.&#13;
Several from this vicinity took&#13;
in the exhibition at the Dunning&#13;
school-house last Saturday evening.&#13;
Mrs. Walter Wright and daughter,&#13;
Emma, of Stockbridge, were&#13;
in this vicinity last week; the latter&#13;
is securing scholars for a&#13;
music class in Pinckney the coming&#13;
season.&#13;
Joe Bush has purchased the&#13;
farm where Archie GloVer has&#13;
been for some time and will move&#13;
soon. Mr. and Mrs. Collins will&#13;
occupy the tenent house belonging&#13;
to Mr. Griner,&#13;
The many friends of Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Jas. Roche to the number of&#13;
65 gathered at their home on&#13;
Tuesday evening of last week and&#13;
gave them a complete surprise&#13;
and a very enjoyable time was had&#13;
There many friends here greatly&#13;
regret to have them leave the&#13;
neighborhood but wish them the&#13;
best of success.&#13;
A sad accident occured in this&#13;
vicinity on Friday afternoon of&#13;
this week. While Norman Wilson&#13;
was feeding his fathers corn&#13;
husker his left hand came in contact&#13;
with the rollers and was completely&#13;
crushed, The Dr's. are in&#13;
hopes of saving the first finger&#13;
and thumb. He has the sympathy&#13;
of the entire community.&#13;
The Anderson Farmer's Club&#13;
will meet at the home of Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. John Donnahue on Saturday,&#13;
April 8th; a cordial invitation&#13;
to all, there will be no refreshments&#13;
and the meeting will commence&#13;
promptly at 2 o'clock and&#13;
the following is the program:&#13;
Chora*, Star *p«agl«4 Baaaer&#13;
Fred D«rkM&#13;
C. JL Fraat&#13;
WQllt Tuppar&#13;
MIM KUlie Carpcatcr&#13;
Solo,&#13;
Paper,&#13;
OlacoMton,&#13;
IMC 9ok),&#13;
ReciUtloo,&#13;
D N U , FIOMOM Hutte, Klttk H o t&#13;
Paper, **Of what do wotnaa't rirfcfe&#13;
coMlrt," Mia. W. A. rprout&#13;
fart. Polo. EtfcelBpMMt&#13;
bttittttoo, * JofcaDialdft&#13;
Vjoiisttolo, C. a u p t w w i&#13;
Paper, A. Q W d m&#13;
DiMBMion, Will Bocfee&#13;
ttedtatioa, P**»&#13;
Ho4o.&#13;
ffrmlli&#13;
Box,&#13;
OMftH,&#13;
Suhscribe lor the Dkpateb.&#13;
CAST PUTNAM.&#13;
The spring term of school began&#13;
last Monday with Miss Olella&#13;
Fish as teacher.&#13;
Arthur Schoenhals and wife are&#13;
spending this week witK Chas.&#13;
Brown and family.&#13;
Mrs. Chas. Hicks, of Jackson,&#13;
spent the first of the week with&#13;
relatives in this place.&#13;
Burr Fitoh, of Stockbridge,&#13;
spent a partx&gt;f-hiS~"vft&lt;;Htioii with&#13;
his many friends in East Putnam.&#13;
S. J. Kennedy, of the AI. A. 0.,&#13;
spent last week with his parents,&#13;
E. W. Kennedy and wife of this&#13;
place.&#13;
MissMyrta Hall, of Williamston,&#13;
spent last week in this place.&#13;
She was accompanied home by&#13;
her mother Mrs. J. R. Hall who&#13;
will visit relatives there for a few&#13;
days.&#13;
An extra good farm of 65 acres tor&#13;
sale or rent. Enquire of A, J . Wilhelm.&#13;
Anderson, Mich. Box 36.&#13;
Ten Mil.Ion Wheelmen.&#13;
It is stated by competent authority&#13;
that there are tBn million people in.&#13;
America who are bicycle riders.&#13;
Probably each one gets an average ot&#13;
one hurt in a season and that is just&#13;
when Henry &amp; Johnson's Arnica A&#13;
Oil Liniment gets in its arood work&#13;
Nothing has ever been made that will&#13;
cure a bruise, cut or sprain so quick&#13;
\y. Also remobes pimples, sunburn&#13;
tan or freckles, Clean and nice to&#13;
use. Take it with you. Costs 25«&#13;
per bottle. Three times as much in a&#13;
VVft_selLit&#13;
it to give good satisfaction or money&#13;
refunded.&#13;
F. \. Sigler.&#13;
The time for which t.ht DISPATCH&#13;
was sent on trial to IO many new subscribers&#13;
is nearly expired and according&#13;
to agreement wo shall discontinue&#13;
the paper. We hope we have made&#13;
it interesting and profitable enough&#13;
to you so that you will 4e*ire to have&#13;
it a weekly visitor for one year.&#13;
We are now offering the DISPATCH&#13;
one year and the Farm Journal five&#13;
years, all for the price of the DISPATCH,&#13;
$1.00. We consider this one&#13;
of the best offers we have ever made.&#13;
Do not wait until we withdraw the offer&#13;
but subscribe at onoe and get tbe&#13;
most and and best reading you ever&#13;
got for the money.&#13;
H« Fvolcd the lnr(e«o&#13;
AH doctors told Kenick Hamilton of&#13;
West Jefferson, 0., after suffering 18&#13;
months from Rectal Fistula, be wonld&#13;
die unlnss a costly operation was preformed;&#13;
but be cured himself with&#13;
five boxes of Bucklen-'s arnica salve&#13;
the surest pile cure on earth and the&#13;
best salve in the world; 25c a box and&#13;
sold by F. A. Sigler.&#13;
The Farm Journal has nearly two&#13;
million readers each issue; it is putting&#13;
in a new press that will print 200&#13;
copies a minute; it is the best farm&#13;
paper in America, and it please9 the&#13;
women folks all to pieces. We have&#13;
made a special arrangement by which&#13;
we are able to send the Farm Journal&#13;
five years to every subscriber of the&#13;
Dispatch who pays all arrearages and&#13;
a year in advance; also to all new subscribers&#13;
who pay a year ahead.&#13;
WAYNE-HOTM1-.&#13;
AMEHIOAN AMD mWtOPCAN PLAN,&#13;
%a TO ••BO *t.OO TO 0M.OO&#13;
MBMM, eoo. TO DATM QAM&#13;
Do you want all the news&#13;
uring the coming year?&#13;
]f so why not&#13;
nvest $1.00 in ths DISPATCH.&#13;
• rwr m&#13;
S&#13;
P&#13;
A&#13;
T&#13;
C&#13;
H&#13;
ubscribe immediately&#13;
o as to secure the&#13;
remiura of the Farm Journal&#13;
erfectly FREE.&#13;
11 the home&#13;
nd farm news for ONE DOLLAR.&#13;
his is really&#13;
he best offer we ever made.&#13;
an you do without when you&#13;
an get so much for $1.00?&#13;
and in your dollar quick and&#13;
ave your name on the list.&#13;
Business Pointers.&#13;
Dr. Cady'a "Condition Powders a n&#13;
just what a hor&amp;e needs when in bad&#13;
condition. Tonic, blood purifier and&#13;
vermifuge. They are not food bat&#13;
medicine and the be«t in use to put a&#13;
horse in prime condition. 'Price 25a.&#13;
per package. For sale by F. A. Sig&#13;
ler. _ _ _ _&#13;
To Beat&#13;
House and two lots, corner of Howell&#13;
and Portage streets, Apply to&#13;
R. Erwin at Pinckney Mills. . '&#13;
The Appetite of a C«at&#13;
Is envied by all poor dyspeptics&#13;
whose stomach and liver are out of order.&#13;
All such should know that Dr.&#13;
King's New Life Hills, the wonderful&#13;
stomach and liver remedy, gives a&#13;
splendid appetite, sound dsgestion and&#13;
a regular body habit tbat insures perfect&#13;
health and great energy. Only&#13;
25c at F. A. gigler's ding store.&#13;
•••iviiamu&#13;
UOQinOQliUUDQUDQ&#13;
Railroad Guide.&#13;
Brand Trunk Railway System.&#13;
Time Table in effect, Februury "&gt;, 1899.&#13;
M. A. L. DIVISION -WESTBOUND.&#13;
No. 27 Pusengn, Pootiao to Jackson&#13;
.connection from Detroit 0 44 a m&#13;
No. 43 Mixed, Lenox to Jactuon&#13;
....&gt;.. .connection from Detroit 4 45 p m&#13;
All trains daily except Sunday.&#13;
EA8T10UND.&#13;
No. 80 Passenger to Pontiac and Detroit 5 11 p m&#13;
No. 44 )(lx*l to Pontiao and Lenox 7 56 a m&#13;
All tralnrdatty exespt Sunday. —&#13;
No. 80 connection at Pontiac for Detroit.&#13;
No 44 connection at Pontiac for Detroit and&#13;
for tb« weflt on I&gt; &amp; M RK&#13;
E.H.Hughes, W. J. Blaok,&#13;
AGPATAj?ent, Aj&lt;ent.&#13;
Chicago, III. Piuckney&#13;
AND&#13;
Popular rout« for Ann Arbor, Toledo&#13;
and poini- East, South, and for&#13;
Howe!I, OWOMO, Alma, Mt Pleasant&#13;
Cadillac, \lanislee, Traversa City and&#13;
points in Northwestern Michigan.&#13;
W . H . UKNNETT,&#13;
(1. P . A. Toledo&#13;
pill THE M5T SWING MACItWB W EARTH frrtct (o the fe&#13;
BIGGLE BOOKS A form Library of unequalled value— Practical*&#13;
Up-to-date* Concise and Comprehensive—Handsomely&#13;
Printed and Beautifully Illustrated.&#13;
B y J A C O B B I Q G L E&#13;
No. 1-BKWLE HORSE BOOK&#13;
All about Horaea—« Common-Sense Treatise, with over&#13;
74 Uluatratjona. • atandard work. Price, y&gt; Cent*&#13;
No. 2-BKJOLE BERRY BOOK&#13;
All about growing Small Fnrita lead and learn bow.&#13;
contains 43 colored life-like reproductions of allleadiaff&#13;
varieties and zoo other illuatrationa. Price, 50 Cents.&#13;
No. 3-BKMLE POULTRY BOOK&#13;
AH about Poultry ; tke beat Poultry Book in existence*&#13;
tells everything; withas colored life-like reproductions&#13;
oPfraicHe,t h*e&gt;C«*a.ipal breeds; wsta&gt; IOJ other iUttatratioaa.&#13;
No. 4-BiapLB COW BOOK&#13;
All •boat Cows and tbe Dairy Baainca*: haviasjagreat&#13;
sale; contains • colored life-like reproductions ofeacb&#13;
breed, with ijaotlicr illuatrationa, Price, 90 Ceata.&#13;
No. 6-8KK1L8 SWtNE BOOK&#13;
Just ooL All aboat Hogra—Breedinf, Feedins, PutA.&#13;
cry, Diseajes. etc. Cnmmim owr Jo beawtflai Jaatftones&#13;
and other eagrarinsa. Price, 90 Centa.&#13;
%&amp; * —&#13;
Chicken, or grow* cm*&#13;
•way ior the MOOLU FARM JOURNAL BttM&#13;
ptperoftts&#13;
aayORB affte WBOUt WBU. aal Ike M M JODUUL&#13;
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tskenmts f srt«reto«t\J&gt;yM o«osnt n«dMenn«tiTa ii Patents taken throasrh eekU notice, without ^ Sdauific&#13;
Mum &amp;~&lt;&#13;
ajM«4a^ «o(ioe, wttbont oharsn. in the&#13;
A h a n d s o m e l y IBufltrated m t U r -&#13;
e o l a t i o n o f a u y aotenttfle J m i&#13;
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HK OHh latHM Oft,Gtfcaofc&#13;
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$3.50&#13;
I *\ &gt;- .*•&#13;
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HUNDREDS ot testimonials bear&#13;
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WE TREITMD CURE Heart Disease, liver &lt;"Tr*w*&#13;
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•RCTAL HOTICII Tfadie unable to call should send&#13;
•tamp for question blank (or home treatment.&#13;
- O. TL XT.&#13;
Edited by the W.C. T. U. of Hackney.&#13;
i KiYvYWrYlh&#13;
* - TYLISH, RELIABLE&#13;
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Recommended by Leading&#13;
Dressmakers. £ £&#13;
They A'**ay* Please.^fc» CALL&#13;
PATTERNS&#13;
NONE BETTER AT ANY PRICE&#13;
n p are told In nearly&#13;
•very city and town in the United Staler&#13;
II i : j r dcjlsf doti not kerp them lend&#13;
jirrcr to JI One cent itamps received.&#13;
Ajj/&lt;r»»-y«jr nearest point.&#13;
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' BRANCH o m c t s :&#13;
180 Fifth Ave., Chicago, and&#13;
1051 Market St.. Sao Francisco. № CALLS&#13;
MAGAZINE&#13;
Every state except three now&#13;
has laws requiring scientific temperance&#13;
instruction in the public&#13;
schools, and in the initial letters&#13;
of those three—Virginia. Arkansas&#13;
Georgia—spel the suggestive&#13;
word, "Vag."&#13;
The British Medical Journal&#13;
states that the paper used ia&#13;
many brands of cigarettes contaiu&#13;
arsenic. When arsenic is inhaled&#13;
in small quanities it causes&#13;
chronic cough, and other symptoms&#13;
usually associated with consumption.&#13;
Canon Wilberforce, preaching&#13;
in Chichester cathedral, said he&#13;
unflinchingyl declared that the&#13;
licenad liquor traffic in our great&#13;
cities was the peculiar fosterer of&#13;
that particular class of out casts&#13;
to which the poor victims of the&#13;
Whitec'iapel murders belonged.&#13;
Multitudes would be drawn out&#13;
of the mire, would be disentangled&#13;
from the network of evil&#13;
round their feet, would be startled&#13;
in the p ifehs of honor aud virtue,&#13;
but for the frenzying temptation&#13;
of the gin shop and the publicbouse.&#13;
And no rescue work, no&#13;
attempts to raise from the dust&#13;
the daughters of our country's&#13;
shame, would avail so long as the&#13;
common sale of intoxicating liquor&#13;
was permitted and encouraged&#13;
by the state, and sanctioned or&#13;
allowed to go unrebuked by the&#13;
church. ~ ~&#13;
That the cigarette is a deadly&#13;
poison is susceptible of the most&#13;
positive proof. A few months&#13;
ago I had all the nicotine removed&#13;
from a cigarette, making a&#13;
solution of it I injected half the&#13;
quanity into a frog, with the feffect&#13;
that the frog died iustantly.&#13;
The other half was administered&#13;
i to another frog with like effect.&#13;
Both&#13;
EARLY USE S O F OLA8S.&#13;
KBOWB bat&#13;
'Orna-&#13;
Glcrtoot) New*&#13;
Come s from Dr . 1). H. Cargile of&#13;
Waihita . 1. T. be writes: 'Fou r bottle s&#13;
of Electri c bitter s ban care d Mrs.&#13;
Brewer of scrofula' which has caused&#13;
rim to&#13;
f acted by&#13;
In an Interesting article on&#13;
mental Glass in All Ages/' in the j n e r great suffering for years. Terrible&#13;
Woman's Home Companion, Orlena L.1&#13;
tA , . * i . V *&#13;
Sbackelford has this to say of the an- 8 o r M w o u l d b r H a k o u t o n ^ *"*&lt;*«"*&#13;
Uquity of glass: "The Egyptians used *a0*« *n&lt; * the best doctors could give&#13;
glass ornaments largely for personal'her no help; but tier cure is complete&#13;
decoration. Necklaces, bracelets, j a n ( j her health U excellent. This shows&#13;
beads,&#13;
beauty have&#13;
. etc., of exquisite h i t b o a g a n d a h a ? e p r o v e d _ t b a t e l .&#13;
bean dddiiissscccooovvveeerrreeeddd iiinnn ttthhheeeiiirrr 1 . . ... \ 4 . . t \ . . , ._&#13;
tombs. It also served to bedeck cloth-! metric b l U e « I S t l 'e bast blood purifier&#13;
known. It's the supreme remedy for&#13;
eczema, tetter, salt rheum, nlcere,&#13;
boils, and running sores. It stimulates&#13;
liver, kidneys and bowels, expels&#13;
poieon8, helps digestion and builda up&#13;
the streDtftb. Only 50c and sold by F.&#13;
A. Sigler, druszt.'i*t- Guaranteed.&#13;
Ing, and innumerabl e domesti c objects&#13;
were made of it for daily use. Indeed ,&#13;
the accommodatin g mediu m was adapted&#13;
by them to an infinity of purposes,&#13;
being blown, cast, rolled, wrought, or&#13;
cut, as the worker willed, whethe r into&#13;
statue s of thei r gods or as glass eyes&#13;
for th e sightless sockets of thei r mum -&#13;
mies, to express the wish of the soul&#13;
to arrive safe and whole at th e end of&#13;
ita journey . The Roman s excelled the&#13;
Egyptian s as extensive users of glass.&#13;
I t served them for decoratio n to walls&#13;
and floors, for all sorts of domesti c&#13;
vessels, cinerar y urns, and coffins (th e&#13;
Egyptian s buried Alexander th e Grea t&#13;
in a glass coffin), for ornaments , toys,&#13;
dice, draughts , chessme n and water&#13;
clocks. We read of a table of solid&#13;
emeral d tha t was carrie d off by the&#13;
Goth s when the y sacked th e Eterna l&#13;
city, but It is now considere d not to&#13;
have been of preciou s stono—onl y fine&#13;
green glass or jasper—yet deeme d sufficiently&#13;
.valuable to be set with pearls&#13;
and mounte d in gold. These great&#13;
builders—the most practica l of antiq -&#13;
uity—were not slow to realize the&#13;
value of thi s transparen t mediu m as&#13;
a mean s for transmittin g light into&#13;
thei r palace s and temples , but thei r&#13;
window pane s were only from 7 to 10&#13;
inches square, and the glass wag more&#13;
green tha n white, lackin g the crystal&#13;
clearnes s of our moder n productions ^&#13;
Glass mirror s were known to the&#13;
Egyptian s and Romans . Specimen* !&#13;
have been found in th e tomb s of the&#13;
former , and documentar y evidence&#13;
UNDERTAKER&#13;
AND EMBALMER.&#13;
J. G. SAYLES.&#13;
PLAINFIELD, MICH .&#13;
I hold a certificat e from&#13;
the Champio n Embalmin g&#13;
College of Springfield, Ohio&#13;
form Pliny, Seneca, Lucretius and otn- and am prepared to do embalming&#13;
of all kinds.&#13;
JOadyassistanTTorJem ^&#13;
balmin g women and children .&#13;
undefubtedl y proves thei r possession&#13;
by th e latter . Glas s was used&#13;
for lamp s la Pompeii , but we have no&#13;
evidence of its being applied to~sncfr&#13;
a purpos e In Egypt, where it wag appropriate&#13;
d mor e largely to ornamenta l&#13;
and decorativ e rathe r tha n domesti c&#13;
purposes. "&#13;
ENGLISH IN HAVANA.&#13;
Dinund fot the Grammar* • Among thS)&#13;
Spaniards and Cubans*&#13;
The Spaniard s and Cuban s in Ha -&#13;
vanaar e certainljr^catchin g on. " Th e&#13;
principa l bookstor e in tha t city had&#13;
Chamber I nin'e Coug-li Reined r&#13;
Thi s remed y is intende d especially&#13;
for coughs, colds, croup , wboopiot ?&#13;
cough and influenza . It bas becom e&#13;
famou s for its cure s of these diseases&#13;
over a large par t of th e civilized&#13;
mor e tha n thirt y English grammar s j world. Th e most flittering t«stimon -&#13;
frogs were full grown a n d ! on Its shelves when th e protoco l was ! ials have been received giving accoun t&#13;
l\\t&#13;
KVBBV THUM B AX 1IOUIIX* «T&#13;
FRANK L. ANDREWS&#13;
Editor a*d frppHstor.&#13;
bubacrlptloa Price $1 la&#13;
it tbe Po«tofflca at Plucknay, Michl&lt;aa,&#13;
w »«coad&lt;l*M mttt«r.&#13;
•dv«rti«iag rate* made known on application.&#13;
. , $4.00 per ytar.&#13;
aad marriage uoticea published free,&#13;
i ace meats of entertainment* may to Piii&#13;
Cor, If desired, by ureeenttng the ofllce with ticket*&#13;
of tdmlMioa. la ewe ticket* are aot brought&#13;
to tne office, regular rates will be charged,&#13;
AU matter la local notice column will be cnarg&#13;
ed at 5 cent* per line or tractlon thereof, for each&#13;
Insertion. where no time is specified, ail notice*&#13;
will be inserted until ordered dldcontinued, an*&#13;
will be charged for accordingly, t j r . Ul changee&#13;
of adveniaemente MUST reach this offlce a* early&#13;
as TU»SOAT morniug to insure an iueertioa the&#13;
same week.&#13;
JOS&#13;
In all ita hranche*, a specialty. We have all kind*&#13;
and the latent ntyJea of Type, etc., which enable*&#13;
IU io erecuw all kind* of work, inch a» Books,&#13;
faiaplel*, foature, Frogmmmes, Bill Heads, Not*&#13;
Head*, s&gt;UUmenu, Cards, Auction Bills, etc., la&#13;
superior stylea, upou ihts unorteat notice. Prices a*&#13;
&lt;» v &amp;, ^oud work can t&gt;a aoae.&#13;
• LL BILLS PAIABLa OV UOHTd.&#13;
TH E VILLAGE DIRECTORY .&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
. .._ •Vlex . Mclntyr*&#13;
E. L. Thoiupaon, Altred Moaka,&#13;
l Hichirda, i«o. Bovvmia, Samuel&#13;
fcyk.ee, K. U.JoUason.&#13;
» ...B . H. Teeple&#13;
» W. E, Miirpby&#13;
Assubuii W, A C*rr&#13;
STBSKT CoatMiduioNicu Oeo. Bureh&#13;
JUIWAUL -L&gt;. W. Mart*&#13;
UKALTM orrio*a Dr.U . r*. Siller&#13;
ATXOB»KY ....~ . W. A. Carr&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH.&#13;
Hev. Chiu. Simpson, pastor. Services every&#13;
Sunday morning *t 10:3*J, and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:00 o'clock. Prayer meeting Thursday&#13;
evening. Sunday school at close of mornservice.&#13;
b\ L. Audrewd, 8upt.&#13;
L CHUHCH.&#13;
\J ttev. c . W. Bice pastor. Service every&#13;
Sunday morning; %i 10:*) and every Sunday&#13;
evening at ?:UC JCl)Ci. Prayer meeting Thor*-&#13;
d*y eveninga. WuaJ.iy school at close of morning&#13;
service, it. U. i'etple , JSAIK. tt*w rteai. Se e&#13;
ST. MAUD'S CATHOLIC CtiUUUa .&#13;
Rev. M. J. Oomiuart'ord, factor. Sdrvicee&#13;
•ver y Sunday. Low maae at 7:3U o'clock&#13;
bigU masfl with Mrmoajtt 9 ;3fj a- m. Qatechisni&#13;
at 3:00 p. w., veepersand benediction at 7 :W p.m.&#13;
SOCIETIES;&#13;
The A. O. H. Society of this place, -n^ets&#13;
ihird Sunday in tue C'r. Matthew llall.&#13;
John McGuinese. Couuty Delegate.&#13;
p i n c k n ey Y. P. S. C. E. Meetinge held every&#13;
B4*t»ie CorJley-, Pres liable Denver Se c&#13;
XT LEAGUK . m*u every y&#13;
Hievening at B:oo oelock in the M. E. Cattrtftt. A&#13;
] cordial inviutioa 1* esteadud 10 ovoryjue, espedaily&#13;
youug people. Mrs. Stella u t P&#13;
Brightest MagulM Published&#13;
Contains Beautiful Colored Plates.&#13;
Jliu&amp;uates Latest Patterns, Fashions,&#13;
Fancy Work.&#13;
Afentt warned for thi* raafmitne In every&#13;
locality Beautiful premium* for a little&#13;
work Write for termt and other particular*.&#13;
Subscription only SOc * pe* ylU,&#13;
including a F R E E Pattern.&#13;
THE McCALL CO^&#13;
to 146 W, i4 t b St. . New York&#13;
MILLEI ROOCO«E20t3 HILES l« 1J2 HOURS&#13;
The Eldredge&#13;
$50.0 0&#13;
Xhe Belvidere&#13;
$40.0 0&#13;
5upMtor to «U others Irrespective&#13;
of price. CatalogHe tells you&#13;
wtiy. Write for&#13;
i of average size. Th e couclusio n&#13;
is evident tha t a single cigarett e&#13;
contain s poison enoug h to kill&#13;
two frogs. A boy who smokes&#13;
twent y cigarette s a day has inhaled&#13;
enoug h poison to kill forty&#13;
frogs. Why does th e poison not&#13;
kill him ? If not immediately , he&#13;
will die soone r or later of weak&#13;
heart , Bright' s disease or some&#13;
othe r malad y which scientific&#13;
physicau s everywhere now re-&#13;
-oguize as th e natura l results of&#13;
signed. All were sold in two days.&#13;
The dealer ordere d two dozen more ,&#13;
which arrived Frida y week, and were&#13;
all sold within twenty-fou r hours .&#13;
of its good work; of th e&#13;
and persisten t cough s it baa cured ; of&#13;
severe cold; tbat have yielded prorapt -&#13;
The most aristocrati c girls' school in ly to it.-* soo'ibin g effects and of th e&#13;
Havan a is the Conven t of the Sacred j dangerou s attack s of crou p it has&#13;
cured , otte u saving the life of the&#13;
child . Th e extensive use of it for&#13;
whoopin g coutr h has sUowa tha t it&#13;
robs disease of all dangerou s consequences&#13;
. Sold by F. A. Siller.&#13;
;hronie nicotine poisoning . iInn; tha t enter s the Spanish&#13;
^lace of th e often beautiful , man y variably the expression&#13;
inies wickedly obscen e picture s&#13;
which cigarett e manufacturer s&#13;
&gt;ften send ia connectio n with&#13;
heir packages or offer as a premi -&#13;
Hear t in Cerro . The mothe r superio r&#13;
said to a Heral d correspondent : "At&#13;
the request of the pupils' parent s we&#13;
have entirel y suspende d the study of&#13;
French . This enables us to devote the&#13;
extra amoun t of time to the study of&#13;
English. " "Goo d evening" is supplant -&#13;
ing "Bueno s Nochee " at th e clubs.&#13;
Friend s meetin g in th e evening frequentl&#13;
y practic e the new language, so&#13;
far as thei r limite d knowledge will&#13;
permit . Th e first -word of English&#13;
min d is in-&#13;
"all right. "&#13;
The average citizen of Havan a appar -&#13;
entl y regards the master y of thi s&#13;
phras e a great accomplishment , and&#13;
uses it on all passible occasions . Your profits,&#13;
hackma n says "all right " when you t r a 8 h y u n o B l d a l&#13;
Tu a . ' o r k^wortu League We-u every Sunday&#13;
J afUjruoju ac kjj o'clock, it M. E cUaro'j. All&#13;
cordially iuvitel.&#13;
Mi Edith VBD^LQ, Sa&#13;
Ta e C . T. A. and 0.&#13;
eveiy third Sataruav&#13;
thew Hall. Jouu&#13;
jf (bis p'.ace, meet&#13;
at* ia t!ie Fr. Mat.&#13;
t, President.&#13;
KNIGHTs OK M.VCCAUEBS.&#13;
M.eet every Friday evooiag on or before foil&#13;
of the uioob At tlitiir Uall iu Uie Swartuout bldg.&#13;
Visiting brother* ire cordially invited.&#13;
T ivin^ston Lodge, $0.7--, «* A A.. M. K??&lt;i!ftr&#13;
I J Communication Tuesday evening, o i or before&#13;
the lull of LU,e uiuou. Aio^^udj r ylciutyre, W . M.&#13;
give the address to which you want&#13;
every package of cigarette s j to drive, and he makes the eame re-&#13;
&gt;ught to bear a skull and cross- mark when you pay him.&#13;
boues aud should be marke d&#13;
'deadl y poison, " like "rough on&#13;
rats'" strychnine and other deadly&#13;
—Dr. J. H. Kellogg.&#13;
ACTIVE SOLICITORS ' V V N T '^&#13;
WHBKKlor "Tne S.orv of th« Philippines.'&#13;
by Wurat Haldtewd, cuiuiniasiou^d by th- tiovern.&#13;
rueat as Oiti'-uil ilistoriiu to the War IVparttDttut.&#13;
rb^ b )ok was wri;.t»»i in * my camps at&#13;
Saa Frasciaoo, on tiie Pacitic with GeDersl Merritt.&#13;
in ihe bospiUis at Honolulu, in ilon? Kou.r, in&#13;
the Atuerk-an trenciu'e at Manilla, in the intur-&#13;
K«Mite camp-* with AguiQtddo, &lt;&gt;a the deck o&gt; tbe&#13;
Olytupia with t&gt;»-wey. and in the roar of tue battle&#13;
at the ml. or Manilla Bon.tu/.. i for u^enie. Brimful&#13;
of pictures t-itea by s»&gt;&gt;vern!ueut photojjia-&#13;
{ihers on tlit? dp &gt;t. Lar^e b\i &gt;k. L &gt;\v prices. -Bijj&#13;
pttid. Credit tiven. l)rop all&#13;
oolis Outfit free. Addresa.&#13;
F. T."Barber, Sec'y. Star insurance Bldg. Chicago.&#13;
ORDER OF&#13;
the Friday&#13;
4A.M.&#13;
-* L'Ai tuentd eaca inontb&#13;
• KBAO, &gt;V. .4.&#13;
LAD1K- Of TliK MACUABKlSci. .uoat every 1st&#13;
and &lt;ir«i aatjrdrty ut eacUauuiu tit ;i:Ju p iu. at&#13;
K. «&gt;. i'. M. Uuu. V'lHina^ d;ster* oriiacly ia&#13;
vited. LILAOOXIWA; i^ady COUI.&#13;
Diftcat'errrt by m&#13;
Anotlie r great discovery has been&#13;
8&gt;o»MloB from Tee*twrlRnUm.&#13;
Ther e has been an importan t wholegal*&#13;
secession from th e rank s of th e&#13;
vegetarians . The entir e Dominica n&#13;
orde r in Englan d has received per mislion&#13;
from Rom e to eat flesh four days&#13;
a week instead of perpetuall y abstain -&#13;
ing as heretofore . In cases of 111-&#13;
mad e and tl-n» too, by a lady in this h e a l t h o r s p e c i a l l y h a r d w o r k m e a t | t&#13;
•ountry . 'iJisease fastened its clutcbe s to be allowed six days a ireek. This&#13;
lpon Iu r and for seven years «be ioport?' l t decision has been arrived&#13;
withstoo d its s*v*rest test*, but her a t a f t e r t h e c l o s e s t medica l and of-&#13;
. . . j • . , ' flcial scrutin y as to the effect* of&#13;
vital orpin s * eve undermine d and _*,_ * -w.*i- . _ " . _ . " .&#13;
&lt; Ti N i: POMi-rTOfW&#13;
l"r&lt;TH 4&#13;
of ibe&#13;
tbeGovern&#13;
» x 4 «• € to p&#13;
%** lo* k tM№ writ top it tkf army raaosa at 8aa&#13;
f i tl,&lt;&gt; ) aclfic *lrh &lt;&gt;m&gt;raj Jtforrit !«&#13;
at H«M0«ki,lB H o a c JUas ; U the&#13;
b 4 M l tt I tb t t&#13;
, abstlnenr e from&#13;
deat h seen^. i ruminant . Fo r thre e variable climat e like tha t of England . '&#13;
montJi a sic niii,'h« d incessantl y and The result is tha t vearetariap^T O baa \&#13;
could not j&gt;l"i&gt;. Mi»' tinally discovered been declare d incompatibl e with good&#13;
a w«y to rw(»ve--v by purcbastai r of w o r * -&#13;
i s a in&gt;tt,i « i»t I )\\ Kinir' s New DISCOT -&#13;
ery for Consunuuion , ajad was so&#13;
muc h relifVfd on takin g first dose,&#13;
1 have been afflicted with ruouina -&#13;
tisni for fourtee n years and nothin g&#13;
seemed to #ive any relfef. I was able&#13;
to be aroun d all tbe time , l&gt;ut. ccastantl&#13;
v sufiviins: I had tried eve-ythin&#13;
«/ I could h^ar of and at last was&#13;
told to try Cbainberlain' s l*aiu BAAIU&#13;
wuu'h I did aud was imrcedia'el y ve&#13;
lieved and in a short tim e onr^d . I&#13;
am happ y to say tht t it has n 't *'«•'* •&#13;
returned. — l"sb Ed«ar , Geiinai ^ &gt;uri,&#13;
Cal Fo r sale l\v P. A. Siller.&#13;
Klles* Pmln Piua, **OIM&#13;
KNIGHTti OF THE LOYAL GU iBO&#13;
tue t every second Wednesday&#13;
evening of every inouiainttie XL. O.&#13;
T. M. liall at 7-.:i0o'clock- All viaiting&#13;
Guards welcome.&#13;
KOBiCKT AiLNKXL, Capt. G*&#13;
TiHE W. C. T. U. luedte the Urdt Prular of each&#13;
month at £:&amp;. p.on. at t ie a»ad of Dr. El. P.&#13;
Sigler. Kvervune - intur^stad ia t^tnperauc* la&#13;
coadially invited Mru. '^c»l Siller, Prett; Utt.&#13;
Ktt* Dorfee, secretary.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
H. F. 5IQLER M. 0 C. L, SIGU.ER M, 0&#13;
DRS.&#13;
SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
d 8«« .n». All call» ^rutuptt&#13;
to day or uight. Ofiic« on Main »tr&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
Pliyalciaud aad&#13;
DR. A. B. GREEN.&#13;
DENTIS1 —;;Very Tauraday aud Friday&#13;
Offlce o»er Siller's Druz store.&#13;
I&#13;
For&#13;
Letter.&#13;
tbat shn slept all niwht and with two&#13;
bottles bas lww»n HlHolut#»)y eur«d Her&#13;
name is Mrs Lntb«&gt;r l^utx." Thus&#13;
writes W. C. Haminick &amp; Co., of&#13;
Shelby, N. C. Trijl bottle* free at&#13;
F. A. 8itfler « drug store. Regular&#13;
lr'iuckney, Micb.,&#13;
April 5,1899.&#13;
50c and $1 00 ev«ry bottle goaraat&#13;
«ed&#13;
". HaratanY Dem*&#13;
To my Friends and the Public:&#13;
In reward to the&#13;
Acs o n c -.•-.' ;.^.&#13;
WRTiatn tl'O •:'-.-.• •&#13;
A n d b o w e * » «••• •.•••&#13;
tweet. Da. '-.. •&#13;
tpeedilv ctitc&#13;
torpid liver t*t&gt;C&lt; \.i ttocu&#13;
$9.50 We Bike to&#13;
All-Wool Slit&#13;
ifiiOdoej*.^^- wU.&#13;
• Urn&#13;
Latest Ctty Styles&#13;
at a&lt;" Ton can be a well-dressed man&#13;
it you know how. Write us for&#13;
Samples and Booklet "How*&#13;
L6Wil D*txs W*U, and&#13;
Edwards* pastor &gt;f rue&#13;
letter written by Mr. John Martin .English Baptist church at&#13;
that was printed in the DISPATCH ot&#13;
last week, I would 8*y that He. Martin&#13;
forgot to fttAt* th4t it was tbe r*-&#13;
q«ett of my wiie, tfn. £tta F . ) * ' t h * iinimeat proved of irr*at service&#13;
Wrijrht, that her tbetor't bill aad to me. It subdoed tbe inflamation and4&#13;
be p&lt;ud ovA' ralMwtd tbe p«U. 8»o»rd a&lt;»y&#13;
when suffering with&#13;
was advised to try GbamberUin&#13;
Bain. He says: "A few&#13;
wf %ar tetntc, waieb re^&gt;a«t has kmm&#13;
witk.&#13;
paim^balm »&#13;
nM." For aak by&#13;
^•lesiHofcl in Detroit&#13;
imtr, &gt;.wirwn elan. W«o&lt;»w&gt;i aM M M M A T M K&#13;
»y, wttfc .&#13;
"A&#13;
' ' • • • ^ . 1w&#13;
' i1';&#13;
/ , - , • •.. • / • &gt; - . - • &gt;&#13;
ESfer''&#13;
fl v ' . ' •")&#13;
* ' * • ? : • •••;•&#13;
• ^ :&#13;
! * • • • • •&#13;
FT.AKK L. AMmxvrt, Published&#13;
FINCKXEY,&#13;
Men wo do foolish thing when&#13;
aeaa over should remain on land.&#13;
The acts of tome so-called variety&#13;
•clot* vacillate between bad1&#13;
worse&#13;
Gen. Qotr.e; is beginning: to flnfl oit&#13;
what It means to have a congrea* oa&#13;
hand*.&#13;
Love makes the world go 'round—&#13;
*nd the attraction of gravity worries a&#13;
tot of people.&#13;
TALMAGE'S SEBMON.&#13;
'LIFE'S ACIDITIES" LA8T SUNDAY'S&#13;
SUBJECT.&#13;
'When Jems Tta«r«ror« Had A«celv«d&#13;
the Vlu^Kar*—From John, GU*i»t«r&#13;
sis., VerM 90 — Bom* PtUm Sunday&#13;
TUougbU for ChrUtiauft.&#13;
There is more power in kindness&#13;
than there is in dynamite, but it takes&#13;
longer to find i: out.&#13;
A cynical bachelor who has evidently&#13;
loved and lost says the Boston girl's&#13;
affinity is a snow man.&#13;
Forgret the good you have done to&#13;
others and the evil they have done to&#13;
you if you wculd be. happly.&#13;
Some women wear their sweetest&#13;
smiles when they want favors of their&#13;
husbands and some start the flow of&#13;
their briniest tears.&#13;
Boston Is taking sufficient Interest&#13;
tn the war with Spain to rise and remark&#13;
that nobody has yet dared to say&#13;
the beans were embalmed.&#13;
They are having a hot time in old&#13;
Havana every night, and do you expect&#13;
a change until the annexationisU&#13;
carry out the scheme they are nursing?&#13;
No one questions the existence, of&#13;
many varieties of Democrats, but history&#13;
fails to record, under any circumstances,&#13;
the actual materialization of&#13;
a non-partisan Democrat&#13;
' One of the current magazines has an&#13;
article entitled: "Our Daughters;&#13;
What Shall We Do With Them?"&#13;
-There is—ac*use—worry lag- over _thla&#13;
question. Our sons will see thai the&#13;
girls are taken care of.&#13;
Mr. Chctate, the new American ambassador&#13;
to the court of St James; is&#13;
being highly praised by the London&#13;
papers. Mr. Choate is undoubtedly&#13;
an able man, but It must be remembered&#13;
that as England is afraid of a war&#13;
jrUh Russia it would be hard to find&#13;
any respectable American who would&#13;
not make an instantaneous hit over&#13;
there. t The naval appropriation bill was&#13;
passed by the United States senate&#13;
March 1st, after a debate of less than&#13;
live hours. In that time, however, 4t&#13;
.jr?s amended radically jn jne irsp?-t.&#13;
"'•The price to be paid by the government&#13;
for armor plate was fixed in the&#13;
bill at $300 a ton, a reduction of the&#13;
amount fixed by the bcuse of $145 a&#13;
ton. In addition the secretary of the&#13;
navy was authorized in the event of&#13;
the refusal of the armor-plate companies&#13;
&lt;o supply armor at $300 a ton, to&#13;
proceed to the construction of an ar-&#13;
'uaor factory to cost $1,600,000, and&#13;
placing in the secretary's control $2,-&#13;
O00.000 with which to operate tto government&#13;
plant&#13;
1 A gentleman of sixty is frank&#13;
enough to tell the readers of Popular&#13;
Science that in his youth he was so&#13;
completely under the dominion of the&#13;
passion of anger that be was brought&#13;
to the brink of crime and delirium. At&#13;
twenty he became discreetly aware Of&#13;
the danger and ashamed of the weakness.&#13;
Then he set about the task of&#13;
aelf-conquest, and with sucil success&#13;
that for '.he last twenty yeans he has&#13;
not once given rein to anger. In all&#13;
ages men have committed *4» of&#13;
violence against each ether la tot&#13;
blood; but the doctor woulC £K&gt;babry&#13;
nay thatta much greater number have&#13;
shortened life; besides impairing Its&#13;
quality, by the nervous expenditure&#13;
wasted upon an Irritable taaper.&#13;
A breach cf promise suit tot&#13;
weeks occupied public attention in one&#13;
of osr largo cities. The defendant,&#13;
-who vrtkB recently married, was sued&#13;
by a young wome,n who asserted that&#13;
betrotfiftft to her. -The' jury&#13;
¥L *v4rt&lt;* ~^i%i&lt;aiTOf *, large&#13;
*&lt;ua, tfee '~&lt;ise Is said t*rbe Closed. U&#13;
closed? 'rr£tet'tt&amp;ff&amp;rr%% ot liqt ^ j the&#13;
principals in the suit, trot those o^the&#13;
tm4£«kt. rtouac wife «o4 the other&#13;
members of three families hjHr« M s&#13;
dragged through t^e^mrU awi have&#13;
become (thr«ii!^6ct of ptrtHc Jest and&#13;
comment. AH the* ttvee U» taint of&#13;
this auk will follow the actors in It&#13;
It U not a pleasant theme, bat the fre-&#13;
^oeocy ot these legal trials calls for&#13;
plain •uWringt Bnca^emen^' ft***d&#13;
wttlMut mutttal respect and «swU&#13;
which are not intended to&#13;
flML aw btrt the first step in «,&#13;
wholly 1rfpt&#13;
The brigands of Jerusalem had done&#13;
their work It was almost sundown,&#13;
and Jesua was dying. Persons in cruciilxion&#13;
often lingered on from day to&#13;
day—crying, begging, cursing; but&#13;
Christ had been exhausted by years uf&#13;
maltreatment. Pillowlesa, poorly fed,&#13;
flogged—as bent over and tied to a low&#13;
post, his bare back was inflamed with&#13;
the scourges Intersticed with pieces of&#13;
lead and bone—and now for whole&#13;
hours, the weight of his body hung on&#13;
delicate tendons, and, according to custom,&#13;
a violent stroke under the armpits&#13;
had been given by the executioner.&#13;
Dizzy, nauseated, feverish—a world ot&#13;
agony is compressed In the two words:&#13;
"I thirst!" O skies of Judea, let a drop&#13;
of rain strike on his burning tongue!&#13;
O world, with rolling rivers and sparkling&#13;
lakes, and spraying fountains, yive&#13;
Jesus something to drink! If there be&#13;
any pity in earth or heaven or hell, let&#13;
It how be demonstrated in beliaU of&#13;
this royal sufferer.&#13;
The wealthy women of Jerusalem&#13;
used to have a fund of money wltri&#13;
which they provided wine for those&#13;
people who died in crucifixion—a powerful&#13;
opiate to deaden the pain; but&#13;
Christ would not take 't. He want«d&#13;
to die sobe»v and so he refused the&#13;
wine. But afterwards they go to a cup&#13;
of vinegar and soaked a sponge in it,&#13;
and put it on a stick of hyssop, and&#13;
then press it against the hot lips of&#13;
Christ. You say the-wine was uu&#13;
anaesthetic and intended to relieve or&#13;
deaden the pain. But the vinegar vas&#13;
an insult.&#13;
In some lives the saccharine seems&#13;
to predominate. Life is sunshine on a&#13;
bank of flowers. A thousand hands to&#13;
clap approval. In December or in January,&#13;
looking across their table, thT&#13;
see all their family present. Kealtii&#13;
rubicund. Skies flamboyant. Da.vs&#13;
"resilient" But"In a" great many ^ases&#13;
there are not so many sugars as acids.&#13;
The annoyances, and the vexations,&#13;
and the disappointments of life overpowerthe&#13;
*uee€sses. -T-here is a.grfcvei&#13;
in almost evei^y shoe. An Arabian legend&#13;
says that there was a worm in&#13;
Solomon's staff, gnawing its strength&#13;
away; and there is a weak spot in&#13;
every earthly support that a man leans&#13;
on. King George or England forgot all&#13;
the gTandeurs of his throne because,&#13;
one day, In an interview, Beau Bruintnel&#13;
called him by his first name, ard&#13;
addressed him as a servant, cry in?:&#13;
"George, ring the bell!" Miss Latigdon,&#13;
honored ail the world over for&#13;
her poetic genius, is EO worried over&#13;
the evil reports set afloat regarding&#13;
.her^ tt^t ih&lt;i is fc"ri(3 de?&lt;!L with an&#13;
cm*iiy bottle of prussic aciu in her&#13;
hand. Goldsmith said that his life was&#13;
a wretched being, and that all tu:tt&#13;
want and contempt could bring to it&#13;
had been brought, and cries out:&#13;
"What, then, i3 there formidable in a&#13;
jail?" Correggio's fine painting ia&#13;
hung up for a tavern sign. Hogarth&#13;
cannot eell his best painting except&#13;
through a raffle. Andrew Delsart&#13;
makes the great fresco in the church&#13;
of the Annunciata, at Florence, «ud&#13;
gets for pay a sack of corn; and there&#13;
Christ. Why, they told him for lew&#13;
than our twenty dollars! They all foraoofc&#13;
hl» qnd fief,, Tfc*y out hUa t9&#13;
the quick. He drank that cup to the&#13;
dregs. He took the vinegar.&#13;
There is also the soreness of pain.&#13;
There are some of you who have n&lt; t&#13;
seen a well day for many years. By&#13;
keeping out of dr? jhta, and by carefully&#13;
studying dietetics, you continue&#13;
to this time; but oh, the headaches,&#13;
and the sideaches which have beau&#13;
your accompaniment all the way&#13;
through! You have struggled under a&#13;
heavy .mortgage of physical disabilities,&#13;
and instead of the placidity that&#13;
once characterised you, it is now only&#13;
with great effort that you keep away&#13;
from irritability and sharp retort. Difficulties&#13;
cf respiration, jof digestion, of&#13;
locomotion make up the great obstacle&#13;
ta your life, and you tug and sweat&#13;
along the pathway, and wonder wiion&#13;
the exhaustion will end. My# friends,&#13;
the brightest crowns In heaven, will :ut&#13;
be given to thGse who, In stirrups,&#13;
dashed to the cavalry charge, whilo the&#13;
general applauded and the sound of&#13;
clashing sabers rang through tho lanJ;&#13;
but the brightest crowns In heaven, I&#13;
believe, will be given to those who&#13;
trudged on amid chronic ailments&#13;
which unnerved their strength, yet ail&#13;
the time maintaining their faith iu&#13;
God. It Is comparatively easy to fight&#13;
in a regiment of a thousand men,&#13;
charging up the parapet3 to the sound&#13;
of martial music; but it io not so easy&#13;
to endure when no one but the nurse&#13;
and the doctor are the witnesses of the&#13;
Christian fortitude. Besides .tha,t, you&#13;
never had any pains worse than&#13;
Christ's. The sharpness that st'ing&#13;
through hl^ brain, through his hand3,&#13;
through his feet, through his heart&#13;
were as great as yours certainly. He&#13;
was as sick and as weary. Not a nerve&#13;
or musele or ligament escaped. All the&#13;
pangs of all the nations of all the ages&#13;
compressed into one sour cup. He&#13;
took the vinegar!&#13;
There is also the sourness of poverty.&#13;
Your Income does not meet your&#13;
outgoings, and that always give3 an&#13;
honest man anxiety. There is no sign&#13;
of destitution about you—pleasant appearance&#13;
and a cheerful home for you;&#13;
but God only knows what a time you&#13;
have had to manage ycur private&#13;
-finances: JUSTUS the bfljs Tiram'pnfie"&#13;
wages seen: to run down. You may&#13;
say nothing, but life to you is a hard&#13;
push, and when you sit down with&#13;
your wife, and talk over the expenses,&#13;
you both rise up discouraged. You&#13;
abridge here and you abridge there,&#13;
and you cet things snug for smooth&#13;
sailing, and lo! suddenly there i3 a&#13;
large doctor's bill to pay, or you have&#13;
lost your pocketbodk, or some debTof&#13;
of them. But where Is Lazarus? Lou*&#13;
ly and afflicted Christ, his great loving&#13;
eye* filled with tears! Oh, jres, yes!&#13;
He knows all about the loneliness and&#13;
the heartbreak. He took the jrinegat,1&#13;
Then there is the 'sourness' 6f thi&#13;
death hour. Whatever else we may&#13;
escape, that acid-sponge will be&#13;
pressed toTour Up* 1 sometimes have&#13;
a curiosity to know how I wfll behave&#13;
when I come to d|e--wheth&amp;i I&#13;
will be calm or oxcited; whether I will&#13;
be filled with reminiscence or with anticipation.&#13;
I cannot say. But come&#13;
to the point I must and you must. • As&#13;
officer from the future world will&#13;
knock at the door of our hearts, and&#13;
serve on us the writ of ejectment, and&#13;
we will have to surrender. AWd we&#13;
will wake v up after these autumnal&#13;
and wintry and vernal, a.nd summery&#13;
glories have vanished from our vision;&#13;
we will wake up into a realm which&#13;
has only one season, and that the season&#13;
of everlasting; love.&#13;
Tp all those to whom life has been&#13;
an acerbity—a dose they could no^&#13;
swallow, a draught that sat their teeth,&#13;
on edge andf a-rasp'ing—I preach ••.yth9&#13;
omnipotent sympathy of Jesus Chtlsti&#13;
The sister of Herschel, the estronomer,&#13;
used to spend much of her time&#13;
polishing the telescopes through which&#13;
he brought the distant worlds nigh;&#13;
and it is my ambition now, this hour,&#13;
to dear the lens of your spiritual&#13;
vision, so that looking through the&#13;
dark night of your earthly troubles&#13;
you may behold the glorious constellation&#13;
of a Savior's mercy and a Savior's&#13;
love. Oh, my friends, do not try to&#13;
carry all your ills alone. Do not put&#13;
your poor shoulder under the Apennines&#13;
when the Almighty Christ is&#13;
ready to lift up your burdens. When&#13;
you have a trouble of any kind, you&#13;
rush tht3 way and that way; and,you&#13;
wonder what this man will say about&#13;
it, and what that man will say about&#13;
it; and you try this prescription, and&#13;
that prescription, and the other prescription.&#13;
Oh, why do you not go&#13;
straight to the heart of Christ, knowing&#13;
that for our own sinning and suffering&#13;
ho took the vinegar?&#13;
There wa3 a vessel that had bee"n&#13;
tossed on the seas for a great many&#13;
weeks, and been disabled, and the&#13;
supply of water gave out, aad the&#13;
crew were dyir.g cf thirst. After many&#13;
sail a g a l n i t t h e&#13;
it. When the&#13;
A BRAVE COLONEL.&#13;
RECOMMEND* PE-RUfNA AS A.&#13;
ILY MEPIOIME.&#13;
Spring V«4l«la« »nd&#13;
for C»t»rrta tuM&#13;
1&#13;
Colonel Arthur U Hamilton, of the&#13;
Seventh Ohio Volunteers, 259 Goodale&#13;
street, Colqmbui. phio, writes: "Besides&#13;
having the merits .of Pe-ru-na so&#13;
fully demonstrated in my. family, *•&#13;
' %&#13;
Coiopsi pamUtcm,&#13;
are annoyances and vexations in high&#13;
places as well as in low places, showing&#13;
that in a great many lives are the&#13;
sours greater than the sweets. "Whon&#13;
Jesus therefore had received the /iaegar."&#13;
It is ab*nrd to suppose that a man&#13;
who has always been well can sympathize&#13;
with those who are sick, or fnal&#13;
one who has always been honored con&#13;
appreciate the sorrow of those who&#13;
are despised, or that one who hay been&#13;
horn to a great fortune can understand&#13;
the distress and the straits of those&#13;
who are destitute. The fact that&#13;
Christ himeelf took the vinegar makes&#13;
him able to sympathize today and for&#13;
ever with all those whose cup is filled&#13;
with the sharp acids of this life. He&#13;
took the vinegar!&#13;
In the first place, there was the sourness&#13;
of betrayal. The treachery of&#13;
Judas hurt Christ's feelings more thon&#13;
all the friendship of his disciples did&#13;
him good. You have had many&#13;
friends; but there was one friend upon&#13;
whom you put especial stress. You&#13;
feasted him. You loaned him money.&#13;
You befriended him In the dark passes&#13;
of life, when he especially needed a&#13;
friend. Afterward he turned upon you,&#13;
and he tool: advantage of your former&#13;
intimacies. He wrote against you. He&#13;
talked against you. He mlcrosconised&#13;
your faults. He flung contempt at you&#13;
when you ought to have received nothing&#13;
but gratitude. At first you could&#13;
not sleep at nights. Then you went&#13;
with a tense of having been&#13;
That difficulty will never be&#13;
though mutual ffif&gt;n4s tans&#13;
in the matter until you shall&#13;
feanfe, the old cordialigr will&#13;
come back. Now I commend to&#13;
*a MOB the sympathy of * *etr»-ed&#13;
has failed, and you are thrown abeamend.&#13;
Well, brother, ycu are in glorious&#13;
company. Christ owned not a house in&#13;
which he stopped, or the colt on which&#13;
he rode, or the boat in which he sailed.&#13;
He lived in a borrowed house; he was&#13;
burled in a borrowed grave. Exposed&#13;
to all kinds of weather, yet he had&#13;
cnly one viit of clothes. He breakfasted&#13;
in the mcrning, &amp;nd no one&#13;
could possibly tell where h3 could get&#13;
anything to eat before night. He&#13;
would have been pronounced a financial&#13;
failure. He had to perform a miracle&#13;
to get money to pay a tax-bill.&#13;
Not a dollar did he own. Privation of&#13;
domesticity; privation of nutritiou*&#13;
fcod; pilvaf-icn of a comfortable couch&#13;
on which to sleep; privation of all&#13;
worldly resources! The kings of the&#13;
earth had chased chalices out of which&#13;
to drink, but Christ had nothing but a&#13;
days they saw•a&#13;
sky. They signaled&#13;
vessel caane nearer, the people- on the&#13;
suffering ship cried to the captain of&#13;
the tfther vessel. "Send'ns^merwater.&#13;
We are dying for lack of water."&#13;
And the captain on the vessel&#13;
that was hailed responded: "Dip your&#13;
buckftts where you are. You are in&#13;
the Amazon, and there are scores of&#13;
mtter of-frefcft water ail arontid afrftut&#13;
d h d f A&#13;
taken, &amp; for catarrh and stomach&#13;
trouble:aftd all unite.in praising it.&#13;
As a rtoSKJrlW oa#rrh % can fully&#13;
recommend, it." Mrs. Hamilton, wife&#13;
of the, ©Uw»t colonel, is an ardent&#13;
friead of 'JMtiHptaa also, jn a letter&#13;
on the jttbje«V-|b«,t&gt;wita:.; "I have&#13;
been taking Pe-ru-na for some time,&#13;
and I am enjoying better health now&#13;
than I hay,e for years. I attribute the&#13;
change in my health to Pe-ro-na. and&#13;
recommend this excellent catarrh&#13;
remedy to vrtn woman, .bjfcjieving it&#13;
to be especially beneficial to' them."&#13;
The spring-time Is the most favorable&#13;
time of Ihe year to treat; caiurrh.&#13;
There Isv^e much less liability to take&#13;
fresh cold that the treatment is ua*&#13;
impeded. AH old&#13;
cases of chronic catarrh&#13;
should begin&#13;
imme d 1 a t e 1 y a&#13;
course of Pe-ru-na&#13;
as directed in Dr.&#13;
Hartman's boolis&#13;
ibiacol.&#13;
Hamilton.&#13;
There are so meny&#13;
different p h a s e s&#13;
ami stages of catarrh&#13;
that one&#13;
h a r d l y k n o w s&#13;
when he has It. A&#13;
great many people.;&#13;
think they are suffering from something&#13;
else and hai% tried many medicines&#13;
in vain, when if tfiey could realize&#13;
that it Is catarrh and lake Pe-ru-na&#13;
ffi tfliy would lmprovir promptly&#13;
•pon'wcoverientirely. There are&#13;
ajthgtltfte*. bet no one feersuade&#13;
W iw ofe* catarrn,cjj^dlea&#13;
JustafSo&#13;
"Winter Catarrh" is a book written&#13;
by.Br. Hartm«n. Columhur, Ohio: Sent&#13;
free to &amp;tfy address.&#13;
you, And hundreds of feet deep." And&#13;
then they dropped their buckets over&#13;
the side of tSe vessel, and brought up.&#13;
the clear, bright) fresh water, and put&#13;
out the fire of their thirst. And so I&#13;
hall you today, after attmg and perilous&#13;
voyage, thirsting as you are&#13;
for perdoet end •Wrathig'Ifcr ccrtnfort,&#13;
and thirsting for eterbal life; and I&#13;
ask you what is the use of your go-J&#13;
ing in that death-etruck strfte, while' A . I T A T T P P AW TJUTOTET&#13;
all around you is the deep, clear, wide, j A JJJLAI XldX U U T A l J L l l .&#13;
sparkling flood of God's sympathetic&#13;
mercy? Oh, dip your&#13;
drink and live forever.&#13;
A nev? climbing cucumber i&amp; recommended&#13;
as &amp; fine article.&#13;
buckets and&#13;
"Whosoever&#13;
the&#13;
jplain cup Bet before him, and it was&#13;
very sharp and it was very sour. He&#13;
took the vinegar.&#13;
There were years that passed along&#13;
before your family circle was invaded&#13;
by death, but the moment the charmed&#13;
circle was broken everything seemed to&#13;
dissolve. Hardly have you put the&#13;
black apparel in the wardrobe before&#13;
you have again to take it out Great&#13;
and rapid changes in your family record.&#13;
You get the house and rejoiced&#13;
in it, but the charm was gone as soon&#13;
as the1 crape hung en the door-bell.&#13;
The one upon whom you most depended&#13;
was taken away from you. A&#13;
ccld marble slab lies on your heart today.&#13;
Once, as the children romped&#13;
through the house, you put your hand&#13;
over your aching head and said: • On,&#13;
if I could only have it still!" Oh, i: is&#13;
too still now. You lost your patience&#13;
when the t^ps, and the strings, and the&#13;
shells were left amid floor; but oh,&#13;
you would be willing to have the trinkets&#13;
scattered all over the floor again,&#13;
if they were scattered by the 9ame&#13;
hands. With what a ruthless ploughshare&#13;
bereavement rips up the heart!&#13;
But Jesus knows all about that. You&#13;
cannot tell him anything cow in regard&#13;
to bereavement. He had only a&#13;
few friends, and when he lost one it&#13;
brought tears to his eyes. Lazarus had&#13;
often entertained him at his house.&#13;
Now huotvi is dead and burled, and&#13;
Christ breaks-down with emotion* the&#13;
convslsion of .grief juddering through&#13;
.all the ages of bereavement. Ofarist&#13;
knows wnat it UA to go through the&#13;
bouse mteting * JamUiar inmate.&#13;
Christ knows w&amp;sjt It is to see an un»&#13;
occupied place at tfre table. Were&#13;
tatre not four of them Maif and&#13;
Sia-Jia,antfCJHi«tan«'Laaarurr Fcmr&#13;
wlll,( let him come and&#13;
water cf life fceely7' V1*&#13;
Yet there are i»ea(i^jwhov&gt;r*fj$e thif&#13;
Many of the Clerg-y in Michigan Endorse&#13;
the Tattle Conqueror.&#13;
Our religious opinion* are, as a whole,&#13;
a matter oi faith.' W£*fct&gt;^er denomination&#13;
or secj; we fo\L6*$&gt;fef*B our faith&#13;
own vinegar, and carry their own burdens;&#13;
and their Hfe, 'instead of b e -&#13;
Ing a triumphal" march from victory tc&#13;
victory, will be a hobbling on frwa defeat&#13;
io defeat, until they make final&#13;
surrender to retributive disaster. Oh,&#13;
Iifwigh I could today gather up in my&#13;
arms all the woes of men and women,&#13;
all their heart-aches* all their disappointments,&#13;
&lt;all their chagrins; and&#13;
juat take them right to the feet of a&#13;
sympathising Jesus. He took the vinegar..&#13;
Nana Sahib, after he1 had lost&#13;
his last battle, la India, fall back into&#13;
the jungles of Iheri—jungles so full ot&#13;
malaria that no mortai can live there.&#13;
He carried with him also a ruby of&#13;
great-lustre and of great value. Ha&#13;
died in those jungles and his body&#13;
was never found, and the ruby has&#13;
never yet been recovered. And I fear&#13;
that today there are some who will&#13;
fall back from this subicct icto the&#13;
sickening, killing jungles of the!* sin/&#13;
carrying a gem of Infinite value—a&#13;
priceless soul ,|jo be 4ost forever, C\&#13;
that that ruby might/las^ IK the eternal&#13;
coronation'! Btrt, no: Thar* are&#13;
some, I fear, who tur^iucayJteacv this&#13;
offered mercy, and comfort, and divine&#13;
sympathy.notwtthstanding that Chrtct,&#13;
that he tl№$*lgbty. believes fctt adopted&#13;
oseed is unquestioned 3&amp;$ opinion of&#13;
the eleftry on any subject carry welldeserved&#13;
weight with all classes of&#13;
people. Many reverend gentlemen in&#13;
Michigan are testifying for the little&#13;
conqueror. Their praise is not given&#13;
lightly and only after personal experience.&#13;
Gratitude and a desire to promote&#13;
the welfare of jfahejpibcli brings&#13;
forth stfch tesOtayoaf-eta follows r &lt;&#13;
The Rev. P. A. Smith, of 829 First&#13;
street, KalawujJP*. Mich.,&#13;
I procured' Doan's Kidney Pills I was,&#13;
at the time, and had been considerably&#13;
troubled with my kidneys. Backache&#13;
was quite prdliatoceoVheiargespeciayll&#13;
severe when I sat or stood in a stooping&#13;
po*HU»;for any length of time, piber&#13;
symptoms usually attending disordered&#13;
kidneys plainly indicated what c/use d&#13;
the difflctttty. Doan*a Kidney"THfil&#13;
ojprrected tKe/anneyancerin a very short&#13;
for&#13;
the long&#13;
a&#13;
the&#13;
and »ler&#13;
age&lt;k«AdJfc»&#13;
su^ered the placer*&#13;
' ~(ved'In his face&#13;
of the -nthft^mob^&#13;
aid the discour-&#13;
g ^ U ^ j f imn t ed Ota« 1i«*0o4ei*.&#13;
took the vinegar. May God AJmightx,&#13;
brreeaak tthee teftrtcattoe/ii»»nndd; ; lleeaaii yop&#13;
out into the strong hope, and the good&#13;
cheer, and the• glorious sunshine o*&#13;
this triumphant Gospel!&#13;
Iht Toiee of nature proclaims th»,&#13;
death does not end all. JSuman eoniW&#13;
» declaration of&#13;
time, and, I have nx&gt;t nqticad, oj^ to&#13;
d t i h i h t"^&#13;
, d, nxt date, any ihmcstioh ot"^. recttrr^ce.&#13;
As I toolcop othe*.-niedieijDe there can&#13;
be no doubt but«^Dpan'e&gt; KiAoey Pills&#13;
were tffe Tttrect means, "6T .curing aeu&#13;
I*m most fev«fablgi.i4fc»taeed with&#13;
them."&#13;
"10oan*s'&gt;!&amp;i4'ney Pillr'fer.&#13;
dealers. Priotf «J eibisf*&#13;
le by all&#13;
by&#13;
• colt to stop a* ^&#13;
AISJ j ' \*9dm^^ _A.&#13;
The Pi&#13;
is Au&#13;
'jane&#13;
^ ^ SB* Before sarsaparillas were known,&#13;
fifty years ago, it began&#13;
work. Since&#13;
nyoucancount&#13;
.the sarsaparillas&#13;
by the&#13;
thousands&#13;
withevery&#13;
variation&#13;
of imitation&#13;
of the&#13;
original, except&#13;
one.&#13;
They have&#13;
never been&#13;
able to imitate&#13;
the&#13;
quality of&#13;
the pioneer.&#13;
When you&#13;
see Aycfs on&#13;
a bottle of sarsaparilla&#13;
that is&#13;
enough; you can&#13;
have confidenceat once.'ITyouwant an&#13;
experiment, buy anybody's Sarsaparilla; if&#13;
want a cure, you must buy&#13;
[T*« Sfefttpfcrillt triilch made SirsiparilU {amour}&#13;
Bicycles&#13;
Give riders that satisfied feeling that comes from (he&#13;
knowledge that they have the best ~&#13;
Made by ttra POPE MF6. CO. Means Satisfaction.&#13;
C f U M B U K S f ftUIttfSS, $ 7 5&#13;
COLUMBIA CHAII WHEELS, $ 5 0&#13;
HARTFORD BICYCLES,&#13;
VEDETTE BICYCLES,&#13;
- - $35&#13;
$25 lit $26&#13;
JUVKNILI BJGYOi.ES In all sizes, from S2O to S25.&#13;
Askw* Columns D-fer fa* r^ilr,&#13;
or write us dwed. mdamot 2c atsaop. POPE 00.. Hartford.&#13;
- H E THAT WORKS EASILY, WORKS&#13;
SUCCESSFULLY." CLEAN HOUSE WITH SAPOLIO&#13;
8ee that&#13;
Spatcling9*&#13;
Trade-Mark'&#13;
I* on your&#13;
Bate Ball 8upptto»&#13;
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A. G. &amp;PALDINQ * BBOS.&#13;
New York. Catatfo, Dem&#13;
flam ittveftaf&#13;
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GET YOUR MONEY'S WORTH&#13;
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DOMESTIC AND FOREIGN NEWS&#13;
A Company IIIM Been Organised to&#13;
duoe » Heeoad Klondike at tbe&#13;
Farla Exposition— A Taeoau Man&#13;
Killed HU "Wife While Dreaming.&#13;
War In the tensoan Itlands.&#13;
The news from Samoa that the U. S.&#13;
cruiser Philadelphia and the British&#13;
cruisers Porpoise and Royalist had&#13;
bombarded the towns held by Mataafa,&#13;
who has thus far had the official support&#13;
of the German government, came&#13;
with startlrag suddenness to officials&#13;
at Washington, and displaced for the&#13;
time being the attention given to the&#13;
fighting around Manila. The shelling&#13;
of Mataafa was looked upon as of secondary&#13;
importance but the deepest interest&#13;
attached to the attitude of the&#13;
German government. That some overt&#13;
act would take place has been apprehended&#13;
for many days but there was&#13;
little idea it would take such a broad&#13;
sweep and lead to such heavy loss of&#13;
life. In this aspect of the case the&#13;
actual results were regarded as far&#13;
more serious than those which had&#13;
been expected and provided for during&#13;
the recent diplomatic exchanges between&#13;
the three governments. Moreover,&#13;
new elements of international&#13;
danger had unexpectedly arisen. These&#13;
included the proclamation of the German&#13;
consul, Rose, which, it is believed,&#13;
tended to incite the Mataafa party to&#13;
an open revolt. Also the wounding&#13;
and killing of British sailors and marines,&#13;
the shooting of an American&#13;
sentry and the attacks on the several&#13;
consulates.&#13;
WAR NOTES,&#13;
Succession to German Thrones.&#13;
Advices from Berlin says: Threre is&#13;
a strpngly growing sentiment in favor&#13;
of excluding foreign born princes from&#13;
succession to German thrones. The&#13;
death of the hereditary prince of Saxe-&#13;
Coburg and Goths and the question of&#13;
the throne of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha&#13;
^tare-started- a dise»ssion -which has&#13;
taken a violent form in some of the&#13;
papers. A member of the bundesrath&#13;
has often discussed the matter during&#13;
the past month, and that while nobody&#13;
thinks of excluding the present heir&#13;
to the throne of Coburg, some new&#13;
legislation on the subject will .shortly&#13;
be proposed in the bundesrath jointly&#13;
by the German governments, and that&#13;
later it will be sent to the reichstag.&#13;
Shot His Wife in a Dream.&#13;
Dr. Chas. Corey, of Tacoma, Wash.,&#13;
shot and killed his wife while, according&#13;
to his story, the two were lying&#13;
asleep. Corey was ill and his story of&#13;
the affair is that he was laboring under&#13;
a nightmare, believing his wife&#13;
was being pursued by a stranger who&#13;
was intent on killing her. Just as the&#13;
pursuer was about to stab his wife, according&#13;
to the dream, Corey fired two&#13;
shots from his revolver. He awoke&#13;
with a start to find himself sitting in&#13;
bed with a revolver in his hand. The&#13;
husband is nearly crazed with grief&#13;
and friends are watching him to prevent&#13;
his suicide.&#13;
The naval board of promotion, con&#13;
sisting of Rear-Admirals McNair, How&#13;
ell and Howison, have completed and&#13;
submitted its report. The. ep&#13;
passes favorably on all the offlijers appointed,&#13;
so that all questions of their&#13;
advancement is removed. The list is&#13;
as follows: Rear-Admirals George C.&#13;
Remey, Norman H. Farquhar. John C.&#13;
W&amp;Uon, Henry B. Robson. Win field 8.&#13;
Schley, Silas Casey, Wm. T. Sampson,&#13;
Bartlett J. Cromwell, John W. Philip,&#13;
Francis J. Higginson, Henry F. Picking,&#13;
Frederic Rodgers, Louis Kempfl,&#13;
Geo. \V. Sumner. As Mr. Robson has&#13;
retired, Capt Benj. F. Day is made a&#13;
rear-admiral.&#13;
The fighting in the Philippines is&#13;
still going on with a terrible loss of&#13;
life. A report says Americans lost 45&#13;
kilted and 145 wounded in one day,&#13;
which was much lighter than the previous&#13;
day. The insurgent loss is not&#13;
estimated, but is said to be very heavy.&#13;
The latest advices is to the effect that&#13;
the rebels fired Malabon and Polo and&#13;
repeated to Malolos, where, it is believed,&#13;
they will make their last stand.&#13;
Our troops are in pursuit, capturing&#13;
trench after vrench.&#13;
In an answer to a letter from the&#13;
postmaster-general of the army, requesting&#13;
a decision as to the class of&#13;
enlisted men of the regular army entitled&#13;
to the benefits of extra pay on&#13;
discharge from the army, Solicitor&#13;
Tracewell of the treasury has decided&#13;
that the men who enlisted for the war&#13;
only and are entitled to extra pay are&#13;
those who went in after the act of&#13;
April 20, 1898, which authorized the&#13;
increase of the regular army.&#13;
Capt. O'Neill, chief of the ordinance&#13;
bureau of the navy department, has&#13;
forwarded to the secretary for his approval&#13;
a form of circular advertising&#13;
for bids for armor for the battleship&#13;
Maine and the four monitors authorized&#13;
last spring and the three battleships&#13;
and three armored cruisers authorized&#13;
by the last naval appropriation&#13;
bill.&#13;
Spanish officers acquainted with the&#13;
Philippine islands continue to predict&#13;
the failure of Maj.-Gen. Otis'campaign,&#13;
notwithstanding the American Paccess.&#13;
They say that while the Americans&#13;
will undoubtedly win all the battles&#13;
they wittlose^the campaignitsrtf;owing&#13;
to the aptitude of the Tagalos to&#13;
conduct u war of surprises and ambuscades.&#13;
Secretary Alger has reported a favorable&#13;
condition of affairs in Cuba&#13;
and has expressed the opinion that&#13;
more troops than are now in the island&#13;
will not be needed. After the volunteers&#13;
ave sent home, there will be 14&#13;
regiments with a total of IS,000 men&#13;
in Cuba, making two regiments of regulars&#13;
to each province.&#13;
Klondike at the ParU Exposition.&#13;
An in port ant corporation has just&#13;
been organized under Canadian and&#13;
New York auspices, to exploit to the&#13;
world at the Paris exposition a perfect&#13;
representation of life and work in the&#13;
Yukon territory including ail phases&#13;
of mining, by men direct from the&#13;
Klondike. An exact counterpart will&#13;
be built representing a portion of the&#13;
main street of Dawson. There will be&#13;
Indian villages, dog teams, together&#13;
with moving pictures, the latter to be&#13;
the result of an entirely new machine&#13;
which Thos. A. Edison is now constructing.&#13;
S1.0O0,OwO for rive Steamer*.&#13;
It is learned on good authority that&#13;
the American Steel &amp; Wire Co. has secured&#13;
control of the five steamers of&#13;
the Zenith Transit Co. The vessels&#13;
sold are the steamers Queen City, Empire&#13;
City, Zenith City, Superior City&#13;
and Crescent City. They are all of&#13;
the largest class, and the deal is the&#13;
largest ever made on the great lakes.&#13;
The fire steamers are valued at upwards&#13;
of €1,000,000.&#13;
Will Bee««alae tfe*&#13;
A call has been issued ,for a national&#13;
ooafereaee of reformers who favor&#13;
Abolition or suppression of the drink&#13;
traffic and other restores*. The conferettee&#13;
Is to convene in Ptttslmrj, June&#13;
&amp; Tfce object will** extension of the&#13;
BBorement and selection of costferaes&#13;
to a similar conferenos im Buffalo,&#13;
June 38 and July 4. Women wit! ante&#13;
equal rights with men in the coulsr-&#13;
A sssali taaanfactoxv dt atocworics&#13;
in Hotokea, N. J., waio^kroyed recently&#13;
\f an explosion. Ooe man,&#13;
Nicola Afcsaloae, waf killed-, Michael&#13;
Ans^ai father of IfielfcelY was psiay&#13;
The mono j loss was smaH.&#13;
The Klondike iroW yield iorthi* year&#13;
U estimated at »l&amp;,000,00«.&#13;
Three more of the band of brigands&#13;
that had been operating in the San&#13;
Luis district have been captured, and&#13;
the entire band is now in custody.&#13;
Among those arrested charged with&#13;
complicity in acts of brigandage are&#13;
several former insurgent officers, all cf&#13;
whom, however, assert their innocence.&#13;
The six additional mountain guns&#13;
asked for by Gen. Otis a short time ago&#13;
are now on their way to Manila.&#13;
These guns are 2 pounders and can be&#13;
taken anywhere that mules or men can&#13;
go. Geu. Gtis has eight of these guns,&#13;
besides four 12-pounders of the Actor&#13;
battery.&#13;
As soon as Gen. Otis achieves a decisive&#13;
victory over Aguinaldo, the&#13;
Philippine commission will issue a&#13;
proclamation promising amnesty to&#13;
all natives who lay down their arms&#13;
and self-rule to those who recognize&#13;
the sovereignity of the United States.&#13;
Malolos, the insurgent capital, has&#13;
been taken, and the rebels arc now&#13;
with Aguinaldo and his cabinet north&#13;
of the capital. The American loss was&#13;
4 killed and 23 wounded. Before the&#13;
insurgents retreated they applied tUe&#13;
torch to their former capital.&#13;
As soon as the Sheridan arrives at&#13;
Manila Gen. Otis will have 1,900 reinforcements.&#13;
Besides this six regiments&#13;
of infantry and artillery, comprising&#13;
8,000 men, one regiment of which has&#13;
started, are under orders for Manila.&#13;
Hsrry Huber, aged 20, a member of&#13;
the hospital corps with the 1st California&#13;
volunteers, was literally cut to&#13;
pieces by the Filipinos, while acting&#13;
as a spy. His home was in Oakland,&#13;
California.&#13;
The Americans have won a sweeping&#13;
victory over Aguinaldo's forces. Tbe&#13;
American loss was 100 killed and&#13;
wounded, and the Filipinos between&#13;
900 and 300.&#13;
The American casualties for tbe&#13;
three days' hard fighting was 53 killed&#13;
and 211 wounded.&#13;
The total number of American catuaKieaueiaee&#13;
Feb. 4 U 157 killed&#13;
8*4&#13;
An Excellent Combination.&#13;
The pleasant method and beneficial&#13;
effects of the well known remedy*&#13;
STBUP or FIGS, manufactured by the&#13;
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO., illustrate&#13;
the value of obtaining the liquid laxative&#13;
principles of plants known to be&#13;
medicinally laxative and presenting&#13;
them in the form most refreshing to the&#13;
taste and acceptable to the system. It&#13;
is the one perfect strengthening laxative,&#13;
cleansing the system effectually,&#13;
dispelling colds, headaches and fevers&#13;
gently yet promptly and enabling one&#13;
to overcome habitual constipation permanently.&#13;
Its perfect freedom from&#13;
every objectionable quality and substance,&#13;
and its acting on the kidneys,&#13;
liver and bowels, without weakening^&#13;
or irritating them, make it the ideal&#13;
laxative.&#13;
In the process of manufacturing figs&#13;
are used, as they are pleasant to the&#13;
taste, but the medicinal qualities of the&#13;
remedy are obtained from senna and&#13;
other aromatic plants, by a method&#13;
known to the CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP&#13;
Co. only. In ordqr to get its beneficial&#13;
effects and to avoid imitations, please&#13;
remember the full name of the Company&#13;
printed on the front of every package.&#13;
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.&#13;
DAN TBASCI8CO, CAX*.&#13;
XtOUXSVJXiXiZ, KY. 27SW TOBX. H. T .&#13;
For sale by all DruggUta.—Price 50c per bottle&#13;
jifffigg? I Thompson's Ey WatttT&#13;
WANTED—Case of t&gt;ad Health tnat B-I-P-A-7"-ft&#13;
xrl\[ not benefit. Send 5 cent* to It [pan* Chemical&#13;
Co.. New York,(or 10 tamplea and 1,000 leatlmoolala.&#13;
n P O D G V KEW DISCOVERY:&#13;
••awIm^»r sT V P I quick relief ati'icurv* worn&#13;
cases, tieui for book of teatJinonl&amp;lsand l O d a n ' treatment Free. *r. •.•.uuuu'naou. itiuu, tta&gt; NEU-ROT-I-CO TEA Totntroda^onrTe* a»w H M I i MU frfctt We win malt one fnii&#13;
•lie package on reueipt of 4 two-cent »tainr&gt;*.&#13;
Guaranteed to care Constipation and Ue*ilat-be.&#13;
A Nerve Tonic. 25&lt;\ ^package. Kearutlco HetUclne&#13;
Co.,Hornellivllle.N. Y. •&#13;
C A N D Y CATHARTIC&#13;
It not tntt lUtcment worth \nrt*'.\g*Un%.[( you hare&#13;
a trlttuX iufferfn&lt; from asjr Kidney dl*ea*e? Not a&#13;
p«t»Dt nledlcluc: nUilicr li pjileui ubiUed tu coiaa-&#13;
10 New York for treatment. Eiaii. and te«r of or1n«&#13;
free of chance. Send* OM.. eip. paid. Name paper.&#13;
T«.pkini-C«r*in C«.. 1300 Broadwh. N«w York City.&#13;
WhlsUersDved&#13;
A Natural Btaok toy&#13;
Buckingham's Dye,&#13;
Pile* M e«Bta of all druggista or&#13;
B. P. Hall * Co.. Nuba*. K. H.&#13;
CUIE YOOnOFI Use Bis • (or aBnatnral&#13;
lachargM, iaaasnaialioee,&#13;
irritations or ulveratioae&#13;
of m t i e o m meatbraaaa.&#13;
. - Paia!*ae, aad not&#13;
ITWrTIMII VHfsBMtttV c o t or poiaoaous.&#13;
y&#13;
or aeat in plain wrapper,&#13;
by ezpraea, prepaid, for&#13;
p.m. or 3 botitoa* «t.7&amp;.&#13;
CircaUr ee&amp;i oa CHEAP FARMS DO YOU WUT A HOIE?&#13;
100,000 ACRES £ £ &amp; &amp; % •old on long time sn£ **ty payments, a ltttlw&#13;
( d i TBK&#13;
s y p y ,&#13;
BTemjr. o m e a n d soe t u c r write- T B K TBUMAX MOSS STATE BANK, Sanllaa&#13;
Center, Mien., or&#13;
THE TRUMAN MOSS ESTATE,&#13;
Croswsl!* Stnll&#13;
NEWSY BREVITIES.&#13;
Ex.-GOT. Thos. C. Fletcher, formerly&#13;
of St. Lomis, Ma, but for the past Itf&#13;
jears a resMeat -of Washtaftoa, is&#13;
dead, AgtATX&#13;
Tike a s m s of the IT. &amp;&#13;
•rlsoaa ha*e&#13;
The fortner is now the Warren&#13;
sad tfce latter the Haaeoek.&#13;
asstmyrni it&gt;f)&#13;
Hair * Fait works, at Chioajo.&#13;
taff a property loss of nearly M0Q,00t.&#13;
EVeren" atayloyes were iajnred, &lt;&#13;
tfttallr. . . . ~&#13;
TO THE&#13;
CANADA. OBrtBctsemuatbauf Marckud April.&#13;
excwatoM will leave Ohio a&amp;d Michtfaa polaufer&#13;
****** Canada, oa lloaday vt each week.&#13;
Tb*M excanluoa will b« accompanied by Meat* ef&#13;
UM GoT«rmoMQt. aad •petlal c a n w U l b i provides&#13;
for the thruost trif.&#13;
For ptrtleaJar* as to how to obtain l«0 eeres ef&#13;
railway rates for settlers, apply to eke&#13;
SBp*tMea4eat of&#13;
lsBBtlcraUua Otuwa, Canada, or&#13;
lt P L C B 4&#13;
tac4igM aad railw&#13;
A M d&#13;
f lsBBtlcraUua. *&gt; J** « £ • * • • M*.J*Jea*aBt, M|«lt. P. L. Caves, Be4&#13;
Art. i d m r M. V. H c l u e s . Dettvfc, Miufc.&#13;
W.N.U.—£r«TltO«T~NO. 13—ISM&#13;
1 *&#13;
•T&#13;
•CM&#13;
Hi&#13;
, - • • • • &lt; * . * • « • • •&#13;
&lt;&lt;rv... VI. *••&#13;
•&gt;-( «».".'i&#13;
^&#13;
m&#13;
...v.p&#13;
UNADILLA- V'&#13;
James Burden was elected supervisor.&#13;
Frank Ives lost a valuable horse&#13;
and two fine colts last week.&#13;
Mrs. Julia Bartsuff is visiting&#13;
her son, Charles at Ann Arbor.&#13;
Frauk and Kate Bar mi m made&#13;
a trip to Jackson last Thursday.&#13;
DeWitt Perry and wife, of Munith,&#13;
visited at Ferry Mills lust&#13;
Thursday.&#13;
Fred Sfcowe and wife? ares pending&#13;
a few days with friends in&#13;
Dansville.&#13;
Wirt and Gratia Dunning returned&#13;
to their school in Alma&#13;
last Monday.&#13;
Edwin Lyman, of Jackson, visited&#13;
friends aod relatives in this vijla«e&#13;
sevaral days this week.&#13;
The Athenemn will m^t at the&#13;
home of Irwin Abbott of Anderson on&#13;
Friday evening ot iw &gt; wH**k&#13;
Will L'iplady cl&lt;HH&lt;i a v*'*v successful&#13;
terip of school in district number&#13;
one on Friday of last&#13;
eel lent program wa- i&#13;
pupil* and the school&#13;
visitors.&#13;
The store of RMM&gt;&lt; I&#13;
a busy scene for tinweek&#13;
as they cooked&#13;
cuit and coffee free.&#13;
room&#13;
• i H \ « t h e&#13;
ie&#13;
An ftxl&#13;
»y the&#13;
• tail ot&#13;
was&#13;
past&#13;
biaadstoves&#13;
aud&#13;
made several sales.&#13;
• F. L. Andrews ent«rUinM several&#13;
frentleman friends on KuUdy evening&#13;
last celebrating his 3Stli uirtliday.&#13;
Refreshments were s r i \ f j and a&#13;
pleasant evening spent playing croko*&#13;
nole. The gentlemen left Mr. A. a&#13;
fine, substantial, easy rocker as a&#13;
The entire Republican ticket token of esteem, with wishes for many&#13;
was elected in this township ex-1 returns of th« birthday.&#13;
OBITUARY.&#13;
Diert, at the home of her mother m&#13;
Putnam township, of uppeodioitia, on&#13;
Monday, April 3,1899, Miss .Blancha&#13;
Hendee, awed 17 years, 11 months and .that It It probably not io bad aa It&#13;
16 days. lounds. "One lady that I knew,&#13;
Grammar.&#13;
The writer of ft book erf travels, ten-&#13;
Ing ot the Insect pests encountered la&#13;
which la the best that cat he said Is&#13;
**llet Miss Hendee was born in Putnam, . at hertoI1tt&gt; *? h t ? 1T&#13;
* , „ ioo. D L . • ui thing crawllnf on her BhouWer. Sbe&#13;
April 17, 1881. She was a bright K r e a m e d a n d called h#r huaband, and&#13;
younx lady and always lived a oon- ^e had lust time to knock the centlsistent.&#13;
Christiau life, trusting in the pede off before biting her in the neck.&#13;
Lord. Her illness was of short duration&#13;
and though she suffered a great&#13;
deal, she WHS patient through it all.&#13;
She leaves a mother, one brother&#13;
HOME KBOM THK WAR.&#13;
The m*n}i«»rti of the 35th who ware&#13;
mustered uut tbe past week, a* once&#13;
Knutfhi WwW respective bomefl. Oar&#13;
l»oy*oH!o \l, returned to Gregory&#13;
Nfondhv «n&gt;l were preeted there and&#13;
at Pin-knHv i&gt;y cheers and a bearty&#13;
weir mi" The boys are all looking&#13;
and three sister* to mourn their loss.&#13;
The lun^ral tierviees will be held at&#13;
tb« liom« nf her mother, Thursday,&#13;
(today) at 1:30 p. ni., ttev. Cbas. Simpson&#13;
officiating.&#13;
MONTHLY REPORT&#13;
cept supervisor.&#13;
Miss Josie May, who has been&#13;
sick for the past week, is able to&#13;
The Pinckney Excbange Bank&#13;
hanys up a neat sign to the effect that&#13;
they are protected by a policy in the&#13;
be about again.&#13;
John Jackson has lumber on&#13;
the ground for a new barn which j deinniiyin* it from "loss thatTma'y be&#13;
he intends to erect in the spring. \ caused by a burglary or robbery of&#13;
Bankers Mutual Casualty Company.&#13;
This refers to an insurance policy issued&#13;
by the Company to the bank, in&#13;
Hi^h School Department.&#13;
Whole number of days taught 20;&#13;
grand total number of days attendance&#13;
799; average daily attendance 39&#13;
whole number belonging 44; aggre*&#13;
gate tardiness 51; pupiU neither absent&#13;
nor tardy during the pa*t month:&#13;
Onaght the Tartar.&#13;
"Poor Gayboy used to think that&#13;
advertising paid." And doesn't be&#13;
now?" "No. You see, he advertlied&#13;
(or a wife In a matrimonial paper—&#13;
tnd got one.1*&#13;
A Mr. Miller, of Stockbridge, j tbe bank, and secures the nank and&#13;
has rented the Win. Stilson&#13;
place latey vacated by Will Hopkins.&#13;
Geo. Shepard and wife have&#13;
moved into the bouse with A.&#13;
Barp and will work for him the&#13;
coming summer.&#13;
_ TC/CWI flowlf*tit _iimd Stanlv&#13;
Marsh, of Ann Arbor, and Morgan&#13;
Sherman, of Ypeilanti, were&#13;
home last Monday.&#13;
its patrons from the dancer of&#13;
from that score. The Company issuing&#13;
the policy pays tbe loss occasioned,&#13;
and in addition to this money&#13;
protection, the Company has an efficient&#13;
detective service which is at&#13;
once put on the track of a criminal&#13;
wboj interferes with any bank holding&#13;
a policy iu the Company, and&#13;
^nnfintf the bnryfcnr of"Tablier to bay&#13;
and trii 1 regardless of the time and&#13;
effort required. Punishment is sure&#13;
to overtake any person who attacks&#13;
Nellie Uarduer&#13;
Rose Head&#13;
Kittle Grieve&#13;
Minnie Moaki&#13;
Iva PI ace w»y&#13;
Mabel Staler&#13;
Cyrus Gardner&#13;
Kate Clark&#13;
Blanclie Graham&#13;
Fred Campbell&#13;
Ooldie Turner&#13;
Pupils neither absent nor tardy&#13;
durinur the term:&#13;
Mablel Sieler&#13;
Tbe other&#13;
last week.&#13;
Kate Clark&#13;
Place way&#13;
DUBFEE, PRINCIPAL.&#13;
reports were published&#13;
FANCY NAMES FOR POISONS.&#13;
Danger Lurks In M»ny of th« So-Called&#13;
iw*\ Value In&#13;
Literature&#13;
18 THE&#13;
Reynold'* Black Lanshaug-s,&#13;
Bred from prize winners; strictly&#13;
beautiful; large in size; hardy, bust of&#13;
layers; active forager*; fine sitters and&#13;
mother; excellent table fowl.&#13;
Also very (iue Wbito Bramas; eggs&#13;
for batching by applying 1J miles&#13;
west of Chubbs Corners.&#13;
Eflg8 per 13, 75cts.&#13;
REYNOLDS &amp; SON,&#13;
Pinckn*»y, Mich.&#13;
and Improved&#13;
FRANK LESLIE'S&#13;
POPULAR MONTHLY&#13;
Tor a Quarter Century '&#13;
25 cts., $3.00 a Year,&#13;
Now 10 cts., $1.00 a year.&#13;
Msa. FBANK LSBUB, Editor.&#13;
Prmant Contributor*:&#13;
Frauk R. Stockton, . *&#13;
G«n. Wesley Uerritt,&#13;
Bret Harte,&#13;
Sec. of Navy Long,&#13;
Joaquin Miller,&#13;
Julia C. R. Dorr,&#13;
Walter Camp,&#13;
Egerton Castle,&#13;
Win. C. VanTaasel Sutpben,&#13;
Margaret E. Sanggter,&#13;
Edgar Fawcett,&#13;
Lruiee Chandler Moulton,&#13;
William Dean Howells,&#13;
Qen. Nelson A. Miles,&#13;
and other noted and popular writers.&#13;
Prank Leslie's Popular Monthly !• 1«&#13;
all respecta one of the hrlKbtent and b»*t Iliuttrated&#13;
10-oent raa azlni&gt;t In (he world-mis* better,&#13;
The beet known authors aod artists oontributo to&#13;
Us pages, aod tb» bi^taeat staudard of printing la&#13;
apparent.&#13;
SPECIAL;-Beaatlful Milltarj Calendar, «lx&#13;
seotlont, eacb in twelve colors, lOxl^^i lnohea,&#13;
March 1899 to February 1900, toRether whh thla&#13;
magazine Mirch to December 1899-ail for 11.00.&#13;
Frank Leslie Publishing House, N.Y.&#13;
Copies Sold and Subscriptions Received bj Newsdealers.&#13;
Edd Smith has traded his old i the hank in the way of burglary or&#13;
farm to Chas. Bullis tor his&#13;
immediately sold the one&#13;
ceived to Joseph Bowen.&#13;
The L. A. socieity of the Presbyterian&#13;
church, will give a Blue&#13;
"Jay socTaTat the hall WeidrreEday&#13;
afternoon and evening, April 19.&#13;
Tbe donation which was held&#13;
last woek Wednesday for the&#13;
benefit of Bev. Dunning was&#13;
poorly attended on account of&#13;
bad roads.&#13;
Andy and Mike Roche, and&#13;
John and Erny McClear, of Co.&#13;
M, 35th Mich., arrived in Greg-j&#13;
ory Mouday noon. They are all&#13;
hearty and well)&#13;
J. 1). Witson, who had to leave&#13;
the bank at Chelsea for his health&#13;
is row looking after the business&#13;
affairs of Geo. P. Glazier in the&#13;
western states and this locality.&#13;
andjiohbery. The patrons or the bank&#13;
re- can readily see the great merit of such&#13;
protection.&#13;
For Mule.&#13;
Brood sow tor sale.&#13;
-- HJL_KEYNOLDB, Marion.&#13;
Our Millinery parlors me hiUeJ up&#13;
and open tor inspection in I be rooms&#13;
over the bank. BOYLE &amp; UALJBTKAD&#13;
Yoocain&#13;
Dodge TIICBI&#13;
In his quarterly report on the health&#13;
of the borough of Chorley, Lancashire,&#13;
Dr. J. A. Harris, the medical officer&#13;
for the district, calls attention to the&#13;
indiscriminate sale and purchase of&#13;
the various Bo-called headache powders.&#13;
He states that under his direction&#13;
the county police obtained six or&#13;
eeven samples from different shops&#13;
In the town and had them submitted&#13;
to analysis. In every case the quantity&#13;
of the active ingredient was found&#13;
to be In excess of the maximum dose&#13;
Wed-&#13;
MORE LOCAL.&#13;
J. Donaldson was in Howell&#13;
nesday.&#13;
H. B Galdner visited the countyseat&#13;
Tuesday.&#13;
Regular meeting of Loyal Guards&#13;
next Wednesday evening.&#13;
E. L. Thompson visited friends in&#13;
Fowterville &lt;he first of t::e week.&#13;
The band rendered several selections&#13;
Monday which helped enliven op&#13;
election.&#13;
Tbe weatber being favorable, the&#13;
band will give an open air concert&#13;
Saturday evening.&#13;
Miss Mary Gate and Mrs. Brokaw.&#13;
who recently sold their farms just&#13;
south of tbe village, moved this week&#13;
into tbe Chas. Lore boose, on Unadilla&#13;
ttreet.&#13;
Tbe Drs. Bigler, assisted 1.y Dr. Dar&#13;
liajr of Aon Arbor, performed aa op-&#13;
#raiion on Mr. Douglas of AaderMm,&#13;
Tuesday lor appendicitis. He is doing&#13;
40 weil as can be expected.&#13;
, IUHU&lt;H&lt;&gt;8 C A. Hyde and George&#13;
and tbe Miseee Jessie Wilson&#13;
Hotson of Rastford, Ifte-&#13;
Were guests of Jf. C.&#13;
Wilson tnd other relatives last week.&#13;
W,Blod*et of Detroit and&#13;
Did you ever try to dodge tbe&#13;
rain-drops? Did not fumrrd&#13;
very well* did you? It's just&#13;
as useless to try to escape from&#13;
the germs of consumption. You&#13;
can't do it. They are about us&#13;
on every hand and we are cori^&#13;
stantly taking them into our&#13;
lungs.&#13;
Then why don't we all have&#13;
this disease? Simply because&#13;
these germs cannot gain a foothold&#13;
in a strong throat and&#13;
lungs. It's when these are&#13;
weak that the germs master.&#13;
The body must be well supplied&#13;
with fat. The danger comes&#13;
when the blood is poor and the&#13;
body is thin. If your cough does&#13;
not yield, and your throat and&#13;
lungs feel raw and «ore, you&#13;
should not delay another day.&#13;
TakeScott's&#13;
Emulsion of Cod-Liver OH with riypopbosphites&#13;
at once. It will heal the&#13;
Inflamed membranes and greatly&#13;
•strengthen them as welt The&#13;
pharmacopoeia. These1 remedies belong&#13;
to the class of the analgesics, the&#13;
members of the group in common use&#13;
for this purpose being aeetanalide or&#13;
phenyllacetamide, phanazone, and&#13;
phenacetin or para-acet-phenetldin.&#13;
Their properties were fully considered&#13;
in the section ot pharmacology and&#13;
therapeutics at the meeting at Edinburgh,&#13;
where Professor Stockman&#13;
(Glasgow) opened a discussion on the&#13;
Therapeutic Value of Recent Synthetic&#13;
Analgesics; Their Benefits and&#13;
Attendant Risks." There was a general&#13;
expression of opinion that these&#13;
drags required to be handled with the&#13;
greatest possible care, and that a&#13;
slight error of judgment with regard&#13;
to dosage might be followed by disastrous&#13;
results. AH these substances&#13;
depress the heart's action, and In toxic&#13;
doses diminish the force of the respiratory&#13;
act. The danger Is not obviated&#13;
by selling a poisonous drug under a&#13;
fanciful name.&#13;
HORSE-SHOEING&#13;
GENERAL REPAIRING,&#13;
Coatracted feet are helped&#13;
andhorses do Qot interfere when&#13;
I do the work. Oall and give&#13;
me a trial. Shop cm Mill street&#13;
north of Opera Houee.&#13;
t&#13;
Kale.&#13;
Notice Is b reby glr*n that by tirtue of a Fieri&#13;
TRUTH IN ADVERTISING&#13;
It is rare but not unknown. A truthful&#13;
man will have a truthful business, and a truthful business will be as&#13;
particular as to what it says in the newspaper as though the proprietor&#13;
of that business was telling you facts face to face. The Busy Bee&#13;
Hive has built its business on honest goods truthfully advertised.&#13;
We have at this store many things to help us do business.&#13;
The largest and lightest store in town, the best and brightest set of&#13;
help, the largest and most varied stock of goods, ample capital to buy&#13;
everything for spot cash; but above all what we consider our greatest&#13;
help and of more value than our capital, we have the confidence of&#13;
the people of Central Michigan. Thb we prize above all and will&#13;
guard and protect it in every instance.&#13;
Nof Let Us Talk Aboot Carpets.&#13;
Have you got to carpet one of your rooms this&#13;
spring? If you have* come to us and see the largest and the finest&#13;
„ . . . . v ,., stock of Carpets tbat has ever been shown in Jackson. The stock is&#13;
Factae issued out of, the Circuit Court for tb* I . . . , . . , m . . , , ,&#13;
county of Liviugaton, ia favor ot&lt;i*onje Ackiey,j surprisingly large and varied. I h e prices, on the hand, are eurprist&#13;
^ o thIt ***!!' Ch*tt*1" •*nd *nl ***** °' i n 8 l v anaall. We have every kind of Carpet, every variety of colorh&#13;
rank PondlnM.d county, to me direct* *a«L . ° J . . *. . f^ | * * „&#13;
delivered, i iid on tbe tbird day of *Yb.u» &gt;• 1899 ing, every style of pattern that you might wish to see. We shall b e&#13;
ie%y upoa aod take mi the right, mie aud iutere.t pleased to have you compare our stock with whatever else may b e&#13;
shown, and we shall expect to have you tell us, as many others are&#13;
telling us each day, that oar prices are, for quality such as we show,&#13;
quite under anything else shown in Jackson.&#13;
digestion stronger, the&#13;
appetite better and the weight&#13;
The whole body bewdl&#13;
fortified and the&#13;
of aaid Frank Pond Io and to the following&#13;
crlbed real estate, thai is to say :&#13;
All of the north half (Vi) of the north east&#13;
fractional quarter (1-4) of section number two&#13;
(2)«K«nit Ura north flfiy acre* th»reof,&#13;
Ateo, ibti north ten and eixtj three hundredth&#13;
(10.68) acres of the south halt (V») of said north&#13;
e«at fractional quarter of »:&lt;d eection number&#13;
two (2). All In TOWP One North ot Kaujre Three&#13;
east Urintfftoo county, Ml&lt;hi*ao. *&#13;
And ali^, by virtue of the aame writ, I did on&#13;
the thirtieth day ot March MM. levy upon and&#13;
take a 1 tb« right, title and Interest of the amid&#13;
Jfranlc fond Io and to the following described real&#13;
e*tat«,4batistosay:&#13;
All Utat p* rt oi tbe south half {Yj of the northeast&#13;
fractional quarter ($4) of M«tion two (1),&#13;
towB«s&gt;e(&gt;) north of range three (8) east, lying&#13;
between toe north ton and sixtytlirw bnndredlh&#13;
(10.68) MSNS, and the aonth forty (4O&gt; acree tbosettC*&#13;
AUo(«aid«everm] de^sribedparoeUof r*al estate*&#13;
b«Uglaodirb«f»ofOaa Pond die Al«o&#13;
gain a foothold.&#13;
Iff this nourishing, sustainand&#13;
stassfthenifif power&#13;
et 5COTT5 EMUL5I0N that&#13;
•it tint fitee on TbarwUy&#13;
mtwt w*bk* April 1Z.&#13;
•11 beinflo Unadilla Uwnahip, State *f Mlehlgaa.&#13;
AU^ofwhtokrigtit, title »«4 Latent* X «IHU1 ««.&#13;
poM for eale at pnblk «aeUoo or veadue to the&#13;
bktdflr at MM aoat* door of tbeCoart&#13;
*Uto of MioMfaa, (that baiag «IM&#13;
pUM» «i lMldfa« ib« CiMttA Court tar aald&#13;
IN DRESS GOODS&#13;
Our showing is remarkable. At every price&#13;
from the lowest up to the finer goods we have a very large range. We&#13;
have bought very generously the* year of every kind of good Drees,&#13;
Goods, and we will shew you a tremeadoiuly strong line to eeleot&#13;
from. In justice to yourself we would advise you to look at the&#13;
different lines shown in Jackson. Other stores in Jackson have good&#13;
lines *€ well es ourselves; look at them, bat look at oars for sure.&#13;
Then you will be in a better position to judge of oar statement that&#13;
we have the largest, the most desirable sad tbe lowest priced line of&#13;
Dress Goods, quality considered, of any bouse in Centre!&#13;
E LD.</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 April 06, 1899</text>
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                <text>April 06, 1899 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1899-04-06</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 XVII. PINOKNET, LIVINGSTON 00., MIOH., THURSDAY, APRIL 13. 1899. No. 15.&#13;
THE APPAREL&#13;
MAKES&#13;
MAN&#13;
Uy if it fr the&#13;
Apparel MADE-TOMEASURE&#13;
by u it&#13;
Fred Kauffmann&#13;
The American Tailor&#13;
CHICAGO&#13;
K. H. CRANE,&#13;
Local Afltnt&#13;
CLOTHING !&#13;
This season we represent&#13;
Fred Kauffmann, one of&#13;
Chicago's beat tailors. All&#13;
goods from this houfi* are&#13;
guaranteed to be strictly&#13;
MADE to MEA8UKEAlso&#13;
a PERFECT FIT.&#13;
This house makes suits to&#13;
to measure for boys as well&#13;
as men. We will make silk&#13;
vests a specialty, they are&#13;
the style. From $8.50 up.&#13;
Suits from 112 up&#13;
We also represent the Celebrated&#13;
Work Brothers, of&#13;
Chicago, for ready made&#13;
Clothing, the latest in style&#13;
and thoroughly well made.&#13;
For M a c k i n t o s h e s&#13;
for men, and rubber&#13;
capes and skirts for Ladies',&#13;
we represent the Dundee&#13;
Rubber Co., of Chicago. We&#13;
shall always be glad to show&#13;
you our samples in all these&#13;
lines, and solicit your patronage,&#13;
E. H. CRANE.&#13;
LOCAL NEWS.&#13;
Now that you are_&#13;
HOUSE-CLEANING&#13;
—-D^a-i-you-want-one of those Enamel Beds in the many&#13;
artistic designs. I am selling more of them this season&#13;
than ever before.&#13;
Do you want a Couch ?&#13;
Do you want a Davenport?&#13;
Do you want a Mattress?&#13;
Do you want any Diners?&#13;
Do you want a Rocker?&#13;
Don't you want a Bookcase,&#13;
Sideboard, Extension Table, Morris&#13;
Chair or anything in the line&#13;
of House Furnishings?&#13;
If so I can furnish you all these at bargain prices.&#13;
Call and see. Goods bought for cash can be sold cheap.&#13;
8IGLER&#13;
Remember tbe date&#13;
"Stub" or "Fool from Boston,"&#13;
At Opera House April 21, '99&#13;
Do not fail to read all the adver&#13;
tisements this week.&#13;
Tbe sound of the willow whistle&#13;
will soon be beard in the land.&#13;
Miss Eitb Can* spent Saturday and&#13;
Sunday with her grandmother.&#13;
MUs Alaine Sigier spent Sunday&#13;
with Miss Edith Wood of Anderson.&#13;
J. A. Cad well and wife, visited&#13;
Chelsea relatives a conple of days last&#13;
week.&#13;
Miss Bertha Donaldson is visitifig&#13;
friends in tbe northern part of tbe&#13;
state.&#13;
A. J. Wilhelm, of Anderson, has&#13;
moved into part of Mrs. Colby's residence.&#13;
Albert Reason has been very sick&#13;
tbe past week bat is better at this&#13;
writing.&#13;
Miss Addie Marble, of YpsilanH,&#13;
called on Miss Bertba Donaldson one&#13;
day last week.&#13;
The Ho we 11 milk factory receives&#13;
100.000 pounds of milk daily and&#13;
Monday a greater amount.&#13;
Rey. C. S., Jones, of Chelsea, will&#13;
deliver tbe evening sermon of tbe&#13;
Jackson association to be held in Lastie,&#13;
April 17 and 18."&#13;
Tbe Birney boys of Leslie and Lansing&#13;
spent Sunday with their mother&#13;
at this place. They left Monday for&#13;
Detroit to visit their brother.&#13;
Tbe society of church workers will&#13;
meet at the home of Mrs. K. H. Crane&#13;
April 19 for their monthly tea. All&#13;
are cordially invited to attend.&#13;
N. Pacy and W. H. Placeway of&#13;
this township will serve as jurors at&#13;
the spring term of court which con-&#13;
Soods&#13;
And at the right prices.&#13;
If yon are in need of anything in the wash goods line it will pay&#13;
you to call and see our stock. In wool suiting we can show you a&#13;
good line.&#13;
Can sell you a nice all wool taylor made suit jacket lined in silk&#13;
for 110.00.&#13;
1 If you are thinking of buying a pair of Lace Curtains this spring&#13;
it will pay you to see our line- The styles are right, the quality is&#13;
right, and the price is right and tbe price is way below anything you&#13;
have ever seen.&#13;
For the Men&#13;
Fine line of Heavy Shoes—now you will need them. Lots&#13;
of working Shirts, all well made and lined through the back.&#13;
A fine line of Neckwear.*&#13;
FREE! FREE!&#13;
An Ellegant Life-size Portrait with only $1.00 trade at our&#13;
•tore, enlarged from any small photo. Call for a ticket A short&#13;
time only.&#13;
Specials for Saturday, April 15: »&#13;
12 Bart of Armour Key Soap, the beat soap on the marvenes&#13;
at Howe)I next Monday,&#13;
Mrs. F, L. Andrew»s^pd daughter,&#13;
Florence, who have been spending a&#13;
couple of weeks with relatives in&#13;
Oceola and ParshallviJle, returned&#13;
home Tuesday of last week.&#13;
Rev. £. E. Caster, of Ho well, will&#13;
give one of bis popular lectures entitled&#13;
"The Golden Gate by Way of Salt&#13;
Lake City1' in the M. E. church Wednesday&#13;
evening, April 26. Admission&#13;
10 cents.&#13;
A team belonging to Mack Martin&#13;
became frightened by dogs while&#13;
bitched in front of the bank Monday&#13;
and broke loose. They made things&#13;
lively ior a few moments bat after a&#13;
rnnofabalf mile were canght and&#13;
brought back without damage, flow&#13;
they managed to miss the many buggies&#13;
that they passed is a mystery.&#13;
Most of the trial subscriptions expire&#13;
with this issue and we shall then&#13;
discontinue sending the paper unless&#13;
arrangements are made for its COBtinuenoe.&#13;
Now is the time to get. tha&#13;
most for $1 (K) as we are sending tlfe&#13;
Farm Journal five years and t i e DisJ&#13;
PATCH one year all for f 1.00. Already&#13;
several of tbe trial subscribers have&#13;
sbbecsibed for the two papers, and jnjre&#13;
hope to bear from all.&#13;
W k in Want of&#13;
DRUGS,&#13;
PATENT MEDICINES,&#13;
TOILET ARTICLES,&#13;
Books and Stationery,&#13;
GIVE US A CALL.&#13;
Also&#13;
WALL PAPER,&#13;
The latest styles and patterns.&#13;
An Ellegant Line of GLASSWARE and CHINA.&#13;
F. A. SIGLER.&#13;
AT THE CORNER DRUG STORE.&#13;
STEEL RANGES&#13;
The best steel ranges on earth for&#13;
ket,lor25c&#13;
fart BOM f»&#13;
1 Can Choice Jomatoa for 7c&#13;
1 Botfe «f fiae Ctteup for 7o&#13;
Do aoi ietg^ to try fioyal Tiger Tea-there a » other*&#13;
AD. \D. Itarw&#13;
We desire through tbe .colamns ef&#13;
the DISPATCH to thank * the many&#13;
frieads who so kindly apafeted w during&#13;
the sickness, deajfclr and boriat of&#13;
oor loved one. V&#13;
Mas. WM. B M M S AMP FAMSLT.&#13;
Are at Teeple and Cadwell's Hardware Store.&#13;
Having sold a number of them which have been working&#13;
successfully for a year or more, proves them good.&#13;
We warrant them to bake as quickly and with as little&#13;
fuel, either coal or wood, as any range made, and we&#13;
know they will hold fire over night as well as any air tight&#13;
stove which proves them to be well and substantialy made.&#13;
Do not fail to examine these ranges. No trouble to show&#13;
tnem. •&#13;
VERY TRULY YOURS,&#13;
TEEPLE g&gt;. CA DWELL.&#13;
at to naofi fro* o v w&amp;m ba« rfoar&#13;
for tt* OfcM Umtli&#13;
Ca»W&#13;
THIS WEEK&#13;
We wish to call attention to&#13;
our live of Table Linens, Turkey Red, Cream Damask, Bleached and unbleached&#13;
Linen. We are offering ao especial bargain in Un-bleaehed Lines,&#13;
62 iacaes wide, at 44c per yard, and a warranted oil color Turkey Red Damask*&#13;
extra width and quality, at 35c 40c and 45c per yard.&#13;
Selling "CRESCO" CORSETS?&#13;
Yes, selling lots of taem. It&#13;
didftt take \p*g for tbe news to get abroad that we bad secured the exela&amp;iv*&#13;
rigiit lor tbe saiepf this much talked ot specialty for this section. Coratt*&#13;
thai break at t*e wjftiet line are, to say tbe 1**4, disappointing. Tbe "Gratoo&#13;
Corse* oa**oi break at the waist line. That's why it win* wearer*,&#13;
plete tiae raste of Grescos now in Mock. Glad to bare yon ttrnnkii i t&#13;
«»&#13;
THIS WEEK:&#13;
All 15c Dress Goods will ^o at 9&#13;
AS 2Se Brocades "&#13;
Special prices on Tmak Flannel&#13;
2 Caat Sttmoo lor&#13;
yd&#13;
19c&#13;
17c&#13;
¥• G&#13;
:&#13;
1¥&#13;
: • * ( • • •&#13;
I&#13;
-i-&#13;
• * ' "&#13;
1L&#13;
1 • . ^ •&#13;
-&#13;
, • *&#13;
• • A -&#13;
• X&#13;
a&#13;
4&#13;
^ i f t ^&#13;
. • • ; ? * •&#13;
IS*..' v ' ii i at&#13;
;f !i R. Sutton and H. S. Deal Were&#13;
j Elected Regents ofthftIL if M.&#13;
GRANT'S PLURALITY IS 30,000&#13;
.According to Late&#13;
'. llcaos Also Elected&#13;
tlie Circuit iTiiils;— -&#13;
Ameodmeoti tel4 ta&#13;
of&#13;
•8"*-&#13;
• Fair weather in the state «E* vet&#13;
l&gt;rinff out as large a v»t« as Ht%fct have&#13;
ihtton exported. Tba ictnrna tfcna Car&#13;
p£cc!ved indicate that Jndfea C JB.&#13;
•Grant wa&amp; re-elected by a* iiliinlnl&#13;
JpluniHty of 30,000, and thai GaL EU&#13;
E. Sutton and Col. Henry SI Dwnrafa&#13;
elected regents of the anivenitj by a,&#13;
'plurality of perhaps 35,000, cvaning&#13;
lahead of their ticket in maaxy localities&#13;
The republicans also elected a&#13;
tig majority of the circuit judges ia&#13;
the 3G judicial circuits of the atate although&#13;
the result is in doubt i« one or&#13;
two districts. Returns from 44 cities&#13;
In the state show that ths Democrats&#13;
•eiected 18 mayors, while th*&#13;
-captmed 23. The others were elected&#13;
on Union or Citizens' tickets ami the&#13;
issues were purely of a local Mature.&#13;
Many cities and villages voted favorably&#13;
on the question of bending for&#13;
improvements. Returns on. tke constitutional&#13;
amendments are&#13;
but results at hand warrant the statement&#13;
that they have carried. la some&#13;
4sases the majorities were heavy in&#13;
favor of them.&#13;
j CIRCUIT JUD6XS.&#13;
' The following- were elected circuit&#13;
judges in their respective districts ac-&#13;
-cording to late returns:&#13;
1—Guy M. Chester, &amp; •&#13;
I'—Orville W. Coolidge, B.»&#13;
S—CJeorge S. Hosmer, IX; WtUuun&#13;
L. Carpenter, K.;* J. W. Ooaovau,&#13;
R.; Robert R. FVazer. K.;&#13;
Jamea B. Pound, EL or Horse&#13;
IloUnert, R.&#13;
A—Erastus Peck. 0 »&#13;
a—Clement Smith, B.*&#13;
G—George W. Smith, R.»&#13;
7—Charles H. Winer, 1L*&#13;
8—Frank D. M. Davis* R.*&#13;
' 9—John W. Adams, D.&#13;
lO—Jiyrop A, Snow, Dc;»&#13;
Reach, 1).&#13;
, 11—Joseph II. Steere, R-»&#13;
12— Albert T. Streeter, R.&#13;
• 13— Fred W. Moyne. R.&#13;
S 14—Fred J. Russell. B.»&#13;
f 15—(Jeo. L. Yaple, D.#&#13;
16—James G. Tucker, IX&#13;
17—Alfred Wolcott,&#13;
Perkins, R.&#13;
18—T. F. Shepherd, R.&#13;
19—James H. McMahoa,&#13;
80—Phil Padgham, « . •&#13;
21^-Peter F. Dodd, * . •&#13;
—22—Edwere^-B.Kiaae^B.&#13;
23—Maine J. Conaiae, E.&#13;
* . ; WOUe 2).&#13;
MICHIGAN NEW8 ITEMS.&#13;
There is talk of a new 030,000 hotel&#13;
at Hancock. ,&#13;
There \tfllhe no tersa o! t So circuit&#13;
court in Jlaeomb county this month.&#13;
Tho G. fif &amp; I. iwhraad, will b*iW a&#13;
new $75,000 union depot ut Grand&#13;
ilapld* ' : .*.&#13;
The balance in tho state treasury at&#13;
close of business March 3! was $1,520,•&#13;
Tho Union school building at Au&#13;
•rtad. Gres, destroyed by fire, will be rebuilt&#13;
this spring-,&#13;
A postoffiee has been established at&#13;
Hawcs, Alcona county, Alex. Savage&#13;
postmaster.&#13;
Jackson county farmers have been&#13;
compelled to buy hay for their stock&#13;
this spring-.&#13;
Farmers in tho vicinity of Munith&#13;
will experiment in the raising of peanuts&#13;
this summer.&#13;
The post cilice at Knotmaul, Montcalm&#13;
county, has been discontinued.&#13;
Mail to Lakeview.&#13;
A civil service examination will be&#13;
held at Adrian, May fl, to till the position&#13;
of postolflee clerk and carrier in&#13;
that city.&#13;
The total cash sales of the state land&#13;
office in March amounted to SG5.337.&#13;
The copper crure had much to do with&#13;
the big sales.&#13;
Tho -Hig Four station at Js'iles was&#13;
recently robbed for the ninth time,&#13;
but the thieves secured only a small&#13;
amount of cash.&#13;
Bad Axe is to have a new grain&#13;
elevator, work on the construction of&#13;
which will begin as soon as the&#13;
weather will permit,&#13;
Old hunters around Monroe say that&#13;
they never knew the ducks to be so&#13;
numerous in the marshes in that vicinity&#13;
as they are this year.&#13;
Portland's idle creamery will be put&#13;
in operation this year if half the 81,500&#13;
necessary for refitting it can be raised&#13;
by private subscription.&#13;
Those who hare made an examination&#13;
of fruit trees in the southern part&#13;
of the state assert that they will blossom&#13;
very sparingly this spring.&#13;
Owing to the scarcity of snow the&#13;
past winter the clover and wheat crop&#13;
in the southeastern portion of the state&#13;
are badly damaged on clay lands.&#13;
It was decided by a referendum vote&#13;
by the people of Port Huron that the&#13;
proposed canal from Lake Huron to&#13;
.Black river should be constructed.&#13;
The farmers of Millburg and vicinity,&#13;
in Berfien county, have organized&#13;
a stock company with $5,000 capital to&#13;
build and operate a creamery at Millburg.&#13;
The business portion of Cadillac has&#13;
been visited by a $10,000 tire, and four&#13;
, ^4—Watson Beach,&#13;
25—John \V. Stone. E-*&#13;
20— Frank G. Enaeridr.&#13;
27—Lewis G. Palmer,&#13;
28—C. C. Chittendea, E.&#13;
29—George P. Stone, IX&#13;
30—Howard Wiest, B.&#13;
3!—Samuel W. Vaaee,&#13;
32—Norman W. Haire. B.«&#13;
3J—Frank Shepherd, E.&#13;
34—Nelson Sharp*, S.*&#13;
35—S. F. Smith, E •&#13;
36—John Carr, D.&#13;
"R" stands for Republican aad **TT&#13;
lor Democrat, and the asterisk (*} de-&#13;
.siotes that the candidate waare-eleete&lt;L&#13;
Ma aid pal OvstnUy&#13;
Notwithstanding the fact that several&#13;
mass meetings hare beea fadd in&#13;
Detroit in opposition to maniripwi&#13;
ownership, the council, after several&#13;
days' consideration of the project, de-&#13;
&lt;eJded by a vote of 21 to 11 toaamoaaat a&#13;
-commission to negotiate for the purchase&#13;
of the street ear ayatna. The&#13;
.committee so appointed ia eoaqpeaed of&#13;
fiaxeu S. Pingree. KUi«t4 &lt;L Stevenson&#13;
aad Carl £. Schmidt, wfce ace appointed&#13;
to serve for abc; tmmr and two&#13;
.years in the order naiani Ta* principal&#13;
objection to the •ifhraal aiit,&#13;
as passed by the legfiltawt, was the&#13;
omission of the reiercavdnar elanae.&#13;
Bat the fact that the eosaakiaaen is&#13;
•bound to report the&#13;
the system can he pm&#13;
council before an&#13;
ahould prevent the street&#13;
from unloading any gran&#13;
watered stock upon the efty mi&#13;
fc the boodling&#13;
&lt; ZdMt ***f Bisee' kna SMI&#13;
j A-farmer was driving a&#13;
road track at Haranee wi&#13;
bobs of ft. sleigh ttaam&#13;
•witch point A train n&#13;
Broaching in toe tiiitanm&#13;
term&#13;
nnn&#13;
lUBa.&#13;
staverailth*&#13;
hind&#13;
an In* in *&#13;
ate efforts were made an nm&#13;
Ahe outfit off toe trade&#13;
Mooeasiul, bat as soon m&#13;
««t of danger the fsiaani&#13;
Mm&#13;
banrd nnk^&#13;
nancri&#13;
mm lift&#13;
asitk e&#13;
tan* an* was&#13;
last liahnad&#13;
and turned the horse*&#13;
A » result that the f f*flr T M&#13;
the horaaa&#13;
up.&#13;
buildings was reduced to ashes. Most&#13;
of the stock in the different stores was&#13;
saved.&#13;
A building boom of large proportions&#13;
is in sight at Houghton. Several&#13;
new and haudsome stone and brick&#13;
business blocks will be constructed&#13;
this summer.&#13;
Thomas Butler shot an otter near&#13;
Homer last week, the first specimen of&#13;
the animal lulled in those parts for&#13;
many years back, according to the old-'&#13;
es&gt;t inhabitants.&#13;
On a farm near Millbrook, Mecosta&#13;
county, is a hog with a shell on its&#13;
back like that of a turtle. The shell&#13;
begins over the front shoulders and&#13;
ends at the hips. v .;&#13;
Jackson Keller, an old man of 70&#13;
years hailing from Alms, was struck&#13;
by a train while walking on the track&#13;
near Owosso and had both hi* legs cut&#13;
off. He died soon afterward.&#13;
Farmers in northern Oakland county&#13;
report the condition of wheat the&#13;
most unfavorable for years, but hope&#13;
that the roots may be in better condition&#13;
than the tops would indicate.&#13;
Jn accordance wHb. the act recently&#13;
passed by the legislature and made a&#13;
law by the signature of the governor,&#13;
it is now proper to say Harbor Beach,&#13;
instead of ttead Beach, as formerly.&#13;
There Js no need of a flbh chute in&#13;
ttbe dam that crosses the Biver Raisin&#13;
at Dundee, as the high water a short&#13;
time ago tore a hole in the dam large&#13;
enough for a warship to pass through.&#13;
Clyde W. Fraaeis, an Ionia newspaper&#13;
man, has purchased the Ypsilaati&#13;
Sentinel. The former owner of&#13;
the paper, M. T. Woodruff, will devote&#13;
hiscntUre time to the. Manistee Journal.&#13;
Jackson's county clerk Is doing a&#13;
rushing business these days in the&#13;
marriage licenses line, the number issued&#13;
from Jan. 1 to April 1, being 111,&#13;
agaiast W at the same time last year.&#13;
Daring March ta« rarenn* atasana&#13;
affixed to documents filed with to* register&#13;
of deads at Houfhton -irnrn— Inaj&#13;
a t * * * ) , tteufhftoa claims to W tn+&#13;
banner «on«W %m Mnroh ik |lnWW&#13;
•pact: '• ' T ~v:,y&#13;
Lyman OtllnMu*, mt MApmrnj, irho&#13;
ia past*) / e a « v* Ace Aad^asJhaan&#13;
totally Mind lor theJnVt 10 yamVnfhna&#13;
recovered -his * sight, and can&#13;
Wheat and clover fields, are looking&#13;
very poorly in Jackson county thto&#13;
spring. Wheat has mostly been killed&#13;
by cold weather and clover is badly&#13;
heaved by tho recent thawing and&#13;
freezing.&#13;
The village of White Pigeon, Constantino&#13;
and Centrevilie ore soon to&#13;
be counected by a new telephone lino&#13;
with au exchange in each of the three&#13;
places. The line will be aji independent&#13;
one.&#13;
In compliance with the request of&#13;
Congressman Shelden, on ajjent of tho&#13;
postofiiee department will go to Houghton&#13;
to investigate and report on the&#13;
establishment of a free mail delivery&#13;
at that place.&#13;
Ropers City is the largost place in&#13;
the state to discover "the finest marl&#13;
beds in the country" right within half&#13;
a mile of the county court house, and&#13;
wants some one to locate a cement&#13;
factory there.&#13;
At the election in Owosso the proposition&#13;
to bond tho city for 815,000 to&#13;
extend the new asphalt pavement was&#13;
carried by a large majority; also the&#13;
proposition to borrow 80,500 to pay up&#13;
last years deficit.&#13;
The comptroller of the currency has&#13;
declared the fifth dividend of 10 per cent&#13;
in favor of the creditors of the First&#13;
National bnnk of lien ton Harbor, making&#13;
in all 60 per cent on claims proved,&#13;
amounting to $81,243.&#13;
Marine City thieves have queer ways&#13;
about them. One of them broke open&#13;
the door of a building the other night,&#13;
and unscrewing the lock, worth about&#13;
$4, carried it away, without disturbing&#13;
anything else in tho place.&#13;
Saginaw Salt &amp; Lumber Co. has sold&#13;
to the Gill Lumber Co., of Cleveland,&#13;
its entire cut of Norway for the season,&#13;
abont 4,000.000 feet at an advancs over&#13;
last year's prices. This is the biggest&#13;
lumber transfer yet made in Saginaw.&#13;
The following day after the Pollock,&#13;
Pettibone &amp; Chapman fire in Detroit,&#13;
MeNaughton &amp; Walker, general commission&#13;
merchants, suffered a fire loss&#13;
of $10,003. Fortunately no lives were&#13;
lost, but one or two narrow escapes&#13;
Ore reported.&#13;
The Stearns collection of musical instruments,&#13;
valued at over 8100,000,&#13;
which was recently given to the University&#13;
of Michigan by Frederick&#13;
Stearns, of Detroit, has been arranged&#13;
on the third iloor of the museum building,&#13;
and is highly prized.&#13;
The construction of Oxford's buggy&#13;
factory is being pushed, and before&#13;
long it will be in full operation, giving&#13;
employment to about 25 men at&#13;
the start. No bonus was necessary to&#13;
secure the plant, which in an important&#13;
addition to Oxfords Industrial interests.&#13;
8TATB&#13;
Rep. Chamberlain will substitute a&#13;
oew bill for the soldier*' rtlief measure&#13;
which eauseid sf'mtfcK disous&amp;ton&#13;
tfhen It passed the house and was BO&#13;
•tntnded by the souat^ thaMbe attorney-&#13;
general has decided that it ia not&#13;
retroactive. It. provided for a tax of&#13;
four ono-hundredtha of a'ratll and was&#13;
made operative until August 1. In tho&#13;
n«w hill th* tax will be hall a tniUau*&#13;
the time will be extended until Nov. 1.&#13;
In order to take care of all needy or&#13;
sick soldiers the bill will provide that&#13;
the fund may be used to pay the expenses&#13;
of any Michigan »oldier from&#13;
the time he reached the borders of the&#13;
state, whether he was mustered out or&#13;
not.&#13;
The open fishing season has been defeated&#13;
in the senate by a vote ot 17&#13;
to 15&#13;
A ORANU LADY QK ILLINOIS.&#13;
^ ^f&#13;
MM. Lucinda JD.'cbaadler, of&#13;
g , la the Honorable President of&#13;
the ,JUlnoli Woman's Press Ansoclatlon;&#13;
Honorable President of the Society&#13;
for the Promotion of Health;&#13;
Phineas T. Binns, a citizen of Buoh*&#13;
anau for the past 53 years, undertook&#13;
to wash the skylight' in his living&#13;
rooms over a store building, when th*&#13;
staging gave way and he fell to the&#13;
floor, a distance of 10 feet His neck&#13;
was broken and bis 6kull crushed,&#13;
lie lived about an hour.&#13;
Mell MacWinter, of Rochester, slapped&#13;
his wife's face, broke her nose and&#13;
blackened her eyes, because she would&#13;
not cook sausage for supper, instead of&#13;
saving it for Sunday dinner. He was&#13;
given $25 fine and 60 days in jail.&#13;
Later he broke jail with the intention&#13;
of killing his wife but the officers&#13;
headed him off.&#13;
Miss Augusta Brnndage, one of the&#13;
operators of the Michigan Telephone&#13;
Co.'s exchange at Lansing, awoke the&#13;
other morning and found that she was&#13;
absolutely unable to speak. She has&#13;
not been ill, and her throat is not sore,&#13;
but repeated efforts to speak have&#13;
been unavailing. She is not able to&#13;
make the slightest sound.&#13;
Old Mr. Tracy, a farmer Jiving in&#13;
Arbela, was missing from the bouse&#13;
for au unusual length of time for him&#13;
so the family began searching, and&#13;
were horrified to find his body in the&#13;
hog pen, nearly eaten up by the hogs.&#13;
It is supposed he went into the pen for&#13;
something and was attacked by the&#13;
hogs, and, being about 70 years old,&#13;
was unable to escape.&#13;
Charles Taylor, treasurer of Home&#13;
township, Montcalm Co., will not have&#13;
to make good the township funds&#13;
which were lost in the failure of the&#13;
Chapin bank at Stan ton, nor George&#13;
Douglass, the county treasurer, the&#13;
eounty funds lost in the same manner.&#13;
The people of the township and eounty&#13;
respectively voted on Monday to raise&#13;
the amounts by taxation.&#13;
The large wholesale millinery establishment&#13;
of Pollock, Pettibone A Chapin&#13;
Detroit has been destroyed by&#13;
valued att8ft,00Q&#13;
BRIEF NEWS PARAGRAPHS.&#13;
Vice-President Hobert is slowly recovering&#13;
from his recent illness. However,&#13;
ho is still confined to his bed.&#13;
Terrence Anderson, of Plymouth,&#13;
Pa., who was demented, committed&#13;
suicide by -jumping down an 800 foot&#13;
shaft at the Dalaware &amp; Hudson mine.&#13;
The Presbyterian Foreign Mission&#13;
society is taking measures toward active&#13;
missionary work in the Philippine&#13;
islands. Over $7,000 has been handed&#13;
to the society.&#13;
Two thousand suits against owners&#13;
of buildings in Chicago, who have&#13;
failed to provide proper fire escapes,&#13;
are under preparation by the city&#13;
prosecuting attorney.&#13;
The steamer City of Columbia, which&#13;
recently went on the reef ut Honolulu,&#13;
and was subsequently sold for 91,500,&#13;
is to be repaired and placed on the&#13;
route between Hawaii and China.&#13;
The iron companies at Ishpemtng&#13;
will fight the strikers and have notified&#13;
them that they would hire entirely&#13;
new crews. About 2,000 men are affected&#13;
and trouble is feared if new&#13;
men are imported. Noa-union men&#13;
are joining the union.&#13;
It is expected that Senator Sayre's&#13;
bill placing a tax of $1 a barrel on&#13;
beer will be passed by the senate.before&#13;
long. The money derived from&#13;
the taxes will go into the primary&#13;
school fund, and it is expected to&#13;
amount to $750,000 annually.&#13;
There is every indication that not&#13;
less than 5.000 miles of new railway&#13;
will be built in the U. S. in 1690, representing&#13;
an investment of about 8150,-&#13;
000,000. At the present time over 4,-&#13;
000 miles are either under contract or&#13;
actually under construction.&#13;
Twenty inmates of the state industrial&#13;
home for incorrigible girls, in&#13;
Chillicothe, Mo., made a break for llberty,&#13;
armed with butcher knives and&#13;
other weapons. They drove back the.&#13;
guards, but were finally run dowa and&#13;
captured by the police, after along&#13;
chase.&#13;
A prominent young man of Birch&#13;
Run, who enlisted with the 35th Michigan&#13;
volunteers when it was recuited&#13;
at Island Lake and followed the regiment&#13;
during its later maneuvers, got a&#13;
furlough about a month ago on account&#13;
of sickness and came home. His&#13;
illness has developed into insanity.&#13;
He is very vicious and imagines he is&#13;
in the hands of Spaniards.&#13;
During one of the squally afternoons&#13;
recently two tramps—a man and a woman—&#13;
camped on the roadside near&#13;
Cauiden. A dilapidated shawl supported&#13;
by crotched sticks served as a&#13;
wind-break and on the leeward side a&#13;
small fire sputtered. Seated on chunks&#13;
of woods, as near the fire as smoke and&#13;
heat would allow, the pair were found&#13;
perusing a well worn copy of the Bible.&#13;
Several villages in the state are discovering&#13;
that, in their zeal to reward&#13;
tufficient village officers by electing&#13;
them for another term, they have violated&#13;
the terms of their charters. The&#13;
law provides that no one shall serve as&#13;
village treasurer more than two terms&#13;
in succession, but In many places this&#13;
provision was completely overlooked&#13;
and competent treasurers re-elected&#13;
for a third term.&#13;
THE MARKETS.&#13;
L1YK MTOOK.&#13;
K#w York— Cattle Sheep&#13;
Oark, d—iart in tnrf goods, wnooocapy&#13;
the ad|oiniag' store, had their&#13;
stock damaged 98,000, «od the damaires&#13;
to the two buildJnfs will bring the&#13;
total aqxmat of dnsmaje up to about&#13;
•60,006.&#13;
Kevet before _ln the history of Kalkaaka&#13;
bas thejw been anen a wood far,&#13;
mine as dorinir the peat ^woAwmths.&#13;
For several yennj prioas nave ranged&#13;
so low that Xaonera did jnftt ftnd it&#13;
nearly everyone ra* &amp;**M aeajianed,&#13;
Nothing&#13;
tained, and&#13;
fora&#13;
but green teal could be«V&#13;
that at avattjratif aria*&#13;
Bent grade*.. | t 7&#13;
Lower Kradc*.. t u&#13;
Lambs&#13;
v. Mfli&#13;
4 40 t ftJ 6 ti&#13;
r . . f t 7AV8*&#13;
Lower grade*..i 00$ J vO&#13;
Dstrolt—&#13;
Be-tgrades....4 0)A4 Si&#13;
Lower grade*..! * £ » 7&gt;&#13;
5 10&#13;
463&#13;
4 51&#13;
600&#13;
»M&#13;
Bogs&#13;
Si*)&#13;
4 0J&#13;
ID&#13;
Itt&#13;
iS&#13;
Best grade*....4 "Oft* &amp;0&#13;
Lower grades..! 7^#4 03&#13;
Bestjrra4«*....l enmi t\ Lowergraoes..! n i l Si&#13;
Potatoeosi,t —Mea apver. no. Uvs P y p t cdaulccklc*s.a I*.t l feBperral.b s trfoicwtll?s,»c; turse?*, uct •utter, bottom, HP J * IJMfcS fi*M. li*e» paarr/ ,d fotc*&#13;
LUCINDA D. CHANDLER,&#13;
of Chioaeo, 111.&#13;
founder of the Margareth Fuller So*&#13;
elety for the study of JSconomfes and&#13;
Governments, and also President of&#13;
the Chicago Moral Educational Society.&#13;
Mrs. Chandler Is an ardent&#13;
frtrod of Pe-ru-na, and In writing to&#13;
Dr. Hartman on the subject abo stated&#13;
as follows:&#13;
Chicago, Jan. 6. 1899.&#13;
Dear Doctor—-I suppose every on*&#13;
that Is confined to tbeir desk and not&#13;
getting the required amount of exercise,&#13;
will sooner or later, suffer with&#13;
catarrh of the stomach and indigestion.&#13;
I know by experionce that Ptru-&#13;
na is a most excellent remedy for&#13;
these complaints. It ha3 relieved line,&#13;
and several of my friends have used&#13;
it with the same satisfactory results,&#13;
Yours very respectfully,&#13;
LUCI.NDA B. CHANDLER.&#13;
Nothing like the harrow for making a good&#13;
seed bed for wheat.&#13;
- In transplanting, carry as much soil as possible&#13;
wliU the roots&#13;
Deafness Cannot be Cared&#13;
by local applications na they cannot reach the&#13;
diseased portion of tho ear. There is only one&#13;
way to cure deafness, and that is by constitutional&#13;
remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed&#13;
condition of the mucous lining of th«&#13;
Eustachlan Tube. When this tube gets Inflamed&#13;
you have a rumbling sound or Imperfect hearing,&#13;
and when it is entirely closed, deafness is&#13;
the result, and unless the Inflammation can be&#13;
taken out and this tube restored to its normal&#13;
condition, hearing will be destroyed forever;&#13;
nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh,&#13;
which is nothing but an inflamed condition of&#13;
the mucous surfaces.&#13;
We will give One Hundred Dollars for any&#13;
case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot&#13;
be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circular*&#13;
; free.&#13;
F J. CHBNBV &amp; CO., Toledo, a&#13;
Sold by Druggist*. 76c.&#13;
Hall's Family Pills are the best&#13;
cover&#13;
d m a s thick-ab th* stools will&#13;
Do Toar Fwt Acb« »nd Barn.t&#13;
Shake into your shoes, Allen's Foot-&#13;
Ease, a powder ipr the feet. It makes&#13;
tight or New Shoes feel Easy. Cures&#13;
Corns, Bunions, __ Swollen, Hot and&#13;
Sweating Feet. At all DrugyUts and&#13;
Shoe Stores, 25c. Sample sent FREE.&#13;
Address Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y.&#13;
The more bushels&#13;
cost per basket.&#13;
to the sere the less the&#13;
TO CUBE A COLD IZff ONE DAT&#13;
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All&#13;
druggists refund tho money if It falls to cure.&#13;
tte. The genuine h*s L. lliQ. ooieafh tablet.&#13;
If you mix your own fertilizer you will know&#13;
what It contains.&#13;
ITS'&lt;**&gt;**•• CfyCBiAw.lVailta or n*rv0aM«sfci&#13;
tint daj'tjM* of Dr. Klia*'* OrMi K«rr« ah&#13;
B M 4 for R R B B t * . O 0 trial bottl* and trasftafc&#13;
Da. S. hL *14»a. Ltd.. Ml Arch St* Philadelphia, ft&#13;
thIatn I sto e aeusireor ittoprevent disease among stock&#13;
Mrs. WtatteWs SootMaa* Svmp&#13;
Tor ehllarvn t—Vilng^oftea* tM gvoum«auc«aiii:&#13;
a U a l l a y s p a i a . o m e » w l a d a » n &gt; . U&#13;
weed seeds and you will have lea*&#13;
Ess. na*rt W«ed&#13;
Wthrtolla ett rIrna s a f eewol dh olaur osn. e Ancitg*h tq;u iwckil.l Scuurree ears&gt; for Catarrh In every JJc botUe. ' .&#13;
Animals closely confined seed a greater variety&#13;
of food.&#13;
Good For Lttfci* Folks.&#13;
Doa't »ort«r» ta« children with llqaM and bin pot.&#13;
Only what Is digested sad assimilated adds to&#13;
toe growth.&#13;
We will forfeit 11.000 If any of our published&#13;
testimonials are proven to be aet genuine. Tnn&#13;
Pis© Co, Warren, Pa,&#13;
Have msngert asovabie, so they esa be rftao-&#13;
Lower fraAet».1 *»§4 n&#13;
l»M •»§•»•»» »&#13;
DICK RODNEY:&#13;
Or. The Adventures of&#13;
An Eton Boy...&#13;
JA/YIB3 GRANT,&#13;
A m "Hallo!" said Tom Loiubourft^ J»udflenly&#13;
looking aloft, as the #»j»aila&#13;
flapped and shivered; "sip1* yawning&#13;
or steering witffc whai it^giat Spanlard&#13;
tfboftt?"" " • f&#13;
"SUT ^vhere is he?" added Curlton,&#13;
la W now miasetf Antonio from the&#13;
wheel; "Antonio, wh«»»rc you?"&#13;
"Gone overboard, I hope," exclaimed&#13;
the second mate, with something more&#13;
that need not bo repeated, as he rushed&#13;
to the ^tftel, and, after making ft revoYif&amp;&#13;
a:few times rapidly, he filled&#13;
the «at1a and steadied the &lt;brlg. Thla&#13;
was done just fri time, for the Eugenie&#13;
had a press of canvua on her, and, had&#13;
eho been, taken aback, the consequences&#13;
might have bsen serious.&#13;
"Look about for the skulking lubber/'&#13;
said Lambourne, in great wrUth,&#13;
"an'd, BOUEO him well with a sluahbucket;&#13;
another moment and tha craft&#13;
would have been broached to!"&#13;
"He must have crept behind the&#13;
longboat and got into tha forecastle,"&#13;
suggested Carlton.&#13;
'I'll bring him up with a round turn&#13;
for playing this trick," grumbled Lambourne.&#13;
"Hush," said I, as a strange sound&#13;
fell upon my ear.&#13;
"What is it?" f-ked the others, listening.&#13;
"A cry—did you not hear it?"&#13;
"No—nonsense!" said they, together.&#13;
"It was a cry that came from somewhere.'!&#13;
"I'did'hear something," said Will&#13;
White; 'but it was a sheave creaking&#13;
In a block aloft, I t'hink."&#13;
"No, nc." said I, pausing by the&#13;
capstan, as a terrible foreboding seized&#13;
me; "it came from the cabin." ' =&#13;
"There is no one there but the Captain,&#13;
Hislop, and the boy Bill, who&#13;
sleeps in the steerage, and they are&#13;
all three sound enough by thi3 time,"&#13;
said Lambourne.&#13;
"But the sound was from the cab-&#13;
In/ ' I persisted, hastening aft&#13;
At that moment another cry, loud&#13;
and piteous—a cry that sank into a&#13;
hoarse moan, echoed through the brig,&#13;
"piercing the night's dull ear/ ' and&#13;
ringing high above the welter of the&#13;
sea alongside, the bubble at the stem&#13;
and stern, or the hum of th,e wind&#13;
through the taut rlgsing.&#13;
We all rushed aft to tWcooapafiloa,&#13;
and at that instant Antonfo Bprang up&#13;
the cabin stair. By the clear splendor&#13;
Of the tropical moonlight we could *9$&#13;
that his- usually swarthy' visage was&#13;
paie as 'deaths while his black eyes&#13;
biased like two burning coals. He&#13;
grasped his unsheathed knife,the blade&#13;
of which, as well as his hands and,&#13;
clothes, were covered with blood!&#13;
My heart grew sick with vague apprehension,&#13;
and my first thought was&#13;
for a weapon; but none was aear.&#13;
"What have you been about, you&#13;
rascally picaroon—and why did you&#13;
leave the wheel?" shouted Lambourne,&#13;
becoming greatly excited; "the masts&#13;
might have gone by the board—what&#13;
devil's work have you been alter be-r&#13;
low?"&#13;
Then the dark Spanish ereole&#13;
grinned, as the blood dripped from his&#13;
hands on the white and moonlit deck.&#13;
"Knock him down with a handspike,&#13;
Carlton," added Lambourne, who could&#13;
not leave the wheel; "knock him&#13;
down—the shark-faced ewabf'&#13;
On hearing this, Antonio drew from&#13;
his breast a revolver pistol, one of a&#13;
pair which we knew always hung&#13;
loaded in Weston's cabin, and fired&#13;
Straight, at the head of Carlton—who&#13;
dodged the shot, which killed the seaman&#13;
named Will White, who stood behind&#13;
him.&#13;
The ball pierced the brain of the&#13;
poor fellow, who bounded convulsively&#13;
nearly three feet from the deck; he&#13;
fell heavily on his face and never&#13;
moved, again, tojr he was dead—dead&#13;
as a stone.&#13;
In its suddenness this terrtbfcr deed&#13;
paralyzed us with horror, not unmixed&#13;
with fear, as we were all unarmed and&#13;
completely in the power of this Spanish&#13;
demon, the report of whose pistol&#13;
brought all №« startled crew tumbling&#13;
over each other out of.the forecastle.&#13;
"Aha, maldita! Santos y Angeles!"&#13;
said the -Spaniard, Waring the pistol,&#13;
die muzzle of which yet smoked, toward&#13;
us la a halt circle, as A tvsnilng&#13;
for all to stand back; "did you this*&#13;
to n»"yonr rig* upon me? I am&#13;
address, the half of which was scarcely&#13;
understood by our men, as it was&#13;
said in Spanish.&#13;
"Basta!" (avast) I see that you do&#13;
understand," he resumed; "and now&#13;
begin by obedience. Throw this carrion—&#13;
thsi bestia muerta—overboard".&#13;
But parceiving how we all shrank&#13;
back—&#13;
"Overboard with him!" he added,&#13;
brutally kicking the inanimate body&#13;
of poor Will White; "or demonio, I&#13;
shall send the first who disobeys me&#13;
to keep him company."&#13;
He grasped me by the hand—his&#13;
hateful clutch was firm as a smith's&#13;
vise—and then he leveled his pistol at&#13;
the head of Ned Carlton.&#13;
For a moment the latter stood irresolute,&#13;
and then, seeing the black muzzle&#13;
of the revolver within a foot of&#13;
his head, he muttered a deep malediction,&#13;
stampod bis foot with rage on the&#13;
deck, and said:&#13;
"Mr. Rcduey, bear a hand with me&#13;
to launch this murdered man—this&#13;
poor fellow—overboard"!&#13;
"Obey!" thundered Antonio.&#13;
Like one in a dream I bent over the&#13;
dead man, on whose pal'o face, glazed&#13;
eyes and relaxed Jaw the bright moonlight&#13;
was shining, and in my excitement&#13;
and bewilderment I nearly&#13;
slipped and fell into the pool of blood&#13;
which flowed from his death v/ound.&#13;
I had never touched a corpse before,&#13;
and an irrepressible shudder ran&#13;
through all my veins. But, that emotion&#13;
once over, I could have handled&#13;
a dozen with perhaps indifference; and&#13;
there are few who, after touching the&#13;
dead, have cot experienced this change&#13;
of feeling.&#13;
Ned Carlton, with a sound like a sob&#13;
in his honest breast—a sob of mingled&#13;
rage and commiseration—raised the&#13;
yet warm body; I took the feet, and&#13;
through one of the quarter-boards,&#13;
which was open, we launched it into&#13;
the great deep, and as the brig flew&#13;
on, rolling before the early morning&#13;
wind, there remained no trace of poor&#13;
Will White, but his blood, a dark pool&#13;
upon the deck, and the crew stood&#13;
staring at it and at each other with&#13;
blank irreeolattoa, horror and dismay&#13;
expressed in ail their faces.&#13;
Erapty-haaded aad defenseless as&#13;
we all were, each was afraid to apeak&#13;
or act, leet he might be the next victim&#13;
whom the merciless Cubano would&#13;
ihootdown.&#13;
With a growl of defiance Antonio&#13;
now turaed away, and, brandishing&#13;
th&amp; revolver in token of the obedieibce&#13;
he meant to exact, he descended slowly&#13;
into the cabin, where we soon heard&#13;
him £m&amp;shta£ .open the lockers, aad&#13;
busy with the case-bottles in the steward's&#13;
locker, or Billy the cabin boy's&#13;
pantry.&#13;
His departure seemed a relief to all,&#13;
bat in hali a minute after he was gone&#13;
below little Bill; . or "Boy Bill," as&#13;
he was usually termed, whose sleeping&#13;
place was the steerage, rushed up&#13;
the cabin stair in his shirt and ran&#13;
among u£, sobbing with fear and dismay.&#13;
AlT a rope's-end or a rotten eastssMr,&#13;
as sroo shall fla4L J,am apw the captain&#13;
of tills shCp^ J^JJ^iU force 70a&#13;
AH to obey 111% Qfcif4l?--3toai &amp;• swore&#13;
oae of those soDor^ui and blaspbem-&#13;
««« oaths whteh-jpa *ojAip\f from a&#13;
JUaUh tongwli&gt;tfs&lt;ltVMnr *oti all&#13;
i* sucoesaioa, till I SIB the J^M man&#13;
Isjitt on board; ab4rjfFtei)i 1 a a ttr»4 of&#13;
«V ship I CAB fears or sevttle her. Do&#13;
jcm iwdecstaikd An *isT*&#13;
followed thii'itrtaft ]&#13;
CHAPTER XX.&#13;
Cornference of the Crew*.&#13;
Scmei time elapsed before the ppor&#13;
boy became sufficiently coherent to be&#13;
understood, but it would seem that on.&#13;
hearing the first cry, which had&#13;
&amp;larv-«d me, he sprang o&amp;t of his&#13;
berth, which was at the foot of the&#13;
companion way,, and on looking iuto&#13;
the cabin, he saw' by the night light&#13;
which swung in the skylight, the&#13;
Cub&amp;Bc, armed with a bloody kntfe&gt;&#13;
rush from the captaln'3 state room&#13;
into that of the mate, which waa opposite.&#13;
Another choking cry acquainted him.&#13;
that Antonio had stabbed Hislop in Ills&#13;
sleep; and fearing that his own turn&#13;
would come next, he had crept Into an&#13;
empty cask which lay below the companion-&#13;
ladder, and remained there,&#13;
trembling with dread, until he took an&#13;
opportunity of rushing on deck and&#13;
joining us.&#13;
This terrible revelation added to cur&#13;
dismay.&#13;
We were now in a desperate predicament,&#13;
without a captain or mate to&#13;
navigate the brig, and *t the mercy of&#13;
a well-armed desperado, to whom homicide&#13;
was a pastime; thus, all who&#13;
had handled him so severely on the&#13;
night we crossed the line began to feel&#13;
no small .degree, of alarm for their&#13;
own safety, being certain that men&#13;
Mood woitfd be shed the moment he&#13;
.came on deckL . . .&#13;
Ail dressed themselves with the utmost&#13;
**pedltiOAi SA4 it was jpesoWel&#13;
to hold a cowjesl -of war. Ussiheiae&#13;
was ssstt at tW-wfceel; ana *&gt; be «rs»&#13;
pared sec aay emergency, he resolved&#13;
trfTedtk* the caftVas on tb» brig. U0n&#13;
UM royals w**e taken 4owa, AU studdlag-&#13;
tatts taken it, a*d the topsails&#13;
jrtiw ban** 4 ; a* this km 4 O M as&#13;
quietly as possible, lest any sound&#13;
might arouse the fiend who seemed&#13;
now to possess the Eugenie.&#13;
Lambourne ventured to peep down&#13;
the skylight, when he saw Antonio&#13;
drinking brandy from a case bottle,&#13;
without troubling himself with a&#13;
glass. Then the Spaniard proceeded&#13;
to attire himself in the best clothes&#13;
of Captain Weston; be forced open&#13;
several lockfast places, and took from&#13;
them money and Jewelry, which he&#13;
concealed about his person. What his&#13;
ultimate object could be in performing&#13;
these acts of plunder on the open&#13;
sea, we could neither conceive nor&#13;
divine. bu;t on chancing to glance upward,&#13;
he caught a glimpse of Tom's&#13;
eyes peering down.&#13;
There was an explosion, a crashing&#13;
of gliss and a ball from a revolver,&#13;
fired upward, grazed Tom's left car&#13;
and pierced the rim of his sou'-wester&#13;
as a hint that our Cubano had no intention&#13;
of being overlooked in his operations&#13;
below.&#13;
We heard him close the cabin door&#13;
with a bang, and after locking it,&#13;
throw himBelf on the floor behind it,&#13;
with the intention of sleeping, probably,&#13;
but with the full resolution that&#13;
no one should enter without disturbing&#13;
him; aud in this way, after examining&#13;
his pistols, he reposed every&#13;
night afterward while on board.&#13;
"By jingo! I thought the killing o*&#13;
them birds would lead to bad luck&#13;
somehow," said Henry Warren, an&#13;
old foremast man, with a reproachful&#13;
glance at me, as he threw the two albatrosses&#13;
overboard.&#13;
We now held a solemn conference to&#13;
meet the emergency which was certain&#13;
to come anon, and to consider the be3t&#13;
means of subduing and disarming the&#13;
culprit.&#13;
"Whoever goes nigh him in the&#13;
cabin, either by the door or the skylight,&#13;
risks being stabbed or shot,"&#13;
said Tattooed Tom; "so we must go to&#13;
work some other way, shipmates, and&#13;
that other way must be considered."&#13;
"We might close and batten the Bkylight&#13;
and companionway, and then&#13;
starve or smoke him out," suygested&#13;
one of the crew, Francis Probart, our&#13;
carpenter.&#13;
"Smoke him out?" echoed Tcrrou&#13;
"Yes, as we do rats." '&#13;
"By what?"&#13;
"Fill a bucket with spun yatx* and&#13;
greaBed flax, with sulphur and bilgewater—&#13;
ain't that the medical compound&#13;
for rats?"&#13;
"Nonsense," said Tom; "you vmild&#13;
burn the ship "&#13;
"As he has often threatened to do,"&#13;
eald Carlton, "and may do yet,"&#13;
A most extraordinary scheme was&#13;
proposed by one man—that we B^ould&#13;
launch the longboat, throw into her&#13;
eome bags of bread and gang-casks of&#13;
water, trcship the compass, doublebank&#13;
the oars, and shove off for the&#13;
coast of South America, after scuttling&#13;
the brig and leaving Antonio to his&#13;
fale.We were in a horrible state of perplexity,&#13;
and I seemed to see constantly&#13;
before me the gashed bodies of my&#13;
two kind, brave and hospitable friends&#13;
—Captain Weston and Marc Hislop—&#13;
lying in their berths dead and unavenged,&#13;
with their destroyer beside&#13;
them!&#13;
We had the capstan-bars, and with&#13;
these it wae proposed to assail him&#13;
when next he came on deck. Then we&#13;
had the carpenter'B tools, among&#13;
which a hand-saw, an auger, an adze&#13;
and a hatchet, made very available&#13;
weapons, and these, with the old cutlass&#13;
and harpoons which figured on&#13;
the night we crossed the line, were&#13;
speedily appropriated. I was armed&#13;
with a heavy claw-hammer, and, mowing&#13;
firmly to stand by each other, we&#13;
resolved to lynch Antonio the moment&#13;
he came out of his den.&#13;
While we were thus employed in&#13;
devising the means of punishment, the&#13;
dark shadows of night passed away;&#13;
the morning sun came up iz his tropical&#13;
splendor, and the blue vravee of&#13;
the southern sea rolled around us in&#13;
light, but not a sail was visible on&#13;
their vast expanse.&#13;
The crew seemed pale and excited,&#13;
as they might well be, and, with buckets&#13;
of water we cleansed the deck&#13;
from the blood that stained i t&#13;
The morning advanced into noon,&#13;
and the vessel was steered her due&#13;
course, for the wind was still fair. Ned&#13;
Carlton was at the wheel, and the men&#13;
were all grouped forward, when suddenly&#13;
Antonio- appeared on deck with&#13;
a knife in his sash and a revolver in&#13;
each hand.&#13;
He was so pale that his olive face&#13;
seemed almost a pea-green, and n&#13;
black crust upon his cruel lips showed&#13;
the extent of his potations In the&#13;
cabin. He glanced into the binnacle,&#13;
and perceiving that the brig was still&#13;
being steered her old course, he cried,&#13;
In a hoarse voice:&#13;
"Hombres, allegarse a la cuesta!"&#13;
(men. bear toward the land) and&#13;
pointing Co the direction in which he&#13;
knew the vast continent of Sooth Amertea—&#13;
from which, we were proba&amp;ly&#13;
four or five hundred miles distantmust&#13;
be. he added orders in English to&#13;
shape the brig's co&amp;rse doe west, and&#13;
stamped his right toot on the «%ct to&#13;
give his words additional fore*.&#13;
(To be cowtteoed.)&#13;
a hero as* an «rtafcft&#13;
TALKS WITH&#13;
WOMEN OF&#13;
MIDDLE AQE&#13;
PREPARE for the turn of life. life a critical period.&#13;
At indications of the change sypsar hm man your physical&#13;
condition is good. The cxperiaBco b a wonderful&#13;
one and under some circumstance* fqsf *f stepaoe* Mrs. Pink*&#13;
ham. of Lynn, Mass., will give 709 Wi idtlm* without charge.&#13;
She has dejn m moch for women*&#13;
surely yo» c s * trust her. Read&#13;
this letter fraa MM. M. C. G RIFTING,&#13;
of OwfwiBe. Mo.:&#13;
i "DZAK MM. PWKHAM :—The&gt;&#13;
doctor rslwi my trouble ulcera*-&#13;
tion of wonb amd change of life.&#13;
I tvas tiusAkj with profuse flowing&#13;
and became very weak. When I watte to you I was downin&#13;
bed, had not sat up for sis month*; was under a doctor's&#13;
treatment all the time, but it did me no good. I had almost&#13;
given up in despair, but your Vegetable Cosnpound has madoxne&#13;
feel like a new woman. 1 cannot thank you enough. I&#13;
Tvculd advise any woman who is afflicted at I have been to&#13;
write to Mrs. Pinlcbam, at&#13;
Lynn, Mass., and get her advice&#13;
and be cured as I have&#13;
been.'&#13;
MRS. F. H. AIXF.N, 419 Ne-]&#13;
braska Ave., Toledo, Ohio,&#13;
writes:&#13;
••DEAR MRS. PINKHAM:—&#13;
Change of life was working on&#13;
me. My kidneys and bladder&#13;
were affected. I had been&#13;
confined to the house all summer,&#13;
not able to stand&#13;
ou my feet for any&#13;
length of time. Terrible&#13;
pains when urinating&#13;
and an itching that&#13;
nearly drove me wild.&#13;
I had tried many rerae-1&#13;
dies. I told my hus*|&#13;
band I had great faith 1&#13;
in yours and he got me a bottle;&#13;
I feel that I am entirely cured. I **r"&#13;
realize that such a wonderful cure is&#13;
ham's Vegetable Compound is the 1&#13;
my fourth bottle.&#13;
work aS day. I can hardly&#13;
Lydia E. Pinkrisen&#13;
for women."&#13;
Don't wait until you are prostrated with the mysterious condition&#13;
known as "Change of Life" Get Mrs. Pinkham's ad*&#13;
vice and learn how other women&#13;
To make first-class butter requires a&#13;
flrst-class cow and a first-class dairyman.&#13;
Keep the cows clean if you would&#13;
keep the milk free from odors.&#13;
Oh That Delicious Coffee t&#13;
Coats but lc per lt». to grow. Salzcr has&#13;
the seed. German Coffee Berry, pliK- 15c;&#13;
Java Cofles pkg. 15c. Salzer's New American&#13;
Chicory lac. Cut this out and send 15c&#13;
Xor any of the above packages or send 303&#13;
and eet all three p?c?s. and great Catalogue&#13;
free to JOHN A- SALZER SEED CO., La&#13;
Crosse, Wia. [w.n.j&#13;
. The melting point of butter may be&#13;
varied by the kind of food.&#13;
You want not only arood flow of&#13;
but one that comes to stay.&#13;
* • • TryQrain-0!&#13;
TryGrain-0!&#13;
Ask you Grocer today to show yorr&#13;
a package of GBAIN-0, the nevrfood&#13;
ftnttfasfc-&#13;
The children may drink it without&#13;
injury as well as the aduIL All who&#13;
try it, like it. ' GHAIN-O Bos that&#13;
rich seal brown of Uocua or Jars,&#13;
but it i* msde from puro gmns, and&#13;
the most delicate stomach, receives it&#13;
without distress. |Cie price of coffee. •&#13;
15 cents and 25 cents per package* +&#13;
Sold by all grocers £&#13;
Tastes like Coffee&#13;
Looks like Coffee&#13;
Accept BO t&#13;
&gt; • • • • • • • • » • •&#13;
DO VOU 6DON'T DEL A V&#13;
BALSAM&#13;
H to*m CeM*. Cowcte. fere TWwfc Ota* IntMMtt.&#13;
WhoocJflfCougti, Br«J&gt;cMtis«n4 Atthmt.&#13;
A certain care tor ConemafNen l» Rr»t stages.&#13;
a M t HI*retietinatk&amp;AceestMea. Utettonco.&#13;
Yes wM «ee the •xcettent eflecf alter takiaq the&#13;
, trat soae. SeM by dealer* everyvfce/e. Lartfs&#13;
When&#13;
Buying&#13;
Ball&#13;
Goods&#13;
Look for&#13;
Spalding'sTrade Mark&#13;
"Standard of Quality"&#13;
and take no substitute&#13;
1 CattaloftiQ Free.&#13;
A, G. ffALDDK} A BROS.&#13;
Denv«r&#13;
FOR 14 CENTS&#13;
1MHo&lt;&#13;
rS _ . Fig Trottmactteo, t Ue akn F*lro wOenri oSne,edi,&#13;
i•e.«ltooKnbei h(«LOr Ojr, iwtbe woailrl '&#13;
CtUlosBe'&#13;
•••H•wtawwaeM. fwtM*«a ioaavMiUw ytroya r8 eti&gt;rel-dAr^ ur&gt;de awaA^PMwlll^vrwffit alo v » i t h -&#13;
LA iBoaas. wis.&#13;
CANADA&#13;
ISA&#13;
BIGCOUNTRY to Butt almost nny ktn*&#13;
will find lands suited&#13;
ure. The stock rals«r&#13;
fa tuch quantities ttaaa&#13;
fee able to put a fence around all&#13;
ithe war In which a Minnesota&#13;
Ala remarks on a recent trip-&#13;
Weatera Canada. Particulars&#13;
r to the Departwa,&#13;
Canada, or t o&#13;
V a 1 Merr U Block, Detroit,&#13;
ieve, ML Pleasant, M:cn.,or-&#13;
Axe. liieb.&#13;
, T&#13;
to&#13;
BOND&#13;
OWOSML&#13;
Hicm&#13;
WC CANT&#13;
MAKE&#13;
my better ink than&#13;
we do —we don't&#13;
know how to. We&#13;
can nuke poorer&#13;
ami cheaper iuk,&#13;
but We wont.&#13;
GARTER'S INK Is the b*st thst can be&#13;
made. It co&amp;ta you no&#13;
more than the poorest.&#13;
Funny booklet "How to Hake Ink Picture* •fiee.&#13;
CARTER'S INK CO.. Bostoa,&#13;
CHEAP FARMS MINIM? AHMET&#13;
Improved and unim—&#13;
1' proved fanuliyf h ~&#13;
to be UivMe*&#13;
write. TOU&#13;
THUM+fi WQm STATS&#13;
nssimuMAji wois ESTATE.&#13;
*&#13;
&gt; * , , ^ . : . • ' . • . • •&#13;
• - *&#13;
• I ,,"w,&#13;
• • &gt; ' . *&#13;
I:&#13;
VI&#13;
p&#13;
F. L. ANDREWS EDiTOIt.&#13;
THURSDAY, APR. 13, 1899.&#13;
Interesting Items.&#13;
How unfortunate that those&#13;
people who beat know how to run&#13;
a newspaper are invariably engaged&#13;
in some other business.&#13;
Hundreds of people in Jackson&#13;
were attacked at about the same&#13;
time last week by a species of intuenza,&#13;
becoming hoarse, and afterwards&#13;
developing a cough. A&#13;
flock of germs apparently struck&#13;
the city in a bunch.&#13;
Beginning Tuesday all mail&#13;
matter sent from post offices will&#13;
be weighed before being sent and&#13;
all mails on trains will be weighed&#13;
when received. This is done&#13;
once in four years and coutinues&#13;
for 40 days and in this way the es-!&#13;
timates are made for carrying the&#13;
mails on railroads for the succeeding&#13;
four rears.—Local Republican.&#13;
The newest scheme which is being&#13;
worked on the Michigan farmer&#13;
is a smooth agent to secure&#13;
permission to tack up a few signs&#13;
on the farmer's barns and fences,&#13;
and then ask the unsuspecting&#13;
granger to sign an agreement not&#13;
to "tear downthe signs for ninety&#13;
days. Three months later the&#13;
farmer who was siinpW enough&#13;
to put his name to the paper is&#13;
notified that his note at ninety&#13;
days, for $300, is due.&#13;
Mere are some weather proverbs&#13;
referiug to song birds and&#13;
storms: "When birds cease to&#13;
sing, rain and thunder will follow.&#13;
If birds in general pick their&#13;
Several villages in the state are&#13;
discovering that, in their ietl to&#13;
reward efficient village officers bjr&#13;
electing them for another term,&#13;
they have violated the terms of&#13;
their charters. The law provides&#13;
that no one shall serve as village&#13;
treasurer more than two years in&#13;
succession, but in many places&#13;
this provision was completely&#13;
over looked and competent treasures&#13;
re-elected for a third term.&#13;
The Farm Journal is unlike&#13;
any other paper; for oue thing it&#13;
prints no quack medical advertisements;&#13;
for another it takes&#13;
five-year subscriptions and gets&#13;
the paper to its subscribers the&#13;
full time if they are anywhere on&#13;
this planet, even if they move two&#13;
or three times; if they die their&#13;
heirs get i t Now we are going&#13;
to send the Farm Journal for the&#13;
balance of 1899 and all of 1900,&#13;
1901, 1902 and 1903, nearly five&#13;
years, to every advance paying&#13;
subscriber to the DISPATCH, but&#13;
better speak quick, as we have&#13;
only a limited number of Farm&#13;
Journals to offer on these terms.&#13;
feathers, wash themselves and fly&#13;
to their nest, expect rain. Parrots&#13;
and canaries dress their feathers&#13;
are wakeful the eveniug before&#13;
a storm. If the pea-cock&#13;
cries when he goes to roost, and&#13;
indeed, much at any time, it is a&#13;
sign of rain. Robins will perch&#13;
on the topmost branches of trees&#13;
ane whistle when a storm is coming&#13;
OD.&#13;
Marriage, according to Dr.&#13;
Schwartz, of Berlin, is tbe most&#13;
important factor in longevity.&#13;
Of every 200 persons who reach&#13;
the age of 40 years, 125 are married&#13;
and 7$ unmarried, At 60&#13;
years the proportions are 48 to&#13;
22; at 70 years, 27 to 11; and at 90&#13;
years, 9 to 3. Fifty centenarians&#13;
had all been married. The doctor&#13;
asserts that that the rate of&#13;
mortality for husbands and wives&#13;
between the ages of 30 and 45&#13;
years is 16 per cent, while that&#13;
for unmarried persons is 28 per&#13;
cent.&#13;
A short time ago, the roof of&#13;
the stand pipe attached to the&#13;
water works at Napoleon, Ohio,&#13;
was blown off in a heavy wind&#13;
storm, and the upper part of the&#13;
ladder leading to the top was&#13;
carried with it. J^u ingenious&#13;
plan for replacing the roof was&#13;
adopted and successfully carried&#13;
out. The water was withdrawn&#13;
from the stand pipe and a raft&#13;
built on inside. Water was then&#13;
turned on, and the raft laden with&#13;
workmen and utensils was gradually&#13;
raised at the rate of about 25&#13;
feet an hou r. Five hours were required&#13;
to make the ascent1&#13;
Hooks and pulleys were then attached&#13;
to the pipe and material&#13;
was drawn up from the outside,&#13;
while the men repaired the dam-&#13;
«f a method formerly employed ia&#13;
University Items,&#13;
The monthly averages of the&#13;
University hospital for March,&#13;
'99 are the largest on record, those&#13;
of February '99 being the second&#13;
largest. The total number of&#13;
patients registered during March&#13;
was 178. Seventy-seven of these&#13;
were in-patients and 101 out&#13;
patients. The average-number of&#13;
patients during the month was&#13;
84, the highest number 88, and&#13;
the lowest 78. At one time or&#13;
another over one hundred patients&#13;
were kept waiting for beds, there&#13;
being at times as many as thirty&#13;
applicants on hand.&#13;
The first comprehensive textbook&#13;
on the subject of pharmacology&#13;
will be published shortly hy&#13;
AMMonal Local,&#13;
Don't fail to s*e Stab; or Fool from&#13;
Boston on Friday evening. April 21.&#13;
The lataet popular songs will be&#13;
sung between acts a' Stab: or Fool&#13;
from Boston at opera hooM on Friday&#13;
evening, April 21&#13;
An error crept into oar writeup of&#13;
election last WH^K. It read every&#13;
democrat elected l&gt;ut clerk, and should&#13;
have re«3 treasurer. The ticket&#13;
showing who w*-i* elected was correct&#13;
however.&#13;
The people of" Uivgory will hold a&#13;
reception and dance at the Alaccabee&#13;
hall in that place on Friday evening&#13;
ot this week in honor ol the soldiers&#13;
of the 35th regiment. All soldiers of]&#13;
the war invited to attend free. Bill&#13;
50c.&#13;
The Stock bridge High School will&#13;
produce the four-act drama "Stab" or&#13;
"Fool from Boetoa" at the open bouse&#13;
in this plaoe on Fridaj evening, April&#13;
21. General admission 10 and 15c.&#13;
Lea Brothers of Philadelphia. It&#13;
is the work of Professor Arthur&#13;
R. Gushny of the Medical department&#13;
of the University of&#13;
Michigan and embodies orignal&#13;
research ubon which the author&#13;
has been engaged for some time&#13;
past. It also contains a comprehensive&#13;
treatment of the literature&#13;
of the # subject. J"he work&#13;
has been so arranged as to be of&#13;
value. to medical students, the&#13;
practitioner, and the biologist.&#13;
Conrad and Jcnes, of West&#13;
Grove, Pa., the largest growers of&#13;
cannas and roses in America, have&#13;
arranged, through Dr. Schlotterbeck&#13;
ofi the pharmaceutical department&#13;
of the University of&#13;
Michigan, to make a large floral&#13;
display on the campus the coming&#13;
summer. Over five hundred canna&#13;
plants, comprising ten of the&#13;
finest and most extensive varieties,&#13;
have already arrived in Ann&#13;
Arbor and will be set out as soon&#13;
as tbe weather permits. These&#13;
with fifty hardy sHubs, such as&#13;
roses, spiraeas, althaeas, etc., will&#13;
be placed in four large circular&#13;
beds.&#13;
A complete steam laundry is&#13;
now in operation in connection&#13;
with the University of Michigan&#13;
hospitals. The machinery includes&#13;
a sterilizer, in which twenty&#13;
pounds of steam pressure is secured,&#13;
a washing machine, a centrifugal&#13;
extractor or ringer, a&#13;
mangle for flat work, .a body&#13;
ironer, a seven bar steam dry box&#13;
in which 210 degrees of beat may&#13;
be obtained, and three electric&#13;
flat-irons. Three persons are employed&#13;
in operating the laundry.&#13;
The daily output is five hundred&#13;
pieces. It is estimated that, the&#13;
saving in. washing and laundry «x-&#13;
$80 to I4»lt month,&#13;
Paused Beyond.&#13;
Johu Douglass, superint9ndent of&#13;
the elevator at Anderson, di*J on&#13;
Friday morning from appendicitis.&#13;
He waa taken sick on the preceding&#13;
Snnday and 49 hours after an operation&#13;
was preformed by L)rs. Sigler of&#13;
Pinckney assisted by Dr. Darling of&#13;
Ann Arhnr. From its short duration&#13;
his case was thought to be a favorable&#13;
one but at che operation it was found&#13;
that a proceeding attack had produced&#13;
complications from which it was impossible&#13;
to recover. He leaves a wife&#13;
and four small children and his untimely&#13;
death h universally regretted.&#13;
Board of Supervisors.&#13;
The following are the names of the&#13;
supervisors elected and their town*&#13;
ships. Tbe first eleven are democrats&#13;
and the rem4tn4off five republicans:&#13;
Brighton Frank E. Bldwell&#13;
Conway Charles L. Gordon&#13;
Cohtetah Haniy Bo lisa&#13;
Deerfleld L«man D.Howe&#13;
Genoa Patrick H Gray&#13;
Hamburg Edward J. Sherld an&#13;
How«ll Walter w. Knapp&#13;
Handy Kred Rlchter&#13;
Marion Hlrara E. Reed&#13;
Putnam Gary V. VaaWtnkle&#13;
Unadilla James Bnrden&#13;
Green Oak S, A, Smith&#13;
Bartland. Arthur Cimmer&#13;
Iosco ., B W. lierford&#13;
, PranL I&#13;
Tyrone George Dodda&#13;
Keep* Folk* Well.&#13;
It is better to keep well than to get&#13;
well, although when one is sick it is&#13;
desirable to get well, When we consider&#13;
that eight-tentl.s of the ailments&#13;
that afflict tbe American people are&#13;
caused by constipation, we shall realize&#13;
why it is that Baxter's Mandrake&#13;
Bitters "keeps folks we'll11 or if sick&#13;
enables them to get welT. Baxter's&#13;
Mandrake Hitters cures constipation.&#13;
Price 25c per bottle-1-Why not step in&#13;
and get a bottle and by using it be assured&#13;
of good health th&gt;/outf h the trying&#13;
hot months. We sell it and guarantee&#13;
it to give satisfaction or money&#13;
refunded.&#13;
F. \.&#13;
Could not exprat the rtptars of&#13;
Anna E. Springer of U25 Howard at&#13;
Philadelphia, Pa., when she found&#13;
that Dr. Kind's New Discovery for&#13;
Consumption had completely cored&#13;
ser of &amp; hacking cough that for many&#13;
years had made life a burden. AU&#13;
other remedies and doctors could give&#13;
her no help, but she says of this Royal&#13;
Cure "it soon removed the pain in my&#13;
chest and I can now sleep Roundly,&#13;
something I can scarcely remember&#13;
doing Wore. I feel like sounding ita&#13;
praises throughout the universe.11 So&#13;
will everyone who tries Dr. King's&#13;
New Discovery for any trouble of the&#13;
throat, chest or langs. Price 50c and&#13;
$1. Trial bottles free at F. A. Siller's&#13;
drug store; every bottle guarantee^&#13;
Sheriffs Hale.&#13;
Notice 1B hereby given that by virtue ota Fieri&#13;
Facias issued out of the Circuit Court for the&#13;
county of Livingston, lu favor ofGtoorge Ackley,&#13;
against the goods, chattels and real estate of&#13;
Frank Pond In said county, to me directed and&#13;
delivered, I Ud on the third day of February 1890&#13;
levy upon and take all the right, title and Interest&#13;
of tald Fraok Pond In and to the following described&#13;
real estate, that is to say:&#13;
Ml of the north half (Vi) of the north-east&#13;
fractional quarter (1-4) of section number two&#13;
(2) except the north fifty acres thereof. .&#13;
Aleo, the north ten and sixty three hundredth&#13;
(10.B8) acres of the south half (14) of said north&#13;
east fractional quarter of said section number&#13;
two (2). All in Town One North of Range Three&#13;
east Livingston county, Michigan.&#13;
And also, by virtue of the same writ, I did on&#13;
the thirtieth day of March 1809. levy upon and&#13;
take aU the right, title and Interest of tbe said&#13;
Frank 1'on.d In and to the following described real&#13;
estate, that is toaay:&#13;
AU that part o( the south half (&gt;£) of the northeast&#13;
fractional _ftflarter (J4) of section two (*),&#13;
town one (i) north of range three (S) east, lying&#13;
between tbe north ten and sixty-three hundredth&#13;
(10.6a) acres, and the south forty (40) acree thereof.&#13;
XUofsaldBeveral described parcels of real estates&#13;
being land whereof Otis Pond die 1 siezed. Also&#13;
all being lu Unadilla township, State of Michigan.&#13;
All of which right, title and interest, I shall expose&#13;
for sale at public auction or vendue to the&#13;
highest bidder at the south door of the Court&#13;
House In the Village of Howell, in said county of&#13;
Livingston, state of Michigan, (that being the&#13;
place of holding the Circuit Court for said county&#13;
of Livingston), on Friday the twenty, sixth (20)&#13;
of May, 1809. at the hour of one o'clock in the&#13;
afternoon of that day.&#13;
"Dated at Howeil, this 8rd day of April, 1809.&#13;
W. B . GlLDART, , MALACUY ROCUK,&#13;
t-ai Attorney. Sheriff.&#13;
The Farm Journal has nearly two&#13;
million readers each issue; it is putting&#13;
in a new press that will print 200&#13;
copies a minute; it is the best farm&#13;
paper in America, and it pleases the&#13;
women folks all to pieces. We have&#13;
raado a special arrangement by which&#13;
we aca able to send the Farm Journal&#13;
five years to every subscriber of tbe&#13;
Dispatch who pays all arrearages and&#13;
a year in advance; also to all new PUDscribers&#13;
who pay a year ahead.&#13;
Business Pointers.&#13;
Dr.Cady's Conditioo Powders "are'&#13;
just what a bpjrw n*ed* when in bad&#13;
condition/ Tome, blood purifier and&#13;
vermifuge. They are no* focfy imt&#13;
medicine and the hest'irJU4«Jb'. J*r a&#13;
horse in prime conditions Prio£ 25o&#13;
per paokage. For sal* by F. A.&#13;
ler. ' • : '&#13;
Htrnden's Seeds Grew, .&#13;
plant tbeiu too thick. 3 packages, 5c,&#13;
F. E. WRIGHT&#13;
Tfcftt !%•№• * H«tiMh «&#13;
Would quickly leave yon, if y&#13;
used Dr. King's New Life PlU*j&#13;
Thousands of sufferers have pto*o||&#13;
their matchless merit for aick &amp;ndMl&gt;&#13;
vona heaiaches. They make p ut&#13;
blood and strong nerves and build Of&#13;
your health.. Easy to take. Try t h t *&#13;
Only 25c, money back if not e*ltl«&#13;
8old by F, A. Siffler,&#13;
Railroa d Guide .&#13;
Brand Trunk Railway System.&#13;
Time Table in effect, February r&gt;, 1800.&#13;
M. A. L. DIVISION -WESTrSOUND.&#13;
WAYNE HOTEL. DETROIT&#13;
AMERICAN AMD KU HOP BAN PLAN*&#13;
0* TO • • eo ir.oo ro ti.OO .&#13;
Bimaua UBALU, eoo. UP TO OATM&#13;
No. 27 Passeaper. Pontiao q&#13;
connection "from Detroit 0 44 a m&#13;
No. 48 Mixed, Lenox to Jackson&#13;
connection from Detroit \ 40 p oa&#13;
All trains daily except Sunday.&#13;
EA8TBOUND&#13;
No. SO Passenger to Pontiao and Detroit 5 11pm&#13;
No. 44 Mixed to Pontiao and Lenox 7 &amp;5 a a&#13;
All trains daily except Sunday.&#13;
No. 80 connootioaat Poatiao for D«twU, _ _&#13;
No 44 conneotion at Pontiac for Detroit and&#13;
for the west o n D A M Rl&#13;
E.H.Hughes, W. J. Blaek,&#13;
A Q P AT Agent, Agent,&#13;
Obioago, 11). Piuckney&#13;
4*0 tTEMfMW UNK1&#13;
Popular route tor Ann Arbor, Toledo&#13;
and poin(9 East, South, and for&#13;
Howell, OVTO&gt;SO, Alma, Mt Pleasant&#13;
Cadillac, Manistee, Traversa City and&#13;
points in Northwestern Michigan.&#13;
W. W, BKKNKTT,&#13;
G. P. A.Toledo&#13;
BIGGLE BOOKS A Farm Library of unequalled value—Practical,&#13;
Up-to-date, Concise and Comprehensive—Handsomely&#13;
Printed and Beautifully illustrated*&#13;
By JACOB BIOGL E&#13;
No. l-BKML E HORSB BOOK&#13;
All about Horses a Common-Sense Treatise, with over&#13;
74 illustrations, a standard work. Price, 50 Cents.&#13;
No. 2-BKMLE BERRY BOOK&#13;
All about growing Small Fruits- read and learn bow,&#13;
contains 43 colored life-like reproductions of all leading&#13;
varieties and 100 other illustrations. Price, 90 Cents.&#13;
No. 3-BKWL E POULTRY BOOK&#13;
All about Poultry; the best Poultry Book in existence 4&#13;
tells everything; witbaj colored lile-like reproductions&#13;
of all the principal breeds; with xoj other illustrations,&#13;
Price, 50 Cents.&#13;
No, 4-BIOGL B COW BOOK&#13;
AU about Cows and the Dairy Business: having a great&#13;
sale; contains S colored tife»Uke reproductions of each&#13;
breed, with 13a other illustrations. Price, 90 Ceats.&#13;
NO. 6-BtOOLB SWINE BOOK&#13;
Just out. An about Hogs-Breeding, Feeding. Batch*&#13;
cry, Diseases, etc. Contains over 80 beautuu halftones&#13;
sad other engfaviogs. Price, ^ t&#13;
ihcBBKJOMOLLBB BBOOOOKK&lt;! arttmiqu«,original totfal-7om&gt;«m&#13;
saw aoythiag like tkno-HW practical, ao acatibie. They&#13;
•r e having an caoraoua aaW lUH,W«rt, North aa4&#13;
Booth. Every oat who kena a Bom. Cow, Hoc or&#13;
FARM JOURNAL He Davis Machine Go, GWcaoa&#13;
Baby&#13;
Carriages&#13;
rhEDAVI5 MACHINE &lt;S«- SELL THE BEST SEWING MACHINES ON EARTH&#13;
i)ircc t to tbe consumerd t factor y price *&#13;
filC 1|B£RTY $22.80&#13;
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THE STERLING teaes A nw wen O M K&#13;
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-VERY. LIBCRTYWADPEHTED10 YEARS&#13;
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TRAD* MARKS&#13;
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TKtTS AU DISUSES&#13;
WE AM MEN *e**o»«* to vigor »nd&#13;
• F e l l W t f f vitality. Organ* of&#13;
body wWoh have oeen weakened&#13;
*' " disease, overwork, excess or&#13;
lona, restored to full power,&#13;
i and vigor by our new and&#13;
original system ot treatment.&#13;
MUMDRED&amp; of testimonials bear&#13;
nUnUnCUO evidence of the good&#13;
result* obtained from oar method of&#13;
treating all forma of ohroaio disease.&#13;
WE TREITlND&#13;
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oonwMAnoi tan.&#13;
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WL HALt IN RMWMAL CHARM.&#13;
t n o u . sonOKi Those unable to call should send&#13;
stamp for question Wank for home treatment.&#13;
STYLISH, RELIABLE&#13;
ARTISTIC***&#13;
RecoMSBtnded by Ltatflag&#13;
Drestasker*.&#13;
They Always I MS CALL&#13;
ift\TTERNS&#13;
NONE BETTER AT ANY PRICE&#13;
'.'heie ptiurm art told i s nearly&#13;
y city »nd town In th» United St»t«t.&#13;
H VOUT d«»l»r doe« not keep them Mnd&#13;
dirtci tout On* c*nt stamps racelved.&#13;
Addret* your netren point.&#13;
THE McCALL COMPANY,&#13;
13810 M6W H t * Strttt, New Yerk&#13;
BRANCB orrtcit&#13;
i8o Fifth Ave., Chicago, and&#13;
tom Market&#13;
whicaca,&#13;
gaaFrai•clsco.&#13;
GAZINE&#13;
Brlfhtut Magmilna&#13;
Contains Beautiful Colored Plates.&#13;
Illustrates Latest Patten)!, Fashions,&#13;
Fancy Work, !&#13;
! Afentt wtnt«d for this mafftttn* latvcryj&#13;
locality. Beautiful premium for a Iktl* j&#13;
work. Write for lerma ana other particular!.&#13;
Subscription on\y SOOi p«»yt*»i&#13;
including aTFREK Pattern.&#13;
dams THE McCALL CO.,&#13;
138 to 146 W. 14th St., Nsw \*k&#13;
WHEELS,&#13;
Too!&#13;
MILLER RODEONtaOtt M I U I IN 132 HOURS The Eldredge&#13;
' 9SO.OO&#13;
The Belvidere&#13;
.00&#13;
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Salted by the W.C. T. U. of Fieetaeej.&#13;
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339 BROADWAY* Facts*?,&#13;
The W C T U met on Friday,&#13;
April 7, and held a very interesting&#13;
and instructive meeting with&#13;
readings from the life of Neal&#13;
Don and imminences by Francis&#13;
Willard. The following extracts&#13;
are from the work:&#13;
Neal Don was born March 20,&#13;
1804 and died Oot 2, 1897. He&#13;
was a man of wide experience,&#13;
| often helping important positions,&#13;
such as director of banks, manufacturing,&#13;
railroads and other&#13;
corporations. Ba served as Colonel&#13;
and afterwards as Brigadier-&#13;
General in the war for the Union;&#13;
was twice wounded in battle and&#13;
for many months a prisoner of&#13;
war. To Neal Don, world-wide&#13;
fame came through his long and&#13;
self-sacrificing services for temperance.&#13;
The present generation&#13;
The April number of Ticks ex*&#13;
oellant garden journal come© to&#13;
hand promptly and filled with&#13;
matter of interest t o all those&#13;
having gardens or who are interested&#13;
in plants. T h e illustrations&#13;
are excellant and appear o n nearly&#13;
every page. A n aooonnt with illustrations,&#13;
of the newer varieties&#13;
of Lilac makes known the superiar&#13;
qualities of some of the finest&#13;
of these beautiful flowering&#13;
shrubs. I t is certainly full of&#13;
good things.&#13;
O»emt»aj&gt;f tfce Pepmlar Grsusd Have*&#13;
Hemie te&gt; MUwsmkee em4 sh* N«rth-&#13;
WMt Ti» 8&#13;
Commencing Monday April 10, the&#13;
summer service across Lake Michigan&#13;
will be resumed for the season of 1899&#13;
connecting with Steam boat-Express&#13;
train No. 17 of the Detroit and Milwaukee&#13;
Division of Grand Truck&#13;
Railway System, leaving Detroit at&#13;
4.05 p. m., (excepting Sundays) arriving&#13;
at Grand Haven 11.00 p. m.,&#13;
connecting there with first-class passenger&#13;
steamers of the Crosby Transportation&#13;
Co. (carrying the United&#13;
S il , i g M i l k&#13;
6 30 a. m., making all connections for&#13;
the north-west. Bates always lower&#13;
than by all-rail routs. Tickets can be&#13;
A tr nrwjr rtmpi at baa&#13;
(rneial Verrlt, Iq&#13;
R l |&#13;
r h wasVrltw*&#13;
^AlHoattfrk In joni Rosy, ta t&#13;
itrsacjiwtat ^ n i n a , I* the tatarm&#13;
c-aa M t»«t» Ar»&lt;BjMoti(&gt;G ilwii'ck ft (he Of yaw&#13;
pta vlib 11«»\. M&lt;I3 l2th*ro»r of tb« battle it&#13;
tb*failofVaatke.. Boeaasators4*ats. BrtmM&#13;
oi origlt-sl I&gt;M»«T«E takwn by sawraaVMf paotof*&#13;
rsitoerto* *he t&gt;r&gt;ai Larfs hook. Low&#13;
small; traveling hundreds of&#13;
miles in his own conveyance. No&#13;
hamlet was so small that he did&#13;
not reach it He prepared and&#13;
circulated petitions to the Legislature&#13;
for a prohibitory law. In&#13;
season and out of season, upon&#13;
every available opportunity whenever&#13;
he thought it would aid his&#13;
object, he proclaimed his abhorrenoe&#13;
of the liquor trade and his&#13;
determination to surpress it and&#13;
to oppose all who favored it. He&#13;
became the object of hostility.&#13;
Incendaries fired his buildings;&#13;
ruffius attacked him in the. street;&#13;
rascals assailed his house with&#13;
missils though always to their&#13;
discomfort But undaunted he&#13;
kept on his course convinced that&#13;
he was making progresss, perhaps&#13;
slowly, but surely. In 1851 Mr.&#13;
Don was elected mayor of Portland,&#13;
Maine, by a larger vote than&#13;
ever before given then to a mayoralty&#13;
candidate. Clothed now&#13;
with official influence he appeared&#13;
before a legislative committee&#13;
with a draft of prohibitory law.&#13;
The bill passed both houses and&#13;
was approved by the Governor&#13;
June 2, 1851, and has ever since&#13;
been known as "The Maine Law".&#13;
In 1855 he was again elected&#13;
mayor. Two or three years later&#13;
he was elected to the legislature.&#13;
In 1857 and twice after at the invocation&#13;
of the United Kingdom&#13;
Uliance, he visited Great Britain&#13;
iud without compensation devoted&#13;
more than four years ^of&#13;
ime to the advocacy of prohibition-&#13;
before great audiences.&#13;
Since two genertions ago Neal&#13;
Don put bis hand to the plow and&#13;
lie never looked back. Whoever&#13;
elfee faltered be never wearied.&#13;
Never undereetimating the teak&#13;
no sucoeee ever elated and no rebad&#13;
of all agents of Grand Truck&#13;
Railway, and connecting lines. Fast&#13;
Steamboat Express train has Buffet&#13;
car attached in which lunches and&#13;
refreshments are served at reasonable&#13;
rates, between Detroit and Grand&#13;
Haven.&#13;
has little conception of the task §t a t e s m a i ,h arriving at Milwaukee&#13;
which he undertook more than 50&#13;
years ago. In the midst of conditions&#13;
existing at that time to declare&#13;
the liquor traffic hurtful in&#13;
effect, it was regarded as an insult&#13;
to the intelligent and as an&#13;
impeachment of the integrity of&#13;
the most respectful citizen. To&#13;
urge its suppression was to incur&#13;
the hostility of leaders in every&#13;
walk of life. But convinced that&#13;
no progress could be made while&#13;
the liquor traffic was legally considered&#13;
neccessary and respectful,&#13;
Mr Don aimed to strip it of&#13;
legal indorsement and to this end&#13;
to convince the people that the&#13;
trade was infamous through exposing&#13;
it as the prolific parent of&#13;
poverty, misery and crime. It is&#13;
impossible to follow him through&#13;
this work—it covered years. He&#13;
addressed large meetings and&#13;
Robbed tbe tirare&#13;
A startling incident of which Mr.&#13;
John Oliver of Philadelphia, was the&#13;
subject is narrated by him as follows:&#13;
"I was in a most dreadful condition,&#13;
my skin was almost yellow, ey63 sunken,&#13;
tongue eoated, pain continually-in back&#13;
no appetite, gradually growing weaker&#13;
day by day. Three physicians had&#13;
given me up but fortunately a friend&#13;
advised tryin? Electric Bitters and to&#13;
my great joy and surprise, the firit&#13;
bottle made a decided improvement. I&#13;
continued their use for three weeks&#13;
and am now a well man. 1 know they&#13;
saved my life and robbed the grave of&#13;
another victim. No one should fail to&#13;
try them. Only 50c guaranteed at F.&#13;
A.. Sigler's drug stoie.&#13;
The Best Value In&#13;
Magailne Literature&#13;
18 THE&#13;
New and Improved&#13;
FRANK LESLIES&#13;
POPULAR MONTHLY&#13;
Por a Quarter Century&#13;
25 cts., $3.00 a Year.&#13;
Now 10 cts., $1.00 a year.&#13;
MRS. FRANK LESLIE, Editor.&#13;
Present Contributors:&#13;
Frank R. Stockton,&#13;
Gen. Wesley Merritt,&#13;
Bret Harte,&#13;
Sec. of Navy Long,&#13;
Joaquin Miller,.&#13;
Julia C. R. Dorr,&#13;
Walter Camp,&#13;
Egerton Castle,&#13;
Win, C. VanTassel Sutphen,&#13;
Margaret E. Sangster,&#13;
Edgar Fawcett,&#13;
Lcnise Chandler Moulton,&#13;
William Dean How^lls,&#13;
Gen. Nelson A. Miles,&#13;
and other noted and popular writers.&#13;
, Prank Leslie's Popular Monthly if la&#13;
all respecta one of tbe brightest and brat illaatnte&lt;&#13;
i lO-o«at ma-azines in the world—non« better.&#13;
Tbe be«c known authors and artists contribute to&#13;
1U pa«*», and the highest stuudard of printing i»&#13;
apparent.,&#13;
8PECIAL:—Beantiful MiliUry Calendar, ais&#13;
seotiom, each in twalre colors. 10x12^ inches,&#13;
March 189ft to February 1900, together with thU&#13;
magaaine March to December 1 « W l l for 3100&#13;
Frank Leslie&#13;
THftOW AWAY YOUR&#13;
, Itfs)ttOt* "pftteiU" B«dicin«. bat k&#13;
direct from the tonnuia cf E. E. V&#13;
C L v e l a d ' s m o n i i , ' .s. BAk^BNlsuSgJ&#13;
&lt; knov. u restorative and b&amp;&#13;
\ '~&gt;iator for ir.ca and wonieo.&#13;
1. creates «oUd ftcsh, B«eclp&#13;
and strcostb, clears the brain,&#13;
df.kfcs the b}ood pure and rich&#13;
and causes a general feeling of&#13;
health, btrenzth a,ud renewed&#13;
•vit'ility, while the generative&#13;
©r^ias are helped to regain&#13;
their uoraal powers and the&#13;
sufferer is quickly wade conscious&#13;
of direct benefit One&#13;
Vox will work wonders, six&#13;
should per feet a cure. Prer»qred&#13;
in .'-mail bjgar coated tablets&#13;
easy to swallow. The days of&#13;
celery compounds, aexvuraa,&#13;
sarsaparillas and vile liquid&#13;
torica are over. BAR-BEN ia&#13;
for sale at all drug Ktnr-s, a 60*do*e box for 80&#13;
GCAts, cr \r&lt;-£ will ri.til it securely sealed on re*&#13;
eeiptof l&gt;rice. C:.iS. EARTOM AND BENSON,&#13;
494 'Jsr-^a Llock, Clevelaad, (X&#13;
For sale by&#13;
F. A. SIGLEB, Druggist.&#13;
Pinckney, - . Mich.&#13;
UNDERTAKER&#13;
AND ENBALMER.&#13;
J.G.&#13;
PLAINFIELO, MICH.&#13;
I hold a certificate from&#13;
the Champion Embalming&#13;
College of Springfield, Ohio&#13;
and am prepared to do embalming&#13;
of all kinds.&#13;
A lady assistant for^embalming&#13;
women and children.&#13;
Chamberlaiu's Comrb BemeAy&#13;
This remedy is intended especially&#13;
for coughs, colds, croup, whooping"&#13;
cough and influenza. It has become&#13;
famous for its cures of these1 Jiseases&#13;
over a large part of the civilized&#13;
world. Tha most flattering testimonials&#13;
have been received giving account&#13;
of its flood work; of the aggravating&#13;
and persistent coughs it has cured; of&#13;
aevere colds that have yielded prompt*&#13;
lylo its soolhing effects and of the&#13;
dangerous attacks of croup it has&#13;
cured, oiten saving the life of the&#13;
child. The extensive use of it for&#13;
whooping congh has shown that it&#13;
robs disease of all dangerous consequents.&#13;
Sold by F, A.&#13;
vD wrapt Tacxan*Y MOMUIQ wt &gt;&#13;
FRANK L. ANDREWS&#13;
JTttitor amd &amp;*pt**Ur.&#13;
bnb#criptioa Price | 1 la A4T*B««.&#13;
at the Postoflce at .&#13;
as secoad-cisss matter.&#13;
Advertising rates made known oa application.&#13;
Business- Cards, f\M per year. '&#13;
r«aih and marriage notices published (rat.&#13;
•aaooActnaeats of entertainments s&amp;ay be pau&#13;
(or, if desired, by nreseatingthe offloe with Oak*&#13;
ett oi admisatoa. In case tickets are not brought&#13;
to the offlce, regular rates will be charged,&#13;
AU matter la local notice eolumn will be chart&#13;
ed at 5 cents per line or teacttqa thereof, (or each&#13;
Insertion. Waare no. tints is speclned, all notices&#13;
will be inserted until ordered discontinued, aai&#13;
will be chaxi^i for accordingly, flsrAllchaafsa&#13;
of adrertiseoMaU MOOT reach tbSofllc* as early&#13;
as TcasuAT morning to lasare an iasertion the&#13;
same week.&#13;
r/]*9 &lt;0fl9 W %f 9 ¥%f&amp; P&#13;
s / \JM9 M^MMI&amp;JV 4 JfwW Cr * In all its branches, a specialty. We hate all kinds&#13;
sad the latest styles of Type, etc., which enables&#13;
as to execute all kinds of work, such as Books,&#13;
PampteU. Posters, Progras&amp;mes, BUI Heads, Note&#13;
BeadsV Statements, Cards, Auction Bills, etc, la&#13;
superior styles, upon the »hortest notice. Prieease&#13;
' work can be aoae.&#13;
•LL BiLUa PASABLS lflSAX O* lVXaiT H9SXH.&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIRECTORY,&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PHKSXDKKT.. ..~. —« Alex. Mclntyre&#13;
T*USTKSS K. h. Thompeon, Alfred Mottles,&#13;
Daniel Blcharda, &gt;ieo- Bowman, Samuel&#13;
Sykea, V. i). Johnson.&#13;
C U B E . . . . . . ~ - R- H.Teeple&#13;
TaiABDaiB ^. ~ WjB. Jlurphy&#13;
AMBSSOB - W. A. Carr&#13;
EiTacn OoMxiaaiosBB .Geo. Baroa&#13;
MABSAHL ; ••—1&gt;. W. Marta&#13;
HKAMTB o r « c « a Or.H. F-^i«l«&#13;
ATTORNEY ~— W. A. Carr&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
'BXHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH.&#13;
_ _ Bev. Chas. Simpson, pastor. Services every&#13;
Sunday morning at Ui;3o, and erery Sunday&#13;
evening at r :»&gt; o'clock. Prayer meeting Thursday&#13;
evenings. Sunday sctiool at close of morning&#13;
service. F. L. Andrews, Sapt.&#13;
OONliRBGAriONAL CHURCH.&#13;
%*J Rev. C. W. Kice pwtor. Service every&#13;
Sunday morning at 10 :B0 and erery Sunday&#13;
evening at TrOCo'clack. Prayer meeting Tharsd*&#13;
y evenings. BunJiy school at close of morn-&#13;
Ins service. R. U. Teeple , rfupt. Uo*^Keai, '&#13;
^1T. MU^8JATacL.LO CHLJROa.&#13;
O Rev. M. J. Oommarfard, Pastor. -Services&#13;
every Sunday. Low mass at 7:3U o'clock&#13;
hlsli mass witb sermon at 9:31) a. m. Catechism&#13;
at 3:00 p. ui.i vespersanubeaedictloaat 7:40 p.m.&#13;
SOCIETIES;&#13;
The A. O. H. Society of ttiia place, meet* every&#13;
tuird Sunday iu tne Fr. Matthew flail.&#13;
John McGuinew,County U l&#13;
inckney Y. P. S. C E. Meeting* held every&#13;
Sunday evening in Coa^'l church &lt;it ti:! l.»'clauk&#13;
Bessie Cordley, I'res U a b l u l&gt;&lt;sv.:&lt;&gt;*r S e c&#13;
y&#13;
A&#13;
i CTIVK SOLICITORS WVNTR3 EVEKY&#13;
A WHBKE for "The Siory of thft Philippines. '&#13;
by Murat Halstead, coinmL^sloned hy th« Ctovern.&#13;
ment as Official UUtorian to the War Depart*&#13;
mant. The book was written in army camps at&#13;
Saa Francisco, on the Pacific with Genersl Merritt.&#13;
in the hospitals at Honolulu, in Honsr Kon«, in&#13;
the American trenches at Manilla, in the in»urgenta&#13;
camps with Agninalclo, on the deck of the&#13;
Olympia with Dawey. and in tbe roar of the battle&#13;
at the tal or Manilla Bonanza for agents. Brimful&#13;
of pictures taken by government photographers&#13;
on tbe spot. Lar^e book. Law prices. Big&#13;
profits. Freight paid. Credit sriven. Drop all&#13;
trashy unofficial war books Outfit free. Address,&#13;
F, T. Barber, Sec'y. Star Insurance Bldg. Chicago.&#13;
for 31.00.&#13;
ilouse.N.Y.&#13;
Copies Sold and Snbacripttous liftWved by Newsdealers.&#13;
ance woskfn today * have hit&#13;
grand lite a* aa edtatpie of th*&gt;&#13;
re#jnlt ' that can be attained&#13;
h h undaunted oourage and&#13;
Cfci&#13;
ri&#13;
labeii like til- tor »ov beeU&#13;
in&#13;
in tbe Wank&#13;
efiie-r85e&#13;
1 have bean afflicted with rbenmatism&#13;
for fourteen years acd nothinfif&#13;
seemed to give any relfef. I was able&#13;
to be around all tbe time, but COQstantlv&#13;
sufiferia^r I had tried every^&#13;
thine I could boar of:and at last was&#13;
told to try Chamberlain's Pain Bnlm&#13;
which I did and was immediately relieved&#13;
and in a short time cured. I&#13;
am bappy to say th«t it has not sinew&#13;
returned.— losh Ed«ar, Germantown,&#13;
Cal For sale hy P. A. Sigler.&#13;
ijiPWOUTH LKAGUK. Mwjts every&#13;
iieveninx at ti:()i) ocloclc In tbe M. E. Cnttrca,&#13;
cordial invitattyu is extondea to eruryoae,&#13;
cially youuij people. .Mre. -Stella Orahaiu Pre*.&#13;
Junior Epwortli Le^no, MH*U every Sunday&#13;
afteruo n\ at .*: a o'ci^olc, at .\I. K cUarcli. All&#13;
cordially invitoil.&#13;
Mi l^litii Vin^liQ, Superiuteuient.&#13;
Sunday&#13;
The C. T. A. and ti. »ucitiwy jf this place, meet&#13;
every third Saturuay evunlng in tne Fr. Matthew&#13;
Hall. John Douohue, 1;resident.&#13;
NIOUTSOF MACCABEES.&#13;
Meet every Friday evonin^ on or hofore (ill&#13;
of tile moon at their hall in the Swartliout bldg.&#13;
Visiting brothers are cordially Invitud.&#13;
C . U4MPBKLI., Sir knight Commander&#13;
T Ulngeton Lodge, No.7*% ? A A. M. l&#13;
J j CommunicaLion faesday evening, on or Iwiore&#13;
the full ot tbe moon. »Alexaniler Mclntyro, \\\ M.&#13;
ORDER OF EA.srKt&lt;NT SCAK nioetauacn month&#13;
the Friday evening following ilia regular F.&#13;
AA.M. meeting, MKS. M\HY KKAD, VV. M.&#13;
f AD1ESOFT1IE MACCABEUS. .Uoat every let&#13;
JLJ and Atd Saturday of eacbmoutn at i'.'lO p m. at&#13;
K. •). r. M. anil. Visiting ^;sRri cjrdiiiiy in&#13;
vited. Lax CasiWAf Lady Com.&#13;
KNIGHTS OP TIIK LOYAL (JU ABD&#13;
meet every second Wednesday&#13;
0T«nhis of every month iu the K. O.&#13;
T. M. ll&amp;Li at 7:30o'clock. AU visiting&#13;
tiuarde welcome.&#13;
KOBKRT ARNELL, Capt. tie&#13;
nyRK W. C. T. U. moots the rtrst Friday of each&#13;
I month at 2:&amp; p. m. at tie home of Dr. H. F.&#13;
Slglerr Kreryone Interested in temper inc* la&#13;
co&amp;dially invited Mrs. &lt;^al Siller, L'res; Mrs.&#13;
Ktta Dnrfee, Secretary.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
Act on a u i ^ pri&#13;
zwfci&amp;ts) the liver, L ^&#13;
ana towels through&#13;
n«rvfj. DR. Maasr Poxa&#13;
tpeedilv cvr* kf&#13;
torpid Uver&#13;
ttoo. 8 r *&#13;
.1:&#13;
aad&#13;
E. Edwards, paafcor ot tbe&#13;
Baptist church at Minersville.&#13;
when suffering with r ben mat ism&#13;
WM advised to try Chamberlaia's Pain&#13;
Balm, fle a»yi: "A fev applicattoot&#13;
ef thU liniment proftd of treat terviee&#13;
H. F. 81QLER M. D- C, L, SIOLER M, D&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
Physicians and Sur^e ma. AU calls prompt)&#13;
attended to day or mght. OiHce oo Slain str&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
DR. A. B. GREEN.&#13;
DE.\Tlsr-:;vory Tauredayand Friday&#13;
Office over Si^'ler'a Uru^ store.&#13;
For $9.50 Waeaaaaketo&#13;
yottr measure a&#13;
Fin*. AU-Woo) Suit&#13;
Latest City Stylet&#13;
Toe can be a well^remed man&#13;
if you know how. Write us for&#13;
Samples and Booklet "He* to&#13;
LotiWtU, Drtss W$U% and&#13;
to ae. It lobdtted tbe inflainaliol&#13;
relieved the paia. Sboald any saf ertr&#13;
profit by ffifiag peiatjbalM a ihai tt&#13;
l " For atie bj P. A.&#13;
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M. H. A M U A&#13;
№',-; . -oft&#13;
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№&#13;
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L. Axuiixwet, Publish**.&#13;
A flood cf tears Indicates t#ou.W#d&#13;
crater*.&#13;
He that runt way read—his &lt;tppon-&#13;
«nt's inaugural addess&#13;
It keeps the tramps o w ftiraiahlng&#13;
material for comic-paper jokes.&#13;
It a man ever feels religious It's&#13;
rhea he finds btnwelf in a tight place.&#13;
. The man who makes * donkey of.&#13;
himself seldom toasts o* being eelf*&#13;
made.&#13;
Ajax may have defied the lightning,&#13;
but he never set his hand against a&#13;
live wire.&#13;
A few congregations are willing to&#13;
pay a pastor for telling them the truth&#13;
about themselves.&#13;
An Irish philosopher says the only&#13;
to prevent what's past is to put a&#13;
stop to it betire it happens.&#13;
• Concentration is the secret of&#13;
strength, in politics, in war, in trade; in&#13;
cbort, In all management cf human affairs.&#13;
Of two evils the less is always to be&#13;
chosen. That thou mayst therefore&#13;
avoid the future everlasting punishment,&#13;
endeavor to endure present evils&#13;
patiently.&#13;
: Spain's decision to prosecute Admiral&#13;
Cervera and the former captain&#13;
cf the Cristobol Colon for the loss of&#13;
the fleet off Santiago, savors of the&#13;
ethics of the Middle Ages. On the other&#13;
hand, an act one hundred and fifty&#13;
"years ago, of Maria Theresa, a collateral&#13;
ancestor of the Queen Regent of&#13;
Spain, embodies the generous spirit of&#13;
.the nineteenth century. When Marshal&#13;
Daun lost a decisive battle, after&#13;
bravely contesting it, his quoen went&#13;
out from her capital to meet him on&#13;
his return, and by the warmest expressions&#13;
of kindness and confldencs&#13;
raised his crushed spirits. In this she&#13;
von a cDmmendable victory.&#13;
• The unjustifiabel severity of a parent&#13;
is loaded with this aggravation, that&#13;
those whom he injures, are always in&#13;
•hi s sight. The domestic oppressor&#13;
dooms himself to gaze upon those faces&#13;
which he clouds with terror, and with&#13;
sorrow; and he beholds every movemeet&#13;
the effects of his own barbarities.&#13;
He that can bear to give continual pain&#13;
to those who surround him, and can&#13;
walk with satisfaction In the gloom of&#13;
his own presence; he that can see submissive&#13;
misery without relenting, and&#13;
meet without emotion tbe eye that implores&#13;
mercy, or demands justice, will&#13;
or aamomuou; he has found ol&#13;
TALMAGE'8 SERMON.&#13;
stopping the avenues of tenderness,&#13;
and arming his heart against the force&#13;
of reason.&#13;
' The suggestion to tax grain has been&#13;
brought forward In the legislature of&#13;
North Dakota, where it has been embodied&#13;
in a concurrent resolution for&#13;
a constitutional amendment. This provides&#13;
that the legislative assembly&#13;
tnay tax wheat, flax and oats and barley&#13;
grown in the state and storeu in&#13;
the elevators or kept for seed at a rate&#13;
of not to exceed half a cent a bushel&#13;
on wheat, the game on flax, a third of&#13;
a cent on barley and a quarter of a&#13;
cent on oats. At present the grains&#13;
grown In the state pa y practically no&#13;
taxes. The millions of bushels of&#13;
wheat grown In the state are threshed&#13;
and disposed of between assessments.&#13;
The rate of a quarter, to half a cent a&#13;
bushel, if applied to the mill ions of&#13;
bushels of the varioue grains grown in&#13;
the state, would, it 1* said, produce a&#13;
revenue exceeding- 1250,000 . How the&#13;
measure is likely to be received generally&#13;
is not yet apparent from the adrices&#13;
at band.&#13;
: From out the smoke and carnage o!&#13;
the late war, one incident shines like a&#13;
star in a cloudy sky. It is that of the&#13;
military funeral in Santiago last November&#13;
of the body- of General Vara&#13;
del Rey... Four months after the Spaniard&#13;
had fallen at El Caney, fighting&#13;
at the head of his men, an aged general&#13;
/VRHderrama.-drTtved trom Spain&#13;
to beg the body of his former comrade.&#13;
General Woo* *63&amp;JI dispatched"&#13;
an officer and company to find the&#13;
grave, from wbtofc air mark* had been&#13;
removed by the. Ctttms*. .. Altec a long&#13;
aearch ths body was Identified, and&#13;
transferred to the handsot&amp;e coffin&#13;
**dught fM.n&gt;. Seal*, a ^ c a e o r t ** to&#13;
the vessel by an American band and&#13;
!faat{aflofi,' At:the carterf p*f*4.the&#13;
palace General Wood an4 staff .stood&#13;
'at attention with bared heads. "General&#13;
Vat* del Ray was a bra^e gup,"&#13;
•ai d the chivalrous victor,'*"and we&#13;
honor his memoi*/* If* wonder* the.&#13;
old VaJderram* aaid3ft %rtwelU*Ys*&#13;
"ANQBL8 OF THB GRASS'* LAST&#13;
SUNDAY'S&#13;
Las* !«««• . «u Fsltowsi "if Tfcoa&#13;
Hod »• Cloth * %*• tomm • « . . Bow&#13;
K n h M «r« ffUl n« Cloth* Joe * O ¥ •&#13;
•K. LlttU f*ith?"&#13;
The Uly is the. queen of Bible flow*&#13;
•rs. The rose may have disputed her&#13;
throne in modern tlmea, and won it;&#13;
but the rose originally had only five&#13;
petals. It was under the long-continued&#13;
and intense gaze of the world&#13;
that the rose blushed into its present&#13;
beauty. In the Bible train, cassia and&#13;
hyssop and frankincense and myrrh&#13;
and spikenard and camphire and the&#13;
rose follow the lily. Fourteen times&#13;
in the Bible is the Uly mentioned; only&#13;
twice tho rose. The rose may now&#13;
have wider empire, but the lily&#13;
reigned in the time of Esther, in the&#13;
time of Solomon, in the timo of Christ.&#13;
Caesar had his throne on the hills.&#13;
The lily had her thranie in the valley.&#13;
In the greatest settaon that was ever&#13;
preached there was only one flower,&#13;
and that a lily. The Bedford dreamer,&#13;
John Bunyan, entered the House of the&#13;
Interpreter, and was shown a cluster&#13;
of flowers, and was told to "consider&#13;
the lilies."&#13;
We may study pr reject other sciences&#13;
at our option. It Is RO with astronomy;&#13;
it is so with chemistry; it&#13;
Is so with jurisprudence; it is so with&#13;
physiology; it is so with geology; but&#13;
the science of botany Christ commands&#13;
us to study when he says: "Consider&#13;
the Iilie6." Measure them from root&#13;
to tip of petal. Inhale their breath.&#13;
Notice the gracefulness of their poise.&#13;
Hear the whisper of tb» white lips of&#13;
the Eastern and the red lips of the&#13;
American Illy.&#13;
Belonging to this royal family of&#13;
lilies Is the Uly of the Nile, the Japan&#13;
lily, the Lady Washington of the Sierras,&#13;
the golden band lily, the giant&#13;
lily of Nepaul, the Turk's cap lily, the&#13;
African lily from the Cape of Good&#13;
Hope. All these lilies have the royal&#13;
blood in their veins. But I take the&#13;
lilies of my text this morning as typical&#13;
of all flowers, and their voice of&#13;
floral beauty seems to address us, saying,&#13;
"Consider the lilies, consider the&#13;
azaleas, consider the fuchsias, consider&#13;
the geraniums, consider the ivies, consider&#13;
the hyacinths, consider the heliotropes,&#13;
consider the oleanders. With&#13;
deferential and grateful and worshipful&#13;
souls, consider them, Not with insipid&#13;
sentimentalism, or with sopbomorlc&#13;
vaporing, but for grand and&#13;
practical and every-day, and, if need&#13;
be, homely uses, consider them.&#13;
The flowers are the angels of the^&#13;
When&#13;
•ot for**&#13;
s+rta &gt; « * * * «U* &gt;*ir&#13;
They ail have voices,&#13;
the clouds speak, they thunder; when&#13;
the whirlwinds speak, they scream;&#13;
when the cataracts speak, they roar;&#13;
but when the flowers speak, they always&#13;
whisper. 1 stand here to interpret&#13;
their message. What have you to&#13;
say to us, O ye angels of the grass?&#13;
Th&lt;«i morning I mean to discuss what&#13;
no*ers are good fuf. T h »t is xny subject—&#13;
What are flowers good for?&#13;
I remark, in the first place, they are&#13;
good for lessons of God's providential&#13;
care. That was Christ's first thought.&#13;
All these flowers seem to address, us&#13;
today, saying, "God will give you apparol&#13;
and food. We have no wheel&#13;
with which to spin, no loom with&#13;
which to weave, no sickle with which&#13;
to hirvest.no well-sweep with which to&#13;
draw water; but God slakea our thirst&#13;
with the dew, and God feeds ns With&#13;
the bread of tho sunshine, and God&#13;
has appareled U3 with more than Solomonic&#13;
regality. We are prophetesses&#13;
of adequate wardrobe. "If God so&#13;
clpthed \is. the grais. of the field, wUl&#13;
he not much more clothe you, 0 ye of&#13;
little faith?" Men and women of&#13;
worldly anxieties, take this message&#13;
home with you. How long has God&#13;
taken ?are of you? Quarter of the&#13;
Journey cf life? .Half the-journey of&#13;
life? Tnree-Quartera ot the journey&#13;
of life? Can you not trust hiic the&#13;
rest oi the way? God "does not promise&#13;
you anything like that which ths&#13;
Roman emperor -had on his taftte at&#13;
vast expense—five hundred nightingales'&#13;
tongues—but he has promised&#13;
to take care of you. He has promised&#13;
you the necessities, not the luxuriesbread,&#13;
not cake. If God so luxuriantly&#13;
clothes the grass of the field, will he&#13;
not provide for you, his living and&#13;
immortal children? He will.&#13;
If you aak me the question, What&#13;
are flowers good for? I respond, they&#13;
are good for the bridal day. The bride&#13;
must have them on her brow, and she&#13;
must hare them, in her band. The&#13;
marriage altar must be covered with&#13;
them. A wedding without flowers&#13;
would be as Inappropriate as a wedding&#13;
without music. At such a time*&#13;
they are for congratulations and&#13;
prophecies. &lt;jf «pod. r So much of the.&#13;
w+o&lt;!fht^t&amp; cover 4fc* feegl**-&#13;
Flowart art appropriate At iack occasions,&#13;
for is nUuty-ni»e,oat of a&#13;
hundred casea.it4s't*e very'besi thing&#13;
that could have happened. The world&#13;
"it an in-&#13;
» i l*i«*fbrows la&#13;
wedded lil% -before they have begun&#13;
arranges for the best So that flowers,&#13;
in almost all cases, are appropriate&#13;
for the marriage day. The dlveraencts&#13;
of diaposUtoa will become&#13;
corjeepoadeneee, reckleesneai wUl become&#13;
prudence, trivtAUy will be&#13;
turned Into pr*ct4o|lltp.i&#13;
There has bean many an aged widowed&#13;
son! who had a barefully locked&#13;
bureau, and la the bagstau a box, and&#13;
in toe bo* a tojded papasv aad in the&#13;
folded paper a half-blown rose, slightly&#13;
fragrant, discolored, carefully&#13;
pressed. So* pat it U m i Iwty or fifty&#13;
years ago. pa the anniversary of her&#13;
wedding she will go to the bureau,&#13;
she will lift the box, she will unfold&#13;
the paper, and to her eyes will be exposed&#13;
tbe half-blown bud, and the&#13;
memories of the past will rush upon&#13;
her, and a tear will drop upon the&#13;
flower, and suddenly it is transfigured,&#13;
and there is a stir in the dust&#13;
of the anther, and it rounds out, and It&#13;
is full of life, and it begins to tremble&#13;
in the procession of the church&#13;
atele, and the dead music of a half&#13;
century ago comes throbbing through&#13;
the air, and. vanished faces reappear,&#13;
and right hands are joined, and a manly&#13;
voice promises, "I will, for better&#13;
or worse," and the wedding march&#13;
thunders a salvo of joy at the departing&#13;
crowd; but a sigh on that anniversary&#13;
day scatters the scene. Under the&#13;
deep-fetched breath, the oower3, the&#13;
congratulating groups are scattered,&#13;
and there is nothing left but a trembling&#13;
band holding a faded rosebud,&#13;
which is put into the paper, and then&#13;
into the box, and the box carefully&#13;
placed in the bureau, and with a&#13;
sharp, sudden click of tho- lock the&#13;
scene is over.&#13;
Ah, my friends, let not the prophecies&#13;
of the flowers, on your wedding&#13;
day, be false prophecies. Be blind to&#13;
each other's faults. Make the m.Q4t of&#13;
each other's excellences. Remember&#13;
the vows, the ring on the third finger&#13;
of the left hand, and the benediction&#13;
of the calla lilies.&#13;
If you ask me the question, What&#13;
are flowers good for? I answer, They&#13;
are good to honor and comfort the&#13;
obsequies. The worst gash' ever made&#13;
into the side of our poor earth, is the&#13;
gash of the grave. It Is so deep, it is&#13;
go cruel, it is so incurable, that it needs&#13;
something to cover it up. Flowers for&#13;
the casket, flowers for the hearse, flowers&#13;
for tho cemetery. What a '-ontrast&#13;
between a grave in a cewtry&#13;
churchyard, with the fence broken&#13;
down, and the tombstone aslant, and&#13;
the neighboring cattle browsing amid&#13;
the mullein Etalks and the Canada thistles,&#13;
and a June morning in Greenwood,&#13;
the wave of roseate btoem rolling&#13;
to the top of the mounds, and then&#13;
breaking Into foaming crests of white&#13;
flowers aih^trotmri tberptttows of dust!&#13;
It Is the difference between sleeping&#13;
under rags and sleeping under an embroidered&#13;
blanket. We want Old Mortality&#13;
with bis chisel to go through&#13;
all the graveyards in Chrlstendom.and&#13;
while he carries a ci^el in one hand,&#13;
we wont Old Mortality to have some&#13;
ilower seed in the palm of the other&#13;
V°nd. * * *&#13;
It was left for modern times to spell&#13;
respect for the departed and comfort&#13;
for the living in letters of floral Gospel.&#13;
Pillow of flowers, meaning rest&#13;
fqr the; pilgrim, whojhas^ got to the end&#13;
of his Journey. Anchor of flowers, suggesting&#13;
the Christian hope which we&#13;
have as an anchor of the soul, sure and&#13;
steadfast. Cross of flowers,, euggqeiing&#13;
•he tree on which our sius were slain.&#13;
If I had my way, I would cover up all&#13;
tho dreamless sleepers,' whether in&#13;
golden-handled casket or pine box,&#13;
whether a king's mausoleum or Potter's&#13;
field, with radiant or aromatic&#13;
arborescence. The Bible says: "In the&#13;
midst of the garden there was a sepulchre."&#13;
I wish that every sepulchre&#13;
might be in the midst of a garden^.&#13;
It you ask me the question, what are&#13;
flowers good for? I answer, for religious&#13;
symbolism. Have you ever storied&#13;
Scriptural flora? The Bible is up&#13;
arboretum, It is a divine conservatory,&#13;
It is an herbarium of exquisite ber.oty.&#13;
If you want to illustrate the brevity&#13;
of the brightest human life, you. will&#13;
quote from Job: "Man comet^^otth&#13;
as a flower and is cut down." Or yo£&#13;
wilt quote from the Psalmiec: "AM tfce&#13;
flower of the field, so he perlshetft; the&#13;
wind paseeth over it, and it is jpfte?&#13;
Or you will quote from Isaiahi',\i-;-VJttf&#13;
flesh is grass, and the goodliness thereof&#13;
is as the flower of the field." Or&#13;
yon will quote from James the Apestie:&#13;
"As the flower of the gras*&gt;4ttfce&#13;
posgeth away." What graphic Bible&#13;
symbolism!&#13;
All the cut flowers will soon beCji&amp;i,&#13;
whaterer^ care you tajco of * 6S[em«&#13;
Though morninj and night yoac &gt;iptiie&#13;
them in the naae of the showor*&#13;
the bapttsm win not be to them l e a v -&#13;
ing ordinance. They^hav* teen&#13;
wounded with the Wife that cct&#13;
They ^re/T^eedlng' their life . w . , ,&#13;
thty ar*,dyin* wiw; The fragrant la&#13;
the air te their eepertinriul asetmdim&#13;
« iplrifs. Oh,Tes! Flowers ar# almost&#13;
h«aao. Dttfcffcrts teU as feat&#13;
flower*, wreathe, they tale&#13;
1 * wi z^7 •"&#13;
they hart tht dislike*. Tfctjf ilatp. tfeajr&#13;
live Is families. They have tfc&#13;
mm* tVmtr HMftmAmmtg&#13;
birth, their burial, their cradle, their&#13;
grave. The zephyr rocks the one, and&#13;
the storm digs the trench for the other.&#13;
The cowslip must leave Its gold, the&#13;
lily must leave it* silver, the rose must&#13;
leave its diamond necklace of morndng&#13;
dew. Dust to duet So we come up,&#13;
we prosper, we ipread abroad, we dio,&#13;
as the flower—-as the flower!&#13;
Change and decay in all around I see;&#13;
0 thou who change*! sot, abide with&#13;
me!&#13;
Flowers also afford mighty symbolbua&#13;
cf Christ, who compared himself to&#13;
the ancient queen, the Uly, aad the&#13;
modern queen, the rose, -when he said:&#13;
"I am the rose of 8haron, and the lily&#13;
of the valley." Redolent like the one,&#13;
humble like the other. Like both, appropriate&#13;
for the sad who want sympathisers,&#13;
and for the rejoicing who want&#13;
banqueters. Hovering over tho marriage&#13;
ceremony like a wedding-bell, or&#13;
folded like a chaplet on the pulseless&#13;
heart of the dead. Oh, Christ! let tho&#13;
perfume of thy name be wafted all&#13;
around the earth—lily and rose, lily&#13;
aud rose—until the wilderness crimson&#13;
into a garden, and the round earth&#13;
turn into one great bud of Immortal&#13;
beauty laid against the warm heart of&#13;
God. Snatch down froiii the world's&#13;
banners eagle and lion, and jm-t en lily&#13;
and rose, lily and rose.&#13;
But, my friends, flowers hH.-e no&#13;
grander use than when on Easter&#13;
morning we celebrate the re-animation&#13;
of Christ from the catacombs. Th9&#13;
flowers spell resurrection. There is&#13;
not a nook or corner in all the build-&#13;
Ing but is touched with the incense.&#13;
The women carried spices to the tomb&#13;
of Christ, and they dropped spices all&#13;
around the tomb, and from these spices&#13;
have grown all the flowers of Easter&#13;
morn. . T h e two white-robed angels&#13;
that hurled the stone away from the&#13;
door of the tomb, hurled it with such&#13;
violence down tho hill that it crashed&#13;
in the door of the world's sepulchre,&#13;
and millions of dead shall come forth.&#13;
However labyrinthine the mausoleum,&#13;
however costly the sarcophagus,&#13;
however architecturally grand the necropolis,&#13;
however beautifully parterred&#13;
the family grounds, we want them all&#13;
broken up by the Lord of the Resurrection.&#13;
The forms that we laid away&#13;
with our brokeo hearts must rise&#13;
again. Father and mother—they must&#13;
come out. Husband and wife—they&#13;
must come out. Brothers and slaters—&#13;
they must come out. Our darling chil-^&#13;
dren—they must corae out The eyes&#13;
that with trembling fingers we closed,&#13;
ciu£t open in the luster of Resurrection&#13;
morn. Tbe arms that we folded in&#13;
death must join ours in embrace of reunion.&#13;
The beloved voice that was&#13;
hushed must be retu^ed. The beloved&#13;
form must come up without its infirmities,&#13;
without its fatigues—it must&#13;
come up. Oh, how long It seems for&#13;
some of you! Waiting—waiUag for&#13;
the Resurrection! How long! how&#13;
long! I make for your broken hearts&#13;
today a cool, soft bandage of lilies. I&#13;
comfort ycu thi3 day with the thought&#13;
of resurrection.&#13;
When Lord Nefeon w&amp;4 buried In St.&#13;
Paul's Cathedral in London, the heart&#13;
of all England was stirred. The procession&#13;
passed on amid the sobbing of&#13;
a nation. There were thirty trumpeters&#13;
stationed at the door of the Cathedral,&#13;
with instruments of music in&#13;
hand, waiting for the signal, and&#13;
when the illustrious dead arrived at&#13;
the gates of St. Paul's Cathedral, these&#13;
thirty trumpeters gave cne united&#13;
blast, and then all was silent. Yet the&#13;
trumpets did not wake the dead. He&#13;
slept right on. But I have to tell you,&#13;
what thirty trumpeters could not do&#13;
for one man, one trumpeter will do fot&#13;
all nations. The ages have rolled on,&#13;
aad the clock of tha worlds destiny&#13;
Etrikes nine, ten, eleven, twelve, and&#13;
time shall be no longer! Behold tie&#13;
archangel hovering! He takes the&#13;
trumpet, points it this- way, puts its&#13;
lips to his lips, and then blows ore&#13;
long, loud, terrific, thunderous, re*&#13;
verberati&amp;g and resurreotlonary blast!&#13;
Look, look! They rise! The dead—&#13;
the dead! some coming forth from the&#13;
family vault; some from the city cemeter/;&#13;
some from the country graveyard.&#13;
Here a spirit is joined to its&#13;
body, and there another spirit is joined&#13;
le another body, and millions of departed&#13;
spirits are assorting the bcdlee,&#13;
and then re-clothing themselves' in&#13;
forms radiant f?v ascension.&#13;
'n»e earth begins to burn—the bonfire&#13;
of a great victory. All ready,, now&#13;
for the procession of reconstructed humanity!&#13;
Upward and away! Christ&#13;
leads and all the Christian dead follow,&#13;
battalion after battalion, nation&#13;
after nation. Up, up! Os, on! Forward,&#13;
ye ranks of God Almighty! Lift&#13;
up your heads, y» everlasting gates;&#13;
and let the conqueror* come in! Resurrection!&#13;
Resurrection.&#13;
And so I twist alt the festal flowers&#13;
of the chapels and cathedrals of all&#13;
Christeitdbm into on* great chain,'&#13;
and with that chain / bind the flatlet&#13;
mornjfig of ISM with the closing Easter&#13;
of the world's history—Resurrection!&#13;
May tlfe Obi Of peace ft**&#13;
brought acaU from the dead oar Lord&#13;
an*&#13;
she**, through tto Mood of t*e cove&amp;&#13;
aat, make you perfect la every jpod&#13;
work to do his wlU.&#13;
"He Who Pursues Two&#13;
Hares Catches Neithe•r 9*&#13;
man about town, "I tried&#13;
for years to burn the candle&#13;
at both ends, in the pursuit&#13;
of pleasure while trying to&#13;
attend to business. My blood,&#13;
stomach and kidneys gob into&#13;
a wretched stite knd it&#13;
seemed that Icoutd not carry&#13;
the burden any longer.&#13;
But now my rheumatism hargone,&#13;
my courage has returned, and; efll on&#13;
account of that marvel, Hood's Sanaparilla,&#13;
which has made me a picture of&#13;
health. Now I'm in for business puro&#13;
and simple.1'&#13;
Rosy C h e e k s - " * havs p°°d health&#13;
and rosy cheeks, thanks to Hood's Sarsapsrilla.&#13;
It builds me up and suvce doctor'*&#13;
bills." MAST A. BVBXK, 6C4 Kaet Clait&#13;
Street, Indianapolis, Ind. ' &gt;&#13;
Impure Blood -Abacees—'*A«iabsceii&#13;
formed on my riglit side, caused by&#13;
impure blood. Hood's SarsaparilU has&#13;
made me as sound AS a dollar and tbe curs&#13;
\s permanent." W. H. HEFFITKR, Alvira, Pa.&#13;
m Hcnd*• YttU core Itycr Ul»; the non-UrlUttng &gt;n&lt;t&#13;
cnly cathartic to l*k« with hood'* StTr«np»rl)l»I&#13;
Very much of the so-called finest&#13;
butter made would "be white if butter&#13;
color were not used.&#13;
No new process will transform a&#13;
bony steer into a sleek one.&#13;
Clean food and clean quarters maks)&#13;
clean egfts, milk and meat.&#13;
Are You Using Allen'* Foot-Eate?&#13;
It is the only euro for Swollen,&#13;
Smarting. Burning", Sweating Feet,&#13;
Corns and Bunions. Ask for Allen s&#13;
Foot-Ease, a powder to bo shaken into&#13;
the shops. At all Druggists nnd Shoe&#13;
Stores, 25c. Samples sent FEKP, Address,&#13;
Allen S. Olmsted', LeRo'y, N. Y.&#13;
Many an otherwise good aninr.al is&#13;
stinted in the dam's body.&#13;
"Itching hemorrhoids were the&#13;
plague of my life. Was almost wild.&#13;
Doans Ointment cared me quickly and&#13;
permanently, after doctors had failed."&#13;
C. F. Corn well, Valley Street, Saugerties,&#13;
N. Y.&#13;
the In rarest most growlhy and&#13;
best sows for breeders.&#13;
Scrofula, salt rheum, ervsipj^asand&#13;
other distressing eruptive diseases yield&#13;
quickly and permanently to the cleansipg,&#13;
purifying power of Burdock Blood&#13;
Bitters.&#13;
on th* milker'* stool have o&gt;&#13;
language of their own.&#13;
Bodily pain loses its* terror if you've&#13;
a lppttle of Dr. Thomas Eclcctric Oil in&#13;
the house. Instant relief in 0*509 of&#13;
burns cuts, sprains, accidents of any&#13;
sort,&#13;
Groom your cows regularly if you&#13;
groom them at all.&#13;
The little folks love Dr. Wood's Norway&#13;
Pine Syrup. Pleasant to take;&#13;
perfectly harmless; positive cure for&#13;
coughs, colds, bronchitis, asthma.&#13;
"Should a cow go dry?'' A short time&#13;
—if she will.&#13;
IN OLDEN TIMES.&#13;
Uany Thlngi Were Different—Now-»-d»y»&#13;
the Public Profit by Experience.&#13;
When the striped polo or sign which&#13;
now indicates a barber shop was employed&#13;
to let the public know where&#13;
cupping or bloodletting W&amp;K professionally&#13;
performed, close shaves were&#13;
of daily occurrence; not tho easy remoral&#13;
of tbe hirsute or hairy adornment&#13;
of the head and face, but close&#13;
from entering eternity. More&#13;
than one unfortunate entered the barber-&#13;
surgeon's doorway to leave it a&#13;
corpse or so weak that weeks were required&#13;
to get the victim of malpractice&#13;
on his feet. Bloodletting was used for&#13;
everything, from a heartache to a corn,&#13;
and a pain in the loins was invariably&#13;
treated with two Incisions, one o n ^ c h&#13;
bide of the spine. Lake plasters and&#13;
liniments, these helped from the&#13;
counter irritation they created, and we&#13;
presume £aab had- №r. Calvin Wilson,&#13;
proprietor of the leading shaving parlor&#13;
of Niles, Mich., lived ift the tirne of&#13;
George* HI, of England; in place of&#13;
taking the course he did a bliorf time&#13;
ago with his back, bloodletting would&#13;
ha*4 %e*tt resorted to: Bead how be&#13;
treated liti'trvwrbie. Mr. WVinon says:&#13;
wMithy tohoec ocpsvawtleo noffc Mmy vbevayc kIaUcKheIT ,f rinout^s wtf htolo at oI- hreaavres . sSutffaetrueds *e oonn »&lt;M^'e»r»^Weyet Mfora rta a anrus1m#lbKerM cCr»&#13;
Is.&#13;
anmess,, J ftoTncg,r yloUnme,e b yoeufo rset orvoew t hdea lalyo ateatsokt iotf oCvhee&gt;r fttfilfflVo* dn&amp;L *o to sleep. X trteft&#13;
raeoassraTl Wto btteltlt eJru tetfyl o№o*s*t.tl. tlon bfuettf KwitdetttaeMy P fvlfot.t teTrOt h arerlt.ie «fU t heyfate ttMadljtw Mpopttr tehce tethterteteo •acotor ed eataedd tbeea t ois tspsoupeoh*. es©atoe»r »t'»o fcdney Pllto perform what they pvoVise.&#13;
K * til&#13;
Fosterthe&#13;
tat*&#13;
V for U e U. «.&#13;
am'a, &amp;o4 take u&gt;&#13;
N&#13;
' ' ! '&#13;
IM'MIifliM&#13;
News of the Day as Told Overthe&#13;
V ^r Slender Wires,&#13;
NEWS&#13;
Foxmev Ho»&lt;-Httn1fsrla.il ^&#13;
Tarjktsh Guard* bad » p&#13;
Harrhfcn of Chicago B.-EJboti&lt;l.'&#13;
/ « O U J M mad BJs Cuban&#13;
' ThaCpban military&#13;
dead^tya. Maximo Gom*» will take&#13;
up hi* program of solidifying the&#13;
Cuban people into a P*r*7 that shall,&#13;
without ceasing, urjfo the United&#13;
titatea to withdraw from the island.&#13;
His purpose la to make the people seem&#13;
to havo but one emotion, one desire—&#13;
the thought of independence and of&#13;
absolute separation from the U.S. Geo.&#13;
Oorne^ if reinstated, would be of great&#13;
service to the United State3 in the disbursement&#13;
of the 83,000,000, but bis&#13;
political program xa&amp;aas the keeping&#13;
upy»f agitation and disturbance in the&#13;
inijids of the people and the wakening&#13;
Q:TAincrlcan authority by producing&#13;
tlie impression that everythincr&#13;
done by the Americans is temporary&#13;
andmajsooner^or la,|er be ,qyfirturjBc4,&#13;
hence American observers consider any&#13;
such agitation as extremely harmful&#13;
to the industrial revival and the restoration&#13;
of Cuban credit.&#13;
.' Cuban SolJlers Said to be Murderer*.&#13;
The steamer Montserrat has left Havana&#13;
for Spain, having on board 200&#13;
(Spanish passengers, formerly residents&#13;
of Cuba, aud mostly small merchants.&#13;
There have recently been at least three&#13;
authenticated murders of Spaniards in&#13;
the country and in some cases men of&#13;
property have been killed. If it is&#13;
known n? ho the murderers are the fact&#13;
has not developed, though there are&#13;
men in Havana who say there is evidence&#13;
pointing to Cuban soldiers being&#13;
the guilty parties and that since Gen.&#13;
Gomez was deposed from the post of&#13;
Commander-in-chief of the Cuban forces&#13;
the Cubans have not had a head to rig&#13;
idly enforce discipline and punish&#13;
crime.&#13;
' liulgarlans and Turks at War.&#13;
1 A serious collision has taken placebetween&#13;
Bulgarian and Turkish frontier&#13;
guards at Kozyl-Agob, between&#13;
Jamboli, eastern Roumelia, and Adrianople,&#13;
on the bonks of the Toonja,&#13;
156 miles south of Jamboli. According&#13;
to a dispatch from Sofia, capital of&#13;
Bulgaria, the Turks attacked, a weak&#13;
Bulgarian outpost, but the Bulgarians,&#13;
aided by armed iixhabitants, repnlsed&#13;
their assailants after a four hour* light.&#13;
Both sides suffered losses of killed and&#13;
wounded. The Tories were seeking to&#13;
secure a position hitherto held by the&#13;
Bulgarians. ; ' '&#13;
; To the Disarmament Congress.&#13;
The secretary of state has announced&#13;
the constitution of the United States&#13;
delegation to the disarmament congress&#13;
which will meet at The. Hague&#13;
in the latter part of May. The dele;&#13;
ffatlon consists of Andrew White, U.&#13;
8. ambassador at Berlin; Mr. Newell,&#13;
U. S. minister to the Netherlands;&#13;
President Seth Low, of the Columbia&#13;
university. New York; Capt. Crazier,&#13;
ordinance department, U. S. army, and&#13;
Capt A. T. Mahan, U. S. navy, retired.&#13;
Frederick Holls, of New York, will be&#13;
secretary of the delegation.&#13;
Comnluion luts Reached an Agreement.&#13;
j The tripartite commission, the three&#13;
powers, the United States, Great Britain&#13;
and Germany, has reached an&#13;
agreement on two propositions, namely:&#13;
The appointment by each power of a&#13;
high official to investigate and regulate&#13;
the conditions prevailing at Samoa,&#13;
and the making of unanimity&#13;
necessary in all decisions of these high&#13;
officials.&#13;
Chicago's Mayor Be-Elected.&#13;
Charier H. Harrison was re-elected&#13;
mayor of Chicago by over 41,000 plurality.&#13;
In the last proceeding mayoralty&#13;
contest Harrison Was elected by&#13;
nearly 80,000 majority. It is said that&#13;
his re-election may make him the&#13;
Democratic candidate for Vlce-Presldent&#13;
of the U. 8. next year.&#13;
TELEGRAPHIC KITS.&#13;
Spain is having much difficulty in&#13;
finding a minister who is Willing to&#13;
come to. the U.S.&#13;
News from Bewail^ Texas, gkwm&#13;
meafrre details of the potaoeJaff of twe&#13;
childree Mr*. Annie UaaheJc, tfcelr&#13;
•aothee. who sdmiaiateeed stryobstae&#13;
to them MM! tifceo committed amtelSs.&#13;
of&#13;
p&#13;
ft J.tW.OOO, aad from miscel.&#13;
ttreef orer&#13;
l o g * toial of o»ar&#13;
WAR NOTES,&#13;
The secretary of war recently roque&#13;
»ted the opinlou of attorney*g«Qer&#13;
»l as to whether tiec. 17 of the action&#13;
passed at the last session of congress,&#13;
'increasing the efficiency of the army,!1&#13;
pr&amp;hibts the continuance of the sale of&#13;
intoxicating dririttr by the government&#13;
in the canteen sections of the post exehoogea,&#13;
which are. organized and&#13;
maintained at Vbe various army posts&#13;
ftnd encainpmepts throughout the U.&#13;
$,. The attorney-general, iq bis reply,&#13;
holds that the section in question doe*&#13;
uot prohibit the continuance of the&#13;
sale of intoxicating drinks throughout&#13;
the canteen sections, as heretofore organized&#13;
and carried on, except that no&#13;
officer or enlisted man can he detailed&#13;
for duty In the canteen section to do&#13;
the selling.&#13;
A dispatch from Havana says that&#13;
the local newspapers revive the rumor&#13;
that Gen. Ludlow is to be transferred&#13;
from Havana to the Philippines, and&#13;
that Gen. Lee Is to be made the head&#13;
of the new Occidental department. Gen.&#13;
Lee's appointment would be an excel*&#13;
lent one from a political point of view,&#13;
for he has the cordial friendship of&#13;
nearly all the elements in the population&#13;
there, nnd has had a chance to&#13;
gala a-valuable insight into the workings&#13;
pf the Cuban character.&#13;
It is now believed that the backbone&#13;
of the rebellion in the Philippine Islands&#13;
Is broken. Many of the natives&#13;
have already laid down their arms and&#13;
are returning to their homes. Those&#13;
who have surrendered, and have&#13;
learned that the promises of good&#13;
treatment are fulfilled, are inducing&#13;
their relatives to return to their homes,&#13;
and thus it is believed the war will&#13;
finally be brought to a close, or rather&#13;
confined to the habitual revolutionists.&#13;
"Four bundits, among them Antonio&#13;
Nunez, a notorious desperado, were recently&#13;
captured five miles from San&#13;
Luiz after a lively fight with the men&#13;
of the 9th immune regiment and taken&#13;
to Santiago and locked up. A regular&#13;
battle, however, has taken place near&#13;
Holguin, between the bandits and men&#13;
of the 2d immune regiment, two outlaws&#13;
and one soldier being killed.&#13;
Further serious trouble is anticipated&#13;
at Holguin and Guantanomo.&#13;
The Cuban military assembly at Havana&#13;
has voted to disband the army&#13;
and to dissolve. The muster rolls were&#13;
left in the possession of the executive&#13;
committee oT~the assembly, who will&#13;
facilitate the preparation of copies for&#13;
Gov.-Uen. Brooke. The army question&#13;
id now considered settled and the Cuban&#13;
soldiers will receive their respective&#13;
share of the $3,000,000.&#13;
According to Gen. Bates, who has&#13;
been inspecting U. 3. troops in Cuba,&#13;
the 31st Michigan volunteer regiment&#13;
will receive orders to go home within&#13;
the next two weeks. This is good&#13;
news to most of the members of the&#13;
regiment, as they are anxionsly looking&#13;
forward to. the time when thsycan&#13;
return home.&#13;
The United States cruiser Charleston,&#13;
which, has been cruising along the&#13;
west coast of Luzon to the north, sent&#13;
a boat in shore near Dagupan the other&#13;
day to make soundings. The rebels&#13;
opened fire, wounded a United States&#13;
officer. The cruiser thereupon bombarded&#13;
the town, the insurgents evacuating&#13;
it.&#13;
There are persistent rumors afloat in&#13;
Manila that Aguinaldo, the insurgent&#13;
leader, has been supplanted in the control&#13;
of Filipino affairs, by Gen. Antonio&#13;
Luna, Commander-in-chief of the&#13;
Filipino forces. Luna is described as&#13;
being a typical beligerent and a second&#13;
Weyler.&#13;
Acting Secretary Allen, of Washington,&#13;
has received a letter from the&#13;
manager of the Neptuae Co., the great&#13;
Sweedlsh wrecking corporation, announcing&#13;
that it is not possible to&#13;
raise and repair the vessels of Cevera's&#13;
fleet sank near Santiago.&#13;
(ien. Otis has cabled the war department&#13;
that the transport Sherman has&#13;
left Manila with 100 wounded soldiers,&#13;
which included all that were able to&#13;
be sent home at that time.&#13;
The casualties in the Philippines&#13;
from Feb. 4 to April 4, 18M, inclusive,&#13;
as reported to the adjutant-general,&#13;
are: Killed, 184; wounded, 976; total,&#13;
1,160.&#13;
The President has appointed Col.&#13;
Adelbert L Buffington to be brigadiergeneral&#13;
and chief of the bareaa of ordinance&#13;
to succeed the late Gen. Flager.&#13;
NEWSY BREVITIES.&#13;
John Blumenrother, of St Joe, Foad&#13;
da Lac county, Wia, who lived alone&#13;
and was estimated te^fce worth aajr*&#13;
where from*15,009 to tS6,000, was recently&#13;
found murdered. The chests&#13;
wwave the mmmtj was supposed to have&#13;
rifled. Noehu.&#13;
of rook rrMjmtiH to weigh&#13;
M 1 1 M eiiff oato ifce&#13;
bafldUga of the BwUary whirlpool&#13;
rapids «Aevator and th* tracks of the&#13;
Gorgf railway a* ipagara Falls, Jf. Y.,&#13;
b t fell h&#13;
pleasant method and beneficial effects of the well-known remedy, SYRUP OP FIGS, manufactured A by the California Fig Syrup Company, illustrate the value of obtaining the liquid laxative principles&#13;
of plants known to be medicinally laxative and presenting them in the form most refreshing to the taste&#13;
and acceptable to the system. It is the one perfect strengthening laxative,&#13;
CLEANSING THE SYSTEM EFFECTUALLY, DISPELLING&#13;
COLDS AND HEADACHES, PREVENTING FEVERS,&#13;
OVERCOMING HABITUAL CONSTIPATION PERMANENTLY.&#13;
Its perfect freedom from every objectionable quality and substance, and its acting on the kidneys,&#13;
liver and bowels, gently yet promptly, without weakening or irritating them, make it. the ideal laxative.&#13;
In the process of manufacturing figs arejised, as they are pleasant to the taste, but&#13;
THE MEDICINAL QUALITIES ARE OBTAINED FROM SENNA AND OTHER AROMATIC PLANTS,&#13;
by a method known to the California Fig Syrup Company only. In order to get its beneficial effects, and&#13;
to avoid imitations, please remember the full name of the Company printed on the front of every package.&#13;
Consumers of the choicest products of modern commerce purchase at about the same price that others&#13;
pay for cheap and worthless imitations.—To come into universainiemand and to be everywhere considered&#13;
the best of its class, an article must be capable of satisfying the wants and tastes of the best informed'&#13;
purchasers. The California Fig Syrup Company having met with the highest success in the manufacture&#13;
and sale of its excellent liquid laxative remedy, SYRUP OF FIGS, it has become important to all to have a&#13;
knowledge of the Company and its product. The California Fig Syrup Company was organized more than&#13;
fifteen years ago, for the special purpose of manufacturing and selling a laxative remedy which would be&#13;
more pleasant to the taste and more beneficial in effect than any other known. The great value of the&#13;
remedy, as a medicinal agent and of the Company's efforts, is attested by the sale of millions of bottles&#13;
annually, and by the high approval of most eminent physicians. As the true and genuine remedy named&#13;
SYRUP OP FIGS is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Company only, the knowledge of that fact&#13;
will assist in avoiding the worthless imitations manufactured by other parties.&#13;
for &lt;Sale by All Drui^iste , Price 50 Per Bottle.&#13;
ALA&#13;
B&#13;
ASTI&#13;
XJLBASTINB U the orisinal&#13;
and only durable wall coatinc.&#13;
entirely different from ail kal-&#13;
•omlnea. Ready for UM In&#13;
whit* or twelve beautiful tint*&#13;
by addtn* coW water.&#13;
AD1E8 naturally prefer ALABAST1NE&#13;
for walls and eeU*&#13;
Inn. because !t Is pure, clean,&#13;
durable. Put up In dry powdered&#13;
torn. In five-pound packages,&#13;
with f uU directions.&#13;
L*L kalaomlnet are cheap, temporary&#13;
preparations made from&#13;
wfedUna*. ctaalks. clays, etc.,&#13;
and stack, on walls with decaying&#13;
animal glue. ALABA8-&#13;
T P t g Is not a lriisomtnt&#13;
BWABB of the dealer «ho&#13;
•ays he can sell you the "same&#13;
thing" as ALABASTINE or&#13;
"something Just as good." He&#13;
j , either not posted or to try-&#13;
Sag to deceive you.&#13;
Nt&gt; IN OFFERING something&#13;
h« has bought sheao and tries&#13;
to seU onALABA8TINB'B demands,&#13;
be may not reaBflStba&#13;
d y*« win suffer by a&#13;
on your walla.&#13;
RKatBLB tetan&#13;
a tfcwautt. Deaten rMk&#13;
Oa»v&#13;
to male* wall coatwtta&#13;
«M&#13;
fas rjrntwpR WALUI «t&#13;
dwrala*&#13;
of toa« ara&#13;
tortMt vors.&#13;
THE DEMAND FOR Hartford&#13;
BJcycles-&gt;&#13;
factories to their full&#13;
eqvaled combinations&#13;
«iAUTY&#13;
Eabodjiof none radical&#13;
la a slnyto atasoa. Tbej are&#13;
Heat toalMtuainmf&#13;
a*&#13;
«av* way aaa ta* boy •tranfled to&#13;
"A TRAINING IN CLEANLINESS IS A&#13;
FORTUNE.99. COMPUTE YOUR EDUCATION WITH&#13;
,„•;/•#,,-&#13;
: ' • / ' • ; . ' ¥•' :• ':.'•**•• rrVi'jrf&#13;
•y-,.jv&#13;
'• ' V "':*••'&#13;
• • • • " • . \ "'&#13;
H*&#13;
fe.-.&#13;
• • &amp; • • • • .&#13;
SILVER LAKE ITEMS.&#13;
Wm. Clark was in Howell one day&#13;
last week.&#13;
Mrs Ransom Ferris is recovering&#13;
slowly form ber severe illness.&#13;
* Mrs. Win. Tburston has two little&#13;
brothers from Dexter visiting ber.&#13;
This vicinity boasts of two ranges&#13;
from the store of Teeple &amp; Cad well.&#13;
Happy times in tbe Meyer family,&#13;
as their son and brother, Will, has n«&#13;
turned Irom the war.&#13;
Miss Ella Ryan has returned to ber&#13;
school in Cbelsea and is feeling quite&#13;
refreshed after ber vacation.&#13;
There is minors of an epidemic of&#13;
sore tbroat throughout the state and&#13;
several here have been afflicted.&#13;
Mark Bell has moved on to the farm&#13;
recently purchased of Mr. Tiplady&#13;
and Mr. Bierce has moved into the M.&#13;
Bell house.&#13;
Dexter township has always held its&#13;
election at the Welsh school house&#13;
until this spring when tbe place ot&#13;
meeting was changed to Hudson.&#13;
The statement in tbe last issue tbat&#13;
Jim Tiplady bad rented the A. J. Wilhelm&#13;
farm was correct, but he has&#13;
since made different arrangements&#13;
and rented tbe Fid Dunlayy farm and&#13;
moved there this week.&#13;
B»»rt Carpenter of Ann Arbor .visited&#13;
Ms parents at Dover this week, and&#13;
as they have been poorly all winter be&#13;
will probably make arrangements to&#13;
take tbe old couple home with him&#13;
where the children can care for them.&#13;
$1.50 will get you one-dozen A. 1&#13;
Arifeto Cabinets at Paddock's, Howell,&#13;
Mich. This offer is good for one week&#13;
only.&#13;
HAMBURG. V&#13;
Miss Maggie Gaffy is visiting rela-&#13;
-iive_i and friends in Durand.&#13;
Misb Nellie Powers is teaching the&#13;
spring teurm in Hamburg district.&#13;
Miss Arola Steiner has returned&#13;
from a two months visit with her parents&#13;
near Howell.&#13;
Miss Bernice Oreer is home from&#13;
Brighton, wher*e she is attending&#13;
scdocl, on a vacation.&#13;
Rev. Harvey 'Pearee will fill his&#13;
father's pulpit at this place one week&#13;
from next tinnday evening.&#13;
Dan Thomas is now finishing his&#13;
house that be began last fall and will&#13;
soon have it ready to occupy.&#13;
Wilbur Todd moved to his new&#13;
borne in Dimondale on Monday. Mr.&#13;
Todd was highly respected and all regret&#13;
his moving.&#13;
Mrs. Jae. Crossman met with a serious&#13;
accident one day last week, while&#13;
walking down a steep bank she slipped&#13;
on some ice and tore the ligaments of&#13;
ber left arm and put the arm out of&#13;
joint at the elbow.&#13;
Hale.&#13;
Brood sow for sale.&#13;
C. E. REYNOLDS, Marion.&#13;
Peck began work Monday&#13;
for T. Shehan.&#13;
Than. Mongan, of Brighton,&#13;
called on friends here Monday.&#13;
Frank Baily, of Howell, was the&#13;
guest of 8, G. Teeple Monday.&#13;
Wils Mercer and G. Carpenter&#13;
were in Howell on business Monday.&#13;
.&#13;
E. B. Cook moved his family to&#13;
Pinckney and will reside in the&#13;
Hooker house.&#13;
JVW. Placeway and wife were&#13;
in White Oak Saturday and' Sundaf&#13;
to see J. King who is in poor&#13;
health.&#13;
Miss Ella Meicer, who has been&#13;
spending the past three weeks in&#13;
Toledo, returned home the first of&#13;
fiamua Mid w&#13;
last with&#13;
this&#13;
Remember the social at Presbyterian&#13;
Hall Wednesday evening&#13;
April 19.&#13;
Miss Adeline Bunker spent&#13;
Saturday and Sunday with her&#13;
parents at Munith.&#13;
L. M. Harris received news&#13;
Sunday of the death of his father&#13;
who lived in New Jersey.&#13;
The people of this township&#13;
met at Gregory last week and&#13;
organized a farmers club.&#13;
Hellen Watson, of near Pinckney,&#13;
spent lust week with her&#13;
sister, Myra May of this place.&#13;
A large number from this place&#13;
attended the funeral of John&#13;
Douglas at Stockbridge last Monday.&#13;
Rev. Dunning has resigned&#13;
his position as pastor of the Presbyterian&#13;
church of this place and&#13;
Plaiufield.&#13;
Richard Mackinder had a&#13;
smash up in town last Friday,&#13;
breaking the thills and cross bar&#13;
of his new carriage.&#13;
Rev. Whitefield, of Detroit,&#13;
filled the pulpit of the Presby.&#13;
church last Sunday evening. He&#13;
ia here on trial for the coming&#13;
year.&#13;
It is reported that Gratia Dunning&#13;
will have to give up his position&#13;
as teacher in the Alma&#13;
schools on account of his voice&#13;
failing him.&#13;
There will be a party in the&#13;
K O T M hall of Gregory next&#13;
Friday night, April 14, in honor&#13;
of the returned soldiers of the&#13;
35th. Everyone is invited to&#13;
come; both- old and young.&#13;
Our Millinery parlors are tiittei up&#13;
and open for inspection in the rooms&#13;
over the bank. BOTLE &amp; HALSTEAD.&#13;
Miss Lettie Wylie is home from&#13;
the Normal this week.&#13;
L JB. Howlett and wife, of&#13;
Howell, Sundayed at the home of&#13;
A. G. Wilson.&#13;
Miss Josie May, of Un ad ilia,&#13;
spent the first of the week with&#13;
Nora Durkee.&#13;
Miss Mabel Swartnout, of Pinckney,&#13;
spent Saturday and Sunday&#13;
with friends bere.&#13;
The remains of Jaa. Durkee&#13;
were removed to the Sprout cemetery&#13;
on Monday last&#13;
The many friends of Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Will Keusch will be glad to&#13;
know that t(iey have again taken&#13;
up their residence in Anderson.&#13;
Mr. John Douglas, formerly of&#13;
Stockbridge, but for the past two&#13;
years a resident of this place, died&#13;
at his home on Friday last after a&#13;
short but severe illness caused by&#13;
appendicitis. He leaves a wife&#13;
and four little children to mourn&#13;
their loss. During his short stay&#13;
here he gained many warm friends&#13;
who extend their sympathy to&#13;
the bereaved family. The funeral&#13;
services were held from Stockbridge&#13;
on Monday last, several&#13;
from heie attending.&#13;
ALBERT I MM,&#13;
Veterinary - Surgeon&#13;
All diseases of the horse&#13;
treated in a scientific manner.&#13;
Special attention given to&#13;
lameness. Call at my shop on&#13;
Mill st., Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
Btyuold's Black Lansiitngs,&#13;
Bred from prize winners'; strictly&#13;
beautiful; large in feize; hardy, best of&#13;
layers; active foragers; fine sitters and&#13;
mother j excellent table (owl.&#13;
Also very fine White Bramas; eggs&#13;
for batching by applying 1 | miles&#13;
west of Chubbs Corners*&#13;
Eggs per 18, 75cts.&#13;
REYNOLDS &amp; SON,&#13;
Pinckney, Mioh.&#13;
ANDERSON.&#13;
Grandma Watson lias been&#13;
qu'te sick for the past few days&#13;
but is now on the gain.&#13;
Miss Addie Bowman of Ypsilanti,&#13;
was the guest of relatives in&#13;
this vicinity first of the week.&#13;
mat cough&#13;
Bangs On&#13;
You have used ail&#13;
I sorts of cough reme- 1 dies but it does not&#13;
yield; it is too deep&#13;
(seated It may wear&#13;
* itself out in time, but&#13;
it is more liable to&#13;
produce la grippe,&#13;
pneumonia or a serious&#13;
throat affection.&#13;
You need something&#13;
that will give you&#13;
[strength and build&#13;
up the body. scows&#13;
EMULSION wiU do thb when everything&#13;
ebefaib. There b no 4pufet&#13;
about i t ft nourishes,&#13;
fl Mid&#13;
y and&#13;
tt to&#13;
MORE LOCAL,&#13;
The dust Ays in onr streets.&#13;
Bikes begin to appear an oar streets&#13;
as a surety that spring is here.&#13;
Rev. A. Crane and family of Brighton/&#13;
visited the Sprout families at&#13;
Anderson the past week.&#13;
Mrs. John Wolfer and daughter, of&#13;
Manitb, spent several days the past&#13;
week with relatives here.&#13;
The lastof last week there was talk&#13;
of a reconnt in t is township on supe.&#13;
visor and highway commissioner,&#13;
but the last accounts are tbat the&#13;
matter has been dropped. We think&#13;
it a wise decision as the difference was&#13;
THURSDAY, FRIDAY and SATURDAY,&#13;
too great to overcome."&#13;
wduid bave been glad to ha*re had the&#13;
recount so as to have cleared tbem of&#13;
all llame.&#13;
or "The Fool From Boston."&#13;
APRIL 20, 21 and 22,&#13;
We will display for the inspection of the Ladies of Pinckney&#13;
and vicinity a lovely line of Trimmed Hats,&#13;
Sailors and&#13;
Walking Hats&#13;
Will be on sale&#13;
Friday and Saturday,&#13;
April 14 and 15.&#13;
The above play which will be pat&#13;
on the boards at the opera house in&#13;
this place, by the Stockbridge High&#13;
School, Friday evening, April 21, is&#13;
one of the best plays ever tackled- by&#13;
amatures and the company handle&#13;
every part in excellant sh ape. The&#13;
play contains a deep plot and is very&#13;
thrilling.&#13;
The villain. Barrett, is fine; Tyler,&#13;
the old man, also does well; Ida Da&#13;
Boise is hard to beat in the part given&#13;
ber, as an heiress; and Clare Backus&#13;
in his parts of "Jack Curtis", Bummer&#13;
Jim/' "Foolish Jake" and "Pat&#13;
Grimes" affords plenty of fun and&#13;
keeps the house roaring a good share&#13;
of the time; bat be is always on hand&#13;
to catch tbe plotters and aid little&#13;
"Stub."&#13;
Do not fail to see this play. Admission&#13;
10 and 15 cents.&#13;
GK L . M.A.RTIJNT.&#13;
WHEN YOU'RE READY&#13;
WE ARE&#13;
Bluster&#13;
a horrible barn,&#13;
A&#13;
Will often cause&#13;
scald, cut or bruise. Bucklen's arnica&#13;
salve, tbe best in th^ world, will kill&#13;
the pain and promptly heal i t Cures&#13;
old sores, fever sores, ulcers, boils, felons,&#13;
corns and all skin eruptions. Best&#13;
pile cure on earth. Oirlv 25c a box.&#13;
Cure guaranteed. Sold by F. A. Sig-&#13;
Isr, "&#13;
Joe Ohoate and the Priaee o( Waits&#13;
tatve already tat oat a ootfie of cigars.&#13;
Between the curti&amp;s smoke&#13;
drifts Cboate related Depev's latest&#13;
joke aad the prince described the&#13;
cfearmt of the latest togbrette. Orer&#13;
in a ooarealmt corner roast; Jos&#13;
Ghoftto tuU the duke of York talked&#13;
over poiats fa society.&#13;
lit* «f&#13;
Becent observatloas among Indians&#13;
show that Sa South America, at weU&#13;
M ia North AsMriem, tat red&#13;
Or&#13;
c o t * *&#13;
M food&#13;
CHHS tafce&#13;
E, Ch«ni(ts, N«w Yoric&#13;
the&#13;
ftsstt tar beta tew&#13;
m per test ot the&#13;
4ae iret rear of Ufa.&#13;
of ltfs It only if&#13;
to the tttjtfc, *ad&#13;
tfts duftag&#13;
Heady to do Spring business q£th you. Never any&#13;
spring have we been better reacfy. The cold weather has hung on,&#13;
but Spring Goods must be wanted pretty soon now, and we want you&#13;
to see us when you get at your spring trading.&#13;
Just now we want to talk&#13;
To you about Table China.&#13;
You had heard, hadn't you, bow we have just&#13;
opened up a large china and crockery department in our basement?&#13;
Been down there yet? Well, we want to see you there, and we want&#13;
to tell you the kind of prices we've got on china and crockery. You&#13;
must come and see the goods to appreciate the values we are offering.&#13;
You don't have tdHtay a dinner set for twelve people any&#13;
more. We've got around that way of doing business by selling you&#13;
just the number of pieces to your set that you need for yoor family.&#13;
Buy what you need of any set—aa few pieces or at many as you want&#13;
and if you break a piece or two come back and we'll sell you just that&#13;
separate piece. We can make you-up the old style U2-pieoe dinner&#13;
sets, if you want them at extremely low prices. But very few hare&#13;
families of 12, and that is the size family the old 112 piece set was&#13;
made for. You will find the lowest prices you have ever known about&#13;
in the New Crockery Department&#13;
0&#13;
Kitchen Furnishing&#13;
Granitoware, tinware, woodeaware at the very lowest&#13;
prices consistent with beat goods. No "seconds" or "thirds" in&#13;
graniteware but "firsts" and firsts are the cheapest even if yoo do see&#13;
at big pieces in thuds at 10c as oome in firsts at tie. Always b i f&#13;
first quality in graoiteware and yon will oome out ahead.&#13;
L. FIE LD. «;&#13;
MM</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 April 13, 1899</text>
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                <text>April 13, 1899 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="6143">
                <text>1899-04-13</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="6144">
                <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 XVII. PINCKNEY, LIVINOSTON 00., MICH., THURSDAY, APRIL 20, 1899. No. 16,&#13;
Serge Siltits&#13;
The banner garment*&#13;
of the season&#13;
is tb« color&#13;
the price per suit&#13;
MADB TO MEASURE&#13;
•Y&#13;
Fred Kauffmann&#13;
The Antriofl Tailor&#13;
CHICAQO&#13;
You will reproach yourself II you&#13;
buy before examining&#13;
STYLE 5678&#13;
Ask bis local representative&#13;
K. H. CRANE,&#13;
to show you the pattern and the&#13;
"other serges."&#13;
CLOTHING I&#13;
This season we represent&#13;
Fred Kauffmann, one of&#13;
Chicago's best tailors. All&#13;
goods from this nous eare&#13;
guaranteed to be strictly&#13;
MADE to MEASUREAlao&#13;
a PERFECT FIT.&#13;
This house makes suits to&#13;
to measure for boys as well&#13;
as men. We will make silk&#13;
vests' a specialty, they are&#13;
the style. From $3.60 up.&#13;
Suits from $12 up&#13;
We also represent the Celebrated&#13;
Work Brothers, of&#13;
Chicago, for ready made&#13;
Clothing, the latest in style&#13;
and thoroughly well made.&#13;
For M a c k i n t o s h e s&#13;
for men, and rubber&#13;
capes and skirts for Ladies',&#13;
we represent the Dundee&#13;
Rubber Co., of Chicago. We&#13;
shall always be glad to show&#13;
you our samples in all these&#13;
lines, and solicit your patronage.&#13;
K. H. CRANE.&#13;
POSSJBLY&#13;
You don't need any window shades but&#13;
If you are in need of any&#13;
LOCAL NEWS.&#13;
Don't" Buy „•&#13;
Until you have seen the Buckeye Adjustable&#13;
Drop Shade. It is the most&#13;
complete as well as convenient Window&#13;
Shade on the market.&#13;
Remember the data&#13;
"Stub" or "Fool from Boston,"&#13;
At Opera House April 21, '99.&#13;
Plant yoar trees April 3. That is&#13;
Arbor day.&#13;
F. L. Andrews was In Detroit on&#13;
business the past week.&#13;
Bicbard Clinton moved bis family&#13;
into the Jackson boose last week.&#13;
Mis8 G. L. Martin and Mrs. Ann&#13;
Fitzsimons were in Detroit the firs,; of&#13;
tbe week on business.&#13;
Geo. Hendee. having sold bis farm&#13;
in Con way, has purchased tbe Hodfteman&#13;
farm just east of town.&#13;
Miss Ethel Read and Messrs Will&#13;
Monks and James Green, of tbe U.&#13;
of MM are spending tbe we&lt;*k at&#13;
home.&#13;
Frank Parker and James Fitzsimmons,&#13;
who have been on the road&#13;
canvassing for pictures, returned&#13;
home last week.&#13;
Messrs Roy Tyler and Will Kennedy&#13;
of Stock bridge, were in town a couple&#13;
or days last week making arrange*&#13;
meats for the play tomorrow evening.&#13;
Mrs. Hattie S. Bradley and daughter.&#13;
Margaret returned to their borne&#13;
in Lansing on Saturday last, after&#13;
spending several weeks with relatives&#13;
and friends here.&#13;
Da not forget that Rev. E. E. Caster&#13;
0. D.t of Ho well, is to lecture on "The&#13;
Golden Gate by tbe Way of Salt Lake&#13;
City" on Wednesday evening, April&#13;
26. You will miss a rare treat if you&#13;
do not bear him at the M. E. church.&#13;
Admission 10c,&#13;
i m m&#13;
My Stock of Furniture&#13;
Gk&#13;
Was neverniDrexomplete.-&#13;
claim to make the Furniture but I do&#13;
make the^ price that sells.&#13;
SIGLER&#13;
The House was Crowded.&#13;
On Wednesday evening last the&#13;
members and friends of the Cong'l&#13;
charch at this place went to the&#13;
dcL-JlQlX^PJ?6-,^,^6*1" Castor, Rev. C. W.&#13;
Rice and tendered Him and&#13;
DO YOU WANT GOOD SHOES?&#13;
# # # # # # # #&#13;
* We are selling lots of them. Shoes that&#13;
will not rip. Made from all solid leather.&#13;
I will lay aside 25 pair of Ladies Shoes for&#13;
0 Saturday mostly in small sizes and will name&#13;
m&#13;
#&#13;
#&#13;
*#&#13;
the price so low that you will buy them. $2.50&#13;
and $3.00 shoes for 79c per pair.&#13;
Special prices on Ladies Skirts for Saturday—&#13;
Call and see them.&#13;
I am selling lots of Carpets. Do not fail&#13;
to call and see the samples before buying your&#13;
carpets.&#13;
# * • * • # •&#13;
S^fc&amp;aYs&#13;
4 •&#13;
XXXX Coffee at&#13;
Boston Shoe Polish, per bottle,&#13;
1 tt&gt; Good 50c Tea for - •&#13;
9c&#13;
15c&#13;
39c&#13;
"VD. \D.&#13;
mable wife a reception.&#13;
The pleasant rooms of the parson*&#13;
age were crowded and a very pleasant&#13;
evening was spent. A short program&#13;
was arranged with music and&#13;
speeches by the Revs. Pr. Comerford&#13;
of St. Marys, Cbas. Simpson ot the&#13;
H. E., and K. H. Crane a former&#13;
Cong'l pastor. Rev. Rice responded&#13;
in a few well chosen remarks. The&#13;
speeches were all full of welcome and&#13;
good cbeer. After the speeches and&#13;
music, an hour was spent in a social&#13;
visit and getting better acquainted&#13;
and tbe company broke up with a&#13;
good feeling toward all.&#13;
As a side issoe t&amp; tbe reception,&#13;
many of the friends brought in their&#13;
pounds and left many a substantial&#13;
token&#13;
table.&#13;
Mr.&#13;
made many friend botji in a^id oat of&#13;
tbe church and we speak for them a&#13;
successful work- in our&#13;
When in Want of Aa&#13;
DRUGS, ',"&#13;
PATENT MEDICINES,&#13;
TOILET ARTICLES,&#13;
Books and Stationery,&#13;
GIVE US A CALL.&#13;
Also&#13;
WALL PAPER,&#13;
The latest styles and patterns.&#13;
An Ellegant Line of GLASSWARE and CHINA.&#13;
F. A. SIGLER.&#13;
AT THE CORNER DRUG STORE.&#13;
STEEL RANGES&#13;
Thp hest steel ranges on earth for&#13;
Are at Teeple and Cadwell's Hardware Store.&#13;
' « ' •&#13;
Having sold a number.of them which have been working&#13;
successfully for a year or more, proves them good.&#13;
We warrant them to bake as quickly and with as little&#13;
fuel, either coal or wood, as any range made, and we&#13;
know they will hold fire over night as well as any air tight&#13;
stove which proves them to be well and substantial)'made.&#13;
Do not fail to examine these ranges. No trouble to show&#13;
of their good Irishes on th«&#13;
Rice and wife base already&#13;
them.&#13;
VERY TRULY&#13;
TEEPLE &gt; CA DWELL.&#13;
We have over 200 pieces of the best standard prints to select from aod&#13;
are showing the largest assortment of Dress Ginghams, Percales, Piques, Silks and Drew Suitings ever?&#13;
in town. Oar Parasols in blacks and colors with the latest and prettiest handles conceivable are rigtet- '&#13;
ly termed beauties. As to Lace Curtains, Curtain Mulls, Fancy Denims, JGmbroideries and Lace yon&#13;
have only to glance at them to know tney are right&#13;
The line of Ladies' and Gent's Furnishings we are carrying is the latest Crash Hats in all *&#13;
the new and natty shapes. In Men's Work Shoes of Congress, Lace or Buckle at $125,1.50, L75 and&#13;
2.00, we can surely please you* We are sole agents lor the celebrated Wm. Bichardson Shoes having&#13;
them in 12.50 and 3-00 Gent's Shoes that are decided values and guaranteed goods. Also in Ladie#*&#13;
Shoes we carry two of tne leading ma^ea. These are stylish goods and made to fit both the pocket&#13;
book and the foot Our Dongola Kid for Elderly Ladies i» just the thing and very cheap:&#13;
Is complete. Our prices are v«ry low. Our Teas and&#13;
Canned Goods are A NO. L This wee* we will dose '&#13;
One lot of •aOOf^MfeOoxteiMat:&#13;
One lot of Men's Fedora*, ttaok and brojnt •*•&#13;
One lofti of Ttnafe FTann&lt;4 .gi^V......* ; •. . . . . . / . ..7*&#13;
•J' ' ''•'.&amp;, . . , •"•" °?i'l-J*&#13;
I ' - ' - ' ••!&gt;'&#13;
"4&#13;
44&#13;
•ffi&#13;
&lt;w zi\*\}&#13;
; : • , * • • • &gt; *&#13;
Hi-&#13;
I?&#13;
I&#13;
I-::&#13;
of the Week Recorded in a&#13;
CONCISE MtB INTERESTING^&#13;
t wa« Dam**** Mstk Mora tn the&#13;
Southern Covuttoi TBMMI Ia the North-1&#13;
«ra During tht&gt; Cold Weather of&#13;
•Vcbruary and Mar«h — Other Items&#13;
Crop Report fs&gt;r April.&#13;
The Michigan orop report for April.&#13;
says that the extremely cold weather*&#13;
la February was followed by peculiar&#13;
and exceedingly disagreeable weather&#13;
i a March. While the temperature for&#13;
the month has not bee a lower than&#13;
usual, yet the conditions have not bee^i&#13;
avt all favorable to crops. There has&#13;
been more or less precipitation all&#13;
through tho month, bat this has not&#13;
;beaefitted wheat much, as the snow&#13;
either blown away or melted&#13;
wiy as soon as it fell. There has&#13;
beeu much freezing and thawing, especially&#13;
during the first halt of the&#13;
month* This has caused many fields&#13;
to be covered with water, or partly so&#13;
a t least, which was unable to settle&#13;
away, as the ground was frozen to a&#13;
'great depth. In answer to the question&#13;
"Has wheat during March suffered&#13;
injury from any cause?" 305 correspon&#13;
dents ia the southern counties answer&#13;
"yes" and 106 "no;" in the central&#13;
counties 73 answer "yes" and 03 "no&#13;
in the northern counties 17 answer&#13;
"yes" and 43 "no;" in the upper penin&#13;
«ula all correspondents agree that&#13;
wheat has not been damaged during&#13;
the month.&#13;
3,«78 Death! In the State for March.&#13;
Purlng March there were 3,378 deaths&#13;
l a Michigan, this being exactly 500&#13;
leas than in February. As March has&#13;
three more days than February this&#13;
represents a considerable decrease in&#13;
mortality. The death rate for March&#13;
-was 16.5 per 1,000 estimated population,&#13;
as compared with 20.7 per 1,000&#13;
for the preceding month. The death&#13;
iat© for the rural population was only&#13;
-slightly greater than that of the cities,&#13;
instead of being markedly greater as&#13;
in February. There were 623 deaths&#13;
of infants under 1 year of age; 344 of&#13;
children aged 1 to 4 yean, and 930 of&#13;
persons aged 65 y e a n and over. The&#13;
principal causes of deaths were &amp;s follows:&#13;
Pneumonia, 945; inftuensa, 841;&#13;
cerebral spinal meningitis, 126; con*&#13;
sumption, 302; other forms of tuberculosis,&#13;
70; typhoid fever, 34; diphtheria&#13;
and croup, 36; scarlet fever, 14; measles,&#13;
•; whooping cough, 22; diarrhea I&#13;
riisnsaat of children, 41; puerperal septieearfa,&#13;
17; cancer, 112; accidents and&#13;
violence, 99.&#13;
STATE GOSSIP.&#13;
A Pl» li -Mb IP Yt&#13;
Nineteen years ago Ara L. V. D.&#13;
Cook, whose home is in Howeil, swallowed&#13;
a pin. As Mr. Cook was only 0&#13;
years of age at that time and his digestive&#13;
apparatus refused td&gt; respond&#13;
readily to this foreign substance' the&#13;
pin remained intact within Mr. Cook.&#13;
.As the years rolled by he eoqld occasionally&#13;
feel a tickling sensation and&#13;
finally a lump the siae of an egg formed&#13;
his body. Of late years he suffered&#13;
ite pain and decided that an operation&#13;
would relieve him. The operation for&#13;
• appendicitis was performed at Harper&#13;
hospital, Detroit, recently and the pin&#13;
that bail been in his body for nearly a&#13;
aeore of years was removed. Cook in&#13;
rapidly improving.&#13;
• ...&#13;
\ Want* a BSS.0OO Fleeter.&#13;
~Wm. Washbum, of Port Huron, has&#13;
^commenced suit against the F. &amp; P. M.&#13;
JL K. Co. for 925,000 damages. Washburn&#13;
was driving aeroea Lyon street on&#13;
the night of Sept. 9,1896, when he was&#13;
atruek by a passenger train on the&#13;
above road. Bis rig was demolished,&#13;
and the man himself nearly killed.&#13;
The plaintiff says now that Jhere was&#13;
a o headlight on the engine and also&#13;
that the speed of the train was 25&#13;
miles an hour, which ia 19 miles.taster&#13;
the law allows.&#13;
The contract for St. Joseph's new&#13;
$20,000 brick school has been let.&#13;
Ypsilauti will have a now city hall&#13;
It is not to cost more than 8100,000.&#13;
Railroad Commissioner C. S. Osborn&#13;
has assumed tho duties of that office.&#13;
The Tort Huron Engine &amp; Thresher&#13;
Co. has increased its capital by 8l~3,&gt;&#13;
000.&#13;
The Michigan Central car shops at&#13;
Jackson are now running 10 hours a&#13;
d»y.&#13;
Kinety-seven Uids faced the judges&#13;
of the baby show at Jackson the other&#13;
night&#13;
The village of Oakley, Saginaw&#13;
county, refuses to grant a saloon li*&#13;
cense.&#13;
Frank Hamilton, convicted of burglary&#13;
at Grand Rapids, got 12 years at&#13;
Jackson.&#13;
The Kalamazoo and the Wolverine&#13;
paper companies of Kalamaaoo will be&#13;
combined.&#13;
Th«» W|"M»»«n fish commission has&#13;
stocked Sycamore river with 10,000&#13;
brook trout&#13;
A starch mill and a brick and a tile&#13;
factory will locate at Harbor Beach,&#13;
Huron county, this year.&#13;
Huron county capitalists will prospect&#13;
for coal, lead and oil in Oliver&#13;
township.&#13;
The village of Laurium, Iloughton&#13;
county, will bond for a $35,000 sewer&#13;
system to be put in this summer.&#13;
A fine new flouring mill is to be&#13;
built at Charlotte this summer, which&#13;
will fill a long-felt want in that city.&#13;
Lead has been found in large quantities&#13;
three miles south of Elk ton and&#13;
a stock company has been organized to&#13;
mine it.&#13;
Frankfort is to have a new flour mill&#13;
of 100 barrels daily capacity, which will&#13;
be one of the finest plants of its size in&#13;
Michigan.&#13;
The total enrollment of the U. of M.&#13;
for the present year, exclusive of summer&#13;
schools, is 3,050; with the summer&#13;
schools, 3,193.&#13;
A new railway will be built from&#13;
Btephenson to White Rapids, where an&#13;
immense new paper and pulp mill will&#13;
soon be erected.&#13;
In order to be in the lead Niles' enterprising&#13;
citizens have commenced&#13;
making arrangements for a Fourth of&#13;
July celebration.&#13;
Things must be looking up for farmers&#13;
in Eaton county. Last week one&#13;
farmer of the county sold two** horses&#13;
for 82,000 apiece.&#13;
A straw stack toppled over upon&#13;
Adam Davidson, a Bad Axe farmer,&#13;
knocking him against the barn and&#13;
probably inflicting fatal injuries.&#13;
A large force of men and teams are&#13;
at work grading for the proposed&#13;
tracks of th« IW,roit &amp;. Pontiac&#13;
Tried te Beaton Life by Frmyer.&#13;
The 3-year-old child of Arthur Wells&#13;
and wife died at Milford recently under&#13;
peculiar circumstances from lung&#13;
trouble brought on by a severe cold.&#13;
It ia alleged that those interested related&#13;
to call in a physician, but reaorted&#13;
to prayer and aong to efleeta&#13;
«are. After death ft ia said that the&#13;
another for many hours tried to bring&#13;
the child back to life, bat ia rain.&#13;
He May&#13;
James Snover. a hotel aad boarding&#13;
awmac keeper, of WatervUei. U ia jail&#13;
a t t*. Joseph, awatOag examination&#13;
a t to Ida sanity. The othar night he&#13;
wife aad iaasHr of 15 •rift&#13;
from the fcowaftj -declaring&#13;
fc»«vo»ld kill all was, attempted&#13;
He ia 49 year* of age and&#13;
indieattoas o* mental unaft&#13;
are indieatioas..ojf&#13;
- at Sajrinsw. , TJ*.ri*ec k stead-&#13;
My ri**utfaad a Wittta a few inches of&#13;
high, water mark. Loir laads\are «0v-&#13;
Sevensl, l i t fa*sW&lt;-sanities&#13;
»f**rdosvn wit* aae iee bafc&#13;
stopped with M A p * . £u«ij*a*&#13;
• e a t r i K&#13;
electric road from Pontiac to Detroit.&#13;
Four young Burr Oak boys went&#13;
fishing one night recently and returned&#13;
the next morning with 14 bushels of&#13;
fine bass, pickerel, porch, sunflsh and&#13;
eels.&#13;
The Rapid Railway Co. has accepted&#13;
St. Clair's franchise, and will forfeit&#13;
$1,000 if the road is n^t commenced by&#13;
May 1, and in ope cation by Nov. 1&#13;
next.&#13;
The new sandstone department&#13;
building for Red Jacket was recently&#13;
completed at a cost of 825,000. It is&#13;
one of the finest fire engine houses in&#13;
Michigan.&#13;
Walter Chaffee, aged 75, a farmer&#13;
living four miles southwest of Colon,&#13;
committed suicide by shooting himself&#13;
in the head. He was an old pioneer&#13;
and had been ill for a long time.&#13;
George Smith's dwelling1 house et&#13;
Beaverton was struck by lightning the&#13;
other night, and Louis Smith, aged 19,&#13;
was badly burned about the face,&#13;
breast and* down one lag. He may recover.&#13;
Andrew Stevens, a liveryman from&#13;
Jackson, met with a peculiar accident&#13;
by the overturning of a carriage. An'&#13;
umbrella handle was driven through&#13;
his hand and amputation may be necessary.&#13;
At Stevensville there exists several&#13;
cases of scarlet fever, several bad cases&#13;
of diphtheria and the measles prevails&#13;
in half of the homes of the village.&#13;
Schools and churches are closed for the&#13;
present.&#13;
A vein of coal has been discovered&#13;
on M. A. Horrock's property just east&#13;
of Lyons. Ohio parties have leased all&#13;
the land in the immediate vicinity and&#13;
preparations are being made to exploit&#13;
the find.&#13;
Mrs. Joseph Kay, who bad her haa.&#13;
band arrested at Jackaon on a charge&#13;
of adultery hae withdrew the complaint.&#13;
The couple have kissed aad&#13;
made up, and are again living together&#13;
at Lansing.&#13;
An attempted assault was made upon&#13;
Mrs. A. Spencer, who lives alone a t&#13;
her home in Alma. 'The offender attempted&#13;
to gain entrance at the back&#13;
door, but assistance was at hand. Be&#13;
escaped and officers are searohing.&#13;
The badly decomposed body of a&#13;
aaaa was discovered in Bdardtnan lake,&#13;
near Traverse City, by rfvermen'/who&#13;
'were running logs.' ' Coroner Mdon&#13;
think* the feodj hs* *eea fH «ae'w**sr&#13;
all winter. Some better**L is Thomas&#13;
Mecosta county farmers are contracting&#13;
to raise sugar beets for the&#13;
sugar factory ut Kalumazoo.&#13;
Wrn. Tillman, a prominent farmer,&#13;
of Montroie, accidentally shot himself&#13;
while preparing to shoot into a flock&#13;
of of wild ffeeso. Both barrels loaded&#13;
with buckshot entered his leftside and&#13;
arua. He will probably die.&#13;
Alleg-an is axperianoias; an epidemic&#13;
of spinal meningitis, the first sine? the&#13;
extremely cold winter of 1873 and 1874.&#13;
Two deaths have resulted front attacks&#13;
of the disease, and there are two or&#13;
three cases of it now in town.&#13;
Ole M. Olson, a prominent business&#13;
man of Big Rapids, mistook a carbolic&#13;
acid bottle for a water bottle at u drug&#13;
store and drank quite freely of the&#13;
deadly poison before he discovered his&#13;
mistake. He died a few minute* later.&#13;
S t Johns people are again agitating&#13;
the question of a new opera house,&#13;
something the village has needed badly&#13;
since the loss of the old one by fire&#13;
several years ago. The present scheme&#13;
is to raise the money necessary by popular&#13;
subscriptions.&#13;
On ton agon people see the chance of&#13;
their lives to place that long-slumbering&#13;
village again on its feet, and will&#13;
make a united effort to secure the location&#13;
there of the stamp mills of the&#13;
numerous new mines which are being&#13;
opened up in the county.&#13;
Levi Soules, of Imlay City, while&#13;
sawing wood for his brother near&#13;
Leonard, met with a frightful accident.&#13;
The saw burst, cracking his skull and&#13;
dashing out a portion of his brain.&#13;
Twenty-five pieces of the sk'ull were&#13;
removed. He cannot live.&#13;
Andrew Johnson, of Laurium,&#13;
Houghton county, has a pet dog that&#13;
recently chewed up $100 worth of bills&#13;
which dropped from its owner's pocket,&#13;
when he went to bed. The notes were&#13;
chewed so fine that it will probably be&#13;
impossible to get them duplicated.&#13;
B. Gebhardt, a hotelkeeper and baker&#13;
of Saline, went to Detroit recently on&#13;
business, expecting to return home the&#13;
same d»y. Nothing has been heard of&#13;
him since by bis relatives. As he had&#13;
considerable money on bis person it is&#13;
believed be was a victim of foul play.&#13;
Ground bas been broken for Caro1*&#13;
beet sugar factory "which will be ready&#13;
for the machinery early in July and&#13;
completed for operation Sept. 15.&#13;
Other unDUffoetaring enterprises are&#13;
now being talked of with bright prospects&#13;
of KOBW of them Wing added to&#13;
Caro's induMriea&#13;
The Twift City Iron works at Ironwood,&#13;
owned by- K. Charboimeau, have&#13;
been completely destroyed by fire.&#13;
The dwelling' house &lt;rf Axel Strom, adioining,&#13;
was also destroyed. The loss&#13;
is estimated at 84O,0OOP with small insurance.&#13;
The Are is- believed to have&#13;
been of incendiary origin.&#13;
George Byers, a respected farmer &lt;&gt;t&#13;
M I S OF THE TELEGRAPH STATUE LEGISLATURE.&#13;
k.&lt;« • • * • » " •&#13;
News of the Day as Told Over the**&#13;
* Slender Wires, ' :&#13;
DOMESTIC AND FOREIGN NEWS&#13;
Six Persons were Klll«d la,a Riot In an&#13;
Illinois Mining- Town — Great 8trtd*»&#13;
Made by American Tntdo la China—-&#13;
Uermaoi Offeuded.&#13;
ge Myers, a resp&#13;
Fostoria, took strychnine with intent&#13;
to commit suicide. lie took an overdose&#13;
which made him iU and! saved his&#13;
life. His aged wife ha* beea at the&#13;
the point of death for some time aad&#13;
the dread of being left alea* eansed&#13;
him to try and take his own lite.&#13;
A well near Litchfield, which was Sa&#13;
use 30 years ago, possessed wonderful&#13;
healing properties. It contain** minerals&#13;
in diluted form. In the eoarse&#13;
of time it was filled up and' almost forgotten,&#13;
but bas recently been reopened.&#13;
It is said that the water magnetized&#13;
tools so that they became magnet*.&#13;
Robert Ackerson was out with the&#13;
boys at Munith throwing pebbles&#13;
across the river, making them skip on&#13;
the edge of the water. He had a&#13;
pocket full of flat stones and became&#13;
so interested in the sport that he threw&#13;
several silver dollars,- wbick be had in&#13;
his pocket before he realised that they&#13;
were not pebbisa&#13;
Galien has a dog that became locally&#13;
famous the other night. The animal&#13;
stood on the- railroad track when the&#13;
New York express came rushing along.&#13;
The dog was. thrown 10 rods, and was&#13;
uninjured,, but the air brake valve on&#13;
the engine was broken by the contact&#13;
and the train quickly came to a standstill.&#13;
It was a bulldog, but he missed&#13;
his hold.&#13;
Aagufc Cameron, wbo lives five miles&#13;
from Preseott. bought a cow about 18&#13;
months ago which recently died of a&#13;
mysterious disease. A postmortem&#13;
was held aad a four-ounce hunting&#13;
ease stem-winding, Elgin movement&#13;
gold wateh, No* 961,199, was found in&#13;
the aoimars stomach. The cow cost&#13;
$40. but the value of the watch 1B said&#13;
to be higher.&#13;
A classification of the patients&#13;
treated in the hoinoepathic hospital of&#13;
the U. of M., jrives the following percentages:&#13;
Farmers1 wives, 25 per cent;&#13;
farmers, 14; farmers' children, 22; farm&#13;
domestics, 3; farm hands, 4; total farm&#13;
class, 67. The remaining 33 per cent&#13;
is composed of students, 10 per eent;&#13;
mechanics, 0; paupers, 2; others, IS.&#13;
Officers of the 34th Michigan volunteers,&#13;
who reside in the upper peninsula,&#13;
are asking where they come in&#13;
on the proposed reorganisation of the&#13;
Michigan National Guard as outlined&#13;
in the plan of the state military board.&#13;
Calumet has always been one of the&#13;
best towfts in the state as far as the&#13;
national Guard is eooeerned. Eegtmeetel&#13;
headquarters bare been there&#13;
akvoe tbe 4Ame When tae Flftfe regiment&#13;
Germans are Offended*&#13;
After receiving Mr. White, the U. B.&#13;
ambassador, and Sir Frank Loscelles,&#13;
the British ambassador, last week, and&#13;
explaining to them Germany's attitude&#13;
regarding Samoa, Emperor William&#13;
sent instructious to the German ara*&#13;
ba&amp;sadors in London and Washin-gtoa&#13;
to the general effect that Germany considers&#13;
the new government in Sainoa&#13;
illegal and the action of the British&#13;
and Americans a clear violation' of the&#13;
Samoan act. The report of the behavior&#13;
of Admiral Kautz toward the&#13;
German cruiser Falke has given urn*&#13;
brage throughout the empire and it is&#13;
considered certain that, if the report&#13;
is confirmed, the United States will&#13;
readily admit Germany's right to satisfaction&#13;
and will repair Admiral Kautz's&#13;
error's. It is hoped, however, that the&#13;
accounts are exaggerated.&#13;
Slain by Rioters.&#13;
In a riot which broke out on the&#13;
main streets of Pana, III., in front of&#13;
the telegraph office, between white&#13;
and black miners, in which deputy&#13;
sheriffs took part, five men and one&#13;
woman were killed. Nine persons&#13;
were wounded, several so seriously that&#13;
they will probably die. The cause of&#13;
the riot was the calling out of 100 deputy&#13;
sheriffs In the Fl«rroam and Penwell&#13;
mining districts to protect several&#13;
families of Negroes that were endeavoring&#13;
to load household effects&#13;
preparatory to leaving for Iowa. The&#13;
goods they were moving were said to&#13;
belong to the Pana Coal Co., who had&#13;
placed guards over their property to&#13;
prevent the Negroes from getting&#13;
away with it.&#13;
Oar Trade With Chins.&#13;
The strides made by American trade&#13;
in China are shown in a report of Con*&#13;
snl- General Goodnow. Our cotton&#13;
goods, flour and kerosene are beiug iutroduced&#13;
in large quantities, entering&#13;
China at Shanghai and thence being&#13;
distributed up the Yaugtse river and&#13;
the populous provinces of Chefco, Tien&#13;
Tsin and Niuchwang. The consulgeneral&#13;
estimates that 59,000,000 pounds&#13;
of our flour was imported at Shanghai&#13;
last year, and the value of flour imported&#13;
into all China was 81,231,2(10.&#13;
The imports in other lines were: Keroaena,&#13;
42,330,000 gallons: ihfiel]ngs*_3xi.&#13;
473,000 pieces; drills, 1,208,000 pieces;&#13;
jeans, 105,000 pieces. &gt; • . - • •&#13;
Mall la Now Exchanged at Hollo.&#13;
F. W. Vai lie, assistant postal superintendent&#13;
at Manila, reports to the department&#13;
at Washington that by order&#13;
of Gen. Otis he met the Filipino officials&#13;
from the island of Negros, and in&#13;
order to demonstrate that the voluntary&#13;
surrender of the.insurgent forces&#13;
there was appreciated, gave instructions&#13;
that the Iloilo postoffice should&#13;
begin at once exchanging mails with&#13;
Bocoiod. The Spanish stamps were to&#13;
be recognized, or unpaid postage collected&#13;
at the rate of two cents per&#13;
ounce.&#13;
Foreigners are Coming.&#13;
The emigrant season to the U. S.&#13;
opened last week with the usual rush.&#13;
The BteamArs hare steerage passengers&#13;
booked several weeks ahead and it Is&#13;
calculated that the Irish exodus will&#13;
approach that of recent summers. The&#13;
Teutonic, Canada, Ultonia and Campana,&#13;
sailing within four days, took&#13;
together 3,000 Irish emigrants. The&#13;
Teutonic's contingent is 800, and even&#13;
then she was obliged to leave 60 behind,&#13;
as there were no berths available&#13;
for them.&#13;
Killed by Dynamite.&#13;
The wife and daughter of John Carrington,&#13;
farmer living about eight&#13;
miles' east of Veedersburg, Ind., were&#13;
killed by a dynamite explosion, which&#13;
wrecked their house. Carrington had&#13;
placed about 75 pounds of dynamite&#13;
under the stove to thaw it. He went,&#13;
out to prepare to use the explosive,,&#13;
when it exploded and blew tho houseto&#13;
ruins. The little girl was inatamtly&#13;
killed and Mrs Car rington lived bo* a&#13;
short time.&#13;
Our Trad* With th* New&#13;
Acting Secretary of War Meiklejoa*&#13;
has given out for publieatiaa awa* interesting&#13;
statistics regarding the trade&#13;
of the U. S. with the islands of Caba.&#13;
Porto Rico and the Philippines. The&#13;
returns for February show an lisrcatc&#13;
of imports from the islands into this&#13;
country amounting to 1874,408 and a&#13;
corresponding increase of experts from&#13;
the U. 8. to the islands of 1693,969 as&#13;
compared with tb^Aame awath a year&#13;
Sinai congregation, of Chicago, has&#13;
voted to pay itt rsbbi, Dr. Emil G.&#13;
Hirsch, who was recently called to&#13;
Tempel Emanu-El. in New fork, an.&#13;
The governor has sent to the senate&#13;
the following w&gt;min^flbnj&gt;: AYttour L.'&#13;
Wonien, ol Detroit, Wayne county, as&#13;
a mea»ber\af the s^ate\ board of corrections&#13;
and—charities---for tho term of&#13;
eight years, .from, and, Aftep^^at 1,&#13;
160D, to succeed Edward ^enlrs; Mtsn&#13;
II. Hunt, of Rttdfifedria'wnahlp, iVuynfe&#13;
county, as a member of the oomm^ssibn'ers&#13;
of Wayne county, for the term&#13;
of six yearsdrajn and I f d r May 1 ,t^W.&#13;
to succeed Henry £fO&amp;»; Otto fc»tpU» of&#13;
Detroit, Wayne counVy_, as a motnoer&#13;
of the Uoar4 «f jory soi^iajJAiM&amp;tvfd*&#13;
Wayne'county, for t^e t^rm oft six&#13;
years from aiid after May 1, K99,vtv&#13;
suceeeiil ^D(ivid . ttoffiaaity&#13;
Moeller. of Detroit, Wayne county,.&#13;
a member of the board of jury eomi&#13;
sioners for Wayne county, forr th^s lern&gt;v&#13;
ot six years from and after May 1,' l№0 ,&#13;
to-succeed Eugene IL Hill; Herman.P.&#13;
NagfrU of Detroit, Wayne county, as a&#13;
member* of the railroad and street&#13;
crossings board, for the term of four"&#13;
y»ar» front and after Jan. l,vl&amp;t)9, to&#13;
succeed Wm, H. Lockerby.&#13;
№i4sier&gt;s bill for the rslief of soldiers&#13;
of the late Spanish war was the subject&#13;
of a long discussion in the house,&#13;
Chamberlfcirt leading iu favor of i t ,&#13;
and: it was finally passed. It is similar&#13;
tothe one passed some time ago except&#13;
that the defect whfieh made that&#13;
one' practically useless was remedied&#13;
by providing that the relied! may ,ex'-&#13;
for indigent •soldiers : -^Pbe rs4e was&#13;
al so ratal*} • rrdnr' fou r-on^l&gt;^nd red tbs&#13;
of a mill, sod- aa' aneadsxent was&#13;
tacked ou providing that in Wayno&#13;
county the relief shatt go ttrrouffh the&#13;
regular soldiers* relief commission. It&#13;
was given immediate effcub and sent to&#13;
the senate.&#13;
Tbft ( house military committee rt- v&#13;
ported favorably Kelly'i*-, bUl Riving&#13;
soldiers of the late Spanish war who&#13;
left the stale 815 per nvanth^cxtra a«y,&#13;
and those .who didn't leave the siato&#13;
810. It went to the way* and m«wns&#13;
committee. Gen. Case of tHe mililnry&#13;
board strongly opposes, the bill because&#13;
it provides that the extra, pay, bl&gt;ajl&#13;
stop when peace was declare*!, lie&#13;
vfvys that would shot out the boy* of&#13;
the 35th and 31st from getting any extra&#13;
pay for the long service they have&#13;
just concluded, and would only give a&#13;
mere bagatelle to any of the boys.&#13;
Herritf offered a resolution that hereafter&#13;
the sessions of the house shall&#13;
be^in ut 10 o'clock in the morning instend&#13;
of i iu the afternoon. Kelly and)&#13;
others opposi'd it. Kaying that it is not&#13;
yet titno to l&gt;egin the morning session*,&#13;
and that more can be acc«tinplisliei1 by&#13;
devoting the morning hour« to corn-&#13;
Tniiti'u work. r Chainborlain vv»rn««l&#13;
the new members that if they do not&#13;
got their bills acted on pretty soon&#13;
they would find U ImpoMHfbte to Hn rt&#13;
a little luter. Tbc resolution for morning&#13;
sessions was adopted.&#13;
The biTl to increase the mill tax for&#13;
the support, of thp st»U.'&#13;
from one sixth of a mill to one fourth,&#13;
was reported out favorably by the »»mate&#13;
committee. The sixth mill tax&#13;
produces about Si£4,000. and the fourth&#13;
mill will produce about $276,000. or&#13;
$92,000 more. If this hill goes through&#13;
it will of course be in lion of tjie $00,.*&#13;
000 the university is asking for improvgroeats.&#13;
, .. ' , ,'..&#13;
A measure for the establishment of&#13;
local day schools for de#f children thnt&#13;
is iu all essential respects exactly&#13;
what Miss Donahue, ^cachcr of the&#13;
deaf class in the Detroit schools, and&#13;
her friends on the Detroit board of&#13;
education want and have been agitating&#13;
for so lonpr, lias at lost been agreed&#13;
on and reported out by tho house coromittee&#13;
on schools for the deaf*. '&#13;
The bill making Miehipan.a prohibition&#13;
state, as far as cigarettes are-ooncerned,&#13;
of which the private corporations&#13;
committee gained jurisdiction- because&#13;
introduced by its chairman*. Mr.&#13;
McCail, passed the, committee. It absolutely&#13;
prohibits the manufacture&#13;
and sale of cigarettes in, this state.&#13;
Its passage by the legislature- i&amp;teonsidered&#13;
highly probable. •&#13;
GoodeU'a bill providing that village&#13;
councils may order street paving done,&#13;
to be paid for on the ingtalhneat plan,&#13;
which some of the people at Highland&#13;
F*rk village opposed so vigorously re-,&#13;
cently, was rushed' through th« senate&#13;
without going through the committee&#13;
of the whole and now tdto- opponents&#13;
oil the bill are warm under the collar.&#13;
About the hottest fight of the session&#13;
was pulled off in the hauseoverthe Mc-&#13;
Leod general referendum bill for DetroU&#13;
strset railway fiaochlses, but the&#13;
bill was. finally refenad back by a vote&#13;
f&#13;
Th* canteen system will eontinue to&#13;
W operative at Michigan nUlitaryenesaipaaenU&#13;
for aU the legislature wJU&#13;
Ao to prevent i t&#13;
The beet sugar bounty Mil carrying&#13;
f4OO,oao appropriation passed the house&#13;
by a vats of 7* to I*. t.&#13;
Will Build&#13;
P&#13;
Xew I*aa WajHaf MUls.&#13;
of the&#13;
large h ore&#13;
saidrd51hig-tniHs'ttreost oVer li.ooo.:&#13;
000 are %o to erected at-&#13;
In the hsav4bf tJh^h Ja&#13;
All materials atosssary-for »he ffrnu*g*&gt;f&#13;
of the-ores are found thsir, tooai eoav^',&#13;
Ing f«oa\ i a * «•»,, miom km.&#13;
•'?'• (&#13;
"Let Him Who Wins It&#13;
Bear the film.&#13;
, PrtJse unstinted is accord"&#13;
ed to all honorable victors,&#13;
in the din of&#13;
or in the quiet paths of&gt; peace*&#13;
Hood's Sarsaparitta has won&#13;
thousands of victories over all&#13;
forts of trophies of &amp;e blood,&#13;
and it is America's ggreatest&#13;
Htdicinc, the best thaimoney&#13;
It possesses the exact combination&#13;
which purifies the blood and brings the&#13;
color of health to every cheek. It&#13;
never diaUppointa.&#13;
OCrofuUl—" When three months old OUT&#13;
biby Hoy was covered witfc itchinK ana&#13;
burning scrofula sores. The best physician a&#13;
failed to relltve. Hood's SarsaparMa saved&#13;
his life as it made a permanent cure.™ Ms*,&#13;
LILIIE M. Fisu, East 8prlnsp&amp;rt, Mich.&#13;
ErysfpOlas — ** A scrofulous condition&#13;
of my blood caused me to suffer from erysipelas&#13;
for 15 years. Physicians did not&#13;
even lielp, but Hood's Sarsapartlla permanently&#13;
cured tbls disease."" A. E. S&#13;
208 Court Aye., Jeffersoarille, lad.&#13;
enlr to imM; with,Hwl'i&#13;
Sheep koit on wooden -floors&#13;
have ill shape I hoefa.&#13;
wiJl&#13;
7m. ; Alabastlne is a dura We and natural&#13;
coating for walls and ceilings. It is&#13;
entirely different from all "kalsomtne"&#13;
preparations, . Alabastlne comes in&#13;
whke or twelre beautiful tints, and is&#13;
ready for use by adding cold .water.&#13;
It is put qp in dry powder form in&#13;
15ye-pound packages, with full directions&#13;
on' every package. Alabastine Is&#13;
handsome, cleanly and permanent, it&#13;
can be re-coated an a retinted at slight&#13;
expense. Paint dealers and druggists&#13;
cell Alabastlne and furnish card of&#13;
tlnu.&#13;
L*t MB M_V« tU« Fibre.&#13;
When Admiral Dewey destroyed the&#13;
SpanlBh Navy in Manila Harbor therfe&#13;
were lying in the harbor six big .ships&#13;
laden with Manila fiber for the Deering&#13;
Harvester Co. of Chicago. By a special&#13;
order from the Navy Department&#13;
Dewey was permitted to release these&#13;
ships. Their cargoes reached the Deer-&#13;
Ing Twine Works in Chicago in due&#13;
course, and that twine will be used to&#13;
bind the sheaves of this season's harvest&#13;
all over the world.&#13;
A crop of early lambs can often be&#13;
made very profitable.&#13;
U n e ' t Family Medicine.&#13;
Moves the bowels each day. In order&#13;
to be healthy this U necessary Acts&#13;
gently on the liver and kidneys. Cures&#13;
aick headache. Price 25 and 50c.&#13;
To a male's ears a. mule's voice is always&#13;
music.&#13;
A LONG FELT WANT.&#13;
It to Sappilrd la TfcU Vicinity •« LMt.&#13;
It is hard to always be pleasant&#13;
Good nratured people are often irritable.&#13;
If yon knew the reason you would&#13;
not be surprised.&#13;
Ever hare Itching Piles?&#13;
Not sick enough to jro to b«i or not&#13;
well enoegh to be content?&#13;
Nothing will annoy 5*0u so.&#13;
The constant itching sensation.&#13;
Hard to bear, harder to get relief.&#13;
Keeps you awake ntjrhta.&#13;
Spoils Totfr temper —nearly drives&#13;
you crazy.&#13;
Isnt relief and cure a long fel£ want?&#13;
It is to be -tad for everyone, in.Doan's&#13;
O i n t m e n t ,.,-•• ' . •&#13;
Doan's Ointment *e*er fails to core&#13;
Itchtag Pile*, JBciuwna, or any itching&#13;
of the skin. • '"&#13;
Here is proof of 'it at the testimony&#13;
o( am Ann Arfeer eititen:&#13;
Mr. C. C. CbuFcU, of 520 South Seventh&#13;
street, Ann Airbor, now retired&#13;
from the active duties of life, «aya:&#13;
I have no hesitation In veoommendlnc Doan's&#13;
Oinunent. To «ayoae requiring a bealinxand&#13;
•oot-lng prepttrstion It jprill prove invaluable.&#13;
I suffered for yean fraaa itehln? hemorrhoidn&#13;
aad though I tried evarytfetag I. could hear of&#13;
and used jymecUeH preacribed by «oor«fi &lt;9t&#13;
frieadH. I *ra» ua*-le to obtain permanent relief&#13;
until my attemtkm m%a oalled to Doan'a&#13;
Ointment. I was somewhat aurprised after fee&#13;
•econd application to notice what a dDSerent&#13;
effect it had from aarthinf I had hitherto used.&#13;
Encouraged I UMed K atneUgr according 4 t&#13;
t i n abd tn a rprla*&amp;fl7 h r t le&#13;
DICK RODNEY;&#13;
Or. The Adventures of I:&#13;
An Eton Boy...&#13;
BY JAMBS GRANT.&#13;
2&#13;
3i&#13;
\&#13;
CHAPTER XX.—(Continued.)&#13;
He took us so suddenly by surprise,&#13;
that, although we had been waiting&#13;
and watching for him since dawn, his&#13;
resolute aspect and the arms he wiolded&#13;
controlled us all, and we stared at&#13;
each other with irresolution in our&#13;
purpose and hi our faces. No man,&#13;
apparently, cared to act as our leader.&#13;
"Presto!" roared the Cubano; "obey&#13;
aad keep quiet, or, demonio! as there&#13;
are so many, I have a great mind to&#13;
Bhoot one-half, that I may control the&#13;
rest. Cast loose those top-sails, and&#13;
up with the royals again—set the flyhig-&#13;
glb and main trysail—quick, perroa,&#13;
or I'll make Bhark's meat of some&#13;
more of you!"&#13;
The crew esemed to lack either resolution&#13;
or the power of combination,&#13;
and no men appeared anxious to incur&#13;
the sure penalty of instant death&#13;
by acting In opposition to his peremptory&#13;
orders in setting an example to&#13;
the rest. So, sullenly and silently the&#13;
sail trimmers stood by the tacks and&#13;
braces.; the wheel revolved In the unwilling&#13;
hands of Ned Carlton, who was&#13;
compelled to obey, for the cold muzzle&#13;
of a six-barreled revolver, capped and&#13;
cocked, was hold close to his left temple.&#13;
The head of the Eugenie payed off&#13;
In obedience to her helm, the yarda&#13;
swung round and were braced sharp&#13;
up; and with the starboard tacks on&#13;
board, in three minutes we were stoer*&#13;
ing as due westward as her head would&#13;
lie for the coast of South America.&#13;
The alteration of our course furnished&#13;
the crew ^rith a new source of&#13;
speculation. It was evidently the Intention&#13;
of Antonio, if he could reach&#13;
the coast of Seguro, or that of Bahia,&#13;
to eBcape with all his valuables and&#13;
his vengeance; and to this end, if&#13;
ships pussed without succoring or&#13;
overhauling us, and if we did not destroy&#13;
him, he might certainly destroy&#13;
us, by scuttling the brig, or setting her&#13;
on fire.&#13;
The noon passed over without an&#13;
"observation," for there was no one to&#13;
work it, to estimate the latitude or&#13;
longitude, to keep a reckoning, or take&#13;
note of our variation and leeway; _nd&#13;
lest we should signal any passing shift&#13;
Antonio, who was a most thoughtful&#13;
scoundrel, threw every color ov«v&#13;
board. He did not come on deck again&#13;
for some time, as he had plenty of&#13;
spt?tt8 and provisions below, and the&#13;
tell-tale compass in the skylight afforded&#13;
him constant information as to&#13;
whether the brig was steered in the&#13;
direction he wished.&#13;
He was constantly drinking, but&#13;
never became so intoxicated as to be&#13;
unwary. *&#13;
And so the fated brig glided over the&#13;
hot sea, under the blazing sun. The&#13;
albatrosses came round us again, with&#13;
tripping feet, flapping wings and open&#13;
bills; but no one molested them now&#13;
-~we had other things to think of;&#13;
e&gt;d as I sat on the anchor stock in the&#13;
weather'bow, watching them floating&#13;
in the water, or skimming over it&#13;
with their vast wings outspread, I&#13;
thought of the "Ancient Mariner,** and&#13;
all that he had suffered for killing "the&#13;
bird of good omen."&#13;
I felt a strange dread creeping over&#13;
me while these verses seemed on my&#13;
tongue—they were so descriptive of&#13;
the atmosphere and of the situation:&#13;
"All in &amp; hot and copper sky,&#13;
The bloody sun at noon,&#13;
Right up above tho mast did stand,&#13;
No bigger than the moon.&#13;
"I cloaed my lids, and kept them close.&#13;
And the balls like pulses beat,&#13;
For the sea and sky, «nd the sea and&#13;
•ky,&#13;
like a load on my weary eye,&#13;
And the dead were at my feet"&#13;
Remembering the manner in which&#13;
Antonio first came on board—the mystery&#13;
of his being alone in the bloodstained&#13;
boat—his dreams—the disappearanco&#13;
of Roberts—the occurrences&#13;
of the morning—and though last not&#13;
least, the rough treatment to which&#13;
the crew had subjected him on the&#13;
night we passed the line—none were&#13;
very willing to enter the cabin where&#13;
this savage Cubano, flushed with&#13;
brandy, bloodshed and ferocity, sat&#13;
with loaded pistols in his hands. But&#13;
all felt that something must be done;&#13;
that, while a doubt remained, it&#13;
should be solved, and a life so importanttto&#13;
us saved, even though others&#13;
be risked for it.&#13;
I volunteered to become the envey&#13;
of the crew.&#13;
"No, no, Master Rodney," said Tattooed&#13;
Tom; "this will never do! What,&#13;
do you think we will let you venture&#13;
into that murderer's den while so&#13;
many able-bodied fellows hang&#13;
astern?"&#13;
"But I know his language, which&#13;
none of you do."&#13;
"He speaks the Queen's English now&#13;
as well as any of us," said Carlton,&#13;
"and if I had only a pistol or a musket&#13;
to give me but one chance for my&#13;
life, I would have made it speak to&#13;
him long ago, in the lingo such pirates&#13;
know best."&#13;
"Moreover, as I did not molest him&#13;
on the night we crossed the line, he&#13;
has no particular grudge at me," I&#13;
urged.&#13;
"There is some sense and truth in&#13;
that," muttered several of the crew.&#13;
"I'll go— it,Is settled," said I, anxious&#13;
to solve the mystery of the groans,&#13;
while feeling a glow Qt triumph at the&#13;
applause I should gain for the risk I&#13;
ran, which assuredly was not a small&#13;
one.&#13;
"It is a shame for us lubberly fellows&#13;
to stand by here and see that lad&#13;
risk his life," said Probart, one of the&#13;
crew; "and if so be that Creole picaroon&#13;
falls foul Of him "&#13;
"If he does," exclaimed Tom Lambourne&#13;
through his firmly set teeth,&#13;
while striking his clenched right hand&#13;
on the hard palm of the left, "may I&#13;
never see England again If we don't&#13;
attack him at stem and stern at once!&#13;
I'll drop down the skylight, with as&#13;
many as will follow me, while you,&#13;
Ned, will dash down the companionway&#13;
with the rest, and then at him&#13;
with hatchet, handsaw and capstanbar.&#13;
He can't kill u« all, shipmates,&#13;
that's one comfort—he can't kill us&#13;
all!"&#13;
The prospect of an early demise was&#13;
neither sootfced nor encouraged by this&#13;
promise at the bloody scene that was&#13;
to follow.&#13;
The carpenter gave me a email but&#13;
very sharp tomaitaw_:. I concealed it&#13;
in my breaet, and resolved to use it to&#13;
6ome purpose if soolesled in the cabin.&#13;
The idem Hashed upon me that by one&#13;
determine* biaw I might disable him&#13;
forever, and perhaps do an act of justice&#13;
by dispatching him outright&#13;
With a vague sense that I was about&#13;
to face a terrible danger, and that the&#13;
sooner It was faced and past, the better,&#13;
I walked hastily aft, and on descending&#13;
the ccmiia__o-lAdder, paused&#13;
when halfway 'down, and after knocklag&#13;
on tfae bulkhead called out distinctly&#13;
and boWy—&#13;
"Auta_Jo! Hallo, Cotono!"&#13;
"Well, what »d© you want?" asked he,&#13;
ealkjly.&#13;
"To speak wttia 71m; may Z «ome&#13;
down?"&#13;
"Enter, comparer©; y-ou have not yet&#13;
harmed me, tlrus I bear you no malice."&#13;
g Med te4t&#13;
reetions Mrprla*&amp;»hort length of&#13;
time wboa you take teto aaeount the b f&#13;
vears II was' fafififtldic ted thte Iri riituatiion ©eased aed&#13;
the Inflammation was allayed. When D«a&amp;'«&#13;
iMatment cured me it will oum others.&#13;
Doau's Ointment for sale by all dealers.&#13;
Mte? W oeol* Mailed by&#13;
Mil burn Co., Buffalo, N. T*.&#13;
for the U. 8. Remember the name&#13;
Doan'a aad take »o substitute.&#13;
DOYOOVHTllOKt&#13;
100,000&#13;
T*fT*WliAIUIMS&#13;
CHAPTER XXI.&#13;
I Confront the Cubano.&#13;
From the wild thoughts and fancies&#13;
which the horrors of that early morn-&#13;
Ing, our strange situation, and my own&#13;
•rather active imagination, were suggesting,&#13;
I was roused by Ned Carlton,&#13;
who, on being relieved from the wheel,&#13;
came forward to the bows, where moat&#13;
•f the crew were seated on the windtae8,&lt;&#13;
or were lounging against the bitts,&#13;
•peculating on what might turn up&#13;
next. .&#13;
Is an excited and impressive manner,&#13;
he reported that be had heard,&#13;
from time to time, the sound of moans,&#13;
M from eefB*6M in great pain in the&#13;
cabin; that he believed that either the&#13;
cantata or mate yet survived; and If&#13;
We omsM get down by any means we&#13;
might be la time to save oae or the&#13;
otter. If he was Weeding to death,&#13;
the victim could not ftm* lonr-a little&#13;
Putting a hand in tny breast to ascertain&#13;
that my little hatchet was secure,&#13;
I entered the cabin, where the Cubano,&#13;
with Ms broad back placed&#13;
against the ritdderease, was seated on&#13;
the stern-locker at the table, which he&#13;
had covered with bottles, biscuits.&#13;
cheese and polonies while papers,&#13;
dockets, broken desite. and boxea lay&#13;
scattered about him. He was dad, as&#13;
I have stated, in the poor skipper's best&#13;
shore-going salt of clothes, which he&#13;
wore open and loose, for the atmosphere&#13;
of th9 cabin, notwithstanding&#13;
the shattered skylight, was oppressively&#13;
hot, as the sun was now almost vertical;&#13;
the flies were la noisy rwarma.&#13;
and the cockroaches were crawlingover&#13;
the beams and bulkhead panels.&#13;
On flrst hearing a foot oa the coapan- •&#13;
Ion-ladder, he had evidently snatched&#13;
up a revolver, and cocked it; hot on&#13;
finding that his visitor was only me, he&#13;
put it down, threw away the fag-end&#13;
of a dxarito. and said, with a ferocious&#13;
grim aad iroaical politeaeas—&#13;
lias (a good day),&#13;
a n I ipda*»ad.4»r W*&#13;
It was the firat time I&#13;
coolly destroyed a fellow-being aa he&#13;
to&#13;
with an indescribable loathing; but X&#13;
bad a purpose to achieve, and determined&#13;
to do It&#13;
I was about to enter Western's stateroom,&#13;
when the Cubano (cocked his revolver&#13;
and cried, in a voice of thunder—&#13;
"Come back, or I will shoot you aa&#13;
dead as he is! Ha, ha! por grados"&#13;
(by degrees) "I shall get rid of you&#13;
all."&#13;
I paused and locked at him; my&#13;
roung heart beat wildly; I felt that I&#13;
was facing death, and what would I&#13;
not have given bad my hatchet been a&#13;
pistol, even with one barrel, though my&#13;
opponent was master of twelve charges.&#13;
"He is dead, then?" said I In a husky&#13;
voice.&#13;
"Who—which?" asked the Cubano,&#13;
with a fresh clgarlto between bl3&#13;
strong white teeth.&#13;
"Captain Western."&#13;
"Aye, dead as Judas!" said be, laughing&#13;
hoarsely.&#13;
"But I understand that Hislop -"&#13;
I stammered.&#13;
"El contra-maestre—well?"&#13;
At that moment a low moan vrhich&#13;
went through my heart came from the&#13;
stateroom or little side cabin of Marc&#13;
Hislop.&#13;
"Well, hombro, vhat of Mm?" growled&#13;
Antonio.&#13;
"He is bleeding to death, and I wish&#13;
to remove him."&#13;
"Do aa you please; he will be food&#13;
for the fish before the sun sets!"&#13;
"You will allow me to take him on&#13;
deck?" said I, earnestly, almost imploringly.&#13;
"Yes; you have done me no harm"&#13;
(he repeated this very often); woe to&#13;
those who have done so!"&#13;
A gleam of suspicion flashed in the&#13;
eyes of Antonio as he said:&#13;
"True; but not a man shall enter&#13;
here, and leave alive. The ship-boys&#13;
may assist you; but I will shoot the&#13;
whole crew down like dogs If they venture&#13;
to approach me; BO I give yon&#13;
five minutes to carry the contra-maestre&#13;
to the forecastle bunks, or to pitch&#13;
him overboard, whichever you please,&#13;
though the last would please me."&#13;
"Five minutes?"&#13;
"Yes, five by this watch," he added,&#13;
pulling out of his fob a gold repeater,&#13;
which, even in the excitement of the&#13;
moment, I recognized to be mine, the&#13;
same which my mother gave me when&#13;
I first left home for Eton, and of wtiich&#13;
I had been robbed at Tennerlffe. There&#13;
was no doubting the little rings and&#13;
charms which my sisters, Dot, Sybil&#13;
and one of their female friends had&#13;
appended to It; and thus I discovered&#13;
another black link in the life of Antonio.&#13;
I dared not appear to recognize it&#13;
when his strong brown hairy hand, the&#13;
bloody spots on which made me shudder,&#13;
held it toward me, lest he might&#13;
shoot me down, but summoned Billy&#13;
Wilkins, the cabin boy, by desiring the&#13;
man at the wheel "to pass word forward&#13;
for him and another apprentice."&#13;
The boys came, but not without great&#13;
fear and reluctance; and while Antonio&#13;
proceeded leisurely to make another&#13;
paper cigar, keeping his ears open for&#13;
every sound, and his black eyes fixed&#13;
keenly on us the while, we entered&#13;
the little stateroom of Marc Hislop and&#13;
beheld a sight which filled us with the&#13;
deepest commiseration and dismay.&#13;
CHAPTER XXII.&#13;
I Rescue the Mate.&#13;
Pale as marble, with his lower Jaw&#13;
relaxed and his eyes almost closed,&#13;
motionless as if dead, but, nevertheless,&#13;
still breathing slowly and heavily, poor&#13;
Marc Hislop lay in his bed, the clothes&#13;
and pillows of which were saturated&#13;
with blood, for he seemed to be covered&#13;
by wounds, and the crimson current&#13;
had flowed over the piles of his&#13;
favorite books, which were scattered&#13;
upon the cabin floor, where they had&#13;
been trod under foot by Antonio while&#13;
overhauling the repositories of the unfortunate&#13;
proprietor.&#13;
Shuddering, and in haste, we lifted&#13;
him from the bed, muffled him in a&#13;
blanket and conveyed him, passive as&#13;
a child in our hands, from the cabin.&#13;
/ * we passed out, for a moment it&#13;
Beemed as If the ruffianly Spaniard repented&#13;
of his temporary clemency; for&#13;
when he saw the pale, bloody and Insensible&#13;
form of the poor fellow trailed&#13;
past, he made an ominous stride toward&#13;
us, and threateningly clutched&#13;
the hsit of the Albacete knife in his&#13;
sash. Then waving his hand, almost&#13;
contemptuously* he said:&#13;
"Basta—go, go—it matters little now,&#13;
either to him or to me. Demonio! I&#13;
always strike deep."&#13;
Alarm and pity endowed, us with unusual&#13;
strength, and we bore the speechless&#13;
victim of Antonio up the steep&#13;
stair to the deck, where our crew, with&#13;
mattered oaths of vengeance, and expressions&#13;
of.commiseration, bore him&#13;
Into the forepart ef the vessel. There&#13;
a bed was made tor him on deck; for&#13;
coolness, an awning was rigged over it,&#13;
aad we had his wounds examined.&#13;
We found a deep stab la the neck,&#13;
dangerously Mar the jugular&#13;
s, second in the breast. * third&#13;
ettvee* the henea at the right forearm.&#13;
aad eVftMttfa in the Jert tb**; all ted&#13;
evidently been dealt through the bedr&#13;
LUMBACO&#13;
tSCAaVTO GET&#13;
MCaSVTO CURE&#13;
V TOO IMC St. Jacobs Oil&#13;
Do not fail to keep the box containing&#13;
grit well filled.&#13;
Thar* Is m CIMW of People&#13;
Who are injured b j the use of coffee.&#13;
Recently there hae been placed in all&#13;
the grocery stores a new preparation&#13;
called GRAIN-O, made of pure grains,&#13;
that takes the place of coffee. The mod&#13;
delicate fctomach receives it without&#13;
distress, and bnt few can tell it from&#13;
coffee. It does not cost over one-fourthas&#13;
much. Children may drink it with&#13;
£reat benefit. IS cents and 25 cent&amp;&#13;
per package. Try it. Ask for GRAIN-O.&#13;
Separate the fowls that you are fat*&#13;
ten ing for market.&#13;
Do Your Feet Ache and Barn?&#13;
Shake into your shoes, Allen's Foot-j&#13;
Ease, a powder for the feet. It rankeaj&#13;
tight or New Shoes feel Easy. Cnrefr&#13;
Corns, Bunions, Swollen, Hot aikfti&#13;
Sweating Fee^w At all Druggists and.&#13;
Shoe Stores, 25c Sample sent FBEE-|&#13;
Address Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y_j&#13;
Promise—A imaJl outlay from which larg*&#13;
returns are expected. . ,&#13;
Dropsy treated free by Dr. H. H. Green's&#13;
Sons, of Atlanta, Oa. The greatest dropsy&#13;
specialist* in the world. Read their advertisement&#13;
la ***A*VT w'wmn of thi» paper. ;&#13;
Egotist—A man who imagines the world c u t -&#13;
get along without him.&#13;
Carter** Bxt&gt; Swart Weed&#13;
Will cure a cold In oae nirht: will enre a s m&#13;
throat In a few hoars. Acts quick. Sure e&#13;
for Catarrh la every fie botUo.&#13;
Pessimism—The philosophy with which v e&#13;
regsrd our neighbors.&#13;
An Excellent Combination*&#13;
The pleasant method and beneficial&#13;
effects of the well known remedy,&#13;
&amp;TBVP OF Itoas, manufactured by the&#13;
CALIFOJUTIA P M &amp;rmrr Co., illustrate;&#13;
the Talue of obtaining the liquid laxative&#13;
principles of plants known to be*&#13;
medicinally laxative and presenting&#13;
them in the form most refreshing to the&#13;
taste and acceptable to the system. Itis&#13;
the one perfect strengthening lexkrtire,&#13;
cleansrajr the system effectually.-&#13;
dispelling oolda, headaches and fevers&#13;
gently yet promptly and enabling'&#13;
to overcome M1^*^*1 constipation j&#13;
manently. Its perfect freedom from&#13;
erery objectionable quality and swb»&#13;
stance, aad ite ajeting on the kidneys,&#13;
liver and bowels, without weakening:&#13;
or irritating them, make it the kleeX&#13;
laxative.&#13;
In the process of manufacturing fig*&#13;
are used, aa they are pleasant to the&#13;
taate, trat (he medicinal qualities of the&#13;
remedy are obtained from senna aadt&#13;
other aromatic plants, by a method*&#13;
known to the GaixronnA Fie SYSUF&#13;
Co. only. In order to get its beneficial&#13;
effects and to avoid imitations, please&#13;
remember the fall name of the Company&#13;
printed on the front of every package.&#13;
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.&#13;
OAXk, .&#13;
1 W YOUC, W. Y l&#13;
£0c per bottle&#13;
PATENTS.&#13;
wiInT AnoXt TbE»»DeS-Ci&gt;a aSe eeaf* t*e d healthM that R I M F - I . Co.. New Yofft.for t&#13;
cue*. Bauk ef&#13;
meat Free&#13;
nEW DISCOVERY:&#13;
Vilek relief ind cmrt*&#13;
d l O t *&#13;
purpose. (To be&#13;
€•&#13;
': " vN'S&#13;
• * • '&#13;
'«r.{V,&#13;
№T$ &amp; * " * . • • &lt; •&#13;
'..'V&#13;
« &lt;- • . &lt;•&#13;
&gt;:. r,:--^/F:.- . ^,;- " •*¥&#13;
fbuhuq&#13;
F. L. ANDREWS EDITOR.&#13;
THURSDAY, APR. 20, 1899.&#13;
Interesting Items.&#13;
One week from tomorrow is&#13;
Arbor-Day.&#13;
A. D. Bennett is again foreman&#13;
in the Herald office at Howell.&#13;
Dexter has a full fledged Business&#13;
Men's Association composed&#13;
of 25 charter members.&#13;
The Herald Publishing Co.&#13;
have disolved partnership, and&#13;
Thomas Brewer again has full&#13;
charge.&#13;
* "Better late than never," so&#13;
thinks G. T. English, of Chelsea,&#13;
who filled his ice house with 10&#13;
inch ice, April 3.&#13;
Evangelist Moody says: "Is it&#13;
strange that it's so hard to get&#13;
honest servant girls nowadays?&#13;
Not a bit when their mistress&#13;
tells them to say she's not at!&#13;
home whilo she's up stairs look-'&#13;
ing through the blinds to see who&#13;
it is.&#13;
There are a good many boys&#13;
throughout ttfts state whose passion&#13;
for "cooning fruit" may get&#13;
them into serious trouble if a bill&#13;
which has already passed the senate&#13;
becomes a law. I t makes the&#13;
robbing of orchards a felony to&#13;
which is attached a severe punishment&#13;
We clip the following from the&#13;
Brighton Argus:&#13;
Mr. Editor:—At the annual!&#13;
township meeting a resolution&#13;
was carried offering a bounty on&#13;
all crows killed in the township of&#13;
Brighton at the rate of ten cents&#13;
per head. There is in my opinion&#13;
an error in the good people of&#13;
this town offering any such&#13;
bounty or any bounty on crows;&#13;
for the reason that killing crows&#13;
is forbidden by law. Sec. 20, page&#13;
202, of the laws of 1897, provides&#13;
that it is unlawful to kill any "insectivcrous"&#13;
bird; and Sec. 30 of&#13;
the same act makes it a misdemeanor&#13;
and punishable by a fine&#13;
of not less than $10 and not -ex&#13;
ceeding $125 for each offense. As&#13;
I understand it, a crow is an iuseotivorous&#13;
bird and consequently&#13;
those persons who may be comtemplating&#13;
pickiug up a little&#13;
change by killing crows had better&#13;
keep oue eye open in the direction&#13;
of the game warden.&#13;
B. T. O. CLARK.&#13;
The election inspector's report&#13;
was presented and read.&#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 those persons receiving the&#13;
highest number of votes cast at&#13;
the recent village election as returned&#13;
by the board of election&#13;
inspectors be declared duly elected&#13;
to the various offices as follows:&#13;
President, Alexander Mctutyre&#13;
Clerk, li H Teeple&#13;
Treasurer W K Murphy&#13;
Assessor , . W A Carr&#13;
Trustees Daniel Kiohunid&#13;
Alfred Alonks&#13;
George Bowman&#13;
Krauk Johnson&#13;
Samuel Sykea&#13;
The clerk next swore iu the&#13;
newly elected officers.&#13;
Moved and carried that the&#13;
bonds of \V. E. Murphy, treasurer&#13;
and R. H. Teeple, clerk, with&#13;
H. H. Swarthout and J. W. Harris&#13;
as sureties for the former and&#13;
G. W. Teeple and J. J. Teeple as&#13;
sureties for the latter be accepted&#13;
as read.&#13;
Council adjourned,&#13;
R. H. TEEFLE, Clerk.&#13;
Council Proceedings.&#13;
For The Village of Pinckiier.&#13;
Mar. 16, 1899, Regular.&#13;
Council convened and called to&#13;
order by Pres* Sigler.&#13;
Present: Trustee Teeple, Jackson,&#13;
Thompson, Monks, Reason.&#13;
Absent: Trustee Erwin.&#13;
Moved and carried to accept&#13;
the minutes of previous meeting.&#13;
The following bills were presented:&#13;
1&#13;
№&#13;
Reason &amp; Su»han, oil and sundries&#13;
Win. Huff, 1 da gatekeeper,&#13;
Geo. Season, on election ami&#13;
registration.&#13;
F L Andrews, printing&#13;
C J. Twjile, on election board,&#13;
J II shultz, fhctlnn supplies&#13;
C L Sykw*. Uritrt , {H&gt;JKT&#13;
Tt'epl- ic Cidwt'll, imilf. and nundriee&#13;
E rl Brown, on board of election,&#13;
K H Teeplf, clerk wr\-ices,.etc ,&#13;
E L Thompson, electiop registration&#13;
D W Muria. 1 yns.tr'aa Birvictrs,&#13;
FUJnck»on, Buard of elnMlun,&#13;
W A Carr, services and attorney&#13;
Wm. Mclutyre, service enuw plow,&#13;
780&#13;
SOO&#13;
250&#13;
26 00&#13;
5 00&#13;
65&#13;
200&#13;
1 28&#13;
450&#13;
?3 68&#13;
6 60&#13;
600&#13;
400&#13;
11 00&#13;
200&#13;
Total, $10847&#13;
Previous canb balance, ;&#13;
" Carton hatad,&#13;
110 27&#13;
• 0 80&#13;
Regular , April 3, '99.&#13;
Coouci l crlled to order by Pres .&#13;
Mclutyre . Present:—Pres . Mc-&#13;
Intyre ; trustee s Johuson , Monks .&#13;
Upo n motion , counci l adjourne d&#13;
to Apr. 10. R. H. TEEPLE , clerk.&#13;
Regular , April 10—&#13;
Counci l convene d and called to&#13;
order by Pres . Mclutyre .&#13;
Present : Trustee s Thompson ,&#13;
Johnson , Bowman , Mouks , and&#13;
Sykes. "**&#13;
Minute s of previous meetin g&#13;
read and approved .&#13;
Moved and carried tha t street&#13;
commissione r Burch' s repor t be&#13;
accepted . Th e repor t is us follows:&#13;
liH&#13;
W&#13;
O&#13;
Culhane, Vt&#13;
Wright,&#13;
SI Burch,&#13;
day shoveling aaow,&#13;
i i&#13;
i i&#13;
i k&#13;
«3&#13;
03&#13;
63&#13;
75&#13;
Uoved and carried to accept&#13;
ftilku read&#13;
Total, $2 tt4&#13;
Moved and carrie d to allow bills&#13;
as read and order s be drawn to.&#13;
pay the same.&#13;
Tbe following contingen t bills&#13;
were presented :&#13;
Wm. Mclntyre, snow plow service, 85 00&#13;
D W Murta, 1 8-SO mo. services, 7 92&#13;
F E Wright, feeding tramp, 28&#13;
Total, $18 17&#13;
Moved and carrie d to accep t&#13;
bills as read and order s be drawn&#13;
to pay th e same.&#13;
The clerk was requeste d to order&#13;
a tax roll.&#13;
The presiden t made the following&#13;
nomination s for commissione r&#13;
of street : Sam'l Grimes , Thos.&#13;
Turner , Jno . Monks . Ballots&#13;
were prepare d and resulted in&#13;
Jno . Monk s receiving six votes.&#13;
Moved and carrie d tha t th e appointmen&#13;
t of Joh n Monk s as&#13;
street commissione r be sustained .&#13;
Moved and carried to sustain&#13;
the president' s appointmen t of E.&#13;
L. Thompso n as pres. pro tern .&#13;
For the various committees , th e&#13;
presiden t made the following appointments&#13;
:&#13;
Park Ommitee&#13;
Sidewalk "&#13;
Street "&#13;
Lighting "&#13;
Finance "&#13;
Thompson and Monks&#13;
Richards and Bowman&#13;
Syk«i and Monks&#13;
Bowman and Johnson&#13;
Johnson and Thompson&#13;
Moved and carried to sustain&#13;
appointments as made by the&#13;
president&#13;
The president made the following&#13;
appointments: Health officer,&#13;
H. F. Sigler; . village attorney,&#13;
W. A. Carr.&#13;
Moved to recind motion relative&#13;
to marshals salary, adopted&#13;
April 11, 1898. Carried&#13;
Moved and carried that the&#13;
clerk advertise for sealed bids for&#13;
the following: For the performance&#13;
of service of marshal until&#13;
2nd. Monday in April, 1900; for&#13;
the lighting of street lamps for 1&#13;
year, and for the furnishing of&#13;
oil for street lam ps for one year,&#13;
bids on all brands desired.. Said&#13;
council reserving the right to reject&#13;
any or all bids. Said bids to&#13;
be in clerks bands on or before&#13;
May 1, 1809. Moved and carried&#13;
that Finance committee confer&#13;
with Eidtor Andrews relative to&#13;
to the printing of Village business&#13;
for ths ensuing year.&#13;
Council adjorned,&#13;
R. H. TEEPLE, Clerk,&#13;
NOTICE.&#13;
Notic e is hereby'given tha t seated&#13;
bids tor th e following will be received&#13;
by the visage clerk: Fo r th e&#13;
lightin g of street* lamp s 1 yr.—work&#13;
to be performe d accordin g to the resolutio&#13;
n adopte d Dec . 2, '95.&#13;
For the performanc e of dutie s ot&#13;
Village Marshal ' unti l 2nd . Monda y&#13;
in April, 1900.&#13;
For th e furnishin g of« oil by th e&#13;
gallon for Village unti l May 2, 1900.&#13;
Bids on all brand s desired ; said bids&#13;
to be in hand s of clerk on or before&#13;
Mayl , '99 and counci l reserves right&#13;
to reject any or all bids.&#13;
Date d Apr. 17, '99. R. H . TEKPLK ,&#13;
Clerk.&#13;
Volcanic Eruption!&#13;
Are grand , but skiu eruption s rob&#13;
life of joy. Bucklen V arnio a salve&#13;
cure s them ; also old, runnin g and&#13;
fever sores, ulcers, boils, felons, corns ,&#13;
warts, cuts, bruises, burns , scalds,&#13;
chappe d bands, chilblains , best pile&#13;
car e on earth , drives out pain s and&#13;
aches. Onl j 25c a box; cure guaran -&#13;
teed. Sold by F . A. Sigler, druggist&#13;
MOR E LOCAL.&#13;
Miss Blanch e Mora n and Mat t&#13;
Brady were quietl y marrie d a t th e&#13;
hom e of th e bride' s parent s in thi s&#13;
place on Sunda y last.&#13;
Maste r Claud e Black bad th e mis&#13;
fortun e to get somethin g int o one of&#13;
his eyes while playin g the past week,&#13;
which has caused him quit e a little&#13;
trouble .&#13;
The manage r of th e Howel l Oper a&#13;
Hous e has mad e arrangement s for a&#13;
retur n dat e with Porte r J, White, the&#13;
Greates t Living Mep )i&amp;to, in th e&#13;
greatest play of the age, FAUS T at th e&#13;
Oper a House , in Howet l on Wednesday&#13;
evening, April 26th. This is withou t&#13;
a doub t th e finest spectacula r pro&#13;
duetio n ever brough t to Howell . Th e&#13;
electrica l effects are a marvel of&#13;
stage craft. The fact tha t this is Mr .&#13;
Whites second appearanc e in Howel l&#13;
in this productio n is sufficient eyi&#13;
denc e of tie merit s of tbe play. The&#13;
famou s and weird Brocken scene,&#13;
with tbe lost souls in tormen t and the&#13;
electri c snakes, owls, etc. is never to&#13;
be forgotten . Reserved seats are on&#13;
sale at th e store of A. Garlan d at 50c&#13;
each .&#13;
Business Pointers.&#13;
Dr . Cady's Conditio n Powder s are&#13;
just what a hor&amp;e need s when in bad&#13;
condition . Tonic , blood purifier and' ;&#13;
vermifuge. The y are not food but&#13;
medicin e and the best in use to pu t a&#13;
horse in prim e condition . Pric e 25c&#13;
per package. Fo r sale by F . A. Sig&#13;
ler.&#13;
Tbe origina l and only genuin e Red&#13;
Pills are KniJl' s Red Pills for Wan&#13;
People . All other s are imitations .&#13;
Don' t be induce d to pay 5Oo a box&#13;
when you can buy the genuin e at 25c.&#13;
For Male.&#13;
Two 18 inch leathe r horse collars&#13;
open at th e botto m (nearl y new.)&#13;
E. J . BKIGGS .&#13;
Our Milliner y parlor s are flitted up&#13;
and open for inspectio n in the room s&#13;
over the bank. BOYLE &amp; HALSTEAD .&#13;
The Stockbridg e High Schoo l will&#13;
produc e the four-ac t dram a "Stub " or&#13;
"Foo l from Boston " at the oper a house&#13;
in this place on Frida y evening, April&#13;
21. Genera l admission 10 and 15c.&#13;
For Sale.&#13;
Harnden' s Seeds Grow . Don' t&#13;
plan t the m too thick . 3 packages, 5c.&#13;
F. E. WRIGH T&#13;
Nationa l in color and&lt; effect are&#13;
Knill' s Red Pills for Wan People ,&#13;
Knill' s White Liver Pills, and Knill' y&#13;
Kidne y Pills and guarantee d by our&#13;
local Druggists.&#13;
Anderson Farmers ' Clnb .&#13;
The Anderson Farmers ' Club met&#13;
at the hom e of Mr.an d Mrs. J . J. Don -&#13;
obue, Apr. 8. Considerin g th e coo*&#13;
ditior i of tbe roads, a good crowd was&#13;
in attendance , The meetin g opene d&#13;
with a solo by Miss Mae Brogan .&#13;
The business meetin g was the n held&#13;
and this was followed with an instru -&#13;
menta l solo by Miss Florenc e Marble .&#13;
Miss Rosella Deverau x the n enter -&#13;
taine d the compan y with a recitation ,&#13;
A new featur e of our club—a&#13;
questio n box—was the n introduce d&#13;
and th e following question s were&#13;
asked: "What IR your opinio n of th e&#13;
amendmen t tha t the highways be improved&#13;
by th e cities and towns? " and&#13;
"SLould U.--&amp; . Bond s be Taxed? "&#13;
Messrs C. M. Wood, Joh n Harris , F .&#13;
W. Allison and Wm. Roch e comment -&#13;
ed upon these questions . Miss Paci a&#13;
Hinche y the n recite d a selection in her&#13;
pleasing manner , and Miss Kitti e Hoff&#13;
sang a solo. Miss Ma&lt;* Brogan favorably&#13;
rendere d an instrumenta l solo,&#13;
after which the program closed with a&#13;
recitatio n by Miss Brogan .&#13;
The Far m Journa l has nearl y two&#13;
million reader s each issue; it is puttin&#13;
g in a new press tha t will prin t 200&#13;
copies a minute ; it if tbe best farm&#13;
paper in America , and it pleases the&#13;
women folks all to pieces. We have&#13;
mad *&amp; special arrangemen t by which&#13;
we are able to send the Far m Journa l&#13;
five years to every subscriber of the&#13;
Dispatc h who pays all arrearage s and&#13;
a year in advance ; also to all new sub*&#13;
scribers who pay a year ahead .&#13;
WAYNE HOTEL, DETROIT&#13;
AMERICAN AHD EUROPEAN PLAN,&#13;
•a TO 09.BO tt.OO TO 0*.OO t&#13;
8imoum MEAL*. 6Oo« UP TO DAT* GAP**&#13;
Tea Mi l Ion Wbeelmei,&#13;
It is stated by competen t authorit y&#13;
tha t ther e are tea million peopl e in&#13;
America who ar e bicyile rider s&#13;
Probabl y each one j e t s an average it&#13;
one hur t in a season and tjaat its just&#13;
when fienrt ' &amp; Johnson's ' Arnica &amp;&#13;
Oil Linimen t gets in its good', work&#13;
Nothin g has ever been mad e tha t will&#13;
cure a bruise, cut or sprain so quic k&#13;
ly. Also remobe s pimples, sunbur n&#13;
tan or freckles, Clean and nice to&#13;
use. Take it with you. Costs 256&#13;
per bottle . Thre e time s as tnucb , in ' a&#13;
5Oo bottle . WeVeti it and guarante e&#13;
it to give good satisfaction or mone y&#13;
refunded .&#13;
F. A. Sigler.&#13;
HIGGLE BOOKS A Far m Librar y of unequalle d value—Practical ,&#13;
Up-to-date , Concis e and Comprehensive—Hand -&#13;
somely Printe d and Beautifull y Illustrated *&#13;
By JACOB BIOQLE&#13;
No . 1-BIGGL E HORS E BOOK .&#13;
All about Horses—a Common-Sense Treatise, with over&#13;
74 illustrations. a standard work. Price, 50 Cents.&#13;
No . 2-BIQQL E BERR Y BOOK&#13;
All about growing Small Fruits—read and learn how,&#13;
contains 43 colored Hie-like reproductions of all leading&#13;
varieties and 100 other illustrations. Price, 50 Qe&amp;t*.&#13;
No . 3—BKJOLE POULTR Y BOOK&#13;
All about Poultry; the best Poultry Book In j&#13;
tells everything ; with23 colored life-like&#13;
of all the principal breeds; witb 103 other iuustratiooa.&#13;
Price, 50 Cents.&#13;
No. 4-BIOGL E COW BOOK&#13;
All about • • • • W*^-**M« C*^\* owTV sW aMnUMd tWhWe- D* ^ *a* i•r A yJ BWuUsMiMnVesSsV; • hUaW*VltSM I sale; contains 8 colon-d life-like reproductions 4&#13;
breed, with 13a other illustrations. Price, 50 Cestft.&#13;
No . &amp;—BIOGL B SWIN E BOOK&#13;
Just out All about Hoirs—Breeding, Feeding, Batch*&#13;
ery, Diseases, etc. Contains over 80 beautiful n*l£&#13;
tones and other engravings. Price, 50 Cents.&#13;
tfaeBIGGLE BOOKS are tmique,ori^na],usefut-vou never&#13;
saw anything like them—so practical, so sensible. They&#13;
are having »n enormous sale—East, West, North and&#13;
South. Every one who keeps a Hone, Cow, Hog or&#13;
Chicken, or grows Small Fruits, ought to send right&#13;
•way for the BIOQLE BOOKS. The FARM JOURNAL Isvowpaper.toadefaryouaad me « misfit It l i t * years&#13;
ow; it Is the great boiled-down, hit-the-nailon-the-heftd.—&#13;
quttafter-you&amp;ave-said'fc, Starm and Household paper fa&#13;
the worW-the biggest paper of i u size in the United T&#13;
of AJacrfca-^baviug over a million a*i a-faalfrcgulsn&#13;
M r QKB m tte BiGCLE BOOKS, tad Hh. rAilM JODEHAL&#13;
k_^№_^sflsS^A^^B^ft_^^^^^^^^&gt;^^K^K^^S &gt; **f B l ^ . —. - _ __ ^&#13;
Tbe Best Value in&#13;
Magailn e Literatur e&#13;
IS THE&#13;
i&#13;
New and Improved&#13;
FRANK LESLIE'S&#13;
POPULAR MONTHLY&#13;
for a Quarter Century ,&#13;
25 cts. , $3.0 0 a Year. • '&#13;
Now 10 cts., $1.00 a year.'&#13;
Has. Fiux^t LXSUE, Editor.&#13;
Present Contributor*:&#13;
Fran k R. Stockton ,&#13;
Gen . Wesley Merritt ,&#13;
Bret Karte ,&#13;
Sec. of Navy Long,&#13;
Joaqui n Miller,&#13;
Julia C. R. Dorr ,&#13;
Walter Camp ,&#13;
Ecrerto n LJastle,&#13;
Win. C. VanTassel Sutpban ,&#13;
Margare t E. Sang.ster ,&#13;
Edgar Fawcett ,&#13;
Lraise Chandle r Moulton ,&#13;
William Dea n How«lls,&#13;
Gen . Nelso n A. Miles,&#13;
and othe r note d and popula r writers.&#13;
,, frank Leslie's Popular Monthly Is in&#13;
all respects one or the brightest and b»at illustrated&#13;
10-cent ma/azines In the world—noa« better.&#13;
The beet known authors and artists contribute to&#13;
its pages, anil the highest ataudurd of printing is&#13;
apparent.&#13;
SPECIAL:—Beautiful Military Calendar, sir&#13;
sections, each in twelve colors, 10xl2l/ i laches,&#13;
March 1890 to February }900, together with this&#13;
magazine March to December 1809—all for 91.00.&#13;
Fran k Leslie Publishin g House , N . Y.&#13;
Copies Sold and Subscriptions Received bj Newsdealers.&#13;
Railroad Guide.&#13;
tfrand Trun k Rallwar System.&#13;
Time Table in effect, February 5,1898 .&#13;
M, A. L. DIVISION -WESTBOUND.&#13;
No, 27 Psssenper. Pontiao to Jackson&#13;
conut'ttion from Detroit 144 s a&#13;
No. 43 Mixed. Lenox to Jackson&#13;
connection from Detroit 4 46 p m&#13;
All trains daily except Sunday.&#13;
EASThOUND&#13;
No. 30 Passenger to Poatiac and Detroit 5 11 p s»&#13;
No. 44 Mixed to Pontiac and Lenox 7 M a m&#13;
All trains daily except Sunday.&#13;
No. 30 connection at Pontiac for Detroit.&#13;
No 44 connection at Pontiac for Detroit and&#13;
for tb» west on D 4 M R K&#13;
JJ.H.HHghea , W. J. Bla«k,&#13;
A Q P 4 T Agent, Ai^ent,&#13;
Chicago, 111. Pinckney&#13;
AND 9TMAM*HtP UNKMt&#13;
Popula r rout e for Ann Arbor, Toledo&#13;
and point s East , South , an d for&#13;
Howell, Owoeso, Alma, Mt Pleasan t&#13;
Cadillac , Manislee , Traverse City an d&#13;
point s in Northwester n ^ichi*ran .&#13;
W . H . B E N N E T T ,&#13;
(J. P . A, Toled o&#13;
Subscribe for the Dispatch.&#13;
50 YEARS'&#13;
EXPERIENC E&#13;
dtaf a st«tcfa and ,&#13;
optmon fr*« wb&#13;
bfi. Oom&#13;
bookosv&#13;
i- '•::• . &gt;--i&#13;
BRITISH&#13;
MEDICAL INSTITUTE 3 0 3 E. Main St., JACKSON, MICH.&#13;
TREATS ALL DISEASES&#13;
OF MEN AND WOMEN.&#13;
rWrfEi/AVAK iHWE£/NF v"Sitatolirteyd. toO vriggaonrs aonfd&#13;
the body which have been weakened&#13;
through disease, overwork, excess or&#13;
indiscretions, restored to full power,&#13;
strength and vigor by our new and&#13;
original system of treatment.&#13;
HUNDREDS °' testimonials bear iiviiuiitmw evidence of the good&#13;
results obtained from our method of&#13;
treating aU forms of ohronio disease.&#13;
WE TREITMD CURE&#13;
Catarrh, Heart Dams*&#13;
Broncaitk&#13;
Neuralgia,&#13;
Sciatica,&#13;
Lumbago,&#13;
aleW&lt;&#13;
TuflooVt, , . Files, Ffeuh,&#13;
Stenlitv SWtfi D»^*&gt;*^i*m.&#13;
Hatter'Trwbfe, BfaedDfseaca,&#13;
Loai of Vitality, YouthfcU Errors,&#13;
Dyspepsia. Nerrou. TroJ&amp;a,&#13;
WeakocsaofMca.&#13;
GOISUIffaTZOI FBKB. UUMB8 10DMUTB.&#13;
I w i ft to ft. V»t Opra Saator*.&#13;
DR. HAUI IN PERSONAL CHARGE,&#13;
tPMUl HOTiClt Those unable to call should tend&#13;
•tamp for qnestlon blank for home treatment.&#13;
STYLISH, RELIABLE&#13;
ARTISTIC-**&#13;
Recommended by Leading&#13;
Dressmaker*. £ ;&#13;
Tbey 4!w«yi&#13;
MS CALL&#13;
- ^ BAZAR, | PATTERNS&#13;
NONE BETTER AT ANY PRICE&#13;
| y h-ie pattern* are (old In nearly&#13;
»very city *nd town in the United Stlt**.&#13;
If »cur dealer dott not keep them i«nd&#13;
direct,JOUI One cent itampa received.&#13;
Addrcii your nearest point.&#13;
THE McCALL COMPANY,&#13;
13810 146 W Uth Strttt. Ns» Ytrfc&#13;
BRANCH o r n c t s :&#13;
189 Fifth Ave., Chicago, and&#13;
1051 Market St., San Francisco. MS CALLS&#13;
MAGAZINE&#13;
Brlghteit Magaxloe Published&#13;
Contains Beautiful Colored Plates.&#13;
Ilollnusw, tFaainesc yL Wateosrtk P. atterns, Fash*&#13;
Afenn wanted for (bit m*(tiln« ktvrtry&#13;
locality. Beautiful premium! for a. littU&#13;
work. Write for lerrni And other partioulara,&#13;
*iiihi"iptirn nnly 3 Q c . r S S f '&#13;
including * F R E E Pattern. d«« THE McCALL CO.,&#13;
138 to 146 W. 14th St.. N#w Y«rk&#13;
We MakeWHEELS,&#13;
Too!i:&#13;
MILLER RODE ONE2093 MILES IN 132 HOURS \ The Eldredge&#13;
$50.00&#13;
The Belvidere&#13;
$40.00&#13;
&lt;; Superior to all others Irrespective&#13;
!! of price. Catalogue tells you&#13;
why. Write for&#13;
. o-&#13;
Edited by the W.C. T. U. of Pinekaey.&#13;
BROADWAY.&#13;
IACDNEC1.&#13;
Factory,&#13;
MLVIPBRB. RJL.&#13;
Who Shall Fight the Temperance&#13;
Battle.&#13;
One who seeks to interest and&#13;
engage others in active temperance&#13;
work, or to enlist recruits for the&#13;
white ribbon army, finds a variety&#13;
of opinion among the non-active in&#13;
temperance work as to who should&#13;
be expectetl to go to work and&#13;
shoulder this little job, which all&#13;
agree needs so much to be done.&#13;
Or, to put the case less radically,&#13;
it seems to very many as if it&#13;
were the proper ditty and call of&#13;
some, but not of others, to undertake&#13;
some form of protest and&#13;
opposition to the liquor traffic,&#13;
though at the same time they will&#13;
let you know that their common&#13;
senBe,—or, is it their lack of&#13;
faith?—teaches them that it can&#13;
but prove a. hopeless warfare.&#13;
One lady will sweetly hear you&#13;
tell about the manifold opportunities&#13;
for doing valuable temperance&#13;
work along some one or&#13;
other of the various lines of departmental&#13;
work so organized by&#13;
the W C T U that every man, women&#13;
oc child, even the sick in&#13;
their beds, who will, may lend a&#13;
hand to help push the reform&#13;
along. You will suggest a dozen&#13;
different things so easily in her&#13;
power, and urge the awful devastion&#13;
of the drink traffic daily going&#13;
on, and ask her to "join and&#13;
help." What will be the answer?&#13;
Perhaps she will say, "If I had&#13;
any boys, I presume I should be&#13;
very much interested." Or, perhaps,&#13;
"My boys are men now, so&#13;
perfectly free from every such&#13;
habit, I have no fear for them; so&#13;
it does not worry me." Or again&#13;
you will hear: "The temperance&#13;
work and the dreadful liquor traffic&#13;
are so trying to my feelings&#13;
that I cannot bear to attend such&#13;
meetings. I never go to hear&#13;
lectures, even; it upsets me so.&#13;
Of course, we all know how true&#13;
it is." Another will say " I have&#13;
no friends who have ever suffered&#13;
from drink, so I do not feel any&#13;
personal concern." And frequently&#13;
some one will say "There are&#13;
some women in this town who, I&#13;
know, and everybody knows, have&#13;
suffered enough from liquor, and&#13;
I should think you would get&#13;
them into the svork. They ought&#13;
to be interested.&#13;
1 CTTVR* FCnClTORS WANTEP EVKB*&#13;
A WIXI Ut -rf ftvrj of the Phnipines'&#13;
Fy Vnrst P»l*tc»*, coa sii**fri»cl by tb* Govern&#13;
mni »r Offrisl HUiort»B to ih« WarDef»rtin«nt&#13;
Tb* bowk « • • «T«m&gt;1a th« arany cttsapa at fiaa&#13;
rranci*co, &lt;oa-tb« Taelfle with ( soeraJ Mexrit, to&#13;
the b&lt;wvitel» »1BOSD1O)»M» Hoif ttmt, in U&#13;
tb* .&#13;
o»i &lt;tf tb* hml* at&#13;
for *t»»ta. lrtmfml&#13;
MMBA phfteff&#13;
book. ! * • price*.&#13;
UtglvsB. s V a f ^&#13;
Continued Next Week.&#13;
' m i SJ i » _&#13;
From the Sonny South.&#13;
During the past week we received&#13;
a letter from L. C. Tapper&#13;
of Palmyra, Tenn., the following&#13;
being a short extract:&#13;
I have been in the sunny south&#13;
for fonr months and it has&#13;
been a surprise to me, that is the&#13;
weather. In December and January&#13;
it was 22 below zero, but it&#13;
is now warm and the flowers are&#13;
in bloom. Farm work has been&#13;
started and the wages are from&#13;
$8 to $15 a month. Potatoes are&#13;
selling at $1.50 per bu.&#13;
Story off a slave.&#13;
To be bound h&amp;nd and foot for yean&#13;
by tbe chains of disease is the worst&#13;
form of slavepy. George D. Williams,&#13;
of Manchester, Mich., tells how such a&#13;
«lave was made iree. • He says: "JUy&#13;
wife has been so helpless for five years&#13;
that she could not turn over in bed&#13;
atone. After using two bottles of&#13;
Electric BitUrs. *b« is wonderfully&#13;
improved and is abla to do ber own&#13;
work." This supreme remedy for&#13;
male disease* quickly cure* nerv;&#13;
•ett, sleeptaniMss*, melancholy,&#13;
sVAal. haftlra/»h«, fainting&#13;
Additional Local.&#13;
L. Sellman was in Detroit one day&#13;
last week.&#13;
The Glazier Stove Works at Chelsea&#13;
have been gobbled up by a trust, so&#13;
says the A. A. Democrat.&#13;
The road scraper waa kept busy the&#13;
latter part ot last week improving&#13;
some of our village street*.&#13;
The cellar wall of tbe new residence&#13;
of W. H. Docking partly caved in&#13;
last Friday, causing a great deal of&#13;
extra work.&#13;
A man in Chelsea has invented an&#13;
ice making machine which, if a success,&#13;
will do away with harvesting ice&#13;
in the the winter.&#13;
An electria air line railway from&#13;
Ann Arbor to Detroit is talked of at&#13;
the present time. The only stops will&#13;
be Dixboro aud Cherry Hill.&#13;
Last Friday afternoon as Fred Burgess&#13;
was passing the home of V. G.&#13;
Dinkle, he discovered it to be on fire&#13;
in the upright. The inmates were&#13;
notified and by the help of several&#13;
neighbors, a small part of the household&#13;
goods were saved. The house,&#13;
windmill and chicken-coop were destroyed.&#13;
Insurance $800 on the house,&#13;
and $300 on the house.&#13;
Blason Hoorns.&#13;
Her best friend has gone. Last Saturday&#13;
evening Job T. Campbell was&#13;
taken suddenly ill. The disease&#13;
proved to be appendicitis. Dr. Me&#13;
Lean of Detroit performed an operation&#13;
Tuesday. The patient rallied,&#13;
and for. 24 hours his condition was all&#13;
that could be desired. About three&#13;
o'clock Wednesday the change came&#13;
and he failed rapidly' until 7:45&#13;
Thursday morning, when he passed&#13;
away. He will be sadly missed by the&#13;
entire community.—Ingham County&#13;
News.&#13;
Mr. Campbell was born in Onondaga,&#13;
July 9,1855. His early education&#13;
was acquired in the district school,&#13;
his father being a farmer, but by&#13;
energy and push he was climbing to&#13;
the top most round of success. From&#13;
1880 until"" the'"present time he has&#13;
been engaged in newspaper work,&#13;
having been publisher at different&#13;
"THR0W AWAY YOUR BOTTU.&#13;
R'soota "patent" medicine, bat i»&#13;
direct from thefomulaofILR&#13;
Clcvetaad'8 tnort eminent&#13;
O.Ben»on.Ph.IX,B.a BAJS&amp;ENVThegreaU&#13;
c X known restorative and tovigorstor&#13;
for men and women.&#13;
It creates aoUd flesh, nuacto&#13;
and strength, clears the brain,&#13;
makes the blood pure and rich&#13;
and causes a general feeling of&#13;
health, strength and renewed&#13;
vitality, while the generative&#13;
organs are helped to regain&#13;
their normal powers and the&#13;
sufferer ia quickly made conscious&#13;
of direct benefit. One&#13;
box will work wonders, *bc&#13;
should perfects cure. Prepared&#13;
in small sugar coated tablets&#13;
easy to swallow. The days of&#13;
celery compounds,' ttervuraa.&#13;
aarsaparillas and vile liquid&#13;
- . tonics are over. BAR-BEN is&#13;
for sale at aU drag stores, a 60-dose bos for 80&#13;
esnt*, or we will mail it securely sealed on receipt&#13;
O&lt; price, DBS. BARTON AND BENSON,&#13;
494 £axv£en Slock, Cleveland, Q,&#13;
For sale by&#13;
F. A. SIOLER, Druggist.&#13;
Pinckney, - - Mich.&#13;
UNDERTAKER&#13;
AND EMBALMER&#13;
J. G. SAYLES.&#13;
PLAINFIELD, MICH.&#13;
I hold a certificate from&#13;
the Champion Embalming&#13;
College of Springfield, Ohio&#13;
and am prepared to do embalming&#13;
of all kinds.&#13;
A lady assistant for ^embalming&#13;
women and children.&#13;
hulmett&#13;
poauMutu&gt; mvamt THCUDAY momma BY 1&#13;
FRANK L. ANDREWS&#13;
JSdiioramd iJropri4tor.&#13;
Subscription Prtc« $1 in Advance&#13;
at \be Postofflce at Pioclcaey, Michigan,&#13;
aa Moood-clau matter.&#13;
Advertising rates made known on application.&#13;
Business Cards, |4.00 per year. .&#13;
remta and marriage notices published fwe.&#13;
Announcement* ot entertaintnenta may be pal4&#13;
(or, if desired, by presenting the office with tick*&#13;
etc of admission, la case tickets 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 S cents per line ur fraction thereof, for eacfc&#13;
Insertion, where no time is apeciaed, ail notice*&#13;
will be inserted until ordered discontinued, and&#13;
wlil be charged lor accordingly, fc#" All change*&#13;
of advertisement* MUST reach this office ae earl*&#13;
as TDKSDAT morning. to insure an Insertion th*&#13;
same week.&#13;
JOZ PRTJVI IMG /&#13;
In all its branches, a specialty. We have aU kind*&#13;
and the latest styles o/Type, etc., wuioh enables&#13;
u« io execute aU kinds oil work, such an Books,&#13;
Pamplets, Posters, Programme*, Bill Heads, Mot*&#13;
Heads, Statement*, Cards, Auction Bill*, etc., la&#13;
superior style*, upon the shortefct notice. Prices aa&#13;
o&lt;v aa good work can be acme.&#13;
«.LL BILLS FAYABLK Kilt-iT Otf &amp;VHU.Y MONTH.&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIRECTORY,&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
. ..—... &lt;Ue&amp;. Mclatyre&#13;
K. L. Thompson, Altre« Monica,&#13;
Daniel Richards, neo. Bowman, riaiuuel&#13;
Sykea, f. 1&gt;. Johnson.&#13;
CLKBX «... R. H. Teeple&#13;
TBEAUDBBU ~ W. E. Murphy&#13;
ASSESSOR W, A. Carr&#13;
*ra*BT COMMISSION-Bii Geo. Burck&#13;
MABKAHL L&gt;. W, ilurta&#13;
HKALTUOPFICSB lit. a. K.SUler&#13;
ATTORSKY . . ^ . . W. A. Carr&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
VfETHODlST EPISCOPAL CHURCH.&#13;
1U. Kev. Chas. Simpaon, pastor. Services every&#13;
Sunday morning at lo.id, and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:00 o'clock. Prayer meeting Thursday&#13;
evenings. Sunday school at close of morning&#13;
service. F. L. Andrews, Supt.&#13;
O L CUUftCH.&#13;
\J Kev. C. W. Kice pastor. Service every&#13;
Sunday morning at 10:30 and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:0C o'clock. Prayer meeting Thursday&#13;
evenings. Suadiy school at close of morn-&#13;
Lnir service. B. 11. Tee pie , -&gt;iipL lUa Kail, Sec .&#13;
ST. JIAKtf'S'JATHOUC'CHUtfOlI.&#13;
Kev. Al. J. Comuidriord, 1'aitor. .Services&#13;
every Sunday. Low mass at 7:30 o'clock&#13;
high mass with sermon at 'J:ftja. m. Catechism&#13;
at 3:00 p. in., vespers ana benediction at 7 ;&lt;U) p.m.*&#13;
SOCIETIES;&#13;
Cham be rial u'« Ci&gt;a«rn&#13;
This remedy is intended especially&#13;
f of ~co'u glis, eoTds, cfoup, whocTpin«•&#13;
cough and influenza. It has become&#13;
famous for its cures of these diseases&#13;
rphe A. O. H. Society of ttiia place, rnaeta every&#13;
1 third Sunday iu tue Kr. Matthew Hall.&#13;
John McGuiue#8, Count/ Delegate,&#13;
pinckn«y Y. P. S. C. E. Meetiu^a held e?ery&#13;
ITSunday evening ia Con^'l cUurolj at 6.\) ('clock&#13;
Mi*i Be««ie Cordlsy, Pres. Mable Darker Sec&#13;
EPWOIITH LliAUUE. Meets every&#13;
eveningat «:(Woclock in the .U. K. Caurch.&#13;
dil i k&#13;
Sunday&#13;
g A&#13;
cordial tuvitatkon is exK-ti.tetf to evuryoue, e*pedally&#13;
young people. Mra. stglU (irxiiam Prea.&#13;
tinies of the LESLIE LOCAL, and the \ over a large part of the civilized&#13;
world. Tha most flittering testimonials&#13;
have been received giving account&#13;
of its tfood work; of the aggravating&#13;
and persistent coughs it has cured; of&#13;
severe colds' that have yielded promptly&#13;
to its sooLhing effects and of the&#13;
dangerous attacks of croup it has&#13;
cured, often saviug the life of the&#13;
child. The extensive use of it for&#13;
.PINCKNEY DISPATCH and at his demise,&#13;
editor of the Ingham County News.&#13;
Mr. Campbell has held many offices&#13;
of trust while in Leslie and at his&#13;
late home in Mason. From 1893—97&#13;
he was member of the bouse of Kepresentatives.&#13;
A wife, four brothers, and two sisters&#13;
with a large circle of friends&#13;
are left to mourn tbeir loss.&#13;
Verily, a bright light has gone out.&#13;
Important Notice!&#13;
We, the undersign, do herby agree&#13;
to refund 25 cents the price of any&#13;
Box of Kniirs Bed Pills for Wan&#13;
whooping cough has shown that it&#13;
robs disease of all dangerous consequenoes.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler.&#13;
Tuiiior Ei&gt;vorlii Lea^ue^&#13;
cordially invitwi.&#13;
fclditti&#13;
every Sunday&#13;
; » All&#13;
S.iperi;it«Q«Jent. rieC. T. A.andb.&#13;
ever/ third Saturday evening iu&#13;
thewHall.&#13;
of this p!a&#13;
the Vt. Matlace,&#13;
meet&#13;
g&#13;
John l&gt;onohuti, J-resident.&#13;
KN&#13;
M&#13;
NIGUTS OP MACCABEES.&#13;
eetevery Friday evening on or before foil&#13;
of the IHOOD at their hall iu the tSwarthout bldg.&#13;
Visiting brothers are cordially invited.&#13;
CHAS. U4MPBKI,L, Sir Knight Commander&#13;
Livingston Lodge, No. 7*5, ? h. A, M. , .&#13;
Communication Tuesday evening, on or&#13;
thefuli of the moon. Alexander Molntyre, W. M.&#13;
RDER OF EASTEUN "S I'AK meets each month&#13;
MKS."M.VI;Y IUAU, W. M. '&#13;
" | U the Friday&#13;
&amp;A.M. meeting,&#13;
A WHEKE for '-The Story of tn« Philippines.'1&#13;
by Murat Halatasd, commissioned by the Govern,&#13;
ment as Oiticial Historian to the War Department,&#13;
The book was written in army camps at&#13;
p f l r t n i . p » I a «MW W J I O U D a / , B i « *.u„„ I San FrancUco, on the Pacific with General Merritt. People, rale and Weak Feople, they i n the hoepitais at Honolulu, in Hop* Koa?, in&#13;
rft^tnrft V im Vie»nr And Vifalirtr the American treuchee at Manilla, in the inturrestore&#13;
Vim, Vigor, a n d V Itallty. ~ u t 9 camps wilh Aguinaldo, on tue deck of the&#13;
•Olympia with Dewey. and io tUe roar of tbe battle&#13;
at the iall or Manilla. Bonanza for agent*. Brimful&#13;
of pictures taken by gorerumeut photographers&#13;
on the spot. Lar^e' book. Low prices. Big&#13;
profits. Freight paid. Credit £iren. Drop all&#13;
trashy unofficial war books Outdt free. Address.&#13;
F. T. Barber, Sec'y. Star Insurance Bldg. Chicago.&#13;
Knill's White Liver Pills, Knilfa&#13;
Blue Kidney Pills, or Knill's Dyspepsia&#13;
Tablets, if purchaser is dissatisfied.&#13;
Only Warranted 25 cent&#13;
preparations on the market.&#13;
WILL CURLETT, DEXTER&#13;
WILL B. DABROW, PIXCKNEY&#13;
This miracle working aedi*&#13;
eiie k • godt«ad to weaJk, siokly, r u&#13;
ion people. Erery bokUt&#13;
Omly&#13;
Rena ikable Rescue.&#13;
Mrs. Michael Curtain, Plainfietd 111.&#13;
makes the statement, that she caught&#13;
cold, which settled on her lungs; she&#13;
was treated for a month by her family&#13;
physician, but grew worse. He told&#13;
&amp;he was a hopeless victim of consmption&#13;
and that no medicine could enre&#13;
her Her druggist suggested Dr.&#13;
Kings New Discovery for Consumption;&#13;
she bought a bottle and to ber&#13;
delight found herself benefitted from&#13;
first dose. She continued its use and&#13;
after taking six bottles, found herself&#13;
sound and well; cow does her own&#13;
hou*e work,,acd is as well as she erer&#13;
.—Free trial bottles of this Great&#13;
i6covery at F. A. Siftl«r'« Drug Store.&#13;
Only SOcents and $1.00, erer/ bottto&#13;
goar ran teed.&#13;
1 have been afflicted with rheumatism&#13;
for fourteen years and nothing&#13;
seemed to give any relfef. I was able&#13;
to be around ali the time, but coostantlv&#13;
suffering. I had tried everything&#13;
I could hear of and at last was&#13;
told to try Chamberlain's Pain Balm&#13;
which I did and was immediately relieved&#13;
and in a short time cured. I&#13;
am happy to say that it has not since&#13;
returned.—Josh Edgar, Germantown,&#13;
Cal For sale by P. A. Sigler.&#13;
Act on a new _&#13;
regulate the iitar, «*&lt;*"» | A&#13;
aid towels thwuaktS&#13;
nerves. Da. Mnjtf P o u&#13;
ipeedil* curt bUkwinmaj&#13;
'torpiA ifot $MA trwfiiffttton.&#13;
SmtilMfc nilltiw^.&#13;
Rev. E. £d wards, pastor of the&#13;
English Baptist church at Minersville.&#13;
Pa^ wnen suffering with rheumatism&#13;
was adjrhed to try Chamberlains Pain&#13;
BaUn. Re says: "A few applications&#13;
of ikm liniment prored of great serrice&#13;
to me. It 8uM«ea the inffamatioa&#13;
relieved (In pai*. Sbouid any sufferer&#13;
trial if&#13;
F. A .&#13;
T AD1E-J OF THE MACCAP.iiKS. AiW. every 1st&#13;
I 4 and -'ird Saturday &lt;jf eacuuiouth at 'i:'ib p m. at&#13;
K.. O. T. M. hall. VisitiUjj sister* oriia4ly ia&#13;
vited. LILA CosiWAif Lady Com.&#13;
KNIGHTS OK THK LOYA1. GUARD&#13;
meet every second Wednesday&#13;
eveniug of every mouthiuthe K. O.&#13;
T, M. Hall at Ts'lOo'clock. All visiting&#13;
Guards welcome.&#13;
A&amp;SKLL, Capt. G«&#13;
W. C. T. U. rueets the first Friday of eack&#13;
L month at i:80 p. m. at tne home of Or. H. F.&#13;
Sigler. Everyone interested ia temperance ia&#13;
coadtally invited. Mrs. '^eal Siller, Pres; Sfr*.&#13;
Ktta Durfce, Secretary.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
H, F. SIGLER M.f&gt; C. L, SIOLER M, D&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
Physicians and Surgeons. All calls prompt!&#13;
attended to day or uight. Office on Malnstr&#13;
Pinckney. Mich.&#13;
DR. A, B, GREEN.&#13;
DKNTiSr—Every Taursd»y and Friday&#13;
Offio» over Sigler'a Drug Store.&#13;
v &gt;•*' ?&#13;
03&#13;
v&#13;
flu&#13;
&gt;&#13;
I&#13;
9&#13;
a&#13;
2&#13;
Have you a library? If so, mhj not&#13;
*et labels like this for your&#13;
Priated taaoat styU with yoar&#13;
i l t b e hfauU apaot at th* ~&#13;
ptrKNL&#13;
• №&#13;
V '•&#13;
iff&#13;
V." '.&#13;
:$.!/« •••..:'&lt;» i&#13;
\ • _ ; • &gt; • ».-• ••.v&#13;
iv,-&#13;
ginehfty&#13;
FINCKNEY,&#13;
L. AXDUKWS, Publisher&#13;
• " • MICHIGAN.&#13;
FA MX AND GABDEN.&#13;
MATTERS OP INTBRB8T&#13;
AQRICUVTUJItSTS.&#13;
T O&#13;
Theatrical angels rush la where wise&#13;
men fear td tread.&#13;
The golden rule measures&#13;
twelve inches to the foot.&#13;
exactly&#13;
When a man reaches the end of his&#13;
collateral he la pawn-broke.&#13;
8otn«Up-to-D«t« Hfc_t« About ©oltiVAtton&#13;
•* tfee lUtl and Yield*&#13;
Th«r**f—^Ho-rUeBlfttr* TllleeUare and&#13;
Only those on the lower part of the&#13;
wheel are In favor of revolutions.&#13;
The average burlesque actress is simply&#13;
what the name would Indicate.&#13;
If a man speaks and acts as hit conscience&#13;
dictates he Is culled a crank.&#13;
If a girl will not marry when she&#13;
may she may not marry when she&#13;
Mill.&#13;
Lots of men who imagine1 they have&#13;
a literary bent soon find themselves&#13;
broke.&#13;
Occasionally we meet a man whose&#13;
mind Is go weak that it can't even&#13;
wander,&#13;
The yourg husband forsakes hl3 club&#13;
during the honeymoon—unless he's a&#13;
policeman.&#13;
It occasionally happens that a man&#13;
dislocates his common sense when he&#13;
falls in love.&#13;
Bigamist Bates wants to mnrry&#13;
again. Some people never learn any*&#13;
thing by experience.&#13;
A soft answer turneth away wrath,&#13;
but a wrathful answer doesn't always&#13;
turn away the soft individual.&#13;
The Cuban assembly evidently does&#13;
not care how many good thing* get&#13;
away from the Cuban soldiers.&#13;
As the Oom Paul of the Sam&lt;K»B cMS«&#13;
trlct old Mr. Mataafa has found life&#13;
exciting but more or less uncertain.&#13;
MottlM U Bfttten&#13;
An old problem aot yet solved,&#13;
writes H. K. Qronbeek in N. Y. Produce&#13;
Review. Yean of crusade against&#13;
them by dairy papers. an&gt;d butter sellers,&#13;
and still mottles- we-*&gt; plentiful&#13;
as ever. The-.cause J.;t •&amp;$. syot claim&#13;
to know it. DHterent theories have&#13;
been advanced by different authorities&#13;
in the dairy world. Perhaps some&#13;
of them are correct, Vitt ?vore than&#13;
possible they are alt wore or less misleading.&#13;
Uneven distribution of salt&#13;
one says, and this perhaps is most frequently&#13;
supposed to bf the cause. And&#13;
probably uneven distribution of salt&#13;
does cause mottles sometimes, but I&#13;
know it does not cause mottles all the&#13;
time. We are also told that mottles&#13;
make their appearance when the butter&#13;
is not salted at all, so we must&#13;
look for other causes of mottles. Uaeven&#13;
distribution of the color, or ,of&#13;
the mud in the color perhap3. But also&#13;
here we are told that mottles appeal&#13;
where ne color is used. Other theories&#13;
have been advanced: feed, frozen milk,&#13;
make of separator, richness of cream,&#13;
temperatures of cream, butter or room*&#13;
all of which are more or less ridiculous.&#13;
Uneven distribution of mottles&#13;
I shall not try to argue, but will guarantee&#13;
that if the mottles are worked&#13;
evenly Into the butter, they will disappear.&#13;
Aad -the thought may be&#13;
nearer the truth than it appears to be&#13;
at first sight, at least in the. absence&#13;
of a known cause it does well, and&#13;
Prof. Storch of the experiment laboratory&#13;
in Copenhagen ventured the opinion&#13;
that mottles might be of bacteriological&#13;
origin. So much for the&#13;
cause. How to prevent is hard to say&#13;
until the cause is better known, but&#13;
if mottles do make their appearance in&#13;
your butter, I know of only one way&#13;
to make them disappear,' distribute&#13;
them evenly, work your butter more—&#13;
work it until the mottles disappear.&#13;
Uttble except 01 a small scale: aad&#13;
often it cannot be profitably followed,&#13;
even on a small scale, because of the&#13;
coat 6* the labor involved U handling&#13;
and hauling of leaves, muck, and&#13;
other coarse and crude material!. (2)&#13;
The other, and most practicable&#13;
method, and one that is adapted to any&#13;
scale of operations, is regular rotation&#13;
of crops, including tmall grain,&#13;
red clover, cowpeaa, or other renovating&#13;
crop. A judicious, well-managed&#13;
rotation may be made profitable every&#13;
stage and every crop, as well as&#13;
profitable In the lots, run.&#13;
I- THB&#13;
A moralistic failure is a. m\ a._n who&#13;
gives you-advice about getling on in&#13;
the world, then winds up by striking&#13;
you for a loan.&#13;
Idolrmaking 1B one o( the most comlaon&#13;
arts of man. Like the Hottentots,&#13;
we can make a god out of almost anything;&#13;
yea, and worse than they do,&#13;
we may even worship ourselves.&#13;
Cora C«itujff.&#13;
A bulletin of the GeoT^Sa station&#13;
says:&#13;
Corn delights in a deep, mellow, rich&#13;
and moist loam. Any of the ordinary&#13;
soils of the country that are either&#13;
naturally of the above characters, or&#13;
can be brought into the required condition&#13;
by proper—rotation, deep and&#13;
Edna May in London declares that&#13;
she cantifet get along wHtb her husband&#13;
In San Francisco. Under, the circumstances,&#13;
jurft think what a terrible&#13;
time she would have if they happened&#13;
to be ia the «ame city som* titeet&#13;
All real and wholesome enjoyments&#13;
possible to man have been just as possible&#13;
to him since, first he was made&#13;
of the earth, as they are now; and they&#13;
are possible to him chiefly is peace. To&#13;
watch the corn grow, and the bloa-&#13;
«om set, to draw hard breath over the&#13;
plowshare and spade, to read, to think,&#13;
to love, to pray—these are the things&#13;
to make men happy; they have always&#13;
had' the power of doing these—they&#13;
never will have power to do more.-&#13;
Buskin.&#13;
Qtteen Victoria's will is described as&#13;
engrossed on vellum, quarto site, and&#13;
•bound as a volume. When the queen's&#13;
&lt;5eatto makes the document a practical&#13;
issue; will some one rise to offer the&#13;
etock objections of "unsound mind"&#13;
and "undue influence?" The process&#13;
would be £* more absurd than the&#13;
proceedings in our probate courts,&#13;
where the wishes of testators are so&#13;
often Ignored. One almost 4nfers that&#13;
It has become an axiom in probate&#13;
that * man who has showa good sense&#13;
and % sound.mind i t 'iys accumulation&#13;
of wealth is quite uaeqaal to the&#13;
task of directing vhat disposition shall&#13;
be made ot hi* .c/.-ney after; his death.&#13;
The wise way for men to do is to give&#13;
their property Ja frist before death&#13;
deprives them of option in the dlspocition&#13;
of i t&#13;
t/ropc That &amp;»»• Fertility.&#13;
No crop in thl3 section of the country&#13;
takes the precedence of corn, writes&#13;
a Nebraska contributor to Wallace's&#13;
Farmer. It is so abundant and so&#13;
abundantly useful. I do not know of&#13;
any other crop that can be used for&#13;
so many purposes. It makes good human&#13;
food and admits of being prepared&#13;
in so many ways. I don't know&#13;
of any other crop that will supply the&#13;
wants of our domestic animals so completely&#13;
as the corn crop. The entire&#13;
plant fed to cattle or sheep makes an&#13;
admirable fattening ration, supplying&#13;
both grain and rough feed of the&#13;
highest quality. Do not fail to have&#13;
a good corn crop. Then concentrate&#13;
it as much as possible into the most&#13;
marketable product, butter or meat,&#13;
before it leaves the farm. Next to&#13;
corn, if not equal to it, is sorghum,&#13;
drilled in with the ordinary grain drill&#13;
at the rate of three pecks to one bushel&#13;
of seed to the acre. No one will believe&#13;
the amount of good feed for any&#13;
kind of stock this will produce until&#13;
they try it for themselves. Then comes&#13;
peas and oats sown together. I differ&#13;
from many in the amount of seed to&#13;
be sown in this combination. I think&#13;
mostly too many oats are sown for&#13;
the peas. I prefer one and one-half&#13;
to two bushels of peas to not more&#13;
than three pecks of oats per acre. Do&#13;
not let the peas become too ripe before&#13;
cutting. My crop of peas and oats&#13;
seeded in the above proportions yielued&#13;
last season over four tons per acre.&#13;
Fan can Attacks pn Cedar Trees.&#13;
From Farmers' Review: Anyone&#13;
years the cedar trees of the Agricultural&#13;
College grounds have been attacked&#13;
by the well known brown fungus,&#13;
the so-called cedar apple (Gynmospornnginus&#13;
macropus). SonSe four&#13;
years ago the department of horticulture&#13;
began hand picking the fungous&#13;
growth on certain groups of trees to&#13;
determine Whether or not by this&#13;
means the attacks could be reduced&#13;
and injury prevented. From that time&#13;
till the present these trees have been&#13;
careiuiiy gone over several times each&#13;
year and the fungus removed from&#13;
them, it has not, with, very few exceptions,&#13;
been allowed to reach tfee&#13;
apore bearing stage. There has. however,&#13;
been no diminution of the attack.&#13;
The disease appears as vigorous&#13;
at the present times as at any&#13;
time in the past. The trees are more&#13;
thrifty than they would have been had&#13;
the fungus been allowed to grow undistributed,&#13;
but they are no freer from&#13;
the disease than others that have had&#13;
no attention. Cedars can not be freed&#13;
from this disease by hand picking, at&#13;
least if there are other trees of the&#13;
same species In the neighborhood that&#13;
are untreated.&#13;
W. L. HALL.&#13;
Kansas Agl. College.&#13;
by&#13;
•?*1 Lewis'43m—.&#13;
Pe-ru-oa Drug Mfg. Co.; Columbus, 0.:&#13;
"Gentlemen—I have used Pe-ru-na&#13;
for a short time and can cheerfully rec&#13;
ommend it as being all you represent&#13;
.and wish every man who Is suffering&#13;
•with catarrh could know of its great'&#13;
value. Should I at any future time&#13;
have occasion to recommend a treat&#13;
way&#13;
Eo». James Lewi*. Surveyor General of L*oUUna.&#13;
ment of your kind, res$«, assured that&#13;
yours will be the 4oe.' v "&#13;
"Gratefully yours,&#13;
"JAMBS LEWIS/'&#13;
Wherever the catarrh Is, there Is sure&#13;
to be a waste of mucus. The mucus Is&#13;
asi'precious as blood. It is-blood, in&#13;
fact It is blood plasma—blood with&#13;
the corpuscles removed. To stop this&#13;
waste, you must stop this catarrh. A&#13;
coarse of treatment with Pe-ru-na&#13;
never fails to do this.&#13;
Send for free catarrh book. Address&#13;
The Pe-ru-na Drug&#13;
Con; Columbus, Ohio.&#13;
Manufacturing&#13;
OpttmlHm—.fhe philosophy with which we regarft&#13;
ouraelvvs. - '&#13;
8ft.&#13;
Snobbishness is held up to ridicule&#13;
by London Truth. A recent occurrence&#13;
ia England prompted its derision. The&#13;
children of ak orphan asylum at Derby&#13;
•w&lt;rre inviteti by s^igpathetlc frleudd to&#13;
attend a fc*al expert,-a*d war^. of&#13;
course, delighted at the prospect But&#13;
the children ot the poOfhonse were&#13;
also invited,-and imtended %p be present,&#13;
whereupon thf manager of the orphanage&#13;
declined. to permit Uie children&#13;
of that 4astitatlon to $b*tm&#13;
the atttkij^ted eHJorment. His&#13;
hlbition was based on&#13;
thorough preparation and liberal manuring,&#13;
and can be maintained in this&#13;
condition by frequent and thorough&#13;
surface culture, will produce satisfactory&#13;
yields ot corn, with a moderate,&#13;
Well-distributed rainfall. Perhaps the&#13;
most essential requirement for an&#13;
ibundfcnt yield of cOflf is plenty oC&#13;
moisture in' the son. Without til's&#13;
plenty of moisture, such a yield is ab-&gt;&#13;
$rijut«ly impracticable. Jt is-not tndJ&#13;
«peBsabta that tti« moisture shall bo&#13;
supplied Erectly by Abundant rains&#13;
during the period of the__grow4k of the&#13;
crop, but the requirement, must be met&#13;
In some way. The supply of moisture&#13;
ffom rainfalls may be supplemented,&#13;
or entirely substituted, by irrigation,&#13;
as is done In arid and sexrfl-arid. regions;&#13;
or the farmer may trust to the&#13;
clouds for a generous supply; but the ruo ti«* p««ch H.ODM.&#13;
demand for moisture must be met. F a r m e r 8 . Review: For a number of&#13;
cr the crop w|U be more or less a w h o w l u ^ , n n e e d o f lailure. '&#13;
Without resorting to expensive irrisation&#13;
methods, and not willing to rely&#13;
on the rainfall froisa the heaven* the&#13;
farmer may select the low-lyingj naturally&#13;
moist axtf deep soils, akxig the&#13;
water-courses—the "bottom -lands."*&#13;
These soils are moUter than the* uplands,&#13;
not solely because oC their toping&#13;
lower, and near a vater«co«r*e.&#13;
but—and very chiefly—because of their&#13;
great depth" and their loamy character,&#13;
or large content of humus, or decayed&#13;
vegetable matter. These soils&#13;
become thoroughly saturated with&#13;
moisture during the winter and spring&#13;
rains, and on account o t tbeir .deptlr&#13;
and quantity of humus, they retain&#13;
the moisture during u much longer&#13;
period.&#13;
In the absence ot such soils, if the&#13;
farmer wishes to produce- "'regularly&#13;
profitable crops oX-coro, he must bring&#13;
his uplands, as nearly as practicable,&#13;
into the condition of the loamy, bottom&#13;
lands. Moisture, moisture, i* the&#13;
prime essential, and moisture lie must&#13;
provide, or he will, certain ly fall of *&#13;
crop, if the cjouis withhold their a.pcu2tomed&#13;
supply. Every in&amp;lijpest j&#13;
farmer understands the ifaportaqte g{&#13;
deep and thorough breaking ofvytfce&#13;
STATE OF OHIO, CITY or TOLEDO, I&#13;
LUCAS COUNTY-, .(&#13;
KttANK J. CHKNRY makes oath that he is the&#13;
Bonier partner ot the tirra of F. J. CHI-NEY &amp; Co.,&#13;
dolne business in the City of Toledo, County ana&#13;
State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay,the&#13;
su_jffof OWE HVSfORliD DOLLARS for «.ach&#13;
ancr every case of CATAUKH mat cannot x&gt;$&#13;
curtd by the use of HAT..."8 CATAWtfi CTTRE.&#13;
PRANK J. CHENEY.&#13;
Sworn to before me and subnorlbed in my&#13;
presence, this 6th day of December. A. D. 1886.&#13;
B_|AL A. VV. GLEASON,&#13;
qtsswitsa ffHtlu- W r i t * to&#13;
to which pfltoespeclallxfow zaies are.&#13;
being, q u o t ^ o V e r a U ^ t n e s of rallyour&#13;
letto the 14th.&#13;
d no snow tift after&#13;
e cattle have been,&#13;
are all in good&#13;
g now. That&#13;
about 6 inchesn&#13;
we&gt;&#13;
crop&#13;
drift*&#13;
right,&#13;
avier&#13;
never&#13;
the ct.!d when"** take&#13;
. the *%m -igalrtftl.it they&#13;
do ia Illinois. ' U ha»&lt;^-&lt;rozon in the&#13;
'stable this winter. -Ti?»t mp_rt cf the&#13;
stock run* out, but ^ # a ; % 4 f l need&#13;
•of it, for timber is f№&amp;$T(l!'wMt there&#13;
is.no expense to build good stables and&#13;
*"" "*' have geqcl leg trojises and&#13;
are very warm. Two men can&#13;
a house 16x24 In two days.&#13;
Tfc6iVare good rails for fences. We&#13;
ifrflf'ljfO,miles &amp;q$i the coal district,&#13;
the price being from 56 cents up to-&#13;
I2.G0. ^ e land is a tcry^rlch, loamy&#13;
soil, from 6 inches to several feet la&#13;
depth; the hills have the 4eep*st. It&#13;
i* a, rpJHng country, and ^ccetHPt for&#13;
BtocH of^ll ki&amp;d^-abeep 3&amp;&gt; Wtn, and&#13;
there ace pj-ntfj-qf si^all lake* where&#13;
_Lk__.-^'-_b.*-L_L « i • ' - • • * . _ . &lt; -^r " . . . . _ mm*•_ __&#13;
4«ltto&#13;
Caa" get ^ood water; The&#13;
•.ou t of &amp;*** Jasl^ear, about&#13;
ff-mt ^rll.-atid run at large;&#13;
unless fn "cbirge © f a herdsman, wehave&#13;
tt&gt; fence agaUxst them. Wheat&#13;
goe« from^u KT60 butdlels pp er ^&#13;
oa*s 80 Jo 90, verv^ften over a hunddrreedd,&#13;
Xs:t^ pott ihb&#13;
l&#13;
'&#13;
^:t^ potatoes a. neighbor&#13;
planted 7 bushels' and dug 226 bushel*&#13;
and no^tSuga. Roots of all kinds do»&#13;
well. There are lots of strawberrle*&#13;
arid lots of red raspberries, black and&#13;
red currants, and goo_teb*rfie_., wherethe&#13;
fire has not burnt them. Cattl*&#13;
are scarce. I, have been tryinfe to buysome&#13;
for 8 itonths and have got onlythree&#13;
two-year-old, v*d paid1430 each.&#13;
Hogs jlre Jbt b t Th&#13;
H»lTs Catarrh C&lt;«je Is ta-ttn Internally, . . . ^&#13;
actn directly on,tb^ blood and mucous sun&amp;cefc&#13;
of t|ie wyttem.- BgTid for u»ttB|Pj-iUfji. free. '/' *&#13;
F. J. CHENEY &amp;, CO., Toledo, 0-&#13;
Spld by Drt-tjriKtH, 7lc. ,.'. \f&#13;
Hall's Family PUU lire the tept. .' &gt;&#13;
Advice—Something that is easy to give, but&#13;
.Jprlc.es&#13;
tlen&#13;
•Hsslt h and&#13;
C Ne«o« b. ejaouutry *wj*itth*m p im«npdle k•kei«np. Idtu clll eeayne iw. ibtha d frbarg»r»athn.t C-u-dhruU C*ndy Cathartic! All druirfrlaU, 10c, *Bc, bic'.&#13;
Charles II spent much, time iA W-t chcnieali&#13;
labftotory. v&#13;
I T S r»rtnitD«DtljrCaivU . KofiMorDtrron*Q««aaf W&#13;
tlm' * ^ W 99. •MiMb t 6r«* t K«r**R«ate«r .&#13;
gMr f f»rFI l in.ff||..MMtt((- -»»ll bboottttffee aanndd ttrrccffttUUaa**&#13;
D l L U KUKK. Ltd..931 Arch St.. PWladWphi*. B%.&#13;
Fox, the orator, found his greatest pleasure&#13;
la gambling, , , . ;&#13;
Pico's Cure for Corwumptum in the only&#13;
cough medicine u*qd In my houae. D. C. Albright,&#13;
Mifflinburg. Pa., Dec. 11, ffc.&#13;
Queen Victoria, during her youth, was fond&#13;
of archery.&#13;
Br"oSwunm'*m Ter- *Ctio»miap»l aCinotn**i l»a*l _w aan t fe«nuourd tloo ccahri*l diLren natll&#13;
Socrates wai said to be the ugliest maa of his&#13;
time.&#13;
oparce, Jbut pan be got. They&#13;
«^H' for 6&lt;*nttf (freesed, fcnd coat taore&#13;
tor stocker8. Wheat ^0 cents per bu.,&#13;
oats 25 cents, eggs 30 cents a dozen,&#13;
buttei*15 and 20 cent*, poultry was 10&#13;
and 11. cents dretsstd. Sheep are&#13;
scarce. If you come, bring your fana&#13;
tools, Tiut bring no seeders; we use&#13;
drills. Bring cows, but do not bring:&#13;
horj.es unless you are an experienced&#13;
hand in shipping them, for so many of&#13;
them are hurt in shipping. There will&#13;
be plenty of work for a binder. Two&#13;
good horses Fill bre«k, Uut three lighter&#13;
are bett«\ The fcorseS you get here&#13;
can w'onlr.without grain, but are better&#13;
It will be hard to tell what&#13;
es willj^evfor thqjjpmigrabe&#13;
very largge dm -icomlngg&#13;
spring. They could be had last spring-&#13;
__•• JL _____ _^_a __L _k __ _•_•_•• • __. ^ V P ^ _ % _. _• &gt; _ • . __. 1 • — ^ B - . . _ A fe _ ' H__ _ * _ _i one time.—They ciahn the Vest tlma~&#13;
to break is June, but my experienceis&#13;
to break in the spring and work it.&#13;
You can break till the middle of July.&#13;
It is the only cure for Swollen^&#13;
Smartisgr.'-Burning, Sweatl&amp;f? Feet,&#13;
Corn* and Bunioas. Ask for Allen 'a-&#13;
Foot Base, a povrder to be shaken into&#13;
the shoes. At all Druggists and Shoe&#13;
Stores, 25c Samples sent FREE," Addreta,&#13;
All** &amp; Olm»tedr U R o j. N. Y.&#13;
BxaUon, *Uayt p*la. carat wind eolie. 15 matia bottl*.&#13;
r p o l i ce c o u rt j u d g e 's e q u i v a l e nt&#13;
for tlO o r t e a t - a y * . • • • • • * ^ *&#13;
two years hence, will&#13;
procure pits at once from some nursery&#13;
supply company. Fall is the proper&#13;
time for stratifying the pits in the&#13;
sand, but if done now there may still&#13;
be enough freezinr weather to loosen&#13;
the shells so thai they will germinate&#13;
readily enough in the spring Plant&#13;
the seeds In straight narrow furrows&#13;
three feet apart, covering them about&#13;
two inches deep. Keep the seedlings&#13;
well cultivated during summer, and by&#13;
August they will be half an inch in&#13;
diameter and ready to be budded. It&#13;
unacquainted with this operation you&#13;
may be able to make arrangements&#13;
with the Horticultural Department4 of&#13;
the Kansas Agricultural College to&#13;
furnish you with an experienced budder.&#13;
By this means a l*rge number of&#13;
trees may be obtained at slight cost&#13;
The Horticultural Department has prepared&#13;
a printed price list of the vines,&#13;
fruit trees, shade trees and ornamental&#13;
shrubs that can be disposed of in&#13;
the spring. It will be mailed to any&#13;
one in the state upon request.&#13;
C. P. HARTLEY.&#13;
Agricultural College.&#13;
THE ; ^ i ••" .&#13;
MARKS OF&#13;
SUFFERING&#13;
•oi l early in the sprlog, or even^vafr*&#13;
Ikr., Not so many appreciate tbt¥l#fport*&#13;
oce of ftafttf die «eii; bytattfoc&gt;Mr&#13;
the tl»&#13;
paupers, Vilh. wliojp h«* did not wiak&#13;
• A ' • ^ " . + ^ _L ' . ^ . A mC * _. __ ' • " the Umiatds of th« orphanage to&#13;
elate. As both .orphanage and poorattempt&#13;
at drawing.. Che Uaf aad ladocinf&#13;
one class ot unfortunates to&#13;
look down upon another as. tbeii aodal&#13;
telerkws seems, to- Truth, like&#13;
until the clods diUppear&#13;
It is *l#o desinMe to&#13;
a U» _ • * • • . friaWe&#13;
»*t*l0*A*lly the superficial&#13;
'&gt;'-r&#13;
more valuable aa4 oclr p«ri&#13;
effective ^ ft t&#13;
: A Long-Nosed Hog.—But a furrow ift&#13;
a furrow no matter whether made by&#13;
a fcingle or double-board plow, or by&#13;
^ ^ Arkansas rasor-back hog that can&#13;
potatoes from the third row&#13;
life a crack in the fence—a kind&#13;
e | swine that the Arkansas farmer lifu&#13;
br the ears to see If it is fat enough&#13;
tb kill. If the nosfe goes down it won't&#13;
e&gt;. but if the body descend* tt U fat&#13;
indeed.—EJL&#13;
HEALTH and beauty are tne glories of perfect&#13;
hood. ,.. , • &gt;. &gt; t \&#13;
Women who suffer constantly with weakness peculiar&#13;
to their sex cannot retain their beauty. Presentation' of&#13;
pretty features and founded form is&#13;
a duty women owe to themselves.&#13;
The mark of excessive monthly sufering&#13;
is a familiar one in the faces of&#13;
yottnjj American women.&#13;
Don't wait, young women, until&#13;
your good looks are gone past recall.&#13;
Consult Mrs. Pinkham at the qut-'^&#13;
start. Write to her at Lynn, Mass.&#13;
Miss EON A BLrts, Higginsport, Ohio, writes&#13;
PofKHAM—I am a school teacher and hadLsaffered.untoid agony&#13;
during my menstrual periods for ten yeats. My trerrou* sys»&#13;
tsm.'wa* almost* wreck* I sufered rn^f^x in my&#13;
had almost eveflj, inhuman flesh&#13;
heir to; 1 had^keilreatment from a&#13;
number of physicians who gave me&#13;
no relief. In fact one&#13;
eminent specialist said&#13;
- ao aediciae could help&#13;
use,' * must ^submit to*&#13;
an operation. . At my&#13;
mother's request,, I,&#13;
wrote to Mrs. Pink*&#13;
" DSA*&#13;
ham stating&#13;
case in every par^&#13;
ticular and re-.&#13;
ceived a prompt&#13;
reply. I followed&#13;
suffer no more'&#13;
duxxBg&#13;
to know more&#13;
K I «m by oocttpptiott a Jfcfcool ticket, sad&amp;r&#13;
a Uf&amp; with pafarftd medstntatfai •&amp; WHnhmk*. *&#13;
j oeired mot\&#13;
&lt; potud thtti frwn all&#13;
win dieernffly&#13;
tmttara.**" ''—&#13;
lilts KATKCOCK^ t6&#13;
: * \ ? • ' ; • • ' : • . ' • , • • • .'•' ' "^ ' ' •&#13;
' ' ' , ' . ' ' • ' • ' ' ' * *&#13;
' l . " . . ' • ' • •&#13;
.£ r -'&#13;
• ' • ; ' • ' , &lt; ^ • ^ • ' • i \ r ' " ' - - 1 V ' &gt; ' ' ' r ; : / " ' v ' - ^ / * ' - &gt; ' 1 ' : ' " ^ ; ' ; ' ; &gt; • " ' • • " • • • • ' • - \ ''•••'"''•, : "' '•. • : ' ' ' * • : , . • &gt; ' • • ' ; * • ' • • • • - ' • ' • • • . ' ^ ':' \ • • • . , ' ' • - • • r - • / ' r ' • • • • • • . . • • ; . • - . " ' • • . • ' . . ' • - - ' ' - ' ^ " ' - - * ' ' ' ' " * ' : '&gt;*&gt;'',•*• '&amp;?'£}":•:•'&#13;
-&#13;
No old-tinie doctor discards the medicine which can H W i n&#13;
unbroken record of&#13;
•**r F//ift/ Years o/ Cares.&#13;
Ttf those doctors, who went op and down the country in every&#13;
kind of wind and weather, faithw, patient tmd true, Aycr's Sarsaparilla&#13;
owes its irst success. Today anr doctor of repote who&#13;
prescribes any Sarsaparilla prescribes Ayer'8* We have thousands&#13;
of testimonials from doctors all over this land that it is the one&#13;
safe Sarsaparilla, and the doctors know what it is. because we have&#13;
beengivins the formula of it to them for over half a century.&#13;
This is why Amirs is "the fader of tl of much advertising nor&#13;
because of what we put around the bottle, but beaose of what&#13;
is in the bottle. '&#13;
Jt is tbe ons safe.spring medicine for you.&#13;
I SDiI JOHIfW.J&#13;
Waafclngtoa, a&gt;. .&#13;
hr ^OMOtitaa Cmims.&#13;
udieatiag eUmi, »Uj atues&gt;&#13;
la aot tkU I U M M M wort* lar—Hiatltti.tf fo« hart&#13;
• frl*s4 lufforlac n-osn any MIAmj IUIHM&gt; Vot •&#13;
patent a*lleln«; neither Is pati«at obit*** to ©o»«&#13;
to Ke* York for treatBtea*. Kxasi. tod MM of irta*&#13;
free of ehtrgft. Send 4 01., cxp. paid. Nan* paper&#13;
Spaldinj's Official&#13;
Base Bali Guide&#13;
KDITW »T BBXBT CSASWIOS.&#13;
P R I 0 1 10 O1RT8, POSTPAID.&#13;
tat*&#13;
New PlayingRules&#13;
A. a.*PALDIRO * RROt.&#13;
New York&#13;
Poultry are early risers and need&#13;
their morning meal early.&#13;
Coughing Lead* to Consumption.&#13;
Kemps Balsam wiH stop the cough&#13;
at once. Go to your druggist today&#13;
and get a sample bottle free. Sold in&#13;
25 and 50 cent bottles. Go at once; delays&#13;
are dangerous.&#13;
''I had a running, itching sore on my&#13;
leg. Suffered tortures. Doan's Ointment&#13;
took away the burning and itching&#13;
instentiy, and quickty effected&#13;
permanent cure." C. W. Lanhart.&#13;
Bowling Green, I).&#13;
"Cure t be cough and save the life"&#13;
t&gt;t. Wood -s JKorway Pine Syrup cures&#13;
coughs and colds, down to the very&#13;
verge of consumption.&#13;
Diphtheria, sore throat, croup. Instant&#13;
relief, permanent cure. Dr.&#13;
Thomas' Bclectric Oil. At any drug&#13;
store. ^&#13;
"Now good digestion waits on appetite,&#13;
and health on both." If it doesn't,&#13;
try Burdock Blood Bitters.&#13;
TO CXRK A COLD XX OMr DAT&#13;
Tske Laxative Bromo Qainlae Tablets. All&#13;
d r i s u refuadtheBMtt«y if U tails iftcure.&#13;
The genuine b** I* B. Q. on each tablet. I AM A PHYSICIAN&#13;
Art "6 DROPS" t n&#13;
HUNDREDS OF HY PATIENTS.&#13;
WAR NOTES,&#13;
Gens. Lawton and King recently&#13;
launched an expedition of three gnnboata,&#13;
with 1,500 picked men in canoes,&#13;
in tow of the gunboats. The object of&#13;
ttte expedition is to cross the lake, capture&#13;
Santa Cruz and sweep the country&#13;
to the south. The expedition, which&#13;
embarked at San Pedro Maoati, consisted&#13;
of eight companies of the 14th&#13;
infantry, three companies of the 4th&#13;
cavalry, four of the North Dakota vol«&#13;
unteers, four of tbe Idaho volunteers,&#13;
two mountain guns and 300 sharpshooters&#13;
of tbe 14th infantry.&#13;
The banditti question in the province&#13;
of Santiago de Caba is assuming&#13;
much more serious proportions. l a&#13;
spite of the fact that there have been&#13;
many arrests in the neighborhood of&#13;
Sancti Spiritus, including the principal&#13;
leaders, the number of outlaws is increasing&#13;
instead of diminishing. The&#13;
gendarmes are practically worthless&#13;
unless they are with American troops.&#13;
Gen. Lawton succeeded in raising&#13;
the American flag over Santa Cruz after&#13;
a spirited conflict in which six Americans&#13;
were wounded. The native forces,&#13;
commanded by a Chinese, was driven&#13;
into mountains, after having 68 slain,&#13;
a large number wounded and captured.&#13;
An American general has expressed&#13;
the opinion thut 100,000 men would&#13;
now be necessary to crush the rebellion.&#13;
L. P. Mitchell, assistant comptroller&#13;
of the treasury, in a decision rendered&#13;
holds that while the marine corps cannot&#13;
be understood to be a part of the&#13;
navy for all purposes, the officers and&#13;
enlisted men of the corps who were&#13;
appointed or enlisted therein for the&#13;
war only, and were honorably discharged,&#13;
are entitled to the extra pay&#13;
granted by the act of March 3, 1808.&#13;
Word has been received of Gen.&#13;
Law ton's victory in the vicinity of&#13;
i'ugsajan and Lnmban. He succeeded&#13;
in capturing- both towns, driving the&#13;
insurgents up the mountain side. Six&#13;
launch^* and two cascos were captured&#13;
in the river. The rebel loss is said to&#13;
IMJ liesivy.&#13;
Insurgents made a desperate attempt&#13;
to break our line of railroad communication&#13;
the other nig-ht by attacking&#13;
Gen. McArthur's forces, but were&#13;
driven back by Gen. Wheaton with&#13;
heavy IOSH. The American casualties&#13;
was three killed and twenty wounded.&#13;
Aguinaldo has issued a decree directing&#13;
that Spanish shall ,be the official&#13;
language throughout the archipelago,&#13;
and protesting against the American&#13;
pretension to force the use of g l i h&#13;
ou the natives, who do not know it&#13;
The l'r«*ldent°» Proclamation.&#13;
president McKin1?- has issued the&#13;
fo'io-.ving proclamation:&#13;
Whereas, A treaty of peace between"&#13;
1 hi* United. States of America and her&#13;
majesty, the queen regent of Spain, in&#13;
tlu- name of her august son, Don Alfonso&#13;
XI11., concluded and signed by&#13;
their respective plenipotentiaries at&#13;
Paris on the 10th day of December,&#13;
1£№. the original of which convention&#13;
being in the English and Spanish languages,&#13;
is word for word as follows:&#13;
(Mere the full text of the treaty is included.)&#13;
And, Whereas, the said convention&#13;
has been duly ratified on both parts&#13;
and the ratifications of the two governments&#13;
were exchanged^ in the city of&#13;
Washington ou the 11th day of April,&#13;
ISM.&#13;
Now, therefore, be it known that I,&#13;
William McKinley, President of tbe&#13;
United States of America, have caused&#13;
Hie s&gt;aid convention to be made public,&#13;
to the end that the same aud every article&#13;
and clause thereof may be observed&#13;
and fulfilled with good faith by&#13;
the United States and the citizens&#13;
thereof.&#13;
In witness whereof I have hereunto&#13;
set my hand and caused the seal&#13;
of the United States to be affixed.&#13;
Done at the city of Washington this&#13;
lUh day of April, in the year of our&#13;
Lord one thousand eight hundred and&#13;
ninety-nine, and of the independence&#13;
of the United States the one hundred&#13;
and twenty-third.&#13;
(Signed) WILLIAM MCKISLEV.&#13;
liy the President:&#13;
JOUN HAY, Secretary of State.&#13;
Floods are causing much damage in&#13;
Montana.&#13;
atammaathaaj—t been receive d from Dr. C A. Jack* the&#13;
U-kmowa PhTaioiaa aad Sttrseoaof Keaxnej, Neb . Hia letter , wit* odMrt,&#13;
4« printed below:&#13;
SL—HHIT Kaa March W 1891.&#13;
D«a» i l n - I an a,*bjsfe1m a&amp;4«radaaU of tba UaiTSMRy of 6w«*sn. aai hawiiwaa la aeUre&#13;
^n«f«taaaa0 7«an,B«tIm«st«oBsea«iaatao nn*a&gt; ha* so •tttelsbe d TO« I a us e uw as jr*&#13;
" trel/yoBM , O. A. J Aosaov, K. D.&#13;
THE MARKETS.&#13;
LIVK STOCK.&#13;
Kew Tork— Cittlo Shte p Lambs Hogs&#13;
Best frrart^sM "H3i *o *4 *i W M 9« JSJ&#13;
Lower grades..2 0) $ 6J&#13;
Beslgrades...fk tQ&lt;&amp; go&#13;
Loner grades., i U&amp;i u&#13;
Detroit—&#13;
Be-tRrades.... 4 0X»4 40&#13;
Flower xr*U«*..S hi&amp;t 73&#13;
Buffalo—&#13;
Bestgr»des....4&lt;H)1 4 M&#13;
L 4 S 7 ^ 4 M&#13;
4 SI&#13;
3 OJ&#13;
4 »*»&#13;
Z Hi&#13;
ft 29&#13;
500&#13;
4 0J&#13;
3 9)&#13;
3W&#13;
K 63 sao&#13;
'TIS CHEAPER IN THE END.&#13;
As Black DYE&#13;
YtufWSuskRrs&#13;
40a&#13;
Lower grades..^ 71M* UJ&#13;
Beet jrr*&lt;tes . . . U i l S l J B 00&#13;
Oxford Ch«MMto Co., VT.MAMI IW. 1MI Lower grades..? Ti*4 7i / S M&#13;
Lower jjrade»..S M&gt;&#13;
M oto. • » drug»i*U or ft. P.ttaM * Cav.MsssMM.tU4 .&#13;
UBAIX. «TC&#13;
No. 1 red NaCt omrnix, NaOlawt«a. lte FREE m MIN|J«a , MM sisaff K&#13;
taM w ft M rtt la tae p a l OhtM AM&#13;
i..*P&lt; strteUyfreA.Itc«tr&#13;
t m: № r , ITC yerJto&#13;
Girf Can&#13;
A physician who m«\Kcs the&#13;
lest &amp;nd ivhonest about itc*r&gt;&#13;
tell you thtf.in many cases,the&#13;
number of red corpuscle* m the&#13;
blood \% doubled After &amp; cour&amp;c&#13;
of treatment with DT Williams'&#13;
Pink Pills for P&amp;le People.&#13;
Thai this me&amp;ns oeod blood&#13;
m^y not be entirely cle&amp;r From&#13;
the doctor's statement, but &amp;ny&#13;
girl vrho h&amp;s tried the pills c&amp;n tell&#13;
you th&amp;t it me&amp;ns red lips, bright&#13;
eyes, dood appetite, absence of&#13;
hedd&amp;che. and that it transforms&#13;
the pale and sallow girl&#13;
Into a maiden who glows with&#13;
the beauty which perfect health&#13;
alone can d'tve.&#13;
Mothers whose daughters&#13;
frorf debilitated as they pass&#13;
from oirlhood into womanhood&#13;
should not neglect the pill best&#13;
adapted for this particular ill.&#13;
Frank B. Trout, of x©j Orlawold Aw., Detroit, Mich., tart: "At the&#13;
age of fourteen we had to take our daughter from scUool OH account of ill&#13;
health. She weighed only 90 pounds, was pale and tallow and the doctors&#13;
•ai d ahe bad anaemia. Finally we gave her Dr. Williama' Pink Pills for&#13;
Pale People. When she had taken two boxes she was strong enough to&#13;
leave her bed, and in less than six months was something like herself.&#13;
To-day she is entirely cured, and is a big, strong, healthy girl, weighing&#13;
I jo pounds, and has never had a sick day since."—Dttrnt Evtning AVrur.&#13;
The genuine Dr.Williams' PtnK Pills for P* u People M&#13;
sold only in packages, thffvwr*pp«T *iw*yv bearing&#13;
the fill n«m«. At &amp;U 6Tugg**tk, «T direct from the&#13;
DrWUIi&amp;ms Medicine Co.Sihenectady.N.Y, 50*per bo*.&#13;
VYVVY&#13;
MITUM XATUBS lUTvagiu&#13;
sWvas HATUB* **Tyai»*&#13;
MA KATTUUUMK«**&#13;
ATUIIJU&#13;
ATVwi*&#13;
• CLKAN s&#13;
froi t««p*r**«t**i;tfc*k»Jf »&#13;
. . »1, aatf with tko MiraUd&#13;
l«dwer~$lfl«t, a porfMt ahear cat I* lHMr«d. Tk« Doorlnff Ido&amp;l&#13;
r k will PIM M ro«. Ta« quortio* «&gt;t »nHM* kair*-hM«a u « »i»-&#13;
m»at It don» away wit*. Aa aajartakl* Un*d, for loBgtaoaln&gt; or&#13;
pltaiaa, a—ps taalniif a»»ajs hi pff&gt;s&gt; m t t l i,&#13;
Hov*n a n katlt to mtiaty tb» MOM orttlcmi &lt;&gt;anads&#13;
HARVESTER COMPARY, ChlCttffo. VYYVYRMMRHRHKJ&#13;
Hartford&#13;
Vedette Bicycles for 1899&#13;
COLUMBIA BEVEL-8EAR C MAI A LESS . It Is always read y to ride becaus e&#13;
th e runnin g gear take s car e of itself. Nothin g to entangl e or soil th e clothin g&#13;
became it has no chaw. Th e best hlU-cHmbe r becaus e bevel-gearin g never cramp s&#13;
or twists unde r strains . Pric e $ 7 9 .&#13;
COLUMBIA CRAIH MODELS have improve d&#13;
frame connections , specially cut sprocket s which prevent&#13;
sliding of th e chain , 3/16-inc h chamfere d chain ,&#13;
black and gold- rims aad othe r new aad distinctiv e features.&#13;
Pric e $»© .&#13;
RARTFOROS contai n man y improvements , Includin g&#13;
frame s of th e latest design, flush joints, interna l expanders&#13;
, and crank-shaf t constructio n which&#13;
doe s away with th e keyed-o n craek . $ 3 * .&#13;
VEDETTES are buik of excellen t materia l&#13;
and are In eaery way adapte d to thos e who&#13;
desire die i p t wear of a new bicycle at a&#13;
1n&#13;
moderate Men's, $ 2 1 ; Ladies', S 2 C&#13;
Art Catalogs f* * V CrfMakia &lt;U*Wr or by sail far&#13;
P0PC IMIUFJICTUM M COHPMY ,&#13;
DON' T BORROW TROUBLE.9* BU Y SAPOLIO&#13;
!iv&#13;
* f ; • &lt; • • : ! = • • ' . ' • • !&#13;
.-.-r&#13;
; * ' • " • • " .&#13;
. - ' •• ' • , . ' %'&#13;
,' I ...&#13;
^ • • ' • •&#13;
' • * ' • i ' - •&#13;
fa&#13;
EAST PUTNAM V&#13;
Guy Half was in Dexter the&#13;
first of the 'week.&#13;
Mabel Swartbout is visiting her&#13;
grandparents, Geo. Hicks and&#13;
wife.&#13;
Bell Kennedy spent last week&#13;
at the home of her brother, E. W.&#13;
Kennedy at this place.&#13;
Mrs. W. H. Placeway and son,&#13;
Brayton-, visited Frank Boylan&#13;
and wife of South Lyon over Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. E. D. Brown and Grace&#13;
Lake were guests of Herbert&#13;
Sc'hoenbals in Genoa on Friday&#13;
last.&#13;
The following is the program&#13;
of the Putnam and Hamburg&#13;
Farmers' Club which meets April&#13;
29th, at the home of Geo. Culy:&#13;
&amp; • '&#13;
¥ii&#13;
••&#13;
f'.1&#13;
Inat. Music,&#13;
Recitation,&#13;
Song,&#13;
Paper,&#13;
Recitation,&#13;
Song,&#13;
Paper,&#13;
Reading,&#13;
Du»t,&#13;
Recitation,&#13;
R*clt»don,&#13;
^, Maud Culy&#13;
Florence Andrews&#13;
Sadie 8warth out&#13;
Geo. Teeple&#13;
Brayton PUceway&#13;
Addle Klce&#13;
Beeale Cordley&#13;
Mrs. £ . W Kennedy&#13;
Mr. and Mrs, S. Swartbout&#13;
Veronica Fohey&#13;
Sadie Swartbout&#13;
, „_ . ,„.. /&#13;
ANDERSON. v&#13;
Mrs. C. M. and Miss Edith&#13;
Wood were in Howell last Saturday.&#13;
Mrs. J. E. Durkee and family&#13;
are now nicely situated in their&#13;
new borne.&#13;
James Marble and wife were&#13;
guests of Howell friends Monday&#13;
and Tuesday.&#13;
Miss Maud Allison of Tosco, visited&#13;
relatives in this vicinity on&#13;
Saturday last.&#13;
Miss Louese Williston, of Marion,&#13;
was the guest of friends here&#13;
one day last week.&#13;
Dillivan and Floyd Durkee,&#13;
g Putnam Sundayed&#13;
under the perental roof.&#13;
Miss Belle Birnie has gone to&#13;
Iosco where she will work at&#13;
dressmaking the coming season,&#13;
Henry Whippie and wife returned&#13;
to their home on Saturday&#13;
last after a few days sojourn with&#13;
friends and relatives in South&#13;
Lyon.&#13;
WRIGHT VILLE V&#13;
J. TV. Sheets is no better at&#13;
this writing.&#13;
Miss Katie Davis was in Howell&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Miss Emma Peacott, of Ioeco,&#13;
visited at Dan'l Wright's Sunday.&#13;
Daniel Wright and wife visited&#13;
in Stockbridge the last of last&#13;
week.&#13;
Levi Douglass, of Preecott, is&#13;
visiting his sister, Mrs. J. W.&#13;
Sheets.&#13;
Potatoes that are in pite in this&#13;
part of the country are coming&#13;
out with very few frozen.&#13;
Some of the fanners have begun&#13;
to plow for oate which makes&#13;
us think that spring has come to&#13;
atay.&#13;
E» D. Van Buren and Miss Allie&#13;
Crowley were guests of Hiram&#13;
Hopper and wife of Howell last&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Remember Stab, or Fool from Bos*&#13;
ton, at opera house, tomorrow, Friday&#13;
evening.&#13;
Gene Pyper, of Chelsea, Sundayed&#13;
with her parents at this place.&#13;
Boy Stowe bad the misfortune to&#13;
break his thumb last Sunday.&#13;
Archie Palmer, of Waterloo, spent&#13;
Saturday and Sunday with Alex&#13;
Pyper.&#13;
Chas. Allen, of Highland, made a&#13;
business trip to this place last Monday&#13;
and Tuesday.&#13;
Alma Grimes, of Stockbridge, is&#13;
doing house-hold duties for Mrs.&#13;
Flora Watson.&#13;
Adeline Bunker has quit work for&#13;
Flora Watson and returned to her&#13;
home in Munitb.&#13;
Roy Dunning went away last&#13;
Thursday to look up a position for&#13;
the coming year.&#13;
Mrs. Cora Marshall returned from&#13;
Jacttfon fitter a week's visit with her&#13;
brother and daughter.&#13;
Val Hudson and wife, of White&#13;
Oak, called on his brother John of&#13;
this place last Thursday.&#13;
Rev. Williams, of Ann Arbor, is&#13;
spending a few days in this town&#13;
looking up the insurance business.&#13;
Ellen Marshall, who has been&#13;
spending the winter with her son in&#13;
Stockbridge returned home Saturday.&#13;
Elmer Barton and wife, who&#13;
moved on a farm in Lake Co. about a&#13;
month ago, returned home laat Friday.&#13;
Will Clark started for Bay City&#13;
last Monday and will work on the&#13;
railroad between that, place and&#13;
Detroit. ^&#13;
The party at the K. O. T. M. hall at&#13;
Gregory last Friday evening for the&#13;
returned soldiers was well attended&#13;
and all r eported a good time.&#13;
Win. Gilbert died at his home in&#13;
this place Wednesday, April 12.&#13;
The funeral was held in the M. E.&#13;
church, Rev. Palmer officiating. He&#13;
was .born in New York in 1814, and&#13;
came to Michigan in 1837, where he&#13;
has followed bis trade as blacksmith&#13;
until about a year before his death.&#13;
He was HU earnest worker and regalar&#13;
attendant at church.&#13;
publio&#13;
tnd&#13;
Mas. Jessie Parsball had a&#13;
gale on Tuesday of this week.&#13;
Y. T.Cole has sold hit cows&#13;
will go out ot the milk business.&#13;
Toad Doods and wife spent Sunday&#13;
with her sister at Oak Grove.&#13;
Rev. Bancroft held quarterly&#13;
meeting at the Tyrone M. E. church&#13;
last Sunday.&#13;
Will Wolverton has been quite&#13;
siok the past week but is better at&#13;
this writing.&#13;
Mrs. C. M. Smith is visiting her&#13;
daughter, Mrs. Wm. Payne, at Bancroft&#13;
for a few weeks.&#13;
Rev. Bushhell, of Plymouth,&#13;
preached here last Sunday morning&#13;
and Rev. Plut&#13;
plymouth.&#13;
filled the pulpit at&#13;
PARSHALLVILLE. J&#13;
Mrs. Norbert, of Sagigaw, is visiting&#13;
relatives here. -&#13;
Frank Bravender has sold out his&#13;
interest in the store here.&#13;
Have&#13;
Heard&#13;
i«rk*« Iran If«r*«&#13;
Wat the result of bis splendid health.&#13;
Indomitable will and tremendous&#13;
energy are not found where stomach,&#13;
liver, kidneys and bowels are out of&#13;
order. If you want these qualities&#13;
and the success they bring, use Dr.&#13;
King's New Life Pills. They develop&#13;
every power of brain and body. Only&#13;
25c at F. A. Sigler's drag store.&#13;
SILVER LAKE ITEMS. *&#13;
John Meyers is drawing lumber for&#13;
his blacksmith shop.&#13;
Cha8. Jewel and wife spent Sunday&#13;
with hi9 wife's parents in Dexter.&#13;
Mrs. Sid Thurston, who has been&#13;
poorly the past winter, spent Friday&#13;
last with friends in Pinckney.&#13;
A tramp peddler who remained&#13;
at the home of Cbas. Voorheis one&#13;
night this week, gave Mrs. V. a fright&#13;
by returning after Mr. V. had left the&#13;
house. Not liking his actions Mrs. V.&#13;
fled out the rear door to the neighbors&#13;
who returned with her to find the&#13;
doors open but the peddler gone. It&#13;
is dangerous to harbor such people,&#13;
and Mrs. Voorheis says she will never&#13;
keep one again.&#13;
- , + ,m • * •&#13;
STILL MOKE LOCAL.&#13;
Mrs. R. E. Finch had the misfortune&#13;
You may have heard&#13;
about SCOTTS EMULSION&#13;
and have a vague notion&#13;
that it b cod4h*r oil with&#13;
its bad taste&#13;
all its other&#13;
smefl&#13;
features.&#13;
It i$ cod-liver oa, the&#13;
purest the best in the&#13;
world, but made so palatable&#13;
that almost everybody&#13;
can take i t Neariy atf&#13;
children lite U and ask for&#13;
more*scorrs&#13;
EMULSION&#13;
looks cream i It nout*&#13;
to sprain an ankle on&#13;
Lyle Younglove, of Detroit, spent&#13;
Sunday with his parents in Marion.&#13;
Mrs. C. N. Plimpton visited Howell&#13;
friends and relatives the past week.&#13;
Mrs. F. 6. Jackson U visiting her)&#13;
parents and other friends at Deerfield.&#13;
The engine and tools belongins to&#13;
J. H. McComb were moved to Deiter&#13;
Wednesday.&#13;
Bora to Mr. and Mrs. G. E. Holmes&#13;
of Lansing on Wednesday morning,&#13;
April 12, a son.&#13;
Tomorrow evening at opeia house,&#13;
Stab, or Fool from Boston. Admission,&#13;
10c and 15c.&#13;
Rev. C. W. Rice was in Leslie this&#13;
week attending the Jackson association&#13;
of Cong'l cb arch es.&#13;
Several of the lady friends of Miss&#13;
Lucy Mann enjoyed a candy pall at&#13;
ALBERT E. BROWN,&#13;
Veterinary • Surgeon&#13;
All diseases of the horse&#13;
treated in a scientific manner.&#13;
Special attention given to&#13;
lameness. Call at my shop on&#13;
Mill st., Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
Boynold's Black Jjanshangt.&#13;
Bred from prize winners; strictly&#13;
beautiful; large in &amp;ize; hardy/;best of&#13;
layers; active foragers; fine sitters and&#13;
mother; excellent table iowl.&#13;
Also very fine White Bra mas; eggs&#13;
for batching by applying 1£ miles&#13;
west of Cnubbs Corners.&#13;
Eggs per 18, 75cts.&#13;
REYNOLDS &amp; BON,&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
THURSDAY, FRIDAY and SATURDAY,&#13;
APRIL 20, 21 and 22,&#13;
We will display for - the inspection of the Ladies of Pinckney&#13;
and vicinity a lovely line of Trimmed Hats.&#13;
Sailors and&#13;
Walking Hats&#13;
Will be on sale&#13;
Friday and Saturday,&#13;
April 14 and 15.&#13;
GS% L .&#13;
THE AN NUM.&#13;
HOUSE-CLEANING&#13;
TIME&#13;
J UNACHLLA&#13;
Geo. Seiffrist has got a new bicycle.&#13;
J. 0. Colton, of Jackson, was in&#13;
town last Wednesday.&#13;
Albert Watson and wife of this&#13;
tow* vissted his brother in GbeJsea&#13;
Wed&amp;esday sad Thursday.&#13;
C.K. Ms* and daughter, of Bellair*,&#13;
«re jyesdi&amp;g a few day* with&#13;
relatives cf this place,&#13;
wlio&#13;
bhes the wasted&#13;
the baby, chid&#13;
better than&#13;
other food!&#13;
bean about&#13;
fjon to other esMdiioM thai&#13;
cream does to «dfc. tfyoa&#13;
have hi&#13;
with other totaled&#13;
« " d M&#13;
Jennie Watson, wfao has&#13;
, tpectiioff s tern weeks with ttsVcds m&#13;
JHumad retortied hoase iast Pridaj.&#13;
Tbe members of the Preebytenan&#13;
fifasrch met after services iast Bvaday&#13;
~a«d voted to ke*«p Be?. WbitfieMl of&#13;
t*imt wfco IMS fiM the psilpst for&#13;
her home on Tuesday evening.&#13;
The next regular meeting of the&#13;
Anderson farmer's club will be held at&#13;
tbe home of Abel Smith, May 13.&#13;
A Union temperance meeting will&#13;
be held at the M. E. church on Banday&#13;
evening next, conducted by tbe&#13;
W C T U , assisted by the pastors ot&#13;
the churches.&#13;
Mrs. Pateey Welsh, who has been&#13;
laid np for a couple of weeks as a result&#13;
of running a nail into her foot a&#13;
eouple of weeks ago, is able to be out&#13;
with the aid of cratches.&#13;
Mrs. WJSL Aldrich, of Munith, the&#13;
lady operated upon last week, is do*&#13;
iaff well and her friends look for her&#13;
eosaplete recovery. Mrs. AJdrich has&#13;
been an aavalid for several years and&#13;
for tbe past year has been nearly&#13;
helpless. She was formerly Miss&#13;
May Hoyt of this village and has&#13;
mamj friends bare.&#13;
Tbe lectors by Bev.G. W. BJodget&#13;
of Detroit, at the opera house in this&#13;
placs om Dsmrsday eyeuiajt was&#13;
Is here and with, it most come thought* of many necessary things.&#13;
The wearout and breakage of a twelve-month most be made good&#13;
once a year and booadelesmng time is the season for restocking and&#13;
replenishing. Time was when yoa had to run around town with a&#13;
long list to this place, that place and the other place; bat that is&#13;
changed and now you can come to as for your BagB and Carpets,&#13;
Window Shades, Lace Curtains and Draperies on one floor; Linens,&#13;
Sheetings, Towelings, Tickings* on another floor, and glassware,&#13;
chinaware, crockery, tinware, cooking utensils, house cleaning utensils&#13;
in the basement Everything you need for housedeaning time&#13;
ready for you here.&#13;
Win&lt; dow Shades.&#13;
We can give you the greatest variety of shade&#13;
cloth to select from; can make your curtains in the manner and give&#13;
yoa the most skillful workmen to hang them for you.&#13;
Carpets.&#13;
It is needless to claim for our oarpet stock that it is&#13;
larger than any one other in Jackson. Anyone who* looks with half&#13;
an eye can see that our stock of carpets is larger than all other J«ok-&#13;
•on stocjks combined. It would, therefore, Mem most sensible for&#13;
largely every O M was&#13;
"Get there1'&#13;
h fury mam Lnsirheid"&#13;
pkmtj for&#13;
well&#13;
else&#13;
any carpet purchaser to look at what we have to show before making&#13;
any purchases. Buy where you see what pleases yom best but look&#13;
at all the stocks before you buy.&#13;
Kitchen FursisWags.&#13;
very&#13;
best goods produced and only the best—first g*4e in erory kind—no&#13;
second and thirds U granstewaie or tisusmce. They ass tbe most expensive&#13;
in the ead.&#13;
fer orer aa hoar&#13;
aedabatf awftjoMy hardly realised&#13;
WO«M&#13;
ifM FIE ID;&#13;
•-VV&#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 April 20, 1899</text>
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                <text>April 20, 1899 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1899-04-20</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 XVII. EHTOKNET, LIVINGH3TON CO., MIOH. , THITBSDAY, APRIL 27, 1899. No. 17 .&#13;
Serge Suits&#13;
1$« burntr garments&#13;
O&lt; the MUQB •&#13;
Is th« color&#13;
$ 1 2 * 5 0 the price per Mtt&#13;
MADB TO MEASURE&#13;
• v&#13;
Fred Kauffmann&#13;
The AMeHctn TiUor&#13;
CHICAQO&#13;
Yew wtn reproach yourself M you&#13;
buy before examining&#13;
STYLE 667 8&#13;
Ask his local representative&#13;
K. H. CRANE.&#13;
to show you the pattern and the&#13;
"other a#ges.N&#13;
CLOTHING !&#13;
This season we represent&#13;
Fred Kanffmann, one of&#13;
Chicago's best tailors. All&#13;
goods from this hous flare&#13;
guaranteed to be strictly&#13;
MADE to MEASUREAlso&#13;
a PERFECT JIT.&#13;
This house makes suits to&#13;
to measure for boys as well&#13;
as men. We will make silk&#13;
vests a specialty, they are&#13;
the style. From $8.10 up.&#13;
Suits from $12 up&#13;
We also represent the Celebrated&#13;
Work Brothers, of&#13;
Chicago, for ready made&#13;
Clothing, the latest in style&#13;
and thoroughly well made.&#13;
For M a c k i n t o s h e s&#13;
for men, and rubber&#13;
capes and skirts for Ladies',&#13;
we represent the Dundee&#13;
Rubber Co., of Chicago. We&#13;
shall always be glad to show&#13;
yyou our samples in all th eee&#13;
lines, and solicit vour patronage.&#13;
E. H. CBANE.&#13;
LOCAL NEWS.&#13;
POSSJBL Y&#13;
you don't need any window shades but&#13;
If you are in need of any&#13;
Don't Boy...&#13;
Until you have seen the Buckeye Adjustable&#13;
Drop Shade. It is the most&#13;
complete as well as convenient Window&#13;
Shade on the market.&#13;
My Stock of Furniture&#13;
Was never more complete. 1 4&amp;&#13;
claim to make tiie Furniture but I do&#13;
make the price that sells.&#13;
Tomorrow (Friday) is arbor day.&#13;
East Main street is now in fine&#13;
shape for a coating of gravel.&#13;
Tbe bicycle hospital has been fall&#13;
to overflowing the past week.&#13;
Mrs. Cba*. Bowman, of Wrightville,&#13;
spent Sunday with triends here.&#13;
L J. Cook, wife and daughter, of&#13;
Brighton, were guests of friends here&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Several from here took in the play&#13;
"Faust" at tbe Howell opera bouse&#13;
last evening.&#13;
Some side and cross-walks are in&#13;
bad shape and should be seen to before&#13;
an accident occurs.&#13;
Chas. MoGilfrey, of Jackson, was&#13;
tbe guest of Robert Erwin and family&#13;
a conple of days last week.&#13;
Swarthout &amp; Knhn loaded a oar of&#13;
potatoes at this place Monday. The&#13;
price paid was 40 cents per bushel.&#13;
C. N. Plimpton has fitted up the&#13;
creamery, recently purchased by him,&#13;
as a shop and undertaking establishment.&#13;
Chas. Bowman will open a meal&#13;
market in the building, cornet* Mais&#13;
and mill streets, on Saturday of this&#13;
week.&#13;
On Thurtday latt the remains of&#13;
Silas Barton Sr. were taken from the&#13;
vault and placed in the Barton lot of&#13;
the cemetry.&#13;
Claud Hause has moved into the&#13;
Ned Chubb house and will work for&#13;
V?. H. Harris this season at the carpenter&#13;
trade.&#13;
Mrs. W. L. Potter, of Flat Bock,&#13;
was tbe guest of her parents, Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Chas. Simpson of this place the&#13;
last of last week.&#13;
moved his fam-&#13;
Wk in Want if Allying in&#13;
DRUGS,&#13;
PATENT MEDICINES ,&#13;
TOILET ARTICLES,&#13;
Books and Stationery,&#13;
GIVE US A CALL.&#13;
Also&#13;
WALL PAPER,&#13;
The latest styles and patterns.&#13;
G-. A.. 8IG-LER.&#13;
WASH GOODS&#13;
Now is the time you will need them.&#13;
We can show you a nice assortment to select from.&#13;
Lace Curtains and Window Shades. Call and see&#13;
what we have.&#13;
Special sale on Ladies' skirts for this week. Call&#13;
and get prices.&#13;
Men's Heavy Plow Shoes. We are showing a good&#13;
line of shoes that are made to wear.&#13;
In Groceries we have nothing but the best. The&#13;
best Spices; the best Coffees; the flest Teas; the best Canned&#13;
Goods.&#13;
Come and get a sample of our Royal Tiger Tea; it&#13;
is cheaper to use than cheap tea; it will go twice as far.&#13;
Our 20c Coffee is the finest in the county for the&#13;
price. Come and get a sample.&#13;
ily into bis rooms over tbe pot-latch&#13;
and will run a wood working shop in&#13;
the rooms below.&#13;
Miss Franc Burch, who has been&#13;
absent for the past winter, returned&#13;
here the past week for a visit to her&#13;
brother and other triends.&#13;
The Misses Name Sigler, Lillian&#13;
Boyle, Iva Halstead and Edith Wood&#13;
weregnests of Miss Grace Lake of&#13;
East P utnam orvt Sunday.&#13;
The Sunday Free Press contain* a&#13;
fine cut of Walter C. Robinson s who&#13;
is well known here. It was given in&#13;
connection with others of the masonic&#13;
fraternity.&#13;
Eugene Mann, who has bees in&#13;
Sunset, Colorodo for the past 18&#13;
month*, made a short visit to his parents&#13;
and other friends here the first&#13;
of the week.&#13;
Toe ladies aid of the M. E. cbojsoii&#13;
will hold a tea at tbe borne of Mr*.&#13;
H. G. Briggs on Wednesday of *ejct&#13;
week, May 3. Tea served from&#13;
o'clock till all are served.&#13;
Tbe play "Stab" or "Pool&#13;
An Ellegant line of GLASSWARE and CHINA.&#13;
F. A. SIGLER.&#13;
AT THE CORKER DRUG STORE.&#13;
STEE L RANGE S&#13;
The earth for&#13;
Are at Teeple and Cadwell's Hardware Store.&#13;
Having soldja number of them which have been work*&#13;
ing successfully for a year or more,' proves them good.&#13;
We warrant them to bake as quickly and with as little&#13;
fuel, either coal or wood, as any range made, and wt&#13;
know they will hold fire over night as well as any air tight&#13;
s tove which proves them to be well and substantialy made.&#13;
Do not fail to examine these ranges. No trouble to show&#13;
lib. Sodiofor*&#13;
1 lb. Beat Ckaaed Otrtaats for '&#13;
1 bottle of Best Boston Blacking for&#13;
Boston" as played by ti» Hi** fl*«*&#13;
of Stocfcbridftt, a* tbe #pe«a pom&#13;
this yillage on Friday evtoifg of&#13;
week m well readertd Aad&#13;
good sati&amp;.actioa. Sacfc&#13;
tb«r parti Mealy tat tbe stars were&#13;
Stab, tie h*u**,Him H* ;&#13;
$»d Jack Onrtte., tbe&amp;Ml fasa Botto&amp;&#13;
CB fl AltaMlber tha nlar&#13;
and wae grtetei witfc A&#13;
** at 8 o M&#13;
tacm.&#13;
* VERY TRULY YOURS,&#13;
TEEPLE SP CA DWELL.&#13;
A few iElyers, merely suggestions. Act upon&#13;
the hints and thoroughly investigate &lt;mr Shoe stock.&#13;
You 11 find it right. Shoes for Ladies, stylish dress&#13;
shoes in the new cuts, in material and colorings that&#13;
are the best. Special values at $1.60 , 2.00, 2.50 and&#13;
3.00. Shoes for Misses ranging from $1.00 to $2.00 :&#13;
A special value in Misses Tans at $1.69 . Men's fine&#13;
shoes in coin toe, plain and vesting tops, excellent for&#13;
wear and nothing better anywhere unapproachabel&#13;
values at $1.25, 1.50, 1.75, 2.00, 2.50, and 3.00.&#13;
,*&#13;
hompoomom Umtwe&amp;ML&#13;
Lfim p o o* oft Men's Gotten aai Wool Ptasjfc.&#13;
Lowprioer&#13;
F- G.&#13;
• " * -&#13;
-; '•№&#13;
&gt;:• &lt;&#13;
: ^ r ^ • ' , • • ' ' • ' • - • • •• " • • • " : • ' • • • y - v : i : " • y f V ^ • • • ' " : - v ; - • * . . - ^ - . : — ' : • • - &gt; y . : • • • * , • • v . -v y v&#13;
in&#13;
•,&lt;• V .&#13;
i A ' 1 ' •&#13;
Doings,of the Wfttk Rt»rd*d.i&#13;
Brief Style&#13;
CONClSt "AND IJITEffESTING, '&gt; f M . y •-,;.&#13;
Ttekt*&#13;
by U. 8. g»pr*i&#13;
the Vlctta *f&#13;
—U O. I . JO,&#13;
Black&#13;
A**«ult&#13;
The U. S. supreme court has reversed&#13;
the 4.eoi«it&gt;n of t^e ^apreme&#13;
court of Michigan In tW e y e of filenry&#13;
C. Smith, of Adrian, Y*. the L. S." &lt;fc M.&#13;
IS. Hy. Tho opinloa was rendered by&#13;
Justice Peckham. The only subject&#13;
considered vnm whether the act of the&#13;
Michigan legislature requiring the-sale&#13;
of 1,000-mile tickets at 3 cents per&#13;
mile was in violation of M y pnMajta&#13;
i)f the federal coastitatioa. Justice&#13;
Peck ham says that it fa not within tme&#13;
province of the court to review th$ decision&#13;
of the lower court as to whether&#13;
it violates the con&amp;titatioa of the state,&#13;
but he holds that a COM pan y hn^ a&#13;
right to insist that all persons shall be&#13;
compelled to pay alike, awl thal'^no&#13;
discrimination against it &lt;ia J&#13;
certain classes of marrMf£ ata&#13;
ilies, excursionists or other*, sha&#13;
made by the legislatare. ThereTore,&#13;
the judgment of the sapreme court16f&#13;
Michigan should be reversed and tbe&#13;
case remanded for further pv&amp;Gtxdmfci&#13;
not inconsistent with the opinioa of&#13;
this court, and it is so ordered.&#13;
MS; rearrears&#13;
in&#13;
.930.83; dlsr&#13;
The Lady Maecahaes pf: Michigan.&#13;
In session at Detroit this week, have&#13;
{riven out their annual report for publication.&#13;
Tbe reports shjow* % balance&#13;
on hand Jan. 1, 1998, of&#13;
ceived from assessments&#13;
•98, 8182,676.24; total,&#13;
bursed from fnnd ia&#13;
. balance on hand Jan. 1,&#13;
Emergency fund—ftafaiw^ oa hand&#13;
/an. 1, 1698, *U,07&amp;«C; reeeisvd in '98,&#13;
69,59^.59; total, «3O,CTl-2i; paid oat in&#13;
bonds and premiums. f9L6,C12.$Q; deposited&#13;
in bank, $4*,&lt;K8.?&amp;. Geaerai fund—&#13;
Balance on hand Jan. I, 18M, «S,«14,07;&#13;
amount &gt;eoe.ived ttom aaaplies, fees&#13;
and taxes, t2fe,49ft.t3; total, 4t31«SOf.59;&#13;
disbursed in '98, 936,101.97; balaaoe on&#13;
hand, f 5,202.52. Onuul total on hand,&#13;
including tlS.OOO ia vested ia United&#13;
Btates bonds, l5L.7U.29i&#13;
No Lliult to lbs S»lalDrnEXS|UMI' T»x.&#13;
The supreme court has deity the saloon&#13;
kqapftp of t^e Hfcf^to 4 hafd blow,&#13;
Ui fin opinion in,a. ease brcruglTi to test&#13;
validityy of t^&lt;f re oc«Jina.pua» of the&#13;
city of 'eHg o;/l l$a'nAdQ,,Q w ohni crhe talijla lpiqouseosr daealers&#13;
above the 850J state" taif. The&#13;
court holds that "it №"entirely within&#13;
the province of cities artel villages to&#13;
exact an additional license. Thin&#13;
opinion opens a very wide channel for&#13;
cities aud villages of (he atala desiring&#13;
to crush out saloons.&#13;
Forgot Hit Name and W bm IJe Lived.&#13;
Joe. Travis, the boy who so mysteriously&#13;
disappeared from Oxford some&#13;
tjme ago, has returriedXbtoe and tells&#13;
a queer story. Ifo Mtys that while m&#13;
Lapeer he fell down and struck his&#13;
head rendering him unconscious. MVhen&#13;
he regained consciousness be had for*&#13;
gotten where he Htctt fjtfd what bis&#13;
name was. Sinct*hieh h« haa been in&#13;
Flint, Battle Creek; South Bend", Ind.&#13;
and Chicago. While at Battle Creek&#13;
he saw his name in a paper and bis&#13;
memory instantly returned to him.&#13;
STATE GOSSIP. '&#13;
Dundee now has a steam fire engine.&#13;
It will bo Ang. 1 before Mt Clemens&#13;
can have free inail delivery.&#13;
It is reported that a wal)&#13;
tory will locate alt Watervliet.&#13;
'Moses J. Howe, of Milan, has bftim&#13;
elected supervisor 28 oattsfleutive terote.&#13;
The citizens of Mt Ctetii^nB have petitkmed&#13;
the&#13;
The other evening- the ettixeas smrfk&#13;
o f Millington Were aro«sed fzwm their&#13;
sleep by tbe explosi—l M a dynamite&#13;
stick, placed under tbe Croat part of&#13;
-tfcg. rraidftQ^ ofJgr.Paris— a respected&#13;
farmer. Mr. Davisov wmA tits family&#13;
had retired for the evestag and never&#13;
knew that .they had aa e s e a y t r ho intended&#13;
tbehv deatruetiost. It is reported&#13;
that the&#13;
Mr. Davison&#13;
through &lt;a&#13;
ter feeling w»»&#13;
the sale. The frost verawia was blown&#13;
away and tbe h o — shattered somewhat&#13;
from, its foondatieau, the damage&#13;
amounting to $500.&#13;
by him&#13;
bit-&#13;
I,&#13;
Three, unknown ^w. —&#13;
vaulted, robbed and left for dead. John&#13;
Haberstraugh, a Gerataai wh« it-res&#13;
ilone in a small home temr saUes «ast&#13;
pf jjedjor*. The we* eaUc4 at his&#13;
aW%»4aak»4foradrtecl of water-'.&#13;
He, went to U » pajap with a 4ip per to&#13;
*-"^«~ *ii!h&lt;r;w»ter, isfccM oae man*&#13;
ft.&#13;
And (hen kicked bias&#13;
They then completely- raswacked fiab-&#13;
^twtnwyh' s hoeac, atoki hi* hone. j&amp;nd&#13;
carriage, and leftl*" JU»f caemrei $10&#13;
Uk wyygy, h»t. tmrUafcaf qpite a «nm&#13;
that&#13;
bjr relatives&#13;
in Berrlea Spriaga from A. L.&#13;
Warren, now iatha arToa&gt;iilrr^i4swjukc&#13;
Ike says that deaths by aiitrida 4me occurring&#13;
dailj at Dawrfm XMjc The&#13;
failure to find gold mmd. Che impoverished&#13;
condition of huadreds of prospectors&#13;
ht tfethrottiag 4he eeaaon of&#13;
miners, and a amiekhU swaia is the reault&#13;
Be says taat the 1wapi»*3s are&#13;
fuU of seanry atrich«a&gt; auaera and&#13;
many deaths- have oetMcwtd frnam the&#13;
tn&amp;lady. Thonaaads W g&gt;*4d hunters&#13;
been in,Alaska two jewta apd lias bad&#13;
. ' • • * • about »,&lt;»•• .&#13;
cejjort are Ba^r&#13;
, Jacksoa,&#13;
iMd,&#13;
ATlie West ijkyCity^^Co. will&#13;
another shaft in FranUenlnst township&#13;
this summer.&#13;
Holland last year mstie a net profit&#13;
of 92.04$ on its lighting plant and&#13;
water works.&#13;
Mrs. Caroline Phelps, of Kalamazoo,&#13;
down tbe cellar atauiAtlier home&#13;
and broke her neck. •&#13;
Ben ton HoTbor has concluded to try&#13;
asphalt paving and has let a contract&#13;
for $14t000 worth of it.&#13;
The Reed boose at LudingtOD k»s&#13;
been destroyed by fire. Total loss,&#13;
812,500 ; partially insured.&#13;
-• Tbe annual reunion of the Calhoun&#13;
eonnty Maccabee tents and hives will&#13;
be held at Albion on June 9.&#13;
Henry S. Fraliek. of Grand Rapids,&#13;
for many years secretary of the State&#13;
Fair association, bas resigned.&#13;
Oakland county farmers ?l*tm their&#13;
winter wheat crdp will not average&#13;
more than 60 per cent this year&#13;
The D.. S. 8. &amp; A. Ry. will bni!d a&#13;
line from Hough ton to Lake Gogebic,&#13;
following the south copper range.&#13;
Marshall was" "dry Sunday «&gt;~f»ras&#13;
saloons were concerned, bn( it is&#13;
said the,4ru£ stores did a bigbissiness.&#13;
A building boom is in&gt; sight for&#13;
Royal Oak. Several fine residences&#13;
will be built during the comiog sum-&#13;
•*?*?* i .. ^&#13;
4Tbe board of supervisor* of Eaton&#13;
county will on May 4 consider the local&#13;
option petitions presented to the county&#13;
clerk.&#13;
David P. Cbalker. a member of Jackson's&#13;
police force is 3fi years old and&#13;
weighs 350 (KHindf lie is'd»ub.beds tbe&#13;
"baby;"&#13;
Dowapiac has a miiitaiv co»psny&#13;
which will try to secure admission to&#13;
the state- national guard v?b*o tb«.iatier&#13;
is reorgantzed.&#13;
There h not a r&amp;eant dwell io^t house&#13;
in lironson and only one vacant store.&#13;
Twenty-five jaovy residences aiW. "be.&#13;
•built tbis summer. ' ' "• ' '"'&#13;
The building occupied by the jMWhigan&#13;
Bicycle Cement Co. at Niles, has&#13;
been gutted, by fine, causing a loss of&#13;
$3,000; fully insured.&#13;
t n Casco tow&amp;skip. Allegan eovnty.&#13;
lrve« a man who, though fee is now 29&#13;
years of age, ©ever passed a night&#13;
*w»y from his parents.&#13;
JT "Bttttoaar VfeTC s*arisiUHf lias&#13;
been formed at Flint to correct busimess&#13;
evil* and ft^» promotioo o^ the&#13;
geoeral welfare &lt;D(«tbe 'ttip.j : '&#13;
TkatnewptO.OOO depot for Cadillac is&#13;
a sere thing, the G. R. &amp; 1. railroad&#13;
haviag appropriated the money for its&#13;
erection the coming summer.&#13;
Martin ladies have organised the&#13;
• l a d i e s ' Sidewalk Brigade" for tbe&#13;
purpose of keeping the sidewalks of&#13;
the village in good condition.&#13;
•Ground will shortly be broken for&#13;
t h e Dalcenia home for Indigent wo-&#13;
•me* at Marshal I. When Completed, it&#13;
will accommodate 35 old women.&#13;
, tt is probable that tbjt jlun&#13;
r a * ~ a * : &gt; ^ ^ ^&#13;
mod bmOd a nni^i •Uiio*. at Ca^lac&#13;
ttnat wJM b *&#13;
paper, which will begin publication at&#13;
feck about May 1. T. O: G h&#13;
/CarsonviUe lawyer^ w l f l , U&#13;
fiaher. u&#13;
l;i »*"•{•; 'tr&#13;
i White In * „ « , of ^aaan.Vty « s&#13;
iVpajLj.roy&gt;J« wiVhJ|li w i f e , . J a c k&#13;
4 i s . o f ' H o « j h 6 H i »&#13;
Newl&gt;erfy ii going to have another&#13;
hotel, work on the construction of&#13;
. which will betfIn immediately. .&#13;
High water has carried away&#13;
Van Every mill dam at&#13;
Bttrrein of pickerel' bnd carp&#13;
found the next day; some were&#13;
in UiAhes aud picket fences.&#13;
The bicyclists of Niles will build a&#13;
bicycle puth from that' city to Barr«n&#13;
lake, a summer resort located five miles&#13;
east. The money for building "the&#13;
path wilf be raised by subscription.&#13;
It is estimated that fully 50 per cent&#13;
of the wheat crop in tuu vicinity of&#13;
Marshall will be a failure this season.&#13;
The expected warm April rains did not&#13;
show up and the wheat has steadily&#13;
retrograded.&#13;
Traverse City has secured the location&#13;
qt tbe Michigan Starch Co. Potato&#13;
Htarch, dextrine and gums, potato&#13;
flour and other potato products will be&#13;
manufactures', as well a* wheat starch&#13;
and corn starch.&#13;
-was the t . , .. «&#13;
• V 4&#13;
Frank Yeager, of Moontown,&#13;
killed a4Han named Powell with an ax,&#13;
shot Mrs. Yeager three times and then&#13;
cut his own throat. Yeu^er and bis&#13;
wife will probably die. Yeager was&#13;
jealous of Powell.&#13;
Jerry Taylor, sent to lonta from&#13;
Oakland county, in June, 1807, for live&#13;
years for burglary, scaled the wall by&#13;
means of a gas pipe. He was captured&#13;
an hour later, the bloodhounds running&#13;
him to earts.&#13;
Andrew Ca.oeg-ie has promised to&#13;
give $1,750,000 to cover the cost of the&#13;
proposed addition to the art, science&#13;
and library departments of the Carnegie&#13;
library at the entrance to Schenly&#13;
park, Pittsburgh Pa.&#13;
Hereafter it will be s^afe for ladies&#13;
to. walk along the streets of Carsonville,&#13;
as the council has ordered the&#13;
village marshal to arrest promptly&#13;
anyone found drunk upon the streets,&#13;
as well as anyone using profane language.&#13;
Houjrhton is having the boom of its&#13;
life. It U one of the oldest towns in&#13;
the upper peninsula and, next to Calumet,&#13;
probably (he richest: but never&#13;
before has it felt the tremendous effect&#13;
of "big times in coppers" as at&#13;
present. . • A* - •&#13;
Many Manchester citizens think coal&#13;
exists in paying quantities under the&#13;
village, but the fact that it wiil cost $5,-&#13;
000for drilling. &lt;»tc.. to find out it they&#13;
are right makes them doubtful whether&#13;
it would pay to be certain aa to the&#13;
correctness of their belief.&#13;
A Vassar man purchased a cow the&#13;
other day, paying $35 for her, and&#13;
started to drivt? her home. While&#13;
crossing a railroad track on the way&#13;
she bolted and ran up the track just in&#13;
time to get in front of a faist {rain,&#13;
Which struck and killed her.&#13;
Xs 6pringr advances the put look for&#13;
Reaches*! Grand Haveu grows brighter-&#13;
One of tbe most prominent growers, is&#13;
so confident of a fair Crop that he has&#13;
made a tat of 8100 that he will harvest&#13;
18,000 baskets this season. ^is&#13;
usual crop is about 30.000 baskets.&#13;
The unanimous opinion of those who&#13;
have made an examination of the conditions&#13;
it&gt; that the wheat, crop ia Cass,&#13;
county has been seriously injured, and&#13;
will, be far belovy the .average this year.&#13;
Uunless warm rains come soon, much&#13;
of what is still alive will be killed.&#13;
oDuring March the dairy and food department&#13;
examined 1 Oi sample* of food&#13;
products, 56 of which were found to be&#13;
pun1. During the month four violators&#13;
of the pure food laws were fined, three&#13;
were convicted and released on boads&#13;
to appear for sentence, and three cases&#13;
are pending..&#13;
It now costs Sparta S400 to light the&#13;
village street with dinky little oil&#13;
lamps which only serve to accentuate&#13;
the darkness, yet the citizens are looking&#13;
askance at a proposition from a&#13;
firm which offers to replace the lamps&#13;
with electric lights at an annual cost&#13;
of only $20 more.&#13;
The cement industry is becoming one&#13;
of the most important in the IT. S.,&#13;
and southern Michigan leads the world&#13;
in factories. One of the best factories&#13;
is that of the Bronson Portland Cement&#13;
Co. The output of cement there is&#13;
now 1.000 barrels per day, and nearly&#13;
100 men are employed.&#13;
State Game and Fish Warden Morse&#13;
has announced the following appointments:&#13;
Chief deputy, Chas. E. Brew*&#13;
ster, Grand Rapids; state deputies,&#13;
Frederick EL Fisher, Detroit, for Wayne&#13;
county; D. A. Aitken, of Sault Ste.&#13;
Marie, for Chippewa county; bounty&#13;
deputy, Wm. Ocobock, of Wyandotte,&#13;
for Wayne county.&#13;
The supreme court holds that cities*&#13;
villages or townships need not keep&#13;
their roads or streets ia h«tter condition&#13;
tfcaa the law provides fan 4a th»&#13;
case of vehieles. The law doaa a*s apply&#13;
to bicycles, and ejrelers 4MMMS#4 «*!•&#13;
leet damages. The court sajrs. thai it&#13;
aa extension of the UahilUjr ia •eea^i&#13;
jMCestary. tbe legislature a*a*fc ha&#13;
A*k«d for relief. ,&#13;
Geo. L. Atktas, a oarp«a*cr of I*a»&#13;
odtt, while cfossUftff.* bridge over^a&#13;
•creek-near ftardwood lake, was&#13;
€acka«ibj « h\$&gt; lynit. Jwk&#13;
.upon «hi«K tram h.' tioav UatAk&#13;
bhvowntinto « creek, &lt;«ndv* terrJAc&#13;
ieomb«t taok -pla««, Un- whieh. .Attains&#13;
was victoriaaajr^aithough&#13;
badly laoer-&#13;
• '• liTft* ' ' « a v ' -&#13;
•I&gt;tro1t—Har. Na 1 timothy, 10 80 per tea.&#13;
STATfi LEC.lbLA.TURE.&#13;
The senate held an evening session&#13;
Uie/rther night and passe* two very&#13;
important bills, the one e^to,&#13;
normal school at Marqt^tW, apuropri* '&#13;
(^ting 935,000 for the purpffse, »№&lt;Jthe&#13;
other the "barbers' bill," for a state&#13;
bj&gt;ard to examine and license barbers.&#13;
The nd^jpal^s^bqp- j^Ul tvent t^roujrh&#13;
without any trouble or opposition and&#13;
the long cherUbed, a^afettion. of ^thf up*&#13;
p&gt;r peninsula 'peopW S*iit ' it lait be*&#13;
realized as soon a» Gov. Pingree signs&#13;
tfce measure. The befbert'-bfli Svaa&#13;
opposed by Senator Sheldon and others&#13;
on the general ffronp^ that, too many&#13;
state boards are being created, Giddings&#13;
defended it, and it wepVthrough&#13;
with none but unimportant amendments&#13;
except one that w&gt; barber shall&#13;
be given a license who i» addicted to&#13;
the use of liquor to excess.&#13;
The house in committee o^ the&#13;
whole, ground out several important&#13;
bills; Two of EikhoflTs labor bills&#13;
were acted on favorably, one providing&#13;
that buildings in course of cot&gt;8»tn&gt;ction&#13;
shall be equipped with adequate&#13;
closet facilities for the workmen, sad&#13;
tbe other relative to contract labor ia&#13;
prisons. Aldrich's bill' prohibiting'&#13;
persons affected with certain private&#13;
diseases from parrying was agreed; to.&#13;
It has been amended so as- to make*&#13;
such aji act a felony, and by requiring&#13;
that the husband or wife may testify&#13;
against the other, and that the&#13;
cian .shall tell what he knows;&#13;
/ Gov. Pingree has sent to the&#13;
the nominations of G, W. Bement, of&#13;
Lansing, as a member of the board of&#13;
control of the- school for the blind at&#13;
Lansing, and Charles Euth, as judge&#13;
of the court of mediation and arbitration,,&#13;
the former for si* years and the&#13;
latter fqr three years. Wm. D. Mahon&#13;
ofv Detroit, who was recently noml-r&#13;
nated by the governor for the latterplace,&#13;
declined because of lack of time&#13;
to give it.&#13;
In the police and justice courts of Detroit&#13;
one day each week is set apart&#13;
for jury trials, and tbe pay of the&#13;
jurors is SI per day. The result is&#13;
that it is a hard matter to get good&#13;
jurors. Rep. Elkhoff secured tbe passage&#13;
of two bills in the house raising&#13;
th* pay of the jurors to 92.50 per day,&#13;
and as the delegation is unanimous for&#13;
the measures they will undoubtedl y&#13;
become laws.&#13;
The coroners of Wayne county will&#13;
be happy individuasl in the course of a&#13;
few days when Gov. Pinflrfte signs the&#13;
bill raising their salaries from f 1,200&#13;
to CCvOOO. The bill has passed the senate&#13;
and was given immediate effect by&#13;
both houses, and will became a law as&#13;
soon as signed.&#13;
Gov. Pingree told "Billy" French&#13;
that if any bill passes to disposses the&#13;
St. i Clair Flat property owners, he&#13;
would veto it. He also said that the&#13;
man who urges the passage' of such a&#13;
**H-W*MHB»4 huaaeif **nlilical&#13;
ft Isihe tkfcto%ng%, the&#13;
year's fresh prime* Sensible&#13;
people new do the same that&#13;
Nature does—am to be pifrifxed,&#13;
and for the same reasons*&#13;
Theyyse that marvelous blood&#13;
purifier. Hoofs SarsaparilU,&#13;
t p f&#13;
Its work and wQrt&amp;ar»knoTO».irori&lt;J&#13;
wide as s household medicine.&#13;
Ctoairh~"*&gt;tMfr«Mb}e eata?rnsl' dropping&#13;
in my throat, made me nervous on&amp;&#13;
dlsiy. My liver was torpid. Hood's Ssr-&#13;
Mpsrllla corrected both trouble*. Ur&#13;
health la very good." MB». Ktvi&amp;w J,&#13;
byiLB^. 2№ Main St., Aubiiro, Maine..&#13;
Eruption*-"I *P«nt hundred * of dot*&#13;
lam to cure eruptions on my right leg without&#13;
permanent good. SEX bottles of Hood's-&#13;
Sarsaparllla completely eured ro» U am&#13;
very grateful." HwtMjjf BABTUSTT, 46&amp;&#13;
Ninth Ave,, New York City.&#13;
A s t h m a -" I was trpubled with ottnma&#13;
for many years, beine worse spring and fall.&#13;
No medicine svsilod until I took Hood's&#13;
Sarraparllla which completely cure4 me.&#13;
Mawy otaera heard of my cur* and they u§e&#13;
HqodTs/' C. l.'lUroDn;"Eth8,'Obto.&#13;
on./ rtth&#13;
Don't marry a girl who isn't willing&#13;
to do her share of the work on 9-&#13;
tandem.&#13;
A. farmer recently wrote his name&#13;
and poatofflce address on a postal card&#13;
and addressed it simply to "Deering,&#13;
Cttittgo." By return mail he received&#13;
from the* Dteering Harvester Company&#13;
a catalogue with over 109 fine halftone&#13;
illustration^ containing a,picture&#13;
Of th&gt; largest factory la.,America, a&#13;
"twiner1 booklet" on the subject of&#13;
binder twine, a copy of the Deering&#13;
Farm Jburnal, and a personal letter—&#13;
all for. a uoit&amp;l card. Try It.&#13;
Gold Is never so bright as when it is&#13;
doing tbe will of God.&#13;
Shakecinto your shoes, Allen's Foot-&#13;
Base, a powder for the feet. It makes&#13;
tight or New Shoes feel Easy. Cures&#13;
Corns, Bunions, Swollen, Hot and&#13;
Sweating Feet. At all Druggists and&#13;
Shoe Stores, 25c Sample sent FREE.&#13;
A4dre*s&gt;Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y.&#13;
The devil's wrong&#13;
think they are right&#13;
people always&#13;
If the amendment io the cnustitution&#13;
providing for an intermediate court&#13;
fails of passage, a bill may be passed&#13;
by the legislature providing1 for an additional&#13;
supreme court judge, thus relieving&#13;
the pressure some what&#13;
L. Hubbard, Jr., a well-known&#13;
youug newspaper man of Detroit and&#13;
a graduate of the university, has been&#13;
appointed by Speaker Adams as press&#13;
cleric for the remainder of the season,&#13;
vice Grant Bennett, resigned. !&#13;
Gov. Pingree has signed the Spring&#13;
dnck shooting bill and now hunters&#13;
can get up bright and early mornings&#13;
and shoot all the ducks they can bit,&#13;
as the bill takes immediate effect. The&#13;
season closes May 1.&#13;
The McCall bill prohibiting the sale&#13;
and manufacture of cigarettes in this&#13;
state has been referred back from the&#13;
committee of the whole to the com*&#13;
mittee on private corporations.&#13;
Gov. Pingree has signed the- bill&#13;
raising the salary of the state-game&#13;
warden to 82,000 and creating the office&#13;
of chief deputy at $1,500 ; and it Uvnow&#13;
a law and in full effect.&#13;
y g to-day&#13;
andgft a 15c. papfoge of&#13;
Several towns in Texas ha*, be«a&gt;&#13;
visited by a terrific wind and^ bail&#13;
storm which done considerable-damage..&#13;
THE MARKETS.&#13;
. LITE StOCK.&#13;
K«w York— Cattte Sheep Laqa*&gt;s&gt; Hogw&#13;
Best grade*....II0 •'. n 8) 1650 #,06 . ft* t»&#13;
Lower grade*.8 15Q4 *&gt; 4 UU &amp;.TJ 4 00.&#13;
Be*t*r.»&lt;ies.... 5 ao^s7% n |i) n 90&#13;
Lower Kradfts..2 GOflM 00 8 4J &amp;50&#13;
D e t r o i t—&#13;
Bes t grades....4 00fc4 7J 4 51 5,90.&#13;
U 8M&lt; 5 UQ&#13;
Bfts&amp;ff a4«*... .4 40)4 tt i Mi&#13;
UM»»«rfCttj&gt;«il t 7**4 00 &amp; ft*&#13;
4 SO * W ft 85.&#13;
Tmrruii r itfjl f a *&#13;
Lfurtr gnats. J Mm*&#13;
I 6JA4 7i KM »W 4 10&#13;
I (A&#13;
OKAUT MTC&#13;
Wheat. Omrn OaU,&#13;
N t U M a i watte&#13;
ToU4o&#13;
tli*eimn*U 7tt7&lt;&#13;
am*&#13;
:i ' .'&#13;
It takes the place of coffee&#13;
at i th^ cost.&#13;
MacJefrom pure grains it&#13;
is nourishing and healthful..&#13;
I M M tlMkYew IVMW dvM y&lt;wORAPT-O.&#13;
DDYQU&#13;
1&amp;0UCH&#13;
DONT DELAY&#13;
M PS&#13;
BALSAM&#13;
eurt&#13;
U SalTMS ta« «UMtt«u&#13;
4MM&gt; Ss M • • 4lMli&#13;
is trst rt&#13;
U&#13;
Chinaman's Writing&#13;
then Carter1t Ink i» m&#13;
CARTER*! UUC COI,&#13;
. . •• &lt;&#13;
DICK RODNEY;&#13;
or, The Adventures of&#13;
An Eton Boy&#13;
BY JAMEfal GRANT.&#13;
CHAPTER XXII.—(Continued.)&#13;
"The poor led le dying from lack of a&#13;
doctor," «»W tsld Tom,1 wbtr test* &gt;beslde&#13;
HisJop, hantHln«.lii« rounds with&#13;
the tenderers of a wo»an; "and it&#13;
the whole British pavy hove in sight,&#13;
we haven't a1 tag of tenting to shake&#13;
out as a signal, sine* that rascaTly picaroon,&#13;
tfe* Cufcma. hae cast every color&#13;
aodeigaai overboard."&#13;
•"Well, Tom, h© sbant die this bout,'"&#13;
eald Ned Carlton, hopefully. "Let us&#13;
tie up his wounds as "best -vre c^n, to&#13;
belay tme bleeding, and. give him something&#13;
as a reviver."&#13;
•"W* a bleesing hifr old mother in&#13;
Scotland don't seo ail this," Added&#13;
rough Tom Umlsowrvfc,' ^Atb- &lt;• V* tear&#13;
la his eye; "poor XUc'i:,Hl&amp;lop 1B her&#13;
oiifyv lupport, an^*, sister Vtoo."&#13;
I tnought now, with compunction,&#13;
bow often his theories and pedantry&#13;
had t»ored me, and I reeolved to be&#13;
•nremitting in nty care'o? hTm." ^ ,&#13;
The united medical skill of those&#13;
honeet souls, our-crew, was very BmaH;&#13;
bowever, the -wounds 'were carefully&#13;
washed in clean Tvater;. their best&#13;
eatrt* 'were torn 'into bandages or folded&#13;
into pads to stop £l»e bleeding; and&#13;
In this they were 'quite successful&#13;
A beaker of New iBng&gt;amd -rum was&#13;
nolsted out of the tforehold, and its&#13;
bead was instantly etartett. The HQuor&#13;
was very Tedblent of treacle; but a&#13;
glacs; of Ht mtxed &lt;w!f h -water—ttf&amp; readiest&#13;
stimulant that occurred tP the&#13;
minds of the seamen—was .poured between&#13;
the parched lips of the sufferer,&#13;
who at last slept, in the pleasant atmosphere&#13;
formed by Use awning&#13;
which shaded himirom the fierce- son,&#13;
and in the breeze 'that whistled past&#13;
the tows as the- Bugrenie «tlH * * e on&#13;
her tew course, close hauled, with all&#13;
her fore-and-aft canvas set, »ad the&#13;
white, glittering spray flying over her&#13;
cat-heads and dolphin striker.&#13;
The terrible Gubano still kept petftesston&#13;
of the cabin. His two six-barreled&#13;
revolvers gave him twelve shote,&#13;
and we were but nine in all, as the&#13;
captain, Roberts, and Will White had&#13;
already perished by 'bis hand, and&#13;
HjfslokJ, *16 all appearances, was dying;&#13;
thug Antonio kept «s ail (SL sub-&#13;
Jeetiob .by frt*. weapons,. just* am a*)f&#13;
a dozen well-armed soldiers may w i -&#13;
trty\ f mnh nf thginftr^ft&#13;
So passed the night; the crew gr#&#13;
ed fonward, full-of schetike* for&#13;
auce, and he aft, full of trlumjih,&#13;
fe/ocity and cogaac. &gt; v .&#13;
Ntxt morning I was on the&lt;Quarter-&#13;
4eca&gt; and wljen day broke I'became&#13;
awafe, by a splashing eottnd aeteln,&#13;
that we were towing something iAifefce&#13;
dead water of the brig's wake. On&#13;
looking aver the taffr&amp;il, what were&#13;
my emotiqas on beholding tkebodyof&#13;
my kind friend—our good and h^ppitable&#13;
oeptalri—&lt;owW by tbe neb£ at&#13;
the end of a line!&#13;
Around the poor corpse, which- was&#13;
Jn Its nightdress, the green waves&#13;
danced menily in the golden light'of&#13;
the•mor&amp;ing. syi1 that was now..beaming'over&#13;
the sea, "re/reshing^.tae distant&#13;
shores and reviving all but him."&#13;
Antoalo In the. n № ^d ,&lt;#st ifcXrpm&#13;
©ne^pf" the caqfa windows on the port&#13;
f i d i ^, the0 I'utter^iase, and through&#13;
thai atpWtttre' the linfe' to witicn' iV was&#13;
»c&gt;k^[6^'a^c!gfir, whicix as-&#13;
4 | * f t e ^ l 't times, I dis-&#13;
Cn'bao'-was&#13;
bep&#13;
to f roetcame^&#13;
wltal^rett&#13;
prevented .any 56&#13;
V&#13;
"feesaonio!" we heard him exclaim,&#13;
wh^n bf ffwiKlihni ittftiw***-ty, Ehlp&#13;
tbe line part^r*Jted.it»J # ^ Corpse&#13;
w«"CtT*oHln« and. aangim; te ties ward.&#13;
"Tttere *e RO««. «ftd QQ&amp; West Aim,&#13;
aJtboush i^'s.,«k&gt;*4rift rvJUiOtfct : a&#13;
v&#13;
-ialdnj off kIs&#13;
hat. as the body aohfaed like a fisherman's&#13;
float osudss wmve«-ter a little&#13;
•pac e and.thfla. d i m ^ e a f^ to-^eHuxg.&#13;
wtdt* track Bu4e by tae Eugenic&#13;
tttrough the-'darVapp'lB-kiieeai ct t ie&#13;
All the stories I&#13;
iwgi&#13;
mt 4tWs&#13;
« r « ad&#13;
^seilpee* by&#13;
HyslQp rallied a little and was rem^&#13;
ved Into one of the forecastle berths,&#13;
lie could tell us only that he had been&#13;
surprised when asleep, and had been&#13;
stabbed again and again—that he became&#13;
insensible and remembered nothing&#13;
more, His distress was great when&#13;
we' related the story of the captain's&#13;
fate, the death of Will White, and that&#13;
their destroyer was still in possession&#13;
of the ship and the arbiter of all our&#13;
lives.&#13;
He writhed on his bed of pain and&#13;
sighed bitterly onflndfng how stiff and&#13;
soro, how weak and almost blind he&#13;
had become by loss of blood; but a&#13;
crisis was now at hand with our Cubano.&#13;
The evening of the fourth day after&#13;
we had saved Hyslop found the brig&#13;
stiU lying on a westerly course; but&#13;
whether in the latitude of Cape San&#13;
Hoque or of the Rio Grande, we knew&#13;
not; and. I suppose, it was all the same&#13;
to Antonio.&#13;
I was at the wheel. The sunset was&#13;
gorgeously beautiful. The Eugenie was&#13;
running with both tacks aft; and under&#13;
the arched leech of her courses I&#13;
conld see the blood-red disk bf the&#13;
sun right ahead settling in the waves,&#13;
which shone in all the colors of the&#13;
dying dolphin; while against the flaming&#13;
orb the black outline of the masts,&#13;
the figure-head and the taper end of the&#13;
jibboom, with its cap, guys and gear,&#13;
were clearly and distinctly defined.&#13;
The waves ahead roee and fell between&#13;
me and the sun, as slowly and&#13;
imperceptibyl he sank at the flaming&#13;
horizon, from a quarter circle to a&#13;
segment; then the last vestige of that&#13;
also disappeared, but the lingering&#13;
rays 6t hf« glory played upward on&#13;
the light clouds that floated above.&#13;
Even they paled away and died out,&#13;
and twilight stole over the sea, which&#13;
changed from gold to a traaspareat&#13;
blue. . . . • - .&#13;
Witfc the -increasing1 twilight came B&#13;
ctang* of wind, and before it a great&#13;
bank «f ciood rolled from the horizon&#13;
on our starboard bow. Under its shadow&#13;
th4 sea was darkened and its broken&#13;
water flecked with white. The new&#13;
breeze; came first upon our quarter,&#13;
thea rapidly it wan abeam and three&#13;
grea&amp; dlbatreaswj were Been t o whip&#13;
the wa with tkeftftxrtftgg, whfle a whole&#13;
where "ta#-ablp- we* drtriag or driftour&#13;
bows, plunging Joyously from wave&#13;
to wave.&#13;
Tueks and braces were instantly&#13;
manned and the sails were trimmed&#13;
fijew for our desultory course.&#13;
"riail ho—to windward"! Bald one of&#13;
the crew&gt; in a low but excited ^voice,&#13;
lest the sound might reach the cabin;&#13;
and as the dense bank of purple clouds&#13;
opened a large bark came out of it,&#13;
and her form1 became more and more&#13;
defined as she left the vapor astern.&#13;
She was going free—that is, with her&#13;
head further off the wind than closehauled—&#13;
and had a press of snow-white&#13;
canvas, which shone in tae last, .light&#13;
of the west.&#13;
"She, i$ four mil.es off." a.ajd Carlton.&#13;
u\Ve must signal her," added Lembourne.&#13;
"With what?" asked Carlton, in the&#13;
same Bharp but low voice; "every color&#13;
is overboard."&#13;
"Anything wljl do—a blue shirt at&#13;
the foremast head; quick?—the sky&#13;
will be quite dark in ten minutes. Run&#13;
it up in a ball with a slipping loop,&#13;
man-o'-war fashion," said Lambourne,&#13;
in a loud whlsp«r; "get reader a ship's&#13;
lantern some of you, for the night&#13;
darkens so fast that we shall scarcely&#13;
be visible when she is abeam of us.&#13;
Ned, get Into the fore-channel and&#13;
wave the light as a signal that we&#13;
want a boat." \ '&#13;
These orders were rapidly obeyed&#13;
and preparations made to throw the&#13;
brig in the wind. While one man hastily&#13;
got the lantern from a litthe round&#13;
house, in which certain stores and&#13;
tools were kept on deck; Ned Carlton&#13;
pulled off his shirt, and was in the&#13;
act of binding it to the signal halyards,&#13;
when the Spaniard, whose quick&#13;
ears detected some commotion, sprang&#13;
on deck, armed as usual.&#13;
On seeing Carlton busy with the halyards&#13;
he looked round, caught sight&#13;
of the ship, which was running with&#13;
the white foam boiling under her foretoot,&#13;
i n* Oust in a moment divined&#13;
what we were about&#13;
Muttering a terrible imprecation in flfr**-&lt;r*1 he Ire* at CarHoav but missed&#13;
btaa ftfr-betere, and shot dead a poor&#13;
apprentice who was eloae by.&#13;
--tarnat t^MUler, *«• * and 'blood&#13;
can't bear tfcttff" saosUed Tom Lemhottcaa,&#13;
whose fnry was soundless, and&#13;
who aaatejpd'up a capstan-tar. "Bee?&#13;
down on him ail hands: there is neither&#13;
sea law no land law eaa help us&#13;
here!* \&#13;
fSastcalac Whatever earns, neatest to&#13;
: * ; •&#13;
wt&#13;
tLt binnacle between as sad him. ftred&#13;
«v«r it flye or six shots from his re*&#13;
volver with terrible rapidity; but so&#13;
unsteady had his hand become la oottsequence&#13;
of his free potations bel*v,&#13;
Uiat every bullet missed, though one&#13;
cMt the kAucklea of Tom Lambouraela&#13;
right hand, and anothsr tore away the&#13;
rim of my straw hat&#13;
He drew a second revolver from his&#13;
ea«b. but Lambourne, by one lucky&#13;
blow with the capstan-bar, knocked it&#13;
out of his hand. It went twenty feet&#13;
Into the air and fell overboard.&#13;
Quick as lightning Antonio pla/**5.&#13;
the other in hlg breast, drew his knife,&#13;
stooped his head, and darting through&#13;
us like an eel, gave Carlton a gash In&#13;
the thigh as he passed.&#13;
He then made for the main rigging,&#13;
and sprang on the bulwark, no doubt&#13;
with the intention1 of running up aloft&#13;
to some secure perch, where he might&#13;
reload hU remaining pistol, and shoot&#13;
us all down at leisure; tut he missed&#13;
his hold of the rattling, and fell overboard!&#13;
There was a shout of furoius Joy.&#13;
"The sea will rob the gallows of ite&#13;
duel" said Carlton; "but he'll ,b«.&#13;
shark's meat, anyway."&#13;
But Antonio was not gonci yet, foi&#13;
in falling he caught one of the lower&#13;
studding-gail booms, and clutched it&#13;
with deadly tenacity, for he knew that&#13;
if once he was fairly launched lntc.&#13;
the ocean his fate would be sealed.&#13;
His face was pale with combined feai&#13;
and fury; his black eyes blazed with&#13;
the fire of hatred; the perspiration&#13;
oozed in drops from his temples. Tom&#13;
Lambourne sprang forward to beat oft&#13;
his fingers; but at that caoment the&#13;
boom, a slender spar, broke from its&#13;
lashings alongside, and swung out at&#13;
a right angle from the brig, with th«&#13;
wretch at the extreme end of it, dangling&#13;
over the waves, like a herring at&#13;
the point of a -amrod.&#13;
Again, and again he writhed his body&#13;
upward In wild struggles to get astride&#13;
the boom, or to reach it with his&#13;
knees, but in vain!&#13;
Instead of exciting pity his terrible&#13;
situation drew forth a shout of derision,&#13;
mingled with expressions of hatred&#13;
and satisfaction, from the line&#13;
cf avenging faces that surveyed him&#13;
over the bulwark, fie hung thus for&#13;
fully five minutes, for Ue was a pov/erful&#13;
man, o£ great strength, muscle and&#13;
bulk.&#13;
. I have no doubt this man1 was AS&#13;
brave as it 1B possible for a ruffian to&#13;
be; but the prospect of c.r\ immediate&#13;
death—a death, too. from which there&#13;
was no escape—terrified him.&#13;
His glance of. hate.toward us turaed&#13;
to one of wild and earnest entreaty, :&#13;
"Mercy.!—pardon!—in the name and&#13;
for the love of the Almighty!" he exclaim**&#13;
in Spanish, in a tone of intense&#13;
earnestness; but he waB heard by&#13;
us with fierce derision in that moment&#13;
of just triumph and too long delayed&#13;
vengeance.&#13;
E tee lwrch,&#13;
and each time the feet and knees of the&#13;
wretched Cubano were immersed in the&#13;
waves.&#13;
Beneath him was the abygs of water&#13;
that rushed past the side of the&#13;
brig. He panted rather than breathed,&#13;
and through the dusk we could see how&#13;
his aeathg hands turned white as his&#13;
^ace, and that the points of his fingers&#13;
were blood-red. 5Als eyes grew wild&#13;
and haggard as terror ebilled bis coward&#13;
heart and. agooixed his soul; md&#13;
yet through the surge the fleet cxwft&#13;
flew on!&#13;
Every moment increased the wei&amp;tit&#13;
of his body and the weakness of tie&#13;
hands and wrists.&#13;
At last it v/as evident that his pevers&#13;
of endurance could be no longer&#13;
taxed; he uttered a half-smotbe.&lt;&gt;d&#13;
shriek, and closed bis eyes as be cluAg&#13;
to that slender spar, and it swayed *o&#13;
a.rd' fro while the close-hauled bTtg&#13;
flew on!&#13;
The iron hook in the bulwark TO&#13;
which the studding-sail boom **£&#13;
hang gave way under the dous'e&#13;
weight of the spar and of his bod•*.&#13;
There was a shrill cry of despair, li^c&#13;
the parting shriek of an evii spirt,&#13;
or the skirl of the gusty blast, as tfte&#13;
boom, and the wretch who clung to it&#13;
in blind desperation, vanished into t\e&#13;
black trough of the sea, and, like a&#13;
cork or a reed, were sw*2t amid trie&#13;
salt foam to leeward.&#13;
The Eugenie rose like a duck upon&#13;
the water, and, as " freed at that&#13;
moment from a load of crime, eeeotd&#13;
to fly forward with Increased gpeet?&#13;
Twas night now, and the s»vip&#13;
which we had first seen upon car&#13;
weather bow was a mile astern and to&#13;
leeward of U*.&#13;
(To be continued.)&#13;
ma t o&#13;
Tbe late Professor Drummond.&#13;
quite a child, discovered that b« couM&#13;
hypnotise, people. At a fcktMay party&#13;
a little girl refused to play tae pUno.&#13;
DnumnoBd happened to catch her eye,&#13;
tad eaU. "Play/* To aU tvrprist sfte&#13;
rose obedteatiy, west to tae t4a*o, staid&#13;
played. At another time ae hypnotist*&#13;
*hcty, gave him a poker for a gun, and&#13;
•aid, T s * a pheasant; aboot me." The&#13;
boy did so. aad Dniisaerd, to keen ey&#13;
w*am,. i*&amp;* vbtreanon the eoy.&#13;
Hie Mblvd" Move, made — if ao.&#13;
alt * o w the haad with ta« poker.&#13;
The fcypMrtiseri had |ott ttee to atop&#13;
oNE reason Mia. PiaUamV ttm&#13;
promptly if that they have&#13;
Through some of the many tfeewaada of Mrs. Pink*&#13;
ham's friends as ailing woman will to M to wtite to ltn&amp;&#13;
Piakham at her home in Lynnv&#13;
Kas&amp;, and will tell her symptoms.&#13;
The reply* made without charge of&#13;
any kind, will bear such evidence&#13;
of knowledge of the trouble that&#13;
belief in her advice at once inspires&#13;
hope.&#13;
This of itself is a great&#13;
HELP9TO&#13;
CURE&#13;
Then the knowledge that women ant? swn Use letters asking&#13;
for advice and women only assist Mrs. FirtlMW ia replying&#13;
majces it easy to be explicit aboot th*attU»ta*agsta*rdefo*&#13;
the disease.&#13;
#RS. $UZA THOMAS, of 654 Hue S U Esstoa. Pa., writes 1&#13;
" DEAR MRS. PINKHAM—I doctored with two of the best&#13;
I doctors sa the city for twoyears&#13;
and had me relief until I&#13;
began the «ae of yow remedies.&#13;
My trouble was ukeration of&#13;
the wosnb. I suffered&#13;
semethtag terrible, could&#13;
not sleep nights and&#13;
thought sometimes that&#13;
death would be such a&#13;
relief. To-day I am a well&#13;
woman, able to do* my&#13;
own work, and have not&#13;
a pain. I ased four bottles&#13;
of Lydia B. Pinkhasn's&#13;
VegatabseCompousd and&#13;
three packages of Sanathre&#13;
Wash and cannot&#13;
thank yen enough for the&#13;
gooditfidsae,-&#13;
Mas. M. STQDDARD,&#13;
Box 268. SpnagfieUl Minn.,&#13;
writes:&#13;
••DEAR Kaa. FmuAst^For&#13;
about four years I was a great sufferer from' fexaala tseabtes. I&#13;
had backache all of the time, no appetite, pains ta stomach, faint*&#13;
ing spells, was weak and my system was coawpletelyrun down*&#13;
I also had falling of womb so bad that I eosjld scarcely walk&#13;
across the floor. After taking two bottles of your Vegetable&#13;
Compound and one box of Lozengers, can say I a a cured.**&#13;
THE CUniNG KIND&#13;
Th« Dcerlng* Ideal Mower U tbt&#13;
tldn of » gnus catUnc macbJ&amp;a tb«t will emt.&#13;
Tk* llckt dnft of the Devrtng Ideal M&#13;
fact U*t the D«tvM« rolltr h&#13;
friction.&#13;
Th« Dieting Ideal Mower run*&#13;
so loit motion.&#13;
Th* Deerlnf Ideal Mower «• quick&#13;
Every oanc« of kon* power U »»T«&lt;1. Ik*&#13;
whNk, Vo t&gt;wklnc«ptouc«taiteri.'&gt;&#13;
The Deerlnf Ideal Mower k v u&#13;
that to alw»jr| № UA*I tta«&#13;
nowtn&#13;
, but tb« D«*fittf Ideals *r*&#13;
Scsd for tie acscristlT t&#13;
"Ujst Draft latsls. "&#13;
DEERIM8 HARVESTER € ! » ,&#13;
CHICAGO.&#13;
The fact that tte Chedxdtm wheel girt f»&#13;
hill doee not mean that chain wheel* are of no&#13;
•elre* and e*n assure roa that they ^•eyou e&#13;
•howtisthatthe Chainiestis the better hilI-cK«»b«.&#13;
cause the berel-gearing cannot be cramped or t^ajated&#13;
This same uniformity of action makes the rtiauil— em&#13;
ning machine under ail conditions of ridini*.&#13;
CtiiUea, $75; Cifcrtit C l * , $50; MirtMtvSSS;&#13;
girl npxhe&#13;
cbmim wheels oor-&#13;
Waatthepictare&#13;
Bimniybev&#13;
tk« extra strain, run-&#13;
Ask Any Oolasbia dealer fee a Catalogue,&#13;
#or write to us dixeax, enclosing a S-oe Ktamp. laifwi,&#13;
8palding:'s&#13;
Catalogue of Sports&#13;
-72 IMPS* wifeaestto 4Q0&lt;&#13;
SPAI.DINO 4&#13;
e b—»er&#13;
Italr rearlai allk KNSMHiS&#13;
-'*„&#13;
1 ' • • » • » . • • *&#13;
' :' &gt; * * a , * ' * *&#13;
f indnry&#13;
F. L. ANDREWS EDITOR.&#13;
THUBSDJtf, | APR. 27, 1899.&#13;
HELD' QOURT AT DOQ SHOW.&#13;
A Tfttw Girt Mid the Atteatloa 8fce&#13;
Attracted by B u Actions.&#13;
Over at the dog ahow on the opening&#13;
night a pretty girl followed by the&#13;
customary masculine throng that always&#13;
circulates around a pretty girl&#13;
•8 a moth whirls around a candle, wandered&#13;
through the aisles of the First&#13;
regiment armory and listened to all the&#13;
noisy canines sing their doleful# songs&#13;
of woe and wrong. She patted the&#13;
heads of the ugliest bulldogs and twisted&#13;
a bunch of violets into the collar&#13;
of a shaggy S t Bernard.&#13;
She pulled the tails of the kinkled&#13;
pugs and tweaked the ears of the jaunty&#13;
fox-terriers. She righted a collar&#13;
that had turned awry and even ventured&#13;
to make friends with the bloodhounds.&#13;
The dogs were happy and&#13;
so was the pretty girl. The delight of&#13;
the escorting masculine throng was&#13;
not so evident, but they pretended at&#13;
least that they enjoyed playing second&#13;
fiddle to a dog rather than not having&#13;
a chance to take part In her orchestra&#13;
at all.&#13;
One great bulldog evidently shared&#13;
the sentiments of the men. When the&#13;
pretty girl reached the cage that contained&#13;
the ferocious looking brute she&#13;
found it had no water and was barking&#13;
its dissatisfaction at the turn oi&#13;
affairs in the most emphatically protesting&#13;
manner.&#13;
"The poor dog," exclaimed the girl&#13;
In crescendo accents of pity, and at&#13;
odce she remedied the evil by helping&#13;
her four-footed friend to some water&#13;
stolen from the neighboring cage. After&#13;
that act of mercy the dog, like the&#13;
men, was her abject victim.&#13;
It put both paws on her shoulders&#13;
and laid Its head down affectionately,&#13;
and when the girl attempted to wander&#13;
away the dog cried so plteoualy thai&#13;
she returned again and again to comfort&#13;
it. "Poor thing," exclaimed ont&#13;
of the surrounding men with a whim*&#13;
•leal grimace, "poor thing. Who said&#13;
that a dog hadn't the feelings of a&#13;
man?"&#13;
The pretty girl laughed and blushed&#13;
and rewarded the speaker with the&#13;
present of a very special smile.&#13;
Mr. L. J. Danis advertising agent&#13;
for Baxter's Mandrake Bitters, Henry&#13;
and Johnsonr* Arnica £ 0\\ Liniment,&#13;
an.dDowns' Elixir, made this office a&#13;
pleasant call on his annual round, last&#13;
week.&#13;
The territory cared for by Mr.&#13;
Danis comprised the state of Michigan,&#13;
and portions of Ohio, Indiana&#13;
and Illinois, and he visits every town&#13;
once a year, making advertising contracts,&#13;
and looking alter sales.&#13;
These remedies are standard and&#13;
well known to our people.&#13;
It is claimed that Downs' Elixir is&#13;
the oldest cough medicine made, it&#13;
having been prominently before the&#13;
public for nearly three-quarters of a&#13;
century. Mr. Danis reports largely&#13;
increased sales over any imprevious&#13;
year since he has been on the route.&#13;
This speaks well for Mr. Danis, as&#13;
for the medicine he represents.&#13;
Losing Money on Two-Thlrdi of Oar MftU&#13;
The United States lost, An 1887. aboit&#13;
126,000,000 in carrylngLAacond-class&#13;
matter. This consists of magazines,&#13;
newspapers and serial libraries, carried&#13;
at 1 cent a pound, and copies of papers&#13;
forwarded free to subscribers in the&#13;
country. The cost to the government&#13;
of transporting second-class matter is&#13;
eight cents a pound; the revenue from&#13;
it was but eight and a half mills. From&#13;
two-thirds of the mall matter handled&#13;
in 1897 the revenue was less than onethirtieth&#13;
of the cost of the mail service.&#13;
No stamps appear on secondclass&#13;
matter. The money for postage&#13;
is paid to the postmaster, and he giveB&#13;
a receipt for the amount to the pub-&#13;
Usher. The use of "newspaper&#13;
stamps" has been discontinued. There&#13;
are 9,376 postofflees sending secondclass&#13;
matter, and for 1898 there were&#13;
sent 395,000,000 pounds; over 55 per&#13;
cent of this bulk was sent from six&#13;
centers—New York. Chicago, St. Louis,&#13;
Boston, Philadelphia, Cincinnati.&#13;
• m m&#13;
; - WeVXot&#13;
"lin afraid," iald &lt;th« man vita&#13;
heary gold watch chain, *tfeat our&#13;
friend the inventor will never w*&gt;&#13;
aeed." "But he is very clever and industrious."&#13;
"Yes. But he insists on&#13;
getting his machine so that it will&#13;
work before letting me put stock ofi&#13;
the market"—Washington Star.&#13;
A «!«•** QUM Bye.&#13;
A tiger with a glass eye Is in a&#13;
nagerle at Stuttgart, and looks as fierce&#13;
with his glass eye as with the real one.&#13;
"THROW AWAIT YOUR BOTTLE.&#13;
J £ £ t £ * * &gt;**?*' wedldne. bat fa prepare^&#13;
direct from the formula of B. 8. Baito&amp;TlFlX,&#13;
Cleveland's most eminent medalist byHjalsner&#13;
O.Benaon,?lUX,B.8. BA&amp;BBNla ihegreaW&#13;
est known restorative and inrigontor&#13;
lor men and women.&#13;
It creates sesM flash. BJMSGSS&#13;
a*d rtr—gtt. clears the braio,&#13;
makes the blood pure and rich&#13;
and causes a general feeling of&#13;
health, strength and renewed&#13;
vitality, while the generative&#13;
organs are helped to regain&#13;
their normal powers and the&#13;
sufferer is quickly made conscious&#13;
of direct benefit One&#13;
box will work wonders, six&#13;
should perfect a cure. Prepared&#13;
In small sugar coated tablet*&#13;
easy to swallow. The days of&#13;
celery compounds, * acrvunuL&#13;
saratparUlaa and vile liquid&#13;
tonics are over. BAR-B8N is&#13;
for sal* at efl drag stores, a 60-doea box for SO&#13;
cearts, or we will mail it securely sealed on re*&#13;
Ctipt Of prke, DJta BARTON AND BHNSON,&#13;
404 PW'-Ben **i*rVi Cleveland^ Ok&#13;
For sale by&#13;
F. A. SIGLER, Druggist.&#13;
Piuckney, - - Mich.&#13;
Thankful words written by bin.&#13;
Ada E. Hart of Groton, S. D. "Was&#13;
taken with a bad cold which settled&#13;
on my lungs; cough settled in and&#13;
finally terminated in Consumption&#13;
Four doctors gave me op saying I&#13;
could live but a short time. 1 gare&#13;
myself up to my Saviour, determined&#13;
if I could not stay with my friends on&#13;
earth, I would meet my absent ones&#13;
above. My husband was adyissd to&#13;
get Dr. King's New Discovery for&#13;
Consumption, Coughs and Golds. I&#13;
gave it a trial, took in all eight bottles.&#13;
It has cured me. and thank God&#13;
I am saved and now a well and&#13;
healthy woman. Trial bottles free at&#13;
P. A. Sigler's drag store. Begnlar&#13;
•ise 50c and $1, guaranteed or price&#13;
refunded.&#13;
SHORT CHIMNEY STACKS.&#13;
The Days of the Tall Ones Are Xnm*&#13;
beved, It Is Said.&#13;
. The days of, the tall, smoKa-belchlng&#13;
factory chimneys are numbered, according&#13;
to a writer In the Iron Trade&#13;
Jteview. Instead there are to be&#13;
short stacks and blowers. For illustration,&#13;
the experience of a Boston&#13;
manufacturing firm is related.&#13;
Changes In the arrangement of the&#13;
works necessitated the removal of the&#13;
boiler plant, but it was out of the&#13;
question to take the chimney along.&#13;
In Its stead a fan blower was installed&#13;
on top of the boilers, and provided&#13;
with a special engine to drive it at&#13;
just thek*ipeed required. It is automatically&#13;
regulated so that less than&#13;
one pound drop- rh steam pressure&#13;
greatly increases the draft, startt up&#13;
the fire, and brings the pressure hack&#13;
lo where it belongs, t h e fan works&#13;
by suction, draws the n * s t from ih#&#13;
•oiler flue and forces t b n out through&#13;
-a short stack exto&amp;ding only IX feet&#13;
above the boiler-room floor. The&#13;
draught which may be produced is&#13;
two or three times strongs? than that&#13;
of the chimney which has been disparted,&#13;
and is just as strong in aft&#13;
kinds of weather, while the « o * V *&#13;
U said, of the entire mechanioaVtat&amp;&#13;
sJBt statement, including tin&#13;
•tack, hat b#ea lejs than one-half of&#13;
that of a new chimney. Because of&#13;
tfc* t t m g e r draught moeh cheaper&#13;
Chamberlain's Couvh Remedy&#13;
Tbis remedy is intended especially&#13;
for coughs, colds, croup, whooping&#13;
coagh and influenza. It has become&#13;
famous for its cures of these diseases&#13;
over a large part of the civilized&#13;
world. The most flattering tnstimon&#13;
ials have been received giving account&#13;
of its pood work; of the aggravating&#13;
and persistent coughs it has cured; of&#13;
Rpivere co'ds that have yielded prompt&#13;
ly to its soothing effects and of the&#13;
dangerous attacks of croup it has&#13;
cured, otten saving the life of the&#13;
child. The extensive use of it for&#13;
whooping cough has shown that it&#13;
robs disease of sll dangerous conse&#13;
quences. Sold by F. A. Sigler.&#13;
• doctor te&#13;
so fobsstt psopestjr&#13;
is not&#13;
toft to hen bra&#13;
JVOTICE.&#13;
We, the undersigned, hereby agree&#13;
to refund the money on two 25 cent&#13;
bottles or boxes of Baxter's Mandrake&#13;
Bitters, if it fails to cure constipation,&#13;
biliousness, sick-headache, jaundice,&#13;
loss of appetite, sour stomach, dyspepsia,&#13;
liver complaint, or any of the&#13;
diseases for which it is reccomended.&#13;
It is highly reccomended as a spring&#13;
tonic and blood purifier. 3old liquid&#13;
in bottles, and tablets in boxes.&#13;
Price 25 cents for either. One pack*&#13;
age of either guarenteed to give satisfaction&#13;
or money refunded. F. A.&#13;
Bigler. WiU B. Der/ow.&#13;
The Salts**&#13;
The Sultan usually gives audiences&#13;
on Friday after the ceremony of the&#13;
Selamlik, when he wears a Turkish&#13;
general's uniform, with the star of the&#13;
Imtlaz Order in brilliants hung from&#13;
his neck. As he sits in front of yon*&#13;
with his hands resting on the hilt of&#13;
his sword before him, and you watch&#13;
him speak to Munlr Pasha in his quiet,&#13;
dignified way, you cannot resist the impression&#13;
of his picturesque dignity. On&#13;
other occasion* his dress is simplicity&#13;
itself,»careely differing from that of his&#13;
secretaries and other officials. He&#13;
wears a black frock coat cut in Turkish&#13;
fashion, which Just hides a whits&#13;
waistcoat with a gol4 watch chain. The&#13;
only other Jewelry Is apt to bs a plain&#13;
gold ring on the little finger of ths&#13;
right hand, with a falr-sissd ruby cut&#13;
or polished en cabochoa. It is customary&#13;
to sit in the presence of ths&#13;
Boltan after being remitted to do so,&#13;
but the native-born Turk will only Jnit&#13;
sit on the very edge of ths Httls gilt&#13;
•hair and fold his arms across hit&#13;
chest, waiting Cor ttot Svltaa to address&#13;
him, and than a s t t s f 1* f r t r , w*Us&#13;
WAYNE HOTEL. DETROIT&#13;
AMKMQAN AMD aTlMOPaTAM FLAN,&#13;
•» TO e».»o si.oo ro *m,oo 4&#13;
TO&#13;
Business Pointers.&#13;
tf«r Stela.&#13;
For sale or service, a thourghbred&#13;
Clydesdale Stallion. For particulars&#13;
address the subscriber,&#13;
T. Birkett.&#13;
T* Beat&#13;
The house known as the Lipsoombe&#13;
House, Portage Lake. Enquire of&#13;
T. Birkett.&#13;
Two well matched colts, 3 and 4&#13;
years old. t-18&#13;
S. A. Darwin.&#13;
Rev. £ . Edwards, pastor of tae&#13;
English Baptist church at Minersville.&#13;
Pa., when suffering with rheumatism&#13;
was advised to try Chamberlain's Pain&#13;
Balm. He says: "A few applications&#13;
of this liniment proved of great service&#13;
to me. It subdued the inflamation and&#13;
relieved the pain. Should any sufferer&#13;
profit by giving pain balm a trial it&#13;
will please me.'1 For sale by F. A.&#13;
Sigler,&#13;
Far Sale.&#13;
Two 18 inch leather hsrse collars&#13;
open at the bottom (nearly new.)&#13;
E. J. BBIGGS.&#13;
For Sale.&#13;
Harnden'8 Seeds Grow. Don't&#13;
plant them too thick. 3 packages, 5c,&#13;
F. E. WBIGHT&#13;
[CENTS&#13;
The Bailed Dewi* Rarer&#13;
Cream not SKim Milk&#13;
Hits tf\e Nail oathe Head!&#13;
Knows what to ftitiiy&#13;
Knows wlvat toLe&amp;veXMl!&#13;
'—-^ Rull of Gtixger&#13;
Full of Sun5t\l i\e . ^ - ^&#13;
A Practical I^per&#13;
—For 5ieQvc3-PDUcd-qp Farmers&#13;
Good many State where Cflnaptioni5 Cm&#13;
Cut fo Fit the Man who Knows WtotVwK&amp;i&#13;
eBatjUieFiatlfe&#13;
Jostle? toAH Men&#13;
|jfmiD&#13;
Why hare s Mortgage on the Farm, Poor Crops,&#13;
Rheumatism, Sour Bread, Sick Hogs, a Leaky Roof,&#13;
Ropy Milk, a Balky Horse, Grip; Hole in the Pocket,&#13;
Skeleton in the Closet, or any other&#13;
Pain or Trouble&#13;
when you can get the Farm Journal five yean for 50&#13;
cents? Address FARM JOURNAL, Phila., Ba.&#13;
inPORTANT NOTICE.-By special arraafeajeftt&#13;
made with the FARn JOURNAL, we are enabled to&#13;
offer that paper from now until December, 1903, te&#13;
every subscriber who pays for oars one y*r abe«4&#13;
—both papers for the price of ours only.&#13;
49*Be prompt in accepting this offer.&#13;
THE PINCKNEY DISPATCH.&#13;
F. L ANDREWS, PROP.&#13;
HIGGLE B&#13;
btnilins;,low sud tomcbimM «hsst, lip*&#13;
•atf fOMfc**4 with tfc* right h**)«V&#13;
"Firms* Bf»mUml»i,M (Mistsf, ttjr&#13;
word Is law.)—Harp*!"* lUf*slM.&#13;
A Farm Library of unequalled nine—Practical.&#13;
Up-to-date, Concise and Comprehensive—Handsomely&#13;
printed and Beautifully Illustrated.&#13;
B y J A C O B B 1 Q O L B&#13;
No. l-BKMLE HORSE BOOK&#13;
All about Horses a Common-8ense Treatise, with over&#13;
74 Illustrations, a standard work. Price, 50 Cents.&#13;
No. 2-BKWLE BERRY BOOK&#13;
All about growi&amp;c Small Fruits wad and learn bow,&#13;
contains 43 colored life-like reproductions of all leading&#13;
varieties and 100 other illustrations. Price, 50 Cent*.&#13;
No. a-BIQQLB POULTRY BOOK&#13;
All about Poultry; the best Poultry Book ta existence 1&#13;
tells everything; with*) colored life-like reproductions&#13;
of ail the principal breeds; with xoi other illustrations.&#13;
Price, 50 Cents.&#13;
No. 4—B4OGLE COW BOOK&#13;
AIL about Cows and the Dairy Business: having afrent&#13;
_ sale; contains 8 colored life-like reproduction* oreack&#13;
* breed, with 13a other illustrations. Price, 90 Casts.&#13;
No. 6—BIOQLB SWINE BOOK&#13;
Just oat All about Hofft-Breedisf, Feeding, Botch*&#13;
cry, Diseases, etc. Contains over 80 beautiful nal£&#13;
tone* and other engravings. Price, so Cents.&#13;
ibeBKMLB BOOKS ere unique.original,useful-you never'&#13;
aaw anything like th«m-«o practical(»o«ea»lbJe. They&#13;
are having an enormous sale—Seat, West, North and&#13;
South. Bvery one who keeps *&gt; Horse, Cow, Bog or&#13;
Chicken, or grows Small Fruits, ought to send right&#13;
•way ior the B M Q U BOOKS. The FARM JOURNAL lsvowp«p«-,sad«lbryo«iand note Misfit. t t n i M y e e n&#13;
o»dj it b S c great botled-down, mi thenall-on^be nead&gt;&#13;
o^ulUller-yoafcve-aaid-it, Farm and Kotteshold paper te&#13;
3L . . - w g g e t p a p o f i u s U e &amp; t h * D n k i d S U t e *&#13;
l k d l f ^ d&#13;
U&#13;
and&#13;
egD^n&#13;
sats ss4 njoi) wiM ot enut »y mad&#13;
It is better to keep well than to get&#13;
well, although when one is tick it is&#13;
desirable t&lt;rget-well; When we" don=l&#13;
iider that eight-tentti of the ailments&#13;
that afflict* , l t e Amenetn Jeople are&#13;
caused by oonatipation* we shaJKrealise&#13;
why it is that Baxter's Manlrake&#13;
Bitters "keeps folk* welT. orvif/siok&#13;
enables them to get well. Baxter's]&#13;
Mandrake Bitters' &lt;)ure# constipation.&#13;
Price 25c per beitle—Whj not step inj&#13;
and $*t,\* bottle-»ftd by uaiagal jbe&#13;
sored hf good heaitli th^r^gh ^tte&#13;
ing hot months. We sell it and j&#13;
an tee it to give satisfaction or ipdne$&#13;
refunded. i • • ,&#13;
F. Au Sigler. I&#13;
The Best Yalue In&#13;
Magasine Literature,&#13;
IS THE&#13;
and Improved&#13;
FRANK ISSUE'S j&#13;
POPULAR- MOMTtUn&#13;
for 3 Quarter Century •' J&#13;
25 qts., $3.00 a Year.&#13;
No\v 10 cts,, $1.00 a year, j&#13;
"?.. Mas. FRANK: CotudM, Kdlfrot.&#13;
Present Oontribptora: ,-..,&#13;
can^ KniSt&#13;
(Jen. Wesley&#13;
Bret Hatte, ; ^ J&#13;
See. QI'NaW l^ong,&#13;
Joaquin Miller,&#13;
Julia C. R, Dorr,&#13;
Walte/1 Gamp,&#13;
Efferton Castle, . . .&#13;
Win. G. VauTassel Sutphen,&#13;
r- Mar»?arfttiE..San«8ter,, ,, *&#13;
Edgar Fawcett, , %&#13;
Leu ise Chandler Moufton,&#13;
William Dean HOWBIIS,, .&#13;
\ Gen. Nelaon A. Miles, *&#13;
and other noted and popular writers.&#13;
Frank Leslie'sPopular AVdnthlyJ*;in&#13;
all rmsoto on* at tlie MAjStesTand t&gt;e»t Itm9at-&#13;
•d 10-eent hiktasinw in th« world—nose better.&#13;
The beet known authors and artists contribute t*&#13;
its pages, and the highest standard of printing Is&#13;
apparent.&#13;
SPECIAL-Beantlful Military Calendar, six&#13;
sections, each in twelve colors, 10x12^ Inches,&#13;
March 1890 to February 1900, together with this&#13;
magulne March to December 18W-441. lor S1.00.&#13;
Frank Leslie Publishing House, N. Y.&#13;
Copies Sold and Sn¥soriptiona Received by&#13;
dealer*.&#13;
Railroad Guida&#13;
tfrand Trunk Railway System^,&#13;
r.Tlia* Table ID effect, February 5,1899, ,&#13;
M. A.L. DIVISION-WESTBOUND.&#13;
No. 37 FMsenyer. Pontiae to Jackson&#13;
&lt;t oonueotlop, frqni'Detroit 9 U a m&#13;
No. 43 lfittd, Lenox to Jackson&#13;
........eonneotton from Detroit 445p m.&#13;
All traias daily except Sunday.&#13;
EASTfiOUND&#13;
No. 10 Pawinfer to Pontiae and Detroit 611 p M&#13;
Vo. 44 Mlsse! to Po^tiac and Lenox •» 7 86 a s&#13;
All traima daily except Sunday.&#13;
No, 80 connection at Pontiae for Detroit.&#13;
No 44 connection at Pontiae for Detroit and&#13;
for the west on D AM R 1&#13;
£ . B . HugSee, W. J.Blaak,&#13;
A G P AT Agents Agent,&#13;
Chicago, III. ^ Pincknsy&#13;
AMD WTKAM9MIF UN*9*&#13;
Popnlar route for Ann Arbor, Toledo&#13;
and points East, South, and for&#13;
Howajl, Owoaso, A l n i , Mt Pleasant&#13;
Cadillac, Manistee, Triyerse Ckjk and&#13;
points in Northwestern Michigan.&#13;
VV. H . BxHNSTT,&#13;
k P» A. Toledo&#13;
Subscribe for the Dispatch.&#13;
BO YIAIIt' '&#13;
.IXPMtllNGS •&#13;
T R A M MA«WS&#13;
OfSIOMS&#13;
; . • " •''• ' * "•• •••.'.V s • • • ' ; . ' \ v • '/'•&#13;
j o b&#13;
*41te* by the W.G. T. V. of Pliekaej.&#13;
BRITISH -&#13;
MEDICAL MSTITUTE&#13;
$0 3 E. aUta S t , JACKSON, MICH.&#13;
TREATS ALL DISEASES&#13;
OF MEft AID WOMEI .&#13;
WFMK MEM restored to vigor and&#13;
PTCAff JSJCrY Yitautr. Organ* of&#13;
the body which have been weakened&#13;
through disease, overwork, exoeae «r&#13;
Indiscretions, restored to full power,&#13;
•treagt h and vigor toy our new and&#13;
original system of treatment&#13;
HUNDREDS o t nununGUQ ev idteesnticme oonf itahl*e gboeoadr&#13;
results obtained from our method of&#13;
treating all forap of ohronjo dt&#13;
WE TREAflMD CURE Catarrh,&#13;
Asthma.&#13;
Brooch**.&#13;
UmCompIsk*&#13;
Tumors,&#13;
Staritir r&#13;
eonrotanoi ran, OU&#13;
DR. HAU W PJEMtONAL CHARtl.&#13;
s n u ui MffMSs ThoM viable to can skoald tend&#13;
stamp for question blank tor home treatment.&#13;
CTYLIStf, RELIABLE&#13;
They always Please.&#13;
ftVTTIRNS&#13;
NONE BETTER AT ANY PRICE&#13;
• sattams ara aoM ta nmuif&#13;
every alty ana to«r» fct |*« Vailed States,&#13;
If ya«r dcklir d«aa s o t KMB IMB I saM&#13;
direct to at On« «««&lt; atampa raaahed.&#13;
[ AddriM your *«araat poUt.&#13;
THE McCALL COMPANY,&#13;
138 to U6 w. I it* Street, New Vtsfc&#13;
IBANCB ovnois f&#13;
180 Fifth Are., Chleefo, a*4&#13;
91 Markat 5t. . Saa ffr—clsao.&#13;
MACAWH&#13;
138 te 146 W. 1 4 * St. , New Y&#13;
We Make&#13;
MILLER IOOC ONE 2 0 8 3 MILES IN 132&#13;
The Eldredge&#13;
$50.0 0&#13;
The Belvidere&#13;
Superior to all others tmspectiv*&#13;
of pries. Catalogue tolU yo«&#13;
:.- " ' WBjT* WTOHOT&#13;
eov&#13;
Stery of t k Phlliplne*'&#13;
BlssIoaed by the Qovera&#13;
to the WarDeeartment&#13;
h ps at&#13;
A.WBK&#13;
by Jl Brat&#13;
TSboak was »rifte» in the army eamne~at~Saa&#13;
PraAetsoo, on the Paeifio with General lfarrit, la&#13;
tka kaapltais at H O Q C № , 1# Hong Koag, in the&#13;
American trachea iTMw.lftj.J^the Jneunrent&#13;
he rear o&#13;
C«»tlsme«l t lavs* w « e k.&#13;
. Bat these selfish motives and&#13;
considerations are not the compelling&#13;
power which moves the&#13;
temperance reform along, nor, for&#13;
the matter of that, any other reform.&#13;
Sinners cannot save themselves,&#13;
and it is about as true of&#13;
suffers. The hope of the temperance&#13;
reform is the capacity of selfsacrifice,&#13;
for unselfish to others&#13;
among the people. The appeal&#13;
for temperance workers let it be&#13;
said, once for all, is not to any&#13;
man's or woman's selfishness, but&#13;
to their conscience, their devotion&#13;
to others, their spirit of self-sacrifice.&#13;
This is the stamp of women&#13;
whom we want and whom we get&#13;
as W C TU workers. And because&#13;
such unselfishness is preeminently&#13;
a characteristic of a&#13;
genuine Christainity, we have the&#13;
right to the second world in the&#13;
name by which our organization&#13;
called. Every one who proves it&#13;
by devoted personal experience&#13;
knows how faithful the promise,&#13;
"He that losest his life for My&#13;
Bake, shall find it."&#13;
Many a poor woman who thanks&#13;
God in secret, through scalding&#13;
tears, that there is t W O T U,&#13;
never joinB it because it would so&#13;
empheize her already crushing&#13;
sorrow over the. drinking habits&#13;
of husband, father or son, and to&#13;
her overwrought feelings it would&#13;
seem to advertise and publish the&#13;
shame of it Many times the&#13;
drinking husband' or father will&#13;
not permit her to join anything&#13;
of a temperance nature, and&#13;
peace from ' persecution greater&#13;
than ever can only be had by&#13;
pretending indifference. Oftentimes&#13;
the watching, the anxiety,&#13;
the terror of the woman, whose&#13;
home is also the home of an often,&#13;
It is well known, that the nervous&#13;
are directly effected by cigarette&#13;
smoking—doabtless more&#13;
so than by the ordinary cigar or&#13;
super-fragrant pipe. But it may&#13;
not be generally understood that&#13;
nerves of the teeth are actually&#13;
killed by this indulgence. It ap-&#13;
(fears from the testimony of a&#13;
Brooklyn dentist that this the&#13;
case.&#13;
The&#13;
act to&#13;
injury done by&#13;
the peace and&#13;
drunken man, leave no margin of&#13;
thought or service that can,be&#13;
given to the cause which her heart&#13;
blesses in its anguish. And for&#13;
very many of those who "ought&#13;
to be interested" because drink&#13;
has shadowed their lives, there is&#13;
the hard struggle for a. lining, the&#13;
finding of the home supplies because&#13;
drink has sapped the earnings&#13;
and the earning power of the&#13;
husband and father.&#13;
Woman would expect .to. be,&#13;
branded AS something worse than&#13;
heathen if they should fold their&#13;
arms when a neighbor's house&#13;
was being fired by an incendairy&#13;
and say,"If that were my house,&#13;
I should be interested, jn trying&#13;
to stop such conflagrations."&#13;
And it is especially the duty, the&#13;
call, ofiUhoae who fcearte have&#13;
never been broken, whose lives&#13;
have not borne the curse of drink,&#13;
to be first and most helpful in&#13;
fighting down the rum traffic.&#13;
Simple gratitude ought to inspire&#13;
such to action. A little&#13;
enthusiasm for humanity, a little&#13;
of the Christ-love in our souls, a&#13;
little patriotic desire to save our&#13;
country from the tide of ruin, a&#13;
little compassion for everybodys'&#13;
the beer&#13;
order of&#13;
rual neighborhoods, not to mention&#13;
domestic happiness, industry&#13;
and economy, has been proved by&#13;
witnesses from every class of so*&#13;
ciety to have exceeded the evils&#13;
of any single act of internal administration&#13;
passed within the&#13;
memory of man.—London Globe.&#13;
An Indiana grocer has printed&#13;
the following in a circular&#13;
(of course in sarcasm), addressed&#13;
to his patrons: "Notice is hereby&#13;
given that if you will come to my&#13;
store three times a day during the&#13;
next year, and purchas a drind of&#13;
whisky each time, paying 10 cents&#13;
a drink, at tbe end of the year I&#13;
will donate five barrels of my&#13;
beat flour, 100 pounds of fine&#13;
granulated sugar, 100 pounds of&#13;
rice, 10 pounds of coffee, 10 gal&#13;
of syrup, 50 yards of calico, three&#13;
pairs of shoes, one $10.20 cloak&#13;
for your wife; and then I will&#13;
have 120 left to pay for the liquor&#13;
you drank.&#13;
SP*1B* B QrtMaceet I f «*&#13;
Mr. B. P. Oiiv* of BarceTona, Bpafa&#13;
spends his wlntirs at Aikne, 8. 0 .&#13;
Weak nervis had caused seven Spates&#13;
in the back of hit fctaVf. On using&#13;
Eleotrio Bitters, America's greatest&#13;
blood and nerve remedy, all pain soon&#13;
left him. fle saye this g"and xnedieint)&#13;
is what his country needs. All America&#13;
knows that it cures li?er and kidney&#13;
trouble, purifies tbe blood, tones&#13;
np the stomach, strengthens the nerves&#13;
pnts vim, vigor and new life into&#13;
every muscles, nerve «nq organ of UM&#13;
body, If weak, tried, or ailing&#13;
A move is on foot for a condensed&#13;
milk factory at Chelsea.&#13;
The Great Northern Paper Co.,&#13;
have bought 100,000 acres of timber&#13;
land in Maine. This will all&#13;
be made up into paper.&#13;
The decision of the supreme&#13;
court that cities have a right to&#13;
put on saloons all the tax they&#13;
wish in addition to the regular&#13;
$500, will make it awfully inter,&#13;
estin? for the saloon men in places&#13;
where the councilmen see fit to&#13;
get after them. A local tax of&#13;
9300 OT $400 in addition to the&#13;
regular license would make things'&#13;
quite burdensome for the saloon.&#13;
According to the Evening&#13;
Times of Ann Arbor there is now&#13;
a movement started throughout&#13;
the county among the Bepublicans&#13;
to form a combination against&#13;
Ann Arbor which will virtually&#13;
be a boycott unless all dissension&#13;
within the party is ended soon&#13;
and the two factions come to an&#13;
understanding to work harmoniously&#13;
for the support of the principles&#13;
and nominees of the party.&#13;
National in color and effect are&#13;
Knill'a Bed Pills for Wan People,&#13;
Knill's White Liver Pills, and Knili's&#13;
Kidney PiUs and guaranteed by oar&#13;
local Druggists.&#13;
— ^ i e ii m&#13;
Send No Money.&#13;
Any reader of this paper can&#13;
secure their choice of a Sterling&#13;
Silver Bracelet, a good watch or a&#13;
solid gold ring with a genuine&#13;
diamond setting, by distributing&#13;
flower seed coupons among their&#13;
friends and acquaintances. Send&#13;
your name and address with three&#13;
2c stamps to the American Seed&#13;
Co., 335 Broadway, N. Y. today&#13;
and you will receive a package of&#13;
choice seeds, $1.00 worth of coupons&#13;
and full particulars.&#13;
need it Every "Bottle guaranteed,&#13;
only 50. Sold by F. A. Staler, drnggisi&#13;
Interesting Items.&#13;
There is a chance that Chelsea&#13;
may have a furniture factory as&#13;
they have a proposition for such&#13;
an industry. V!.- r: • ,&#13;
Here is a. ptetty , good hint,&#13;
our exchanges, to&#13;
A bachelor once&#13;
is a.&#13;
grom one of&#13;
young girls:&#13;
boys, ouKfet to be reason enough&#13;
for any woman to don the white&#13;
ribbon and help do the work.&#13;
Temperance&#13;
It oosts everything to drinkmoney,&#13;
business standing, manliness,,&#13;
integrity; in abort, J&amp;oth&#13;
property, character, li^ana sonl.&#13;
—Arkaysa* Methodist&#13;
The 4*ct of the. matten j*, if w#&#13;
want to multiply diseases, poverty,&#13;
crime, indolence, and all the&#13;
stages of idiocy and drunkenns&#13;
and the consumption of the&#13;
the&#13;
p and th*y will make&#13;
wit-Prof, a 1L D. Fry.&#13;
the&#13;
asked a married man, who had an&#13;
excellent wife, where he found&#13;
her. The reply was, "At home&#13;
with her mother, and not on the&#13;
streets."&#13;
To run a newspaper without oc~&#13;
asionally publishiny an item&#13;
that is untrue or gives offense,&#13;
remarks &amp; level-headed exchange,&#13;
is like running a railroad with&#13;
out having accidents and smashups.&#13;
To do either is a physical&#13;
impossibility.&#13;
Miss Augusta Brundige, one of&#13;
the operators of the Michigan&#13;
Telephone Co.'s exchange at Lansing,&#13;
awoke tho other morning&#13;
and found that she was absolutely&#13;
unable to speak. She has not&#13;
been sick and her throat is not&#13;
sore, but repeated efforts to speak&#13;
have bean unavailing. She is&#13;
not able to make a soud.—Wil -&#13;
liams ton Enterprise.&#13;
Arbor day began in 1872 when&#13;
Hon. J. Sterling Morton introduced&#13;
a resolution at the annual&#13;
board of agriculture, held in Lincoln,&#13;
Nebraska, providing that&#13;
one day be set apart in April for&#13;
Dr. Cady's Condition Powders are&#13;
just what a horse needs when in bad&#13;
Tonict blood pqrifier and&#13;
vermifuge. They are not food but&#13;
medicine and the best in use to pat a&#13;
horse in prime condition. Price 25c&#13;
per package. For sale by F. A. Sig&#13;
ler.&#13;
Wit £inehimi ^ ^&#13;
•oa»ina&gt; «r&#13;
FRANK L. ANDREWS&#13;
bufaacriptloa Prle* Sl&#13;
Eatand at \f PoatoSk* at Plnekaay, Miehi*aa,&#13;
a* Ttrtrnfl-rltft matter.&#13;
rataa outde known on application.&#13;
B&amp;ala«M Cards. $4.00 per yaar.&#13;
Paath aad n i n u n notieaa published Croa.&#13;
AaaoaanaamaU of «.atertaiaaiaaU *ay &amp;• paid&#13;
forTndasLrad, by prawuttas ths ottca with tick*&#13;
ala of admission. In casa tickats ara aot brpogbt&#13;
to tfevaoflea.Nffmlar rataa wul bachaiftad.&#13;
AU mattar la local nottde coluifca wlllba enars&#13;
a par lias taereof, each&#13;
Wae*» ao U •pKlfted* ail notioat&#13;
ed at S cents per line or fraction thereof, (or &lt;&#13;
laaarti—. waete no time is specified* ell aa .&#13;
will ae jaaartad until ordered discontinued, aad&#13;
will he charge* far accordingly. fy*AUohangee&#13;
at aavertlaemeats MOttT reach thUomee as early&#13;
as TUBBDAT morning to insure an insertion the&#13;
same week.&#13;
JOS&#13;
la all its branchee, a specialty. We have all kinds&#13;
and the latest atTlea ofType, etc,- whloh enables&#13;
as to execute all kinds of work, such as Books,&#13;
PaaBlets,Posters, ProframaMs, BUI Ueads,Mote&#13;
Heads, Statements, Cards, Auction Bills, etc, in&#13;
sapenar styles, open the ahortett notice. Prices as&#13;
ow as good work can be aone.&#13;
AU. BILLS FATABL* »IB»T Or BVBWf 1COMTU.&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIRECTORY.&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
. _ - ~,~ Alex. Mclntyre&#13;
TsotTBBS K. 1A Thompson, Alfred Moaks.&#13;
Daniel Richards, b eo. Bowman, Samuel&#13;
Bykaa, 9. D. Johnson.&#13;
CLBBX ,....«.—..—........—. ,..B. H. Teepls&#13;
TBBASOBBB.....^.. W.E. Murphy&#13;
Aaaissos « « W. A. Oarr&#13;
COMJOSSIOHBII O«o. Barch&#13;
D. W. MurU&#13;
Dr.H. F. Slgler&#13;
ATTOBMBT » ~~ W. A. Oarr&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
EPISCOPAL CHUBOH.&#13;
Chss. Simpson, pastor. Services every&#13;
g at I0:ao, and every Bonday&#13;
' l k P ti Th&#13;
M&#13;
Bundey morning _. .&#13;
evening at 7:00 o'clock. Prayer meeting Thursday&#13;
evenings, Sunday school at close of morning&#13;
service. F. L. Andrews, 8upt.&#13;
/-\ONliftBGAT1ONAL CHURCH.&#13;
\J Bev. a W. Bice pastor. Service every&#13;
Sunday morning at 10:80 and every Sunday&#13;
evening at7:6tc?elock. Prayer meeting Thara&lt;&#13;
day evenings. Bnnday school at close of morningservicer&#13;
B. H. Teepla , Sapt. Rose Read, See&#13;
ST. MABT'8 'J ATHOLIO CHUBCH.&#13;
Rev. M. J. Commerford, Pastor. Services&#13;
every Sunday. Low mass at 7:80 o'clock&#13;
high mass with sermon at 9:30 a. m. Catechism&#13;
at S :00 p. m., vespers and benediction at 7: HO p. m.&#13;
SOCIETIES:&#13;
The A. O. H. Society of this place, meets every&#13;
third Sunday in the FT. Matthew Hall.&#13;
John MoGulness, County Delegate.&#13;
Plnckney Y. P. 8. C. £. Meetings held every&#13;
Snndsy evening in vong'l ohuroh at ft;*J o'clock&#13;
Mina Bessie Cordtey, Pree,. Mable Decker Bee&#13;
EPWOBTH LEAGUE. Meets every&#13;
evening at &amp;00 oclock In the M. E. Cnurch.&#13;
Sunday&#13;
A&#13;
cordial Invitation la extended to everyone, eape»&#13;
dally young people. Mrs. Stella Graham Pres.&#13;
The Farm Journal has nearly two&#13;
million readers each issue; it is potting&#13;
in a new press that will print 200&#13;
copies a minute; it is the best farm&#13;
paper in America, and it pleases the&#13;
"women folks alt to pieces. We have&#13;
made a special arrangement by which&#13;
we are able to send the Farm Journal&#13;
five years to every subscriber of the&#13;
Dispatch who pays all arrearages and&#13;
a year in advance; also to all new subscribers&#13;
who pay a year ahead.&#13;
Junior Epvorth League. Meets every Sunday&#13;
afternoon at 3:00 o'clock, ai M. £ church. All&#13;
cordially invited. i&#13;
Miss Edith Vanghn, Superintendent.&#13;
Tie C. T. A. and B. Society of this place, meat&#13;
everv third Saturday evening in the Pr. Mat*&#13;
thew Hail. John Donohue, President,&#13;
KNIGHTS OF MACCABHK8.&#13;
Meet every Friday evening on or before fall&#13;
of the BOOB at their hall in the Swarthout hid*.&#13;
Visiting brothers are cordially invited.&#13;
CHXS. UMIPBALL, Sir Knittht Commander&#13;
T ivingeton Lodge, No. 7«, P h A. X. Uefnlar&#13;
J j Communication Tuesday evening, on or before&#13;
the full ot the moon. Alexander Mclntyre, W. M,&#13;
OBOJSB OF EASTERN STAB meets each month&#13;
the Friday evening following the regular F.&#13;
AA.M. meeting, MRS. JIABV READ, W. M.&#13;
T ADIES OF THE MACCABEKS. Meet every 1st&#13;
l i and 3rd Saturday of eachmonth at 9:3o p m. a«&#13;
ETi). T. M. hall. VUiting aiatera cordially In&#13;
vited. LILA CONiWAY Lady Com.&#13;
Important Notice!&#13;
We, the undersign, do herby agree&#13;
to refund 25 cents the price of any&#13;
Box of Knilt's Bad Pills for Wan&#13;
People, Pale and Weak People, they&#13;
restore Vim, Vigor, and Vitality.&#13;
Knill's White Liver Pills, Knill's&#13;
Blue Kidney Pill* or Knill's Dyspepsia&#13;
Tablets, if purchaser is dissatisfied.&#13;
Only Warranted 25 cent&#13;
preparations on the market.&#13;
WILL CTTRLETT, DXXTKR&#13;
WILL B. DABBOW, PINCKNKT&#13;
KNIGHTS or THH LOYAL i&#13;
, meet every second Wednesday&#13;
evening of every month in the K. O.&#13;
T. M. Hall at 7:80 o'clock. AU visiting&#13;
,Quarda welcome.&#13;
KOBKBT ABXBIX, Capt. Qe&#13;
W. C. T. U. meets the first Pridav ot each&#13;
I month at 8:90 p. m. at the home of Dr. H. F.&#13;
SJgler, Everyone interested in temperanoe is&#13;
coadially invited, airs. Leal Slgler, Pres; Mrs.&#13;
JCtfta Dnrfee, Secretary.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS,&#13;
H. f. SKH.ER M. D&gt; C, L. SIQLER M, 0&#13;
DRS. SIIJLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
Physiciaas and Surgeons. AU calls promptl&#13;
attended to day or night. Offloe on Malnstr&#13;
Pinokney, Mien.&#13;
the planting of trees. Two yean&#13;
Jater, in the same state, a proclamation&#13;
by the governor ordered&#13;
the observance of the anniversary&#13;
and later the legislature made it a&#13;
legal holiday, christened "Arbor&#13;
Day. NOT it is obfwvod by&#13;
states, by Canada, Great Britian,&#13;
India, Mexico and the isles ol UM&#13;
CTIVB 8OLICITOBS WANTED EVERY&#13;
„ WHERE for "The Story of the Philippines."&#13;
»y Marat Halsteed-commiieioned by the Govern,&#13;
ment as Omdal Historian to the War Depart*&#13;
as«nt, The book was writtea in army oampe at&#13;
8aa Prancisoa on the Pacific with GeaersI Marritt,&#13;
in the hospitals at Honolala, in Hone Kong, In&#13;
the American trenahea at Manilla, in the lnsnrcents&#13;
oampe with Agniaaldo, on the deck of the&#13;
Olympis with Dewey. and in the roar of thebattle&#13;
at the tall or Manilla. Bonaaaa for scents. Bmnralof&#13;
plcivree taken by gorernmeat photograpaers&#13;
on the spot. Large book. Low •prices: Big&#13;
profits, freight paid. Credit givea. Drop an&#13;
trashy onotteial war books Outfit free. Address.&#13;
P. T. Barber, Sac'y. Star Insurance Bldg. Chicago.&#13;
1 have been afflicted with rheumatism&#13;
for fourteen years aad nothing&#13;
seemed to give any reifof. I was able&#13;
to be around all the time, but tea*&#13;
atantlv suffering. I had tried everything&#13;
I oould bear of aad at last was&#13;
DR. A. B. GREEN.&#13;
DENTIST—Every Thursday and Friday'&#13;
Office over Sigler's Drug Store.&#13;
Finer*! Director and EmbaliMr. Besldenoe&#13;
aonnected with new state telephone; All eaila&#13;
promptly answered. One mile north ot Piainfield&#13;
Village. J. U. SAYLBS.&#13;
to tiy Chamberlaitt't Pain Balm&#13;
whiaii I di4 and was imnediately relieved&#13;
aad in a short ttmt cured. I&#13;
Bapgy&#13;
rstansd.—-Joth Xdgar, Ctermaatowi,&#13;
OaJL For sals fay F, A. Sifkr,&#13;
. £••+ "x * V&#13;
4&#13;
¥&#13;
Publisher*&#13;
MICHIGAN.&#13;
If a ma;&gt; nas taleut ha cuu Uii&#13;
use ot another's genius.&#13;
The action of the Cuban cuscznb'.y is&#13;
commended to Agulnaldo.&#13;
Ambassador Cho&amp;te is convalescent;&#13;
tie is almost ready tor another speech.&#13;
The recalcitrant Porto Ricans should&#13;
read the reports from the Philippines&#13;
ponder.&#13;
Kindness is the sum of life, the&#13;
charm to captivate, and tho swoi'd&#13;
which t 0 conquer.&#13;
A St. Louis man claims to have an&#13;
umbrella that has been in hits possession&#13;
twenty years. That's long enough;&#13;
be ought to return it&#13;
The oppoueats cf the street railway&#13;
deal in Detroit will take the matter&#13;
into the courts. They ought •&lt;*&gt; be&#13;
able, at least, to secures aoioe sort of&#13;
Injunction. .&#13;
IIHWI&#13;
News of the №|y&#13;
SlerwJer Wirps?&#13;
Over the&#13;
DOMESTI C AND FOfiEtGN NEWS&#13;
Uada Kapwa. l|e* roslttoa&#13;
In til* Samoa* Matter— Th« Cobaa&#13;
Blaster Roll* Save Hea» Transferred&#13;
—Chinese aatt BrUUh j|erapu&#13;
It is a perfectly safe proposition that&#13;
without the thoughtful ness, which is&#13;
otherwise named face, no one cab find&#13;
the fullest measure of success and&#13;
pleasure in life.&#13;
Since Spain has a prospect ot coming&#13;
into possession of some real money,&#13;
she has stQPped t£e embassy that&#13;
was about starting to treat with&#13;
Agulnaldo for the release cf his Spanish&#13;
prisoners. :&#13;
Nothing is easier than ridicule; and&#13;
tn nine&gt;cases out of tea where ridicule&#13;
is usedv it 4s resorted t»'onir bedattse&#13;
It is the only weapon available, The&#13;
man of intelligence wIlL.use his reason&#13;
in the argument with his opponent;&#13;
the man of knowledge wtfl use&#13;
hie knowledge; but the man who has&#13;
neither Knowledge nor intelligence&#13;
resort tojrtdicute.. it Is a poorly&#13;
sripoxy, whjttfc, suM&gt;W*B*vno;&#13;
tetter weapon. . •»&lt;•;«&gt; t A i Kl'/&#13;
Ex-Presiaent HarrtMm'ik in&#13;
pea,ce and arbitration, but tn&#13;
to the United Sodet^^Chrtsttaa 'Endeavor,&#13;
Boston, he said: "It would&#13;
nave been in vain to suggest the pull-&#13;
Ing down of blockhouses or family&#13;
disarmament to the settlers on a hostile&#13;
Infl^T. frr'.'cr,. Tt*y yrcvM havs&#13;
toid i-u nguily that the comiitlo~..&#13;
-were-not ripe, and so It may bo and&#13;
is, probably, true that a full application&#13;
of the* piinotyle ^J^ not presently&#13;
possible, the devil eVjl being - unr&#13;
chalaed." With 'Philippine rebels1&#13;
snooting at American soldiers,1 and reelstlag&#13;
United fiUtea authority, «x-&#13;
President Harrison is not in favdr of&#13;
disarming or of retreating.&#13;
Ge*ma»Ts&#13;
The m i n i $ &gt;&#13;
Von ljuelow^ b&gt;s sfnoounced to th,e&#13;
reichstag that an agreement had been&#13;
arrived at wfth-'€Jreat Britain with regard&#13;
tp sen4in£'»&lt;ctm mission to Samoa.&#13;
The interpellation on Samoa was presented&#13;
by Dr. IJe/hr, an extremist pan-&#13;
(iercaan, and was replied to by the&#13;
mini&amp;tor of foreign affairs, Huron Yon&#13;
IJuelotv. In the course of his remarks&#13;
the minister of foreign affairs, in part,&#13;
said: "In the interest of the tranquillity&#13;
of Samoan and in the interest&#13;
of calmer relations between the powex*&#13;
s, should they find it advantageous&#13;
if the act has become inadequate, it&#13;
eouKl be replaced by a fresh arrangement,&#13;
corresponding better with the&#13;
present situation. With tins idea, J&#13;
said in the budget committee that we&#13;
were, disposed to eon&amp;eqt to a ©lean&#13;
separation. As, however, the disadvantages&#13;
ot the situation w.ere felt by&#13;
both, the other spowers equally with&#13;
ourselves, we have BO occasion ajid no&#13;
need to mike special proposals oi qur&#13;
own initiative. But so long a* , the&#13;
Samoac act exUts it must be loyally&#13;
observed by all concerned."&#13;
The Cub*a Army Matter Roll*.&#13;
The Cuban army muster rolls which&#13;
were recently delivered to Gov.-Gen.&#13;
lirooke through Senor Domingo Mendez&#13;
Capote are prepared in neat clerical&#13;
style, the 1,200 broad sheets showing&#13;
on their face 48,000 names—6,000&#13;
commissioned officers and 42,000 non&gt;-&#13;
WAR NOTC4J,&#13;
A number of prominent and wealthy&#13;
Filipinos^re organizing a committee&#13;
to tsjire He** to brfcuff »bou^ if poss&lt;-&#13;
W und*rstft«dipg between th* ref&#13;
M^e AiperUtt&amp;s, ^ n e ' branch&#13;
this comtntttee intends to ssit ti*&#13;
United States PhUtppiu« ^^m^^wion&#13;
to make n statement as to what term*&#13;
will be offered the rebels if the \fcter&#13;
will surrender. The objects of the&#13;
committee are: First, to obtain as&#13;
targe autonomous rights for the Filipino&#13;
people as possible. Second, to&#13;
bring about peaceful relations between&#13;
the insurgents and the American authorities.&#13;
Third, to insist that Americans&#13;
and Filipinos only shall occupy&#13;
public oflio**. As tho, committee i&amp;»&#13;
etyde* aeverft) pe*s&lt;o»tt whom Ag uinaiUo&#13;
recently coqdemucd to death, it .ia&#13;
doubtful if they can be persuaded ,to&#13;
approach him cut the1 s u b l e t&#13;
Tit© military udministration WQUW&#13;
like to compliment Gen. Maocimo t»omez&#13;
in some substantial way. His se&gt;&#13;
vioes have been and are exeepiionafly&#13;
«saful to the ^taerioan* $ Q suitable&#13;
oflicial position i^ vi&amp;iblev even if lie&#13;
would accept one, neither does it i^&gt;&#13;
pear Feasible to make him a present of&#13;
money* lie can live as long: as he&#13;
pleases at Uie Quinta da I04 Alo^inos,&#13;
the ramshackle old summer palace of&#13;
former Spanish eaptnlna general,&#13;
wb«re rations for his staff and forage&#13;
for the horses are provided out of the&#13;
IT. S. army supplies.' The ?e n *r a J **&#13;
understood to have only a very slendor&#13;
income from his interests in Santo&#13;
Domingo. .&#13;
Gen. Gomez in a statement regarding;&#13;
his acceptance of the charge of&#13;
aiding ii* distributing the 83,000,000,.&#13;
said: "With the assistance and good&#13;
will of all we can count upon this (the&#13;
American offer) to work for peace and&#13;
to initiate a true reconstruction, that&#13;
will reclaim our beloved country and&#13;
all that conscience imposes upon the&#13;
nation can be accomplished, thus realizing-&#13;
our exalted asparations to be a&#13;
republic of fraternity and^ &amp;ood order.&#13;
The qoinbined efforts of a-H are nettled&#13;
to place us upon the highway to tbis&#13;
THE WOMEN SAY&#13;
. » « - A,&#13;
Tttfcr* la Ko lt*oHHt^. thf .«qa«l of&#13;
r«-o* \n AH'"tti»Hw I&gt;a*«tt«* inn.&#13;
Miss Sunti WymaHT tfecchsr in the&#13;
Richmond School, Cwugo. I1L, writes&#13;
the foJlpv^nj- V^tej tfh DxyH^rtman regarding&#13;
Psrniriuu flhe says:. "Only&#13;
those who type *»ff«V^ with&#13;
asss from oiwwQrlCv!&#13;
such as I hav«t can kjjoair-what a blessing&#13;
It is-to be,abls4o-v find relief by&#13;
spending * eouple oli dollars for some&#13;
commissioned officers and privates.&#13;
The whole statement is IQ orderly ar- j aehfe^m^nt and to promote the talcing&#13;
№• * Susan&#13;
Pe-ru-na. This has been my&#13;
ence. A friend in" need i9 a frifejHcl Indeed,&#13;
and every bottle of Fe-nirna I&#13;
ever bought proved a good friend to&#13;
me."—Susan Wymar.&#13;
Mrs. Margaretha Dauben, 1214 North&#13;
Superior St., Rapine Olty, Wis., writes:&#13;
"^^eel s o v«l^ and igood ;,aad hjappy,&#13;
^ow thavpencftbnot ^scribe *.; Peru-'&#13;
na Is everything to me. I"feel heattny&#13;
and well, but if I should be sick I will&#13;
know what to take. I have taken several&#13;
bottles of Pe-ru-na for female&#13;
complaint. I am in the change of life&#13;
and it does me good."&#13;
Send for a free book written by Dr.&#13;
Hartman, entitled "Health and&#13;
Beauty." Address Dr. Hartman, Columbus,&#13;
0.&#13;
rangeiuent of corps, regiment, battalion&#13;
and company scores. The U. S.&#13;
military authorities make no attempt&#13;
to reconcile tlie 42.000 noncommissioned&#13;
officers and privates indicated&#13;
of measures indispensable for crown&#13;
injf, a grra&amp;d work iu Cuba.&#13;
The state department at "Washington&#13;
has published a report from U. S. Consul&#13;
Williams at Manila in which he&#13;
by these roll* with the 13,219 given in Iretutfs ,tho stafceua&amp;ots&#13;
the esthntrtes prepared untfer the &lt;iV health and climateof tire ThilipbinesT&#13;
rccation Qf the provincial governors. During the last year he says he heard&#13;
The Americans will scrutinize the latter&#13;
carefully and when payments&#13;
begin the individuasl named mast be:&#13;
identified by the various company cap-;*&#13;
taxes."&#13;
f&#13;
Critics of missions, whd «telfcgM in&#13;
smying that "it takes a dollar to carry&#13;
* cent" to the beneficiaries of these&#13;
organizations, are conclusively refuted&#13;
by facts given in connection with tb«&#13;
missions of the Methodist Epla-&#13;
-copal church. During the church year&#13;
1897,8 this body expended in the foreign&#13;
and domestic mission fields about&#13;
twelve hundred thousand dollars The&#13;
"sajarles of missionary bishops, secretaries,,&#13;
a&amp;d-. so forth," together.with th£&#13;
"office and incidental e*B«nB.es;" took&#13;
Just six and a half cents out of each&#13;
dollar given to be expended in mission&#13;
•work. The "children of thts&lt; world"&#13;
tnay be vttsex.'in;.their generation than&#13;
Oia.."children. o£,light;:*, at reaat the&#13;
«ritlcs think so; but the fact remains&#13;
tWat a business corporation which&#13;
could keep its "cost of administration"&#13;
witfilil seven per ctet of its totaf-sxr&#13;
pendltu&gt;.e would feel.tAnt It exhibited&#13;
u who believe In correcting&#13;
tkc!l wives by physical methods will&#13;
natur&amp;ly- And much eacouragemsnt&#13;
and satisfaction in tho decision of&#13;
Judge Pea body of St. Louis, who holds&#13;
fcvubasd is juati^ed in chastising his&#13;
wife in moderation. The trouble is&#13;
that wives have lately developed an inclination^&#13;
to. on.the- chastising themettve*.&#13;
Two receaj.. iuatances in the&#13;
&lt;Wly papers llluatrale ^his. .teaC&amp;ftqr.:&#13;
One « M that of MH. Aiblna Cbemjik&#13;
fa Chicago, who, upon being reproved&#13;
•toy her' husband, broke a. stove left&#13;
ovw his head. The other concerns&#13;
Mrs. Sarah AOStt* o^Camdea^ NTjJ* M.&#13;
who found her husb^ppd in a^*ia|oon&#13;
whaa hft ehoj^d havj-bge&#13;
proceeded i o spa:&#13;
• obvious the&#13;
K # i a f t&#13;
comfort to &amp; ^ p&#13;
Adams,&#13;
wives ire&#13;
roiling pins and, tUkettl** ss w&#13;
M;&lt;y Result In Trouble.&#13;
The action of Deputy Unt_tcj_Statg3_&#13;
Collector of Customs Andrews in holding&#13;
all liquors for the interior at&#13;
Skaguay, Alaska, and refusing to forxvaTd&#13;
them by convoys so long as the&#13;
Canadian officials insist upon stopping1&#13;
American officers at the summit, has&#13;
caused an accumulation in the bonded&#13;
warehouse until there are nearly 100&#13;
tons of liquor* of all kinds ^ a i l i n g ^ r ; ™ ^ ^ ^ ^&#13;
the action of the secretary of the inter-r| ^&lt;^e i c a r n e d&#13;
ior. Meantime a liquor famine is&#13;
threatened ,»t Atlin, Log, Cab in. and&#13;
Bennett, ami smugglers ane' making&#13;
money. There is a strained feeling&#13;
toward the Canadian officials, because&#13;
of their arbitrary assumption of the*&#13;
summit as the boundary lintf fend it&#13;
would not take much to cause a clash.&#13;
Why should ^ man. who follows the&#13;
races expect io get ahead of them?&#13;
Why do they call it idle euriosity&#13;
when it work* day and night?&#13;
Why can't a man avoid a bad scrape&#13;
by letting bis whiskers grow?&#13;
Don't think because a girl rides a&#13;
i is a&#13;
of no temperature rn the islands bcloVr&#13;
r.7 degrees and none above fl.1 ile- I&#13;
gree* in-the sun. The city ot" Manila&#13;
is swept by sea breed's, and has an&#13;
abundant, and good water siippiy. The&#13;
death rate is small and with proper&#13;
care one may be entirely healthy.&#13;
reporlud* that the" governmenVj&#13;
British Attacked l&gt;y Chinese.&#13;
The villagers of Tai-l'oo-Su, one of&#13;
the newly acquired ^ra«os in^he British&#13;
territory on the Ifi^^JS^nr^ainland,&#13;
who broke, out in rebellion recently,&#13;
burned *ome of the- Imtfehisli&#13;
rrat-!shc&lt;ls and then, retired to the&#13;
hills and lirtki tip6ni tWc llritish"troops&#13;
who were. s«nt..Lo quell the disturbances.&#13;
The British returned the .tyre,&#13;
scattering the Chinese and killed some.&#13;
The British suffered no casualties.&#13;
»*•**• NEWB PARAGRAPHS.&#13;
, President Shf^fCinley is to be" nsked to&#13;
open thifttirst ^^tiice ga€e» which will&#13;
permit th« tvaters ol the Chicago sanitary&#13;
canal to flow into the Desplaines&#13;
river at Lockport, Oct. ft, Chicago day.&#13;
It is believed that the rebels have,&#13;
captured lf&gt; of our soldjers. They were&#13;
off the Yorktown and were on th,e»r&#13;
way to rescue the Spanish prisoners&#13;
held at Baler when they' Fell Into the*&#13;
hands of the insurgents who were- io&#13;
ambush.&#13;
The' weekly crop bulletin issued' by&#13;
&gt; Ci rector &amp;c&amp;ne i d£ r,~ of 'thVoIi m ate" U n d&#13;
&lt;Jrbp servtcei toys that while Ihe season&#13;
is, RliU yerjr bsw^wftf^ the weather&#13;
of the past week has been favorable&#13;
sprjins^farm work,&#13;
welter #heat,&#13;
is considering whether it is not cheaper,&#13;
to buy Filipino^ t|ian to shoot them.&#13;
Tjhe real definitiou of the conciliatory&#13;
policy which is being hinted at is that&#13;
Aguinaldo and other rebel leaders are&#13;
to be hotJgHt off.- TWs is £art of the&#13;
job of the junta, of wealthy Filipinos,&#13;
now being organized under American&#13;
The first thipg&#13;
of th« rejbels.&#13;
will thjea be taken latter. •&#13;
Soldiers wh,o ^j.avc served,in the, .regular&#13;
army and were discharged without&#13;
receiving their extra two months'&#13;
pay should apply to the auditor, treasury&#13;
department, Washington,, D. C.&#13;
It takes about a month before an answer&#13;
is received, but finally they n.ll&#13;
receive*, postal notifying then* that&#13;
their claim has been filed, and to wait&#13;
for further developments.'&#13;
U. S. soldiers in Cuba and the Phil-r&#13;
ippines will be clothed in undergarments&#13;
made of light jean material during&#13;
tne torrid heat of summer. The&#13;
war department officials have decided&#13;
to purchase 100,000 suits of this material&#13;
to be shipped to Cuba und the Philippines&#13;
as early as possible.&#13;
The postmaster-general has issued an&#13;
order placing the Philippine postal service&#13;
on an independent basis. F. W.&#13;
Vaille, who has had charge of postal&#13;
affairs in the islands for several months,&#13;
has been appointed director of posts&#13;
for the Philippines.&#13;
It is understosd that Gen. George W.&#13;
Davis is to be the military governorgeneral&#13;
of Forto Rico, to succeed Gen.&#13;
Guy V. Henry. Gen. Davis is a member&#13;
of the Wade court of inquiry. He&#13;
is attached officially to Major-General&#13;
Brooke's command.&#13;
President McKinley has decided not&#13;
to call for any more volunteers at&#13;
present. Gen. Otis now has 52.000 effective&#13;
men, and 8,000 are on the way&#13;
or about to be ordered, which would&#13;
give him an army of about 30,000 men.&#13;
The rebel seat of government, which&#13;
since the capture of Maloios ha»i&gt;een&#13;
at San Fernando, province of Pampangs,&#13;
is reported to have been re*&#13;
moved to Tarlsvc, 73 miles from&#13;
*n the&#13;
WHAT'S IN A NAME?&#13;
Many Times Nothing:—Sometimes a Fund&#13;
of Knowledge.&#13;
Itr's a. good old saying, and a true one&#13;
too, "Know all men by their*works."&#13;
The public have beett imposed upon so&#13;
many, times by oosorupulous claims&#13;
of profit, the&#13;
may decrte that the&#13;
swbmlt to chastisement, but it the lady&#13;
the rnUnir 1C t i j o t e t to be&#13;
lit co- «MtK9 * IV W» fibubl If&#13;
I' Jtidgr will 'lmtttMi eonproetedlBfi&#13;
to susUin oif dethe&#13;
h&#13;
uetor,&#13;
Toledo and DeteoU&#13;
the yards&#13;
was found&#13;
^U,ow»o«y and&#13;
thinks ffrqghiUi Was fctllea with a&#13;
coupling' pin by robbers and then his&#13;
body thrown under the ear*. . ..&#13;
"-•»»' . . .&#13;
from&#13;
Ameripaj^shell ired lasi sammee dnr«&#13;
ta« U. *. warship, ^&#13;
killing three persons&#13;
many others. -&#13;
attd*woandiBf&#13;
naade&gt;for Q&#13;
look lor something1 more&#13;
they ask for deeda. The little conqueror&#13;
has earned the reputation tn&amp;dt&#13;
ia Mlcht^nn awHr MO hstposter cam steal&#13;
it. From north to south, from east to&#13;
west, in every city, tpw.nt and hamlet&#13;
in the state, people stand ready to testify&#13;
to merit. Gratitude for comfort&#13;
brought to thousands of homes brings&#13;
emphatic rejoicings and words of praise&#13;
Ihefikl ofwhlotiRias1 no$ bee^ equalled&#13;
in modern times. I« it a Wonder the&#13;
name POAH is a f ami I i a* obe in every&#13;
ho^sebold?&gt; la it surprising the'public&#13;
appreciate Doan's Kidney Pills slid&#13;
will not be led astray by the imren^ions&#13;
efforts of would-be competitors? A Detroit&#13;
citizen tells here why the name of&#13;
Doan is dear to him: Mr B» V. Elliott,&#13;
of 143 High street, Detroit, says:&#13;
' My knowledge of 0oan'&amp; K14$£$ Pills dates^&#13;
bttclt M five y^»rs wo, I,was then living lu tho&#13;
town where Br. Doan was located. I was tortured&#13;
with kidney, troubles ami (oAuwn&amp;tory&#13;
rheumatism. The doctor prescribed the pills&#13;
for me which have since become so ju^tli! famous.&#13;
Their use quickly eliminated the uric&#13;
acid from my system and with its departure&#13;
came the cure of my rheumatism and the end of&#13;
the kidney troubles. It cook but a-few boxes to&#13;
accomplish this rod and I feel that I owe Dr.&#13;
Poan an QveriuslMig d£bt o| jmvtttude for prescribing&#13;
such a vakiftble remedy. I have toK'cn&#13;
great pleasure in recommending this medicine&#13;
to a number of my friends. I always keep a box&#13;
of these ptJlH on hand RO that should I take a&#13;
severe cold and feel that it is setting on my kidneys&#13;
&amp; few OOK6II of Doan's Kidney Fids, re-&#13;
Uaves all apprehension.&#13;
Doan's Kidney Pills are sold by all&#13;
dealers. Price 59 cents per box. Mailed&#13;
on receipt of price by Foster-Milburn&#13;
Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Sole agents for&#13;
the United States.&#13;
Remember the name Doan's and tak.!&#13;
no other.&#13;
m.Tonheeyr,e anisd tah apt liesa isnu rgei vipnrge aItt carw athya. n makinff&#13;
b-eTghine sfiprrsitn go f clMea«nyi nIng, subfufitc itehnet lyw oerakr lmy atyo bthei nvge ryIn mreuacdhl nleigstht tebneefodr ebhya ngde,t tiansg weevlel rHyS- ppruorvpiodsiensg. tFhoer bweeats hainrtgi clwesi nd(oorw sc, ieWajoiiohotVf Swooarpk. anSdof tf lowoarste rn otIhs insgi; w aeyq*u aelsa sieIrv otroy Hwoecrtks fwroitmh pthcManit sehsa arndd. bVedors ubsaen iaslhuimng alnnd- bsiodrea xl,i maen dIs feoxrc eplulernltty.lng inside and out-&#13;
ELIZA R. PARSER.&#13;
deIcfl aanre atUJaWaniJUieo rk McoLul4d s tmalakl l ihaeo uwto^uld probabiy&#13;
* u— ot Dr. UitM1* Or«*i&#13;
re. #io you wUl&#13;
HIS OLD YELLOW ALMANAC*&#13;
I left tl|t farm v/hen mother died, andi&#13;
chtbeed my place of dwellln'&#13;
To daughter Busie's styilah house, right&#13;
in the city street,&#13;
And there was them, before I came, that&#13;
sort of scared me tetlin'&#13;
How I would find the town-folks1 way*&#13;
no difficult to meet.&#13;
They said I'd have no comfort in the&#13;
rustlin'. flxed-up throng,&#13;
And I'd have to wear stiff collars every&#13;
neck-day right along.&#13;
I find I take to city ways just Hire a duck&#13;
to wuter.&#13;
I like the racket and the noise, and&#13;
never tire of snows;&#13;
And there's no end of comfort In the mansion&#13;
of my: daughter. .&#13;
And everything Is right at hand, andi&#13;
money freely flows; «&#13;
And hired help la all about, just llntenln'&#13;
for my call1,'&#13;
But I mH&amp; fh« yellow almanac frokn off&#13;
my kitchen wait.. .&#13;
The house is full of calendars from attic&#13;
to the cellar; &lt;&#13;
They're puintcd Jn all colors, and are&#13;
funoy-llke to see.&#13;
Eut jtiat in this particular 1 m not a moatin&#13;
feller,&#13;
And the yellow-covered almanac is good&#13;
enough for me: „&#13;
I'm used to It, I've seen it round from&#13;
boyhood to old age,&#13;
And I rather like the jokln' at the bottom&#13;
t h {aec&#13;
I like the way, the ••S" stood out to .show&#13;
the. week's boginntn'&#13;
(In th^e new-fangled calendars th«&#13;
days veomed tart °f mixt(i&gt;,&#13;
And the rr.an upon I ho cover, though ha&#13;
WHB n't exactly winntn'&#13;
"With lungs and liver *&lt;l exposed, still&#13;
ishQwiiiK how we are tlxed;&#13;
And the.'letteri, credentials that was writ&#13;
to Mr. Ayer, „ • , , . ,&#13;
I've often, on u rainy d»&gt;\ found readin'&#13;
very fair.&#13;
I troine*d icno tfihned coitnye. recently; there wa'n't Thvsyo rtto toefd sotyulte :gpeat calendars In every I looskweder eftdt ''eemm iInn peoiltryt: di3dairi, and an- "I'dt hraatt hcecrs tlhya vpei lem."»* almanac than aA And. stohmoeu,g ha,f tJetra knfil ,to city life, I'm lone- For kthitacth eonl dw yaelll.low ahuansfr upon my —Ella Wheeler Wllcox, In the Century.&#13;
Mr. Editor:—For tad good of suffering&#13;
humanity, and particularly those&#13;
suffering from that raost dreadful disease,&#13;
rheumatism, ^6 desire to inform&#13;
your readers that the only specific in&#13;
the world today for this disease is our&#13;
"Five- Drops" remedy. "Five Drops"&#13;
Is the name, and "Five Drops" is the&#13;
dose. Ith Is not ooly acknowledged a&#13;
specific l)y the many thousands who&#13;
have been cured Dy its use, but it is&#13;
now acknowledged to, bo such by the&#13;
rftedlcal profession, man-y of whom use&#13;
tftte remedy in tliclr (telly practice, and&#13;
they state to us that it is tbe only&#13;
tiding with which they can cure the&#13;
rheumatism. Tula remedy not only&#13;
positively cures this disease, but it&#13;
never lias failed and It never can fail&#13;
to cure any and al} of the following&#13;
diseases; Sciatica, Lumbago, •Neuralgia,&#13;
Catarrh, Creeping Numbness,&#13;
Nervousness, Asthma, Heart Weakftess,&#13;
Toothaehe, Earache, La Grippe,&#13;
and diseases №' tbe liver and kidneys.&#13;
"Five Dr^pg" Is not a patent medicine,&#13;
but was perfected only after vast re-&#13;
*arch In scleutlftc fleida, and at&#13;
«xpeuse. H never can be fully appreciated&#13;
until it Is used. Many of its&#13;
cures border on the miraculous. Words&#13;
are almost Inadequate to express tbe&#13;
grtnrt benefit whtch ttrfterlttg humanity&#13;
is dally deriving from the use of&#13;
this most wonderful remedy. Its&#13;
merits and medicinal properties are as&#13;
far above tie other remedies offered&#13;
for-pale as tbe mountain is above the&#13;
valley., It. is worth. iU wefght.ln gold&#13;
(o. anyone suffering from any of the&#13;
diseases for- which it is recommended.&#13;
The prtre is low and within the reach&#13;
of all, $1 per bottle-for full size (300&#13;
dotes), prepaid by thaU or express, or&#13;
six bottk* for $6. Anyone desiring to&#13;
test its efficacy without ordering a full&#13;
size bottle, can have a 25 cent sample&#13;
bottle rent by mail until May 10, b7&#13;
cendln? 10 cents to the Swanson Rheumatic&#13;
Cure Company, 1G7 Dearborn&#13;
stre«l, Chicago, 111. , M&lt; .•/ •&#13;
WINNiPEGOSIS LETTER.&#13;
From Dennis Tcvohey Who Went From&#13;
Aaitla, Minn. . March , 1898.&#13;
'vVi^nip€go?is, Ma.n., Jan. 23, 1S99.&#13;
Benjamin Davies, Esq., Canadian.&#13;
Government Agent,' St." Paul, Minn.;"&#13;
Dear Sir:—I have' great irteasAire in&#13;
writing you these few lines to let you&#13;
ktiow how I like my a«w location and&#13;
how I have b«en getting along,since&#13;
I-left Southern Minnesota, I like this.&#13;
country well, the climate agrees witji&#13;
me ana my family -at ail seasons, ana&#13;
taken all around it is away ahead of&#13;
Minnesota. I.'rhtfkay that we have&#13;
not had oajj stortu^fettijs winter. As&#13;
regards t&amp;,jr$pd*^eVjfc;&lt;Ue soil, I&#13;
considerlt beati Southern Minnesota. I&#13;
am a criicttcal farmer, but have never&#13;
Vege&#13;
l&#13;
seen f as I&#13;
have ^ q ^ j | c&#13;
Krain'WM kihdsVl hk\-e&#13;
dld yleftrs, in fact any m&#13;
not getr sj^ng here&#13;
living caijtspt do i&lt;&#13;
: We hav 4 4 f t ^&#13;
timber for bulHUng. and lots orhay.&#13;
I have got ftftod^yaUr on m i jplacfi&#13;
about 24 feetT^'lTuivW a ;good-«aM of&#13;
neighbors around &gt;m«, "itf^ have been&#13;
well uted bjf everyboir. *- hA^e been&#13;
l&#13;
j y ^&#13;
able to set lots ot work lor myself&#13;
and team at fair wi$fk wttnever I&#13;
wanted it, and I'^lftk »oy one elsecan&#13;
do the same. I would not care to&gt;&#13;
return to Minnesota^ T afil, *rt yours&#13;
Tery truly, •.., J -.• f . - - ^ v •, .&#13;
(8tf»*d&gt; - PKNUW TWOsJEY.&#13;
Th^ JtPvernnM^ Jias SASO«,}A several&#13;
otW*W*f. «ay o f w S S j will be&#13;
pteswM m g h t f W infortUtion, as to*&#13;
tm homestead lands to tnose deslrlnr&#13;
Why Is H&#13;
trommeow " to take milk&#13;
to food health&#13;
Blood Bitters destroy•&#13;
• - • . . . • : • " • • • • • ; ; . • " • . . • - . .. . • v . • • , , • • , - , • . . . • • - . . ' • , . &lt; •; . - = • : , v , &gt; - . ; . • . , : • : • , A / . . • : - • .&#13;
THE SEXTON'S PERQUISITES.&#13;
Made of Trfrdy Payments&#13;
Uad Oebti.&#13;
Thef Eextoo c^riea a refularly&#13;
tvoathly account with the wholesaler&#13;
-and gets a commission, of 20 per cent&#13;
lor his share. For opening the church&#13;
he receives a fee,, For digging the&#13;
•grave the charge la generally |10, ot&#13;
whioh tt»e sexton gets one-half. Thus&#13;
he is enabled to conduct an undertaking&#13;
business at a liberal profit without&#13;
the risk of maintaining an establishment,&#13;
and is at the same time sure&#13;
of furnishing work of the first class.&#13;
The profit from this source to the sexton&#13;
of one large down town church is&#13;
estimated at $10,000 annually. TM&#13;
more fashionable the church tbelarger&#13;
the profit. In one respect tn* sexton&#13;
is like the corner grccer. Both find&#13;
cause tor complaint in tardy payments&#13;
and l c ! credits. Said one sexton:&#13;
"The undertaker of a small church has&#13;
to be a-genius if he makes any money.&#13;
His people are slow to' pay, and it is&#13;
frequently a hard matter to mention&#13;
the subject of crrdit. The sexton must&#13;
pay his wholesaler promptly, and unless&#13;
he has a comfortable bank account&#13;
he is likely to get stranded."&#13;
There are other duties devolving on&#13;
the sexton, however, which give his&#13;
life a pleasanter tone. Weddings are&#13;
cheerful and good for his packetbook.&#13;
The collection of pew rents U sometimes&#13;
unpleasant", but he receives a&#13;
commission. And in the performance&#13;
of his other duties he Is the recipient&#13;
of frequent fees. Thus, without capital&#13;
or worry, the sexton of a wealthy&#13;
church may draw a bank president's&#13;
salary—due to the consolidation ol&#13;
business interests.—New York Evening&#13;
Post.&#13;
FAITHFULNESS REWARDED.&#13;
The Heppner,' Oregon, Gazette tells,&#13;
a story .of. a dog's double devotion*&#13;
which will- t«nd to increase the regard&#13;
of ^*tt/lovers &gt;of dogs for those&#13;
faithful creature3. Mr. James Kinney,&#13;
the chief shepherd of the itacks of Mr.&#13;
Thomas Quade, had occasion lately to&#13;
change camp from the mountain-range&#13;
to his feeding grounds. The distance&#13;
was three miles. One of the collies&#13;
had at the range a Utter of five puppies,&#13;
seventeen days old, which, as she&#13;
was needed in the drive, she had £o&#13;
leave behind. The first night, a3 soon&#13;
as the sheep were folded at the feeding&#13;
ground and her responsibilities&#13;
over, she went straight back through&#13;
a driving snowstorm to her young and&#13;
spent the night with them. Next morn^&#13;
Ing, however, true to her master, ah*&#13;
was at the corral bright and early for&#13;
her duties, floe remained ail day.&#13;
guarding and herding the sheep, and&#13;
at nightfall started bwlt to her babies.&#13;
This continued lor eleven day*. On&#13;
the morning of the twelfth day thd&#13;
dog was late at the corral, and Mr!&#13;
Klnney felt some uneasiness about hex.&#13;
After a time «be appeared* bring&amp;S&#13;
one of her pups, rhich had now grown&#13;
to considerable size, in her mouth.&#13;
She had struggled all the three miles&#13;
with it, over a rough road. It was evidently&#13;
her intention to bring tbepupa&#13;
all up to the corral, one at a time,&#13;
without sacrificing any of her time&#13;
with the sheep. Somewhat conscience&#13;
stricken at hi a neglect of the Utter so,&#13;
far, Mr. Klnney. hitehe* up ft wagon&#13;
and went to Che range after them. He*&#13;
secured them all, and gave them and&#13;
their mother a warm nest close to the&#13;
hearth in the farmhouse.&#13;
SAVING BURGLAR SOUVENIRS,&#13;
Chicago furnishes another unique&#13;
story. Miss Agnes Neagle, an athletic&#13;
young woman of that city, is saving&#13;
burglar souvenirs—that is, momentoa&#13;
taken from real burglars whom she&#13;
catches herself. She has already acquired&#13;
three souvenirs. One of these&#13;
is a coat tail, another a hat and the&#13;
third a tuft of hair. These the plucky&#13;
young woman succeeded in confiscating&#13;
from burglars whom she captured,&#13;
and who left the souvenirs behind In&#13;
their hasty flight, after Miss Neagie&#13;
held on unti^er hold slipped. Miss&#13;
1(106 AGNBB NEAGLE.&#13;
Keigle declares that she is ready tor&#13;
the tint tarflo^&lt;8i« says tWs burglar&#13;
c*t$rlglf'fe xnost excltltqr e*ort for M young, ^ m a t , a&amp;d ^HflJ^afce ft^&#13;
TOUS aftej.*»c&amp; l&gt;attle. y^f^\^&#13;
A liking; to the business. It may oe&#13;
that Chicago will e&amp;fue Itiss Neagte&#13;
as a special *urgl«ur policewoman, ate •&#13;
a handsome TO«M woataa with broad&#13;
shoulders, eonnd teetfc aa4 a wealth:&#13;
«f Max— Is&#13;
* u&#13;
FQR!SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS.) LOUISVILLE, K t0 X ? * / ^ ^ ^ - .,-&#13;
PRICE 5Qc PERBorrLE. r ^ NEW Y0BK, N Y U.S.A. LONDQN^ENG&#13;
BRASSS3JR0NBEII&#13;
eaj'tifetV&#13;
kuohji UM&#13;
bis6fsH*'&#13;
teefa»k«» Cm be brt Jo MMTMS%**hn i fc, i. i»t&#13;
4 ki U , 6 kv Swi SMiOO n T w m tb. W « J&#13;
witaU»« following U»$ of (troeeri&#13;
will be shipped &lt;£o.D.a«bJeetto examlnatloa.&#13;
our coasuuTioa VSOCKSY oaass no. tt&#13;
» Clove*&#13;
51ftetr*n*Ute&lt;19agal&#13;
6 Cake* ToHet froap..&#13;
9 dot. Clothes Fins...&#13;
8 Bars Soap&#13;
.IS&#13;
1 Bottle Rout Beer Ext&#13;
1&#13;
" Pbotphate..&#13;
" Ammwtt...&#13;
" Bluing&#13;
t. Ext Lemon...&#13;
'• Vanilla...&#13;
1 ft Baking Powder.&#13;
1&#13;
.30&#13;
J&#13;
.80&#13;
JO&#13;
5 ftfltarch ,&lt;»&#13;
.15&#13;
8"ft Coffee M&#13;
» Whole Nutmeg,. .85&#13;
t&gt; Ginger&#13;
2~ftT«a 1.40&#13;
1 Box Store Polish... M&#13;
1 ft Corn Starch X»&#13;
A T OUR BXFK^SK. If the groceries are nob&#13;
M represented return them at our eipease and « •&#13;
will refund your will refund your mmoonaeeyr aand ?•• m*j •«•# th« Ss*. BINDERTWK № Oar IHaitrated caiatog of everything to W&#13;
Wear und Ua« »ent free. » m uu Smyth1*&#13;
Patterns Wall Paper at leu than wholeasla yrif.&#13;
Bend for samples. We stilt give » G r a p h o p h o n*&#13;
w'th our 114.75 Grocery Order.&#13;
ISO-16 6 W. MADISON ST..&#13;
jonnsnTnco, M; ciuciea.&#13;
HPH E pleasan t metho d and beneficial effects of th e well-know n remedy , SYRU P OP FIGS , manufacture d&#13;
"*• by th e Californi a Fig Syrup Company , illustrat e th e value of obtainin g th e liquid laxative principle s&#13;
6f plant s known to be medicinall y laxative and presentin g them in the form most refreshin g to th e taste&#13;
and acceptabl e to th e system, w I t is th e one perfect strengthenin g laxative,&#13;
CLEANSING THE SYSTEM EFFECTUALLY D, ISPELLING&#13;
COLDS AND HEADACHES, PREVENTING FEVERS,&#13;
OVERCOMING HABITUAL CONSTIPA TION PERMANENT! Y.&#13;
Its perfect freedom from every objectionabl e qualit y and substance , and its actin g on th e kidneys,&#13;
liver aad bowels, gently yet promptly , withou t weakenin g or irritatin g them , make it th e ideal laxative.&#13;
In th e process of manufacturin g figs are used, as the y are pleasan t to th e taste, but&#13;
THE MEDICINA L QUALITIE S ARE OBTAINE D FRO M SENN A AND OTHE R AROMATI C PUNTS ,&#13;
by a metho d known to lihe Catiforni a Fi g Syrup Compan y only. In order to get its beneficial effects, and&#13;
to avoid imitations , please remembe r th e full nam e of th e Compan y printed.o n th e front of every package.&#13;
Consumer s of th e choices t product s of moder n commerc e purchas e at about th e same price tha t other s&#13;
pay for chea'p and worthless imitations . To come into universal deman d and to be everywhere considere d&#13;
the best of its class, ati articl e must be capable of satisfying th e wants and tastes of th e best informe d&#13;
purchasers. , Th e Californi a Fi g Syrup Compan y havin g met with th e highest success in th e manufactur e&#13;
and sale of its excellen t liquid laxative remedy, SYRU P OP FIGS , it has becom e importan t to all to have a&#13;
I l ^ or tMe^Coakian y auditsTproduct . Th e Californi a Fig Syrup Compan y was organize d more tha n&#13;
fb i l f i lH l i hi&#13;
c w ^ t e C o a k a n y fifteen years ago, fbf tn e special purpos e of manufacturin g and selHiig a laxative remed y which would be&#13;
more pleasan t to th e taste and mor e beneficial in effect tha n any ottie^r known . Th e great value o£ the&#13;
remedy as a medicinal-agent and of the Company's efforts, is attested" by the sale of millions of bottles&#13;
annually, and by the high approval of most eminent physicians. As.the true and genuine remedy named&#13;
SYRUP pp FIGS is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Company only, the knowledge of that fact&#13;
will assist iu avoiding the worthless imitations manufactured by other parties.&#13;
&amp;~ CAb.&#13;
For &lt;Sale by All Orus^i'shs , Price 5 0 $ Per Bottle.&#13;
A principle tbat Is wrohg Is just as wrong: to&#13;
politics as it is in religion.&#13;
It's a long road that has no roadhousa.&#13;
Catarrh Caanet b* Cured&#13;
with LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as they oannot&#13;
reach the seat of tbe disease. Catarrh is a blood,&#13;
or constitutional disease, and in order to cure it&#13;
you must take internal remedies Hall's Catarrh&#13;
Cure is taken internally, and act* directly on&#13;
the blood and mucous surfaces. Halt's Catarrh&#13;
Cure is not a quack medicine. It was prescribed&#13;
by one of the best physicians In this country for&#13;
years, and is a regular prescription. It is composed&#13;
of the best tonics known, combined with&#13;
the best blood purifiers, acting directly on the&#13;
mucous surfaces. The perfeel «ombination of&#13;
the two ingredients is what produces suoh wonderful&#13;
result* in curing Catarrh. $ead for testimonials*,&#13;
free.&#13;
F. J CHEN'EY &amp; CO . Props., Toledo. O&#13;
Sold by druggist*, price rsc.&#13;
Hall's Family Pills are the best.&#13;
If the church could only be kept wide awake&#13;
the sinner could not sleep.&#13;
Grace is the only&#13;
make us like God.&#13;
thing that can&#13;
Art You Cslnff Allen's Foot-KateT&#13;
It is the only cure for Swollen,&#13;
Smarting, Burning, Sweating Feet.&#13;
Corns and Bunions. Ask for Allen's&#13;
Foot*Ease, a powder 4o be shaken into&#13;
the shoes. At all Druggists and Shoe&#13;
Stores, 25c. Sample sent FREE, Address,&#13;
Allen S. 01msted, LeRoy, N. Y.&#13;
Treasure laid up&#13;
interest on earth.&#13;
in Hearen draws&#13;
For t h e W b o l e Pamllf.&#13;
A safe, tare, pmn, p*rr*rt mediolBe for all th« Caja&#13;
. . . . Ilr-C*«:«.rvt» Candy Cathartic, brio* he&#13;
tealta In tfae houMhol*. Dru«iirt»7l»c. ttc.Mc. Mi-v«&#13;
The only sure way to keep from backsliding&#13;
is to keep slfcttikg forward.&#13;
I better* my prompt use of Plto's Cure pf»&gt;-'&#13;
rented quick consumption.—Mrs. Lucy Wallace,&#13;
Marquexte, Kan., Deo. tt. MM.&#13;
The more we do to help others the lighter our&#13;
own burdens will become.&#13;
•7t tdfcaejra taii* dir raittcafteetd ••**&gt;»&lt;«*%•• *'«» T* —f1U*a*a y* T»*o Nektisr Idxva rest&#13;
iUiaadwum to wttiaa« heart*&#13;
H« will do the rest.&#13;
"Neglected colds make fat graveyards."&#13;
Dr. Wood's Norway Pine&#13;
Syrup helps men and women to a&#13;
happy, vigorous old age.&#13;
TO THE FJPEIGHT&#13;
CHEAP FARMS DO YOU WANT * H № ?&#13;
100,000 ACRES riFsrS'jsi&#13;
«old OB long time asd esjy psvyments^ a little)&#13;
each year. Cona and ste tuvr write. THE&#13;
TRUMAN MOSS STATE BANK, Sanllaa&#13;
Center, Mioh., or&#13;
THE TRUMAN MOSS ESTATE,&#13;
CrosweH, SanUacCo* Micb»&#13;
WHEAT&#13;
WHEAT&#13;
WHEAT&#13;
"Nothing but wheat; what you might&#13;
call a sea of wheat," is what was said&#13;
by a lecturer speaking of Western Canada.&#13;
For particulars as to routes, railway&#13;
fares, etc, apply to Superintendent&#13;
of Immigration, Department Interior, Ottawa,&#13;
Canada, or to M. V. Mclnnes. No.&#13;
1 Merrill Block. Detroit. Mich.; James&#13;
Grieve, _Mt. Pleasant. Mich., or D. L.&#13;
Caven. Bad Axe. Michi&#13;
CURE YOUUELF!&#13;
Us* Big • for an;&#13;
4rriUti«a» or ak«ratioas)&#13;
of U I C O I I BMBsbrasaa.&#13;
Paial««a, and not aatria*&#13;
gent or poiaoooos.&#13;
or&#13;
i oft&#13;
HYrKOTlSI^^(«- M&#13;
64.&#13;
CO., l**k Box I*, KtwaA, K. J .&#13;
WANTED-Case vt bad health that B-I-F-A-X- S&#13;
wtn notbeaellt. Send 5 cents to Rlptat Chemical&#13;
CJ . New York.lof 10 sample* and IO0Q testlmoolals.&#13;
PATENTS,&#13;
tffcen Anmerinf idi P.^ase Mwitiee Thii Paper. W . N . U . - - D E T R O I T — N O . 1 9 - - 1 8 0 O Sold Onlp&#13;
to Riders&#13;
Every soul is&#13;
keeps God out.&#13;
sure to starve that&#13;
Terrible plague, those itching, pestering&#13;
diseases of the skin. Put an&#13;
end to misery. Doan'&amp; Ointment cures.&#13;
At any drug store.&#13;
The wisdom God gives takes with it&#13;
all other gilts.&#13;
A little life may be sacrificed to a&#13;
sudden attack of eronn, if you doa't&#13;
have Dr. Thomas' GcieetricOU on hand&#13;
for the emergency.&#13;
The way to come out right is to start&#13;
in right v&#13;
Btsf and most Complete&#13;
Bkpcle....&#13;
etxr Built&#13;
ONE PRIC E TO ALL&#13;
matte frta $10.00 to $41.10.&#13;
Writs T»»MY tor mn&#13;
CASH OR TIMS .&#13;
?owlcr Cpcle&#13;
Works&#13;
137 W. VttMagat St ,&#13;
" DIRT IN THE HOUS E BUILDS THE HIGHWAY&#13;
TO BEGGARY.*9 BE WISE IN TIME AND SAPOLIO&#13;
J-J *&#13;
If,-, •&#13;
^&#13;
• u •&#13;
HAMBURG, J&#13;
Richard Sheridan has been&#13;
very ill the past week but ia recovering.&#13;
The Green Oak farmers' club&#13;
met at the home of C. S. Olsaver&#13;
last week. % y y&#13;
The' W C T U mees Tuesday&#13;
evening of this week at Mrs. T.&#13;
Wrights.&#13;
W. E. Brock way and wife are&#13;
rejoicing over a baby boy which&#13;
arrived last week.&#13;
U. Grant Race, of Detroit,&#13;
spent Sunday with his mother,&#13;
Mrs. Truman Lake.&#13;
That Thobbtn* flea«a«fe«&#13;
Would quickly leave you, if&#13;
used Dr. King's New Lift&#13;
Thousands of sufferers have prottd&#13;
their matchless merit for sick andMT&gt;&#13;
vous headaches. They make port&#13;
blood and strong nerves and build up&#13;
your health. Easy to take. Try them.&#13;
Only 25c, money back if not eortd.&#13;
Bold by F. A. Sigler, druggist&#13;
A Frlffhtful Blu»«cr&#13;
. Will often, cause a horrible burn,&#13;
•calJ, out*or bruised Bucklea's arnica&#13;
salve, the best in th&lt;t world, will kill&#13;
the pain and promptly heal i t Curea&#13;
old sores, fever sores, ulcers, boils, felons,&#13;
corns and all skin eruptions. Best&#13;
pile cure on earth. Only 25c a box.&#13;
Cure guaranteed. Sold by P. A. Sigler.&#13;
druffarist.&#13;
GREGORY .&#13;
Leo McClear has gone to try&#13;
his fortune in Detroit. Success&#13;
to him.&#13;
Bullis &amp; Kuhn are building&#13;
nice barn back of E. A. Kuhu'e&#13;
tesideace.&#13;
Gardening is the order of the&#13;
day with many Gregorians, but&#13;
rain is sadly needed.&#13;
Born to Prank Worden and&#13;
wife April 19, an 11£ pound girl&#13;
baby, all doing nicely.&#13;
t h e University, Normal and&#13;
Albion College students have&#13;
come and gone again.&#13;
Wm, Randolph, wife and adopted&#13;
son of Munith were visitors in&#13;
Gregory and vicinity among their&#13;
relatives and friends last week.&#13;
The loss on buried potatoes in&#13;
this neighborhood was not so&#13;
heavy as was feared from frost.&#13;
Several carloads were shipped&#13;
from here last week. J PARSHALLVILLE&#13;
Will Woverton is so as to be&#13;
out again.&#13;
Mrs. Norbert is very sick at the&#13;
home of Lottie Hetchler of this&#13;
place.&#13;
Mrs. Coleman went to Flat&#13;
Bock Saturday to visit her brother.&#13;
Walter Knickerbocker, of Fowlerville,&#13;
was in town one day last&#13;
week.&#13;
Sanford Avery and wife, of&#13;
Fenton visited at Geo. Dodds&#13;
last Sunday.&#13;
Dr. Parker is improving the&#13;
looks of his house with plaster&#13;
and paint&#13;
Mr. Westervilt, of Detroit, is&#13;
visiting his sister, Mrs. Ezra&#13;
Martin this week.&#13;
Geo. Salsbury is staying in&#13;
town for a few weeks selling&#13;
farm implimenta&#13;
A. 0. Wakeman has moved to&#13;
Hartl^od the past week and occupies&#13;
Che Herbert Lemon house.&#13;
I t is reported that L. E. Smith&#13;
will sell out his goods at cost as&#13;
lie want* toretke from the store.&#13;
Frank Brarender moved to&#13;
Deerfield Monday, and Will Bravender&#13;
takes his place in the&#13;
•tore.&#13;
Glasby and Bravender started&#13;
their wagon on the road last week&#13;
which will be convenient tat the&#13;
fanners. ,&#13;
-4&#13;
Gene Pyper is the proud possessor&#13;
of a new wheel.&#13;
John Frayier, of Iosco, visited&#13;
at Perry Mills last Saturday.&#13;
Fred Douglas, of Ionia, spent a&#13;
few days with W. S. Livermore&#13;
this week.&#13;
John Co)sun and wife, of Webster,&#13;
visited relatives at this place&#13;
and Gregory last week.&#13;
Stanly Marsh and Edd Howlett&#13;
returned to the U. of M. at Ann&#13;
Arbor last Saturday.&#13;
Homer Ives went to Parma&#13;
last week to attend the funeral of&#13;
his wife's sister, Mrs. Dean.&#13;
Wheeler Gaylord and son, of&#13;
North Stockbridge, visited at&#13;
VVm. Pypers last Thursday.&#13;
Haras Miller, who has been&#13;
spending the winter at this place,&#13;
was married to Miss Emma Rutman&#13;
of Iosco, last Wednesday.&#13;
The Ladies Aid socieity of the&#13;
Presbyterian church met and&#13;
elected the following officers:&#13;
Pres., Marthy Webb; Vice Pres.,&#13;
Sarah Hadley; Sec, Belle Sayles;&#13;
Treas., Sarah Pyper.&#13;
The members of the Presbyterian&#13;
chuch,of Plainfield, decided&#13;
not to keep Rev. Whitfield, who&#13;
has filled the pulpit at that place&#13;
and this for the past three Sundays.&#13;
Some people expect to&#13;
get a 11500 preacher for $500.&#13;
Perry Mills house caught fire&#13;
Tuesday morning and came near&#13;
burning but was discovered in&#13;
time so there was not much damage&#13;
done. It burnt a few clothes,&#13;
quilts, one chair, and the carpet&#13;
It is supposed to have caught&#13;
ro m the chimney.&#13;
Henry Ceilings returned home&#13;
Ball Oik last lUnday.&#13;
fciftti* Ltvtrmore is spending a&#13;
tew &amp;»» wife tomb in Cfaeltea.&#13;
Thaicough&#13;
HangsOft&#13;
You have used all&#13;
sorts of cough remedies&#13;
but it does not&#13;
yield; it is too deep&#13;
seated. It may wear&#13;
itself out in time, but&#13;
it is more liable to&#13;
produce la grippe,&#13;
pneumonia or a serious&#13;
throat affection.&#13;
You need something&#13;
that will give you&#13;
strength and build&#13;
up the body.&#13;
SCOTT'S&#13;
EMULSION will do thb what everything&#13;
ebc foils. There » no doubt&#13;
about i i It nourishes,&#13;
strengthens, builds op and&#13;
makes the body strong and&#13;
heaKhy, not only to throw&#13;
off tfus hard cough, but to&#13;
the syskaa a&amp;aiait&#13;
SILVER LAKE ITEMS.&#13;
A new baby boy at John Gallagher's.&#13;
Will Thurston and wife visited&#13;
her parents in Dexter Sunday&#13;
last,&#13;
Mrs. Bert Carpenter of Ann&#13;
Arbor was visiting in thiB vicinity&#13;
last week. "^&#13;
Oral Wheeler has rented his&#13;
farm to Jim Fisk and has moved&#13;
to Dexter.&#13;
About a dozen from this locality&#13;
were in Dexter on business on&#13;
Saturday last&#13;
Charlie Pidd has rented a farm&#13;
in Lima township and will move&#13;
there next week.&#13;
Nick Reed has his cellar dug&#13;
for his barn and the masous will&#13;
commence on the wall this week.&#13;
Miss Alice McCabe is doing&#13;
work for Nick Reede's family as&#13;
Mrs. Reede is busy caring for a&#13;
new baby.&#13;
Several farmers in this vicinity&#13;
are plowing for oats but every&#13;
thing needs rain and nothing will&#13;
amount to anything unless we get&#13;
it soon.&#13;
Mark Bell's team became f nghtened&#13;
last week and ran around the&#13;
field until they freed themselves&#13;
from the wagon. No damage but&#13;
a broken tongue.&#13;
John Welsh has been having a&#13;
nice string of wire fence put on&#13;
his farm, Mr. Bierce doing the&#13;
work. Those contemplating the&#13;
building of fence of this kind will&#13;
do well to see Mr. Bieroe.&#13;
^ m m&#13;
Additional Local.&#13;
•HOT OP QOLD.&#13;
by Inrtlaaa, Aeooralac To »&#13;
of a JC«w Eldo—cU.&#13;
Seattle special to 8aa FranoUoo&#13;
Chronicle: A. itranfe tale concerning&#13;
(be Indiana o* the aortbern part of&#13;
this continent lifting gold tor ihot in&#13;
tfceir guns 1* told by Joan Piehe, an&#13;
oia trapper and prospector who has&#13;
pursued the wikia of the Hudson Bay&#13;
eountry for the Jaat quarter of a century.&#13;
He is now at Vancouver, where&#13;
be is waiting to get a grub stake to&#13;
go to this golden "Bhot mill." Pioht&#13;
oiaims that he has made two trips to*&#13;
tfee Hudson Straits. He says that this&#13;
mysterious gold land Is somewhere in&#13;
the Barrow archipelago, as Plche was&#13;
told by a priest who has been in that&#13;
Joy region, principally northeast of the&#13;
mouth of the Mackenzie river, for the&#13;
last twenty-one years. The tale was&#13;
first got by a native Indian of the Barrow&#13;
country, who drifted on an lot&#13;
floe on the south coast to the barrtn&#13;
lands. He was suffering from a wound&#13;
In his shoulder, and when the missionary&#13;
doctored him he was astounded to&#13;
find a piece of gold In the red man's&#13;
shoulder. The priest showed the nugget&#13;
to Piche and produced several&#13;
others that he got from the Indians&#13;
that inhabit the borders of the bar*&#13;
ren lands when they returned from&#13;
their annual trip to the coast for their&#13;
•apply of golden nuggets to use for&#13;
gave. "7 B i n &lt;«B»r mxonnation coat&#13;
•trrobontte the pftett'sv story," writs*&#13;
* t trapper, "that mm fatted to a r&#13;
by a native of the* Inlands. I met hfca&#13;
in Hudson Straits a&gt;out twenty-fit*&#13;
years ago." Piohe claims t i have narlgated&#13;
the headwaters 0I7 the Saskatchewan&#13;
river when the old Bteamsf&#13;
Northcott was yet new there, and say*&#13;
that he knows where to find this&#13;
known EH Dorado.&#13;
Onifvu Young&#13;
"It is only right that's* sb*ul$ tsU&#13;
you," she satt, "that father has lost&#13;
all." "Not all!" he exclaimed. "Yes;&#13;
all," she asserted. ^«&lt;NO," he said&#13;
firmly; "not all. You art still left to&#13;
him.. 1 could not b« so cruel as to add&#13;
to his misfortunes. Tell fcim—tell him&#13;
from me that my generosity Hmpe^s mi&#13;
to leave him what littls^tUs in W9&#13;
power."&#13;
The German debt is growing&#13;
stantly at the rate of about 136,000,000&#13;
a year. In 1888 it was $178,000,000. M&#13;
toe end of 1898 it was three times as&#13;
great. These figures art from a German&#13;
statistical paper. The total debt,&#13;
1640,000,000 It very small, as debts •»&#13;
in this age.. . . . .&#13;
Ths per capita money circulation of&#13;
tfcft Uaited States is $25.42, the highest&#13;
In the history ;&gt;ot the nation.&#13;
further attack If *•* act&#13;
nisi down or csuciafad m i&#13;
should otttaWy tafce « *&#13;
isj loos&#13;
Floyd Reason intends to build an&#13;
addition to his residence.&#13;
WANTED—By the farmers of this&#13;
vicinity—a good rain.&#13;
Mrs. Jas. Fitch, of Stock bridge, is&#13;
the guest of her daughter, Mrs. Bert&#13;
Hicks.&#13;
M. C. Cranson, of Onandaga, was&#13;
the guest of the Misses Boyle &amp; Halstead&#13;
the first of the week.&#13;
A new line of Sailors and cheap&#13;
Chi Id ren'8 Hats just received at&#13;
BOYL*&amp; HAUTEAD'S.&#13;
m 1 m 11*&#13;
Flint merchants are onto their&#13;
job. About 50 of them have&#13;
sig&amp;ed an agreement to have&#13;
nothing more to do with premium&#13;
coupon schemes or program&#13;
advertising. They will stick to&#13;
newspaper advertising, believing&#13;
it gives the best results.&#13;
P. W. Benley, of Findfey, Ohio,&#13;
has purchased the Industrial&#13;
News and will continue it as a&#13;
demo-populist puplication. Beports&#13;
from Findlay say that Mr.&#13;
Henley is an able jsurnalistic&#13;
gentleman, and will conduct the&#13;
News in a manner that will&#13;
please its numerous readers.&#13;
Spring lillineiy&#13;
Trimmed Hats,&#13;
Fancy Millinery,&#13;
Flowers,&#13;
Laces.&#13;
Latest Novelties.&#13;
Right Prices.&#13;
CALL AND SEE US.&#13;
G. L. MARTIN.&#13;
WANTED—The Subscription&#13;
due on the DISPATCH.&#13;
A CROW HATCHBRY.&#13;
ngnUr ladortiy UTrtaliltalml toy •&#13;
Maa la Peuajlvaate.&#13;
Sosquehannah (Penn.) Cor. New&#13;
Tork Press: Mr. Billing* of Brookdale&#13;
has taken a contract to furnish&#13;
a New Tork millinery manufacturer&#13;
with crow heads for twenty-fly« cents&#13;
•piece. It costs sooMftnlnf to get a&#13;
dead crow. Alive it is an elusive bird&#13;
and ammunition is expensive. Billings,&#13;
however, Is an enterprising speculator.&#13;
He has devised a scheme by&#13;
which a maximum number of crows'&#13;
heads can be got with a minimnm of&#13;
expense. He has set up a chicken in-&#13;
.s.&#13;
Reynold's Black Laasbaags,&#13;
Bred from prize winners; strictly&#13;
beautifnl; large in size; hardy, best of&#13;
layers; active foragers; fine sitters and&#13;
mother; excellent table fowl.&#13;
Also very fine White Bramas; eggs&#13;
for batching by applying 1$ miles&#13;
west of Cbubbs OorDers. ^&#13;
Eggs per 13, 75cts.&#13;
REYNOLDS &amp; SON,&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
ACTIVE SELLING&#13;
AT THE&#13;
DRESS GOODS COUNTER&#13;
It is by reason of the largest the best selected Dress Goods stock&#13;
to be found in Jackson. To walk through our store is all you need to&#13;
see where the most extensive aud most complete Dress Goods stock&#13;
is and to see which store in town is doing the Dress Goods business.&#13;
People are bright and quick to learn where the best values are and&#13;
best values is what always draws. When you tee a busy Dress Goods&#13;
counter—four or five salesmen, all with oostomers waiting for them,&#13;
nobody to wait on you—don't go out where they are not busy just&#13;
because you're a little impatient. Where they*re busiest is where you&#13;
want to buy, for there, depend upon it, is where you get best bargains.&#13;
p n&#13;
in which U placed as fast at&#13;
laid the eggs of about 100 hen citwt&#13;
that have been trapped aad confined&#13;
with perhaps a doxen cock crows.&#13;
Within fifteen days the little creatures&#13;
are hatched, and a fortnight later&#13;
they are ready to be hifr—rted. XI to&#13;
understood that the head of A crow&#13;
Bhtak-ii in&#13;
Che adult of the same&#13;
anifom rets of four&#13;
«hey wm par the&#13;
hs* the oaty&#13;
world, and he Is&#13;
ttato&#13;
Attfee&#13;
A t ^afsn A line of Beautiful&#13;
A t Wk, Novelty Spring Fabrics,&#13;
in various weaves, made to&#13;
sell at very much more money.&#13;
We bring these out and make the&#13;
price 60c a yard.&#13;
dko Figured Black Dress&#13;
^ ^ Goods in Soiiels, Ja*&#13;
quards, Storm Serges, Cheviots,&#13;
and other goods, in value up to&#13;
75c a yard, but all in at one price,&#13;
48c a yard, specially good.&#13;
Bilk Waist Patterns&#13;
Black Cr epons&#13;
A magnificient showing from&#13;
75c up.&#13;
Mousseline de Soie&#13;
The latest Summer Fabrics&#13;
in figures and stripes—very beautiful.&#13;
Belt Buckles&#13;
very handsome designs—stripes,&#13;
plaids and figures—the correct&#13;
amount of silfc for the present&#13;
style of waist lor $2.98.&#13;
The largest line, the handsomest&#13;
line, the best value line of&#13;
belt buckles that ever came to&#13;
Jackson. The novelties are priced&#13;
within easy reach of small parses.&#13;
Woodland, Violet Pethunet&#13;
and Toilet Articles, »to 65c&#13;
L. H. FIELD.&#13;
\ \&#13;
Matt,&#13;
Jp.v</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 April 27, 1899</text>
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                <text>April 27, 1899 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1899-04-27</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="6158">
                <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 XVII. PINOKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MIOH., THURSDAY, MAY 4, 1899. No. 18.&#13;
Serge Suits&#13;
The banner garment*&#13;
of the sewon&#13;
D l U 6 U the color&#13;
$ 1 2 « 5 U the price per «ult&#13;
MADB TO MEASURE&#13;
• Y&#13;
Fred Kauffmann&#13;
The American Tailor&#13;
CHICAGO&#13;
Yon will reproach yourself if you&#13;
buy before examining&#13;
8TYLE 6678&#13;
Aik his local representative&#13;
K. H. CRANE.&#13;
to show you the pattern and the u other terget.1*&#13;
CLOTHING !&#13;
This season we represent&#13;
Fred Kauffmann, one of&#13;
Chicago's best tailors. All&#13;
goods from this hous pare&#13;
guaranteed to be strictly&#13;
MADE to M E A S U B E -&#13;
Also a PERFECT JUT.&#13;
This bouse makes suits to&#13;
to measure for boys as well&#13;
as men. We" will make silk&#13;
vests a specialty, they are&#13;
the style. From $3.50 up.&#13;
Suits from 112 up&#13;
We also represent the Celebrated&#13;
Work Brothers, of&#13;
Chicago, for ready made&#13;
Clothing, the latest in style&#13;
and thoroughly well made.&#13;
For M a c k i n t o s h e s&#13;
for men, and rubber&#13;
capes and skirts for Ladies',&#13;
we represent the Dundee&#13;
Rubber Co., of Chicago. We&#13;
shall always be glad to show&#13;
you our samples in all t h ese&#13;
lines, and solicit your patronage.&#13;
K. H. CRANE.&#13;
POSSIBLY&#13;
YoiUdon't need any window shades but&#13;
If you are in need of any&#13;
Don't Buy...&#13;
Until you have seen the Buckeye Adjustable&#13;
Drop Shade. It is the most&#13;
complete as well as convenient Window&#13;
Shade on the market.&#13;
My Stock of Furniture&#13;
Was never more complete. I do not&#13;
claim to make the Furniture but I do&#13;
make the price that sells.&#13;
GK&#13;
WE CALL&#13;
Your attention to Shoes and Groceries&#13;
this week. I have a few pair of Ladies Shoes in&#13;
sizes 2l/i to 4 ranging in price from $2.50 to $3.50&#13;
that I must close out and will make the price 69C&#13;
per pair. If you want shoes you will certainly buy&#13;
them at that price.&#13;
Our Groceries are all of the best quality;&#13;
no cheap or inferior goods bought.&#13;
Come and try our flavoring extracts.&#13;
They are of the finest quality and are sold in bulk.&#13;
Royal Tiger Tea—Come and try it, and&#13;
you will always .buy it.&#13;
We are selling an excellent Mocha and&#13;
Java Coffee for 20Cthe&#13;
market.&#13;
equal any 25c goods on&#13;
LOCAL NEWS.&#13;
F. 6. Jackaou was in Detroit Monday.&#13;
Mrs. H. H. Swarthout is saining&#13;
Burch and wife were in flowell&#13;
last week,&#13;
Honday was May 1st. Did you get&#13;
a Mrfy basket?&#13;
Hurt A very, of Howell, was in town&#13;
on Saturday last.&#13;
Master Volney Teeple has been on&#13;
the sick lial the past week.&#13;
The W C T U will hold their meeting1&#13;
as usual this week Friday.&#13;
F. L. Andrews visitsd the old home&#13;
in Parshallville the past week.&#13;
Messrs M. T. Kelly and H. E.&#13;
Angell were in Chelsea Sunday.&#13;
F. L. Brown, of Bay City, was&#13;
drowned in Whitmore lake Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. I. S. P. Johnson is able to be&#13;
oat after her several weeks of illness.&#13;
Mra. H. D. Grieve and daughter,&#13;
Kittie were in Howell one day last&#13;
week.&#13;
Rev. Simpson officiated at a wed&#13;
ding in Flat Bock the fitot of the&#13;
week.&#13;
Mont Richards, ot Toledo, visited&#13;
relatives and friends at this place this&#13;
week.&#13;
Mesdames C. L. Sigler and Geo.&#13;
Reason Jr., were in Howell the last of&#13;
last week.&#13;
Laverne Brokaw and daughter,&#13;
Kitsey, of Howell, were guests ot his&#13;
mother Sunday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Mclntee, of Stockbridge,&#13;
are guests of their daughter,&#13;
Mrs. Geo. Clark.&#13;
Mr. Markam, of Ann Arbor, visited&#13;
at the homes of R. E. Finch and F. D.&#13;
Johnson the past week.&#13;
The Globe Manufacturing building&#13;
at Northyilla was struck by lighting&#13;
last Sunday and burned.&#13;
Dr. R. W. Coleman, of Cadillac,&#13;
spent the first part of the week with&#13;
his sister, Mrs. Chas. Love&#13;
Mrs. Win. Aldrich has so far recovered&#13;
as to U moved to the home&#13;
of her aunt, Mrs. C. P. Sykes.&#13;
A. E. Brown was appointed as&#13;
village marshall for the coming year,,&#13;
by the council last Monday night.&#13;
Mrs. Thompson Grimes and daughter&#13;
Bertha started Tuesday for Ne:&#13;
breska for a visit of several months)&#13;
One of our merchants, who does&#13;
not believe in advertising, said: You&#13;
had better advertise in your paper for&#13;
rain as we need that worse than any*&#13;
thing else/' We did so and oh is vicinity&#13;
has been blessed with food&#13;
bowers. It certainly pays to&#13;
ise if you use the right medium.&#13;
When in Want of&#13;
DRUGS,&#13;
PATENT MEDICINES,&#13;
TOILET ARTICLES,&#13;
Books and Stationery,&#13;
GIVE US A CALL.&#13;
Al so . ^ ^ M H ^ B - * —&#13;
WALL PAPER,&#13;
The latest styles and* patterns.&#13;
XXXX Coffee for&#13;
1 Bottle of^Oc Pickles for&#13;
1 Bottle^ of 10c Jelly for&#13;
* . • • •&#13;
Butter and Eggs Wanted,&#13;
9c&#13;
6c&#13;
5c&#13;
/&#13;
Another Ared Oae Qomr&#13;
James Doyle Sr. died at his home&#13;
near Anderson, Sunday evening last&#13;
aged 91 years. He leaves to monrn&#13;
boir loss, anaged wife, two sons and&#13;
oar daughters. Funeral was held&#13;
at St. Mary's church Wednesday.&#13;
Mr. Doyle was one of Livingston&#13;
County's pioneers. He was born in&#13;
Ireland, Mar. 1808, moving from&#13;
there to Canada then to Michigan and&#13;
since 1840 has been a resident of Putnam.&#13;
Miss Griener, ot Anderson, visited&#13;
the High School Tuesday.&#13;
The different rooms united in observing&#13;
Arbor Day by appropriate exercises&#13;
laat Friday, after which a number&#13;
of tree* were planted by the&#13;
pupils.&#13;
The 12th grade aw studying Pope's&#13;
H £asay on Man" as supplementary&#13;
irert:&#13;
A number of the boys who went&#13;
after trees last Pridty mt4e a mistake,&#13;
v?) and thought torn*a&#13;
An Ellegant Line of GLASSWARE and CHINA.&#13;
• /&#13;
F. A. SIGLER.&#13;
AT THE CORNER DRUG STORE.&#13;
STEEL RANGES&#13;
The best steel ranges on earth for&#13;
Are at Teeple and Cadwell's Hardware Store.&#13;
Having sold'a number of them which have been working&#13;
successfully for a year or more," proves them good.&#13;
We warrant them to bake as quickly and with as Httle&#13;
fuel, either coal or wood, as any range made, and we&#13;
know they will hold fire over night as well as any air tight&#13;
stove which ptyres them to be well and substantialy made.&#13;
Do not fail to examine these ranges. No troirbk to show&#13;
them.&#13;
VERY TRULY YOURS,&#13;
TEEPLE #&gt; CADWELL.&#13;
31&#13;
Have just returned ftom Detroit and&#13;
was* immediately followed by a veritable shower of Diniities,&#13;
Percales, Lawns, Ginghams, Dotted Mulls, etc., in&#13;
fact a fine assortment of the very latest Summer Goods&#13;
which were purchased at "late in the season'* prices and&#13;
means that for two weeks we will give the public the benefit&#13;
of this great purchase. Intend to make this a general^&#13;
clearing up sale in which will be included&#13;
10 pieces Dress Suitings, 15c kind at 9yic&#13;
Large line of Ladies' Skirts * 85, 98, 1.25, 1.50&#13;
Ladies' extra value Summer Corsets at 25c&#13;
Ladies1 Gauze Wear at 5 to 25c per garment&#13;
But th€»e are only&#13;
Others you can&#13;
/&#13;
J- ,&lt; * w&#13;
• f.&#13;
* \&#13;
&lt; •¥'&#13;
- j&#13;
.5&#13;
i \&#13;
\:lf&#13;
&lt; i&#13;
$&#13;
"i&#13;
h&#13;
rthfci&#13;
•...• J $&#13;
7 i .&#13;
fe&gt; . ' J i&#13;
•c -&#13;
Brief Style.&#13;
C O N C I S E V ^ N D IHTERESTING,&#13;
O i -&#13;
Trouble at the. IDpa* fttW&#13;
, inhere Is no indication of a peaceful&#13;
settlement of the strike at tkm Tamarack&#13;
and Osceola stamp milts. The recent&#13;
conference resulted mm mil the&#13;
others did, in no agreement. The&#13;
Quincy mill paid off mad gra«toed the&#13;
men a straight 10 percent n i v , which&#13;
is what the Tamarack and Osaeot* men&#13;
want, and this makes mtttrtTf worse.&#13;
On account of the atrike at the wills&#13;
the Tamarack, Osceola, Kepnarge and&#13;
Tamarack Junior mines nave *ot produced&#13;
a ton of copper for a wjeek, and&#13;
tho loss to the mutts is greater thsn&#13;
the difference in wages to tae taea for&#13;
a year to come. It knocks a&amp; the production&#13;
for tho month by msarty 300&#13;
tons.&#13;
. Later.—The striking- miners liare resumed&#13;
work at the Osceola awi Tamarack&#13;
stamp mills. The management&#13;
agreed to the demands of the men of a&#13;
10 per cent raise.&#13;
' -Strange Case In CaHkeaa Camiamy.&#13;
Pierce Cavanagh, a well-know; farmer&#13;
living near Ceresco, some time ago aent&#13;
a ticket to Ireland for the ptfcrpooe of&#13;
bringing his uephew, OrvilleC&amp;raBagh,&#13;
to the U. S. Instead of swadiay Orville,&#13;
his relatives sent another aephew&#13;
named Pierce. It developed shortly&#13;
after Pierce, Jr., arrived in this «©u«-&#13;
try that he was insane. The ancle&#13;
applied to the judge of probate to have&#13;
tlje boy sent back tp Ireland, aaa aasr&#13;
the treasury department a t Washington&#13;
hns taken up the matter and the&#13;
insane lad will be ret anted to hi* relatives.&#13;
The boy is in jail, bait refuses&#13;
to eat, and the sheriff is afraid he will&#13;
starve to death before he caa get him&#13;
off his hands.&#13;
Fake Spiritualist Ceavirted «T JBerder.&#13;
It took a Detroit jury exactly 10&#13;
hours before they reached a verdict&#13;
that convicted Edward Ascfcer, the&#13;
fake spiritualist, of the mtwder «€ Valmore&#13;
C. Nichol, a PitftstteM fcisan»t on&#13;
Belle Isle, Aug. 10 last. The aamrmtrer&#13;
showed no evidence of fear or&#13;
ness when his fate) warn .&#13;
which convicted hint of ••idu'W&amp;m'e&#13;
first degree. Even bad&#13;
acquitted he would still m&#13;
cell, as another wait sal '&#13;
him, charging him with&#13;
poor, simple old fCnprion, of Lamisk'ill^,&#13;
out of 960 by his tafca metanmr •"*&amp;'&#13;
Ascher was given a ttJe semteajat in&#13;
Jackson.&#13;
Staara*&#13;
The secretary of&#13;
articles of incorporation&#13;
i&#13;
the&#13;
ofabeg^tfew&#13;
Jersey corporation which desires ^fih d*&#13;
a general trust compas^r hvataieav ia&#13;
Michigan. The articles tit fuympmn&#13;
tion provide that the onsmpany may&#13;
buy1 and operate mines,&#13;
manufacturing enterprises*&#13;
and sell all kinds of stocks.&#13;
investments, and, ia short, doefcasst&#13;
any kind of busSavesa i s which Large&#13;
sums of money are repaired. The articles&#13;
will not be filed&#13;
of state until the matter earn ht&#13;
inrestlgated.&#13;
, Mary Butterfield Sandersoa, of Marshall,&#13;
under arrest, ihaj&amp;uft with attempted&#13;
murder by leading her aged&#13;
husband with&#13;
changed her&#13;
longer be represent**&#13;
&lt;;. R. Mains, of Battle&#13;
W. Cavanaugh, of&#13;
•conduct the case for&#13;
tried at the June term,&#13;
cutor Hatch and his&#13;
Clark. This makes the third time she&#13;
has changed attorneys since the ease&#13;
was eomxnenced.&#13;
Recently David&#13;
bachelor, without&#13;
dted at l£eno. lie left&#13;
at about $60,009,&#13;
ance, realty and&#13;
was left to Miss&#13;
gomery, a pretty,&#13;
who "always sailed&#13;
add p a t t e d with him&#13;
other girts giv&lt;&#13;
nothing to de&#13;
smiles of Miss&#13;
the old can's&#13;
heiress. r fo )&#13;
Mineral Water a* 1&#13;
The resident*, of&#13;
]hme vision* of their&#13;
'.of Ml Clemens ia the&#13;
,-there&#13;
»*iTV 4»*tl he r ^&#13;
UTATE GOSSIP.&#13;
A tlecr made its appearance at Traverse&#13;
City the other day.&#13;
Fr. F. llarnuda haja been appointed&#13;
archbishop of Santiago.&#13;
A fine new high school is to be built&#13;
at Hough ton, at a cost of 850,000.&#13;
Metamora is to have a new newspaper&#13;
to be known as the Independent.&#13;
Wm. F. Clinger, 78 years old, was&#13;
struck by a train and killed near&#13;
Shelby.&#13;
Pioneers soy that the water in Saginaw&#13;
bay is higher than it has been for&#13;
23 years.&#13;
The University of Michigan has&#13;
graduated 3,258 persons as doctors of&#13;
medicine.&#13;
Armada is to have a veneer factory&#13;
which will give employment to about&#13;
a dozen men.&#13;
A convention to organize a state&#13;
league of municipalities will bo held&#13;
at Lansing May 23.&#13;
Four graduates from the University&#13;
of Michigan have been governor s of&#13;
states and territories.&#13;
Marine City's council has granted&#13;
the Detroit &amp; Northern railway a franchise&#13;
through that city.&#13;
The Michigan Bell Telephone Co.&#13;
has begun the work of extending its&#13;
lines north of Menominee.&#13;
Fire destroyed the Ormsby hotel and&#13;
Thos. Goodeirs residence at Ecorse.&#13;
The loss is estimated at 83,000.&#13;
The people ofjfcaginaw are tired of&#13;
street fairs and xie 8l,~'00 surplus will&#13;
probably be devo'.ed to the good roads&#13;
scheme.&#13;
Taxpayers only will vote on the&#13;
proposition, to bond Port Huron for the&#13;
purpose of constructing a" canal from&#13;
Lake Huron to Black river.&#13;
Marsha) L caa have a ball bearing&#13;
hub factory if it will furnish a building.&#13;
Forty men would be given employment&#13;
the year around.&#13;
Tho supposed smallpox cases in the&#13;
German settlement at Albion have&#13;
turned out to be chickenpox, and Albion&#13;
citizens are breathing freer.&#13;
One hundred and one members and&#13;
former members of the law department&#13;
of the University of Michigan were in&#13;
the army and navy during the war&#13;
with Spain.&#13;
The wheat crop in the vicinity of&#13;
Milan is a failure, and many of the&#13;
farmers are plowing up their fields.&#13;
Many potatoes iu pits were also found&#13;
to be frozen.&#13;
In a wreck on the F. &amp; P. M. between&#13;
Novi and Wixon nobody was&#13;
hurt, but eight freight cars were badly&#13;
smashed. It was caused by a coupling&#13;
pin breaking.&#13;
Railroad Commissioner Osborn's force&#13;
is now busily engaged in spreading the&#13;
taxes for 1898 against the railroad companies&#13;
of Michigan under the provisions&#13;
-of the Merriman law.&#13;
Millington has a 14-year-old boy who&#13;
ris quite a heavy weight. He stands&#13;
«IK feet and one inch in his bare feet^&#13;
has a chest measurement of 52 inches&#13;
and weighs 432 pounds.&#13;
A farmer near Smith's Creek, St.&#13;
Olair county, Uasa«alf that weighed&#13;
106 pounds when two days old, which&#13;
is about double the usual weight of&#13;
such animals at that age.&#13;
It is estimated that a student would&#13;
be compelled to spend 44 years in the&#13;
University of Michigan in order to&#13;
take ali the courses of study now offered&#13;
in the literary department.&#13;
Helen, the little daughter of Fred&#13;
Moore, baggagemaster at the union depot&#13;
at Plymouth, was severely burned&#13;
by her clothes catching from a bonfire.&#13;
She may live but will be disfigured for&#13;
life.&#13;
(ieo. Greer, a farmer of near Gladwin,&#13;
was killed*by a bolt of lightning&#13;
recently and his son Albert, was rendered&#13;
tioeonscious by the same bolt&#13;
and d&gt;d not recover from the shock for&#13;
•two hours.&#13;
A building boom has struck Cadillac&#13;
and struck good and hard. Over 200&#13;
Dew-fetroetures have already been arranged&#13;
for and will be erected this&#13;
summer, and the season is hardly&#13;
started yet.&#13;
At a special election held at Sault&#13;
8te. Marie the city was authorized to&#13;
bonfi i* the sum of $75,000, the money&#13;
rto be used for the construction of&#13;
bridges across the water power canal&#13;
now building.&#13;
Capitalists of Bcrrien Springs have&#13;
purchased a tract of land near the&#13;
river at'that place and will erect a&#13;
•number of summer cottages, with the&#13;
expectation of making* that place one&#13;
•of the most desirable resorts in the&#13;
state.&#13;
Mary Metzner, now residing at&#13;
•'Shelby, Oceana county, is wanted at&#13;
Mishawak*, Ind, to claim a $15,000 estate,&#13;
left by her father. Otto Metzner,&#13;
whe was killed on the Lake Shore&#13;
igailroad a few weeks ago.&#13;
Birmingham's public school building&#13;
us inadequate ^accommodate f.hc rising&#13;
generation, and rooms bare been se-&#13;
•cured in the center dfttte business' district,&#13;
much to the dissatisfaction of&#13;
some of the mt reliant*. ' *&#13;
Secretary of State SWi^w m »»»«.&gt;&#13;
tpeoaamence the ^stribution of sets&#13;
&lt;rf!tbe new comp^Utlon df statutes; t o&#13;
Tho wheat crop in the vicinity of&#13;
Belleville will be an alpaos^ total f ^&#13;
ure. Withiu a radius of 10 or lit milQs&gt;&#13;
the farmers have generally given up*&#13;
all hope and many of them are drilling&#13;
in oats on their wheat grounds.&#13;
The Colrln bill for the protection of&#13;
coal miners went through the senate.&#13;
The recent labor troubles in the. coal&#13;
districts had an effect in hastening its&#13;
passage. The bill is now waiting the&#13;
governor's signature to become a law.&#13;
The village fathers of Sparta have&#13;
decided to accept the proposition by&#13;
which the village could have electric&#13;
lights on the street for a slight advance&#13;
over the price now paid for oil lamps,&#13;
and the work of installing the plant&#13;
will begin soon.&#13;
Railroad Commissioner Osborn has&#13;
proceeded far enough with the computation&#13;
of railroad taxes payable in&#13;
July to estimate that this year's revenue&#13;
will exceed that of last year by&#13;
about $100,000, thus aggregating approximately&#13;
$1,030,000.&#13;
The counterfeiters entered Willow&#13;
the other day and tried to pass a 820&#13;
bill. Justice Butler detected the counterfeit&#13;
bill and ordered them to stop.&#13;
They held him up at the muzzle of a&#13;
revolver until they made their escape.&#13;
Officers are on their trail.&#13;
Rural free mail delivery service has&#13;
been established at St. Joseph, to be&#13;
inaugurated May 1. Jas. C. Dennett&#13;
has been appointed carrier. The service&#13;
will cover an area of 25 square&#13;
miles, serve 575 people and the carrier&#13;
each day will travel 22'j miles.&#13;
Mrs. Ann Dalton-Kaue-Lee. of Muskegon,&#13;
celebrated her 00th birthday&#13;
the other day, The only person in&#13;
that part of the state who is older&#13;
than Mrs. Lee is Mrs., Sylv.a Duram, of&#13;
Polkton township, Ottawa cpunty.&#13;
She will be 103 years of age Nov. go&#13;
next.&#13;
Mininer operations will be resumed&#13;
at the Volunteer mine on the cascade&#13;
range near Negaunee at an early date&#13;
with a force of 200 men. The mine is&#13;
owned by Gen. R. A. Alger and has&#13;
been idle for the past six years. The&#13;
property will be managed by the Cleveland&#13;
Cliffs Co.&#13;
The house has adopted the following&#13;
schedule for daily sessions: Monday,&#13;
afternoon and evening; Tuesday, afternoon&#13;
at 2:30; Wednesday, afternoon at&#13;
2:30; Thursday, 10 a. m. and 1:30 p. m.;&#13;
Friday, morning 10 o'clock. The arrangement&#13;
is made so the committees&#13;
can appoint their meetings in advance.&#13;
The state board of auditors has allowed&#13;
ex-Atty.-Gen. Maynard $700 for&#13;
his services in the Lake Shore nrfleage&#13;
book case. His bill was for $1,000.&#13;
The bills of Alfred Russell, Henry M.&#13;
Cheever and John J. Speed for services&#13;
in the Atkinson law case, have b?en&#13;
allowed $1, LOO, $900 and $ 2 » as presented.&#13;
Orlando Draper, a wealthy farmer of&#13;
Keeler, attempted to chase a flock of&#13;
sheep ont of the dooryard the other&#13;
night, -when his- neck came in contact&#13;
with- the clothesline throwing him&#13;
back nearly M&gt; feet He struck on his&#13;
head, dislocating his collar bone and&#13;
cutting his neck. It b thought he&#13;
will die.&#13;
If every farmer could do as- wet! on&#13;
his crops as D. Brosman, of Silver&#13;
Creek, Cass county, did oo Tiis last&#13;
fall's potatoes, there woulil be fewer&#13;
mortgages on record. Mr. Brosman&#13;
raised 1,200 bushels of Jutbers and sold&#13;
them at such a figure that, after deducting&#13;
all expenses, he will have&#13;
enough profit to more than pay for the&#13;
11 acres of land they were raised on.&#13;
Census bulletin No. 1T which was issued&#13;
recently shows sobcHvision of&#13;
various states into supervisors districts,,&#13;
Michigan being divided into IS such&#13;
districts. Wayne eonnty forms the&#13;
first district. The other II .subdivisions&#13;
follow the lines of congressional districts,&#13;
except where they contain part&#13;
of Wayne county. Supervisors in such&#13;
districts will have jurisdiction only to&#13;
the Wayne county line.&#13;
p u&#13;
a ^ entitled to them, and Is ready&#13;
tto'ttti orders fVom pYlrite citizens at&#13;
•,•11 Superset fcettfcrtfat lanstng. i l .&#13;
NEWSY BREVITIES.&#13;
The Golden Star gold mine on the&#13;
Rainy river in Minnesota, was recently&#13;
sold for $500,000. It was purchased by&#13;
Toronto capitalists.&#13;
A French syndicate is about to close&#13;
a deal for the famous Yellow Aster&#13;
mines in California. The consideration&#13;
is said to be $3,000,000.&#13;
A new elevator will be built at Dulnth,&#13;
Minn., this summer with a capacity&#13;
of 5,000,000 bu. This will give the&#13;
owners a capacity for storing 12,000,-&#13;
000 bushels of grain at the head of the&#13;
lakes.&#13;
A New York. • syndicate is trying to&#13;
buy out tue street railway systems in&#13;
Chicago. It is said that Chas T. Yerkes&#13;
is willing to sell out his interests,&#13;
which control three different systems.&#13;
Bud Cook, a Negro, was stripped to&#13;
the waist by a crowd of people at Rice,&#13;
6a., and -It* lashes were administered&#13;
to him. His offense was the remark&#13;
that the Negroes should pay no attention&#13;
to notices pinned on their doort&#13;
to leave the country. • •&#13;
Chas. W. Williams, alias Jones, col&#13;
Galena. Ga., was shot to death&#13;
in the city jail recently by * mo&#13;
Negroes, Wtfllanw killed Laura Can.&#13;
•fax, a'Negress. The nwb, composed&#13;
of about 25rms4&lt;e* Nigrees, marehe*&#13;
to the jail s o l done tfce WMo*.&#13;
CTATE LEGISLATURE.&#13;
^ |uj)r$me c o j k dfcc^ipn,&#13;
d|t*s the jAtkinpof railroad law, &amp;a&#13;
well as the law of lftlfr, which provides&#13;
for the assessment of railroad, telegraph&#13;
and telephone companies. The&#13;
provisions in this law are exactly similar&#13;
to those in the Atkinson bill, providing&#13;
for the assessment of railroad,&#13;
telegraph and telephone companies.&#13;
Tke case under, discussion was that of&#13;
the Teoumseh Telephone Co. The&#13;
court declared the tax to be ad valorem&#13;
and not specific', and that the auditorgeneral&#13;
had no authority to credit the&#13;
money collected under the law to the&#13;
primary school fund. But the contention&#13;
that the tax can be collected as&#13;
an ad valorem tax, the court says, can^&#13;
not be sustained. It Is nob a specific&#13;
tax and U not withiu the rule of taxation&#13;
prescribed for other property;&#13;
therefore, the law is void. This practically&#13;
disposed of the Atkinson law,&#13;
and brings the matter of increasing&#13;
the taxation of railroads again before&#13;
the legislature.&#13;
Two very important bills, introduced&#13;
by Goodall and Hammond, respectively,&#13;
are on the calendar and&#13;
will soon be acted upon by the house.&#13;
The}' are the anti-trust and stock&#13;
gambling bills, and both measures, if&#13;
passed, will be effectual 4n destroying&#13;
these two elements in commercial life.&#13;
The anti-trust bill has been framed&#13;
with the greatest care, after consultation&#13;
with able attorneys. It carries&gt;a&#13;
penalty of from 85,000 to $?5,000 as to&#13;
corporate organizations, and hea*y&#13;
personal fines. It went down to defeat&#13;
two years ago, but Mr. Hammond&#13;
says he is very hopeful of its success&#13;
at this session. •&#13;
The senate in executive session confirmed&#13;
the following appointments of&#13;
the governor: W. A. Perren, of Detroit,&#13;
member of the Macktnac Island park&#13;
commission for 10 years; Fred C. Bowerfind,&#13;
of Adrian, member of the board&#13;
of guardians of the Industrial home&#13;
for pirl$: John Devener, of Lapeer,&#13;
member of ihe board of control of the&#13;
asylum for the feeble minded and epileptic;&#13;
Dr. A. L. Worden, of Detroit,&#13;
member of the' state board of corrections&#13;
and charities; Wm. Moeller, of&#13;
Detroit, jury commissioner; Herman&#13;
Nag el, of Detroit, member of the grade&#13;
crossing board.&#13;
The senate has confirmed S. N. Bickerstaff,&#13;
of Kalaruazoo, whom Gov. Pingree&#13;
named for member of the! Kalama&#13;
zoo asylum board over two months&#13;
ago. The senftte also confirmed Walter&#13;
H. Bills for mem her of the Jackson&#13;
prison board, and G. Willis Bement, of&#13;
Lansing, for member of the board of&#13;
control of the state school for the&#13;
blind. Aid. Moeller's nomination for&#13;
member of the Wayne county~jury&#13;
commission is still hung up.&#13;
The ways and means committee of&#13;
the house have passed the annual appropriation&#13;
bills for the Kit. Pleasant&#13;
Normal school snd the pastern asylum&#13;
for the insane. The Normal school re-'&#13;
ceives $50,000 for current expenses. $40,-&#13;
000 for buildings and $3.000'for land, a&#13;
ent OD th«? total asked for of $7,120. The&#13;
Pontiac asylum gets 577,000 for new&#13;
buildings and furnishings and sundry&#13;
expenses, a cut of $17,500 from the estimate.&#13;
The legislators are figuring on closng&#13;
up their bnsiuess at the capitol by&#13;
Jtme lst,~1&gt;ut as yet the exact day for&#13;
final adjournment fejas not been fixed.&#13;
The. equal suffrage bill has again&#13;
been defeated in the house. The vote&#13;
-tood 51 to 43.&#13;
Nearly 200,000 cigars have been&#13;
seized in Louisville, Ky., and other&#13;
contiguous towns as well as in Pennsylvania&#13;
cities, bearing bogus stamps.&#13;
The cigars came from the Jackson firm&#13;
at Lancaster.&#13;
Conrad Scbaefer and Benjamin h9^&gt;,&#13;
farm hands employed near O'Fallon,&#13;
111., fought a duel with pitchforks and&#13;
Schaefer was killed. The two had a&#13;
dispute while loading hay snd fought&#13;
ti)i Schaefer fell from a terrific blow&#13;
on the head. He li ved but a few hours.&#13;
Love cannot be found.&#13;
THE MARKETS.&#13;
LITE STOCK.&#13;
New York— Cattte Sheep Lambs Hojrs&#13;
Best grades .*l«&gt;..&gt;3) » 6 J ii .-\&gt;i •« 4&gt;&#13;
Lower grades..* 8UQ4 uo 4 ou 5 « 4 80&#13;
5 00 8 00 4 tO&#13;
4 Ii &amp; 13 3 90&#13;
fi 01 8 00 4 10&#13;
4 0J b GO 3 7J&#13;
5 Jl 8 rtO 4 80&#13;
4 00 4 73 8 79&#13;
Bevtgrades. ..4 40)4 8*) 4 7V, 8 00 4 1*&#13;
Lower graded .2 74*4 0J 4 00 5 40 8 40&#13;
Clacloaatl—&#13;
Best (trades.... 4 81Q5 IV 5 00 8 00 4 OS&#13;
Lower grades^ 1-7*4*4 » IN I 7ft S 4ft&#13;
80) its&#13;
Ol&#13;
Wheat. &lt;3orn, Oats.&#13;
Ma t red Na t mix No. t white&#13;
Best grades.... f&gt; 81Q5 75&#13;
Lower grades..2 №4 4 00&#13;
Detroit—&#13;
Best grades.... 4 O3Q4 80&#13;
Lower grades..i 6O4** 7j&#13;
Buffalo—&#13;
Best grades... S 6)Ql 75&#13;
Lower grades..£ bj&amp;i uo&#13;
Best grade*... .5 SOftS 50 4 '0&#13;
Lower grades..* JO*4 IS 8 7*&#13;
DOWN OifjrHE FAlUfL&#13;
TUl.rt of the boll Apprt«Ut« the Llttt*&#13;
Near the little town of Wood's Corners,&#13;
about six miles frotn Ionia, reatdes&#13;
K. L. Pittirson,. Mr. Pierso*. &amp; farmer&#13;
by occupation, and like a,]\ hard-work*&#13;
Ing Utters of-tue soH he has found the&#13;
burdens the baj;k mast bear no light&#13;
load to &lt;*orry. " tfew people who never&#13;
lhrud on ft farm' rtppws-taltf whatvit&#13;
xneanq \o follow the ^&#13;
to sunset, but .if the' p&#13;
dw\fctcn*«r,&gt;«r¥«AMd s^o^^rotWia, the&#13;
kidneys do. L«ng hpw» of w«j^lc of&#13;
k i d&#13;
-Je»W&#13;
Mai. 7—&#13;
•Betrolt-Hav. Na rtlmothy.'fc n peAon.&#13;
Potatoes,Me per *&gt;u. S Live — - ' -&#13;
1&#13;
frmz&#13;
vet Mx crtWer*&#13;
y g p j ^&#13;
any kind ttenns Ionghour»f6v tfce kidn^&#13;
f,^ f^d. tb&gt;y qfn'J, » &lt; * # M, without&#13;
rebelling. When* the favmer eomes)&#13;
li^nae tired out aV'StfrW«f'-i« H»"only&#13;
realized that the tired feelings mostly&#13;
alway*came from tired,k.id.neysyand&#13;
that the Uttle woodei&gt;worker*, Dt»n'»&#13;
Kidney Pills, would right the vrmag&#13;
brought on by over-worlc, WKe&#13;
be easier for bini, Read what&#13;
Pierson says about his experience:&#13;
I notioed when I utoaped, lifted or olW&#13;
my position uuddeuly. eurlyln the till of&#13;
that I Wax Always rewaiSIeir^wWi^ tAintf'&#13;
aoroMH the Miuall of my baok. and in tb«&#13;
ing was HO liune and sore that I eovUd M C t t j r&#13;
vet out of bed. The too frequent. *o(.ion,of tsa-&#13;
Ijlr.&#13;
plainly Indicated t h u t V y kidn«y« w&lt;Jrt t a »&#13;
oautte^Qf tbe trouble. I ta^d oft^n heard Doso'w&#13;
" 1 J - i W t e a ^ p u t by my neiAboi»r&#13;
' ' MOB S&gt; Vthrir&#13;
lnued&#13;
oared sad:&#13;
vmti fhoron&gt;?hly relieved. Z&#13;
the other wen ht-n I suv that Doan'H' Kti"&#13;
make-notnlst»k«5 when&#13;
ney PHi««ure baekuohe-ood kidney&#13;
.Doaxi's Kiduey Kills, ai'e soldi^y all&#13;
dealers. Prk&gt;e sa ceniur ^peu be*, or six&#13;
boxes for 52.50. Mailed by Foster^Milbuvn&#13;
Co., Bt&gt;ffalo, N. Y. -Hob agentsfor&#13;
the United Stales, . ;&#13;
Remember tho name "DoanV andtake&#13;
no substltne.&#13;
Samuel Richardson wrote hi* uoVeis&#13;
while attired in a full dress snit. '/•'&#13;
Virgil, during the summer&#13;
filled his house with butterflies. .&#13;
Workshop In A mar Ira.&#13;
z success docs not come in *&#13;
moment, and true success is never the&#13;
result of "luck." It takes time and&#13;
real merit, with plenty of experience&#13;
and honest effort, to reach the top in&#13;
anything. The history of the peering&#13;
Harvester Co. of Chicago ia an example&#13;
of success on a large scale. With more&#13;
employes? than any other single maaufscturiag&#13;
plant of any kind ia America,&#13;
it Is now running day and night to&#13;
All orders. Sinco 1891, when Deering&#13;
machines were put on the market with&#13;
"bicycle bearings," the growth of the&#13;
business has been marvelous. The day&#13;
is not far distant when other manufacturers&#13;
will be forced to build lighter-&#13;
draft machines or go out of business.&#13;
Francis I. was known as the most&#13;
skillful jouster of his country.&#13;
Tvr GrmlD-ot Try Gntln-o!&#13;
Ask your grocer today to show you a&#13;
package of 43RAIN-O, the new food&#13;
drink that takes the place of coffee.&#13;
Th£ children may drink it without injury&#13;
as well as the ad tilt: All Whb try&#13;
it, like it. GRAIN-O has that rich seal&#13;
brown of Mocha or Java, but it is made&#13;
from pure grains, and the most delicate&#13;
stomach receives it without distress.&#13;
On«»&gt;toiirth *)i the prior of coffee* 'lie.&#13;
and 25c. per package. Sold by alL&#13;
grocers.&#13;
'• —r •( '.&#13;
Tiiemistocles was passionately fond&#13;
of dancing and flute playing, • ;&#13;
Do Your Feet AiH« and Hum?&#13;
Shake into your shoes, Allen'a Foot-&#13;
Ease, a powder for the feet. It makes&#13;
tighter New Shoes feel Easy. Cures&#13;
Corns, Bunions, Swollen, Hot .and.&#13;
Sweating Feet. A.t all Druggists and&#13;
Shoe Stores, 25c. Sample scut FREEL&#13;
Address Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy,. N. Y.&#13;
Nero was fond of music aud attained:&#13;
great proficiency in the art.&#13;
Confhlof Lead* to C p&#13;
Kemp's Balsam will stop the cough.&#13;
at once. Go to jour druggist foda.*&#13;
and get a sample bottle free. Sold ina&#13;
25 and .^0 cent bottles. Co at once; delays&#13;
arc dangerous.&#13;
Vicano could not listen to the sonnd&#13;
of a flute without fainting. : '&#13;
Ok TUst Delicion« Coffee!&#13;
Costs but 1c per Ib. to grow.&#13;
tho seed. German Coffee Berry, plcp. Ite;&#13;
Java Coffee pkn. lf&gt;c. Sulzer's New Amen*&#13;
ran Chicory l.V, Cut this out and send l i e&#13;
for any of the above packages or sent) 30c&#13;
und get all three pksr*. and jrreat C t&#13;
Iree to JOHN A. *ALZEK SEED. 00).&#13;
C Wia. [&#13;
Confucius, it is said, was passleoAteljr&#13;
fond of watermelon seeds.&#13;
Scratch, scratch, scratchy&#13;
attend to business^dflrtjig t&#13;
s/eep during the tttgntf Cteh&#13;
horrible plague. Doan's&#13;
cures. Never fails. At a&amp;y drug stare,&#13;
60 cents.&#13;
Robespierre was food; 6£rr«adjn*&#13;
etry aloud tp kls frtenda.&#13;
". .'.'' •&lt;&lt; t&lt;. H&#13;
CO«M9)M «#d eolds, down fa the j&#13;
bordsrtand^ of cooauvptioA, ^eld, to&#13;
the «ootMiag, healing iirluSnees tff Dr.&#13;
Woods Norway Pin*«frnp&#13;
woaen « 4&#13;
mmidn"*A1neflcanft suffer&#13;
about in a wheelbarron-.&#13;
• • Courage and Strength&#13;
in Times of Dangerwarning&#13;
between&#13;
the lines* What is that warning?&#13;
It is of the danger from&#13;
Accumulation of badness in&#13;
the Blood, caused by the&#13;
usual heavy living of the&#13;
Winter months. Spring is&#13;
the deatmg* ^oleansiny &gt; thne&#13;
of ifteyear; ife forerunim /&#13;
the brightness "and pea*ty&#13;
g l o r i o u s Summer* • •••&#13;
FoHow the principle that Nature lay*&#13;
•down: StarVin-at once and parifv your&#13;
blood wHh that great specific, Hood'a&#13;
Sarsaparilla. It never disappoints.&#13;
FOOT BtoOOV" *** doctor. Mid Xhtm&#13;
were not seven drops ol good blood. In my&#13;
bod;. Hood's Sarsapafllla built rue up and&#13;
made me strong nnd well." SvBrE £. Bnoww,&#13;
10 Astor Hill, ^ynn,, Maw, ;&#13;
y«hmi» tVbuhieSr-" I «m nappy' tp&#13;
say that I was entirely cured of female&#13;
troubiea by Hood's Sarsaparilla. It helped&#13;
my hu_ban«T8 catarrh greatly." Mas. J. K.&#13;
W t a 703 S. Ottt Street, Camden, 5 . J.&#13;
^ ItHi COM ii»tT HUj th» mmlrrtUtlin and&#13;
only cMliartlc to tttknr with iJt*nr*ii j&#13;
CHEAP EXCURSIONS, 1899.&#13;
Annual Meeting General Assembly&#13;
Cumberland Prsbytertan Church at&#13;
Denver, Co)., May 18 to 26.&#13;
Annual Meeting General Assembly&#13;
Presbyterian Church at Minneapolis,&#13;
Mine, May 18 to June 1. '&#13;
National Baptist Anniversaries at&#13;
Ban Francisco, Cal., May 26 to 30.&#13;
National Educational Association at&#13;
Los Angeles, Cal., July 11 to 14.&#13;
For a}l these meetings cheap excursion&#13;
rate's h'ave beefa" matte and delegates&#13;
and-others interested should bear&#13;
Jn mind that the best route to each&#13;
convention city Is via the Chicago,&#13;
Milwaukee &amp; St. Paul R'y and Us connections.&#13;
Choice of routes Is offered&#13;
thosfe going to the meetings on the&#13;
Pacific Coast of going via Omaha or&#13;
Katisafl City and seturning by St.&#13;
PatH* and Minneapolis. The Cfcicago,&#13;
Milwaukee &amp; St. Paul R'y has th«&#13;
short Tine between Chicago and&#13;
Omaha, and the best line betweeni&#13;
Chicago, St. Paul and Minneapolis, the&#13;
route of the Pioneer Limited, the only&#13;
perfect train in the world.&#13;
All coupon ticket agents sell tickets&#13;
via the Chicago, Milwaukee &amp; St. Paul&#13;
R*y. For time tables and information&#13;
na to rates aud routes address Geo. H.&#13;
Heafford, General Passenger Agent,&#13;
Chicago, 111. ;&#13;
The heretofore rumored changes In&#13;
the system of paying the employes of&#13;
the Baltimore and Ohio Raihoad took&#13;
permanent shape last week at a meetr&#13;
ins of the heads of the several departmenu&#13;
and general superintendents^&#13;
called by General Manager Underwood&#13;
for the consideration of that matter.&#13;
It was determined to replace the presr&#13;
eat dilatory process of running the&#13;
pay cart over the entire system, involving&#13;
«n expenditure of three weeks'&#13;
time in distributing a large bulk of&#13;
currency aggregating one million dollars&#13;
per month, by a more convenient,&#13;
expeditious and safer process of distributing&#13;
through the band* of the station&#13;
agents checks payable at any one&#13;
of the 37 banks «pon the line of the&#13;
system and by any agent of the company.&#13;
The new arrangement U effective&#13;
May 1st. ,. , ,.&#13;
'. A M Y&lt;m ttstair Allen'*&#13;
It is the only cure for Swollen,&#13;
Smarting1. Burning-, Sweating Feet,&#13;
Corns and Bunions. Ask for Allen's&#13;
Foot-Ease, a powder to be shaken into&#13;
the shoes. At all Druggists and Shoe&#13;
Stores, 25c. Sample sent FREE. Address,&#13;
Mien S,..Q}msted, LeRoy. K. Y.&#13;
Cato's only diversion was drinking1,&#13;
s&gt;ad he was fond of .that diversion.&#13;
Lune's Finally ^&#13;
Moves the bowels each day. In order&#13;
to be healthy this is necessary. Acts&#13;
gently on the llrer and kidneys. Cure*&#13;
sick headache. Price 25 and 50c.&#13;
Charlemagne was said to be the best&#13;
player of checkers of his century. .&#13;
^&#13;
Impossible to foresee an accident.&#13;
Not impossible to be prepared for it.&#13;
Dr. Thomas' dielectric Oil—Monarch&#13;
over pain.&#13;
Emerson declared that he composed&#13;
best when walking.&#13;
PEALERS&#13;
Spa-ding**&#13;
Trade Mark&#13;
Athletic&#13;
•jkpplipf&#13;
should carry a complete&#13;
of&#13;
Base Bail&#13;
Foot Ball&#13;
Golf' Tennfs&#13;
CCnrcofecuafect. BoxU&#13;
• ) i , i .&#13;
Always a ^«*nsM&#13;
Write for our&#13;
.3**1 m t t t m *»*•»•••**•*&#13;
s&#13;
stv I&#13;
DICK RODNEY;&#13;
Or, The Adventures of&#13;
An Eton boy...&#13;
i&#13;
GRANT.&#13;
CHAPTER XXIV.&#13;
The Thunderbolt.&#13;
An emotion of mingled freedom and&#13;
satisfaction possessed the whole crew&#13;
on being rid of our tormentor, and&#13;
Lambourne now took charge of the&#13;
brig, which he was perfectly able to&#13;
handle and work, though ignorant of&#13;
navigation as a science, and having&#13;
but a vague idea of the course to steer&#13;
fcr the Cape of Good Hope.&#13;
She was hove In the wind, while In&#13;
the moonlight, about two hours after&#13;
the, exciting scene which closes the&#13;
last chapter, we committed to the deep&#13;
the body of Antonio's last victim, the&#13;
PQor apprentice, whom the saUmaker&#13;
sewed up in- hia hammock, to which,&#13;
being without shot or other suitable&#13;
weights, we tied a sack of coals to&#13;
sink the corp3e.&#13;
The head-yards were filled again,&#13;
nnd, as if anxious to leave that portion&#13;
of the Bea as far as possible&#13;
astern, we hauled up for the cape. Tom&#13;
Lambourne ordered every stitch of&#13;
canvas that the spars would hold to&#13;
be spread upon the Eugenie, that she&#13;
might, as he said, "walk through the&#13;
water 14 her own style."&#13;
All be could do at first was to keep&#13;
her in the course we had been steering&#13;
or. the night these disasters began, for&#13;
as yet we knew not to what degree of&#13;
latitude, south or north, we might&#13;
havo been drifting; however, we calculated&#13;
that Hlslop, weak as he was,&#13;
might be able to take a solar observation&#13;
anu prick on our place, on the&#13;
chart, in the course of six or seven&#13;
We had the usually enug little cabin&#13;
cleansed and cleared from the debris&#13;
created by the outrageous proceedings&#13;
of Antonio, who must have gone to thp&#13;
bottom with all Weston's valuables&#13;
and money about hlni^ as yie could&#13;
find neither; and the sweet expression&#13;
of the poor widow's face, as it seemed&#13;
•••.:&gt; smile en us from the miniature&#13;
&lt;r«\ the af^er-bulkhead, contrasted&#13;
strangely with all the wild work that&#13;
had so lately taken place on board.&#13;
Hlslop and I were restored to uur&#13;
former berths, and then more than&#13;
once in my dreams the pale olive-green&#13;
\isage and glaring eyes of the Cuba&#13;
no came before me, and again I&#13;
seemed; to see him cliriging uapitied&#13;
and in 'desperation to the slender boom&#13;
which swung above the seething sea&#13;
— lor his death and all its concomitant&#13;
horrors haunted me and made me unh£&#13;
ppy.&#13;
The intensity of the heat in that&#13;
Beason suggested the idea that we&#13;
could not have drifted far south of the&#13;
lins.&#13;
ho great was it that the upper spars&#13;
of the Eugenie appeared to wriggle or&#13;
vibrate like serpents aloft in the sunshine;&#13;
while so hot, so clear and so&#13;
rarefied was the atmosphere between&#13;
decks that it was suffocated, especially&#13;
in the lulling of the faint breeze. A&#13;
wMte heat seemed to make sea and&#13;
skr grow paTe; and the former «ast&#13;
upward a reflection from its glassy&#13;
surface and long smooth swells that&#13;
was hot—hot beyon'd all description.&#13;
Though ever and anon the upper&#13;
deck was drenched with salt water, It&#13;
dried immediately, emitting a strong&#13;
otl &gt;r of wet wood, while the skids over&#13;
the side failed to keep the paint, tar&#13;
and rosin rising in large burnt blisters.&#13;
About the time when %e hoped that&#13;
HI slop would have been well enough&#13;
to make aa observation, even by being&#13;
placed In a chair on deck, the weather&#13;
became so rough that he was unable&#13;
to leave his berth, and during all that&#13;
day the brig drove before a heavy&#13;
gale, with her courses hauled close&#13;
up. the fore and main topsail yards&#13;
lowered on the caps, and their canvas&#13;
close reefed. ,&#13;
After the heat we had endured, the&#13;
reader may imagine this gale would&#13;
bo refreshing and a relief. Net so.&#13;
TLe atmosphere, as .it became dark&#13;
with gathering clouds, increased in&#13;
density, closeness and beat, thus about&#13;
th&lt;i time we should have had clear twilight,&#13;
the hour was gloomy as a northern&#13;
midnight—so dark that the men&#13;
i&amp; the tops, or those lying .out alone&#13;
th\s foot-ropes at the yard-arms, when&#13;
under close-reefed topsails, could not&#13;
be seen from the deck, while the breese&#13;
that swept over the ocean was breathless—&#13;
hot as the simoon of the desert;&#13;
aui our men knew not whether they&#13;
wf re drench** by perspiration or the&#13;
spoonsrift tsra *trom &lt;h* warm wave&#13;
tpps fey the increasing Mast.&#13;
The peculiar appearance of this black,&#13;
gale alarmed and bewildered Tattpoatf,&#13;
Tom, who eoml* make aothing of It,&#13;
while poor Mat* Histo* whose skttl&#13;
wostd have been invaluable to as,&#13;
when he heard the singing out on deck,&#13;
thunder of the bellying course*&#13;
with their trails, the roar&#13;
* - * - hatf-barec&#13;
meal, art **«**.'*«. f U ^ewbead, writhed l a Mi ted*&#13;
and mourned his own Inactivity, or&#13;
rather incapacity; but he sent me to&#13;
tell Lambourne to cover up the anchors&#13;
with wetted canvas, as it was&#13;
not Improbable, by the state of the&#13;
atmosphere, that it was full of electricity&#13;
and thus we might be in a&#13;
dangerous way.&#13;
"Tell Tom," he whispered, "It ia a&#13;
trade-wind gale—I know it to be so."&#13;
"How?" I aaked, "when you are lying&#13;
here below?"&#13;
"By the barometer, which remains&#13;
high, while the wind is steady," replied&#13;
Hislop la a low voice, for he&#13;
was BtiU very weak; "if the barometer&#13;
fall, be sure it will become a typhoon,&#13;
and then, with a short-handed craft,&#13;
heaven help us! But assure Tom it is&#13;
only as yet a trade-wind gajle—to take&#13;
as much canvas off her aa he can, and&#13;
to make all snug aloft. We'll have&#13;
thunder directly, Dick—such thunder&#13;
as you can only hear la the tropico."&#13;
He sank back, exhausted even by&#13;
these few words, while I hurried on&#13;
deck with his orders.&#13;
I had scarcely conveyed them to&#13;
Lambourne, who was keeping a lookout&#13;
forward, when, amid the dusky;&#13;
obscurity of sea and sky, there burst&#13;
a sudden gleam of wondrouB light.&#13;
The men, who were spreading some&#13;
old, wetted sails over the sheet and&#13;
working anchors; the steersman at&#13;
the wheel, the watch and all bands&#13;
who were crouching to leeward, or&#13;
holding on by ropes and belaying pins&#13;
to windward*, seemed for a moment to&#13;
become whlte-visaged specters amid a&#13;
eea of pale.blue flame—a sea whereon&#13;
the flying brig, with her brailed courses&#13;
and reefed topsails, her half-naked&#13;
masts and black cordage, were all distinctly&#13;
visible as at noonday, while&#13;
the polished brass on funnel, binnacle&#13;
and skylight all flashed and shone, as&#13;
ship and crew, with all their details&#13;
of form and feature,&#13;
"Were instant seen and instant lost."&#13;
For a broad and blinding sheet of&#13;
electric flame burst upon the darkness&#13;
of the night..and passed away as rapidly,&#13;
when the livid brand burst in&#13;
the welkin or in the wave, we knew&#13;
not which.&#13;
Then camo the roar of thunder—&#13;
the stunning and appalling thunder of&#13;
the tropics, every explosion of which&#13;
seemed to rend-earth, sea and sky, as&#13;
they rolled like a palpable thing, or&#13;
like the united salvo of a thousand&#13;
echoes at the far horizon.&#13;
After a sound so mighty and bewildering,&#13;
the beUowing of the wind&#13;
through the rigging, the hiss and roar&#13;
of the sea as wave broke against wave;&#13;
the flapping of the brailed courses;&#13;
the creaking and straining of the timber&#13;
B, seemed as nothing—the very silence&#13;
of death—while the Eugenie tore&#13;
on, through mist and spray, through&#13;
darkness and obscurity, with the foam&#13;
flying white as winter draft over her&#13;
bows and martingale..&#13;
Again there was a pale-green gleam&#13;
overhead, right above tLe truck of the&#13;
mainmast, wher? the chambers of the&#13;
sky seemed to open. The clouds divided&#13;
in the darkness of heaven, and out&#13;
of that opening came the forked lightning,&#13;
zigzag, green and ghastly.&#13;
There was a dreadful shock, which&#13;
knocked every man down, except Carlton,&#13;
wno was at the wheel, and an&#13;
exclamation of terror escaped us alL&#13;
A tnunde.-bolt had struck the Eugenie!&#13;
With all its wondrous speed—instantaneous&#13;
as electric light could be—it&#13;
jglided down the main top-gajlant mast,&#13;
rending the topmast-cap and the framed&#13;
grating of the top to pieces; thence&#13;
it ran down the mainmast, burst&#13;
through the deck and spent its fury&#13;
la the hold.&#13;
At that moment the main-topmast,&#13;
with all its yards, gear and canvas,&#13;
fell about the deck in burning brands,&#13;
and the brig was hove right in the&#13;
wind's eye, uiile the sea twitched the&#13;
helm &lt;mt of the hands of Ned Carltan,&#13;
who became bewildered on finding&#13;
the -compasses lose all their polarity&#13;
bj the influence of the electric fluid,&#13;
the north point of one heading southeast&#13;
acd of the other southwest.&#13;
Almost immediately after this there&#13;
was a erjr oX "Fire!**-—ttzx cry so terrible,&#13;
MO appalling on board ship? and&#13;
then thick white smoke was seen to&#13;
the erevlces of the battened&#13;
All haste lushed to this point. The&#13;
laax-tooac van vnshlpped from its&#13;
chocks and draMed aft; some stood br&#13;
with bucket* M water, whMe others&#13;
struck o* th* padlocks and iron bars;&#13;
the tarpaaMat was .torn away—the&#13;
hatch lifted—aad k&gt;!&#13;
4 column of ftre ascended in a&#13;
straight line from the body of the&#13;
hold—lurid, ted aad aeorchiaf. aa the&#13;
casks of. molaisf and bales of oottoa&#13;
burned and biased toajethsr. A ooi-&#13;
•coreed t h m c h *he mainstay, all the&#13;
braces of tHe foreyards, ana «i»e** ttxe*&#13;
whol* vessel with light, announced&#13;
that all was over.&#13;
*'lt is &amp; deemed ship!" cried Tom&#13;
Lambourne; "we must leave her at&#13;
l:\st Clear away the longboat. Be&#13;
c.»ol, lads; be cool and steady! Your&#13;
lives depend upon your conduct a»w,&#13;
Mid your obedience to orders!"&#13;
CHAPTER XXV.&#13;
Cast Away.&#13;
Not a moment was lost ia netting&#13;
thu longboat over the side, and with&#13;
a heavy splash, by which it was nearly&#13;
ewamped, we got It afloat.&#13;
Ned Carlton and Probart. the earl&#13;
»eLter, sprang in to fend off and keep&#13;
It from being stove or dashed to pieces&#13;
liy the sea against the brig's side.&#13;
Ty the wild, weird glare that ro3e&#13;
In frightful columns from the main&#13;
pud fore hatchways we had plenty of&#13;
Hglt, as it shone far over the huge&#13;
billows of that dark and tempestuous&#13;
tea, to which we were about to commit&#13;
cur fortunes, and now a pale and&#13;
half-dreseed pgure approached us.&#13;
It was Marc Hislop, whom tho terrible&#13;
odor had roused from his berth&#13;
ia tl?e cabin, and he now came forward,&#13;
supporting hia feeble steps by&#13;
clutching the shrouds and belaying-&#13;
An Ifiijttalwst Combination*&#13;
Xlm flspsssst »*thod and beneftojal&#13;
Secisj «sf&#13;
8 T&#13;
I rushed below and brought up a&#13;
blanket and great coat to wrap him&#13;
In, and he was promptly swung over&#13;
Into the boat, where Carlton received&#13;
and supported him.&#13;
Three bags of bread, with a tarpaulin&#13;
*.o cover them, two ke,gs of rum, four&#13;
casks of water, with oars, sails and&#13;
tilankets, were thrown pell-mel* into&#13;
the beat. A hatchet and a bundle of&#13;
spun-yard completed our stores.&#13;
The compasses were considered now&#13;
&lt;o be useless, or were omitted, X forget&#13;
which.&#13;
The wind still amounted to «i gale,&#13;
though lees violent, and It fanti'd the&#13;
growing flames, so that the fat.i tl brig&#13;
burned fast. The lightning stii' flashed,&#13;
but at the horizon, and tt* thunder&#13;
was heard to grumble above the&#13;
hiss of the sea; yet we heeded mem&#13;
aot, though they added to the terror&#13;
*rid the grandeur of the scer.« ; and,&#13;
mesi providentially for us, the Jury of&#13;
the storm was past.&#13;
Tattooed Tcm was the last ms.a who&#13;
•left the brig, and the moment rio was&#13;
In the boat he exclaimed, with a loud&#13;
voice, that rang above the roaring of&#13;
he flames, which now gushed through&#13;
every hatchway and aperture, above&#13;
the howling of the wind and the breaking&#13;
of the frothy sea—&#13;
"Shove off!—out oare, there, to starboard—&#13;
pull round her stern—pull with&#13;
a will to windward—keep the boat's&#13;
bow to the break cf the sea!"&#13;
We pulled silently and vigorously,&#13;
rnd soon got clear of the brig, through&#13;
the four stern windows of which four&#13;
lines of light glared redly on tie ocean.&#13;
- All our strength was required, to&#13;
achieve this, for the brig, being the&#13;
larger body, attracted the boat toward&#13;
her. However we got safely to windward,&#13;
which was absolutely necessary,&#13;
for to leeward there fell hissing Into&#13;
the sea a torrent of sparks and burning&#13;
brand* from the rigging, which was&#13;
all in flames now.&#13;
Resting upon our oars, or only using&#13;
them to keep the boat's head to the&#13;
break of the sea, and to prevent her&#13;
being swamped—an operation during&#13;
which they were as often flourished in&#13;
the air as in the ocean, when we rose&#13;
on the crest of one vast, heaviag wave,&#13;
or sank into the dark vale sf water&#13;
between two—resting thus, we gazed&#13;
in silence and with aching heart* at&#13;
the destruction of our bom* upon the&#13;
the weU known remedy,,&#13;
ftes, wsunfactured by the •&#13;
STBVP CO., illustrate'&#13;
bstng the liquid laxa-&#13;
• of plants known in be&#13;
ssjBwve and presenting^&#13;
t refreshing to the r to the system. It&#13;
strengthening • laxathe&#13;
system effectually,&#13;
_ i, headaches and fevers&#13;
gently 3** ipnessyl ly and enabling one&#13;
' i hanitaml constipation per-&#13;
Xts perfect freedom from&#13;
table quality and sub-&#13;
__ acting on the kidneys,&#13;
bowels, without weakening&#13;
make it the ideal&#13;
they are pleasant to the&#13;
sswnriiial qualities of the&#13;
from senna and&#13;
plants, by a method&#13;
AUVOmMIA FlO STBUH&#13;
to get its beneficial&#13;
imitations, please&#13;
se of the Company&#13;
the tent of every package.&#13;
FIG SYRUP GO.&#13;
anew TOBX v. y.&#13;
—Price 50c. per bottle A&#13;
r&#13;
We oould feel the heat at the &lt;on&#13;
flagration even to windward. In a quarter&#13;
of an hour she was enveloped from&#13;
stem to stern in a sheet of fire tha*&#13;
rose skyward in the form at a pyramid.&#13;
By this time every vestige of&#13;
her spars, sails and rigging had disappeared.&#13;
The entire deck had been consumed;&#13;
the bulwarks and molded plank-sheer&#13;
rapidly followed, and through the&#13;
flames that roared fiercely from the&#13;
hollow of her hull we could see the&#13;
black timberheads standing upward.&#13;
like a row of fangs.&#13;
Rents appeared next in her sides a*&#13;
the flames burst through the inner and&#13;
outer sheathing, and with a hissing,&#13;
sound as they met the waves of the&#13;
briny sea. Then a salt steam rose,&#13;
and its strange odor, with that of&#13;
the burning wood, was wafted ut times&#13;
toward us.&#13;
At Last she gave a sudden heel to&#13;
starboard, and with a sound unlike&#13;
anything I ever heard before—a deluge&#13;
of water extinguishing a mighty fii-e—&#13;
the waves rushed tumultuously in on&#13;
all sides. She vanished from our sfgh*&#13;
In mist and obscurity, and a heavy&#13;
darkness suddenly replaced the glare&#13;
that for a time had lit up the heavtnlt&#13;
sea* dassltng our eyes and&#13;
our hearte.&#13;
(To be continued.)&#13;
is the original&#13;
oaly durable wall coating,&#13;
* different from all kai-&#13;
&gt; Ready for use In&#13;
• twelve beautiful tints&#13;
lit* adAac cold water.&#13;
XtfOB naturally prefer A l A -&#13;
HASTBIB for walls and ceil*&#13;
tag*. l&gt;eeauae It Is pure, clean,&#13;
&lt;z&gt;rabte. Put up in dry pow-&#13;
AereAfortn, In nve-poinvl pack*&#13;
acea, wita full directions,&#13;
U u kajaoanlaes are cheap, temtions&#13;
made from&#13;
_ is, clays, etc.,&#13;
. stack on walls with deA&#13;
Ana; aatmol glue. A LAB AS*&#13;
KB Js aot a kalsoralue.&#13;
of the dealer who&#13;
be can «*U you the "same&#13;
aa AL.ABA3TINB «r&#13;
_ Just as good." He&gt;&#13;
sttker not posted or is t r y&#13;
you.&#13;
&lt;9n» B f OFTBRING eomethlnp;&#13;
he Vas iMocnt 2h«ao and tries&#13;
so aafi on AL.ABASTINBS dismay&#13;
not realite the&#13;
m will suffer by a&#13;
on your walls.&#13;
SSlIdUB dealers will not buy&#13;
Dealers risk on* by-&#13;
; eoosutn&lt;rs by using"&#13;
. _. Alabaatln* Co^&#13;
to make wall coatiwltheoldjriter.&#13;
WALL8 OT&#13;
. w jae should b#-&#13;
••*•€ oaivi with pure, durabl*&#13;
LLABAS1TNBL ft xafeguardit&#13;
tli. Handreda of tons a f t saBaaany tor tbis work.&#13;
«n&gt;r{SSft£&#13;
Baware of lanro&#13;
light kali&#13;
to OIMIOBJMCS a s .&#13;
package.&#13;
—^ wall paper J s oV- •&#13;
m «ae4 #n plastered walls.&#13;
. eaSaan, brick &lt;«r can-&#13;
• ebM can brush ft on.&#13;
ss »at n&gt;b or scato off.&#13;
!B favor. 8bwti&#13;
Ask pahit dealer&#13;
L U* tint card. Write-&#13;
Era," free, fo-&#13;
BTTNK CO, Orand.&#13;
Mleb_an,&#13;
fe 73 Bow ST&#13;
t°.Mfr5. Eton.&#13;
DYED&#13;
by -. am's Dye.&#13;
' j'»ui«'i in T T mil s rui,&#13;
^MBMMLllf.lf.&#13;
rim&#13;
Hone spring* ei*rnal in the&#13;
breast, ;;&#13;
But all too oft it gets&#13;
ley west. . N&lt;&#13;
Italy ASA had *M soasi^ #aUes of&#13;
land added to its territory in the last&#13;
ft years by the astraa* dt ths dsit#&#13;
of the PtW^m-'*^" "&#13;
• • ;&#13;
• • *&#13;
••?*&amp;&#13;
' V v&#13;
,;vV&#13;
\&#13;
F. L. ANDREWS tWTOH.&#13;
THURSDAY, MAT 4, 1899.&#13;
i * -&#13;
Interesting tttma.&#13;
Three-forths of the bread cast&#13;
upon the waters returns because&#13;
it has a string tied to it&#13;
Look out for the man with a&#13;
kerosene attachment to an ordinary&#13;
cook stove, it fails to do as&#13;
good work as he shows.&#13;
The Kimmis salary bill was&#13;
downed by the house of Represenatives&#13;
by a vote of 2G~xo 60.&#13;
How will it fair in the hands of&#13;
the senators. &gt;&#13;
H ere is a pointer for Michigan&#13;
farmers on potato raising;* A&#13;
Missouri man plants potatoes and&#13;
onions in the same hill and he is&#13;
never bothered with droughs.&#13;
The onions bring tears to the eyes&#13;
of the potatoes and the ground iB&#13;
always kept moist&#13;
The supreme court on Tuesday&#13;
rendered a decision of great importance&#13;
to cities and villages desiring&#13;
to crush the liquor traffic.&#13;
The court holds that a tax can be&#13;
imposed by the cities villages in&#13;
addition to the 9500 licence fee&#13;
provided for the state, law. The&#13;
case in question was a test of the&#13;
validity of ah ordinance of the&#13;
city of Holland which imposed a&#13;
$300 licence in addition to the&#13;
state tax.&#13;
Thomas Allen, a sailor, who&#13;
now resides in Detroit, was convicted&#13;
of attempted murder in&#13;
Grand Rapide several years ago&#13;
and was given five years in Jackson.&#13;
Afterward the fact became&#13;
known that at the time the crime&#13;
was committed he was sailing on&#13;
the Pacific ocean. Gov. Winans&#13;
pardoned him after he had served&#13;
13 months and the house last Friday&#13;
passed a bill allowing him&#13;
110 a month up to $1200.&#13;
Senator Sheldon made the&#13;
speech of his life this morning&#13;
in opposition to Senator Wagners&#13;
motion to make senate btfl No.&#13;
552, prohibiting the sale of chattel&#13;
mortgage property the special&#13;
order for next Tuesday. Mr.&#13;
Sheldon warmed up and denounced&#13;
the bill as an outrage,&#13;
and said it was unconstitutional.&#13;
His digust and excitement increased&#13;
when the Wagner motion&#13;
was adopted in spite of his protests.&#13;
Then the senators repaired&#13;
to the cloak room and&#13;
laughed long and loud. There is&#13;
no such measure as senate bill&#13;
552. The whole play was a put&#13;
up job on Senator Sheldon.—&#13;
State Republican, That was, indeed,&#13;
bright lot of horse-play&#13;
for statesmen to inculge in at the&#13;
state's expense.—Stockbridge Sun.&#13;
^WeiH Well! Bra Gildart some&#13;
people will kick if they were going&#13;
to be hung. What did we&#13;
send the Senators to Lansing for&#13;
anyway?&#13;
Many old soldiers aow feel the ef&#13;
fecte of tke hard 9«nrioe they endured&#13;
during the war. Geo. 8. Anderson, of&#13;
Eossville, York county, Jtauu who&#13;
saw tke hardest kind of aervioe at tbe&#13;
front, is now frequently troubled with&#13;
rheumatism, ' i hsjd a eerex*&#13;
lately u d procured a bottle of&#13;
berlaia'sP&amp;in B&amp;IOL It did mt to&#13;
moec good that I would like to know&#13;
what you would charge for'ooe doze*&#13;
iotoieft/* Mr. Asdvrfeon waited it both&#13;
lor his ow» BM and to supply hit&#13;
fheade **d atiirhban, as ever/ tamiij&#13;
• f it ir-tbeir&#13;
jrif&#13;
back. aptftiM, twaUiifts, cat*,&#13;
krftiMtaadtonM.feririttofa hth «*v&#13;
H&gt;Wild tmwk*bf9.JLm#m.&#13;
Mr. L. J. Danis advertising agent&#13;
for Baxter's Mandrake Bitters, Henry&#13;
and Johnson's Arnica 6 Oil Liniment,&#13;
andDowns'Elixir, made this office a&#13;
pleasant call on his annual round, last&#13;
week.&#13;
The territory cared for by Mr.&#13;
Danis comprised the state of Michigan,&#13;
and portions of Ohio, Indiana&#13;
and Illinois, and he visits every town&#13;
once a year, making advertising con*&#13;
traets, and looking alter sales.&#13;
These remedies are standard and&#13;
well known to our people.&#13;
It is claimed that Downs1 Elixir is&#13;
the oldest cough medicine made, it&#13;
having been prominently before the&#13;
public for nearjy three-quarters of a&#13;
century. Mr. Danis reports largely&#13;
increased sales over any imprevious&#13;
year since he has .been on the route.&#13;
This speaks well for Mr. Danis, as&#13;
for the medicine he represents.&#13;
Prof. Briggfi of the Howell&#13;
school has accepted a position in&#13;
the Monroe public high schools.&#13;
L. E. Howlbtt's little son, of&#13;
Howell, fell from the porch and&#13;
dislocated an elbow and broke&#13;
his arm, one day last week.&#13;
Queen Victoria of England will&#13;
be 80 years old May 24, and it is&#13;
announced that next month will&#13;
bring her last formal appearance&#13;
in public. Such an action will&#13;
practically bring to a close the&#13;
longest, most peaceful arid yet&#13;
glorious reign of any British&#13;
monarch. The Prince of Wales,&#13;
who is next in line to the throne,&#13;
is 59 years old next November.&#13;
W. H. Sweet; was at Portage&#13;
Lake Monday, whece he is erecting&#13;
another handsome cottage.&#13;
The Portage Lake Cottage' Association&#13;
which has been corporated,&#13;
held a meeting April 21, for&#13;
the purpose of electing officers&#13;
and transact any other business.&#13;
Portage Lake has became quite&#13;
popular with Ypsilanti people and&#13;
it will not be long when there&#13;
will be a good many cottages&#13;
there.—Ypeilanti Sentinel.&#13;
There is a boy at Mt. Pleasant&#13;
not yet out of his teens who is&#13;
made of the right stuff. Four&#13;
months ago his father was taken&#13;
ill, and since then has not been&#13;
able to do anything. His business&#13;
was the buying and shipping&#13;
of grain, and when his illness&#13;
came on the boy took hold of the&#13;
business, and though without previous&#13;
experience, has kept it go*&#13;
ing without letting the profits decrease.&#13;
During the four months&#13;
the lad has bought and shipped&#13;
nearly $20,00) worth of grain.&#13;
m i m m&#13;
A Pen Sketch on Man.&#13;
A a sample of what an old maid&#13;
can do with a pen we eabmit the&#13;
following: "Man is a two-legged&#13;
animal that chews tobacco and&#13;
walks on the forked end Most&#13;
men are born; never heard of but&#13;
one that wasn't, and he was made&#13;
of mud, just for a sample. Man's&#13;
life is full of disappointment,&#13;
growls and corn-cob pipes. He&#13;
goes forth/like a lion in the morning&#13;
jmd leaves the wood for his&#13;
wife to chop, and in the evening&#13;
he sueaketh home with his pants&#13;
ripped, and raises Cain about&#13;
hard times. He has lagrippe on&#13;
road-workings days, and walks to&#13;
a circus. He will chase a rabbit&#13;
four miles through the snow, and&#13;
then borrow a horse to ride half&#13;
mile to the poet-office.—Ex.&#13;
1 had a little boy who was nearly&#13;
dead from a* Attack of whooping&#13;
cough. My neighbor* recommended&#13;
Chamberlain's Con*fcffemedy. I did&#13;
not think that any swtdicin* would&#13;
beipAinaibutafle^ Mf%K him a few&#13;
4ote«I notieel an un^roreooet, and&#13;
d hi It&#13;
Cbe bast eoojtfi laidiaf I ever ted i«&#13;
boat*.—J. L. JLoto*. South Bon&#13;
P*. F«r «•!• by F A.&#13;
:&#13;
THROW AWAY YOUR BOTTLE.&#13;
— ,"-"»• —- ^ y ^ * ^^ a*W*j^W4% Baa^^QDa^MiBVa «^W% e^B direct from the formula oi B. B.&#13;
Cleveland'* most tuiacat speckL_ _,&#13;
tnakea the blood pore and tfch&#13;
and canaea a general feeling of&#13;
health, strength and renewed&#13;
vitality, whift the generative&#13;
organs are helped w&gt; regaia&#13;
their normal powcra and the&#13;
•offerer la quickly nude coo*&#13;
•dona of direct benefit One&#13;
box will work wonders, ate&#13;
Should perfectacure. Prepared&#13;
la small sugar coated tablets&#13;
caty to swallow. The daya of&#13;
celery compounds, aenraraa.&#13;
•araaparillaaa&amp;d%llt JUoug&#13;
tonkaar* over. BAR-BEN to&#13;
far sals at atl drug stores, a 60 toss bay for 80&#13;
casts, or w« will mail it securely sealedon ra&gt;&#13;
Otipt Of Price, DRS. BARTON AND BBN8ON,&#13;
^ ^ 4M Bar-Bea Block, Clevelaad, O.&#13;
For sale by&#13;
F. A. SIQLEB, Druggist&#13;
Pinckney, - - Mich.&#13;
HB.TIQHT With oari MU,P US y old plain and barb&#13;
Uftkw tbt beat feJnoe on eartb. WWem M Anmdi *l*U c»b!ii»nt erii Monl wtr »UaLd BoldModml&#13;
saBwais i2 poaitton. PUln, B*rb£d»»d&#13;
andOniMwn&#13;
aUg&#13;
. Addm&gt; HU. Iin.d&#13;
Business Pointers.&#13;
WANTED—l^he Subeoription&#13;
due on the DISPATCH.&#13;
Dr.Cady'a Condition Powders are&#13;
jost what a horse needs when in bad&#13;
condition, Tonic, blood purifier and&#13;
vermifuge. They are not food but&#13;
medicine and the best in use to put a&#13;
horse in prime condition. Prioe 25e&#13;
per package. For sale by P. A. Sig&#13;
ler.&#13;
Vwstlt,&#13;
For sale or service, a themrghbred&#13;
Clydesdale Stallion. For par*&#13;
tionlars address the subscriber,&#13;
T. Birtcett.&#13;
To Bent&#13;
The house known as the Li^soombe&#13;
House, Fortage Lake. Enquire of&#13;
T. Birkett.&#13;
WAYNE HOTEL. DETROIT&#13;
ro&#13;
AMD KUROPKAN PLAH,&#13;
mo 91.00 ro %m,oo c ur B 0&#13;
Ymr Bale&#13;
Two well matched colts, 3 and 4&#13;
years old. t-18&#13;
S. A. Darwin.&#13;
F«r Hale.&#13;
Two 18 inch leather berse collars&#13;
open at the bottom (nearly new.)&#13;
E. J. BBIOOB.&#13;
For Sale.&#13;
Harnden's Seeds Grow. Don't&#13;
plant them too thick. 3 packages, 5c.&#13;
F. E. WEIGHT&#13;
r i&#13;
Ttve Bailed Do*r\ Paper&#13;
Cream not SKiRt Milk&#13;
Hits the Nailoixthe Hef4&#13;
Knows what to Pot ii\&#13;
Full of&#13;
&amp;TWESTJ&#13;
5&#13;
A PTACUQJ&#13;
For^Lecve5-rolUd-ap Fdrrncits&#13;
Good many State wlyere GampCionLS Cun^K&#13;
Cut to Fit the Man who Knows wiw*5 Wtot&#13;
Fartnea at the Ftnstifebie&#13;
Why ha»e a Mort(rage on the Farm, Poor Crops,&#13;
Rheumatism, Sour Bread, Sick Hogu, a Leaky Roof,&#13;
Ropy Milk, a Balky Horse, Grip, Hole in th« Pocket,&#13;
Skeleton in the Closet, or any other&#13;
Pain or Trouble&#13;
when you can get the Farm Journal five years for so&#13;
cents P^- Addresa FARM JOURNAL, Pbila., Pa.&#13;
int&gt;ORTANT NOTICE.-By apcclal arraagsssat&#13;
made with the FAR/1 JOURNAL, we are f sblsrt to&#13;
offer that paper from now until December r t 9 o j ( to&#13;
every aubacrlber who pays for oars oaeyear ahead&#13;
—both papers fer the price of ours oaly.&#13;
prompt la acceptlag this ottsr.&#13;
THE PINCKNEY DISPATCH.&#13;
F. L ANDREWS, PROP.&#13;
BOOKSi&#13;
s\ ftrm library if vaeqvtlled Talnc—Practical,&#13;
IT 1t fimctff and ConiprcbensiTC—-Hand*&#13;
ttfU U l t t d&#13;
y&#13;
ITi tti &lt;1itTi fimct&#13;
MatteiyrrtBlti&#13;
B y JACOB BIOQLE&#13;
1-SH1QLB HORSfiBOOK&#13;
U f boat parses a Cocunoa-Sense Treatise, with o—r&#13;
^mastrsSeia.«staa«ardwork. Price,joCeata.&#13;
BERRY BOOK&#13;
„ ^ ^ BtaaO Fruits read and teara h»w &gt;&#13;
oofitains atfmeoi satovoe ao tthieler- lUikleu srterpartoiodausc. tioPnrsi coef ,a 5n0 CleeaadUia."f&#13;
POULTRY BOOK&#13;
Poultry; the best Poultry Book in existence*&#13;
. .sthioff; withas colored life-like reproductions&#13;
of an the Miaapal breeds; with io» other ifi&#13;
Price, 90 C&#13;
tlaV4 BMOIJB COW BOOK&#13;
AH about cows aad the Datry Business teg 1&#13;
' sal*; coatates • colored life-like reproductiona 4&#13;
• breed, with ijt other illastrstko*. Prioe, 50 &lt;&#13;
Nw. 6-&amp;O0LB SWINB BOOK&#13;
Jastoot. AJ about Hofs Dreedinf,geedin&#13;
ery, Dtoeasea, «tc. Contains orerSo beautflul halftoaesaad&#13;
other cagraTiaga. Prioe, go Cents.&#13;
theMOOLB BOSKS are «aV)ne^orifittat,ttse&lt;ttl--7«« a a r&#13;
•awanything Ukethem-^opracucal.aoaensible. Thej&#13;
are h*Tittf»n esormoua sfie-Sast, West, Mosth s a l&#13;
South. Every oae who keeps a Horse, Cow. Bog or&#13;
ARM JOURNAL&#13;
It is etated by oompetent authority&#13;
that there are' ttn million' people in&#13;
America who are bioyile riders&#13;
ProbatolJ each one «eta\n average ot&#13;
out hart in a season and tha&gt; is jwt&#13;
when Henry &amp; Johnson's Arnica A&#13;
Oil Liniment gets in its good work&#13;
Nothing has ever bew made that will&#13;
cure a bruise, tx&amp; o^ftfirain so qui^k&#13;
ly. Also retfiQbe^ pimples, sun bur a&#13;
tanot.irfckJai. Qlffm Md-osioe to&#13;
o»k 'fa,ke it? witk) 709. Oosta 2to&#13;
per bottle. Three times as much in a&#13;
5Oo bottle. We sell it atfd guarantee&#13;
it to give goad satisfaction, ar money&#13;
refunded. . . • -&#13;
, F:A\ sigler.&#13;
The Jlett Value In \&#13;
Xagailne Literature i&#13;
• IS THE&#13;
1 .New and Improved&#13;
FRANK LESUES&#13;
POPULAR MONTHLY&#13;
• •' Ppr a Quarter Century&#13;
25 bts., $3.00 a Year.' |&#13;
Now 10 cts., $1.00 a year.&#13;
- MBS. PBANK Ltttxf; Bdit6r. ;&#13;
Present Oo&amp;trl^atort;&#13;
Prank K. Stockton,&#13;
Qen. Wesley Merritt, &gt;&#13;
Bret Harte, • •• »&#13;
Sec. of Navy Long,"&#13;
Joaquin Miller,&#13;
Julia C. R. Dorr,&#13;
Walter Camp,&#13;
Egerton Castle,&#13;
Win. C. VanTassel Sutpben,&#13;
Margaret E. Sanggt^r,&#13;
Edgar Fawcelt, :&#13;
Louise Chandler Moultott, t William Dean How^lls1,-&#13;
Gen. Kelson A. Miles,&#13;
and other noted and popular writers.&#13;
oLnee soHfthe t&#13;
yaatrat- a U s p a on the Briotost s U&#13;
e&lt;ltp4««nliawsataesin4aa world—noa« better.&#13;
Tbs bast known authors aad artttU contribute to&#13;
it d b h d d f I&#13;
Tb a h o s a t c&#13;
its psffas, and tbs highest standard of printing Is&#13;
spparant,&#13;
8 P EC IA L:-Beautiful Mllit&amp;rr Calendar, six&#13;
saetioaa, each ID twelve colors, lOxiavi inches,&#13;
March 1800 to February 1900, tonther with thU&#13;
magazine March to December №W-all for $1.00.&#13;
Frank Leslie Publishing House, N. Y.&#13;
Copies 8oldand Subscriptions Received by Hewsdsalers.&#13;
Railroad Guide.&#13;
ttraod Traak Bailwar&#13;
' Time table In effect, February 5, 1&amp;9.&#13;
M. A. L. DIVISION-WESTBOUND .&#13;
No. 27 Passenger, Pontiac to Jackson&#13;
ootiuection from Detroit 0 44 a at&#13;
NoJ 43 Mixed, Lenox to Jackson&#13;
....connectionfrom Detroit 445p si&#13;
All trains dally except Sunday.&#13;
EA8TB0UND&#13;
No. 80 Passenger to Poottac aod Detroit A 11 p at&#13;
JTo. 44 Mx«»l to Fontiao and Lenox 7 S6 a a&#13;
AU trains daily except Sunday,&#13;
No. SO connection at Pontlao for Detroit.&#13;
No 44 connection at Pontiac for Detroit and&#13;
for the west on D A. M B 1&#13;
E.H,Hughes, W. J.Bla«k,&#13;
P A T Agent, Agent,&#13;
Chicago, Iil. Pinckney&#13;
AND tTBAMMHtr UMf9»&#13;
Popula r rout e for Ann Arbor, Toledo&#13;
and point s East, South , and for&#13;
Howell, Owosso, Alma, Mt Pleasan t&#13;
Cadillac , Manistee , Traverse City and&#13;
point s in Northwester n Michigan .&#13;
W. H . BENNETT ,&#13;
G. P.A.Toled o&#13;
Subscribe for tbe Dispatch .&#13;
6 0 YEARS'&#13;
KXPKItlENCK&#13;
• : . • • - v • y # T&#13;
BRITISH&#13;
MEDICAL INSTITUTE 80 3 E. Main 8 t , JACKSON, MICH.&#13;
TREATS IL L DISEASES&#13;
OF MEN AND WOMEN.&#13;
WEAK UFN ^stored to vigor and&#13;
vrSJffl « t / i vitality. Organs of&#13;
the body whioh have been weakened&#13;
through disease, overwork, excess or&#13;
indiscretions, restored to full power,&#13;
strength and vigor by our new and&#13;
original system of treatment.&#13;
HUNDREDS o f testimonials bear&#13;
nununCUO evidence of the good&#13;
results obtained from our method of&#13;
treating all forms of ohronlo disease.&#13;
WE TKEftTiND CURE&#13;
He* * Disease ,&#13;
S h i H&#13;
Cssmfc,&#13;
Alton*,&#13;
Brooch**,&#13;
R&#13;
Ncunlc&#13;
Sdstks,&#13;
Lumbsse.&#13;
Fcnuie W&#13;
y p ,&#13;
sricoede,&#13;
Sterility,&#13;
BUatrTrauafe,&#13;
LQM of Vitality,&#13;
Dyspepsia,&#13;
CooMipidaa,&#13;
lira- CoopUnt&#13;
Tump*,&#13;
Hlcs,R*ik,&#13;
Skia DisesMt,&#13;
BoodDi*»es.&#13;
Youthful Error.,&#13;
Nemus Treufafatj&#13;
Veakne* ci Men.&#13;
ooiiumnoi ren. CHAMBB MODHUT*.&#13;
i H n t t t t . 1*1 &lt;»*• StaAsjs. ' '&#13;
DR. HALI IN PERSONAL CHARGE.&#13;
m c u it IOTKSI Those unable to can should M&amp;d&#13;
•tam p for question blank for home treatment.&#13;
TYLISH, RELIABLE&#13;
ARTfeTIC'%'&#13;
Rscoaatftiis l by Lssrilag&#13;
DrssssaaktTg T $&#13;
Tb«y Always Plsas*.- ^&#13;
MS CALL&#13;
4 * BAZAR* k PATTERNS&#13;
NONE BETTER AT ANY PRICE&#13;
tW Vhtte pattern* tr« told la narly&#13;
(very city and town In tht United Sutai.&#13;
If year dealer d*a» not keep them Mud&#13;
dirici 10 i&gt;i One cent ttampl reccivtd.&#13;
Addrr»»yOu&gt; nearfit point.&#13;
THE McCALL COMPANY,&#13;
1381 0 146 W 14t h S1r««tr N»» Ysrk&#13;
R ca o r r i c i i:&#13;
180 Plfth Avs., Chicago, aad&#13;
1051 Market 51. , Baa Fraacisco.&#13;
MAGAZINE&#13;
Bright*** Magaslse P«MI»h«4&#13;
Contains Beautiful Colored Plates.&#13;
Illustrates Latest Pattenu, Fashions,&#13;
Fancy Work.&#13;
Agenti wanted for l td stafSiSM hi every&#13;
locality. Beautiful premium* for a IlltU&#13;
work, Writ* for ter«n» aa4 *lk*t partieul&#13;
«n, Subscription only SAo* PSfysaSj&#13;
includtag aFKEBfttiwrn. *&#13;
*r— THE McCALL CO..&#13;
13S to 146 W. 14th St. , N#w Ysrfc&#13;
J&#13;
I&#13;
HORSE-Mia m&#13;
ARIBCri E A C H I KK&#13;
most practical fence on earth&#13;
the cost of wire&#13;
end Machines&#13;
Ooia Moda on Machines, Farm and Ornamentel&#13;
Fence at Omaha Exposition.&#13;
Plain, Barbed and&#13;
Farm and Ornamental Fence&#13;
to the fanner at wholesale&#13;
prloea. Illustmted Catalogue&#13;
Free for tbeasttng. Address&#13;
KITSILMAN BROS .&#13;
Box F RldsMvllls). Ind.&#13;
It is stated that Aacher, "who&#13;
convicted of t&amp;e murder of&#13;
Valmore 0. Nichols, will ptfbably&#13;
be assigned to the trip-hammer&#13;
shop in Jackson prison, which is&#13;
designated by convicts as next&#13;
door to hades, ufi there 100 hot&#13;
fires burning all day aityd men&#13;
work with only underclothing on.&#13;
He is number 7,028 on the prison&#13;
book.&#13;
If you don't know where to look&#13;
for a months rent, read the&#13;
twenty seventh Psalm. If you&#13;
find yourself losing confidence in&#13;
men, read the thirteenth chapter&#13;
of first Corinthians. If people&#13;
pelt you with hard words, read&#13;
the fifteenth chapter of John and&#13;
the fifty-first Psalm. If a chilly&#13;
sensation about ttye heart read&#13;
the third chapter of Revelation.&#13;
If you are all out of sorts, read&#13;
the twelth chapter of Hebrews.&#13;
In an ordinary column there are&#13;
about 12,000 pieces of type. An&#13;
average Michigan paper sets&#13;
about 100,000 pieces, to be picked&#13;
and stood on the right end&#13;
with care. These in turn must be&#13;
returned to the case which necessitates&#13;
the handling of 200,000&#13;
pieces of type each issue. Now,&#13;
if in the first place, the editor&#13;
gets correct information, and if&#13;
he writes it properly, and if the&#13;
compositor sets it up right, and&#13;
if the gaily boy knows enough to&#13;
take a decent proof, and if the&#13;
copy holder is sober, the proof&#13;
reader marks the errors, and the&#13;
printer corrects them, and if the&#13;
make-up gets them in the right&#13;
place, and if the press doesn't&#13;
smash any letters—why 'tis easily&#13;
enough seen how unnecessay are&#13;
typographical errors and how&#13;
easy it is to run a newspaper.&#13;
I have been a sufferer from chronic&#13;
diarrhoea ever since the war and have&#13;
used all kinds of medicines for it. At&#13;
last i found one remedy that has-been&#13;
a success as a care and that is Oham-&#13;
MQSB LOCAL&#13;
Everybody is cleaning house L&#13;
berlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea&#13;
Remedy.—P. E. Grisbam, Gaars Mills,&#13;
Pa. For sale by F. A. Sigler.&#13;
A CTIVK yOIJClTOES WANTED EVER*&#13;
W H E RE for MTh«« Story of the Ptailipinee'&#13;
by Mnrat Halstoad, ton mift-ionfd by the Govern&#13;
tnent aB Official Historian to the War Department&#13;
The boek was written ID (be arruy camps at San&#13;
Francisco, on the Pacific with (General Merrit, In&#13;
, the hospitals at Honolulu, in Hop* KODR, In the&#13;
American trenches at Manilla, lr. the Insurgent&#13;
camps with Aguinaldo.on thedeckof the Olympla&#13;
with Drwey, and io the roar of ihe battle at&#13;
the fall of Manila. Bonanza for agents. Brimful&#13;
of o riRinal picture* taken by government photograp&#13;
hers on the spot. Large book. Low prices,&#13;
rig profit*. Freight paid. Credit glvtm. Drop all&#13;
_iaaJi? unofficial ,«'*r huoks. Outfit free. Adores.&#13;
"T • T.BarbtT. Sec'y. Star Insurance Bldu. Chicago&#13;
We, fb'e undersijarriet,t hereby a^ree&#13;
to refund the, money № two 25 cent&#13;
bottles or boxes of Baxter1? Mandrake&#13;
Bitters,, if (it fails to oure congU^ation,&#13;
biliousnW,i siek-Oeadache, jaundice,&#13;
loss of a p p H i ^ ^ r, stomach, dyspepsia,&#13;
liver oonbplaya^, QX ,fpgr of the&#13;
for Which it is reccooiended.&#13;
reccomended as a spring&#13;
tonic and blood purifier. Solcf&#13;
in bottle?, and tablet* in boxes,&#13;
ihe;. 0 « e pack&#13;
• i&#13;
or mwwy&#13;
Wil a&#13;
An Unhung Rend.&#13;
Charged With Attempting To Assult a&#13;
Lima MchoolMa'am.&#13;
About three o'clock* Saturday&#13;
morning morning Miss Edna&#13;
Ileade, a school teacher in the&#13;
townshiy of Lima, who is boardwith&#13;
A. J. Eastern, discovered&#13;
Mr. Eastman's hired man, named&#13;
Stark in her room. He attemped&#13;
an assult, and she screamed but&#13;
was choked into silenoe, and una&#13;
threat of death she promised&#13;
, never to mention it. She told&#13;
; Mrs. Eastman, however, and the&#13;
man was discharged, Before&#13;
j leaving, with a revolver in his&#13;
! hand, he attempted to get to Miss&#13;
Beade who was locked in the parlor.&#13;
He then took her jewelry,&#13;
and left^a note in her room saying:&#13;
*J will see you ail again."&#13;
The matter is in the hands of&#13;
the prosecuting attorney.&#13;
Stark has been arrested and&#13;
lodged in the jail at Aim Arbor.&#13;
—Chelsea Standard. Miss Reed&#13;
was a former Binckney girl.&#13;
His Life Wsv* S«T«d&#13;
Mr. J. E. Lilly, a prominent citUen&#13;
of Hannibal, Mo., lately had a wonderful&#13;
deliverance from a frightful death.&#13;
In telling of it he says£aI WAS taken&#13;
with typhoid fever, that ran into pneumonia.&#13;
My lungs became hardened.&#13;
1 wia so weak I could not even set up&#13;
in bed. I expected to die soqn of consumption,&#13;
when I heard of Dr. King's&#13;
New Disoovery. One bottle" gave V#i&#13;
lief. &gt; I'continued to use and am&#13;
now we!) and \ strong and I cant&#13;
sav too much in its praise." This mar*&#13;
Several took * d | ^ H p * &lt;* *?t*f*&#13;
day and set out txtmKfr * *&#13;
The long looked fem^fim gladened&#13;
the hearts of the people in this vicinity&#13;
the past week.&#13;
The next meeting of the Jackson&#13;
Association of Congregational churches&#13;
will be held at Pinekney in October.&#13;
A twenty-five cent negro show in a&#13;
town will call out a larger crowd of&#13;
people than a good ten-cent lecture&#13;
that will elevate rather than degrade.&#13;
Why is it?&#13;
The weather the past week has prdven&#13;
the necessity of a sprinkler on our&#13;
streets. Somebody can find a paying&#13;
occupation in running one here this&#13;
summer.&#13;
By | the looks of fruit trees in&#13;
this section, (the people} will have&#13;
more fruit than they anticipated.&#13;
Very few trees were killed by the&#13;
long cold spell of the past winter.&#13;
It is to be hoped, if the young men&#13;
who persist in standing in front of&#13;
the open church door Sunday evening*,&#13;
whiffing the odor of cigars in the&#13;
church, to the annoyance of the people&#13;
within, that they will either use a&#13;
better grade of cigars or let out the&#13;
gentlemanly (?) job to some one who&#13;
has not quite as much respect for&#13;
themselves or others. A KICKKB.&#13;
The winter term of school in di3tnot&#13;
No. 6, Dexter, taught by Miss Cora&#13;
Devereaux of Pinekney closed Friday,&#13;
April 14. The pupils rendered a fine&#13;
literary program, at the end of which&#13;
they showed their appreciation of Miss&#13;
Devereaux's successful efforts during&#13;
the past six months in their behalf, by&#13;
presenting her with a beautiful volume&#13;
of Shakespeare's works.—Chelsea&#13;
Herald.&#13;
Dr. £ E. Caster sad wife, of Howel),&#13;
were gne*te of Rev. Chas. Simpson&#13;
and wife last Thursday.&#13;
Messrs FUh«r, Copeland. Bennett&#13;
Benjamin, of Fowleryille, were&#13;
callers on friends here Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. S. Roberts and daughter,&#13;
! Katie, who have been quite ill the&#13;
past winter, ate able to be out again.&#13;
The Band Boya gave some fine&#13;
l music in the open air last Saturday&#13;
evening that was enjoyed by a large&#13;
crowd.&#13;
Mrs. Chas. Teeple has been staying&#13;
the past taw weeks at the home ot her&#13;
parents, Henry Padley and wife in&#13;
Marion.&#13;
The Redemptionjsta priests, Fr.&#13;
Hngan and Fr. Klander are assisting&#13;
Fr. Uomerford during th&lt;* mission&#13;
this week.&#13;
Those who did not attend the lecture&#13;
at the M. E. church last Wednesday&#13;
evening by {Lev. E. E, Caster missed a&#13;
tine lecture.&#13;
Miss Maggie Grieve, who has been&#13;
visiting relatives and friends in Plainfield&#13;
and vicinity for several months,&#13;
returned home last week.&#13;
John Miers, who has been living&#13;
east of town the past winter has secured&#13;
a position in Cadillac and moved&#13;
his family there the past week.&#13;
Mr. Win, A Id rich and daughter,&#13;
Ettie, of Munith, visited his wife over&#13;
Sunday. Mrs. Aldrich is slowly recovering&#13;
from her late illness.&#13;
Mrs. Henry Padley returned last&#13;
week from Milford where she has&#13;
been caring for her mother who is&#13;
very ill, and has been again called to&#13;
her bedside,&#13;
MONTHLY REPORT&#13;
Of the Pinekney Public School&#13;
for the month ending.&#13;
April 28.&#13;
Primary Department—Whole number&#13;
of days taught 20; grand total&#13;
number days attendance 570; average&#13;
daily atteniance 28.5; whole&#13;
number belonging 31; aggregate tar*&#13;
diness 32. Pupils neither absent nor&#13;
tardy during the past month:&#13;
Lucy Calhane&#13;
Lucy Jeffreys&#13;
Lloyd Qrlajea&#13;
Helen Reason&#13;
Roy Moran&#13;
Claude Monk*&#13;
Mary Lynch&#13;
Florence Reason&#13;
Lola Moran&#13;
Norbert L&amp;vey&#13;
Clarence Brown&#13;
ThomaB Koran&#13;
Glen Tupper&#13;
JESSIE GREEN, Teacher.&#13;
velont medicine is the snreat inA&#13;
quickest cure in the world for til&#13;
throat 4ftd lujg /trouble, R«gnl*r&#13;
We aid fl. TriaTooitles f m t*&#13;
P. A. Sizar's drug store;&#13;
guiranUtd.&#13;
. Intermediate Department.&#13;
Whole number of days taught 20;&#13;
grand total number of days attendance&#13;
434|; average daily attendance&#13;
21.72; whole number belonging 23; aggregate&#13;
tardiness 40; pupils neither&#13;
absent nor tardy during the past&#13;
month:&#13;
No Right to Cell&#13;
A woman lovely in face, form Mid&#13;
temper will always have friends bat&#13;
one who would be attractive most&#13;
keep her health. If she is weak, tkkiy&#13;
and all run down, she will be nervous&#13;
and irritable. If she has constipation&#13;
or kidney trouble, her impure blood&#13;
will cause pimples, blotches or skin&#13;
eruptions and a wretched complexion.&#13;
Electric bitters is the best medicine in&#13;
the world -to regulate stomach, liver&#13;
and kidneys and so purify the blood.&#13;
irves, bright eyes.&#13;
She f iwkuty&#13;
POSLUUD BTBBY TOTSSAAY HOWttJW* BT^ 31&#13;
FRANK L. ANDREWS&#13;
JFdiior amd&#13;
BnbecrlptloB Price $1 In&#13;
at the Poetofflce at Plnckaey,&#13;
aa aecond-claM matter.&#13;
Advertising rate* nude known on application.&#13;
Bcalneea Cards, $4100 per year.&#13;
Peatfe and marriage notice* published tree.&#13;
Announcements ol entertainments nay be paid&#13;
for, U desired, by presenting the offlce with tick*&#13;
eie of admission. In case Uckeuare not brought&#13;
lo the office, regular raUji wi}l be charged.&#13;
All matter la local notice column will be ensxg&#13;
ed at 5 cent* per line or traction thereof .for each&#13;
Insertion, where no time Is speeiAed, all notice*&#13;
will be Inserted until ordered discontinued, and&#13;
will be charged for accordingly. BaVAll change*&#13;
•f advertisement* MUST reach thuomc* as earlj&#13;
as TCBSJUT morning to insure an insertion the&#13;
same week.&#13;
JOS&#13;
In all its branches, a specialty. We havealikinda&#13;
and the latest style* of Type, etc., which enable*&#13;
usio execute all kinds of work, such as Books,&#13;
PampleU, Posters, Programmes, Bill Heads, Not*&#13;
Heads, Statements, Cards, Auction Bills, etc., la&#13;
superior styles, upon the •hortast notice. Prices as&#13;
ow at good work can be aone.&#13;
ALL BILLS PAYABLE 71B3T OP BVBBY MONTH.&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIRECTORY.&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
. . . _ Mex. Mclntyr*&#13;
E. L. Thompson, AUrud Moaka,&#13;
Daniel Richards, lieo. Bowman, Samuel&#13;
Sykes, P. U. Johnson.&#13;
CLBBJC - . ~ ~ R. H.Teeple&#13;
TREASUBJCB. W. E. Mnrphy «&#13;
AsBBgaoB W. A. Carr&#13;
STBHET CoMJuasioNBB Geo. Burch&#13;
MARSAHI. * D. W, Murta&#13;
HKALTH OI-MCBB Dr.H. F. Sigler&#13;
ATTOBSKY ~.- W. A. Carr&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH.&#13;
Rev. Chat. Simpson, pastor. Service* every&#13;
Sunday morning at 10:&amp;J, and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:oo o'clock. Prayer meeting Thursday&#13;
evenings. Sunday school at close of morn-&#13;
Ing service. F. L. Andrews, Supt. '&#13;
piOtfUftEGATIONAL CHURCH.-&#13;
\J Rev. O. W. Rice pastor. Service ever*&#13;
Sunday morning at 10:80 and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:0C o'clock. Prayer meeting Than*&#13;
day evenings. Sunday school at close of morning&#13;
service. R. H. Teeple , Sapt. Rosa Read, Sec&#13;
ST. MARY'S 'JATHOUIC CHURCH.&#13;
Rev. M. J. Comoierford, Pastor. Services&#13;
•very Sunday. Low mass at 7:30 o'clock&#13;
high mass with sermon at 9:3b a. m. Catechism&#13;
st3:00p. m., ve*persaaabenedictionat7:tt0p.m.&#13;
SOCIETIES:&#13;
^ *&#13;
smooth relyety skin, rich complexion.&#13;
It will make a good looking, eharmlng&#13;
woman of a run down invalid. Only&#13;
50c at F. A. Sigler's drug store.&#13;
F*r Sale.&#13;
Good young new milch cow*, second&#13;
calf, a pood one and all right every&#13;
way. Will trade for horse and pay&#13;
difference.&#13;
Chas E. Warner,&#13;
Dexter, Mich.&#13;
National in- color and effect are&#13;
KniJl'8 Red Pills for Wan People,&#13;
Knill's White Liver Pills, and Knil!\&lt;&#13;
Kidney Pills and guaranteed by our&#13;
local Druggista.&#13;
Fred Read&#13;
Clyde Darrow&#13;
Adrian Lavey&#13;
EUery Durfee&#13;
Norm* Vaughn1&#13;
Rex Read&#13;
Lee Ttplady&#13;
Morley Vaughn i&#13;
Ethel Dnrfee&#13;
Matwl Brown&#13;
EDITH CARR, TEACHER,&#13;
Grammer Department.&#13;
Whole number of days taught 20;&#13;
grand total number of days attendance&#13;
632: average daily attendance&#13;
31; aggregate tardiness 78; number&#13;
pupils 36; neither absent nor tardy&#13;
daring the month:&#13;
JSthal Graham Eva Grimes&#13;
Eoga&amp;e Reason Laura Lavey&#13;
Mae Reason Alice Barton&#13;
Lee Barton&#13;
C. L. GRIMES, TEACHER.&#13;
Important Notice!&#13;
We, the undersign, do herby-ag ree&#13;
to refund 25 cents the price of any&#13;
Box of KnilVs Red Pills for Wan&#13;
People. Pale and Weak People, they&#13;
restore Vim, Vigor, and Vitality.&#13;
Kniil's White Liver Pills, Knill's&#13;
Blue Kidney Pills, or Knill's Dyspepsia&#13;
Tablets, if purchaser is dissatisfied.&#13;
Only Warranted 25 cent&#13;
preparations on the market.&#13;
WILL CI'RLETT, DEXTKR&#13;
WILL H. DAKROW, PIXCKNET&#13;
High School Department.&#13;
Whole namoer of days taught 20;&#13;
grand total number of days attendance&#13;
728; average daily attendance 36&#13;
whole number belonging 37; aggre-,&#13;
gate tardiness 30; pupils jaeither, ab-&#13;
•ent daring the month: .&#13;
MAbel Sifler Blanche ttraoam.&#13;
* CTIVK SOLICITOR* WVNTKF) EVR-KY&#13;
J\ WHEKKtor'-Tne s- ..rv of th« Philipplnea.'&#13;
by Murat H*l8te?irt. co;i;misaion*&gt;d by the Govern,&#13;
ment as Ottl(*iul Ui*(ori)in to t,h«"War Department.&#13;
The book wivs written in army camp* at&#13;
San Francisco, on tlu&gt; Pacific with G«ut»rsl .Merritt,&#13;
in the bospitsi* at Honolulu, in lion.' Kon*. iu&#13;
the Amprlcan tn'Qch»&gt;8 at Manilla, in the in»urj&#13;
№tit8 cmnprt with Agkilnaklo, on the deck of the&#13;
Olympla with Oewey. and in tho roiir of thebattle&#13;
at th« tailor MauilU. Bou»Q^a for ajjonts. Brimful&#13;
of picture taken by co-'ernment photographers&#13;
on the spot. Litrtte book. Low prlcea. Btj»&#13;
protit*. Kr*»iirht paid. Credit niren. Drop all&#13;
trashy unortliia! war l»ot)k« Outfit fre«. Adores*.&#13;
F. T. Barber, Sec'y. Star Insurance Bid)?. Chicago.&#13;
The A. O. H. Societ y of this place, meeta every&#13;
third a an rtay la ths Pr. Matthew Hall.&#13;
John McGuiness, County Delegate.&#13;
Pinekney Y. P. 8. C. E. Meetings held every&#13;
Sunday erasing in Cong'1 cnurob at fr.M o'clock&#13;
Ml*« Bessie Cordjey, Prea Mable Decker Se e&#13;
• . EPWORTH LEAGUE. Meets every Sunday&#13;
evening at ti:0O oclock in the M. E. Cnurch. A&#13;
cordial invitation is extended to everyone, espepUtly&#13;
T'MingpA'n'l*. Mra. Stella Graham Prefl.&#13;
Junior Epirortb League. MeeU every Sunday&#13;
afternoon at :i:iXt o'clock, at M. E church. All&#13;
cordially invited.&#13;
Miss Edith Van^hn, Superintendent.&#13;
The C.T. A. and IS. Society of this place, meet&#13;
ever/ third Saturday evening in the Pr. Matthew&#13;
Hall. John Donohue, P resident.&#13;
NIGHT8 OP MACCABEES^&#13;
Meet every Priday evening on or before fall&#13;
of the moon at their hall In the Swarthout bldg.&#13;
Visiting brothers are cordially invited.&#13;
CHAI. (JIMPBXLL, Sir Knight Commander&#13;
Livingston Lodge, No. 74, F &amp; A. M. Htgular&#13;
Communication Tuesday evening, on or before&#13;
the full of the moon. Alexander Mela tyre, W. i l.&#13;
ORDER OF EASTERN STAR meets each month&#13;
the Friday evening following tlie regular K.&#13;
AA.M. meeting, MRS . MAKY RBAD, W. if.&#13;
T ADIES OF THE MACCABEKS. Most every 1st&#13;
J j and 3rd Saturday of eachiuouih &amp;t£:SO p m. at&#13;
K. i&gt;. T. M. hall. Visiting sisters cordially in&#13;
vited, LiUi CONIWAY Lady Com.&#13;
KNIGHTS OF THE LOYAL GUAtlD&#13;
meet every second Wednesday&#13;
evening of every mouth in the K. O.&#13;
T, M. Hall at 7:30 o'clock. All visiting&#13;
Guards welcome. '&#13;
ARNELL, Capt. Ge~&#13;
11HE W, C. T. U. meeta the tirat Priday of each&#13;
month at 2:80 p. in. at the home of Dr. H. F.&#13;
Sigler. Everyone interested in temperauoe is&#13;
coadially invited. Mru. Leal Sigler, Pres; Mrs.&#13;
iStta Durfee, Secretary. '&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
H. F. StQLER M. D- C, L, SIQLER M, 0&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
Physicians and Surgeons. All calls prompt!&#13;
attended today or night. Office on Mainstr&#13;
Pinekney, Mich.&#13;
DR. A. B. GREEN.&#13;
DENTIST—Every Thursday and Friday&#13;
Omce over Siller's Drug Store. \&#13;
Ftneral Director and Emhalmer. Residence&#13;
connected with new state telephone. All call*&#13;
promptly answered. One mile north of Plainneld&#13;
Village. J. G SAY LIB.&#13;
IBVEIU7SRW Aek on anew pt&amp;uci}&#13;
xegolate th« liwle, ttea&#13;
•ad bowsls through&#13;
iurw». Da. Mnmr Pi&#13;
i.&#13;
Best Hoiel in Detroit QoU Med&#13;
Ltiojr 8warthout&#13;
i n riafc*way—&#13;
" • ! • • '&#13;
iiuhtfev&#13;
PINCKNEY; • ' • MICHIGAK&#13;
kind and charitable acts.&#13;
The man who is disliked by chU*&#13;
aren and dogs hat but few friends.&#13;
It's a mean bachelor who advises »&#13;
girl to marry and then tails to pro-&#13;
^ g , )8 a, irtislue^s failure when&#13;
a uian putauhlk 'property ihihls wife's&#13;
Opinions are like watches; no two&#13;
ever go alike, yet each man believes&#13;
In his own.&#13;
A man is prouder of the things he&#13;
thinks he can accomplish than oi those&#13;
he really can.&#13;
it's more often'^the husband's crossgrained&#13;
streak than the wife's&#13;
Ing that spoils the dinner.&#13;
•}&#13;
Paris accepts the automobile wlta&#13;
the eagerness she accepted the horse&#13;
In a table d'hote dinner In 1871.&#13;
We are told that there was once an&#13;
old lady who lived in a shoe—and.&#13;
strange to say, she didn't consider it&#13;
any too large.&#13;
A young man keeps company with a&#13;
jtfrl before marriage, but after the ceremony&#13;
it sometimes happens that her&#13;
lather has to keep both of them.&#13;
A dispatch from Valparaiso says:&#13;
•The Bolivian insurgents have won."&#13;
It is not stated whether this refers to&#13;
the came revolution that was started&#13;
a week ago last Tuesday or some later&#13;
out '&#13;
"Should Married Women Follow Professions?"&#13;
This is a query put forth&#13;
by Sarah Grand, the novelist la reply,&#13;
it may be said that It all depend*&#13;
upon the Mkrrtefl woman's husband s&#13;
ability In **e wily "oVproviding necessary&#13;
funds for the running of the&#13;
house. This opinion has been obtained&#13;
from a "washlady" who is now sunporUafft&#13;
a husband and six children,&#13;
and ought, therefore, to be worth somothicg.&#13;
Public Opinion, quoting La Nature&#13;
as authority, states, as the result of&#13;
scientific investigation* that hay whica&#13;
lor any cause has been incompletely&#13;
dried before being put into the bam,&#13;
is exposed to danger from spontaneous&#13;
combustion.—The microbes which ex-&#13;
1st in. all vegetable matter, increase&#13;
enorniDusly^n hay which retarns' mb(3'&#13;
t»re under the "condition's" mentioned&#13;
By them intense heat is generated and&#13;
localized. Experiments have proved&#13;
that their presence and activity^, u,nUe*i,&#13;
favorable jcoadlttoM, havn caused A&#13;
rise of 300 degrees In the temperature&#13;
surrounding them. In the heated&#13;
depth* the hay becomes carbonised,&#13;
and smolders slowly until the mas* la&#13;
opened, or partially opened. Then the&#13;
action of the outer air invites instant&#13;
conflagration.&#13;
A new product, known as "devltrlfied&#13;
glass"—broken glass brought to a&#13;
desired molecular condition by a special&#13;
process of heating—has made it*&#13;
appearance in France, according to tat&#13;
report of the United StateB consul at&#13;
Ijrons. It possesses all the properties&#13;
of glass except its transparency, and&#13;
it can be made to assume any form.&#13;
from paving blocks to the moat&#13;
artistic designs, an&lt;i to resemble&#13;
any \ariety of stot* used as&#13;
constructive material. Jn tha form&#13;
of variegated^ blocks, it has been&#13;
tried in paving one of the main thoroughfares&#13;
of Lyons. The teat has been&#13;
satisfactory. The glass is more durable&#13;
than stone, U as cheap/and is Ies3&#13;
liable to gather and retain A*rt Architects&#13;
are already suggesting tie use a3&#13;
material for hcisa-buildlDg. and thus&#13;
the'.ancient saw which inculcates the&#13;
injudlclousness of none throwing tfy&#13;
people who lire In glaEs houses may,&#13;
&lt;-»r« long, ur-4 a basis In substantial&#13;
fact, in place, &lt;4 what has licretofora&#13;
been a purely rhetorical admonition.&#13;
i wm&#13;
Hews of tbe Day as Tpljl Over the&#13;
blender Wires!&#13;
DOMESTIC AND FOREIGN NEWS&#13;
A Xfgro of Georgia ww the Victim of&#13;
•n Infuriated Mob Who Cookott the&#13;
Africa* iilve—It Look* »• Though&#13;
V t i u the TowavaaL&#13;
Burned at the Stake.&#13;
In the presence of nearly- £.000 people&#13;
who seat aloft yells ofoVfian^e and&#13;
shouts' of joy, Sain Hosd&lt;Ja Kegre, 'who&#13;
commuted two of the basest acts&#13;
know a to crime, was burned at the&#13;
stake in a public road :1&gt;* miles from&#13;
Newnan, Ga. Before the torch, was&#13;
applied to the pyre the Negro \yaS deprived&#13;
of his ears. fingers and other&#13;
portion* of hii^ anatomy. ISefore the&#13;
body was cool it was cut to pieces, the&#13;
bones were crushed into small bits and&#13;
even the tree upon which the wretch&#13;
met his fate was torn up and disposed&#13;
of as souvenirs. The Negro's heart&#13;
was cut in several pieces, as waa also&#13;
his liver. Those unable to obtain the&#13;
ghastly re'ics direct paid their more&#13;
fortunate possessors extravagant sums&#13;
for them. Small pieces went for 25&#13;
cents and a bit of the liver crisply&#13;
cooked sold for 10 cents.&#13;
Later—Two other Negroes, supposed&#13;
to be connected with Ilose, have since&#13;
been lynched.&#13;
IlehaadeU While Alive.&#13;
Advices from Apia, under date of&#13;
April 18, give further details of the&#13;
deaths of ^aslg-n J. R. Monaghan, of&#13;
the U. S. vS. Philadelphia, and Lieut.&#13;
P. V. Laosdale, of the same vessel.&#13;
They show that Monaghan was beheaded&#13;
before he was dead. A deserter&#13;
from the Mataafan forces says&#13;
Monaghan and Lansdale were returning,&#13;
when they were discovered- by a&#13;
chief and hh&amp; wife, who were looking&#13;
for dead men. They tfare the alarm&#13;
and Monaghas was shot while continuing&#13;
the retreat. Latex*, it Appears, the&#13;
rebels returned and killed Lansdale.&#13;
Monaghan fought trutil he was&#13;
wounded, and he was then beheaded.&#13;
The doctor's examination of the remains&#13;
confirms the statements made.&#13;
An unsymw^hf^c Judge, blasted f&#13;
hc?»n of various candidates for'eitizen-&#13;
*Bfp fit White Plains, N, Y., lately.&#13;
"We Condense from the New YdT*: Sun:&#13;
TliirV-flvevItaliaiis made avPllcatlon.to&#13;
t i e ' etmrt for natwaJUWion; TB«y&#13;
bad been sedulous!? coac%ed&gt;y * DOUekcl'"&#13;
heeler,^ «md v e t # to)4/th«t after&#13;
having siren their names and ages&#13;
nothing further would be required of&#13;
them tban to answer "Yes" to the&#13;
oaestions put Accordingly, the.first&#13;
applicant, to the question,1 "Will yoo&#13;
twar arms aginst the U»lte4 SUt*«?"&#13;
—Will you Join the ajufonliU?"&#13;
yct&gt; «Mitt a foreign- power&#13;
_ „ , answered, ATjiUT tad&#13;
ready to declare^ hU nBHnfciesa&#13;
. aside," and of tae Urtrty-four&#13;
;'it is gratifying to know, the&#13;
tse tana&#13;
Committed Murder and Foil ift a Trap.&#13;
A special from Ellsworth, K|M, says:&#13;
An unusual tragedy in which an Italian&#13;
and his wife and a male boarder were&#13;
o-otors has taken plaoe at Kanapolis.&#13;
The husband and the boarder are dead&#13;
and the woman is seriously wounded.&#13;
No names are given. After committing&#13;
the murder the boarder in trying&#13;
to escape plunged headlong into a&#13;
shaft at the salt worksv' The body&#13;
bounded from side to side, splattering&#13;
the timbers with brains and blood unttt&#13;
it toaiihed the bottom, l.Obtffdet'be-&#13;
'dwl TheTTTead and" h*an3s**were torn&#13;
from the body in the fall. The remains&#13;
were gathered up^JJ^a sack and&#13;
o^fht to the top. there ikjpy were&#13;
takeVin charge by the coroner. _&#13;
fttata* o(f (3 rant I A V ^ I U A '&#13;
The equestrian statue of Gen. Grant,&#13;
presented to the city 'of Philadelphia&#13;
by the Fairmount Park Art association,&#13;
was unveiled with appropriate&#13;
ceremonies by Miss Rosemary Sartoris,&#13;
granddaughter of the dead hero, in the&#13;
presence of President McKinley, members&#13;
of his cabinet, representatives of&#13;
foreign governments, and a large gathering&#13;
of distinguished citizens and&#13;
guests of honor. Prominent among&#13;
those participating was Mrs, Grant,&#13;
widow of the general, and other members&#13;
of the family.&#13;
Henry Blamed fdr DreyTa** Coavletlon.&#13;
According to the Temps a member of&#13;
the Dreyfus courtmartial, named Freystaetter.&#13;
in testifying before the court&#13;
of cassation, declared that it was the&#13;
evidence given by Lient..»Col, Henry&#13;
(who afterwards confessed.that he had&#13;
forged a letter which was largely instrumental&#13;
in preventing a vision of&#13;
the Dreyfus case, and •then out his&#13;
throat in prison) which decided Jbe&#13;
courtmartial to convict Dreyfus, an&#13;
that the only document produa&amp;d i&#13;
the presence of the prisoner was the&#13;
bordereau.&#13;
CO Killed by a Cyclone.&#13;
As the result of a cyclone in Missouri&#13;
50 lives wjene wiped opt and it is&#13;
believed that fully 1 ,Q00 were more or&#13;
less injured. At KirktviU*', where the&#13;
storja first broke, a path W s» quartet&#13;
of a ratio wide and as clean as the&#13;
prairie was swept through the eastern&#13;
portion of the city aad 40O buildings,&#13;
homes aad mercantile, w«re'leveled to&#13;
the ground in scattered ruins. The&#13;
property loss is enormous.&#13;
'Biff Sale;' "&#13;
The government is negotiating the&#13;
sale of all'iU rsitronrf* snet steamboat&#13;
t U e fc*&#13;
of&#13;
Th«&#13;
500/»0 silrer.&#13;
job* tefrrts&#13;
Rfeo for four&#13;
ttetUlefc*&#13;
Porto&#13;
hJULiMiUL&#13;
f' ',.&#13;
« № , . . . • ' , • j&#13;
WAR NOTES.&#13;
There have been 20 deaths from typhoid&#13;
fever among the members of the&#13;
8th U. $. oavalryv rttfttioued *t the city&#13;
of Puerto Priaeipe, and 103 cases all&#13;
told are reported. The persistence of&#13;
the disease csnnot be explained. The&#13;
camp is pitched on sloping ground,&#13;
about three miles from the town and&#13;
the teat floors are feily M inches above&#13;
the ground. The water is taken from&#13;
a creek that flows through the camp,&#13;
but none of it is. used until it has been&#13;
filtered and boiled. All camp refuse&#13;
is cremated each day. The tent floors&#13;
are displaced once every 24 hours and&#13;
the sites exposed to the sun and disinfected&#13;
with lime On the other slope&#13;
of the ridge the 15th U. S. infantry is&#13;
encamped, and they have not a single&#13;
case of typhoid.&#13;
Army officials have learned that&#13;
since Manila fell the Filipinos have&#13;
been obtaining supplies of ammunition&#13;
from Hong Kong- and Singapore, as&#13;
well as from Europe, A strict naval&#13;
patrol of the island of I*a«on has been&#13;
established and the belief is expressed&#13;
that the supply of'ammunition will&#13;
now be cut off. It is positively stated&#13;
that the Filipinos have, no factory for&#13;
the manufacture of smokleas powder&#13;
and Mauser catridges which lhejr; are&#13;
usinsr. , :./ '&#13;
The commissary department of the&#13;
army has been authorised to issue to&#13;
such soldiers oe dtrftire it an equal&#13;
value in fish in lieu of the beef ration&#13;
now issued. The restriction regarding&#13;
the issue of fish when beef cannot be&#13;
obtained is removed. Ham or other&#13;
articles of sale, in equal money value&#13;
to the beef may be issued. To the&#13;
present ration two ounces of dried&#13;
fruit are added.&#13;
Col. Remie and Maj. Lasseras, the&#13;
Spanish commissioners, with their secretaries,&#13;
attempted to enter the purpose&#13;
of a conference with Aguinaldo&#13;
regarding an exchange of prisoners,&#13;
but failed in their mission. The part3',&#13;
under a flag of truce, were stopped by&#13;
the rebel outposts on the road and&#13;
were compelled to return without even&#13;
getting* a glimpse o* the rebel leader.&#13;
Soldiers who have served in the regular&#13;
army and were discharged without&#13;
receiving their extra two months'&#13;
pay should apply to the auditor, treasury&#13;
department, Washing! on, D. C.&#13;
It takes about a month before an answer&#13;
is received, but finally they will&#13;
receive a postal notifying- them that&#13;
their claim has been filed, and to wait&#13;
for further developments.&#13;
The American army has reached&#13;
Calumpit after encountering* a desperate&#13;
resistance. The American casualties*&#13;
was 13 killed and .14 Vvounded,&#13;
while the rebels had fully 300 killed&#13;
and 350 taken prisoners. Among the&#13;
dead insurgents was a Spanish captain.&#13;
Several cases of sunstroke were reported&#13;
,during the engagement.&#13;
IlaUerjesC. a-fd M. ot th# 7th artillery&#13;
have been ordered to return ..from&#13;
Porto Rico, and with the remainder of&#13;
the 7th artillery now in this country&#13;
will be recruited to their full strength&#13;
and sent to Manila. Three light batteries&#13;
have already sailed from San&#13;
Francisco, being those requested by&#13;
Gen. Otis some time ago.&#13;
A disastrous battle has taken place&#13;
at Quingua in which the American&#13;
troops lost 6 killed and 43 wounded.&#13;
The rebel loss was light as they were&#13;
well intrenched, but after making a&#13;
stubborn stand they were finally made&#13;
to retreat by our soldiers.&#13;
The President has appointed Col.&#13;
James F. Smith, of the 1st California&#13;
volunteer regiment, a brigadier general&#13;
Qf volunteers. The regiment is&#13;
now in the Philippines. Gen. Smith&#13;
will be assigned to one of the brigades&#13;
of Gen. Otis' army.&#13;
Two new cases of yellow fever are&#13;
reported among the natives of Havana.&#13;
TELEGRAPHIC BITS.&#13;
Eleven residences have been destroyed&#13;
by fire at Clay City, Ky., and 21 families&#13;
are homeless. Loss 840,000 .&#13;
A conclave of Roman Catholic prelates&#13;
from Mexico, Central and South&#13;
America will be held in Rome, May 29.&#13;
Ten archbishops and 50 bishops are&#13;
now hastening to Rome.&#13;
The recent rise in copper is throwing&#13;
a large number of men out of employment&#13;
in England, and the government&#13;
has decided not to place any&#13;
more orders for cartridge shells while&#13;
the present prices prevail.&#13;
The President has approved the project&#13;
for a -Hew trtihs-Atlantic cable,&#13;
running between Germanjr"and the&#13;
United i^ates. The German, ftirmirms&#13;
wiH be ft.&amp;ns, the American, at New&#13;
Yortf, and the line witl tyWch the&#13;
f&#13;
erryt Ohio,&#13;
|Q two&#13;
foU cfnfepton 4&#13;
KIDNEY DISEASE ,&#13;
by Internal Catarrh. Promptly&#13;
. • • Cwe4 bjr Te-ru-aa.&#13;
Bon. J. H. Caldnell, a prominent&#13;
member ef the Lo\i4gl|na&gt; State Legislature,&#13;
says the following- 1A regard to&#13;
Fe-ru-na for eaterrfct.&#13;
'*! have wed ^e-nwia for a number&#13;
el years wtth^he very best results for&#13;
citsrrhal dn^aseii, I shall never be&#13;
1 never fan to&#13;
it w^eji an opportunity £re&amp;ents&#13;
self."—X H. Catdwell, Robellne, La|&#13;
Gilbert Hofer, Crays, Ky., gays in 5a1&#13;
letter dated March. 7th, A8H: "I h&#13;
used four bottles of Pe-ru-na and I&#13;
well ot my catartb, and it cured&#13;
disease. 1 had:&#13;
PLSASED WITH ALDCRtA.&#13;
Aa £*««Jl*a« Beport from W!»c&lt;&#13;
aad Mluu»aota D«l«-ar%tea«&#13;
The op4nlon"&gt;of five delegates from&#13;
Minnesota 1 and. Wisconsin, publishedby&#13;
the Edmonton, Bulletin over their&#13;
names Is&#13;
Northern&#13;
"We must&#13;
nitlced them&#13;
if nab better thl&#13;
chlldrln in&#13;
wlieat thatv&#13;
very complimentary to&#13;
^ The resort sayf:&#13;
wtth-all sftcerity that,&#13;
i f t f lx&#13;
and&#13;
eft. ;Weparta-&#13;
1 doing well. W©&#13;
r by the name of&#13;
formed us that ha&#13;
ain here in three&#13;
thfcteen where he&#13;
as [touch ground,&#13;
berfoflftthera. ttoih&#13;
ls*~*vi all spot* % tfte-&#13;
*lb€rtaT "They ill&#13;
eien the cpLdnve&#13;
over tno&#13;
the counties*&#13;
floaly see hape&gt;&#13;
little ones,&#13;
dressed etjiral&#13;
some class of.&#13;
Taiged.here;\\j( Just&#13;
tor; (TQ; years, I:weiga tWtnfty fourids&#13;
more than t did before f was taken&#13;
sick. I shall never be without Pe-ru-&#13;
^ vlrTaiged.&#13;
teautlfUl, the |ep«e&gt;fuU&#13;
d mto' well i ^ T J L&#13;
ldini 30 t n . B F&#13;
^ statement1 is not frbm,oae&#13;
but from hund»«4«-who tell the&#13;
tail. Oats ylettl from 70 to $&#13;
the" acre?&#13;
Hculkr n&#13;
Jtneaota* we Were in&#13;
kota blisaard 4 pwron the streets at&#13;
d t h i k&#13;
dst"cf a&#13;
Whenuwe er-&#13;
«Ai t h e P 6 0 "&#13;
wearing sumna.&#13;
ftag&#13;
hmaenr dothing^,ko mlttaas on their jl W ^ * HfTJM^^SJThe&#13;
poantrr n sinYply tnote thatf wt^rer&#13;
dreamed of. The printed matter Jgpvt&#13;
out by the government does notetajf&#13;
Send for free catarrh book. Address; tell of the grand country in AlM|tfi.&#13;
Dr. Hartman, Columbu3, 0. 4&#13;
If you fifths your money while young you nay?&#13;
harvest a fortune in after ye'.»rs.&#13;
We offer OneWu Bdred Dolors tf\&#13;
case of C'Utturrh tbucoanu^t IM cured&#13;
F. J. CUBNKY'4tU. rrrj^.. T$orin. O.&#13;
We. the und«rsWmefl. HaW.Jrpown F.&#13;
Cheney for the laKtvV* TCUT*. «el believe&#13;
perfectly honorable In all - -&#13;
and rtimnfial!ri}ble to curry&#13;
mlllioni of w,-r- -^4^*Lhomes&#13;
for themselves? Too&#13;
•ah'not be said in pra%«/t It&#13;
and more tiian, JJie greatest&#13;
thought of .giving tfe the&#13;
iaw cfitt&gt; and&#13;
grjMrfn^v pti&#13;
d by, meraV ta &gt;v-tow&gt;;run out&#13;
WAI.DING, K(NNAN&amp; HAttvIN.Wholes&#13;
(?t*ts. Totcdrv a . w, . \ ^&#13;
HuirsCutarrh"CuresN'taken internaHy. i\ctln&lt;r&#13;
clirecHv upoo MW* hiotxl :uv\ mucous Hyriacfs of&#13;
tBe system. Price 7;&gt;c per bottle. Sold by all&#13;
Driivt'ists, ^eixtimoniuls free.&#13;
Hull's Funnily Pills are the best.&#13;
If a woman once poses as a beauty it keeps&#13;
her busy trying to live up 10 it.&#13;
Exactly slVtiat \im. V^aot. . .&#13;
A hanly little b^x (]U«t rklif fora lady^ f&gt;ur««&#13;
or agentleman'H vet«t pocket i of (M C l&#13;
Cathartic,prevenlH tihit'88.&#13;
HJ&#13;
^&#13;
on't break your Ui yil&#13;
a Uypiicn will&#13;
i&#13;
Mrs. Wlnalow** Soothing Syrup&#13;
r rhllaren t««tiiinf.«ort«nM the irunn&gt;.rrdure»&lt;nflaai-&#13;
Uon, »l»*jDp*in, cureuwludoollc. 25 e e n u a UoiUe.&#13;
If marrfape wasn't a lottery the iaw might not&#13;
interfere in HO many cases.&#13;
forOotou on is the be-it of all&#13;
tz, Fabucher, La.,&#13;
If a man is easily discouraged he will languish&#13;
in obscurity.&#13;
''We hav« tor»r had « bottle returned." proudiy &amp;•-&#13;
*vrt* the proprietor of Brviwn'i Teothnu Cvidijtl.&#13;
If smiles are sunshine browns must be cloudy&#13;
weather. '&#13;
will b&gt;rng from 9(UK ttt 945&#13;
t£e prAtrie. ^ o ^ and wood&#13;
here* In abundance. -Coal i s sold&#13;
in :tWef&#13;
;&lt;^rlrT! of Edmonton ,forv*$ff"pfer&#13;
ton and farmers can secvire coal at&#13;
the mines themselves for 75. cents per&#13;
load. Before closing we t&amp;y to you on©&#13;
and all, come to Alberta, where there&#13;
are homes, for mlllioks and a promisefpr&#13;
sony^tlplh^ ^p. lay«. by for an o,Jd&#13;
age. we are well satisfied with this&#13;
country and as evidence have each&#13;
bought a half section of C. P. R. land&#13;
•*Tf\ Wwnsiap1;^. range 21 west of the&#13;
4th Initial B&gt;eriaiaJi.&gt;&lt;ad will teturonextNBpring&#13;
to reside. Hoping this&#13;
may be of gome benefit to the overburdened&#13;
farmers of the United&#13;
States."&#13;
Sent by Floyd Dean, son of E. (S.&#13;
]?e.an. of Deapville, Mich., who Is now&#13;
&gt;in AJberta, and has taken up ICQ acres&#13;
Don'tthlnk every woman, who looks- In a mmirror&#13;
i» hopelessly lost In admiration.&#13;
Carter'* Ex'.. tM»rt&#13;
,.,,, cure a cold in one nlg"ht; will cure » r t&#13;
•ihroftt In a, few noun*-.. Act* quick.) Sure cLr»&#13;
for C»tafi-h Jn ever.v Jac Wo;«le '&#13;
Don't think because a man possesses a&#13;
in? Intellect that he U lightheaded.&#13;
PAINFUL PERIODS NO MORE I - MRS. GEORGE OSMUN, of Belvidere, Warren O&gt;., N. J., writes:&#13;
••Suffering as I had from weakness, irregmlcwMes and backache&#13;
-'foVseveral yeftrSj^ r*lelf?lfr'*fronlr&gt;^his ftftRerinp •ira^a blessing Ohl&#13;
kow I wfsh napf© suHs^jny^omeit vrould acbept^ur kind afffijr.mr1 be relieved.&#13;
Zhere is n^aeed for waxnen.to suffer, Mrs. I^ikham's aj|rice and Lydia EJ.&#13;
"^ ^^ '* Pinkh^jjtb'ii V'eg||able Coq&amp;ound tttUl relieve) *&#13;
work.&#13;
m fire department rush and&#13;
y will doubtl«pi be sent to&#13;
the reform school. ~P -•'•&#13;
Wm. D. Burdick,sjflycerine«hooUr,&#13;
was reeentlj blown ,to atoms at hi*&#13;
mafftuioe n,ear &amp;r*4fo&gt;d, Pa, He was&#13;
carrying a ean of the explosive when&#13;
last seen alive. That was a few moments&#13;
before t-ate msfftztoe, barn and&#13;
better aoasev went up in a (Hood of&#13;
smoke. Only small fragments of Bar*&#13;
dick* body&#13;
5TE?" IDA PEfEfcfc, Milan" Tenn.,"writes:&#13;
••DEAUMRS. PisfKHAM-^-When I wrote to yon&#13;
the first time asking your advjee I ^ a s a great&#13;
sufferer, ^en^uat^pns iy^i'e irrs^aiar, some*&#13;
tim^s a. .week too j^on lpd^heu *• week or two&#13;
\§tte{ and wj|$nr tSey ^prj^arijdJ^4e very profuse;&#13;
great pa^n and tetftterness in'tne Ijtuwlfe, pain u»&#13;
back dnd limbs, leucorrheca all the time. %&#13;
was weak and nervous and had no appctit^.&#13;
Burning and choking" sensation in my throat.&#13;
I received your reply- and followed all your&#13;
instructions and now I am cured. I owe my&#13;
recovery all to Mrn. Pinkham's advice and her&#13;
wondcrfu] • :• medics."&#13;
' EJMA K. BKPNNKRW; I^just Rochester,&#13;
, Ohio, writes:&#13;
*• I have been thankful a thousand times&#13;
since! wrote to you for what your Vegeta-&#13;
- ble Compound has donejflorme. I followed.&#13;
__ your odviceparefully and now I feel like sv&#13;
* diflcreni person. My troubj^s1 werQ bacjacne,&#13;
.headache, nervous tired feeling,£&gt;ain»&#13;
ful menstruation and l^«c»rrho»,. t tooEc&#13;
four bottles of Lydia I* Pinkham's Vegeta*&#13;
' ble Compound, one box of Pflhi, one package&#13;
of Sanative Wash and vn npw w«il.N&#13;
MRS. UALGH P. Siuifc.&#13;
in the small of.injr back for&#13;
years, and c&lt;nii4a« veV gaaaa ykAmf to&#13;
me. I tried several physicians, but foa&#13;
'no help. I have now Jaken three bot&#13;
of Lydia S. Pin%am'a Vegetable&#13;
a4,«ftd feflgffl Cdiffitto4 woman,&#13;
"Nesvrtjr three years i f o I wrote to yon asking adrice In ree*rd to my heal&#13;
I wme so miserable; «dtt«red from peinfnl mAutra^tSon and b*eks&gt;chef nerrons, dizzy and faint Mfiive4t«aeli a khd UtMr iro.»- yo*K Ullirf&#13;
V.. . «. . «kham's Vegetable Compound.&#13;
opinion is&#13;
You can cheat it for a time, but only for&#13;
a time. The average life of a patent&#13;
medicine is less than two years. They&#13;
are pretty well advertised* some of them,&#13;
but it isn't what is said of them, but&#13;
what they are able to do which carries&#13;
them through the ycar&amp;t , / r w T&#13;
Sarscwati I... • '..: r&#13;
(wfccfc aide S^mptfilliJ)&#13;
has never recommended itself to do what it&#13;
knew of itself it could not do. It has hi vet&#13;
been known as a cure-all in order to catch&#13;
all. For half a century it has been the&#13;
one true, safe blood punier, made in the&#13;
best way out of tie besf ingredients*&#13;
Thousands cl families are using It ^ e r c&#13;
their fathers and grandfathers usel it&#13;
before, and its record is p^ti bf no&#13;
other medicine.&#13;
•i*i •; i t i -&#13;
«r&lt;&#13;
OUB BUDGET OF FUN.&#13;
SOME GOOD JOKES, ORIGINAL&#13;
AND SELECTED.&#13;
A Variety «r Jakes—Gibe* aad Ironies.&#13;
.Original aud 8ele«t«4—rintftam antf&#13;
JeUaaa froaa tae Tide ,of&#13;
•Witty&#13;
Different.&#13;
When once I sat with Clara,&#13;
Z longed for her alone:&#13;
But she would always tctna*,-&#13;
To have a chaperone.&#13;
Kow when I sit with Clara—&#13;
My wife—she act* poaaeasod&#13;
It I but hint remotely&#13;
I wlah we had a guest.&#13;
—Detroit Free Press.&#13;
Boon Solved.&#13;
fs Potterer to shabby? His&#13;
wife Is beautifully dressed.&#13;
"That Is the reason why his wife is&#13;
so beautifully dressed—Potterer goe*&#13;
co shabby."—Ally Slopcr.&#13;
fjojh Ways,&#13;
$oo4 old motto," said&#13;
the statesman, who was considering&#13;
the Philippine question: 'Be s»ire you&#13;
are right and then go ahead/ "&#13;
"Yes," replied the friend; "it's a&#13;
gaf© giUde for every occasion."&#13;
"I don't agree with you there. There&#13;
are circumstances where it must be&#13;
reviled to make it fit. When you find&#13;
yonrself In a position where you can't&#13;
be absolutely sure my motto is: 'Be&#13;
sure you're wrong before you back&#13;
out.' "—Washington Star.&#13;
Earmarks of Fane.&#13;
Chicago Record: "I've struck some&#13;
encouragement at last."&#13;
"What Is It?"&#13;
"This prominent man used to be a&#13;
farm hand at $10 a month."&#13;
"What is encouraging about that?"&#13;
"I used to be A farm hand at $10 a&#13;
month myself."&#13;
Ifetfc Thought 8A.&#13;
guess," said the* arrtt-expanslonthat&#13;
Un-ele SAm'a firitfing he'll&#13;
EaW~&amp;Is~fi5hd« ftril gjetttn&#13;
"I&#13;
1st,&#13;
the Filipinos."&#13;
"Yes," said the sensible citizen, "they&#13;
are pretty good runnera."—Clovelarid&#13;
Leader.&#13;
Advise to Rlrrtt*.&#13;
Come, birdie, came and sins tJ m e -&#13;
Come, charm me with your pretty&#13;
note;&#13;
But let me warn you, birdie, ere&#13;
You come that you had better wear&#13;
A strip of flannel round yaur thraaJ.&#13;
Proaapt for Osupsw&#13;
"Queer about Clara's wedding with&#13;
that plumber."&#13;
"What was quecrT"&#13;
"Why he came to get mawled at tlit&#13;
very day and hour he said he would.*1&#13;
—Detroit Free Press.&#13;
TrighttaU&#13;
"tie has cultivated an extremely mobile&#13;
i*ace." , , .&#13;
"Well, he ought to."&#13;
"Ought to be what?"&#13;
"Automobile!" — Cleveland Plain-&#13;
Dealer.&#13;
In the tfaller?.&#13;
Jimmy—Say! wasn't dat great where&#13;
he holds de mob at bay?&#13;
Tommy—Wot's great about it. Doo't&#13;
dem supes know if dey did anyt'injf&#13;
to him dey'd git de grand bounce?—&#13;
Puck.&#13;
Easily Explained*&#13;
married men&#13;
* tfe&amp;a siAgto ooa»?&#13;
ff&lt;r-~Tfa«7 4otit; it only&#13;
The Natural Cure&#13;
for Indigestion&#13;
Oo yw have pain In the stomach after ^L,1 ( «; Do you h&amp;ve &amp; ytuovy totvgue? Wind on the stomach?&#13;
Constipation? These thing* arise from&#13;
Indigestion and Dyspepsia.&#13;
4. Digestion depends on drdestwe fluids or&#13;
ferments" secreted by certain glands. When&#13;
the secretion becomes insufficient! Indigestion&#13;
results. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pile*People&#13;
cause these dlands to resume their normal&#13;
action and food digestion follows.&#13;
Artificial ferments (of which most so-called&#13;
Dyspepsia cures are composed) may give temporary&#13;
relief, but Dr. Williams' PinK * Pi Us for&#13;
ale People afford &amp; permanent cure.&#13;
Poor digestion often causes Irregularity of the heart's action.&#13;
This Irregularity may be mistaken for real, organic heart '&#13;
disease. A case In point: Mrs. Ellen Colsom, Newpoint, lnd.,&#13;
had suffered for four years with stomach trouble. The gases&#13;
generated by theJndigestlon pressed on the heart, and caused a a&#13;
irregularity of its action. Sue had much pain In her stomach&#13;
und neart, and was subject to frequent and severe choking spell*&#13;
. which were most severe at night. Doctor* were tried In vain; the&#13;
patient became worse, despondent, and feared Impending death.&#13;
She noticed that In Intervals In which her stomach aid not&#13;
annoy her, her heart's action became normal. Reasoning&#13;
corrtetiy tb«t her digestion was alone at fault she procured&#13;
the proper medicine to treat that trouble and with immediate&#13;
tfood revults. Her appetite came back, the choking spell*&#13;
became less frequent and finally ceaned. HIT weight, which&#13;
had been greatly reduced, was restored and she now weighs&#13;
more than for years.&#13;
That others may know the means of cure we give the name&#13;
of the medicine u*ed—Dr. Williams' Pi nit PiiUfor Pale People.&#13;
Thet*e pill* contain all the elements neftcwaary to give new&#13;
life and rlobnest to the blood and restore shattered nerve*.&#13;
—Sew Era, Greenburg, lnd.&#13;
druddists or sent postpaid by the&#13;
Or. William's Mediclnl Co.,Schenectady,N.Y.. Price,&#13;
Sold by all&#13;
So^per box,b boxes^25J?. A diet book sent FREL.&#13;
Hundreds of thousands of farmer*—United States fsrmers, European farmers. Sooth Americas&#13;
farmers, Australian farmers—men who farm for profit—representing the intelligence of the agricultural&#13;
industry, are walking advertisements for Deering grain *n4 crass harvesting machinery.&#13;
Deenng machines are profit producers. The harvest season is brier. Very often the weather&#13;
conditions sre such that unless a crop can be saved just "1n the nick of time" a goodly percent***&#13;
of it is spoiled, damaged, lost.&#13;
It is just here that Oeering machines go in and win the day. Imminent disaster is changed te&gt;&#13;
victory—seeming loss to actual profit.&#13;
Deeria* machines are the tUp»*d*bk kind. They nts«4 the test of dire emergency.&#13;
That's why toe farmers of the world like them, bay them, use them, praise them.&#13;
Deeriof Ideal Binders, Reapers, Mowers, Corn Binders,&#13;
Hay Rakes and Binder Twin© are winner* for '99.&#13;
HARVESTER COMPANY, Chicago.&#13;
Hartford&#13;
, Our Cbainleas biqyoes are always ready to ride because the running gear takes&#13;
care of itself. There is nothing to entangle or soil the clothing. The macblaos anr&#13;
so constructed that tho bevel-gearing cannot be cramped or twisted under strains*&#13;
which accounts for their easy hill-climbing and splendid matting qualities under all ;&#13;
conditions of riding.&#13;
Our new chain wheels contain many improvements eorsriog design, mechanism,&#13;
and finish. The 18» Chain Columbias are the same as the Chsinless with the exception&#13;
of the driving g«»r. Hartford* are of new pattern, have improved crank rtsft&#13;
construction and are thoroughly reliable in every respect. As to the Vedettes wo&#13;
only ask you to compare them with any other machines obtainable at their price.&#13;
PRICES: ChAinless, $75; Columbia Chain Models, $50; Hartfords,&#13;
$3$i Vedettes, $25 (men'i); $*&gt; (ladies').&#13;
Ask any Columbia dealer for Catalogue, Booklets,&#13;
Folders, etc., or write to us enclosing 2-cent stamp.&#13;
POPE MANUFACTURING CO/HP ANY. Hartford. Conn.&#13;
"A BRIGHT HOME MAKES A MERRY&#13;
HEART." JOY TRAVELS ALONG WITH SAPOLIO «- ^-^LTEr -»mmsn WHEAT&#13;
WHEAT&#13;
WHEAT&#13;
NBWMtCOVERY:&#13;
. _ _ _ e.atefc reHef sas cases wotst &gt;B*oo«k. •o»f •te s•t lmmcnsil'sjism said, f» M4 am, yi«** ••t!n• mi «ts&gt;-&#13;
P P M t O I H Y # f l t O W s t i "Nothlnx but wkeat; vtwt you gwiia boofc lsMitflttw htm f pfoess4—&lt; cajj •&gt; s«* of wheat." Ja wbmt « •&#13;
to t e B l i •assota, wftfc other valuabsB !•- by a Jecturer apeakioc ot WejaUra GftBMositerma/&#13;
s fees smtessisnrtislel adsu For particulars aa to roMw, rail-&#13;
Orteve. 1ft Pi&#13;
Caven. Bad&#13;
MYMUfTl&#13;
* ...„&#13;
V&#13;
'&#13;
• • • • • • " • " " • " ' ^ l ^ . fl&#13;
L -V \ T"&#13;
HAMBURG.&#13;
• - • v Mrs. Cfora Stewart, of Dexter,&#13;
visited her parents here Sunday.&#13;
Wm. Featherly entertained&#13;
relatives from Toledo Sunday.&#13;
Kev. A. Crane, of Brighton,&#13;
was in this village on Thursday&#13;
last&#13;
Mrs. Joe Todd spent the first&#13;
part of last wpek with her sister&#13;
Mrs. Grant Race, in Detroit&#13;
Geo. Warner, wljo has been&#13;
very ill for the past two weeks,&#13;
shows no signs of recovery.&#13;
Quite a number came on the&#13;
excursion from Toledo Sunday&#13;
and spent the day at Little Silver&#13;
Lake.&#13;
Chas. Butler,who has run a saw&#13;
mill here for the past year, has&#13;
moved his family back to their&#13;
former home near Howell.&#13;
J. L. Kisby, administrator of&#13;
the estate of the late James Stark,&#13;
sold the property of the deceased;&#13;
at a public auction last Saturday.&#13;
After a short illnesj, Mr. Richard&#13;
Sheridan passed from this&#13;
life, in this village on Wednesday&#13;
last v He was over 80 years old&#13;
and leaves a wife and two children&#13;
A. B. Grgeysuffered severely a&#13;
Ir#»&#13;
Waa the result of bis s.pltndi8 hejrith.&#13;
Indomitable will t M tremendoai&#13;
energy are not foind where ttomaob,&#13;
liver, kidneys and bowel* ire oat of&#13;
order.* If you want these qualities&#13;
and the success they bring, use Or.&#13;
Ring's New Life Pills. They develop&#13;
every power of brain and body. Only&#13;
25o at Y. A. Sigler'g drug store.&#13;
J. TV". Sheets is no, better at&#13;
this writing. * ^&#13;
James Greer has been working&#13;
for Chas. Miller for the past few&#13;
weeks.&#13;
Mrs. A. M. Rock wood and Mrs.&#13;
Jane Wright were in Pinckney&#13;
one day this week.&#13;
Sunday school was organized at&#13;
the Chapel Sunday with a good&#13;
attendance. Sunday&#13;
2:30.&#13;
School at&#13;
y&#13;
few dayfd/ttf week from a fish&#13;
bone whi|^^R g&#13;
throat. JJmRFreer was eatiug a&#13;
little hastily of the first catoh of&#13;
the season when the*accident occured.&#13;
VY PARSHALLVILLE: *J&#13;
Wm. Reed of the Webberville&#13;
paper, spent Sunday with his parents&#13;
here.&#13;
Waltefr Vaa Camp and family,&#13;
of Fentan, spent Sunday with relatives&#13;
herfc.&#13;
Dr. Parker has nearly finished&#13;
the repairs on his residence and&#13;
will move in a few days.&#13;
Rev. J. L. Walker visited hie&#13;
son about 100 miles north of here&#13;
this week, making the trip with a&#13;
horse.&#13;
Lawrence Smith is&#13;
grocery wagon made&#13;
future.&#13;
Mrs.&#13;
in&#13;
having a&#13;
and will&#13;
Tfie near&#13;
Grow Gustin who has&#13;
been spending several weeks with&#13;
her parents here, returned to her&#13;
home in Penn. Tuesday.&#13;
The firm of Glasby and Bravender&#13;
will remain the same, as Wm.&#13;
Bravender has engaged in other&#13;
business and Frank has returned.&#13;
'Mrs. Elmer Preston, who has&#13;
been spending several weeks with&#13;
her daughter near Highland, returaed&#13;
home the past week.&#13;
Frank Kirk and wife spent the&#13;
^&#13;
st week with their daughter,&#13;
r&amp; Cox in St. Johns. They&#13;
also visited in Byron, Owosso and&#13;
Elsie.&#13;
Mrs. James Ncrbert, who has&#13;
been very sick at the home of&#13;
Mrs. Lottie Hetchler, is little, if&#13;
any better. Her son Victor&#13;
with her.&#13;
We had a fine rain last evening&#13;
but still think April has&#13;
broken her record as well as&#13;
March.&#13;
Albert Ward is slowly recovering&#13;
from his sickness and can&#13;
get out of doors by the use of&#13;
crutches.&#13;
W. B. Miller has rented the&#13;
Merril farm. Mrs. A. M. Rockwood&#13;
has rented her place to&#13;
Robert Caskey.&#13;
Mr. Witty and wife, of Marion,&#13;
is caring for Mrs. Mary Fuless&#13;
who is very feeble, she is ninety&#13;
two years of age.&#13;
Co be McGee visited at Frank&#13;
Ponds Sunday.&#13;
J. D. Sheets lost a Green Wilson&#13;
colt last week.&#13;
A. T. Watson visited his aged&#13;
mother in Vera last week.&#13;
Leyi Douglass, of Prescot, visited&#13;
friends and relatives in Iosco,&#13;
last week.&#13;
The Miltner boy that lost his&#13;
over coat will find the same at&#13;
Daniel Wrights.&#13;
Our post office has become established&#13;
and now the question is,&#13;
who will carry the mail. Bids&#13;
must be in before June 1st&#13;
Services every Sunday at the&#13;
Wilson school house, Rev. A. G.&#13;
Bloody pastor;—good attendance^]&#13;
An grand, but akin eruptions rob&#13;
life of Joy. Buofclen'* arnioa salve&#13;
euret them; also old. running and&#13;
fever sores, ulcers, boils, felons, corns,&#13;
warts, cuts, braises, burns, scalds,&#13;
obapped hands, chilblains, best pile&#13;
care on earth, drives out pains and&#13;
aches. Only 25o a box; cure guaranteed.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, druggist.&#13;
SILVER LAKE ITEMS. V&#13;
Wood Bawyers at Wm. Clarks&#13;
this week.&#13;
Mark Bell was busy one day&#13;
last week breaking colts.&#13;
H. K. Bierce has been laid up&#13;
for a few days with rheumatism.&#13;
John Hugh's house caught fire&#13;
last Thursday from a burning&#13;
chimney. Prompt action saved&#13;
the house.&#13;
Those parties who tied a lot of&#13;
rubbish to cow belonging to Mr.&#13;
Bierce, last Wednesday morning,&#13;
wants to be careful they don't get&#13;
caught at it.&#13;
Mrs. Eliza Wood, of Lansing,&#13;
is visiting her sister Miss Lucia&#13;
liinchy, at Anderson, and assisting,&#13;
in the care of her niece, Miss&#13;
Grace Hinchey, who is very ill&#13;
with consumption.&#13;
The heavy storm Monday evening&#13;
'made us hold our breath for a&#13;
few minutes, the lightning, thunder&#13;
and bail weretery severe for&#13;
a while, bat it made us "smile the&#13;
fid hi&#13;
State of Michigan: The Circuit Court (or tb«&#13;
County of Uvingtton: la ChMoory.&#13;
JOBN Dow*,&#13;
EUWAKU SJUtWlDY, itAHLk COOPIS,&#13;
JULIA Fm«mont and kxvk DOMOTAK,&#13;
Defendant*.&#13;
In pursuance and by rirtue of a decree of the&#13;
Circuit Court for the County of LMagttou, in&#13;
Cnanoery, roiw?« in the abofe entitled eauie, and&#13;
bearing date the flrtt day of May. A, D. 1699,1, the&#13;
undersigned, a Circuit Court CommiMioner la&#13;
and for the County of Livingiton aforesaid, will&#13;
sell at public auction to the highest bidder at the&#13;
weet front door of the Court Houae in the village&#13;
of Howell (that being the plaoe of holding the&#13;
Circuit Court la the county In which the prt&#13;
to be sold are situated) on Saturday, the seven&#13;
teenth day of June, A. D. 1890, at ten o'clock in&#13;
the forenoon of said day, all that certain piece or&#13;
parcel of land situated and being in the Township&#13;
ut Putnam, In the County of Livingston and&#13;
State of Michigan.'knownaad described as follows,&#13;
to wit: the south twelve (12) rods and fifteen (18)&#13;
links In width of the southeast quarter of the&#13;
northwest quarter of section number twentynine&#13;
(gQ), being all that portion of said southeast&#13;
quarter of the northwest quarter lying and being&#13;
south of the center of the highway, running in an&#13;
easterly and westerly direction across said southeast&#13;
quarter of tne northwest quarter, in townshiD&#13;
number one (1) north of range number four&#13;
(4) east, containing six and three tenths (6.8)&#13;
acres o(. land more or less.&#13;
Dated, Howell, Michigan, May 3, A. D. 1899&#13;
W I L L U K H . H. WOOD,&#13;
Circuit Court Commissioner.&#13;
WM. P. VAKWINKU, Solicitor for Complainant.&#13;
SHIELDS and SHIKLDB, Solicitors for Defendant*,&#13;
MARIA COOLER and JULIA FITZSIMONB.&#13;
NOTICE.&#13;
I will pay the highest mar-&#13;
,&#13;
next morning to find&#13;
f h d&#13;
thing&#13;
Good Sabath school in connection&#13;
with thirty pupils, four teachers,&#13;
about forty or fifty in regular&#13;
^attendance.&#13;
Have&#13;
Heard&#13;
refreshed.&#13;
We wish to make a Correction&#13;
to those of our readers t^ho understood&#13;
in regard to an article published&#13;
in regard to the^ale of the&#13;
Tiplady farm. Mr. Ball purchased&#13;
the farm of Thos. toirkett instead&#13;
of Jim Tiplady,v ^&#13;
UNAD1LLA- l&#13;
J. D. Colten, of Jacks&amp;u, visited&#13;
friends here the first of tfc» we*k.&#13;
J. D. Watson and wife of Chelsea,&#13;
visited relatives here lastireeic&#13;
Bert Bullis and wife entertain1-*.&#13;
ed friends from White Oak Sunday.&#13;
Fayette Reason, of Stockbridge,&#13;
made a business trip to' this place&#13;
last Monday.&#13;
Parties were here the past week&#13;
looking up a sight for a grist-mill&#13;
Spring Millinery&#13;
ket price in cash for&#13;
BUTTER and EGGS.&#13;
• " * #&#13;
Leave your .. orders 4j for&#13;
Fresh Fish pn &lt; or before&#13;
Thursday of eacli week,&#13;
Call at ray*. market ;for&#13;
prices.&#13;
C. L.&#13;
1 • City Market,&#13;
Trimmed Hats,&#13;
Fancy Millinery,&#13;
Flowers,&#13;
Laces.&#13;
Latest Novelties.&#13;
and basket factory.&#13;
Holden DuBois,' near Eaton&#13;
You have&#13;
IS&#13;
GREGORY. V&#13;
Peach trees are blooming where&#13;
the winter did not kill the tree.&#13;
Arbor day was quite generally&#13;
observed in Gregory and vicinity.&#13;
Miss Mary Hoff, of Unadilla,&#13;
i££ayed with friends in Gregory.&#13;
M&amp;. Al Plumber nas rented,&#13;
and moved into the Jacobs build*&#13;
ing occupied by Dr. Fay last year.&#13;
Henry Wegener strained a&#13;
muscle in.MB ^roin by lifting, and&#13;
has be^n mirier %\e Dr's. care for&#13;
more than a woek and is now unable&#13;
to l»f ont of doors.&#13;
Our little village enjoys the&#13;
visits of two meat wagons each&#13;
Tuseday and Saturday of lat e p.ad&#13;
the first arrival seems to g et the&#13;
bulk of the trade. One is from&#13;
Stockbridge and. the. othe r from&#13;
Pinckney.&#13;
Oeo. Arnold and' wife, Mrs.&#13;
Hinnie Wnodworth, Mrs. Tbomas&#13;
Howlett, Miss Frankie .P!i»ceway,&#13;
Miss Mary Scbofield. 3. A. Den-&#13;
Mm and wife and J3. H- Kllisand&#13;
irtfe ace in attendant^ at the Baptist&#13;
Afeatdfttion meeting at Ohel-&#13;
. r&amp;&#13;
heard&#13;
about SCOTTS EMULSION&#13;
and have a vague notion&#13;
that it is cod-liver oil with&#13;
its bad taste and smell and.&#13;
all its other repulsive fe*-&#13;
tures. it b cod-fiver &lt;£,{№&#13;
purest and the best jnjhe&#13;
world, but made so&#13;
ble that almost&#13;
can take r£ -&#13;
children like*&#13;
more,&#13;
Rapids, visited his' parents here&#13;
the last of last week.&#13;
Harman Eead has a new carriage&#13;
purchased « at Pinckney.&#13;
Now girls who wrll be first.&#13;
Ghas. ELarteuff and wife, of Ann&#13;
Arbor, visited relatives here Saturday&#13;
and Sunday, making the&#13;
trip on their bicjrclee.&#13;
Rev. Donning who has been&#13;
pastor of the Presbyterian church&#13;
here the past thoee years, has accepted&#13;
a call £o • Montague, at a&#13;
salory of $760. He will move&#13;
there the laet ofrthis week.&#13;
Right Prices.&#13;
CALL AND SEE US.&#13;
Jtojmold't Black, unsbaa&#13;
Bred from prize winners; strictly&#13;
beautiful; large in size; hardy, best of&#13;
layers; active foragers; fine fitters and&#13;
roofcttar txctlUnf'4&amp;Ie1fofwoll-&#13;
Also very fine White Bramas; eggs&#13;
for hatching by applying 1| miles&#13;
west of Chubbs Corners.&#13;
Eggs per 18, 75cts.&#13;
REYNOLDS &amp; Sox,&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
Never a time when bright, fresh&#13;
PETTEYSyiLtA&#13;
list.&#13;
i 8 t h e&#13;
WAIGHTVILLE \ /&#13;
Farrington rides a sew&#13;
7&#13;
M. T. Horning visited at the&#13;
h m e of his sister, Mrs. Gardiner,&#13;
lest FHday.&#13;
. G, Teeple Bold a fine horse to&#13;
ti^ii Vparties, last week, for&#13;
$210. . v&#13;
Miae.Jennie Sawyer, of Brigton&#13;
is&gt;*ieting Mrs. Goniway.&#13;
, ( Miss Gracejfash is the guest of&#13;
lift ends in So. Lyon.&#13;
Myer Davis and -wife visited&#13;
irieudsin Howell Saturday.&#13;
j , W. Placew*y a^4 wile were&#13;
looks like creaatj&#13;
ishes the wailed&#13;
the baby, chid&#13;
better than creajn or any&#13;
other food m tx&amp;coct. ft&#13;
bears about the sameitlttion&#13;
to other etnuliioQS Ibit&#13;
cream does to ttflkf Mymi&#13;
have had any exMpence&#13;
with other uhoHeft'm m&#13;
goodM&#13;
will find&#13;
The hypnplnahiM&#13;
«nnbimd w d i S e m Sadditional&#13;
tone op II&#13;
body.&#13;
SOO1&#13;
Spring Dress Goods&#13;
Could be purchased at better advantage than now. The&#13;
most complete that any store ever had in Jackson&#13;
is now shown at the&#13;
BUSY BEE HIVE.&#13;
Mrs. Anna Jiofcrga«g entertained&#13;
a brother from^ Webberville&#13;
over Sunday.&#13;
The next mee&#13;
nam and&#13;
will be&#13;
H. Plaoewf&#13;
May.&#13;
of the Putir'&#13;
« Club&#13;
of Wm.&#13;
)urday in&#13;
A. £. Brown MXJ J. O er&#13;
were in Howell Wednesdaj.&#13;
The Temperance EvanffMi^ / . T&#13;
H. HarriHoo, will hold service* in the&#13;
11. £. church Tuesday and Wednesday&#13;
evenings, May 9 and 10.&#13;
Just aft we go fo press we learn tbat&#13;
a v*ry quiet weddinir took plaoe at&#13;
the home of Mr*. Ha eh Oinrk dr, May&#13;
was unite! in marhaire to Jaotet Wiloox,&#13;
bv Knw. C. W. Rio*, Both ai*&#13;
avorabU .known aid tb«tr&#13;
(need* oQMratatate ibeM.&#13;
Gingham,&#13;
Bibbons,&#13;
Hoisery,&#13;
Underwear,&#13;
Shirts,&#13;
Overalls,&#13;
Handkerchiefs,&#13;
Embroideries,&#13;
Calicoes,&#13;
Percales,&#13;
Shirtings,&#13;
Jeans,&#13;
Denims,&#13;
Tickings,&#13;
Ducking,&#13;
Gloves,&#13;
Lawns,&#13;
Cambrics,&#13;
Sheetings,&#13;
Towels,&#13;
Sheets,&#13;
Pillowcases,&#13;
Laces,&#13;
Cottonades.&#13;
8PR1HG CARPETS,&#13;
A grand showing. A,«tock larger than all other Jackson&#13;
stoabeouflbined and marked at marvel,&#13;
otsly low prioes. \&#13;
FIELB&#13;
r&#13;
&amp;; ' Su V . .&#13;
. • I&#13;
• ^ • • • • - ;&#13;
k</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="36646">
              <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="6159">
                <text>Pinckney Dispatch May 04, 1899</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>May 04, 1899 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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            </elementTextContainer>
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                <text>No Copyright - United States</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="6164">
                <text>1899-05-04</text>
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            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
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              <elementText elementTextId="6165">
                <text>Frank L. Andrews</text>
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